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Amusements. and, John Nunan, B ir. Chas. Fisher, Mrs. s Barzett, Mre. Geo. INTER GARDEN. EVENIN b=-POCAHONTAS=THE NERVOUS e, THE ¥ NERVE. M. Jon Broughaw, Miss } O Emily Melv. WOOD'S THE THIS EVENING-¥RA DIAVOL Worrell Sisters, Mr. Barton Hill ER BROTAER SAM." The 4 full company. FOX'E OLD BOWERY THEATER. ot B-SANDFORD BRATED MIN. SQUE ’(\))'} RA TROUPE — THE BRASS STONE NEW BOWERY THEATER. NING S PIRAL MOUNTAIN=SATTLE OF THE VHEN THE CATS AWAY THE MICE WILL sishiy Fumily, Scaorits Rosita, Mons. Agoust. 3 AMERICAN M A ND EVENING—SHE WOULD A BALNUN EVERY HOUR BE A SOLLIER; Ne C W. Clark: 1 full compeny. ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND CUKIOSITIES. THE CAROLINA AWINS. e e— RDE THIS EVENING A MENT-FPONGO, the Ape— ROBERT MAC et of FRANCOIS RAVEL—Sig wotiza Pepita, 1 wine Youne America, OLYMPIC THEATER. TIIS EVENING, ot '—AURORA FLOOD Mes. Jordan, Mise Meaton, M », Mesrs. Lawlor, Clark, Fenvo, Wallis, Ward, Whitig Rockwell aud siuclair. US, THIS EVENING o sl Spanish Oiscus. Equer trian, Oywua (N, Third-ave. 1OMAS'S ORCIESTRAL cert ot 4 Lusiness Notices. Mook, Lock- 543 Broadway. Resovar.—The improved Ei ptic Covir & Co, N Stitch Sewing Macitnon~ A New Disco * A sure cure for ‘Ingrowing [l Easily a7 ita effects. Au effective wemedy for t it 3 & 1 to give immediate relief ia At cases. M led poctpatd on receipt of One Dollar. o Tmos. . Fowsem, Wiscasset, Moine. NATIONAL Baick MacmINg, with only 3500 bricks per hour, with straight, well- taud ALL cLiMATES, while thoss made by the ¢ 40z meckines oll CRUMILY 7O PIECRS on be- g EXPORED 70 /RIST A Rzqua, General A, 3,000 SuiNgLes rER Hov ¢ made by the Exrine Surnous Macuixe wilh ouly 0N mOam Powrk; and wiil make out of (he eawe smount of timber OXBTHIRD MORE SHINGLES than canbe made by any eswing ehingle machive. A Ruqua, Genera! Agent, No. 141 Brosdway, New-York. SURETO RUGULATE TOE Bowmis.—Mns. WiNs- wow's 800T11¥G SYRUP is the only thing that mothers can re'y upon for tueir clilldren. 1t coreots acidity of the stomseh, regulates tho Boweis, and gives rest, bealth, sod comfort to mother sud child. Dariog the process of tecthing its valve is inealoulable. 1€ softens the gums, redaces ixSammation, and allsys all paly, thereby giviog rost to d and coxfort to the mother. 0. 141 Broadway, N. Y. RoMAINE's CRIMEAN BITTERS. “ Most Powenrur, Toxto." They are the most powerful exh: st toude in the world, is the eoncurrent testimony of thoussnds. Dr. Jauvary, of the regular United State: ys: “After an attack of typhoid fever, their o easbled me e my duties in 8 much slorter time than | hought 1. My sppetito was immedi- the resumed thelr fanctions propared so carefolly as it fs and from 50 MANY receive the spprobation of the 14 becoe fully kno T This uriicle is advertised i tho New-York Lereld. LEAVETT'S SWIETENTA. for clasnaing and preserving the teeth, glving Snmness and to d offeriug 5 de gums, impariiaz weetness to the braath, an Fefrosling fecl -2 to ta o sl everywhers, Try it once ; you will use ne cther. IR Y L e Pl AMERICAN PorvLAR LIFE RANCKE COMPANY, Now. 419 and 421 Grosdway, corner Ganal-st. Proseuts ten now foa Rures do it ol Call'or send for one. Cartes Vignette, §3 per dozen; Duplicates, $2. iatred 160 Chatham ., N. ¥.. . Morr's Cewmaican Pouave Restores Gray Hair, falling out; removes dandrufl; the fino:t dross- No. 10 Astor Honse, 515 nts y B. Pa , 2nd low £ officers and civilians. 1,600 N.¥.; 19 Green st,, Boston. Avoid R. A, Lewis Aseptie Trusses, FLASTIC STOCKINGS, SUSPENSORY BAND- .—Mansu & Co.’s Radical Cure Truss Olice Jy ettendant. Aows, euly &t No. Wirroox & CGipps SEWING MACHINE. *Jee meaun i st rip lu sse or weas, han the titeh."— o ¢ 'nhll Park Trial.” nd sampies of Wotk coutainiug both kinds of iece of goods. No. w08 Broadway. s = vk b RS e o et FLORENCE LOCK-STITcm SpwiNG-MAcmiNes—Best 10 bho world. Fronence SEWine-MACKINE COMPANY, No. 505 Brosdway. GrOVER & Baxer's Hiomest PREMIUM ELASTIC 24 for lani'y use. No. 435 Broadway. IaprovEp Locx-Stiren Macmixes for Tailors and suulactarers. CxovER & DAKER SEWiNG Macumise Cowpaxy, 0. 435 Brosdway. WregLer & Wisox's Lock-STiTem SEWING Macwixs and mouk Macuixe. No. 625 Brosdway. Lyox's New Family Sewing-l{whiuc. Ore marbine free of charge. No. 581 Brosdway. Howr Sewixs Macmine CoupANy. —ELias Hows, $r., President, No. (95 Brosdway. Agsuis wasted. TMARVIN'S N¥wW PATENT ALUM Axp hll)m( PLASTER oL “1LveR Prare Saves. Higl o au B e B " Rlao-"a large swoguent. of Boakers” and | Blerchauts Tt & Co., 265 B'dway, and 731 Chestnut st., Phlla. , for Corxs and BUN1ONS. cties radicelly curative, aud is pre- by all Deusgiats. . C. WELLs Qusmxg's BriL In ibs pabure inz o« red for fmz e’ € Co, Whele Howx's Cor7ox PickrR picks 600 to 800 pounds day i the feié <cener than by band, Bouthern sgents wauted. lowe MAKCPACTORING CONPANY, No. 31 Cedar-it Dercies’s LIGRTNING FLY-KiLLeg Makes quick werk wish files, sndif commenced esrly, keps the house cloar all Surumer. Look out for imitations. Get DrzemER's on'y. als Ageats PALPITATION 0F THE HEART is at once subdned by the groat vegelable sedstive, mervise and tonic, Proxmexs. For per- somt of & bervous e perament sud fec! tion it is the only Depot, No. 2 Dey i+ i{heuum‘.. of y & 1z is being daily cured s7CALPR'S OR7AT REroMATIO HEMEDY The Kates of Foreign Posiage. %o the Editor of The N. Y. Tribune. Siw: [ wish to call attention to the rates of foreign postage. Iihink that these rates are ot presont not regu- Jated by 8 cousisteat or equiteble rule, and that they are, ,1 ‘without exception, far higher than they should be. 0 rates of age upon letters between ihe Unitod States u Lave remained unchanged for moie than a quarter of a century—though a reduction to 15 cents was pro- 18 years ugo by Postmaster-General Jobnson; though a %o 20 Cents was proposed 16 yoars ago by Postmaster- Genoral Hall; thongh a reduction to 12 cents was proposed 'mise years ago by the Post-Office Department of Great Britain; wnd though a reduction has been coustanly demauded by the Dest interests of over 30,000,000 of sufferers in Awerica aud 60,000,000 in Euro '"'n.gguu, wuggont the following as & basis for amend- &: o {0 present m}mfmc in the United States Great Britala respectivs the rates between the two o-‘mn. !‘nu\-uu reductions upon the rates between o6 United Stater, Germany and France; let all letters be pro- ot & doulle rate be charged on dolivery; aud lot no in. g Xpon-lmmubonptucmbymhtm for t Ty Ly g A 6 from annu o ' ht l:. ¥ and A ‘would -’nu '-':I’o- of dollars A:np':-lly to wmerchants, to oa‘n[r-nu wnd classes; would increase the tnoome of ship-owner anm‘mh:fim o ely to the pations; aod d be, in many other ways, of :‘runrnuh:dmmm - v ~.= a1m awure there is not a Toason hz'ln ‘making a reduction of the presont ratos. T suggest immediate 8; ment of om'wjmu‘-um. , June 26, 1666, Obituary. DR. PAUL BECK GODDARD. Dr. Pau! Beck Goddard, one of the most eminent of the couptry, Qled at Philadelphia oo the 5tb, brief ilinees. His devotion to wounded soldiers, during fhe war. safoed Bim erest vopularity amoag the pepple. mows ¢f Lis Gesth must bave mso caused regrot the best soclal and medical circles of Pliladelpbia, where was better koown es an accompls as eitker a writer plished and tioner l or n T, mm 80 muoh ability, be had sl e with el e M e T and its ds were no doubt greatly varied and exacting. ‘canos festing the resources of the mediosl art and sciencs, keen gye was summoned freqnentiy; and, 1 et dailngul b+ for wllsdneated hyicians, bs Tk s -nc{” b, _Like many of the groat lghts of his profes . (loAdard wae, apart from medigine, a wii aud spholsr, was biotier of the Key, K 1dard, o well-known Flrfan 100, Gl Wi elaied o o 1k Dock | FRIDAY, JULY 6, Teo Correspondents, No noties ean bataken of Anonymous Communiostions. Whateveris futended for insertion must be authenticated by the name snd sd dress of Lhe writer—nol nscessarlly for publication. but o3 agusr anty for his g0od faith. Al business letters for this oltice sLoula bs addresiedio “The Tars unr,” New-York. We cannol undertoke to retarn reiscted Communicationd The Tribune in London. STRVENS BROTIVERS, (Amencan ota fur Libraries, 17TTenriette a e W C are Aawate for the saleor THE TRIBUNE 7 will also seceive Sessonirvions and As o Tug TRIBUNE AT SARATOGA.—Thoraton, nowsman ot Saratoga, aclls the TRIBUNE for five cents, and bis boys sell it on 110 sidew atke in fcont of the prncipsl hotels ot tho samo price. e e Advertisers. Wo wilt thank our advertising customors to hand in (el Advertiseaments at as cacly 6n hiour ea possiole, If recelved efler 9 0'slosk they camuot be eisssified under thels proper ivads. NEWS OF THE DAY. ———— THE PORTLAND FIRE. A fire broke out about 5p. m. on the 4*h i in & boat building ehop a¢ Portland, Me., and continuod for 12 hours. The wind blowing a gale, consumizg all the housos in an aroa over & wile in length and from enc-fourth to ove-ha!fa mile in width, The buildings destroyed comprise seven banke, four nowspapor offices, ‘oight clhurches and four hotels. Two thonsand families are rendered houscloss and §10,000,000 worth of property destroyed. Help has boen sent from noighboring towna and largo supplics of cooked and uncooked food for. wardod from Boston for the rolief of those who had lost every thing. ‘The Adams Expross Company offer to take, freo of charge, any coutributions for the sufferers by the Portland fire. FOREIGN NEWS. Advices bave been received from San Domisgo to Jane Juno 16 which bring tho partioulars of the successfal revolu- tion in San Domiugo, aud of the downfall of Baer. It s {hought that Gen. Cabral will be the next Presidont. It is stated that again & eargo of €30 to 1,000 nogross have boen landed in Cuba, and that 2000of them wore furnished by the Government with passes for the interior, Matamoros romains quiet in the handsot the Liberala. Gou. Mejin has arrived at Browusvills en route for Vera Crus. According to official newswrcccived by Sr. Romero from B! Pazo, Juarez was to leave for Chihuakua on the 10th, Satisfactory nows has been received at El Pazo from the Western States, It ia thouglt that tho soat of Governmont will s00n bo removed to Monterey. . CONGRESS. In the Senate yesterday the Conference Committes on the Arsy Appropriation bill made a report, which was agroed to. Tho joint resolution for the appointment of Commissionors to examine the claims of Massachusetts ngninst the Goneral Goveroment for cosst defenses was taken up, amonded and passed. A resolation calling upon tho Presidont for informa- 1100 08 to the number of American vesscls destroyed by pirates off the const of China wos also passed. The bill retroceding Aloxandria County to Virginia was taken up, and, afier de- bate, postponed until to-day. The bill to provide for the pay- ment of Quartermaster's stores and supplics fumished to the United States Army was called up and amended, whon, after o short Executive sossion, the Senate adjourned. In the House the contested elaction case of Fuller against Daiwson was called up, and postponed until the Tariff bill should be disposod of. Tiro Preific railroad bill camo up in order, and & substitute of Mr. Stovens adopted 71 to 67, when hebill as amended was laid om tib table, 134 to 11 Tho re- port of the Couforence Commitles on (he Ariny Appropriation bill was presouted and sccepted. The Tariff bill was thon {aken up and coasidered until 4} p.m.. when tho Houss ad- Jjourned to 74 p. m., about which time the bill was again taken up and acted upou daring the eveniog session. NEW-YORK CITY. About 3 0. m. yesterday a firo broke out on the pier at the foot of Peck-stip, occupied by the New-Haven Steamboat Co.. as 8 freight dopot and eteambont landing. All the sheds, offices and freight were fotally destroyed. The steambost Baltimore, belonging to the Bridgeport Steamboat Company, caught fire and before she could be towed out into the stream was 50 far euveloped in flames that sho was soon burned to the wator'scdge, Four persous sleeping on & canal boat lying at the end of tho pler and & colored man barely escaped with their lives and were severly burned. The total loss will probably amoust w 8400,000, Early yesterday morning a fire was discovered in the building in Thirty-fifih-st., formerly ocoupied by the “ Red Bird” stage company, and the ground flocr of which 1is now usod as a stable. Six horses were burned. A soriovs riot ocearred ou board the steamboat Thomas E. Hulso. ou Wednesday evening, on hor return from Fort Lee to this city, between a gang of Ninth Ward rowdics and somo membors of the 3d Regigent N. Y. 8. N. G, which resultod n sevoral of the passengors being soverely wounded, sud gmuch damage being done (o the boat. William Volty, 23 years of age, o German, and & painter by trade, wantonly fired the contents of a musket loaded with buckshot into a group of childron playing in front of Lis residenco in Williamsburgh, on Wednesday afiernoon, withthe following result: Richad Lecman, agod 6, was shot tbrough the Leart aud lingered two hours; Willinm Manbia, aged 5, lost an cye and was wounded in the arms and legs; his recovery is considered doabtful; Charles Bargut, aged 6, was severely wounded, and cannot, it is belioved, recover. Buren Lamiraude, the aileged obsconding French caslier, whoso case bas besn before Unived Btates Commissloner Detts for woveral monthe, and the summing up in which was to have taken placo yesterday, has succeeded in eluding tho vikilancs | of bis kespers. Itis romored that be administered drugged wine to tho United States Marshal by whom he was being conveyed back to the Jall afior the conolusion of his examina- tion, and, during the latter's stopefication, to bave effected bis cscape. Erery effort is being made to securo Lis recapture. To the caso of John MoKoan, convicted of robbing the New- York Post-Office of valuable ltters, a motion to arrest judg- ment was yesterday denied, and the prisoner sentenced to im prisonment for ten yoars, Inthe U. 8. Cireuit Court, yesterday, U. S. District-At- forney Courtney stated that ho bad becn instructed by the legal autboritics at Washington to enter a nolle prosequi in the case of the United States against Isaac V. Fowlor, formerly postwaster in this city, if in his (the District-Attorney’s) opinion the local public approved aud the rights aud dignity of the Government would ot suffer, aud that, after examining e case, he bad eoncluded to ask the Court to enter such an order upon the indictment. Judge Swalley indorsed tho views of the District-Attorney, and granted the motion, Mr, Fowler, who is said to be in the City of Mexico at present, will at once return to this oity. Ono hundred and twenty-six fnjunctions were served upon the Board of Excise during the last two days, making a total of701. Seveuteen applications for licenses have also been re- ceived. On the 4tl §250; and on yesterday $200 were re. ceived for licanses granted. In a gencral order Police Superin- tendent Kennedy directs that furtlier arrests for violation of the Excise lawebe discontinued until the legality of the enact- mwent oan be finally decided upon. Oficer Twine of tue Thirty- first Precinct was ordered under arrest by Judge Connelly for taking John Riordan into eustody for violation of the Exciso law. The officer gave bail to answer. The Chamber of Commerce met yosterday. A roport on the approaching fair at Rio Jaueiro ws read aud adopted. Mr. Opdyke presented o remonstrance against the Tarif bill, which was ordered to be sent to Senator Morgan, and also a popy to one of our Reproscutatives iu tho House for presenta- tion. A communication relative to a memorial to be presonted to Congress for an appropristion to repair the levees of tho Mississippi was received, and referred to the Executive Com- mittoe. A resolution expressing a hope that the bill now be- fore Congress for sccuring unilormity in the postal systems of the world might become a law, was adopted, and tho Chamber adjoarned. ‘Whilo u party of firemen were playing ball in Lower Mor- risania, on the afternoou of the 4tl, the ball was accidertally thrown into the gardsugf e German named Falk. As oneof the players was about entering the garden to obtain the ball ho was ordered off by the proprictor, who threatened to shoot auy trespasser. The services of Policoman Cook were then procured, but on his remonstrativg with Falk the latter fired at aod instantly killed bim. Falk was arrested and placed in confinement, smid much popular excitoment. Richard Crossing, steward of the Cunard steamship Jave, bas been missing sinoe Monday evening, and fears aro enter- tained for his safety. Policoman O'Counell was fiercely as- sailed in Prospeot-st., Jersey City, on Wednosday evening, for arresting a man named Carey, who had commitfed an assault upon an unoffendivg ecitizen, and would undoubtedly bave been killed bad not several goutiemen come to his rescue. lfl”‘p‘ “‘n_n.\luh ‘were arrested and held to bail 6 6onnsel selected for Deanis Esgen, charged with the murder of Robegt Gardabr in Pegusylvania. two years sinos, lay mwggl to haye the prisoner brought up in the Su- préine ColsT on & witt or Abeas corpus, that he might be held uniil au examination could Be Tigd fato fbe eharges of pasaul made against bim by his wifs, The motion was granted, and e gaso will bo beard to-duy, * . _.fmumynrd & native of Boglana, 40 years of ape, ro- #iding at No. wory, was attacked by cholera yestorday waraing. aud died alier an Ulasss of five hours, NUW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1866 GENERAL NEWS. Dr. Poul Bock Goddard, an ewinent plysician of Philadel- phis, and noted for bis devotion to wounded soldiers during the war, died in that city yesterday after a brief illaess. The Hon. Barawell Rlett was shot on Tueslay near Charleston, 8. C., by some person unkoown, but supposed to be a negro. Some 20 minutes after receivisg the wound, he fell from Lis borse dead. ‘Ths Fourth of July was generally oelebrated in tLis city and throughout the country. At the South the freedmen were es- pecially enthusisstic in their observance of the day; in fact, quite monopolizing tle ordinary festivities. On Tuesday night August Goldman of No. Whipple-st., E. D. Brooklyn, while intoxicated, took his stepson, aged 4, into the cellar of bis residence and beat him o severely that he thought Lim dead, and placed kim in an attic under some rags, where be was fonnd the next mornin (o the Fenian Brotherhood, wherein he epeaks of the recent raid simply s a disappoiutment which can be retrieved, and expacts renewed activity in the cause of Irish Lierty. Seoretarios Stanton and Wellos, ana otlers, arrived at Fort- rebs Monroe on the evening of the 4th, on board the guuboat Asoutney. After anchoring in Hampton Roads until yesterday morning, thoe party returned to Wastington. A fire at Dayton, Nevada, on tho Lst iost., destroyed prop- orty to the value of §125, Fred. li. Gifford, Jr., of Hudson, N. Y., and Louisa Manly of Ottawa, 11, were drowned near the former place on the 4th inst., while on a pic-nic excursion, by tho swamping of & swall boat. Thore was a frost in Pickens District, 8. C, . last week, The features of the Conference Committee's report on the Tax Bill are highly important. The cotton tax is fixed at the compromise figure of 3 cents per pound; the income exemption remains at $600, but non- residents doing business here will have to pay for it; and 15 cents per pound is the rate onsmoking tobacco, Gias companies and others are allowed only for a spec- ified time to add in the tax to their charges, and paper is at most taxed 3 couts, while printing paper is loft freo. Wo have from The London Times some valuable comparisons of the new Atlantic Cable with those of 1858 and 1365, showing a decided chango and refine- mont of submarine telegraphic texture and stracture, The Times romarks that an undetected fault in the in- sulated wire can now be regarded impossible. —————— : whowe silence for somo time has been expressive in its way, issues an address to the Fonians, wherein he advises the brethren to beware of charlatans and tricksters. The address is full of counsel, but its opinions have been anticipated. e e Gen. Sween Mr. Stevens bas offered an important substitute for Repreaentative Wilson's bill explanatory of the Pa- cific Railroad act of 1862-64. This substitute, which concerns the grant of mineral lands and issue of bonds to the several Pacific roads has been adopted, though the bill as amended has been laid on the table. ving that the joint consent of Margland, Vir- ginia, and Congress was needed to cedo or retrocede any portion of the Dietrict of Columbia, Senator Wade has called up the bill to repeal the “retrocession of Alexandria County to Virginia. ; The Abolitionists cclebrated the 4th of July with a spoech from Wendeli Phillips. This epeech, which is another remarkablo criticism of the President and Congress in their work of reconstruction, we give in a special report verbatim. The Army Appropriation bill has been reported from the Conference Committee substantially as it passed tho Seuate. The West Point Superintendent may be chosen from any branch of the sorvice. —_———— Wo hear from Washington that the Tariff will probably be finished in Committee by to-mortow, aud go through thoe House Satnrday. B ] THE TWIN CHERRIES, ‘When Messrs. Raudall, Dixon & Co. issued a call for a National Convention to meet mext month in Philadelphia, they seemed to invite and expect that said Convention should embody the sentiment and ex- press the predominant convictions of the Uniou party —of that Union party which sternly resisted snd sub- dued the Rebellion—of that Union party which nom- inated Lincoln aud Johnson and elected them over McClellan and Pendleton, We said at once—This call is a fraud: its authors do not expect mor desire the attendance of delegates who shall faithfully rep- resent the Union party: they desire and expect to carry off a mere sclvage of this party (composed mainly of eflice-holders) and unite it with the Demo- cratic-McClellan party of 1864, thereby sccuring to the latter the government of the country. This statement was denounced and stigmatized; but a fow dnys have sufficdd to demonstrato its truth, The ‘Union party of 1861-5 disowns this Convention—re- pudiates the authority of Randall & Co. to call it—refuses to attend or connlenance it Not ten of the 130 members of Con- gress Piosen by the Unionists of 1864-5 give this Convention any sort of conntenance; while, on the other hand, their adversaries bave, to a man, wade haste (o ratify and second the call, and to urge their party to bo fully and ably represented therein. Forty of their chosen representatives and Gen, L. IL Rousseau have united in this recommendation; and we presume the half-dozen whose names do not ap- pear were absent from Washington, and will sign on their roturn, Thus the Randall Convention will be easentially o gathering of those who resolved, at Chi- cago in 1864, that the War for the Union had been a failure, and nominated accordingly. The journals which upheld the Rebellion to the last are nearly all urging that ** the South " shall be fully and strongly reprosented; 50 wo shall have at Philadelphia a full Convention of those who maintained the Rebellion, and those who insisted that it should not and could not be put down, but a very small percentage of those who insisted that it conld and should be. Meantime, the cooing and billing ot the predestined compatriots of 1867-8 goes on with ever-increasing fervor and reciprocal delight. The Tammany Society celebrated the Fourth by a dinner, whereat Mayor Hoffman presided, and Messrs. Andrew Johnson and William H. Seward were the foremost invited guests, Both responded lovingly, urging the restoration of the States, but never hinting that their loyal, faithful Colored people onght to be at all considered in such restoration, Their ex-Rebels are all to e restored to power (to which we do not object); but the Four Millions of their people who contributed One Hundred and Eighty Thousand sol- diers to the Union armies and never a regiment to the Rebel, are to be trampled under foot. ** Restora- tion" for them means Slavery; is it a wonder that neither they nor their triends are enraptured at the prospect ! Gov. Baward stood through forty honorable years the consistont, conspicuous, determined, detested ad- versary of the influences which have borne sway in Tammany Hall. Yet Lo writes to the sachems as though ouly a lovers' quarrel Lad momentazily es- tranged tem. Hearhim! n"l AV Jn\ “n[l:‘lnlannm, in r:: llfle. :ilh the Tam- e Thot hak U Bostchy MaS e oo Tl 1o OBiEFve ah honor the auniversary of National Indepeadence; and the further fact that, dulni the receat civil war, the Tammany 1'{5.:.‘..% udim{mh m: of l:nn :‘Lu."‘.;';'é oln |h': noble princl;les now avow ed, I bail tbe Tammany Socloty as a true Union Lea gue.” —There woro members of the Tammany Bocicty who fouglit in the Union, as there were others who fought in the Rebel armioa; but it is mot true that “iLo Tampany Sogiety, with unswerving fidelity, heartily lupporbéd l.hc:f'cdérm Goypmmettt in its [ de @, strugglos with sedition.” In the darkest hour contest, Tammany Hall reélected Bei gross, knowing that Ly uever gave, and never would | conscrivtion of 40,000 w il soon he ordered. and the | give, a vote in favor of enppressing the Rebellion. Tammany Mall elected and reélected to Congross John W. Chanler, whoss heart was as thoroughly with the Rebellion as was Bon, Wood's, And, in the gloomiest days of our great struggle, the Tammany orator of the Fourth delivered, toa erowd of delighted Demoerats, alocture on Kdmund Burke, written ex- pressly to show that the Slaveholding Rebels were fighting for the identical cause upheld by our fathers in their Revolutionary struggle, and never could, be- cause they never ought to, be overcome. Let all men understand that the Randall Conven- tion of August 14 is to be a Convention of the pro- Slavery Sham Democracy—that it is designed and en- gineered to pave the way to their restoration to power. A few Randalls and Raymondsare to be taken in, used to convert the minority of 1364 into a majority in 1563, and are to be paid the lowest price at which they can be had; but there is no thought of abandoning for their sake the distinctive hatreds, nor even the dis- tinctive name, of the down-with-the-nigger-and-upe with-the-Rebel party. Its objects, its instinots, its oracles, will be the same that they have boen—its suc- cess will be tho downfall of all that triumphed with Lincoln and Grant. Let those who wish the country delivered over to the spirit evinced in the Draft Riots of 1863 adhere to the Randall-Niblack Convention; but let all others beware of it! PROTEOTION-FALSE PROPHETS, The Evening Post charges that . “The majority in Congross are, under the dictation of Messre. Morrill and Stovens, engaged in passing o tariff bili Which, by the acknowledgment of its most detormined sup: porters, sacrifices the revenue of the United States for tho sake of *protecting’ a fow wealthy masufacturing capitalists.” —The Post made this same charge repeatedly and rather more broadly, in 1523, as it has done repeatedly since. ‘Then it affirmed (as we showed on the 4th) that the Tariff passed that year would *pro- hibit tho importation of foreizn merchandise,” cripple our commerco and navigation, de- stroy our Colton culture, and greatly diminish our Revenue from Customs. And yet, during the four years' existence of that Tariff, our Cotton culture, Commerce and Navigation, all steadily in- creased, while our Revenue from Customs exceeded, by more than Twenty-seven Millions, the aggregate received during tho four years preceding 1823, (See the figures in our issuo of July 3.) We ask, then, in all carnestuess—since The Post has proved so sigually false a prophet on the very poiut now at issue—(and not once only)—why should we not believe that it will so prove on this oceasion? What is the answer? The Post socs fit to charge that the object of *Pro- tection " is the aggrandizement of “a few wealthy manufacturing capitalists,” But ho v *“afew?” There are millions of the American People this day engaged in those branches of industry which the Tariff now before the House will favorably affect— but supposo there wero but & dozen—how would the benefits of the meascre be con- fined to these? Can no one make Iron, or Steel, or Hardware, or Woolens, or Glass, or Shirt- ings, or Calico, or Cigars, or Wi but those already doing so? What forbida Virg or Georgia, or Missouri, or Illinois, or Minnesota, embarking in several of theso pursuits? If the Tarifl now before Congress makes those pursuits more profitable, why ghall they not be diffused ! Let us suppose any West- ern or Southern State chiooses to manufacture—will she not be more likely to embark in some one or more of these pursuits when markets are good and profits liberal 7 We ask these questions again and again; but there isno rosponse. What ails the dumb dogs of Free ‘Irade? Cannot their importing patrons supply them with an excuse if not an answer? . TAE PORTLAND FIRE, The blazing disaster at Portland adds one more to (he number of fires momorable for great losses and suffering. Half of an important city has been burned down; and in this half were the offices of all the newspapers, the national buildings, the hotels, the business houses, and the principal churches. The homes of two thousand families have Deen Nkewise destroyed, and the present ap- preciation of damage reaches as high as £10,000,000 or more. Wider destitution must follow these terrible facts if so great a public calam- ity is not met by as great a public charity. 1In several of the New-Eogland towns, and in Washington, meas- ures for relief have been proposed; but supplies avd | material cannot reach too soon the thousands of poor who are now living in tents in the streets of Portland. We know nothing of the cause and origin of the fire; but we may hear that it arose from one of those too common nccidents which take place in towns all over the country, by which a wooden house, shop or shanty, es 08 a torch to kindle a ‘whole street. Fires have wnot, of late, been of rare occurrence in Maine if their number has been rewarkable elsewhere. Bangor and Belfast, not long ago, camo near the fato of Portland, if we remember right, Some general reason must be sug- gested for the wholesale burnings which in Maine and other States have ocourred so often. It may be that. after all, we shall trace it to wooden houses aud close building. THE WAR IN GERANY, The forcign papers and letters which were received by the Cuba do not contain any later or more import ant facts than those published in Tur TRIBUNE on Tuesday last, but they shed a clearer light on a fow points on which we were but imperfectly informed by the telegraphio dispatches. The detailed accounts of the great events in Ger- many represent the victory of the Prussians as even more complete and important than it appeared to us on Tuesday. The latest dispatches wmake it highly probable that the whole Hanoverian army, counting about 17,000 men, would be captured. On the 20th of June a Prussian corps coming from Wetzlar ocen- pied the City of Cassel, and thereby cut off the only railrond communication which connects the southern portion of Hauover with Bavaris, the nearest country where her troops could expect to find safety, Only a fow miles of land lie between Cassel and the Prussian province of Saxony, from which trobps were ad- yancing in great haste to intercept the retreat o the Hanoverians, On the 22d of June, a Prussian force arrived at Worbis, a Little town close to the frontier of South Hanover, while aunother, on the same day, occupicd the towns of Gotha and Eizenach, both of which places lie south of Hanover. A junction of these forces with those advancing from the Prussian Rbine provinces eastward for the occupation of Hesse- Cassel would make an escape impossible. A dispatch of the 224 states that the Government of Hanover had asked that of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha for a free transit for her troops, a request which had no prospect of being granted, as the Duke of Coburg was acting a3 a General of the Prussian Army. " On the 234 of June the Prussian army found itself in actual possession of all Germany north of Bohemia, Bavaria and the River Maiv. This territory em- braces all the States of the German Confederation except Bavaria, Wurtemberg, Baden, Lichtenstein, a part of Hesse-Darmstadt, Frankfort, and Luxem- bourg and Limburg, and containing about one-half of the aggregate population of the Minor States. Sowe of these States desired to bo regarded as allios. of Prussia, as the Granddukes of Mecklenburg and the Duke of Saxe-Coburg, who has accepted a liigh position in tho Prussian army, aud Oldenburg, Anhalt, ana Waldeck, who bave followed Prussia in oral Confederation to bave ceased, ts. In Schloswig-Tolstein o , Whother alileg or fiot, Prat. | = contingoats of Hamburg, Bremen and Lubeck Lave hoen ordered to Schleswig-Holstein. The condition of the Federal army has again sho ¥t itself so inferior to that of Prussia, that there i3 no reason to expect any arrest of tho Prussian advance in Western Germany, unless Austris can largely re- enforce the Federals by ber own troops. —————— ND THE ALARM! Woe ask the earnest attention of our City readers to the doings of our Common Council, with a view to such action as self-preservetion may demand. Our intelligent, enterprising and practical business men cannot neglect much longer to take emphatio excep- tion to nets so high-handed and outrageous as those perpetrated by the Common Council as a body. Let us mention a few of the most recent: L On the 14th day of June, a resolation was rushed through both brauches, giving away, in fact, to the Harlom Railroad Company, the whole of One-hundred- and-twenty-fifth-st. It was pushed through with such indecent haste (passing both Boards the same day) that Mayor Hoffinan, in his veto, if not in form, yet in substance, strongly rebuked the Common Coun- cil for the extraordinary rapidity with which it was ready to sacrifice the hest interests of our people. Of conrse, no public notice was given; for those who had the management of the little affair wished to keep it as quiet as possible, lest our people should take the alarm and button their pockets before the job was put through. IL A resolution lately passed the Common Coun- ¢il, directing the Street Commissioner to make a con- tract for twenty years for lighting our streets with coal gas. Mayor Hoffman has vetoed this scheme, also, with what effect, however, we are anxious to sce. 1If, in spito of the prohibitory seotions of the last tax-levy law, the Common Council is able to deliver our people bound hand and foot to the extortionate gas monopo- lies, we shall be saddled with only the small sum of about one and one-half millions of dollars per year for poor, very poor, light. II1. The Common Couneil has been spending more money than the law allowed under * City Contingen- cies,” and, now that the $60,000 asked and granted for 1866 Lias been consumed in paying the excesses of last year, and the appropriations of this, it has been scizod with a sudden dismay that nothing has been left in the City Treasury with which to celebrate the coming Fourth of July! Gentlemen of the Ring: The Citizens' Association did not, as your organ, The World, has falsely represented, prevent the celebra- tion of our National Independence—you had $60,000 for this and similar purposes; you got all the Con- troller thought you were entitled toj and, with proper management, the sum of §60,000 would pay, twelve times over, all the legitimate *Contingent” expenses of our City. 1V. The Common Council, in violation of the City Charter, leased tothe Sisters of Mercy about three- quarters of a block of ground between Fourth and Lexington-aves., in the neighberhood of Eighty- third-st., for the term of ninety-nine years, at tho nominal rent of one dollar per annum, This is only & specimen of how the Common Council deals with its trust property, with property pledged to the creditors of the City. It gives it away for ninety-nine years, whereas the Charter prohibits leases for a longer term than ten years. It is strange that, although this mat- ter was brought to his atteation long ago, yet Corpo- ration Counsel B. 0'Gorman, first nominated by the friends of reform, bas not taken any steps to have this lease doclared void. Why is this? V. The *rawl” recently made by the Common Council upon the property-owners along the line of the Fifth-ave, is another instance of how wide-awake it is for * chauces.” This “raid” is so recent, and excited so much comment when commenced, that it is necessary for us to mention it in general terms only. It scems that for about thirty-four years the carriage-way in Fifth-ave. has been forty feet, and cach sidewalk from the kennel, or gutter, to the house, or street-line, thirty feet wide, Property-owners were pormitted to use fifteen of these thirty fect, relying upon the good faith of the City that these limits would not be changed, uuless the public welfare imperatively 50 demanded; and the property-owners built upon their property accordingly., INO Oug putitioncd for any alteration—Dbut the Common Council appointed a Special Committee to consider the advisability of re- pealing the permission given to the property-owners, and of cutting off all court-yards and stoops extend- ing heyond seven feot from the house-line. This prop- osition of Vandalism is still under consideration— and, if put into exccution, it would involve the de- struction of several millions of dollars' worth of prop- erty. VI The matter of the Corporation Manual shows how the Common Council spends the public money. In the early part of this year, they passed a resolution directing the Glerk to prepare and cause to be pub- lished ten thousand copies of this volume. The Mayor votoed this resolution, because he thought, first, that there was no propriety in publishing ten thousand coptes; and secondly, because there was no limitation upon the expenditure to be male. The bills for this Mannal in 1565 amounted to $53,672 30. The Mayor stated in bis veto that, upon inquiry made of responsi- ble publishers, ho had ascertaiued that ten thousand copies could be prepared for $30,000. The Common Couneil refused to be guided by the Mayor, and to give out the work to the lowest bidder, but passed the resolntion over his veto; and asa matter of course the bills for publishing the Manual this year will amount to at least $60,000. It will thus be seen that this one “job" alome will cost the public $60,000, the whole amount allowed for *City Contingencies” for 1866, out of which this expense of publishing the Manual should come, and to which aceonnt it is charged. ‘When the Council spend at least $50,000 moro on this subject than is nocessary (3,000 copies at $3 per copy being sufficient), this expense being charged against the $00,000 for v Contingencies,” it complains that £60,000 from $00,000 leaves nothing for ** fire- cracke om tho communication -addressed by Mayor Hoffman to Messrs, Edge, it appears that he, too, to our surp athizes with the Common Couneil in their misfortune, Look at the white-washing report of the Commit- teo of the Board of Supervisors in reference to the New Court-House Swindle, A Court-House that was to cost but §700,000 has already, under the ma- nipulations of the Court-House Committee, cost 3,- 600,000, and will ot be completed at a cost of less than §5,000,000. Aund, when Supervisor Smith Ely, jr., tried to have the * whys and wherefores " inves- tigated, s committee was appointed, blind to every- thing but the interests of their *“ pals,” and this com- mittee has just made a white-washing report, which is an infamy and a disgrace to our people. Will g change never come? Mr. James W, Wall of N, J.—who earnestly aud oponly opposed from tho outset the War for the Union—now writes s publio letter to Montgomery Blair, intended to convinee that gentleman that, if he is right now, he must have beon grievously wrong in 15G1-4. 'We think he makes out hia case, Even on the east shore of Maryland, school-hounses are burned down, negroes killed, and the Civil Rights Bill disregarded; so that the chain of Burcau-hating sentiment must be quite complete, from Texas to Delaware. Ths *#g Politi al Acrobat,” Tsn't that eool for July? id that O. H. Browning of Illinois will bo oratary of tho Interior, nfon, end X e fn t g Dbaviog & folot canvass—addressiue (ho gume audicnoes, £ Congr ndidates [ THE ABOLITIONISTS IV COUNOM, SPEECH OF WENDELL PHILLIPS, —*—7— REPORTS FROM THE SKIRMISH LINE. i ) From Our Spectal Corrspondent. FRAMINGHAM, Mass., Wodnesday, Joly {, 1836, mAmdethwm:m.uql Garrlson was the founder, have met to-day, in acosrdance witl their time-honored custom, hmwmlm ham, to discuss the political affairs of the nation. The gather- ln(s‘l:'l:lnndhfivm spocches were then made by Moasrs, G. W. Stacey, Milford, Hoory Geyun (s Goorgie freadman), Chare Lonoes Romond, the colored orator of Massachusetts. Vaiuly, st Mr. Rewgond, are wo called froemen uuti! we stiaia citizonshig in the largest souse. The colored man bas been emancipated after a sort, but bis fall manhood is not yot recognised. Ltk not enough for me to be fre in Massachusstts, My frionds ln South Carolina also mnst be free. Distizctively anti-Slavery ngitation is necessary still. Mr. Wendell Phillips was then introduoed and received with the warm welcome which the * noblest Roman of us all " never fuils to receive from the friends of treedom and of the outcast. T subjoin a verbatim roport of his specch: WENDELL PHILLIPS'S SPESCH. Twill commence, ladies and genticmen, by reading three resolutions: Revlved, That Congress has, vnder the war power, and uiouid now exerclse, the authority to and proteck the «itizeu’ o, eicailon od AT oy e Rt SR Rewleed, That include au:“-lulu""““ coniel e Dlhlr.d.. ‘That is our opi ..- g L J E posed Atcnducnt (o U Constitution ia en infam magind I pripinte S8 & A e cing parporos; Liak o autbore either i v o i honest men b trauaple it under font themseives. for such & mconsiruetion as o il be 0 e negroes, honorable o the aston, suie, dursble snd squsl This is the fourth day of July, @ day which for ninety years the nation bas devoted to the sublimo idea that *‘all mon are croated equal.” Butwe ell kaow that the words have beem for nearly ninety years a ** glittering generality”—1 cruel lio— empty nnd idle worda, coming from'bypyercritical lips. We aly know that the nation never, until within a year or two, made an effort to make these words a roality. God to-day binds pation to the performance of it . This day Is to iformance o ruin, The war I#fisn the ‘x’e’lt national Jpormy. and revealsd to us that ouly by making this ¢ corner-stone of national inskitations does God grant us. chance of a nationslity. Well. how do we stand to-dagy ‘What was the meaning of that first lina in the Declaration of Tndependence? Up to that bour nations were buillcd vpon the idea of o subordination of rank, a gradation of classes. The rich, the educated, the well-born were o protect the “ill. favored classes,” as thoy calied them. Our fathers launc! the idea of a nationslity where Srery mbn: at least eve afi ‘was to be endued with snch political rights as woull :-’nlb of July, 1776, & nation 1o longer to be an association of andslave, nablud: rzm and dopeudonwm people, but a nation was o be & brother! of cqual sovercigus—every clasm was o bave in its own hand the powes to protect itself. Thas is Demoem{. Noman is born so weak that ho does nok know better Low to protoct higown iuterests than any othor man ean protect them for him. That is the common-sense ol Democracy. Now, we are undertaking to reconstruct the Union in 1ts own fandamentsl idea. 'Woman exce, ptod. up to this time the nation has no exception to this ruly except the negro; no grand exception, at icast. The war in Completed when his groat exception o tho Declaration of Ia- dependence is taken out of national institations; the war i not finished until then, Out of that abnormal excopion, the war grow; when that exception 1s dead. the wer is ended, The epoch meant, in God's providence, this—that the Ameri- can nation was to acknowledge that the principles of the De- claration Mlnda“mm covered tho vegro, " ull men are created cqual.” How do we staod in view of that priseiple But a short timo ago, the South, aghast at its own defeat, was ready to submit unconditionally tothe great American ides. ‘There have been, 1 think, three epocks during the war, whem the North was e ially ready. Whon Fremont struck the key-nots. of the hour in 1661, had the Goverament followed it w irage for the pegro, no voico in the loyal North but have s2id, * Amen.” When Lincoln isiued Lis proclmaion in 1863, If, recoguising the nature of the kour, he bad the nation to protect the politioal rights of the nagro, as well s his persona! freedow, every man would bave s:id “Amen.” When the nation was sore with defeat i the disustrons Sam. 4, if the Goveroment then had take: the step, ik been welcomed. - Whon th n_stood over of mart; Presid ory ri €0t ve been 'lfinmd 1Y b gra unnr{ man i the Repablic would fitting trophy o that now-made grave. Johnson came into offfee with the power to sweep out, with the **Amea” of 30,000,000 of North and South, evi ith, every excoption to great oan idea. How do wo stand fo-day1 Th L““p‘fi;!': broken lives, d:.m“ beor hhm.’ o or policy i to restore 88 85 , 83 0X2 sible, ll"UllMlllll was; s.,nn , if H&.m tion 8 it was; uot one word, not oue cliuse, aitercd, not osa Clagze “}a since 1:6). I say the South indulges the hops that in the contingencies and of politics, she mway yet be abl to bec tolnn Who Lee? The President a the Tnited States. Who is ber Commandor-in-Chieft He is encamped in the White House; and he es the of the Usited States to second the plot of Southern v ticians to roll back the revolution, I do not say that I cem pulkmy Inhnd oo the ux:c# pl:“d“rduhich mv- the P:dd"- truitor o higowa promises, 0 8ay, every maa we—and I believe the Pru::e‘;ll o&h United a) prinotples ] "!u( plasning wiiat e now ve been suing for on [ouse, instond of beiug scated withi it, endeavoring to bulld up a party out of Kebels, and cows whose timidity saved them from ~ e Rebels. |Applanse. Well, the President is a great force. It is idle to iguore faot that the tenaut of the White House, with the patronage of the Governmout bebind bim, can alwost guarantee success to any party to which he lends bisaid. And how stauds Natinoal Legislature? Cougress hassurrendered—surres the point in issue; surress tue oxact question upon which deponds the character of the futures Look at it, A barbarous and a civilized community can nover bo united undor one Government on equal terma; the result must bo conflicr. Luorder that barbarism and ofviliza- tion shouid be united under ons Govervment, one or the othee - must be able to control its rival for the time . 1f you ex- sct peace in the future, the North must bave a right Lo ta civilization into tho barbarous South; the civ lfl ust bave the rigkt within the national girdle to centrol the barbarism of ite neighbor. What coutrols N Tywo loments—iand and the ballot-box, Ia the long run, take bLalt a century ther, land owns the Government; that whieh holds the land will be able Lo mold the Government, beeu 80, and thore is liftle doubt that it clways mldunde;&lnu:mflr::‘l:lhn“ Iblmhm 1781 Because its nobility ba with its land; Frerch peasante beld the land of Frazce. What thea lo an 1l makes a democratic revolution imposstble 1a aglund ¢ Because thea aud aow the ruling classes of England holds the land iu its haud. Thicty thousand families own land of Bogland. You might as weli rebel against the Jaw rawjtalion as make a democratic move on the soil of Gi itafn. ‘The Sonth knows it; the South pladges hersef lo . Borsell to keep the 1and oot of the baad of the uegre In this she plants the corner-stone of her Gove in the firmest possible spot. On the other is the ballot. The only possible thing that oau vail this normal ruler of ail Governwents, land, 1s the box. Tu our rocoustrackion these #wo iters aro the ones. The ballot-box is indispavaable, h it ..u?mfi! range themselves fu proportion. Without it. there is hardly & possibility of salvation. Now. in tiess circumstauces, Con- ress sarrenders the two poluts of land for the uegro and the. a 'St has netther confiscated *ie Lind nor Eas she regu- lated the political privileges of the citizens of tuerebeilious States. Lsay, in those circumstances, Congress Las surren- dered. 1 know as well as you do what Cougress means. I kuow as well as you do what hopes Congress indulges. Wo aro accustomed to n,l that the Prosident has a poliey. think it is & mistake, Tho President bas not a policy; 1o has a purpose. Tko Prosideat’s purpose s to ba redlected fn 1808 For that ko will adwit a olicy. To sacuro that he support even sufltage for the vegro. He bLus po idoas; he bas plot, He has o peiveiples; be has o sclish purposs to earry. Cougress broadly cousidered.is iu exactly the same eon- dition. 1 allow the hoadsty of iis purpese, 1 yoy will; but the purpose of Congrass Is o m iteln tho harmony and the prodowinance of the Republican poriy. Covgress, in the truo souse of the word, has 8o policy. It bas @ pun and Its purpose i to tido over the Fall clechionn, . & acknowledze, with you. that the majority of Congress houcotly beliove that by saving tue naity of the Republican party they shall save the nation. I will acknowledge the Lonest convio- tion of the wajority of Congress, but what I waut you to 0b. sorvo is, that Congress to-day does vt even propose to settle the question lavolved in the resolut It oniy proposes lay before the people sueh & measure a8 will seve the iuubt can party i the ballot-box. Wil &, I distrust such o belicve thut all history shows that, poliey. 3 a8 itis suid im 1he Good Louk *be who seeks only to save bis life shail lose i Soa party, when it 18 reduced to o poliey concoeied ooly o to save its 15 coituin to lose it, Tte South has nevee fought on this line. Sle Las always fonght for whet she bes lioved to be a principls, frankly avowing if, aud four times out of five she bas ceeaded, q‘hn polie; tte South, ‘ of the South, at B courage, franknes, and North is tiadity, D aud as you read the history of t the skeickes of the cnwely 30 you read the history of that tieal statesman n the aelatans of men who mpposed them- selves statesuien, and fouad out they were eharlatans, [Ap- plause. Tepublioan party enters to-day on that same track, Look ot its measure, Iis measure is this: It under- enkes to cut down the representation of the Sourh in propor- tion to the extent to which the Soath disfranchises the negro, Oy (ehers né,d;hfi tn 1781 Thew 5 lgw the only three-I2hs of Bier nogroos, and politionl selflshuoss |l|l ord‘n'!u clateh thow nizrdu'w-lflh-. 1ift its vegro Md “‘ slave into a man,” W triod it ninety years, ubacly, sn South, under the {nspiration of this gn!nn. nrver’mmhm singlo effort 10 ot vid of the slavery that robbed her of two- fifthe of the strength of ber black popaletion, The Republicas rty lw«‘ni & wats the same experiment, and Eopes it will [ iaecensful. "ba tbe 1oaders o Congress think 1, that the amendment will be refected. Of course it will be, fdent bas put his foot down -rfi.-ut it. o has warnel Southern Ntates not to indorse it. He Las told them in 40 many words that they will have his support in refasiug (@ ratify it. ‘The procodent 3ot fo tie last asendment counts all the l{uln in mnkl-fip the requisite three-fourths, and & that phrnudenl ::! [0 dl'fll:edmuo;, :\;r:“l:t mwunnmyn . that the proposod amen: W ac does Stevens, what does Boutwell, what Wade, ": does Sumuer agpect? Inthat near Fal, n the elections are over, and the smen iment defeated, what do they oxpoct ! Why, they expect that the Kepublican pasty, victorious at the ballot-box, unfettared by the adoption of tho amendment, wi float back into Congress, able tum an_nct that wb give the ballot to ‘the "'{"‘ iultiato an smeads 1eat of the Constitation whiok sliall seoure it to bim. ‘n: hope, they expect, that after the Jefaat of the amendment: the Fall Jm o, the party "lx roturp to Congreds strovges - t than it stauds to-day, 1 that amendmont a0~ A Tho :{ t Thaddeos Stevens