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Amugements. LLACK'S THEATE m,w.‘n s-TiE COLLEEN BAWN; Or THE YOWEN: Mr. Dan Bryant, Mis AauCool-. 3 Nooan, B. T. old, Leonard. Pope. ‘has. Fisher, Mrs. Jobn Sefton, Mre. Blark Smith, arrott, Mre. Geo. Kowes. " NIBLO'S GARDEN XHIS EVENING, o1 8=RICODEMUS—THE THREE ATH- LUTES. "Toe Hovais ‘(Gubriel, Francols, Antoiue). Young Amerios, Pophia, Moo Van Huinme. Young Americe oa the Flying THIS EVENI BRIDES OF GARI Mossrs. ollan: Gieahamn, Ward. M. Dias Caruoan, Mise OLYMPIC THEATER, THIS EVENING=t f-LOAN OF A LOVER=JENNY LIND— COOL AS A CUCUMBER. Mrs. Jobu Wood. T WINTER GARDEN THI® EVENINO st 8—POCAHONTAS-A OENTLEMAN FROM TRELAND. Mr. Joha Brovgham, Miss Emily Melviile, J. C. Posn. WOOD'S THEATER THIS EVENING-THE INVISIBLE PRINCE—“ BROTHER SAM," The Worrell Sisters. M rton Hill and full company. FOXN'S OLD BOWERY THEATER. 2 THIS EVENING, st 8—LYSIAH, THE ABANDONED. Miss Faany Herriog, W. . Whaliey, Mr. G L Fox. NEW BOWERY THEATER. EVENING —the axtin ED DUMOUTON,or the SHEEFS FOOT-THE F E. B Fuawily, Mise Carrie A. Moore, M RARNUM'S AMERICAN MUSEUM. THIS AFTEKNOON, st 2. and THIS EVENING at LOTTE TEMPLE ; Or, THE FIRST FALSE STEP. Mr. C Clarke and full ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND CU OSITIES. THE CAROLINA TWINS, NEW FPRENCH THEATER, Fourteenth st nedt Sixthavo. THIS ING st 8—The Evglish Comic Opers. A NIGHT IN ROME-THE DOCTOR OF ALCANTARA. NEW YORK CIRCUS. Chiarint's Togsl Spanish Circos. Every night st &, Equestrian, G ymuastic sud Acrobatio Festures. Graud Matinde to-day at 24 CHAR- W, RI- TERRACE GARDEN. Third ave. THIS EVENING i $—THEO. THOMASS ORCHESTRAL GAKDEN CONCERT. MRS CONWAY'S PARK THEATRE, Brooklyn THIS EVENING, THE MARBLE HEART. Mr. Fraok Dwight Douny, and full Company. LOWE'S AMPIITHEATER TO-DAY.~Dayiight and Night Bl oon Ascensions. Business Notices. MoTmERS, PURING YOUR CHILY'S SECOND SUMMER, you will find Mra. WinsLow's SooTHiNG SYRUP a0 invaluable friend 1t cures dysentery and diacrbea, regulates the stomach and bowels, cores wind eolic, wottens the gome, seduces loflammation, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. In .imost every instance, re the infant is sufferiog from pain and exbanstion, reliefl will be found in 15 or 20 minutes after the Soothing Syrup has been adminie tered. Do not full to prooure it. If Auld Scotia’s Grim Reformer, the outspoken, coyalty despising John KNox. was instrumental in abasing s queenly head 08 knocking & crown cherefrom, it is certaln that bis orbane do- «ccendant, the KNOX. is oqually sealous in placing covntless crowns ppon iunamergble heads Could the autique John once more * revisit the glimpaes of the moon,” he would assuredly gt his hats from the modern Ikxox, ot No. 212 Broadway, coruer of Fulton, or at No. 533 Brosdway, neat the Prescott House ped=t. Influenced by the positive injury which so many have experienced in the use of the many vostrams which bave been heown broadcast upon the world, | have sucoseded, after years of un- temitting lsbor and research, i forming s preparation entitied Mans- DR CARMINATIVE STYRUP, which, from testimonials received (rom eminent physiciszs and all other soarces, bas proved to be s complete Depot, No. 447 Broad- Two Homsms, wakes 340 bricks per hour, with straight, well dofined edges, sad the bricks will wtand ALL CLIMATES, while those made by the dry pressing machises all CRENBLE 70 PINCES 0n be- 10 KXPOSED TO FROST. A Exqua, Geseral , No. 141 Brosdway, N. Y. Suinore Macuine with ooly oxe moxse Powre; and will make ot of the ssme amount of timber ONKTHIRD MORE HINGLES than caube wade by any sawiag shingle machine. A. Ruqua, General Aawot, No. 141 Brosdway, New-Yor Durener’s LIGHTNIN Makes qoick work with s, sud if commenced clear all Summer. Lok out for imitations. Get Derem TUERE ARE ONE HUNDRED distinct nervous diseases, wnd thare is not one of thea that will not yield to the great invigor- wot, Broxmexe. Why suffer the torture of nervous weskness for & dsy? The Broxmese will give you instant relief and permasent strongth. Depot, No. 28 Dey ot. Sold by ali Droggists. FLy-Kiuier 5, keeps the hiouse s only. C. H. Neeours, Druggist, Philadelphia, is the sole maker of “NEEDLESS CoMPOUND CANPEOR THOCHES the best little pocket remedy ever offered for Bow.l Complainta. 5 MarviN's New PATENT ALUM AXD DRy PrAsTER o ..'..,':‘::'3‘.‘;":.'.“.' o aoratedd STREL S ' Sal Manvix k Co., 265 B'dway, and 721 Chestnut ot., Phila. 4 -Cllllm'l BeLLogsox, for Corxs and BUSIONS. In its nature lanocent, in it rties radicslly curative, s pre- P i Ly iy 4 o Co., Wholenls Agents. A Lady who bas suffered for over five months the most extreme torture from Neuralzis bas been completely cured by :u-'l- (“forty deops’) of Mercarex's GREaT Rusvmaric Kex v Tug PATeENT RUBBER NECK-TIR. Foras'e by Tunry, No. 409 Brosdway. SummEr Has, of every kind, At greitly reduced pricos. . No. 49 Broadwsy. Fasutox has descended in a shower of superb Straw Hate st Guxix's No. 513 Broadway for Geutlemen, Ladies, Misses, - LT Cartes Vignette, $3 per dozen; Duplicates, $2. All negatives registered. LP: Laws, No. 108 Chatham ot . ¥. Tue ARy AND LEa, by B. FRANK PALMER, LL. D.— The “est” froe o seldiers, ind low to officers and civilisna. 1,600 Constut ot Phil; Astorpl, N.Y.; 19 Green st., Bosion. Avoid Irauduicnt lmitations of bis vateuts. STOCKINGS, SUSPENSORY HaXD- Maman & Co.'s Radicai Cure Truss Othice Tuossks, Enastic Mort's (‘,lilmnu. Posape Restores Gray Hair, arge # glosey sud from falling out ; removes dundruff the Roest dross fug usod. Soid by Kuswrox, No. 10 Astor House, and uli druggies Witieox & Gieps SEWING MACHINE, wnd lews likbie to 1ip i use or wear, then the Lo.-:-n":pon,n Bt &t the * hiand Park Trial.” Send for the 4 saunp! les of Work coutaintng horA kinds of - No. 500 Broadway. - —eer — - LOCK-STITCH SEWING-MACHINES— Best Fromuxce SEwixe-Macuixe Courasy, way. LASTIC 's HiGHEsT Prexioy E l‘flam-’l';ll:“lu;:“: for Il-Gily use. No. 495 Broadw ~ Inproved Lock-STITCH Menulactarers. OnovER & Baxex Sswine No. @8 Brosiwsy. Wiesigs & Wusox's Lock-STitom BEWING Macuxes for Tailors and Macuine Compant, NewDork Daily Cribune. FRIDAY. JUNE 29, 1366. Te Cerrespondenta. e notios ean betaken of Anonymous Communications. Whateveris intended for fnsertion must be suthentic drews of the writer—not necessarily for saty for his good faih. Al business letters for this ofice shoula be addreased to “The Tris onk,” New-York. We oanuot undertake to ratarn rejected Communioations. s — The Tribune in London. STEVENS BROTHERS. (American Agents for Libraries, 17 flenrietta . Covent (‘lu.‘en, W. C for HE TRIBUNE They will siso receive B To Advertisers. ‘Wo will thank our advertising customers to hand in their Advertisemeats st as early an hour as possible. 11 recoived after 9 o'clock they canuot be classified under their proper heads. NEWS OF THE DAY. LA FOREIGN NEWS. By the arrival of the North American at this port yesterday, ‘we have from Rio de Janciro to the 31 of Juno. News bad beon received ot o battle between the Paragusyans and Gon. Flores, one of the commanders of the Allied foroes. ‘The latter is said to have lost feur guns and 2,000 men in Xilled and prisoners. The appearauce of Gens. Osorio and Mitre compelled Lopez to fall back behind his intrenohments. The Brazilian Ministry had suffered a defeat in the Chamber of Deputies, but did not intend to resign. Ofticial nows from El Paso has beenreceived at Washington upto June 1. Tho defoat of the Fronoh at Hermosillo, in So- uora, is confirmed, Tho Western army has been reorgauised and placed under the command of Gen. Corona. CONGRESS. Tu the Senate yesterday a resolution was adopted inquiring into the expediency of & reorganization of the civil service regardiog appointmentd, promotions and diswmissals. A joint resolution regarding the payment of interest on Stato claims for money experded for the benefit of the United Statos, was referred to the Finance Committee. The Mineral Land bill, published last week, was called up and passed. The Niagara Ship Canal bill was taken up, Pending debate upon it. the Tax bill was returnod from thé House. The Senate's amend- wonts were insisted upon and a conference comwittee ap- pointed. The Senate then weat iato Executive session and at 3 p. m. adjourned. In the House several bills from the Committee on public lands were reported and acted apon.. In the contested elec- tion oase, Boyd agt. Kelso, the report of the Committes on Electtons declaring Mr. Kolso entitlad to the seat was adopted. Mr. Boyd was also voted $2,500 for expenses incurred in con- testing the seat. The Senate amendrfents to the House Freed men's Bureau bill were non-concurred in and & Conference Committes asked. A resolntion was adopted inquiring into the expediency of providing that in all cases of granting American registers to foreiga-built vessels the vouchers shall pay to the Government 40 per cont ad valorem. A measage from the Presidont was received on a site for a fresh-wator basin for iron-olad vesscls. Auother message was reoeived in an swer to the House resolution as to whether avy civil or mili tary employés of the Govsroment have assisted in paying public honors to Rebels livingor dead. Tae House then in Committee of the Whole took up the Tariff bill, and Mr. Mor- rill addressed the Houso at length in its support. At its con- clusion the bill was cousidered by sections, the House consid- ering that regarding wool, and making no material smend- wenta, adjourned. NEW-YORK CITY. Michael Kelly was arrested on Wednesday e ket of Mrs. R. A. Green, residing in s yesterday committed for trial An inquest was beld yesterday on the body of Caroline Krehbiel, aged two years, who was run over by a Second-ave. car on the 20th inst., and died from her injuries on Wednesday evening. The Jury censared the driver. Jobn Hays, who escaped from Blackweil's Island several mouths since in a tub, was arrested on Wednesday evening at one of his old baunts. Franols Long was yesterday arrested for assaulting John Dolan of No. 195 Allen-st., on the night of June 25, with some sharp fnstru- ment. The accused was held to bail in the sam of §300. Jobn Grimm was arrested yesterday on the complaint of Andrew Brown, alager beer saloon keeper at No. 203 East Elevonth-st. for stealing 16 gold 20 pisces. Committed for examination. Adolph Stern, s peddleF, aged 21, was arrestod yesterday on the complaint of David Arndt of No. 30 Oliver-st., for stealing 3.100cigars, valued at $43. Ao inquest was held yestorday on the body of Phebe Peterson, aged 15, whbo was drowned on Sundsy night last by falling through a hols in the pler at the o0t of Delancey-st., East River, 1n the Bupreme Court, special term, yesterday, in the case of John T. Hoffman agt. Schulte, the injunction obtalved by he Commissieners of the Siuking Fund, restraining the Board of Health from tuterfering with the outside stands of Wash- ington Market, came up for argument. In bebalf of the de- fendants, affidavits were read to the effect that the condition of the stands was deleterions to the pablic health, and the stands themselves an illegal obstruction of tLe street. The plaintiffs deny these allegations, and argument on the merits is now proceeding. In the Supreme Ovurt, circuit, in the oase of the People ex rel. Farrel Sheridan sgt. Jane Middleton, being & suit brought by a father to obtain possession of his child who bad been bound out to a Mrs, Middleton, after argu- ment, the Court took the papers and reserved its decision. Inthe French Cashier extradition case, yesterday, nothing lmportaut was done, owing to the illuess of one of the counsel The case was postponed until Saturday. The case of Wm. J. Taylor agt. L. M. Montgommery and A. 1. Carredo came up in the Supreme Court yesterday. The plaintiff bad caused the arrest of defendants om a charge of defrauding him under pretense thuat they were tho agents of Gen. Santa Anna in purchasiog steamers to carry outan slleged scheme to overthrow the Mexican Emplre, but which agency had been repudiated by the General. The defendant's counsel, in moving their discharge, presented afidavits elaim- ing to show the fall details of the conspiracy, Counter afii- davits made by Gen. Santa Auna and others were also read re- butting the allegations of the defendants. James Dougherty, No. 36 Furman. and William Hines, residing in King-st., Brooklyn, were sunstruck on Wednesday and died the same evening. John Doyle was also prostrated by the heat, and was taken to the City Hospital. ‘The butchers of Prooklyn are indignant st a recent order of the Health Commissioners requiring them to obtain permits from the Board for cargyiug on their business. A mas meet- g was called for last eveniug to take steps to test the legal rights of the Commissioners to enforoe such an order. At a private weeting of the Italian Committeo to ald the ceause of Italian independence, on Tuesday, Garibaldi's former partoer, Meucei, made a stirring address, which was enthusi- astically received, and a subscription, which has alresdy reached 8600, started. The meeting then sdjourned to Satur- day. Robert Atkin was arrested yesterday, on a charge of obtaining goods from several grocery firms under folse pro- tevses. He was committed for examinatiou by Justice Dodge. The return game between the Athletic and Empire Base Ball Clubs, at Hoboken, yesterday, resulted in the success of the Atbletics—score, 64 to 10. The contest between the Mutual and Eureka Clubs, at the same place, yosterday, ended in o well-earned victory for the Mutuals—score, 24 to 13. The Cricket wa*ch yesterday between the 8t. George's and Phila. delphia Clubs, terminated in favor of tho St. George with 10 Maomusr and Borroxmors Maowixs. No. 625 Brosdway. Hows Sewixg MACHINE COMPANY. —ELIAs HOWE, Jr.. Prosident, No. 099 Brosdway. Agents wasted. ved Elliptic Hook, Lock- Srpure. No. 543 Brosdway. 2 I —Sold lu- lLllo Burrox-Horne MACH)NE un.n:x‘cn " Removar.—The im itk Ma-bines —A. H. ManvracTrive CONPANT. jway M1s80URL— The St. Louis Democrat opposes an ex- tra gession of the Logisla ure for tae purpose of scting upon the ment. In 1863, st the election for Judges of the pe Court, the Conservative candidates received 46,786 icals 45,702, _At the Presidential m’u vote was 73,350, aod McClellsn's 31,678, Constitution fl:::o'l.l.-' i E:M'::' m::: Yorteo 1. Drake. m':c:‘é'w'-uu " ot st the pext not 40,000, while that of the "WM ‘Thnflflbl!h ,il c'm places are bebng loyal new comers. TowA.—The resolations of the Iowa Union State Convention deciare that equality beforé the law is the first duty owed by car Government o all its citizens; that the questions of reconstruction belong to {Le people through the lmwl::lt:l‘:; l‘::vm-l ‘bounties. i ative b i St ok sod the equelization ] Gen. T. H. ith . F”J mm:t:{n sl e Commentio; -z’fln- 3 was Iiprgfl ‘hlo]&’ ‘ulnl the War. PexsSYLVANIA.—General Geary having been inter- relative 1o bis views upon the equalization of bounties, Das made public & Jetter which be addressed in May last to the Hon, Heary Wilson, Clairmsu of the Senate Military Com- 1o this ho argues both for the justice and practi c-n‘l:lnelg'y of this measure, 17 the Government bas not money with whigh to pay this ad , he sug- gosts that Congress * Treasury 10 ssne five per cont g over, pay- able lu 30 years, waking santy bonds, bt 1o coivable ab ali times for Governg: ands as par. . wickets to fall. Iu the Supreme Court yesterday in the case of W, B. & C. Jaodon against J. W. Butler, & sult in which the plantiffs, stock-brokers, sought to recover the sum of §4,500, which they claim to have lost by the defendant's ot keeping bis murgin #00d in certain stock transactions, the jury brovght in & ver- dict for the full amount demanded. Otto Hill, employed st No. 119 Maiden-lane, who bas been missing since Saturday, was found on bis way up the Hudson on one of the Albany steamers, and appears to have wandered off under s temporary aberration of mind. The entire amount of money in his possession at the time of his diseppearance was recovered. ‘The freight agents of a majorily of the railroad lines in the United States are now in session in this city. The object of the Convention 18 to adopt & uniform freight tariff for the ronds represented. No new cases of eholera were reported yesterdsy. There were several sudden deaths reported, but as the lnspectors did not seo the patients untl) after death they were unwilling to pronounce decidedly upon their disease, Thirty-four ivjunctions were issned yesterday by Judge Cardoro against the Board of Excise. 8ix applications for licenses were received by the board and ten delivered. It is understood that the Citizens' Association contemplate expending $5,000 for fireworks, to be exiiibited in four differ- ent localities on the evening of the Fourth of July, A recent fire in Virginia City, Nevads, destroyed property to the amount of $200,000, and rendered 400 familios houseless. Gold was lower yesterdsy, and was quite freely offered during tho day. The closiog rate was 153,and the extremes 154 and 151}, Govern- nient securitios of all descriptions were higher, snd in demand. Tre Railway share market was dull At the Second Board the market was dull, with the exception of Erle. Money s sbundant on eall ut @6 per cent, with exceptionsl loans et 4 upon Governmente. In commercial paper, little dolug. Forelgn Exchange is becoming mare reguler. GENERAL NEWS. ‘The men at work in the white clay-pits at Woodbridge, N, ., bave struck for higher wages. On the employers attempt- 1ug to introduce other workmen, considerable rioting ooourred. ‘Ihirteen of the ringleaders were arrested and lodged in Mid- Qlgsex County Juil. The suryeys in Ludson County (N.J.)h NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1866. for the construction of the New-York and Newark railroad are completed, and also partly made in Essex County. A dispateh from Canaudaigua states that indictments have been found sgainst most of the Feniaus who went there (rom Buffalo for trial. A fire at Buffalo on Weduesday night destroyed the mali-house of Beardsley & Belding, in which stored 15,000 bushels of malt grain and 2,000 bushels of oats; mostly insured. A Louisville (Ky.) dispatch of the 27th says that at a very large meeting of the Secoud Preshyterian Congregation the Ror. Stuart Robinson, their pastor, was sustained by an over- whelming majority, new eiders were elected, and strong min- uates adopted indorsing the Louisville Presbytery agaiost the General Assombly. A general order has been fasued by Gen. Seymour, com- manding at Peosacola, establishing virtually martial law over five counties of Florida, in consequence, aa it alleges, of the civil authorities haviog failed to prevent crimes being committed upon the persous of loyal citizens and soldiers. By a thunder storm in Poughkeepsic on Wednesday tho buildiogs belonging to the New.York Ice Company were set on firo and destroyed, with the Weddle paint works. Loss $90,000. A violent tornado visited Detroit at noon on the 25th inat. Much damage was done to property, but no lives are reported lost. The New-Hampshire House of Representatives yes? terday ratified the Reconstruction Coustitutional Amendment by a vote of 203 to 107. There is something in Logic. We present the three following points and leave them to our readers: L. Extract from daily telegraphic reports.—** * a distinguished Rebel, has been pardoned through ex- ertions of O. H. Browning and otbers.” 11.—Extract from advertisement.—** 0. H. Browning, Claim Agent.” IIL.—Extract from the club-call, 0. H. Browning, * Committee.” Ou the second page of this morning's paper will be found Literary Itoms; on the third pege an article on Long Branch, and Law Intelligence; on the sixth and seventh pages, our Foreign correspondence, including letters from Paris, London, and Stuttgart; on the seventh page very full and interesting accounts of the Commencement season, Presentation Day and the Wooden Spoon at Yale the one-hundred-and- twelfth anniversary of Columbia College, Princeton, Mount Union, the General Theological Seminary, &c. The most significant feature of recont war news from Mexico is the defeat of Col. Dupin's counter- guerrillas. These men were collected from all sorts of desperadoes, and, with Dupin's thorough drill and daring tactics, were generally successful over the guerrillas. They have at last boen defeated, and even routed; and Dupin himself, who has executed 80 many Mexican prisoners, is reported a capti n hand and condemned to the same fate. No incident more plausibly shows the progress of the Liberal Army. The Cordova ¢olonists have come to a grief which hardly werits cithor sympathy or respect, Mz, Jefer- son Davis calls them cowards; and neither Liberalists nor Imperialists think too well of them. Having lost all in a vain strife for independence and for Slavery in their own conntry, they thought so well of confis- cation and outlawry that they took the prope dispossessed patriots, at the hands of a usurper, tled on it, bragged about it, sneered at the Mexicans, wrote of them as the * most worthless population on earth” (see Harris's letter), and supported Maxi- milian in making them bondmen. Harris, Maury, Perkins, Price, Magruder, Shelby, aud more of them, with The Mezican Times for an organ, spoke of Juarez as a **low half-breed,” and his army as brig- ands and thieves; and were loyal to the Empire if to nothing else. The Mexican Ge who owns the land on which Gen. Price founded the town of Carlotta in honor of the Empress voked to break up the whols Cordova Colony. did it, notwithstanding the protestations of Pri whom he threatened to hang; and so ends the p pect of a new Blavery, the humbug advertised by Maury, for which hundreds of unfortunate exiles curse the folly of their leadors. pote THE BANDALL CONVENTION THEN. ¥. TINES. The Times talks of Tug TRIDUNE'S ** opposition ™ to the tional Convention proposed by Messrs. Randall & Co., and proceeds: **The object of the Convention is te nationalise the party; Tug Trust X has labored to sectionalize it. One is designed to heal differences, to avert dangers, to consolidate sad streagthen the party on a fundation of natioual usefuls The other systematically eadeavors to aggravate d and. by arraying the party in h render its seotionalism bitter would therefore be if Tie TRINUNE in soy even toleratad, the gathering of Union wen d South with the view of promoting natiosal barmooy wsd peace.” —Assuming that the party which elected Lincoln and Johnson has hitherto been ** sectional,” and that it needs to be hereafter placed *‘on a foundation of National usefulness,” we have not the slightest re- pugnance to the call of & National Convention as a means to that end. But such Convention must be called by the National Committee appointed by its last National Couvention, or by some other responsible and representative authority. The Randall call is nowise authorized by the party, is not addressed to the party, and s not contemplate s Convention thereof, but only of that infinitessimal fraction of it which condemns the action of Congress and supports what is known 88 the President’s policy. All this, The Times thor- oughly understands; and its juggling with the mat- tor is a gross insult to the understandings of its readers. The Times knows right well that the Randall and Hendricks call is calculated and intended to distract, divide, and defeat that Union party which elected Lincoln and Johnson, Yet it fancies that there are some among its readers who will not per- ceive and apprehend the truth, Such experiments on popular credulity are not only dishonest: they can hardly fail to recoil on the heads of their authors, ‘Whether Messra, Randall, Doolittle, Dixon, Hen- dricks & Co, are—as contradistinguished from the great majority of Congress—the true expositors of Union sentiment, while their opponents are *sec. tional " and heretical—is a question that need not be discussed. Ask the first hundred Unionists of 1564 you meet whether they side with the majority or with the minority in Congress, and—apart from the four or five who enjoy or eagerly seek, Executive favor—at least ninety-eight in the hundred will answer, * We stand with Congress.” Thisis as notorious as that there is or ever was a Union party. The Times gays that Tae TrRipUNE « prefers shibboleths of its own invention to the recorded ut- terances of the Convention thut nominated Mr. Livcolo, and of Mr. Lincoln himself.” —True, Bir! we prefer our own platform, framed of the two broad planks—UNIVERSAL AMNESTY, IMPAR- TIAL SUFFRAGE—t0 any other. We bope yet to see it adopted by the whole American people. But we do not pretend that it is the platform of the Union party; we donot presume to base thereon a call for & Union Convention, or attempt to found a party on our platform—we present it simply as our own; and, while we hope to win others to its support, we make no pretense that tho great party with which we act is under the smallest obligation to ac- oept it. 1If that party shall ever sce fit to do so, we shall rejoice: meantime, we support its candidates and rejoice in its triumphs, whether over-open hos- tility of that more deadly treachery which would “steal the livery of the court of To serve tho Doy 10." i 1f we should illustrate by instances our view of the iniquities of the present Congressional Mileage sys- tem, we could not escape the imputation of gratifying private grudges under pretense of urging a public re- form. We have, therefore, simply printed the sums received by each Senator, Representative or Delegate, ina compact tabular form, without comparisons or was at last pro-, { } have & maprity of one in the Lower Hous other illustrations that might be deemed invidious; but we ask the tax-paying public to institute, each for himeelf, comparizons between the charges of Sena- tors and Representatives living in the same city, be- tween members living very near each other (thongh often in different States), and test in every way the honesty and equity of the present system. Mind, now, that we blame no man for having taken (a5 we presume is the case with most Members) what the law allows him: the question we would press home on each and all is this—I¥hat harve you DONE to have the law made what it should be ? TAE TA ‘We most earnestly tommend to general attention the speech of Mr. Morrill on the Tariff, which will be found in full in our Congressional report. There have been speeches delivered in the House more ornate and rhetorical than this, but seldom a speech of sounder practical wisdom, more crowded with in- formation, more instructive in its statements, We should like to ask the Free-Traders to forego for once their habitual abuse and invective, and to make an effort to answer honestly this impregnable array of facts and arguments demonstrating the necessity of a Protective Policy for the development of American Industry, and the promotion of National Prosperity, They must either try to do this, or they must suppress this speech, and we are compelled to suppose they will choose the latter alternative. ‘What can be said in reply to the exhibition of our losses by war, requiring to be supplied by encourage- ment of domestic manufacture; to the forcible pro- sontation of the evils of an inflated currency which amounts to more than Nine Hundred Millions of Dollars, upon which onr Importers grow rich at the expense of our artisans and laborers ? The nation strug- gles under the burden which is laid on it, and whicha Free Trade policy would perpetuate. Our country, formerly one of the cheapest, is become one of the dearest places to live in. Once jt was the paradise of honest Labor;§ to-day it is the paradise of dishonest Speculation, and Mr. Morrill shows us how necessarily the contiaction of a dis- tended currency and the adoption of a Protective Tariff go hand in hand, and are each essential to the other, atd boh to the fatere welfare of the country. Mr. Morzill's speech is not less instructive in respect to the details of the bill than in respect to the princi- ples upon which it is founded, and while we may differ with him in some particulars we agree most heartily that the Tariff bill will be a blessing if adopted substantially as reported from Comumittee, and that there is the most urgent need of speedy action upon it in both Houses. OREGON, A dispsteh from San Francisco in this morning's paper removes all doubt as to the election of the Union tieket in Oregon. Official returns from all Counties except Coose, Grant and Umatilla give Wood, tie Union ecandidate for Governor, 205 majority. Of the thres Counties yet to be heard from, Cocse and Umatilla gave in 1864, together, a Democrate majority of 49, and Grant is 8 new County. The rest of the Union ticket is elected by a maj of from 350 to 500, The Unionists also elect a majority of the Legislatare, —_— NEBRANKA. We learn from The Omaha City Daily Republican of June 21, that election returns bhad been received from all counties except one, which had made no re- turns as te its vote on the State Constitution. The Republican says that the whole number of votes cast will exceed 5,000, perhaps 5,100 (against 5,950 in 1365, and 4,513 in 1864). The majority for State Con- stitution will not be much in excess of 100 votes, while the majority fog the Hon. David Butler, the Union candidate for Governor, is reported officially to be 145 votes, The majority of Mr. Marquette, the Union candidate for Congress, is 136 votes. The majorities for the otber Btate officers on the Union ticket ere about the same, Only the Hon. O. P. Mason, the Union candidate for Chief-Justice, is be by Mr. Little, whom The Republican calls the most poptlar Democrat in the Territory. There is still scme doubt about the Legislature, but the eloction o' Mr. Williams, says The Republic cures the Senate, and every indication is t to The Kansas State nates the present An “ediorial corresponden Journal, frn Nebraska City, ¢ population of the Territory at 45,000, against 2%,000 in 1560, TIES, COMMENCEMENT MOR It is an wpleasant peculisrity of the present period thiat we thisk so much shout thinking. The Presi- dent of a College, when he takes leave of a little flock of jus: fledged Bachelors, tells them that they must be surz to go on cultivating their minds; that intellectual pmgress alone is consistent with true hap- piness; that they must be faithful to the Republic and to themselves; that he wishes them abundant prosper- o grea deal of taste. The Bachelors then pack ir goods and go out for a pilgrimage over ** the sands of this wilderness of a world,” hot each oue bewring a parchment certificate that he bas studed to the acceptance of his Fac- ulty for fur years, Greek, Latin, Mathe- matics, Natunal and Moral and Intellectual Philoso- phy, with other small side branches of learning. Many of the young gentlemen thus dismissed are full of rather indefinite aspirations and poetical purposes. Most of themare of an ingenuous spirit, and mean to be honorable, industrious, and successful. They are going out to the Battle of Life—for sothey call it—and propose to be good soldiers. There is an immensity of preparation—what shall we say of the performance? There is some:hing pathetic in the consideration that 50 many must fall and fail, must die by the wayside, must walte mind and lose heart in the struggle—so many of thew poor boys now starting with the morning light upon their unwrinkled brows! For of ull failures in this world of disappointment, there is none o) melancholy as that of the intellectual man missing the prize of success through feebleness of will or the perversity of fate, and suffering ten-fold more than wretches of & less sensitive nature. But the world moves on in its career of business or of pleas- ure, mindful for the most part only of its own aflairs, and thinking it does puough if it bestows a momentary sigh upon the private tragedy of which every day brings a new one. A newspaper, consecrated to the practical bustle of affairs, can do no more. We believe that we have read about ten thonsand sermons, addresses, lectures, and speeches, be the same more or less, upon **The Duties of the Scholar in the Nineteenth Century.” Atany rate, we have read more of them than we propose ever to read again, The best of them are but respectable repo- titions. Tho Bachelor of Arts is ** to woo solitude as abride.” Heis to give his days and nights to high philosophy, He is to bo virtuous. He is to be truth- fal. He is to be patriotic, After hoaring this he goes away; ho forgsts his Greek and Latin as soon as pos- sible; he opens a broker's office in Wall-st., or a cotton mill in Lowell; be practices law and discards his yirtue; he turns politician and has no use forit; he preaches without it; or he becomes amember of Con- gress, and finds *high philosophy " & drug! If he cver talks about it again, it isonly once a year at the Commencement dinner, Of purely professional scholars we have hardly a hundred in the whole land, and most of these are engaged in teaching—the mill- horses, if we wmay eay 80, of classical routine. The rest of the Bachelors aro doing something better— they are making woney ! Now, if the President of a College sbould #ay f My young what a clamor would fill the agadeuwic to iends, be sure his doparti make moucey ! shades! With what celerity would that respectable 8. T. . be & xpelled from his office, even although ho couched the o\'noxions sentiment “in Latin, and said: * — ——quirronda pecunis primam est; nummos " Virtus posy But we do not see Why he shonld not say it, when we all mean it and do it, with our whole heart, and mind, and strength. And pray what should be the business of & College but to prepare young gentlemen for the business of life? Then why should we not have Pro- fossorships of Stock Broking 7—chairs devoted to the art and mystery of cornering 8 stock?~teachers of the science of bamboozling a jury and of driving a coach and horses through the flaws of an indictment ? —lecturers on the pure mathematics of Number One? good, hard-headed, practical Doctors of the Main Chance, with appropriate and necessary text-books? If it is to come to that at last, why not in the begin- ning? Questions like these bring us out of the salt fog of our eynicism into a grateful and sunny recognition of what the Colleges have done for us, and may, with all their faults, still do for us. This is a very imperfect world; it is ““prone and obedient,” as Sallust has it, ““to the belly;” and colleges, like churches, are per- petual protests against complete stirrender to the tem- poral and the mechanical. They are a confession of faith which it is better to gabble unconsciously than not to say at all. When a man who can hardly read English dies, and leaves $50,000 to endow o Hebrew chair, he acknowledges duly by hand and seal that there is som ething better than bulling or bearing stock. He would have scoffed at Parson Adams if ho had met him with Alschylus in his pocket in Wall-st.; but asthe roar of that seeth- ing thoroughfare grows faint in his dying ears, he bethinks him that it will be a very good thing to have poor boys taught Greek. These are miracles, but we hare had too many of them to disbelieve in them al- together. Most of our seats of polite learning owe their existenco* to the liberality of departed shop- keepers. Hundreds of churches are under like obliga- tions. A mutation of the hide and tallow market may give the languishing Chinese mission a new lease of life. 8o Colleges are to be cultured and endowed, and honorably mentioned in last wills and testaments, if for no other reason than for proof that Poor Richard was right, and that “learning is better than house or lands.” All the world, in a muzzy sort of way, feels and acknowledges this. On the other hand, what Wealth does for Learning is amply and generously repaid both by the new paths of enterprise and emolument which cultivation opens, and by respectable methods of expending money which refinement establishes, Mr. Astor would never have thought of establishing his great library if there had not been so many little ones in the country. One never knows ifi what form the planted seed will spring up. Harvard College generates picture galleries in New-York, and Yale may have something to do with the Academy of Music. The beginning of all news- paper success is in the dame-school where the alphabet i3 taught. ‘The great operations of the banks are first scrawled upon a boy's slate. It is wmot the ignorant money-changer who is intolerable, but the money-changer who is ignorant of the wretchedness of ignorance. The main educational idea of this age is that of diffusion; | that of s past age, concentration. We may have fewer great scholars than lived and pored and end- lessly wrote in monastic times; but what we have gained is a sufficieney of knowledge, so that no man need be miserable through ignorance. In the promo- tion of this, Colleges do their part, especially in keep- ing up a high standard; snd the multiplication of universities only shows an advance in the ambition and intelligence of the masses. For this, whatever may be collegiate shortcomings, let us be grateful. e————— | HOW NOT 10 SUPPORT THE BRNT, The call of the Doolittle-Jobusonians for a Con- | vention ceutains this remarkable passage: * Hach State Lus the undoubted right to prescribe the qual- ifications of its own electors; and Bo external power rightfully can or ought to dctate, control or influence, the free and vol- untary action of tha States in the exercise of that right” —Then, why have bayonets, amnesty oaths, par- dons, proclamations, and telegrams from the Presi- dent and Secretary of State, now and in the past four years, dictated, controlled and influenced this free and voluntary action? Arewe to understand the Doolittle- Johnsonians as contending that a State has a right to qualify Rebels, or that the President has that right, and can qualify Rebels to assume it? Which? —The National Union Jobusoun Club announces the | following as a part of its platform: Resoleed, That treason is a erime which should be panisbed; | and that we are opposed to compromising with traitors by bartering *universal smaesty’ for - auiversal saffrage. * | | | —Pray tell us to what extent the President’s meas- | | ures bave made * treason odious;” what traitors have been punished; and whetber *‘Amnesty " has not been bartered for a great deal less than Saffrage? —_— PARLIAMENTARY DECORUM. : Some of our cotemporaries, who are not enamorad of the legislation of this Historic Congress, are quite profuse in their denunciations of it, and severely crit- icise its alleged lack of decorum. They point us, as The Herald, Atlas and other presses have done, to the British Parliament and French Assembly as the mod- els which Congress should imitate. Probably the | following from The Pall Mall Gazette of June 2, which | graphically describes recent scene in the House of | Commons, and which has not been rivaled of late years in the House of Representatives, illustrates the | decorum they desiro to have observed during our | American discussions: The Asiatic gentlomen who last night visited the Hovse of Comwons witnessed o remarkable scene, which must huve rather disturbed their previoos conception of the *eolleotive wisdom' of n groat country. For more than an bour, a large | gathering of grave-looking gentlemen were engaged in Loot- | {ng, howling, and groaning, while an excited littlo man was | soen wagglig @ gray beard and gesticulating wildly, while | every uow i then—as the storm around him pdrnnl{y lulied —ho was beard shouting disjointed fragments of seuntences at the top of his voiee. The Oriental vir tors probably learned, from their futerpreter, that this was Mr. Whatley discoursing about Fenjanism and the Pope, and must have been rather puzzled to know whether it was or of the Irish or hatred of the Pope that caused such discord. In the French Corps Legislatif, we often hear of equally boisterous scenes while & member is speaking. Hisses, exclamations, ejaculations, interruptions, the tinkling of the President’s bell, which is used like n gavel for the preservation of order, and the President, finally despairing of quelling the chaos, declaring the sessfon suspended till the tamult ceases. They are concerned, too—these criticising presses—at the strictures uttered against those in authority, as if it were unprecedented. Have they forgotten Henry Clay’s personal invectives against John Tyler? Are Douglas's Dbitter denunciations of Buchanan blot- ted from history? Were Jefferson, Madison, Jackson, and Franklin Pierce, exempt from the severest personal censures? In a land like ours, where there is s0 much independnce of thought, more freedom of discussion and severity of criticism are expected than in monarchical countries, And yet the Legislators of Prussia have denounced their Min. istry quite as severely as our Ministry have been denounced in Congress; and a personal allusion by one of the most gifted of England’s orators to the Falstaffian form and falsifying characteristics of one of his Parliamentary opponents, though biting in the extreme to its subject, passed unrebuked. In the Freneh Corps Legislatif, the President watches the utterances of members, and, when a disparaging allusion is made to the Emperor, stops and soolds the offending member; and several of these stormy scenes have occurred there within the last year, and the description of them has been copied by the press of this eity. 1In both branches of our Con- [4 a different rule prevails, The presiding officer does not volunteer, with superserviceable zeal, as in Franct, to check debaters in their utterances,” They | r mber makes the point of order tly when any n but otherwise the. freelom of debatg is un- 0 checked. Perhaps this Congress compares unfavoes ably with those where pistols were drawn in the Sonate Chamber, as n the days of Benton and Mis- sissippi Foote, or when a Senator was brutally beaten in his seat for words spoken in debate, and for which he had not been even called to order; or whan, Southern members crowded around Giddings's seat to silence his utterances, or when Lovejoy's speech pro- voked a melée aud fight in the area in front of the Speaker's chair, or when Crawford of Georgia and others stood by the side of Thaddeus Stevens, and by personal threats sought to intimidate him. Bat, though there bave been some personalities used 'Nch' might better have been omitted, and though it has been harshly arraigned both by Presidential and Cab- inet speeches, we think this Congress will not suffer by comparison with any of its predecessors of the last quarter of a oentury, EVEN TO T The following extract is taken, not nor The News, nor The Metropolitan Record, The New-York Times: 4 4 v et ooy ' from The World, @ state of things that approzimately and the measure of their devel 3 L idem that after orders, and bureaus ao dominant white race in the Bontt that main ::gl .Iun e“bd t;o-ulll’. and time uch more; but the present tis o e g e Y ence, whatever legislation or tends T S e b e upon the Southern blacks. " ey g It is notgwithout a sincere feeling of sorrow that wa record this terrible backsliding, We see here a journal which has professed to be Republican—going at least to the extent of constantly feeding with the party—sur- rendering every principle which makes Republicanism a distinctive creed, and every sentiment which Christian men, North and South, have entertained toward the negro. It is only another illustration of the saying that the descent to hell is very easy, when once we get upon the road. According to the philosophy of The Times, the ne- groes have no resource but the plantation, and no friends but the masters by whom they were ** brought up.” Slavery was such a happy social custom—so necessary to the well-being of the negro—that he cannot escape from its associations, and its practical, if not (alas for Lincoln!) its political real- ization. The hovel where he lived like a hog, the cotton-field he tilled without reward, the whipping- post, where he saw his wife aud children whipped like felons for some unexplained deficiency in a day's cotton picking, the home of misery and degrada- tion—=all this belongs to the negro's natare! He can- not live without it according to The Times. Nothing remains but to keep him as nearly in that condition as we can, and at the same time to censure those fanatical but perhaps misguided men who heaped upon him the misery of Emancipation. Notwithstanding all, there is butone race which can befriend the negro—‘‘the hereditarily ~dominant white race of the South.” What are ** legislation and laws, and regulations and orders, and bureans and appropriations " to this sublime irrefragible principle of hereditary domination? Perhaps it is wrong to speak of such things in a republic; but when journalists are in the easy descent, they are not over-scrupulous about opinions. We call Slavery acrime; the civilized world ;denounces the slave- trade as piracy. The easy-descending Times sees in the infamy and horror of Slavery a condition of relief for the negroes, their only hope of happiness, the state ““that approximately agreed with their characters and the measure of their development.” The misery of that proclamation of Emancipation! The weakness of Mr. Lincoln! His inexcusable failure to see that nothing but Slavery agreed with the **character” of the negro, and his ** measure of developement!” All of this The Times confesses now—when Mr. Lincoln no longer livesto give and dispense—and our cotem- porary finds its account in herding with Hendricks and Nesmith and the other leaders of the new Union party. the look for securicy and justice for o Southern The National Intelligencer has a ludicrous attack on the proposed Tariff, in the course of which it says: * The adoption of the [;::Poud tariff puts an end to the ex- port of cotton; for everybody who kaows the course of that ':fj' kuows that the returs for cotton must be in Europesa goods. —Why so? There are at least One Billion Dollars of American Bonds and other obligations held in Furope, where the best of them are haw®ed about at 65 cents onhe dollar. Suppose we buy back some of thess, paying for them in Cotton, &e.—what of it? Or is The Intelligencer averse to paying debts!? The Raleigh N. C. Standard says of Reconstruetion and the Constitutional Amendment: * We prefer the President’s plan, We are for that plan :f-mn all others. But if we canoot get it, we will take the Howard amendment, because we know that if we reject it the terms thereafter imposed will be much barder than asy we have {-l feared. Is uot this view reasosable? Who says vay to it THE RECONSTRUCTI AMENDMENT, —-— The Lower House of the New-Hampehire Cosconn, N. H., Friday. June %, 18, ‘The House of Representatives this afternoon passed the Reconstruction Amendment by & vote of Yeas, 235 Nays, 107, GRS IR POLITICAL, pliirt-as By Te L] THE OREGON ELECTION—UNIONISTS SUCCESSFUL. SAN FraNCI800, Saturday, June 23, 18%. A Portland, Oregon, dispateh of yesterday saye that returns from all the counties except Uumatills, Grea! aud Coose give Wood, the Unioa candidate for Goveraor, %5 majority. The rest of the Union State ticket is elected by 8 majority of from 350 to 500, The Uniontats also elect 8 major- ity of the Legislature, INDIANA. NEw-ALBANY, Iod., Thareday, June 3. 1865 The Democratic Congressional Convention met to= day, Major Sherrad presiding. It was large and enthusiastic. Resolutions were passed acknowledging the justice of the late war for the preservation of the Union; declaring uncompro® mising hostility to suffrage for negroes; indorsing the Preel- dent's vetoes of the Freedmen's Bureau and Civil Rights bl opposing an - increase of the rates of duties on imports; warmly approving the restoration policy of the President; opposing suy amendments to the Coustitution at prosent; declaring that noge of the States were ever out of the Union during the late Rebellion; op- posing the cxemption of $3,000,000,000 of the wealth of the country from texation; denouneing the legislation of the Radical Congress, and demanding of the next National Lagis- Isture that overy species of wealth shall bear its equal share of taxation. The Hon. M. C. Kerr was renominated for Congress by 8o- clamatjon. MAINE. PoRTLAND, Thursday, Juse 3%, 1866, The Hon. Sidney Perham was renominated as Rep- resentative to Congress from tho 1d District, by the Repabll- caus, at & Couveation held at Auburn to-day. PENNSYLVANIA® The Pittsburgh Gazette say “1t is stated (on what 8p- pears to us to be competent suthority) that Senator Cowaa has written to a gentleman of this couaty, boiding office g i the whole offiod~ the Federal Government, siguifyiag that the whols 070% ;Phg"' class ure expected to voie wl.” On Monday evening, after & jon by the Clymer Clab s York, the greater part of the audience proc od' to 0 of The True Democrai, where they threatened to mob editor and destroy bis office. They ‘did not, bowever, carry out thoir threats. being probably satisfied to show thele spite against & Union jourusl. 1 t!