The New-York Tribune Newspaper, June 11, 1866, Page 4

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e Amusements. WALLACK'S THEATE THIS EVENING, st 8, RORN ANDY John Nunen, B. TO GUOD LUCK=HAN Mr. Dan Brybant, Miss Ross Cooke, M Gro. H T. Kio i, Leonard, Pope, Grabam, Wt Blark Sifth., Miss Carman, Mise Barzett, Mrs. NIBLO € GARDEN. TS EVENING, at 6 Ballet of THE VIVANDIER Vastomime of THE MAGIC TRUMPET—THE MARTINETT! The KRavels, Gabriel Francels, Antoine, Young America, Signo; Popits, Mous. Ven Hawme. Yousg Americe vn the Three Flying Trapesa. R, OLYMPIC THE. THIS ot 0—OUR MUTUAL FRIEND; Mrs. Jobn Wood. , TER GARDE TH!S RVESING LIES INTHE WEB=HIS LAST LEOS o Mr. John Brongly Mary Carr, Mossre. C ., Miss Pre i} C. Woleott, jr., Mise oleot. j 1, S. Audrew T BROADWAY THEATER TH1S EVENING-THE CORSICAN BROTHERS: Miss elen Western, Mr. ). s TH R INVISIELE PRINC The Nicolo Troupe i f faters, and (411 compa Trapees, Perp ndicuias OWERY THEAT! i, ot B~THE FEMALE DETE 118 MONKEY: Miss Faany Herring, Fi THIS EVENIN LOSINSON AND Foz. SARNUM'S AMERICAN MUSEUM. THIS AFTERN 2, ad THIS EVENING -t':} UNCLE 3 d Mre. J. Pryor, Mre. W. L. r. Kehoe, Schell, Lebrun, 81 ebrun, 3 ou, H.E. Jotnstons, Havilind, \E HUNDKED TUOUSAND CURT- © i ON N, Third ave. © THOMAS'S FIRST ORCHES- THIS BVEN S MINSTREIS. ADS, COMICAL ACTS, FARC Ol DULTS, ete.—THE HOY OUT—ANNA MARIA JON TO MEND. 10NAL ACADEMY OF DESIGN, 115 LULNING, exbivition of the WORKS OF LESQE { RAIDERS. NEVER TOO | N TODAY an LIVING ARTL U 10.0AY. free at 7 ‘""70—1":“.“ LO Y oo adimis to the PHRENO] C USEU ' TOAL, e admider e PUR GICAL MUSEUM NEW FRENCH THEATER. NG, 4t 4, the Evglish Comic Opars, THE DOCTOR Mis R Miss Zelds Hazrison, Mre. Mozart, tle, Eichberg. S EVE CANT T OF AL Island. Long Parse and Stake of $1,000. Trotting for Dnsiness Notices. VERY OF THE AGE for the cure of Dyrente N nneu!:nndlwwl out Sold by all i Price, & AL PoxADE Restores Gray H | removes dondrufl ; the himest dre wnd el & 3 Chalens, € bla remedy hapot., MorT's Cirv s of Gans best Paris Al s large amoitment of Tre ArM AND L beut 1o v P. FRANK Pavyee, LL. D.— dicts, i (ow to officers and civilians. 1609 N.Y.; 19 Greeu at., Bosioa. Avoid 3, SUSPENSORY BAND- ven & Cou's Radical Cure Tiuse Ufiice endant. guss, scrr niy o No. 2 Vesay-st v + Cartes Vignette, $ dozen; Duplicates, Alluegatives r A A A Lewis, No. 160 Chathamst., N. Y. WILLCOX & (a8 SEWING MACHINE. “1ta seam fs stion sbe to rip in use or wear, thn the Judy " at the hland Tri Repoit 1p'en of Work containing borh kinds of e pie - No. 568 Bros THE SINGER M axT Ly Suwixa MACHLN reads; 58 Broadwiy. *ACTURING COMPANY'S new Fax- ready; siso, Buttonhiole Machine. No. Tom SEWING-MACHINES—Best 40NCE SEWINGAIACHISE COXPANY, No. 505 biroadwey. ELastic d s HIGHEST PREMIUM TnprovED LOCK- l Grovii WHRELER & Borro imorw MaciiNg No. 626 Brosiway. AcmiNE CoypANT.—ELas HOWE, 1 Diondway. Ageuts wanted. Purtey Tie BLoon.—It is an established fact tha very large ciass of disorders can ouly be cared by such remedios a0 through every portion will enter into the blood, and clrculste Wi of the body; for by this meeas ouly can the Tezedy be brought into Smuwediate contact with the disesse. To obtain this deslrable end, no proparetion hae ever boen #o uui‘ormiy succensful as Dx. JarNz's Scrofuln, King's Evl, Cancer and Cancerous Tamors, v, Eslargement of the Boues, Chronle Rheumstism uptive Disesses of the Skis, Old szd Indolent U , ke, ez cured withs c 1t s, bestde, oze of the most ALTERATIVE, Wilte Sw sod Gost, E Qoltrous Swellivgs of (ke Thro Lelder, wrhich bas sstonisled ever: thet cen be plonsant ar L Bonie, it removes Dyspepsis sud Nersous Affections ti:n A single trial of DALLEY'S GALVANIC HORSE SALY impartea Straios, Poros, Swoliings, Sit-fast and N and pre 9. 49 Cedes serves the Hoof. $.'d by druzzis abox. ., New-York. Fifly ce EW PATENT ALUM AXD DR¥ PLASTER | 1 tal, and ohants’ S4F 8 Maxvix W Howe's ‘oN PICKER pic e day in the field cenner then by Fand, lows MaxuF 0. 81 Tng SINGER SEV £ cvery speciaity, BuaneT's COCOAINE has rec Goresment. No other prepar for embBelishing and strength plossy. Itcures baduess sud ersdis Best of time and competicion. 8ald 1 over th — Sl i ained edges, sud the bricks wil uads by the dry pressiog wecbis g rxeosed 10 VROTT. v A. Erqua, Gene:sl Agent, No. 11 Broadway, N. Y. (& 3,000 SmisGLss PER HouR ave made by CuevaLgr's Live For Trg Har Nuven Faius to restore gray bair to 1ts original color, freshuess Bad besaty; will PommvaLt stop fts fuling out; will Svmmey romote ite growth; s CERTAIN 0 impert life end vigor; will Ix- Luuu keep the heed fu 8 clesn. cool and Lealthy' sondition; c:nm- wothiog injurious; Las No EqQuar e a Ha Drssaive, ad is fadorsed by our best physicisms. | ssare you. ladies sxd Reutiomen, it is all you require for the Lale. Scid by al drogglts. Samam A. Cnevauss, M. D. AP IR B i e A. A.—Dr. LANGWORTHY'S new Paesivy TRrss, sest in use; no back pressure; mukes s fioal cure. Heiwmoro's V0. 334 Brosdway. Tag. improved Elliptic Hook Lockstitch Sewing- higes.—A. . Sories, No. 543 Broadwsy. Agents wanted. AsToNisHING.~Thomas Coben of No. 92 Norih Eu:hc. Wiilismsburgh, who had the rheumatism for 13 years. snd e walked ou crutches for six months, has been restored fo perfect eaiti: by & few doses of MBTCALYE'S GREAT RUVOMATIC REXEDT. wiltng 5 cout o is @ this statemeut on oata, if tequired. P — MrserABLE PEOPLE.—Thousands suffer from the Jost tecrible fts of gloow aud depression without apperent cruse. 1o Dicse cases the nerves and stomach are slweys rolaxed. Toze the mlmdmmu cheerfolness will be the sure ita. Depot, No. 23 Dey-st. Sold by wil Drugelats. CHOLERA, CHOLERA.—None need to fear it if they /1 keep & supply of BiokxeLL's Synop ot band. - ANOTHER ASTONISHING CURE.~DALLEY'S GALVANIC onan Sarve Is daily curing the worst cases of Gells, Scratchen, walliags, Cuts, Sprains, old Sores, In many fnstances Quittor, Yousg pavia, Founder aud Quarter Crack. Try it Fifty conts a box. /4 by Draggiats, Harness Makers end ot the Depot, No. 49 Cederat., cw-York. e T S \V'e have frequently heard Mothers say they would 1+t be without Mie. Wisarow's Soorming SYRU, from the bisth of o child watil 1t bad Guished with the teething slege, on any con- fi!fllflpfl whatever. It givesan fafant, troubled with colic palns, 1ot sleep, aud its parente subroken rest ot night. Tilryfive cents bt i —————0 Nxgpres's Courovsp CAMPHOR TRocHEs will inno tance be sent on commission. No exclusive control given to « good wrticle; 24 e M. Perrexcint & Co., NEWSPAPER ADVERTIS. Agawrs, No. 77 Purkrow, New York (setal johed in 1849), ats for The ngy Wd wli the vewspapers in (he Udted Siates Eu wd Dritiel Proviaces, Josterday in the place w NEW-YORK DALY TRIBU NewVork Daily Tribume, E 11, 1366. | MONDAY. J o notice o8y g taken of Anonymous Communications. Whateverts intended for insertion must be sathenticated by the name and ad- drews of the writer—not necessarily for publcation. but s sgusr- anty for bis g0od foich. ; AL bustases Iattars for this ofice shoula be sddreed (o “The Tris oxe,” Now Yoik. We cuunot undertake 1o roturn refected Communications. The Tribune PRS, (Amencen Agents for Librarier, 17 Henvietta ”s“{‘rv'r;ya“xmfruvcn e heats for of THE TIIBUNE They will i teceive Bvasenirrions end 4 s S —————————— NEWS OF THE DA S FONREIGN NEWS, By the arrival of the Allemania at s port and the 3y off Father Point we have five days later news rope. Al\stm{ms atlongth accepted the Conference, which was expected to meet shortiy. No official announcement has yetbeen made concerning thoe programme of the Con- ferenice, except that it was to embrace the guestions of Venetia, Schieswig-Holstein and the reform of the Gorman Confederation. The Federal Diet of Fraukfort has re- ceived an invitation, and would also sond a reprosentative, The Emperor, on the Danubian Principalities, had de- clared the election of Prince Charles, contrary to the treaty of 1856, but bad refused to order a milita.y occupas tion of the Principalities, The Turkish Gove: nuent had announced its intention to march at oneo troops into the cipalities, but Anbscqumuli; changed its design, I'he House of Commons in England bud began the dis- cussion of the Reform bill, On the motion for going into Committee on the bill, Sir R, Knightley moved that it be an instruction to the Committee that they have power 1o make provision for the better prevention” of bribe and corruption at elections. The Government opposed the otion, but were beaton by o majority of 10—248 to 238, Mr. Gladstone gave Sir R. Knightley to understand that While the Government would be prepared to give a dispa sionate consideration to “ the clauses which the honorable baronet had, no doubt, prepared,” they ¢ could not delay or endanger the bill to mect his views. L GENERAL NEWS. Julzo Cardozo of the Court of Common Pleas Las granted an injunction, refurnable next Wednesday, in favor of Paul Falk against the Commissioners of Excise. Mr. Falk is o maker and seller of lager beer, and in his affidavit, on which the order to show cause was granted, Lo avers that he is advised by counsel that the re- act of the Legislature, 8o far a8 it prohibits the sale beer on Sunday, is un titutional. The action commenced maiuly for the purpose of testing that question. Mr. Charles F. Rich, member of Assewbly from the Fifth District of Hudson Co., N. J., who has been indictod by the Mercer County Grand Jury, for allesed bribery and ption in obtaining th s ge of Lills at the recent Session, has published & card, asking for a suspension of public opinion in the case until'such time as he can obtain & heariv g, and is confident that he will be able to establish ire innocence in the matter, }'e Fenian war turned oat to have been a fizzle. The invasion of Canada has been abandoned, and thousands of deluded Irisimen are et Buffalo, Malones 8t. Albans and clsewhere, awaiting transportation fo their homes in the Uited §° A urfzr party, said to number 1,50%, ap- ar to have reached Boston already; also others at Al- 1 v aud elsowhere, The trial of the Feniaus at Malone will probably go forward to-day. It seems cer that the present system of ¢ sounding” car-wheels, b king them with a hammier, is of no ac- count whatever in the determination of their strength or dom from flaws, ‘The wecident on the Pennsylvania 1 , Friday evening, took plac ucmwalhrcc fter the broken wheel had been “ sounded” at sioner Bet!s ay had before Lim the Atlantic Tnsurax ‘ompauy against Henry J Morris. is that Morris, who was captatn ¢ the brig D. Albertz, burratrously wrecked that vessel on Long Islaud. The matter was put over until to-morrow, Dix has addressed a letter to Mr. Louis Bulewski ing his cordial sympathy with the friends of re- publican principles in Europe, and congratulating them upon the auspicious tokens which are to be discerned in the present aspect of affairs Two more cases of cholera in this ¢ have occurred i rday morning, one in Hester-st. and one in hest, ‘Lhe first proved fatal; the second, gorous treatment, will probably case of t we owing to prompt aud v not b @ 80, Superintendent Keanedy of the Mr(rn;]mlix.m Police has issued au o to his force instructing them to arrest el person m they find to have dangerous weapons in their possession, that practice being @ felouy in the eye of the law. Mr. Theodore E. Torlinson sontc Hall in Thirteenth-st., measures to organiza o political part to call the ““ United States Democrac or was again arrested on Saturday for g in the Bloomer costume, She was locked up, r several hours was liberated on $300 sureties to peace for one year. of the United States sgainst Eber B. Ward to 'd to be due on an importation of the United States Coust at Detroit, nd others met at the Ma- turday evening, and to hich they propose e Isabella la Cattolica, from Havane, with Governor-General Dulco and suite on board, arrived at this port on Sunday. Tho distinguished party are en route to Europe. At Philadelphia, on Mills, and Jawes Mona destroyed at a loss of 200,000, Covert, the murderer of the Roosa family in Ohio, Las been tried the second time, and couvicted of wurder i the turday morning, Deane’s Woolen j c Co.'s print-works were Gold was very firm all Saturday, opening at 1393, osing at 1393 TLe shipment of specie was Le. total slipment for the week from this or, incloding the Boston shipment on Wed 4. “The Propontis, from Philadelphia, took 82 bonds were dull, with small transactiona at casy, and large balances aro offered The sticet rale contiuues at 6 per cent on small lots, but no awount could boe loancd at that rate. Freights are dull. The rates for prime paper Tange at 5@64 percent. Loieiga exchange closed dull for the steamer. CONGRESS. Juxr 9.—The Senate wes not 1 session, In the House a letter from the Secretary of the Treasury wae presented, containicg a statoment of the mileage paid enators aud Re ntatives in the last Congress. No 5 was in order except debate 1 Committos of the w0, G | fii rates. at 5 per cent. ask attention to the statement transmitted by cretary of the Treasury to the House on Satur- day concerning the salary aud mileage paid members of the last Congress. Here are the official figures of s made by certain members on the ud they prove so conclusively alous absurdity of the whole system that we 3 be found a member of Congress to stand up and defend this swindle. beea too shrewd for that, but they going by dodging the yeas and nsibilities that no mem- ¢ face of Lis constituents, «d and re- nays, aud cov ber would & 1 Are we pever to have t formed? the found Lit on the seventh, a complete | and careful statement in respect to the Crops of1366; | Law Intelligence, including a case of much interest i ary Item to insurers; two letters from Boston concerning the Social Science Couvention in that city, with copions detalls in respect to the Reformatories of Europe and of New-York; and other items of news. | It is reported from Washington that a number of well-known gentlemen stand ready to give bail for Jefferson Davis in any required amount, but that the Government are disposed to release him, if at all, upon his parole ANOTHER EXCISE SUNDAY. Another Sunday of comparative rest and order has added evidence to the value and efficacy of the Excise Law. Wao arc aware that one brewer of evil beer, more daring than his {cllows, succeeded in dis- turbivg the temperance of one section of the city, and keeping ia town a por- tion of the riotous apirits who every Sunday render oncomfortable all those neighboring places which fail to protect themselves by wholesome excise laws. The task was given to this caterprizsing publican to prove, by virtue of a drunken verdict, and under cover of an injunction restraiving the Lxcise Commissioners, that beer is not intoxicating. If beer hasno influ- ence which can Dbe felt by common drivkers and accustomed sots, then more oxciting spirits must have been at work among the brewer's shades yesterday. When beer is not intoxicating. there is but a step from that to brandy, and perhaps that step is what Mr. Swiveller would call a stag The shout and hallabaloo of an ergie mig heard received e been Susday an unholy re-dedication to the money-making spirit of the ruw-seller, who, rich and over-rich on six days’ traftic of impure liquor, and grown fat with a bratal health and bloated prosperity on the spoils of pretty waiter-girls, sechs to b the seventh day of its sanctity, and the people of the bard-carned benefit of the law. The power by which the peace of Sunday has been Dbroken, dates from a small-beer decision recognizing a disputed license under the old disgraceful law, priv- ileging the brewer in question to sell beer to July of this year. This triumph, too casily won, was adver- tised by the lucky money-maker in the German pa- pers. Consequently, there was a rush of Germaus to the brewery on Sunday. The Germans were no bet- ter off for drinking, but the brewer made riches. We trust that the mext move mado by the oppo- nents of intemperance and disorder, will be to apply chemical as well as logal tests to the adulterated and unwholesome liquors sold in the city. If there is any Dbeer sold in the city which is a pure aud not deleterious to health, we should like to kuow it. 'We should further like to know how muchof the spirituous liquors commonly sold in the city is fit to be taken even as a medicine. We observe with satisfaction that the Excise Com- missioners have received $785,000 for licenses, having disposed of 6,300 applications. Payment for licenses will be disallowed after the 16th, when the law will bo enforced with greater strictness than ever. The total receipts from licenses in the Metropolitan District will amount to no less than §1,200,000, while the expense of the Commission is mot more than $10,000. A law which decreases the general debtat this rate, and which keeps and takes from’ the pocket of the rum-seller enough to save the drinker from the poor- house and relieve the citizens from the weightjof taxes, cannot be unpopular with thoso whose opinion i3 of weight. Let us support it by, a public opinion strong enough to give new courage to those charged with its enforcement, and irresistible enough to overawe the defiant lawlessness that mocks it sobriety and good order. ——— THE PARIS CONFERENC We have at length from Vienna the official an- nouncement that the Austrian Government has de- clared its readiness to take part in the proposed Con- ference, and that thus the last doubt as to its assem- bling has been removed, The Paris Moni- teur further informs us that its sessions will bo opened as soon as possible. Some papers circulate the report that the Conference is to enterupon a discussion of the questions concerning,Germany and Italy, and that it may be deemed best to enlarge this assembly into a general European Congress, by in- viting to it the representatives of all the other Powers. This, however, is not probable, because the addition of any new European complication to the knotty sub- jects which must engage the approaching Conference would be one of the greatest obstacles to its final suc- cess. We know little o than before of the dis- positions of the armed Powers and, consequently, of the prospects of the success of the Conference. The Moniteur has recently published an arti- clo denying any intention on the part of the Government of France to extend its froutiers by special treatics with Italy and Prussia, and the article bas had a considerable influence upon the Paris money market. But its cffect was at port from the French Minister of War to the Emperor, proposing modifications in the ninety-eight fortified towns, The opinion is almost general that the Conference will soon see the izing the conflicting views onee tralized by a impossibility of harmo of the different Powe —— CAPITAL ANXD LABOR, To the Editor of The N. V. Tribune. Stz: What would be the value of all productions if one man owned all the Capita), and all others were jbis slaves, subsisting upon the mere necessarios of life? On the contrary, does not the most general distribution incresse valuest Is not vast wealth, iu the hands of a few individuals, s detriment tos people asa wholet Isit desirable to a people iz the aggregate to cheapen the price of labor ¢ Axon SRR, Answer.~Labor is force applied to production; Capital is the reserved, unconsumed fruits of such labor. Itis wrong to make or hold amy person a slave, because a slave is deterred from practicing either industry or frugality by being denied the right to save of his earmngs for the future benefit of himself and his children, It is not necessarily the most gen- eral but the most just distribution of property that is desirable and beneficent. Ifit could be provided by law that all the property in the world should be equally divided every week, month, year, or decade, the result would be universal destitution and mis because of the inevitable discouragement to produc- tion and to saving. All that the law can beneficently do, is to secure to every one bis full earnings, and thus incite to industry, economy, and thrift. Wealth, much or little, in the hands of many or fow individuals, is a blessing or a curse according as it is well or ill used. Such men as Stephen Girard, John Jacob Astor, Peter Cooper, and Ezra Cornell, do great good with vast wealth; while many who are not worth $5 on earth do great harm with the little they have, by getting drunk and abusing their families and others. It is not the amount but the use of a man's wealth that renders it a eurse or a blessing. We know no way in which labor can be cheap- ened but by Freducing the proportion of demand to supply. 1f many want, while few are wanted, to work for wages, Labor must be a drug in the market; while every one who, through industry and economy, censes to be a competitor for wages and becomes in- stead an employer of labor, benefits thereby the whole class of workers for hire. Let us all, then, try toearn and save 50 that, by becoming a capitalist, in how- ever Lumble a sphere, each may cease to depress Labor by competing for wages, and become its benefactor by increasing the demand for its servicos.—( Ed. P WORDS ARE DOLLARS, Massachusetts has just lost a sum estimated at two million of dollars by the omission of a few words ina recent statute. At the last session of the Legi<lature a statute wag [passed, ‘after a long debate, which largely increased the penalties for violations of the prohibitory liquor law. It contained a clause which repealed all previous statutes on the subject; but it neglected to provide that this enactment should not affect cases already before the courts for violations of the then existing law, There was a very large number of convictions under the old law awaiting the decision of the Su- preme Court, on a technical point. There was not much doubt that these cases would hate been decided in favor of the prosecntion,'and that thereby a revenue of fines, amounting in all to perhaps $2,000,000, would have Dbeen transferred from the foul vaults of the rumseller to the cleanly coffers of the Commonwealth. But, in- asmuch as the convictions were bad under the old law, which the new Dill repealed, and as to bave fined them under the recent act would have been to inflict an ez post facto penalty, and, therefore, would have been plainly unconstitutional, the criminals have escaped all punishment under the usual rules of legal interpretation. Nor is this the only loss. These convictions were obtained only after arduous cfforts on the part of the State Constabulary, who, appointed by the Common- wealth, and uninfluenced by local iuterests, have zealously endeavored to enforce the Prohibitory law, which the municipal police never even at- tempted to do. Their zeal and work has gone for nothing. Worse still, largé numbers of liquor- dealers were recently induced to close their dens on condition that the convictions obtained against them should not but held in sus- pense over them, be enforced, NI, MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1866 se men—mainly of the low- | sible for ¢ est class of dealers—emboldened by the recent de- cision, have renewed their traffic with greater assur- ance than ever, and with the usual results. The Coustable of the Commonwealth, bowever, is not daunted by the recent decision, but announces his determination, *if the Government lose one case, to prosecute two in addition, and thus recover all lost.” This is the true spirit in which to meet a temporary triumph of the worst enemies of order aud public safety. . COLORED SCHOOLS. There is & great fecundity of paragraphs anent per- sons of color, about this time, in the newspapers. Philosophers of tho impetuons epecies, accustomed to settle the most vexations problems with lightning ex- pedition, by their pet formula of * D—the Niggers!" will be exasperated to hear that the objects of their ohjurgation, with a prudence worthy of a whiter skin, are taking the most rational and at the same time the most simple precautions against a fiery eternity, by experiencing religion in large numbers in Virginia. It is alittle remarkablo that those who deny the dignity, because they shrink from conceding to the Black the vulgarest privileges of humanity, do not see that it is o great waste of good swearing to damn a being who has no sonl to be damned. On the other hand, we can confidently affirm that we bave never heard of a re- ligious revival among the hogs or the horses, nor are there any missionaries sent to convert the ehimpan- zees. New-Haven is an exceedingly leamed place, and has a Board of Education, every member of which, we dare say, will be rejoiced to learn that the Black beings down in Virg periencing religion; and yet this same Board cannot make vp its mind to permit White and Colored chil- dren to attend the same school. They have the same soul, the same brains, the same necessity of educa- tion, but they must not be guided by the same peda- gogue, nor must they study under the same ro0f— though we suppose that even New-Haven theology will not deny that after the same death they will go to thoe same heaven, or the same ** other place.” The wicked and cruel sophistry which defends separate schools never found a footing in Massachusetts, and some other States, at all, although * colored schools” were here and there established by the towns. So long as it lingers in Connecticut, and betrays Boards of Education into making an irr ous, invidious, and discouraging distinetion, we must not be sur- prised to find the late Slave States carefully purs- ing the relics of barbarism, and pleading the cxample of a Northern Htate as an ex- tenuation of their heathenism. Nor are matters much better elsewhere. In Williamsburgh, lately, the White children of the Gothic M. E. Church refused to walk in procession behind the children of a Colored school—which was certainly Gothic indeed. What kind of practical Christianity can you hope for in your White children, when you fill their young hearts with pride, self-sufficiency, and arrogance, and then expect to save their souls by making them com- mit agreat number of Bible verses to memory ! 1If it was a sacrifice for them to walk behind, are not such sacrifices wholesome ! Isn't humility worth in- culeating ! Isw't self-denial a virtue? Pray, for what do they attend Sunday School, if it be not to learn these elementary principles of religion ? And yet, when a good nce comes for a practical ex- emplification of the very simplest of morals, the young sinmers, full of the oldest kin of Adam, rebel, turn up their juvenile noses at the poor and the persceuted, and, with a curious aping of adult dignity, loftity withdraw, It would be droll, if it they seem to have in Tennessee than for in that Stat in either New-Haven or Ne they have legalized slave marriages, and made all per- sons, of whatever color, equal before the law, We wish the fastidious educators of New-Haven would, in cneration, try to catch up with the lat We solemuly assure them jor advantages, they are the race of slaveholders of Tennessee. that, Considering their su) disgracefully in the rear. We thought that there had e the e improvement in thoss regions and Prudence Crandall; but -Haven Board is about el ge, aud can only result in social been 20 days of Attorney Juds the action of the Ne centuries behind the trouble if per Prove 's3 of two peas, but two peas are wildly dissimilar when contrasted with the photographicidentity of two Copperhead speeches Though one star may differ from another star in glory, yeot both are glorious, and #0, though one disloyal speech may differ from another in ignominy, yet both are ignominions. The truth is, a so-called ** D ocrat,” sore as to his head and sour as to his heart, with & great appetite for political profits, aud a small aptitude for the present emergencies of political BOTY can do nothing else as well as he can find fault with the doings of others. They all play, these out-at-the-elbows political performers, upon a single snarling string.. While they cannot betoo sharp upon New-Engl® i, they lavish all their elaborate suavity of phrases upon South Carolina. They keep their censure for home consumption, and lash their friends and neighbors as if these were the conspirators and the Rebels. Men of threadbare phrases and of moldy platitudes, like Col. L. P. Milligan of Indiana, really believe in their iumost hearts, if bearts they may be considered to Lave, that the Secessionists are the gou- unine martyrs. Milligan, who came very near being bung by & military tribunal for treason to Lis own State, is just out of the Ohio Penitentiary on Dail. His fellow-creatures in Blufiton gave him a reception, with a plenty of brass-band and blank-cartridge cn- thusiasm—one of those ovations which always, upon being reduced to their final elements, yield ouly bad whisky with a trace of tobacco. In his oration of grateful acknowledgment, Milligan militated, vot with- out glory, against the Puritans—which, considering that they have all been dead for about two centuries and a half, Milligan put himself into small jeopardy by doing. This is a favorite ce. With nothing clse to say, which it would be prudent to say, it is al- ways in order in a Copperhead Convention to cast foul scorn upon Plymouth Rock. Milligan followed tho rule. Pocts have praised the Puritang, and Listorians bave enlogized them, and painters have depicted their advent; millions of honest folk hold their memory in grateful admiration; but Mill of Indiana, Colonel of “The Sons of Liberty,” despises them—John Alden, and Elder Browster, and Miles Standish—he holds them all in an equal abhorrence, With a ferocity quite remarkable in a Western man, he abuses them for killing the Indiavs. With a theological iusight not to have been looked for ina Colonel, he affirms that their hearts were desperately wicked. Then Milligan, greatly to the delight of Bluffton, assanlted Boston for boasting of “a higher civilization than common Christians can aspire to.” In that city, as he affirmed, *successful crime is made the standard of respectability.” “There,” be said, * people are educated to villainy —there villainy is most respected.” From that Sodom * annual supplies of schoolmasters, preachers, lawyers, and bankers are sent to plunder the people.” And ro with a frightfully- brutal allusion to the murder of Mr. Lincoln, Milligan passed to the consideration of other topics, There are more Milligans than one in the country, wo regret to say. They are the spawn of popular ignorance, and it is upon the popular ignorance that they feed. It is true that there are men here in Ne York who talk the same lingo, aud mouth the same misrepresentations, and travesty history iu the spirit of attos at-law grappling with a desperate ease, and who know that they are retailing falsehoods and mislea » popular mind, These mey are respoi i wischief: thev are respousible for h ! at the Puritans, and it bas been kept up, with spirit if sins of such fellows as Milligan, who, perbaps, belicves that he is really speaking the truth, Mr. Calhoun, we regret to aver, was the grand aucestor of this brood of blackguards, He sot the fashion of sneering not with vigor, ever since. It wasa fine thing fora Patriarch, perspiring from bis exertions at the whip- ping-post, to aver that the Puritans were also slave- whippers, though the reason why he should like them the less for that was ot so apparent. To prove that the Puritans hanged the Quakers was held to be the end of controversy by those who were always ready and eager to hang Abolitionists. To recount the story of Salem witcheraft was esteemed a perfect defense of property in may, and New-Englanders were held to be in equity estopped from protesting against modern cruelties, because their great-great-gradfathers were Digoted, superstitious, and intolerant. Yet, no doubt, in Mr. Calhoun’s opinion, the slaveholding of Massa- chusetts was the brightest feature in er early history. Ho had no particular respect for Quakers, He Lad no particular sympathy for witches. Yet to be able to say that the New-England of 1620 was behind the New-England of 1820 in all that appertains to civil justico was thought by Mr. Calhoun to be a rare privilege and a rejoinder to which there could be no response! Yet it was after this fashion that Mz, Cal- houn, himself a man of New-England education, be- sotted the intellects and betrayed the julgment of thousands of Lis disciples, man-owners, and the jack- als of man-owners, until it became the established usage to assume in Congress, in convocations, and even, we are ashamed to say, in religious conventions, that all the crimos of the South, in 1360, were at least palliated by the crizies of Plymouth and Massachu- setts Bay in 1630, What Bluffton may think of Boston may be of very little consequence; but when many of theseloose- tongned Milligans ore striving to create sectional jealousies, there being already at the West some ten- dency in that direotion, it is well to show Low utterly empty and untrue is the Milligan style of declama- tion. It only proves what everybody might bave known - before, that there are bad men even in the loyal States, that a few decided Union reverses might bare exposed us toall the perils of treason and insurrection at our own doors. It is the hope and desire of Milligan, as expressed in his speech, that what he calls **The Democratic Party " may “*again came into power.” He tells bis Bluffion neighbors that the Government is robbing them to enrich New-En- gland. He tells them that political power *is in the bands of a privileged oligarchy.” He is indignant that Tudiaua should be taxed to pay the interest on nation- al securities held by bloated Bostonians and New- Yorkers. That is, be appeals to pockets and passions and prejudices—he is serving the ends of disaffection, aud when *the Democratic party" getsonce more into power he expects to reap the full harvest of con- fiscation aud repud! The World inveighs against the inequality of repre- sentation in Connecticut, where some towns with hardly 200 voters have two representatives, while Bridgeport, with 2,500 voters, has but one. It says: ‘his inequality of representation grows out of the recog- nition of the Hght of avery town to at lenst ono_ representative —a provision made vears ago in the Constitation, when there was 1o thought of carvis tiog many small towns out of one large one, Ttist Gerrymandering' that gives the and it has Tadicals their preponderance in the Leglslature; Jost enabied them to clect & Radieal United Statcs Senator in opposition to the wishes of the wealth and business population of the largest towns, which cannot be said to be represented by such u Sexator as 0. 8. Ferry.” —As a clear majority, not merely of the towns and representatives, but of the legal voters of the State, triumpbed in Gen, Ferry's election, what more would you have? Isn't it odd to hear complaints that “wealth” is not adequately represeated from that quarter? The Daily Sun, published at Columbus, Ga., says: As Gens. Stoedman and Fullerton journey South in mission, the school-masters an tho “progress of their 3 schoolmarms fiy Northwerd. ~The stampedo ba {nitiated in Georgis by the Lasty fight of th flock of educstiona! missionarics w L a while under the putronage and prot o Miliedgeville, and it is probabl w Juls sun will ou & single wild goose or Yankee pedagogue for Froed: (ke Potomac to the Rio —We presumo this is intended as complimontary to the President’s Commissione Musient. ENGLISH OPERA—FRENCI T The very successful opera of * The Docter of Alcan- tara” will be repeated this evening, after which it will have to be temporarliy withdrawn, to make room for the production very popular and charming opers, * The Rose of 3 This opera will be produced on Wednesday evening next, with a strong cast, iutroducing among otlier artists, Mr 8, C. Campbell, who s vot yet appeared ranks of this company. *The Tinee of Castile” was very popalar abroad, azd we have no doubt that it will prove very attn Asthe last appearauce, for present, of the Doct Alcantara, will take place this evening, we adrise have not previously heard it, to avail themselves of the oppor- tunitr offered, The plot is rick iu Lumor, end the c is charming {n its gracefal melodious flow, Tt will be given at the A 5 of Music, Brooklys, tuemorrow eve nieg, for the Tast ( CONCERTS FOR THE BENEPIT OF MR, RULLMAN. We happy to say, that concerts given at Irving Hall on Saturday afternoon d evening, were very brilliantly attevded. The voluutecrs on this oceaslon com- prised nearly all the priociy s of the opesatie companies | k, Grau, and Grover, an array of vocal talent superior to any ever brought o this country. ‘Lhere were W chorus, and the co rs, Mare and Sartl. There were fower disappol psal at volusteer concerts, the place of Duing ably supplied by Signor Beilini. 'All tho artists were very cordially roceived by tho pu and the encores were oumerous ond unanimous. Miss Ke! loga's appearance was the signal for the most enthusiast! ception we have seen accorded to any artist for many e and it was gratif g of o native artist omid so wuck foreign talent, which it is the fashion ever to ex. Wallace, was th and cordially given. Mr. Mas contined plaudits artists oxerted then aud we Lave r lenco Was wOro Kol complete. We undorstand t of view was bighly satisfactor publie with the occasion, and the ciplent of the boved! PUDLIC The proprietors of Terrace Garden, Fifty-cight and Fifty-vioth ste., on Third-ave, havo eogaged the serrices of Mr, Theo, Thomas and bis orck an instrumontal concert eaery evening, co o'clock, The selections will comprise all the popular musie suited to concerts of #his ola vog! the celobrated gardons in Germany. Thore willbe a corstant succession of noveliles, and we need hardly say, that with suck an orchostra as Mr, Thomas has under his direction, the per- formance will be admirable in every respect. Tbe fizst cone cert will take place to-night, The Saturday afterncon con. certs at the same place will consist of the ve: a8t orchies. tral music known, and will be, literally, a PLila gramume, e ————— The Thenters, Mr. John Brougham, at the Winter Gard wise offors Hibernian attraction, Mo will play Felic O'Culla- ghan tonight, in * Iils Last Legs"~a perfo at we bave often praised. His own comedy of ** e Web', will also be presented, and will be tlie chief feature of tharo presentation, * Pocahiontas” is in preparation, aud will not long be deferred., It is not easy to keep track of the Kaleidesc ontertainment which is nightly offered at Niblo's Gard; Dill is changed eack evening. To-night ** The Magic Trampet” and **The Vivandiere” will be produced, and to-mdtrow night Kim-Ka” and “Robert Macaire.” Signorita Pepita will dance on each occasion, and is one of the lightest specimens of the “light fantastic toe"” we ever chanced to bekold. Little Young America, also, the brave aud agile performer on the trapoze— an infernal muchine, which seems to Lave been invented for tho purposs of shatteriug the nervous 7stoms of the period— e will be a matl- will partlcipate in each performance, and neo on Saturd M jght at the Oly Mr. Barnuwm bas relented, and a grief-loving public will be represented every may behold the sorrows and the apotheosis of Little one week more, both afternoon and evening, in * Vleh.‘;.: Cabin,"” at the Masenm. Mre. Howard's Topsy should be sesn by every appraciative stadent of art. There will be a performance at the French Theatep to-morrow evening, consisting of ** Le Violoneus,” ' La Venve aux Camelia,” and *‘ Los Femme qui Pleurant.” Mozsfeny and Madamo Fleury will moke their first appearance on thag occasion, An ontirely new programme of Etbiopian miustrel. 8y is offered to-night by Christy's Minstreid. Tt comprises the : “ The Fenlan Raidors—Dor't Shoot;” * Anng " “ Evory Oue for Himelf;" Late to Mend.” “The Female Detective,” in which Miss Fanny Herring will personate six characters, and “Jack Robinsom and His Monkey,” are announced for at the Old Bowery. Miss Herring will take a beuefit next Friday evening. Miss Helen Western's engagement at the Broadway Theater igstill progressing, *“Oliver Twist” is announced. The play is well kuown to be a strong oue, and Miss Western will doubtless find in it many opportunities for the display of her robust stylo of acting. Thers wili be a matinée on Satar day. s The Worrell Sisters and yonng Nicolo appear night. ly, and at 8 Wednesday matinée, at Wood's Theater. A new extr anza is announced, of a mytlological character, called **The TLree Sisters.” Edwin Booth's success at the Walnut-st. Theates in Philadelphia was not excelled by his New-York triumphe He bas played forty nights to the largest and most brillia audiences, and his popularity is increasing. We note this fact as evidence of the advanceinent of tie American stage, foe Edwin Booth appeals only to tho higher classes of theater, goers, and it is by the fatellectoal aud refined that he is sus. tained., This engagement is literally unprecedented in sucoess by any ever played in Philadelphia, even if we go back to the days of Edmund Kean, Cooke and the elder Booth, et THE PENNSYLVANIA BOYS STAXD BY CONGRESS, A conveution of soldiers, numbering about 500 dele- gatos, representing the 250,000 surrivors of the Peousyl. vania regiments, wos held in the Academy of Music in Pittsburgh, on last Tuesday. Gen. Joshua T. Owen of Philudelphis, a War Demoerat, presided, and upon taking the chair, among other good things, said: Fellow-soldiers, who, by concert of action in the fleld, saved the Government and proserved the proud hizser under which you fought, what do you propose to do? Not to revolutioniss parties or introduce any new doctrines, but imply to deter- 1nine that the institations of tho country shall 80 perma- ently established, and the froits of the war so thoroughly gathered, and the principles involved by contest of arms be in- corporated into our statues that peace il be as lasting as our victory is complete. The poliis somewhat excited a8 to what we may do; but they need bave no fear if they are true to principles and to the traditions of our Government; but if they are false, they will fiud we are combined against Y41 counseled the soldiers to be fuithfal to the prici- plos they had established amid great sufferings, and to the men who had sustained them and the Government, while they wero in the ficld, to stand united and firm now, s they stood under the old 13z 0a the hills of Gettysborg in July, 1863, Col. Keatly of Blair County made a #peech on the “ Boys in Blue"; *a name, the memory of which will make trai- tors shudder in all time to come.” The Colonel thought, s we had an American Tribune, we should also have a pretorian guard, that would sce to it that **if treason is to bo made odious, it shall not be by rewardivg traitors.” Gon. Brisbin, of the Regular Ariy, said: He was glad that the Pennsy!vanis soldiers had taken the steps to organize to protect the liberties of the country, and that they will oppose ail who arc not for the conutrs, Tie men who carried the £ag are the proper protectors of the coantry, and when the] theur bailots unitedly the jresalé will be a foregone conclusion, The speeches duriug theday were all of the same charee- ter, and sustained the eforis of Congress to protect loyal men without distinetion of race or color. A permanent organization was effected, entiiled the ¢ National Uniouof the Boys in Blue.” In the evening session, Gen. Fisherof Lancaster, Clair- man of the Committse on Rosolutions, which consisted of Delegates from each Senatorial District in the State, re- ported a declaration of principles that was unanimously adopted.; Among the articles were the following: Third: That it is eontrary to public policy and subversive of the great pmmlple- won by our patriotic blood to periit any men to boid office of honor or profit under the General Gov- erument who, by word or Ceed, embarrassed the Union armies, or cast odium 01 the cause for ch they fought. Fowrth. That the soldiers of Per nsylvania should organize in their respective coanties, to take care thot the triunph of the army be rot fritless, and the rosults of our first endeavors remain ungathered by coneeasions of any material points in fssue in our strugele to the defected party, or by yiel m&o‘d vantages fairly won; and we propose tie following platform @5 a basis of organization.) Fifth: That such treatment sl be accorded to the de- sty requires; but fonted foe as the most chivalrio ut ylolding a principle compivmisicg the rights, or, all, deserting an slly. k: Th h i fmmmm shiall be demanded neorporfted in tie National Constitution a8 are gecessary to prevent th to sacare justice and freedom to tions and colors, and guard the National faith from violation. Seventh: That the Rebels ought not to be precipitated inte pow e befura such guarantees Lave been obtained, and that ac- Lordizgly Cougress, to which righ:fully pertain all questions of recoustruotion, i to be cordially sustained in their demand for such gaarant Fourteenth: That the legisiation whereby Congress at- rotect toe allies, the loyal wen of the tempted to defend und South, against the deadly batied of the common enewics, to Take good for o race frecdom proffered us the price of aid, and wrrence of the rebellion; so nil men of all classes, condi- awarded a3 the dne of loyauy, deseives our Buquall o proval. : yeohi s Col. T. M. Bayne offerel the followingas the minori- ty report of the committee: Resolved, That th n Corgress deserves ogr gratitude,” that radieal eviis vequire radical remedies, and that the Nation sbould tuke po step backward in tts march to ha grand destiny that surcly awats unfalteriug, persistent s to the caase of equa! froedom, ion with a speech in which be said: * Soldiers were indebted to the loyal mem- bors of Copgress during the war for support, and it would not do mow to go back on those membors for Andy Johnson or auy other man.” After a epirited sion the resolution was adopted imous vole and amid great applause. was oppointed with members instructad to urgs the soldiers in striet to orgavize for the Fall cam- ort only those men who remained true, Confederate Colouics Cupiured by the Liberals Mecting of Fremeh Odicers—They Refuse to o Ueorcign Legi Saturday, June 9, 1864, rrivals, with dates to advanced and captured orals were led by 8 Nows were held for $10,000 rans ¢ Maximilien was without The French have promised as- have been Leld already 18 days, r to-day received news’ from the appears that Gen, Bazaine s iu that city and izformed ded to withdraw the French exico; but at same time he would grant officer who would like to take service under . gilon to doso. He stal uext ragk. It is'said the o . The Lib: hority to g , but the pr n Mir o, from which it town in ¢ State of Oaxaca. . Mr. A, Maresch young brother of the Secretary of the Mexican Le at Washington, vas arrested and sent ou f City of Mexico to Queretaro, with & file of o was handeuffed. His only oficuse consisted of ng 4 letter from his brother. YELLOW FEVER AT VERA CRUZ—THS CONPEDERATE COLONISTS. NEW-ORLE Frilay, Jane 8, 1866, g is_quaroni ‘Thore are or at Vera Cruz. » says the sottled aad industrions Com foderate eolonists ure doing well. The doods are everywhero receding. Axican sh cases of v A Corl Lows of Life. A1paxy, June 10, 1368, out O o'clock last eveninga yacht containing three s mez, while ou the way from Cozzens's to Peel , lided with the stoamer Dean Richmond, abaft the wheo!, aud was capsized. 'The steamer was stopped, fot, Johu Best, went to their assistaccs and succeed seuing two of them, one of whom was a son John C. Frewont. Lird, named Marviz, from Pean- sylvania, was drowne, eSS ——— lestown, Mass. BosToy, June 10, 1368, o Birs broke out shortly before 13 ) the building on Maiu: in Charles- town, used as i furniturs manufactory, and there was & lack of water, from repairs being made in the pipes, all t butldings in the square, oo what is callod the ** Old ALl Poad property,” were burned, rendering Liouseless 61 fami Ties, embracing some 500 persons, priacipally Irish, Sev- eral firemen were injured, but none wr{oxl-flr- The loss is timated at $30,000, which is supposec to be insured; but 1ot of the poor occupants of the tencments lose all theie Coilisiol Destructive Fire at Ch Wire at Pittsbu PITIsse this morning destrc \'.-; 0 this 5 s 814,000, 1o 1 me Cowpany of New York, and Ploegis Cowpany the 1 of Baidund

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