The New-York Tribune Newspaper, June 15, 1866, Page 7

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AT TN [sreveRmme GEORGE €. DUNBAR, NO. 46 PINE-ST, NEW-YORK, BUYS AND SELLS +uts MORTGAGE BONDS AND RAILWAY SECURITIES o EVERY DESCRIPTION, NOT SOLD AT THE STOCK EX CHANGES. TELEGRAPH AND LXPRESSERS' STOCKS. ALL TELEGRAPH AND EXPRESS STOCKS ON HAND READY FOR 1. EDIATE DELIVERY. ~GrvicR GREAT W TFTERN ORBLIDATED 0 No. 4 1 - x. Ju GENERAL ME A in this Company wil: A Snd promph s oxPANY, s requested. By or e EOARD OF 1 UST! e s Ornick, mLo, May 29. 1665 S7ath oF luLisoms, 1 HE INTEREST on the PUBLIC DEBT of the | v. 1066, if New atoring om the first MONDA N NATIONAL BANK o sixteenth dav. f Siate of 1itinofe. paid ot the {ors, oo the second ‘)!'I'I("T OF MAYNARD & TIEMANN, MI ENGINEERS AND CONSULTING CHEMISTS No. 240 Pearl- <, New York, snd Central City, Colorado. New-York. June 8. 1066, Hacing just returned from Califorsia. T wish to not ¥ wy (ends s pubiic thst | wili reopon tie Laboratary in s foe J. BT JA 14 1 b i DITS on Mes YRAVEL GAN & Co, LONDON (Suceestors to GEO. Co.), wvailsble m the princioal of EUR( issued by DABNEY MORGAN & Co., No. Danking Honses and Dankers. VERMILYE & CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS STOCKS GOVERNMI AND COMPOUND INTEREST NOTE CLOSING PRICE NEWYORK, June 14, T 1566, Juse, C.1. 1 1 1.} ) 1 I I H JAY COOKE & (0. CORNER WALL AND NASSAU-STS.. NEW-YORK. the wost liberal curreut prices, and Kowp oa hsod ey GOVERNMENT BONDS OF ALL ISSUES, SEVENTHIRTIE CERTIFICATES OF DNESS Ax . COMPOUND INTEREST NOTES, cute orders for purciiase and saie of STUCRS. BONDS, and JAY COOKE & Co. RY, BROAD-STREET, DEALERS IN EXPRESS AND TELEGRAPI STOC eon KS. All the various issues bm:g!d ,'Ld r!fl’_ :]ou.\ MUNEOE & Co. AMERICAN BANKERS, No. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS, axn . No. S WA W.YORK, Cireatar Lettcza of Credit for Traveless in all parts of Europe, Also Com nercial Crediu JU[IN MUNROE & C AMERICAN BAX HAVE REMOVED FIi No. 3 RUE DE LA PAD . end o —FSK HATOn No. 5 NASSAU.ST BUY and SELL AT MARKET RATES ALL DESC GOVERNMENT SECURITIES ACCOUNTS of BANKS. BANKERS exd otiers RECEIVED on favorable terms. & COLLECTIONS MADE THROUGHOUT THE TATES AND CANADAS. ES OF DEPOSIT ISSUED. mk'z's'i.\&{“‘mflflh fl;nm g@fi T Broadway,NY. J“’@ BUY AND SFLL: AMERICAN EXPRESS & K ADAMS FXPRESS RIPTIONS FALGO & CO.'S UNION EXPRESS STOCK . ¥ HOLDELS by 8.1 s STATE OF NGw-YORK FANK DEPANTMENT _ALnANY, April 25, L6, IVEN, pursuant to Chap- 1 'Leus, that the Cireolating otes insued 1 3 YORK. & lionking Associstion ocated in the City of New.Y e 4 by the Su- pintendept of the B NA- [ONAL MECHAN Albsay a The. atin " nted n elx years from the date hezeot eWotes mot be_presented for redea and p Within the time thus spocifed wid cease 1o be & charge upon ue fusd o the hands of the S o when A : TATE OF NEW-) ORK, L. AT A JOTICE IS 1 IBY GIVEN, ter 236 wotes tesued to ¢ suant to Chap- t ficulsting egeimption snd payment w. 0 9pon the fund in the oy L 10N BANK AT DOVER. Doven, N J., March 26, 1866 = This Bask Baving sorrendered ite charier sud cessed bosiness, SOTICE is bereby given that the outetandiag cirenlating notes issued ®y the Union Bank st Dover will be redeenied by i Tasbier in the village of Dover, and by the Me: National Dank Bn the City ot New-York; and that such circalatis, must be pre- AR from the dste of this notice, or the fonds tion of sach oatelanding notcs will be ‘This notice is given in accor with the provisions of an act of State of New - Jerscr, en'itle An Act 1o ensb'e the 1" Beuk ot Dovor. f the Gouaty of Momis. to€ioe fts b ite outstanding iabitil ind rede em ity el oulating o' Cae,” avproved Mares 20, 1 Llawie] G. M. HINCHMAN, Presi . VST YT T T TR N . i D Yavings Lanks DRANKLIN SAVINGS BANK, CORNER OF VIGITH-AV INTEREST COMMENCES JULY 1 G 1S SIX PER (L\‘l_‘ ‘A‘l vnr:r OF ,\‘._ QX PER CENT INTEREST PAID. © FUEE from Government Tax On Sums from §1to $5.000. Mo deposited now will draw inter- oot trom Juiy 1 THIKD AVE. RAVINGS BANK. Cover of Tweuvy vixth et end Third ave Sl! PER CLNT, w GOVERNMENT TAX. CITIZENS SAVING | BANK No. ; CORNER OF CANAY.ST. Intercet on & five to five th oy deposicnd now w; [ Tue Nusrs 0ADTAT. Nuw. K. 363 B IDEND of FIVE YER CEN +tax) has thie day beeu declared, payable oaaad after A DIV be closed on the 20th inst., t0 e open on iy order of the Board illll.\“'f HILL, Casbier e 2d July uest o Urrici or Foom A QIII\RTEHLY DIVIDE £X CEN i con wil be i o the shasebolder Foth 1 U0 W of Jiue icusive. By ordse of NITED | | President and | | starding for it to be_ope INTHEUNITED SATATES, ——— AOW IT NMAS BEEN DONE, AND IOW IT OUGHT TO BE DONE—ITS SUCCESSES AND FAILURES, PROSPECTS AND POSSIBILITIES. Ogrice oF THE TRIDUNE, NEW-YORK, Jane 11, 1866, Mr. J. B. Crippe, President Internationel Silver Mining Com- pany, No. 2 Pine-st., New York: My Dear Sir: I gladly comply with your request, for a brief statement of my views touching Pah-Ranagat Valley and Siiver-Mining gencraliy. 1 have not visited the valley, but in Ralt Loke City Tmeta pumber of gentiemen, who had just come from it, and con carred in declaring it one of the richest regions on the contl new. They extibited specimens of very valuable silver ore, which they asserted were fourd in abundant veins. They also gave me the fiuest heads of wheat I ever saw, raised in the valloy by Indwns, who cultivate the ground with erooked sticks. 1f the ore prove rich, and easily exiracted, the loca- tion, —80 nenr DAVieable watere,—und the climute, —permitting out-door work throngh the waole year,—would seem to render it the most favorable regiou for eilver mining yet found in the Uaited States. Of Silver-Mining in general volumes might he written, 1 can only give yon, in brief, my improsions, after visiting all T GuArts Tegions, except Arizoon I Of the total capital invested in quartz mining in the various States and Territories, I thivk fully 80 per cent has been absolutely wasted. Tn all the Guarts repions expensive machinery is scattored about rustivg sud wasting, and costly quartz mills ere standioge idle, L The philosophy of this is very simple. ments, capitalists bive entered vpon quarts mining with in- credible recklessness. M usiness and vot gawhling. They have done it as men piay monte. or bay lottery tickets, and liay e reaped the proper roward of their folly in invest- ments which prove very permanent indecd. 111, Their first priwe mistake is buying property withont stigation, upon ceriifi-ates and reconmendations 1 or irrespousible parties, Anything can he proved —the hishest merits for tho poors:t mines, less scouadro o'ways exhibit the undertake to demon tes and affid i irod mine, fu In wild excite- st as hest letters of re strate b « property #hould do ciher properiy: either go worthy agent from the i thoroughly, belore ome in peréon, or send ¢ i, or San Franeiseo, doller is paid. IV, Tte second grand mistake is too mock laste in erect- ing mackiery. Companie Iy suppose that their for- tunes are made the mous eted, and therefore butld costly works, betore ascertaioing whetier they have any mine ot pot, 1{ their mive prove good, their mill suffrs while 17 it prove wortiless, the is o dead loss. First op 00X tuns of pov-ore, bel ound, and thei you know exactly what you ation 10 assays. Speci mens of ore which ussay $10,000 to the tun, mag be taken from veins, which are not worth 10 cents 1n the aggregate. Ttere i8 80 Way of festing @ vein exeept to take out a few funs pay-oro, corty it to the neavest will, wheiher 10 yards or 320 wiles awey, ond bave it grouud. bullion which 1t ont s result. The certificate of the assager for all prac tical purposes is were speculation. '1' Toe mives being selecied and opened, almost evers- dent. He requires o all the details of min. e bringing the mill upou ve. the g V. Iu purchasing wines pay no at the superiut f rock, of ore thing depeads upo; thorough koowleq ing aud crushing, combined with perfeet integrity and g busiuess Jodgmeut. Such o man is fnvaluable. W and care. L may usually bo found in some subordi tion in oo of the older mining regi VIL I spite of the incredidle reckiessvess and blunders of our guartz mini t, in spite of the fact that it we new porsuit, with everything toleain, and one which could o be carricd on in ssible regions, where exp were enormons. it s elromdy RFOWR 1o one of th industrial iuterests of the United States. prodoct for last year was about one kaudred Tully nine-tenths of it f:0 tentha of it frouw our o rince o (han a man's zon. Within ton years ufier th 1 believe our anuual product of pr Bundred millions of doil: VILL I have iofio rs ran o ocnan, ect ey, but it affords e 1 know, for the d pood Judg Mon mny 3 “as they would manot 1 & Curry mine of Vire g, has netted its ow Egan cafi tar, 1l and dollars ruuning Gays, turne Of course these are excey failures against these shining ber baving seen a siogle company 1 failed, srd woold not bave fai dacted in the marner 10 which it atte silver mining. Wishing you great success in ¥ derink:ng, & coutident thiat you wiil attaln it if te enterprise is conducted upon common busivess princiyles 1 um, faishfully your friend, ALBEET D). RICHAZDSON. — ENCE. d for itse!f 1a less than nivety ploceer mill of O'syiise, Idsho, and during its first forty-five tnot to have usiness con- UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURT—Jixk l4.=Before Justice SMALLEY. AN ACQUITTA Owen Earley, alias Albert O was placed on trial this morning, eharged with baviog 177 in eounterfoit 0-cent ourrency in Lis powcesion, with an fatant to pass the same. The jury, after being cut but a short time, returned witn & verdict of not guiity, and the prisoer was discharged. s ND JURY. U. 8. Court for the South- @ their sessions ia wpose the Grasd In- U.8 G The Grand Jury of the ern District of New-York are now hold this city. The followicg gentlemen ¢ quest Hon. F. A. Conkling, fo Atterbury, Francis 1°. i White, B. F. reman; Charles H. Delavan, L. P. 1. Charles Abarnathy, J=rem| Charles Fanning, Pe & Crowell, Charles W. Hol . K. Green, Wm_ DeGroot, J. E. Authony Dugrow, W. M. Fravk and I, V, Husted suUP . Chrigtopher Doherty.— con Forsin 1o abide event Motion denied wit et al.—Motion denied; cos #on agt. Chas. P. Wood allow a trial on paym, curity, & Danfort! & otion to diseharye fro to 820,000. Thos, J. Walsu agi granied. EPreial TreM—JosE 14 —Before Justics Porrre. V-JERSEY CENTRAL PANY Wm. C. Clark- spened #0 far as to ent to siand ne se- N. Barney agt. Otio Burstenbinder, » arrest denicd, Bail reduced Peter Mortis, &c.—Motion of con AN INJUNCTION AGAINST THE RAILROAD € Tue People of the State of New.¥ Central Railroad € wpany. This case came np on & demurrer W a complaint in a | suit brought by plaintiffs, restraiving defendants from filling in certain lands and erec(ing buildings on the west #ide of the Jersey shore, bolow J : the treaty of 1553 is The defendants demurred to © treaty there is o om erecting piers and cutrances from our shoros, and onder a charter from the State jon reserved. Attorney. plaimite; ex-julge, Woodra, Atr i d can probibit Now: Jersey that the defendants are actin of New dersey. General Mariindsle Frelinghuy:ev, and mmick, for defendant-, —— SUPERIOR COURT—SPECIAL TERM—JUNE 14, —Before Jus- tice MCOUUNY, Jno. M. Cooly lf" David Jacobus—Wm. Bruce agt. Jas. Taylor.—M Chas. B. Allen agt. Furman ¥, Menager.—The order in ‘this Goes mot confortn 10 the decieion. —(Papers with clerk at Chambers.) S MARINE COURT-Jusr 4. SALE OF ROPE=WAIVLR OF WARRANT BY RACT. The plai udge ALKER. NEW ntiff sold A number ple, aud on ealling for e was defect ver not wee it in for amount and brouglt sult, recovering judgment clnimed and costs. o loswallD. Hatch for plamtiff; Wakeman & Latting for do- sndant - COUVRT CALENDAR-Tn1s Day. SorreMe CoUurT—GENERAL TERM.—The balance 08 witl be ealled T—PanT T.— i, 5470, —Adjourned URT OF COMMON L Preas—Parr L—Nos 5, 1937, 1999, 1203, 1543 2047, 1814, 2124, 2198, Toe Sovrn AMERICAN TRADE—A NEW STEAMER 70 BE PLACED OF THE NICARAGUA LNt —The trade between this port, San Francisco and South America is becomiog so lage, that even the great number of vesscls now em ployed therein are found to be Inadequate to meet the demands made | upon them, and the different steamskip companies are making every exertion for placing new vessels upon the route. A pew steamer of 2,700 tane burden is shortly to be placed upon the route via Nicaragua, whick, it is believed, will excel any vessel now engaged in the South American trade in point of speed and comfort. This vessel Is named the Nicaragus, and is vow at the South Drooklys Tron Works recerving her machivery. ua would have been pluced on the line some time ago, were it not that the mackinery orieinal was condemued, it having been designed by d sapplied with his cclebrated ** cut ofl.” Tho engines ‘ed by @ number of promineut englneers hefore ou board and pronounced to be wialty unfit for accepted by the company; but Qdesigns and powerful descrip- warve, Deiug piaced use, aud vere consequently not vew ones, oftthe most approved tion, ware ordered 0 be constructed at the South Lrookisn Iron Worke. When tie Nicaraugus is placed on the route, tho Central American Transit Company will have five vessels, two of whien, the Moses Taylor and the America, form a con- nection on the other side with the vessels salling from New York, The Santiago de Cuba of ‘this line arrivec at this port | on the 7th inst., baving made ons of the swiftest passages 01 record. Sbe made the ran from Nicaragua in ¢ days and 19 hours, landiog her passengers in less than 23 days from leaving San Fraascisco. 1o other vessels of the line are noted also for their speed and comfort. and with the § mouts beld out by the Central American Transit Comp: traveling ablic as well s to freighters iu point of cheap: ws thiok AL Wo way saloly prodiot 191 Liem & snocessii soason. the mine, take out 50 | s agt, E. D, Jones | agt. the New-Jersey | NEW-YURK DAILY TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 1866. THE TARIFF ON WOOL. 5 s B Manufacturers and wool-growers appear at last to realize ' that they have but one common interest, and asa conse- | quence have combined to ask for protection. Bitter | experience has taught the wool-grower that when the | manufacturing interest languishes, wool-raising is never profitable; and the mauufacturer has also learved that when wool-raising is not profitable, the West aliords Lim @ poor market for his goods, Heretofore the manufactarer kas thrown every obstacle in the way of the farmer to prevent Lis obtaining the least semblance of favor from legislative enactwents, On the other hand, the farmer never willingly conceded a tarill to the manufacturer; believing that whatever benefit the manufacturer obtained, was just so much taken from his own interests. Iu fuct the farmer looked upon the manu- facturer as his greatest enemy, ready to take every advant- age of his umstances, to obtain his wool at the very lowest price, to reduce wool-growing to the starvation | point, aud to scll his goods at the very highest rates. Wool-grower opposed manufacturer, and manufecturer opposed wool-grower; and during this sulcidal warfure, tho interests of both suffered severely; but the country suffored much more, becanse gold bhas been continually drawn away, when it should have boen retuined at Lome. Before tho Rebellion, woolgrowing and manufacturing wero scarcely considered worthy the notics of statest True, they were occasionally made a sort of politice] shut- tlecock, sometimes sent high above every otler interest, then suffered to fall and lie almost lifeless at the bottom of all enterprises. All wool costing less than 20 cents per pound was admitted duty free. In 1861, for the purposes of protection aud of revenue, this wes materially changed, and all wool costing less than 13 conts at the place whence exported paid a duty of 5 per cent ad valorem; escecding 18 cents and ot exeeeding 24 cents per pound, 3 cents per pound; exceeding 24 cents per pount, a duty of 9 cents per pound. This, with somo slight modification, contin- ued in force till February, 1861, By the tarill of that year all wool of the value of 12 cents per pound and under at the lust port or placo of exportation, peys a duty of 3 cents per pound; exceeding 12 cents and not 24 cents p r pound, Geents per pound; excceding 24 cents per pound and not exceeding 32 cents per pound, 10 cents per pound and 10 per cent ed valorem; excoeding 52 conts per pound, 12ceats per pound and 10 per cent ad valorem. When wool is im- ported scoured, thon three times the amount of the above | duties. Scoured woo!, it should be stated, is a term used when it is cleaned ready to put upon the cards, and difters materially from what we call washed wool, latter term being applied to wool when the sheep have been brooks | washed previous to sheari This tariff has the appearance at first sight of afording amplo protection. One vot famillar with the would probably conclude that three cents per pou be suflicient duty on all wool which eost pound, &s this must be a very coa mers do not care much about rais pound on all above 12 cents per pov conts per pound, must bo exough for & m kind which our farmer: produes in large quantiti class of shoep ve and producing heav in will be from 20 to 30 cents per head. Then we ha two cliuses, 10 conts per pound and 10 per cent ad valorem, and ts per pound and 10 per centad valorem. Thes applying to very fime wool, are just what our farmers want; | these sheep t six conts per d and not abov wool, 8 fiom a they noed protection on fine wools; fo produce from (o to threc pounds of weol per bead, w is worth abouf 70 cents per pound his would be f to 40 cents per head. But the fucts do not bear reasoning. Aud, first, | o interval that elapsed | not ouly between the p g effect, but also that between the time when § contemplated, and the s when it went ree. In | { the year 1550 we consummed onc-fourth furvign wool in our manufactories; 1t 60 willion pounds domestic fleece | | and 20 million pounds foreign, Inl 88,853 | bales of foreizn wool; in 1 1864, 112 668 balos; but in 1865, u effeet, we imporied but 53,62 in mind that four-{ifths of the la 1564 was imported during the first six mont before the tari took efiset. It will bo easily scen from s that while we supposed we hiad the benefit of | for- these fig 8 good protective tarift in 1865, the great bulk of ¢ cign wool upon the market hal boeu in ed und previoas low tarifl, and was us o tho wool interests of the eor houses nud thus largely increasing t viding that supply at @ price which ut farmer in Lis western home who was ex with what importers were doing. It ng like an trae, it may be . X 8o, foreign wool sdvanced with the price of gold and much of it wny Leold for gold. The priea of gold in 1863 was in favorof | the importer. The large amount of wool thrown upon the | market in 1563 and 1564 } lom { with the price of gold; n fuct which astonished rsant with the large importat two years, ke us of » importations of th P wool in 1864, and ulso in 1865, now | o deprees it in 1866, Just consid at in 1965, with all our increased mechinery, we ouly orted half the quantity of wool imported in 1853, and only about two- sortation in 1862, This certainly does ap- .2 backw ies of thres cents per pound and 'y one not ¢ 1863 aud 1864, 1 ing down the iee ¢ thirds of the i pear like advin: Sscondly: The low d six r pound bave not beeu confined to coars medium wools, but are the highest dutics, with the exeep- | tion of one little Jot of a few thousaud pounds, which have been paid for the finest wools we have i {uflhv finest” wools raised in 1 Lave not paid more | uts per pou f this wool s iy dirty, so that its value is greatly reduced, Some of it when sconred will not yield more than 25 per cent ready for the cards, or one pound in four for what we Now why is this? Teason for every- will not pay four cents por pound for the v of dirt (and this Is what they say it costs to the place of manafacturing) unless it yields a pr Now, this pound of wool ob- tained from the four pounds of wool and dirt imported at three cents per pound, pays 12 cents duty, for we cannot charge the dirt with duty, asitis not worth the cost of traueportation; but if 1o this pourd of elean wool we ulso add the cost of transporting the four pounds of wool and dirt, which is 16 conts, then wo have 28 cents upon the one pound of scourcd woul, But if we imported this wool scoured, then wo should have to pay three times the amount of the other duties, which in this case would be b times 12 cents and three times 10 per cent ad valorem, that is, about 52 cents per pound. Can we wonder that our importers prefer to import dirt rather than scoured wool, & pound of which has not been imported under the present tarifl, although it would save a complete wasto of four ceats per pound for the transportation of dirt? But it is not all this extremely heavy, dirty wool which is i ported under the duty of thres cents per pound. It will casily bo understood that thero will be much wool which will cost 13, 14, 15 and even 16 cents per pound at the port of exportation; butthe next quostion is, does the importer pay six cents per pound duty on these, as onc would sup- pose from the law he would havo to do? Notatall He reduces the average of his invoiee by importing a sufficient number of the very dirty bales of wool, costing o much Jess than 12 cents per pound as to bring down the average of the whole to 12 cents. Consequently, we have some good woo! imported which only pays a duty of three cents per pound, which will not shrink more than 65 and 70 per eent, That is, we should have for overy 100 pounds im- ported, from 30 to 35 pounds n wool. This would bo on a pound of scoured wool 10 and 10} cents duty, to which add transportation of dirt, making about 11 and 13 cents upon the scoured pound; this would be 21 and 25 cents upou the scoured pound; a great saviug over the importa. tion of the scoured wool. But the sole protection to the farmer is the price of the dirt and the cost of transporting the scoured pound, But if we come to that class of wool which pays six cents per pound duty, we then include the good wools of Australia, Cape of Good Hope, Buenos Ayres, and fine Mezino from Odesss, all of which are im- ported for less than 24 cents per pound at the port of ex- portation. Theso wools shrink from €0 to 63 per cent, yielding from 35 to 40 pounds, scoured, for every 100 pounds imported. The duty upon the scoured pound would be from 15 10 17 cents, aud eost of transportation would be 10 and 11 conts per pound, making 26 and 28 cents per pound; & much smalicr amount than would have 1o be paid for the importation of the sco: red pound. But we may again suppose that there is much wool that would cost 23, 26 and 28 cents at the port of exportation. This would, however, be easily brought under 24 cents per pound by invoicing with it wool which cost less than 24 | cents. Tn doing this thero would be no fraud, as it would 1. A large amount i me trausports from the place of pac | be the cost of the whole upon which the duty would be aid. But 1t s tao cost of the geoured pound whick exclude wool payiag the higher duties; those wools which pay n‘ duty of 10 centa per pound and 10 per eent ad valorem, are brook-washed wools and would shrink from 30 to 40 per cent in scouring, I we takea medium sbrinkage for the wool which peys 10 cents per pound, we should Leve, say €5 pounds of wool from 100 pounds imported; duty upon tho seoured pound would be about 25 cents, and cost of transportation 6 ceuts per scoured pound, making 34 eents per pouxd, or 6 cents per pound more than we have found paid for the scoured of tho 6 por cent duty wool. But if wo take the highest duty of 12 cents per pound and 10 per cent ud valorem, we shall find that these wools would shrink 1ot less than 30 per cent, and in many cases wonld exceed 40 per cent; but we would take s medium, about 33 per cent. This would give us 62 poundsof scoured wool, which would be about 31 cents duty on the scoured pound, and 7 cents eost of transportation would make it 33 cents per pound; while we obtain the scoured pound of the same | quality of wool from the wool admitted at o duty of 6 cents on aceount of its groase, for 28 cents. 15 not this tariffa | farce? s it mot high time to do away with those miss- named diseriminating duties of three and six cents per pound, and impose a duty, if not of 10 cents, at least 87 Wo have given the facts in the case. They clearly show why tho higher dutios have never been paid, and they also show that they are ample protection becauso they have never been touched, and thie manufacturer who sees and understands that bis intercsts and those of the wool-grow- ers are identical, will not object to these conclusio I there are any who believe that their interests are not iden- tical, with such we bave mo controversy; our regard is for the country’s welfure. We have no other concern in the matter, but we Lave an interest inthe whole country which wo will not sacrifice for the private interests of best friends. IRELAND, ——— A Late Spring. From Qur Bpecial Crrespondent. BrLrast, Moy 20, 1866, From “Dan to Beershela," from Cork to Belfast. £t Cork in drizzly, disagreeable weather, “The ficlds n," but the skies were not blue, and there was ter to do than to aceopt the landscape along o Dublin in all its sloppy verdaney. One last ! the distance was vouchsafed a Mallow, and Butterwort, and Charleville, and Killmallock, and g were oue after the other left behind, and as the train slackened its speed in approach- Junetion, the steeples of Tipperary on the out in a burst of glorious suniight, which at that moment burst in radiant beauty over all the fertile hill and dole that stretched ont on r hand, more surpassingly charming in the ish landscape in u:Lplrl green isle, ‘The tields are ) , and, far as tho lless “picturs of good 1ha d ¢ , 1t is ono boun verons fertility, 1d-Winter, ax srnered Dlnsts of and vegetable life is the gruin is impre 5 ed, when the , and the flos neross the plain i then the face of the country wears s cheery J, through some indescribable i ver what a wealth ty bosom. therenowned Rock stance on the right, Kable ruins, justly re- past which are to le, in bleak and and de- Limerick Jun view in the and re; relicsof the 1. Then Loughwore C d out upon the svl‘nn,u onu t to departed glory. Kil- wn scene of many a spirited equine were passed, aud as the suu was Dublin, Irish city, #o rorowned for its ele- auly streots, its stately public le, ty College, its vast, dities, and its Dublin, whers Tom Moore was born, Dean Swife lived, died, and was buried; wh arnell, Tickell, and Sheridan lived and enriched t 1d. The city retains bits, aud its routine cntenant maintaing and wher Addison, ¥ business, The Lord with sufficient, im not whit 1ne auy other mode of government, notwith- rts which her Fenian clildren sbroad are redemption. s marked in Dublin, and that a most When I was last agrecable one to our American cyes, tere, there was scarcely a person to'be found who had not an uukind word to say for our Goverament, then in the 1 at grappla with Rebellion. ~ Scarcely one 1 did not emphatieally and exultingly prediet the down. full and destruction of the Upited States as a government, azl the miccess of the Sonth {n their efforts ut Secession, sw it would be difficult to find & man who would will- admit that ho ever gave utierance to su ha sentie i it, or oY than 8 delusic truits of ¢ chameter. No one will feel surprised that such nifest themselves in the Irish e in this predicament; no od in the mastication and pie which Jouathan has us not to exult, but to take home to o meet to the occasion. 1ti8 not to be denisd that Dublin possesses many an in- Labitant whose sympathics are with the Fenian move, me © are wore nmerous evideneos of this than are Iscwhere, Not enough, ver, 1o war- rant th on that th 1t has the ghost of a chane or is anything clse than & wazniticent ium by der or violation of law is set down to the nian organization, and it is doubtful whethere peor Pat could excreise his time-honored prerogative at Donybrook out being arrested as o congpirator. Speaking of « nrrested rowinds me of Kichmond, whence great er Stephens made his escape, It yot in saring over its somber portal in Cease to do evil; learn to do 1, cut 1o the wall: 1us evideat tlat Stephens fulfilled the lattes half of the pricest o the loter. iia doubtfal if auyvody could “do better” than he did under similar cireumstances., From Dubiin to the ancient town of Drogheda, at the mouth of the Boyne, tha road skirts the seashore and runs through o level and uninteresting country. The hill of Howth re the t Fin McCoul is supposed to have of phyrical valor in tirowing o Briat Boroiline achieved somo aua Uile stole the heir of the cas- lord of the demesne denied Ler a pot her return from a pular performed such prodig stones at the Danes of his glories, wher tle lands, becauso the of beer and & boiled potato when on visit 1o Queen Llizabeth, and where, a ording u.s legend, varions marvejous eveuts have oceurred, rose roen and fresh from the sea on our right as we leit Dub- in, ond ¢ Treland’s Eye”—the littlo island so_called, just north of Howth—scewed to wink in the sunshine with every lap of the sea around its rocky baso. Bualbriggan, renowned for its stocking manufscture, being left rear- ward, we halted soon after st Drogheda. Eversbody knows— ght to know—that they make fine linons ib this anc town, and that at about iwo aud one half miles awny the battle of the Boyne was fought in 1600, Forty {e:m before this Cromwell, in his given way, 1nid siege to the place with an army of 12,000 men, sud after being repulsed in two unsuccessful attacks, sucecedvd on the third in taking possession, “The road to the tield of battle leads along the left bank e river in a westerly direction from Drogheda. An of granite marks the eentral portion of the battie- field, and 1t is said is nearly exaetly lefln the spot where Schomberg fell. An inscription upon the baso relates the fact that there “glorious King William the Third” dc- feated James tho Secgnd on the !st of July, 169, and de- livered Ireland from tho despotism of popery. Aside from this monument, there is nothing to denote that the tranquillity of the beautiful vale of the disturbed by fhe rude shock of battle. are already deeply u\erm:d with Spring verdure and May flowers. Flocks and berds are brousing peacefully, where the hoofs of chargers bearing legions of armed nien com- mingled in deadly contest; and the river gliding genily aloug toward the ueighboring sca, overhung by spreading branches siready bright with the first foliugo of the year, completes a picture of peaceful rural beauty strikingly in coutrast with that which the same locality wore ou that oventful Summer's day nearly two ceutur os ago. Wit strange assoctations concerning men and events aro counceted with the battle of the Boyne? The great central figure, Williaw of Orange, is the first npon which the thoughts center, and his whole singuiar history prior to that eventful voyage from the Hague, when he came over to set the royal house in order in England, passes bee fore us, 11is remarkable rise to power in the Netherlands, the pert which he played in tho wurs of the great King, Louis X1V, and the new destiny that he gave to the King or Great Britain, are among the most rwminml and e rtant events of history, What a different volume of ish bistory would Live beeu writien if that canuor- ghot from the opposite bank of the river wiieh wounded his shoulder on that July duy had ranged nu inch or two lower By contrast with this true how dustardly the character of James the ond appears ! 1 picture Lim Qeeing over youder green hill after the disaster of the Boyne had overtaken Dublin town, him fn thet uncxampled race for Cowardice lent vigor to his eforts in the application whip and spur, and Lis famous ride next day ot 100 miles to Walerford conclusively demonstrates that his qualities were of tie turf tarfy, rather than of the divine order of those that belong to royalty. * Madame. the Lady Tyreounel, on arriving at Dublin Castle, countryinen, the Irish run very fast, it must be owned.” “In this, 08 in every other respect, Four majestr, sur- asses them; foryou have won the race,” was the bittorre- rnn.dur of the lady. Did not his whole previeus and sub- sequent hmlu{{ prove him incapable of manly sensation, and dead to the sense of honor, wo might well believe that a shaft so well aimed must have raukled in tho wound for & Lify-tiwe siter, sid pormanently branded bis nd herds that dot | 3 | stag iL that Becession was anything else | | l | Mauy Day, therefore, | ing the flame through cobalt- rocreant cheek with theblush of shamo. Inatead, ho figuras onlyas the mean-spiritod hanger-on, and dependant at the Court of Louis XIV the sickly, complaining ereature of passion and bigotry, dawdling away the days of o wretchedly misspent life, and finding decent burial only as the last favor of the monarch whose bounty he had meanly accepted for ko many years. - Turning in relief io'the proud, mn&flhe figure of the gollant old Marshal Schomberg, an the part he bad played in the great drama of war that bad for so many s deluged Europe. in blood, the sto: of his exile and battles, and the final fall of the curtein upon his re- ble career, here upon the banks of this smooth-fow- ing river, follows in the train of reminiscence which the scone awakens, with that of Sarstield, snd Caillemote, and many another brave man who enacted o leading part in the history of these memorable d.l:" 1 gathered a little knot of qrimmfil. daisies, and other Spriig flowers, to be preserved as a mewento of Boyne aud its heroes, aud left the field to its calm and quiet solitude, its long con- tinued, and, it way be hoped, its long to be continued centuries of peace aud moral beeuty. An hour at Slane Castle, six miles up the Vale of the Boyne, enjoying the wonderful beauties of the lanuscape, the noblgeastle, the residence of the Marquis de Conyng- ham, andits well-ordered surroundings, aud we bade adien ;» the Boyue, and proceeded on our ourney toward Bel- fast. The country bere wears & decidedly faxen hue, There are linen mills on every hand, except along the sterile Antrim bills, where, judging from tho sppeerance of the 'ln-u-a'my.!:wu-ln very little linen, let alome the mills. [he North of Ireland may be smd to be one great flax riet, The weaith that rowing, linen manufacturing di s being accumulated here among those in the manufac- turing interest is vost, and each day is compounding, Bat t inerease of emigration of the laboring class to Al!u-rfirn threatens serioasly to interfere with the busi- ness, and already begins to excite alarming discussious amorg those engaged in it. A few years hence this ques- tion will have ripened into majestic and troublesome pro- rttons. and the burden of complaint will be shifted in reland from the shoulders of the laborer to the capitalist. he Slamish hills, at whose feet the town of Belfast is built, have to-day—the 1at of May—been sheeted from suminit to base in n mantle of wow. Though the ficlds are green and seed time has alrealy commenced, Winter scers suddenly to have come down over the Northern ocean agnin, a3 if full of spite and vengeance azainst the flowers that are blooming in the lip of May, and eager to them with one blast of his frosty breath ere « him away for his kingdom in_the frozen North. wears a chill and Wintry aspect, and the kecn north-east,and fresh from the lnnmtnprd Grampinns ecross the cbannel, * bites shrewdly,” “Ihe barefooted and ill-fed operatives with which the strects of Belfast abound, when work is done at mnight, shiver anl wrap their seanty coveiing more closely about them as they hurry along foward their cheerless fmmm and look in this temporery return of Winter and consequent basichment for a brief period of the warm and sunny Spring days, & new chapter of woe has been added to their drears existence, Yet o little longer and Summer will be hie; Then these wan aud hope-forsaken faccs will for & time lighterr up_under the cheery influences of those haleyon days, nnd there will be a scason of happiness in ‘of these human drudzes born of the genial th hove warmth of the Summer sunshine, such as the rich can fever feel, and such as Las no place in their cataloguc of Louwie luxuries, Hepewaro. INDITML Professors Reich and Richter published a preliminary notice of this metal in Erdinanu’s Jourual, September 1, 1843, Reich is Professor of Physicsat the School of Mines, Froiberg, Saxony. He is about 70 years of age, and is known for his important investigations upon the ity of the earth, Mo no longer delivers lectures but directs the practical operaticus of the Laboratory. Th. Richter is about 30 years of age, and was assistant to Professor Reich in the Laboratory, Te gives instruc- the blow-pipe, and bas edited the work of the late r Plattner on Metallurgy. He is a great favorite 10 pupils of the Sehool of Mines, and is destived, if he lives, to become one of the most prominent Professozs of the ancient school of Freiberg. In consequence of the fuct that Thallium had been de- tected in a number of furnaee products, it occurred to the Professors to examine some impure Chloride of Zine which they Lad obtained by distilling an ore which contained Arsenie, Sulphur, Tron, Zine, Manganese, Copper, Tin, and Cadmiuz, To their s irprise there was no greeu line of Thallium, but two blue lines made their appearance on a different part of tho spectrum, They immediately set to wor te the unknown body, and were soon sne- cesstul. They proposed the name of Indinm from the color of the lines which lead toits detection. At this early all that they could say of it was that Sulphuretted sgen did not precipitate it from seid solutions of the Chloride; that Ammonia throws down an oxide, and that it was easily reduced before the blow-pipe to a met bead. A second paper by the same authors uppeared Nov. 16, 1863, In this the position of the lines on the scale was moro fully defined. If the soda line was at 50, and Strontia at 104, then the two Indinm hues would be at 110 and 147, A pure salt of Indium in the flame of & gas- bugaer or aleohol lamp imparts o violet color. They also found that the source of the metal was the Blende, and were able to recover 0.1 per cent Indium from Metallic Zine. Be gt A third paper, Oct. 7, 1864, gives us further properties. The oxyd is easily reduced by, hydrogen gas the same as the oxyd of cop; and can’ be melted to pellets in a glass tube. Tho hydrogen gas, after passing over the metal, burns with a blue flame. The metal is white, brighter than tin, approaching the Inster of silver, It is soft and duetile, and retains its luster in the airand in water, in boiling water. Its specific gravity was found to 7, 0n three determinations: according to Winkler it i The point of fusion is the same as that of lead. Its oxyd does not appear to color glass. It is soluble in hydrochioric and suiphuric acids with evo- Intion of hydrogen gas: i% also easily soluble in nitrie acid, 1t is completely precipitated from acid solutions as o hy- drated oxyd by smmonia and potash, insoluble in an ex- cess of the reagent; the principal distinction from zine and cadwinm. The hydrated oxyd is pure white, and peculiarly slimy, on which account it adbLeres to the sides of o vessel, Tartario acid prevents the precipitation of the oxyd. The oxyd after heating and cooling becomes of a st yellow color. Sulphuretted hydrogen does not precipitate any material amount of the métal from strongly acid solutions, The behavior is like zine in this respeet, ¥rom solutions in ecotic acid sulphuretted hydrogen beautiful yellow sulphide of indium, cadmiuin, and this afords a method of separ. from iron aud wanganese, The ehlo esembles cnloride of aluminum and can be proparcd in the same way, by passing chlorino the ox;d, mixed with carbon, It is very hy- L groscapie, and can be driven from one place to another in the tube, The sulphato erystalizes in smuall white scales, The atomic weight i according to Winkler, 35,9, The preparation of Indium from 'l‘lundn isus follows: ude is digested in agua regia, and sulphuretted hydrogen passed through the solution to precipitate all of thie eoj per, lead, arsenic, tin, cadmium aud molybdenum; oxydize the filtrate from the' above, and then add o large excoss of ammonia, by which the greater portion of the zine will be dissolved and separated; dissolve lhn,’mdpi- tate produced by the ammonda in acetic acid, and throw dowi the Iudiuin as a sulphide by meaus of sulphuretted hydrogen. Lu order to obtain & pure salt, this latter op- eration will require to be repeated a number of times. Tho metal is more easily obtained from s gravulated zine than from blende, Schrotter has found Indinm in the blende of Schiinfeld, near Schlaggenwald, Ho roasts the finely stamped ore and digests it in sulphur acid, and throws down the In- dium F-\- metallic zink, in the same manner that Thal. lium 15 precipitated from its solutions, Schidtter has also determined the exact position of the Indium lines with reference to Kirchhofl's ehart of the solar speeteum, aud the photograph of the spectrum taken by Mr. Ruther- ! furd of New-York. Mr. Rutherfurd’s photograph is now accepted as the rd of measurment by the physicists of Evrope, and rded as vne of 105t valuable coutributions to er received from this country, lias found Iudiam in the furiace products of the Hartz mountains, Professor Joy has examined fifteon specimens of blende, from as many lvcalities, 1n widely separated portions of the the Uiited States, but thus far no trace of Indinm has been discovered. ¥ The effect of Indinm upon the fusibility of alloys has not been determined, hut reasoning from” analogy, i a) pears probable that it would lower the polut of fusion the rame s Cadmiun There is every reason to expect that the Indium-blende will bo discovered just as & Cadmium-blende was found on the estate of Lord Greenock in Seotland. What influence the bromide and jodide of indium would have in photo- graphy also remains a question for investigation. lndfum is emphatically a metal of the future. RUBIDITM. This metal was discovered by Bunsen and Kirchhoff in 1861, Buusen is a native of Goettingen, and is a cousin of the late Chevalier Bunsen, so well kuown for is theo- logical writings. Robert Bunzen is about 55 years of age. He was at one time tutor at Goettingen, where Le published a paper on (e employwment of the hydrated oxide of iron as a remedy for poisoning with arsc This was one of the earliest scientific investigations made by him. Afterward he traveled somewhat exter:ively—was appointed Professor at Marburg, later at Nreslau and lastly st Heidelberg, where he has built up the Lirgest scientific laboratory, ex- cepting Lflrhgp. Gowitineen, to be fonnd in Germany. Kirchbofl is not yet forty years old. Ho is Professor of physics and & great favorite of Bunsens The two are much together, and throw ideas and work into each other's Lands, Bunsen was engoged in 1859 ard 1860 f | in the examination of the colored flames produced by the combustion of cortain substances. Ho examined theso flames throngh different media, and found that he could distinguish potash in the presence of soda by view- lass. He afterward em- tic bottle, filled with toyed & wedged-shaped or prismi J D Tromin sulliato of coppor, to distinguiah lithia,strontia and potash. We can well understan: that the transition from colored glasses and prismatic bottles to flint glass risms was very natural. oviewed the light from burning Endlu through prisms, 83 Fraunhofor, Draper, and others Lad dono, snd found that each substance produces its characteristic spactrum, "Tjia discovery sxcited R S by all of the known subs § '= o new lines which they thought ‘must be due to new bodi They gave the name of Rubidium to the metal, yielded o red line very near to the line, and ou of Fraunhofer's line A. Having discovered and ni the new element, the next thing was to study 1ts propees tics and ascertain where it could be found. They first detected it in minersl waters; aftorward was found to exist in small quantities in Im:lomo, r, carnallite, crude saltpeter, tobaceo, coffee, tea, 81 cat, commercial potash, triphylline, and other mi Metallic Rubidiun ean bo prepared from the bi in identically the same wanner as Potassium, It is more difficult to “reduce than Sodium, but more %Nul Potassium, It melts st 204° F. (Potassium 14> ¥, Lithium 356° F.) The atomic weight of Rubidium is 85,36, It decoms poses water the same as the other slkali metals. Toe saits of Rubidia resemble those of potash and sods. The tartrates and the platinum salts vary in_sotubility, othee- wise it would ho Knfic ult to distinguish between them, It now remains to discover some mi con suflicient Rubidium toenable us to study its use in $he arts, Oneof the richest minerals is {h lopidolite of Hebron, iu Maine; according to Johnson and Allen i\l':dun"n this ore contains 0.24 per cent of the oxide ubidium, It is not probable that metallic Rubidinm will ever play an important part in the arts, but its salts m poasess different medicinal properties to potash and sods, just a8 lithin is given a8 & titnte for those alkalies. Whab propertics this alkali wonld impart to glass also remaios & question for the future, We may discover it in sulll- cieut quantities for use in the mafufacture of sonp. CESITM. This metal was discovered at the same time and andee the samo ciroumstances as Eubidium, by Bunsen eod Kirchhoff, Bunsen, in bis capacity of Counsellorof State, is called upon for advice iz sanitary matters, and every- thing relating to mineral springs ie subimitted to Lim foe examination. He had the residues from the evaporatiom of an enormous mnm of the Duerkheimer Sprlng sond o kim, He took 80,000 pounds of this water, and was able to prepars from it & few grains of Cesivm upon. which to found his investi into ite . 1o appears t Jess abundant than Rubidi- d the two are comnwly found associated +11 was not able to determine the atomic wel :m with entire accuraey upon the small guantity o s command, and this valuable work was ace by Johnson and Allen of Yale Coliege. They givo the atomie weight as 133,, hydrogen being taken as unity. I has the hizhest atomic weight of any of the elomouts excepting gold which is 197, Tire Salts of Casium produce sky-blue lines on the and hence the name, i and Rubidium, in sll their compounds, rosems ble potassium &o ¢l y that they cannot be dmmgmM from it by re-agents ot betore ihe blow-pipe. oy com only be recognized by means of the spectroscope, and render that instrument indispensable to the snalytiosh chemist, Rubidiom and Cmsium _ yield slums with alumioa snd sulphuric acid,and the difference in the solubility of tese salt« affords a method for their separation. The ratio of solubility of the Alum: Ihhlilinn. Potash. Casinm. E2] 1 A very interesting discovery was made by Pisani of Paris, A gentleman, who had a collection of mii sent & number of them to Pisani to have them named and described. They were sll of them exami before the spectroseope. One of them, known to miner- alogists under the name of Pollux, was found to givo the blue Casium lines with remarksble definition. It wag subjected to a careful analysis, and found to contain the extraordinary amount of thirty-four per cent of the Oxide of Cwsium. The mineral pollux occurs on the (sland of Elba. It resembles some varieties of fluorspar, and cryse tallizes in the same form. We would call attention to this fact, as it may even- taally be found in lhos‘g'n{’ud Stutes. S During the year 1863, Bunsen was occupi eolltolg materisl from which to prepare metallic Casium. intended to reduce the bitartrate in the same manner &8 he had followed in the Yrrpcrlliun of metallic Rubidiwm. The uses and practical applications of Casium are {:m of investigation, It may hereafter, for sught we , play & very important part in the arts, Gen, ditor of The Tribune. 8 en. Fullerton, on reaching New-Orleans, was welcomed by the Rebels of that city as if he kad been a broves Rebe! Brigadier instead of baving beon an officer in the Uniom army. He was not in the city twenty-four hours before he was scen walking the streets arm in arm with @ siguer of the Louisiana Ordinance of Secession. Om being in the eity one week, he received an icvitation (from the rich traitors who bad sided the Rebellion as it wayaided by we others) to aceept @ public and complimentary dinner as & tokem of the apprectation in which he was held by the people. Oue duy's occupaney of the u2lce just vacated by Mr. Conway, was euough to satisfy him that the negroes of Loaisiana had tes much liberty; too many scbools; too many orphan aud were, altogether, too well protected by the officers Bureau who bad sssigned to it by Geo. Canby Gen. Sheridan. He at once struck at the liborty 30 fréed prople of the City of New-Orleavs, and fssaed order, by the operation of which 30,000 men, aad children were suddenly refurned to 8 £ ill his tpterost, aud ho prosecuted | per pouad. Txabauee va Now Vork i slwost as odious as that from which, under the ludouu” the immortal Lincoln, they had just been delivered. The erder was for the arrest of all snemployed freedmen,” sad directed the Police of the Crescent City to execute its pre« visions. This was welcome duty to the police. They bogas their work, and in less than 24 hours the jails and calaliooses of the city were fall. Homest men were locked up in osle under irou gates. Iudustrious laborers who bad worked om the levee were arrested on their way to their homes. Quar- termaster’s laborers were sclzed with others. Soldiers jusé discharged from o loug term of service were also arrested. 1n a word, every colored man in the ity who could not far- nish a certificate of employment from some weil-known per- o, was seized by the Polico, under Fullertow's order, snd locked up. v A reign of terror lasted tili Fullerton, after 20 days of is famous service, was witbdrawn. Colored men and womes flocked to Gen. Cauby’s and Gen. Sheridan’s Headquarters, asking tor protection. Tle discharged colored troops doter- mined to resist the police, ana a fight took piace on Claiborne- st., in which the police were souudiy beaten. Gen. Sheridas, Gen. Canby, Gov. Wells and Gen. Fulierton Leld a meet- ing on the subject of the condition of the city, and Fullertom was informed that he must stop. He suddenly concluded to revoke the order, By this time the Rebel press kad reacted @ point of ecstastic joy over Fuilerton, and o public dinzer was revived with greater energy thau ever. There were two orphan asyluam for the orpbans of colored troops and seau e, These Gen, Fullerton broke up by a single blow. He ordered the State law respecting apprentices to be enforced and applied to these orphans. In simpler terms, be ordered them to be returned to their old masters to live i Slavery till they were 21 yoars of age. Although neithes asylam was iu charge of the Goverament, yot the orphess must be reinslaved by Fullerton. The result was that the orphans, hearing of the order, rau away and found shelter iw the homes of colored men fu the city. Maoy an old slave- Lolder weat to these asylams after the issue of the order, wsking for *nice little nigger giris to do the dirty werk around their bouses,” &e., &, The next blow of the General was at the Flume Colonies for aged freedmen. These were self-supporting and were med broken up for any reason of economy, bat simply to help breek up the Burewa and give the farms o5 whick they were estabe iished back to their former owners. Two bundred sobools, supported without expense to the Goverament, and which were attended by 20,000 colored children, were broken up by the next stroke of Gen. Fullerton's power. The ouly source of support for these schools was abolisied, and a great work for the improvement of 300,000 people was suddealy brought to as end. Abandoned and confiscable property to the amount of nsarlg $200,000,000 worth—property which Mr, Couway bad teaas clously beld for the use of the (overnment. was altost entirsdy: given up to 1ts former owners by Gen. Fullerton during e 20 days sdministration. s The Freedmen's Courts throughout the State were all abot isbed by the General, and the State tribunals ordered to try ol cases in which the freedmen were interested. A Rebel viotory eould not bave been paraded with larger type or greater jog than was each order of Brevet-Brigadier J. 8. Fullerton. e was soon succeeded by Gen. Baird, au officer who differs from bim about as day differs from lln;—hlm came 1o Washis and was offered by the the post :gluumr:surs This was Goubtiess & reward for hie i g A Cimizex oF NEW-ORLEANS. New-York, June 13, 1866, o ————— ‘POSTMASTERS APPOINTED, AND POST-OFFICES [jogs, Wit l‘l;nwhllr Fallerton, William AU, GoFamard. Orange, beter & Gumpor. Pine Valley, Romer. = . Li : - "Discontinwed. —East Springwater, vingston. c. Addison, ; Chi itre, Chemui Jes; Chemung Centry, Chemn aroe, EsTAB- LISHED AND I NEW-YORK — Established. —East A Gufah C. Youoglove; Williston, Erie, Postmasters Appointed.—Aisbama, Genosee, , Schuyler, Austin n.'hm et “fl:;dg Station, Wi m ~ § Willlam enaon flm L. Hoxie; Lllgeu', Ouondags, Chester ineville, Tompkios, Dart Peter A. Emgie: Little Neck, Queens, Middleville, Herkimer, Orrin A. Ford, Rel Centre, Ozeida, Alson Norton; Halste, ; West Kortright Dal West Vienna, Oseids, Z,-‘o:u.l, George M. Woeod. June 1i.—~Cotton L a9 Steriing Exe York je., to Livery NEW.0ALEAN New mw.?- —Cotton to New @i por ceut

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