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Amansements. S THIS EVENIN Mise Rows Cooke, old, Loonard, Fop: ou, Mre. blszk 8 x E MBUS RECO Mr } THIS TVENING TRUCTED=— A PRETTY FIECE O qugham, Miss ¥ B ey Melville, J. C. Do WOOD'S THE nA Y - Tha Wor Hill DIAVOLO ER LORD DUNDREAR sters, Mz Barton FOX'S O TRIS EVEN] IRATED (NN ETRELS — | £ BRABS LAND and KE Nt . NEW BOWERY THEAPER g THIS PVENING IRAL MOUNTAIN = DOV L ECHELLE PERILE Luislsy Famtly, Senorit APOTHECARY, " MUE ) GIL OUs. K ANL NDRED TH WEMPNT_TITE THRER Popita, M. Van Haauve, Yourd THIS EVENING at § HLETES. The Kave NEV - YORK CIit . _THIS EVENINO, at i=TUE BEAR Chiarints Royal Spiniss Clrcan Eqoe batic Features. Mstinee ok THIS EVENING ot GARDEN CONCERT. . £ RRACE GARDEN, Thi - “PHEQ. THOMASS ORCHFSTRAL AMPHITHE AT SION=THE LOWE 5 . ER. TO-DAY, BALLOON 4 EROOF NIAGARA Businigs Notices. 5. ’ o v e We desive to lention to the SARATOCA “A" Brane Waren. sy v it to ¢ 2 cont more mediciosl wi o the € or any othe: 8§ I the world. rul, and invi art proporti dersiand it s beivg o T ble manner. Drugzists, Hotels snd Groc . Lyon's Isseet Powper, for extermivaling Roachos, Avts and Vermin, and preserving furs and clothing from Meths, Tie original and genoive (s sig + 1 ¥ % ANl others are imitations Take 0o other Insect Po. ¢ Lyox's. Soldby all druggiets, snd by Bamxws & Co.. No. 21 otk row, A Crear Hean POR BUSINESS ¢ o the wure result of & Bote Covomess Warrn baford breakfist. ¢ Covonmms Waren > Crans Bruor e Cueans Tux Hean Smamerys THE APPETITE For ORaBAL DESiuITy aND UTarepsia take Exrinn Waten _Boup 7 ALt DavGans oy are particuiarly o 7 agcupats werkiews, euer edicine the world bas eve £ " feinales wod "he proprietors’ piivate oaity vas w4 o0 v Ubs 1w ve T MiLLiows oF BorTies of Mas. WisaLow s Soor YRop e falting edccoss. 1t 1s an oid md Well-iicd remeiy, wnd bowels, cures wind col +0d heaith to the ehild, com rist o . ManspEx's SaANaTive Piiis are adwitted Ly oll 10 b the mont relisble meaicine in s « of Nervous and Bilioos dosorders, v Mawspen's Saxarivr Pitis Mave opened « new era io mefi@) e rilcglail manded £ Contiveness, B, who, be. Dep A1 Brosdway. Price 25 et per WiLLeox & Grmms Spwin Tt scum s -lwu’n and - Lock-stitoh. “~{" J; Sevd for the * Report stitches on the s e phec Morr's CreMICAL Pox ewpe it glosey and fron Ml o0 dog umd by Resros o SECOND-HAND AN of ovrown v patent ALvawid umber 1 Chestrot at., PLig AGOE. —STRICKLANY'S \ !' 11 Ras etood the test of ve 1. and s the saveteig iemels | by W Denggicts. Tux XErxa Nosrirss LOCK-STIrew Sk Macwinn wanslictured by Proxex, Brarssponr k Co !- Bowery ke & Lyoxs New Lamily Sew Ageuts wanted. One maohine (oo of charge N " Tk AnM AXD Lua, by B wane Parsee, LL 1 — Tha “hoat” 10 soldiens, a1 b heers wnd civilioms. 1,0% Chostmat ot Pi whe NV . I8 Green ot Boston. Awe Irvadulent (oitatione o Lie 1o KINCS, SUSPENSO) » Kadios Cure Tuusses. ELasvic Auws, BupponTERS AC only o No. # Vesey st Lad KRICAN PorULak Larr dxstmaNce CoMPANY, Pretonte ton ne oerer Caun' ot [ Now ay. Aures In tte clreular. Call oF sond for one —;' ; V!V per dofPn ¢ provED Lock-Srrrem Macuises for Tailors aud srers. Gmovan & Vaxeon Sewowe Macwise Cowraxy o Broadway, 'y o Groves & Bax Srvrom Sewine Maswiwwn fo iy o No G0 Bradwey Wuester & Wise's Lock-Stion Bewive Macninr and Borrosmous Macw xs Mo 2i Droadwey Tows Sewino Mackis Compasy. —Eiras Howp Prosident, No. 099 Broadway. Ageuts « sibed. Mew Between the Police and Negrees in the Wighth Ward, TWO OFPICERS BALLY BRATEN For some time past an ill feeling Lus cxiswed be tween Officer Briede of the Eigl th Procinct Poste: nind the 10+ gvoes ln the lower part of Thowpson #6 The Oflicer's peit e | 1 Mt focality, Last eveniog two colore® mer booame b gaged in & fight In froot of No. i+ Thompeonss!, axd Of cor '-h. wae 1o the Immediste viclbity attemptec fo | v Dan Brvent, | 8. T. ftin Jand used with vever- | snd hew stood the + | charged with ba st Previcd Erastio | THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1866. | NewwDork DailnTribune. THURSDAY. “ NEWS OF THE DAY. l - —— | THE WAR IN EUROPE. By the arrival of the St Davids oft Fatlier Point we bave one day later news from Europe. The battle at Skalilz does not appear to have bsen Qecisive as was inferred from the previous advices. Both sides claimed the advantage. Accordingto Prusslan accounts, the Austrions were dfiven in the direction of Josefstadt. The {bird Prussian army corps 0ok 1,000 prisoners. An attack of sians upon the Gallician town of Oswieczym was re- the Silesian town of the Prus: | pulsed. The Austrians had occupled Myslowitz, but it was soon reoccupied by the Prussians, The King of Italy, in 8 dispateh to the Council of Ministers, | says that the battie ot (Castozza was neither won nor lost. The army will at once be concentrated for & new advanoe. The English Government has pablished o proclamation of neatrality. ‘I'he Conference on the Danubian Principalities had ad oaraed. | FOREIGN NEWS. Lord Derby was endeavoring to form & government, and had been promised the support of the Queen. A coalition Ministry | to include Whigs, aud some of the members of the late Cablaet was spoken of, The seamen’s strike in London was aboat to coase. A lotter from from President Jaares to the American Con- sul in San Francisco states that there are no French troops ,mesrer Chibuahua thag in Derasgo. . By way of Havana we bave nows from the City of Mexico to June 28, and from Vera Cruz to the 1st of July. 500 Austrians . had dispersed a Liberal force at{Tuljutla and beld possession of tbe place.. Maximilian has suppressed the Ministry of State. | Thg Tmperialist expedition agninst Chihuahua tns been post- poned. Three hundred men from Matsmoro had been landed at VeraCruz. One hundred and fifty-two of the Spaniards | expelled from South America had arrived in Caba. The official paper of Cabaglenics the outbreak of an insurreo iu Puerto Principe, and maintalos that the whole disturb- « consisted in an affray between someof the soldicrs and the townspeople. CONGRESS. 1a the Senate yesterday, o bill was passed extending for {1vee years the bohetits of tho bill granting lands to the South- | Lill regulating the time and’ mauner of holding elections for . 8. Senators was called up, snd after action on various amendments, was passed—Yeas 25, Nays 11. A resolution wgs introduced calling ou the Sectetaries of State and War for information regarding the seizure of property belonging to cltizens of the United States residents of Arizona Territory by armed bards of Mexicans, and in reference to the alleged massacre of American eitizens at Hermosillo, Mexico. A resolation was also introduced relative to the pro- posed Atlantic calls to bo submerged between r ! United States Bermuds, tbe Azores and Portug | The bankrapt bill was reported back from the Committce on tho Judiciary with amendments, but which made no cssentinl | chaage in the bill ms it passed the Fouse. The Conference Committee on the smuggling bill, made a report which was £ %ol to, concnrring in, mearly all the House amendwents. » bill for the retrocession of Alegandria was taken up, dis- 1 and defeated—13 to 17. The diplomatic and cousular .appropriation bill was colied up, and the Senate {nsisted on its nmendments, calig for & committee of couference. At5:10 | p. w. the Scuate adjourned. 2 In the House the Consular and Diplfaatic Appropriation was reported back with the Senate amendments, after ac- 1 upon which a Committee of Conference was asked. The | Legislatire, Executive and Judicisl Appropriation bill was | also reported back with the Senate amendmente, most of which ‘ were comenrred in. The National - Telegravh bill, passed™ by the Scuste Juse 20, was taken up, aod, after & lengthy debal was passed under {lic pressure of the previous question, 72 to 61 The contested tiemmion onse of Fuller agt. Dawson, from the Twenty-firet District of Peonsylvania, was Yaken up, and, after debate, t over until to-day. A Conference Comtittee wes orderod ont ate bil to quiet land titles in Califorsia. The sub- fect of the msjority and minority reports of the Roconstruc- | tion Committe was referred to the Committee ou Printing. Ati:45 p. m. the House adjourned. afternoon. The Commissioners of %0 guests, were conveyed to tho I . W. Thomas, where s oliation was provided and addresses delivered. As Heury Bergeo, a porter in the employ of the Star Mc. wuical Powder Ca, ecorner of Yourthst. and Lafayette- manipulating a quantity of ehowicals in the labora- oroing, they cxploded, severely burning him about 1he kends and face. No injury was done to the promises. John Mournam was ran over yesterday at the coraer of Broad. way wiid Vesey-st. by stage No. 73 of the Fiftb-ave, liv, the wheels passing over both feet and injarivg bim severaly. The Ariver was not arrested. ’ The case of Mrs. Eleanor E. Willaro, arrested on Sunday stolen a 81,000 United States treasury note from Mrs. Corolide Brabam during the passage from Aspinwall to this city, on board the Sautingo de Cubs, came up before Justice Hogan yesterday, It wiil be remegbered | that (he note was found pluoed fu the dressof the accused. Testmony was taken derogatory to the eharacter of the plain- 11, who, it was asecrted, bad been drunk and scted improp- erly & the voyage. A deeision will be given to-duy. The conetitutionality of the Excise law was argued in the Swpreme Court at Brooklyn yesterday iu the case of J. 'Wo Footclmmn, axrested for seliing without & Vioonse. The writ of | abeas corpus was upplied for on the ground that he bad vio- | Inted no valid subsistiog law of the State. The judges ook the papers and will decide at an early day. Catk Fitzgibbon, residing on the corper of North Fourth «né Erie-sts,, Jersey City, died in the City Prison on Tussduy wight, where sbe bad been incarcerated charged by ber tusband with habitual interporauce. TLilip Seywour, charged with peddling unstamped cigats, wus arrested in Jersey City yesterday, the acensation proved, w1 clgars confiseated. The cousideration of the Hughes bounty ease was resumed ited States Commissioner Osborn yesterday. Pro al-Genersl Fry, George C. Haythorne, and W, H, re examined, when the case was postponed umtil | 1 Lefor vostM | 1 the passengers who left this port by the California siesner yesterdsy was Williaw T. Coggeshall of Ohlo, United States Misister to Ecundor, who is un Lis way to assume the daties of thas position. A wateh race for 81,000, tywo out of three, mwile heats, togk {lace at the Pashion Course, L. L, yestorday, betwoen Cre- morno and Lady Stepheus, the former winning iu two straight Leats. Tlwe, first Leat, 2:574; second beat, 2:52), The Botrd of Education ngt last evening. A resolution wes » the Finance Committee and adopted eppropriating 7.0 for the pure! &se of n sehiool sita ou the southerly side of Ope vardred-and-fiftecnthgt, 100 feet west of Third-ave. Several other appropriations were made, Thomes Iunter n Assistant Soperintendent of Grammar e with u salary of 8125 per anvow, viee 6. W. Cooper, el . A rogular meeting of the Board of Metropolitau Fire Com- wiwsioners was beld yesterdsy. For the month ending Juse | 40 there were reported 76 alarits of fire and 5 false alarms, | mukiog o total pumber of 377 fires and alarms from January 1 o duls 1. 18%. A resolotion requiring candidates for the po- sition of ireman o pass o surgical examination was rejectod. A £ vootion offering #2350 reward for information regarding &t nego i o0 the emgineer of stéamer No. 4, while procceding o fire on the Tth fast., was adopted. Two casen of cholera were reported to the Board of Health ern States for the establiskment of agricultural collogee. The NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, nla";:’xr’]‘ualdr;y. Gor. llrow:uw:; nominees were chosen, 18 toa. Paymastor Romingloa's safe in his office at Nasbyille was and §10.000 absteacted thercfrom. tegiment are suspected. Penn., took fire on | foreed on Mond: Majo Friday evening and burned ell night, thwartiog all endeavors st extinguishing it. A oguncil of surgeons have deeided that there is no hope of Senafbr Lane's recovery, although he may poesivly live o fow days bonger. Shipper's warebouse in Mobile was buried on Tocsday after. | noon with a thousand balos of cotton, Loss, §150,000; insured. The examination before the U, SyCommissioner's Court, i Boston, of Capt. Wm. Grant, charged with burning bissLip | the * Young Meehanie, sea in April last, bas resulted in | committing the defeadant for trial in September next. Tno wife and daugbter of 8 New-Yorker boarding at Union Hall, Sagatoga;were robbed of diamonds and Jewelry worth $7,000 one day last week, ‘Some excitement was caused in Philadelphia yesterday by | the rumor that cholera Lad broken out on board the frigate Chattanooga; but inquiries developed the fact that five men had died of cholera morbus, from which the report douotless arose. The Plastgrers’ Convention assemblgs in TPhiladelphiato- doy, and will probably continue in session for three days. Andrew McBride was arrested yesterday in Brook- Iyn, charged with others with baving boarded e lighter_at the Ewpire Dock, and stealing 81,000 worfh of tea aud coffee, The Portland Motual Insurance Company will lose at least £400,000 by the late fire, It will probabiy pay 20 per cont on. its lowses, . Head Conter Stepbens was arrosted in Boston yesterday at the suit of P. IL. Sennott, who claime €4,000 for the delivery of Fenian loctures and for expenses ineurred in the Campo Belio expedition, Steph peared and gave bail in $7.000. We receive a dispatch a3 we go to press an- nouncing the resignation of Mr. Dennison, the Postmaster-General, and stating itm other mein- bers of the Cabinet will follow his example. The reason assigned is the inability of Mr. Den- It can scarcely be denied that this Randall scheme is now the accepted policy of the President, and that the effort to bind the Cabinet to its execution has com- pelled this secession from the Admmistration. How miny members will stay we cannot say; but from the Tammany rhetoric of Mr. Seward and Mr. Welles, | they will, at all events, remain, Randall may suc- coed Mr. Dennison, for unless the President takes a | Copperhead, Lis field of selection will be limited. | planat sives vania The call herewith printed for a Convention of the | loyal Unionists of the South at Independence Hall, | Philadelplia, on the first Mouday in September next, | must command general attention, There is mani- | festly a secret conspiracy at the South to exclde con- sistent Unionists from office and persecute them to the utmost. They are scattered, overawed, and must organize for mutdal protection and to claim the pro- | tection of the Nation. This call is a sign of promise. | Wotrast it will be fully responded to. Gen. Grant's order this morning, directing a general arrest and detention by his subordinates of all persons in the lately Confederated States who have com- mitted, or shall hereafter cmmit, outrages upon loyal persons of any color which the local anthoritie® do not and shall not punish, is thé most important paper | we have printed for mouths. If ot paralyzed by | higher authority, it will prove a terror to evil-doers and a muchmeeded shield to the persecuted Poyalists of the South. We ardently trust that it may be up- | held and enforced. It is equivalent to a fresh procla- mation of martial law at the South, where no other | law operates to protect those who have been faithful | to the Union, —_— | An dmportant meeting of the Union members r»fl Congress was held last night, and, thongh the pro- | ceedings were sccret, the main cbjeet is stated in our special dispatelies. There was a"general conviction | that the time of adjournment could not now be fixed, and a Comunittee of Senators and Representatives was appointed to review the whole matter and recom- mend at andther maeting a plan of action. —_— According te our Washington dispatch, Mr. Ray- mond—it being Wednesday, perhaps—exhibited signs of a contrite heart, and apologized for the course of | The Times toward the Raendall Convention. When Mr. Raymond accepted the Randall dodge, he be- lieved it was to be pure Union—the unsuspecting man—no Copperheads being admitted! Bat he has. Yeen decgived and will siu no more—until next Wednesday, at least—Wednesday being Raymond’s day.” The Hou. Schuyler Colfax has been renominated | for Congress, Mr. Colfax will fave the chance of & gallant fight, and deserves a triamphant reélection. His letter to the Indiana Convention, to be read in another column, is a thorough exposition of good Union doctrine. Tbe Legislature just chosen of the new State of Nebraska, in session’ yesterday at Omaha, chose Gen, John M. Thayer and Mr, F. W, Tipton U. 8, Scuators from that dmbryo State, They are both Republican- Unionists, Gen. Thayers,we believe, was the first Republican candidate for Delegate from the Terri- tory. We print the news as we receive it, without fally comprehending it. Senator James I1. Laue, of Kavsas, died yesterday, at Leavenworth, He must not be confounded with Senator Henry 8. Lane, of Indiana. ——— Among the Senate amendments to the Consular and Diplomatic Appropriation bill, reported yesterday by Mr. Stevens, was one abolishing the office of Min- ister Resident at Portugal, which was concurred in by the House. Senatgr Clagk’# bill regulating the election of U. S Senators passed the Senate yesterday—25 to 11, As there can be no pretense that it has any partisan aspect or bearing, we trust it whl be promptly taken up in the House and put at once on its passage. The Honse cannot wish to overrule the Senste iu this mat- ter, A resolution, vesting in the American Alllnllc’ Tole- : are not heading toward the Randall convocation? | members to oppose it, was a fact that did the bill bet- ter service than an argument. rom England about the Ministry erisis is unimporant, Derby will probably be premier if he can make & Cabinet. He was casting about for Whigs as pad-work, probably, “and will no doubt find {hem in such Whigs as Earl Grosvenor, who began the war on Reform, and in ‘snch Rgformers as AMr. Lovwe, who was the lata Ministry’s ablest ond most effective opponept. ANDALL CONVENTION. Cicero’s remark that two Roman augurs could not look each other in the face without laughing is Drought. foreibly to wind by tho atterpts of the Ran- dall bolters to represent their position as a medium or compromise between two extremes Says The Tiges: «The intent of the coll s to dovelop the conservativ: elements in the Uaion perty, and to bring them into active codperation wilth ali other conservative elements of either section. . * * +ms are applicable elike to Conservative Republicans and d with equal force they exclude wlira oll o8 lhdke\f me:\“’!:oo{ e Republican or Union party, Ouly they are invited who *sus- mln the Mmminnnfl-.' and the policy to which the Admin- istration I committed as a sequence of tho war, And, ioas- much na tho policy of the Administration recognizes tho right- ‘onsness of the war to preserve the Union, and the right solely .‘:{ Toyal men fo adwission int) Congress 8 Tepresentatives of o rat stripe of uthy it rent that no Demoo The Dll;; N prp;;'h TWorld can bouestiy subscribe to tbe terms of the call.” — 0 pinnacle of effrontery! how can human nature attainit? *The right solely of loyal men"—do you mewn to say that Ben. Wood isn't loyal? Or Heunry A. Wise? Or Throckmorton (another Rebel General, now * conservative Union” Governor-elect) of Texas ? Do you mean to say that Admiral Sewmes and Gus- tavus W, Smith are not loyal? Bs sure 4hey will all be represented in the Randall Congention, present s delegates if they sce fit. Of course, The Times cannot afford to adhere bood that * Tug TRIGUNE intrigued with Vallapdig: lam to bring the war to a dishonorable and disastrous close "—No word, no hint, no suggestion, ever passed between us and Mr. V. s to the terms on which, the ‘War should be arrested; and, as our chief concern notorionsly was that Slavery should at all events perish, and ag his was certainly something clse, it is most unlikely that we should have agreed bad we tried. It is certain only that we neyer tried. But what use in such a fabrication when we It Val. is, and you want to keep him out, something more plausible would better serve your turn. If those who stimulated resistance to the Draft at _the North, or fought in the Rebel ranks at the South, have not seats Tn the Bolters' Convention, it will be owing solely to the fact that they do not appear to claim them, If they choose to be there and their right is disputed, they will be awply strong enough to take the inside of the bouse and show Randall & Co. the door. Nine-tenths of all who will be represented in that Convention wera elther ant®War Democrats or open Rebels; and the delegates will never dare to in- quire into their loyalty in the past. For the present, they are Liearty Jobnson mon, and that must suffice. Whoever looks further will be sure to fare the worse for it. g CLUBS NO MORE! 1f there be one point on which thé people of the exacting implicit obedience, within theirown country, to the Constitution and laws, If any dudividual, eabal or faction, shall henceforth fancy that his rights, bis interests, his appetites, or his convictions, compel bim to decline obedience to lawful authority, he must sub- wit to the penalties by law prescribed for his law-de- fying net or omission. ‘We have sacrificed lives and property enongh to the demon of Civil War, Hence- forth, whatever differences may arise among us are to be peacefully settled as the Constitution prescribes, by the action of the legitimate tribunals, Certain States withdrew from the Union, so far as the aetion of their constituted authorities could with- draw them—so far,"at least, a3 to wage a four-year bloody, releptless war against the Federal Govern- ment for the partition of the Union. In the event, | they were thoroughly thrashed into submission; and are to-day in the Union, as Colorado or Nebraska the safet en instand chised that very large fraction tially reconstructed, and shall urge their restoration to all the franchises so * vilely cast away” by their ruling aristocracy of 1260-61. There i¢ a faction in the loyal States whigh was at heart in sympathy with the Slaveholders’ Rebellion throughout—not with its effort to divide the couutry, but rather with 1ts ulterior determination to coerd® the whole into submission to its will. This faction hates the Southern Blacks the more intensely that they were hostile to and helped overthrow the Rebel- Jion, and weans to keep them forever in vassalage. prompting and stimulating them to trample on the rights of the S8outhern Unionists, and thus perpetuate the feud which Peace ought to have ended aud healed. To this end, it ® now fciting the late Robels to expect and domand instant, unconditional readmission to Congress in defiance of a loyul majority of the members whose right to seats is undisputed. nounce this as tending directly to a rekindling of the baleful fires of Civil War. The World recently sgw fit to say that the lately Confederated States would all vote for President of the United States in 1865, and that “1f the candidate whom their votes olect sbould be refased Nis office, his right will be asserted by arme; and, in sueh a con. tingency, it woukt be a ereat saving of bloodshed if the setual Ancutbent sbonld be also be the President-slect.” * —Now the Coustitution of the United States has provided against the bloody anarchy which The World would fuin jpangurate, by prescribing (Art. iL, § 1) that the electoral vote of cach State shall be offi- cially transmitted to the Prosident of the Senate, and that “Tha President of the Senato shall, in presence of the Sen- ate and House of Rupresonsatives, open all tho cortiflzates, and th votoy shall then be coanted. The person having the groatest rumber of voies for President shall B Presidont.” of the two Houses; will thus officially sad conclu- sively detenfine—as was done in the ease of Mis- souri (1821) and in that of Tennessee (1%61) what scener had he Interfered than (he meg tuyved opon Vin | X, | yeuterday, one of which proved futsl, The frst was Nichaias sietany s """'.::‘:::‘T‘ ::’.'.35..‘121.{'.";’;.‘., [fivey. eed . residing ot No. 660 Water-st, whowas at. | graph Company the exclusive right to use, for 50 ed to bo ai lid Officer Cotton | acked earl ou Taosday aftégaoon, akd is yaw convelesoryt. | years, the Atlantic coast for laying cables to Europe, ""_','i",';:\" R N e R ) y, rediding 48 Wo. 6 ¢, | was 'y.mrd:y referred to lhor Hgmm c'omnfluecpnf Cotton forded b , ABd was do furn et the affaly voon rencied ¢ and & seotion of mED Was uf OBCE MBl 1o he soene Whey fownd Both officors lyng wpor the walk & orowd who #ecmed bent unen e dentt e Deaten with, every imaginable minic seattered a; with the jijured oo Were takes rgoon Froligh wae onl'ed briede is t Jushon ¢ wh 10 ale 06 10- u)‘qmu Ter R, Lipedia! . 70 g Nibs de, Pocalontus heq Biiion e, ! pidty the e Mt wnd it 000 crap il w3 oo those ofwy for oy our ships are Toading RN brrad. (s £ ) ey endst s " :m banged . O 0l $3F | Cloily . A Goud & ot ellow Jack. v, \ A arry / trot of the ripglesden | seised with tho symptoms at U 8. w. yesterday, and & P, after an {Maess of eight hours. Two cases were wieo veported in Brooklyn yestesday. Joseph Picols, aged O residing 1o My tle-ave,, near Yatos, was uttacked at “ 6 1 omthe 10th, and died sbout 7p. m. on the same day. 1 Weiber, resiling fn Cligton-ave, mear Fultop, was at- ‘ecetd on Tuesday, end last eveing was lying in » preoarious cuniition, 4 Ge M-m,m-nuu:m. In Rall wo nortgages and Mate stocks the U are Increasing, sl ok prioew ure pald. The small stooks a7e more sotive. Atthe Second §owst Lewarket was lower. Movey is very lregular, and some B Aere 4 firet rate stabding pey € per cent on call, and “other Dowsns tave 0 swd loans fer 0 days ol 4 per cent on wrdinary collsberals © w merfe) puper wo speeisl . Preights are Sign. o estial News. it vew gunbost Rewsca will sl) from the Washington Y #rd for Portowouth, N, H., on Friday or Saturdey of X, Sbe is s screw steamer of 50 tany burden, oid (mont. % » o prewent navsl foree los Baropean woters albygnte to 12 ter. currying 14l guns. The mew stoam frigal [ en s been to Gty in Admine! Gollaborough'. +oi, and will sbortly sst! for Eurdpe. « 1Y Childe, o promiment citizen of Utics, N. Y., died I+ yesterday morning of Leart dlsease, while sitting in The Catiee rootn of the Oneldn National Bank, The Metrope!itas Fotice bill cawe up i the Tenncuses Sen- Whe was “ } Commerce - _— _Tlm Dill to repeal the retrocession of Alexandria to Virginia was yewterday deteated in the House, 1 r | The National Bankrupt bill, we rejoice to say, was sepgrted in Benate yesterday by Judge £oland. ;Now let us have & vote on it! The speeches ean be ex- cused. Tt wikl e seén by o dispateh frons: Boston that the Feniens have at last got into chaneery. —_—_— a The Mouse Printing Committoo have agreed to lavfsh the b.l‘m of 25,000 on Mr. Lanman's Con. |, biographiy iving the auth ‘wd"o'nmo.ug' graphies, giving the author one dollar o 6,000 copies, Phe Nationc! Telegraph bill, which passed the Sen- ade last month, was yesterday carried in the House, | to be b by avofeof 7210 61. Several attempts were made to amen it, and send it back to the Scnate, but Mr. | Alley'sstatement that the managers of the great tele- President, with the consequet result; aud the person thus declared electod, and 1o oue glse, will be yworn fnto office by the Chibt-Justioe of the United Stales, And whoever disputes or resists his authority, other- wise than by legal procedure, to test his right to the office, will be a rebel and an anabehist. A - fifl:uurw, there willbe none syeh, The Somh.v having failed to fight herself out of the Union, will not attempt to fight herself into an unauthorized ey- joyment of its privileges. They will in due time be rufirgq 10 lier, quiutlI. logally, poacdiully, She has 16 lso p:?fipieil the mennces of violence and sub- voision put forth in Lor bebalf. Th or- e in Lior behal s are of Coffper. where 1t lghifully belongs. ., Gen. Sterking Price éxcused himself fiom '.m' the Mexican patriots on tho ground :llu’zkl?‘:';z Liberals caught him thef would seud him eithor to tho iufernal regions or to the United Btates, and ho would as 5000 go to one plac 85 (o the other, It is 0ped that he will not be sent to the other, The later accomts of fighting in Bohemia, which aro received by the arrival of the St Dagids, araph monopyly .bad bee ] v i o Al opyly .bad been on the floor, persuading | more favorable to the Lrussious. The Prussian ac- | throughout the State, and %o shall endeavos to give | raw material, . . United States have made up their minds, it is that of It was in sabstantial aceord with the Rebels: itisnow | We de-_ —The Prosident of the Senate, under the direction | votes have heen constitutionally and legally cast for | and be | themoment they shall agree npo: is, to be restored to the privileges and franchises they | scheme's to des so wantonly repudisted just so soon as shall be | for the loyal el deemed consistent with the National intogrity and | is now upon Congress, and, therefore, they urge the Whenever they, or any of them, shall have 4‘ importance of bringing the loyal men of the South (in some | s, & majority) of their people who were in- | flexibly loyal throughout, we shall deem then essen- i | , and their responsibility should rest- ! 8 il from 1is fanti, & ! ghafl Heve counts of tho battle at Skalitz greatly differ from theé Austrian. Both sides etaim the victory. It scems, at all events, to be certain that if the Prussians were defeated at all, the defeat was not serious. e e (84 The Spanish authprities-im Cuba officially deny the outbreak of an insurrection in Puerto Principe, and represent the whole affair asa hoax. ‘We give the official denial, as we gave a few days ago the report of the insurrection, for what it may be worth. The official statement, we believe, stauds fully as much in need of farther corroboration s the unofficial report. Subsequent information will establish the whole truth. In the mean time, ‘it may not be out of place to recall a few undeniable facts: 1. There has been for many years in Cuba a strong party in favor of making the island independent of European rule and a free American country. 2, This party enjoys the uadivided sympathy of all tho people of the South American Republics. Those [ ofthe Republics which are at war with Spain, 8sappears from our latest Panama intelligence, have, for some time, been planning a scheme to aid the Cuban party of independence, and bave recontly been in eager consultation about the subject, There i3, therefore, nothing impmbnblq,in a Cuban revolution, and in its support by the allied Republies of South America. On the contrary, if there was not recently an insurage- tion in Puerto Principe, aided by South Americans, we think it highly probable that there will be ene very soon, s 5 3. The Republics of South and Central Ameriea, which together count 4 population of about 14,000,000 inhabitants, have conclusively proved, by the epera- tions of their iron-clads, that they can liberate: Caba n aunited effort. HHow long would baukrupt Spain be able to sustain & war 2 i to | against an American army of 20,000 or 30,000 meu in nison to go with the Randall Bolters to Philadelphia. | the truth; bt what end does it subserve by the false- :filbfl ¥ : i From theso reasons wo believe that the Spanish rule in Cuba and in the West Indies in general is rapidly drawing to a close, whatever may have been the naturo of the recent disturbance in Puerto Prin- cipe. ; THE CONVENTION F SOUTHERN UNIONISTS. The call for the Convention of Southern Unionists, to be beld at Philadelphia in September, is the most important political movement in the South since the close of the war, Of Southern loyali#s we have heard much; now, we hope, we are to know more. This shonld be a trathpet-call to the Union men of the Sonth. Never had they a nobler opportunity to pro- claim their principles. Their protests against Seces- sion were useless, and during the Rebellion they were too weak to effect much good. Bat, now their in- fluence is of immeasurable importance; they are, to the’ army of, Frecdom, a reénforcement which may be like the troops of Blucher at Waterloo. We au- ticipate for them no speedy victosy iu the South; they can have no hope of carrying a sivgle State that re- belled; but the reform they have beguu must, in the end, be a revolution, L But though the South wil] reject this Convention, it is certain to have an immediate and great effect upon the North. Those who fought and voted against the Rebellion cannot {4 tosee that the signers of this | call are the picked mqp of the South. They aro not of those conquered” Rebels, who come back like the prodigal son, but, unlike him, repent not of (heir sins, Throughout the war they were the only frieuds of the Government, except the negroes. All that they could do to avert the Rebellion they did; they warned the South of its error, and“when treason triumphed did not plead State aljegiance as an excuse for joining its ranks. Persecuted as they were, they never yielded. Can the appeals of such men be disregarded by the North? Can it be dofibted that they, above all others, have the right to speak for the loyal people of the South The call emphatically sustains the general policy of Congress, and denies the wild and fatal theory that + the rights of the citizen must be left to the States aloney and under such regulations as the respective States choose voluntarily to prescribe.” * With Reb- els in the foreground,” itadds, **controlling Southern legislation, and embittered by disappointment in their oy the Union, there will be no safety ment in the South.” Their reliance into conjunetion with the true friends of republican governmeant in t¥e North, The eall is not fully signed, but the names already obtained ought to have weight with the North, There is W. B, Stokes,member of Con- gress elect from Tennessee, a probable candidate for Governor, aud o friend of impartial suffrage; Gov. Hamilton of Texas, one of the few Southern Gov- ernors who have not attempted to galvanize armed rebellioh into political defiance; Geo. W. Paschal and Lorenzo Sherwood, persecuted Unionists; Judge Underwood, a Radieal Abolitionist of the worst or best type; Burham Wardwell ot Virginia, who for bis devosion to the Union was imprisened in Salisbury and. Castle Thunder; J. W. Hunnieutt, editor of The New South, the loyal journal of Richmond, and others whose loyalty has been proven, not by late repeutance, but by unbroken fidelity. The convention will be, in shert, an indorse- | ment of the poliey of Congressby the only men in the South whosoe political opinions deserve the slightest respect. AGRICULTU AND PROTECTION. Among the thousands of farmers we have met, we do not remember one who ever -planted seed in his neighbor's garden in the hope that the fruit would fall into his own. Yet there are wen who have, by dint of hard labor, convinced themselves that the only way to butld up American agriculture is by encour- aging European manufactures. Encouragement of this kind i3 very charitable, but it would it not be more just to encourage our own? that the English believe in free trade so profoundly, for they have the profitable side of the question; that which surprises us is that any thoughtful American agriculturist should think that be “can work better with ansimported spade than with one menufactured at homay The theory of Protection underlies our whole system of government; it is carried out.in boun- dary lines, armies, navies, and fortresses; it is only when eommerce and manufactures are concerned that the free trader Lids us throw off eur armor and gban- don all industries to the unrestrained rivalry of the world. - P Free trade admits that its ivovitab'® result is to chieck the growth of homg manafactures, and setoally justifies it by the moptirons argument that unlimited increase of ianufactures wonld Jroduce a rivalry that \\'l)rl!u Qostroy them all, f"l."‘“' is principle, w v escape from abject dependence upon for- | cign countrics. We are Lo remain stunted, that wq may eseape the daugers of erowth! Fortunately, these hugbears begin to lose thair ter- rors, The American agriculturist knows that 1o in- creage Ametfcan mannfuctures is to broaden tho home market for Lis ‘.rodlwlinna bo kuows that & mill but b fo him fucaloulably more than a will 500 miles away; he knows fl:l'.:l home market relieves his grain from ¢he tax of trans- portation whieh is imposed by a distant one, Our agricultaral interests can ouly be truly served by a TariZ which shall profect American mauufactures. This lop-sided prosperity of the free traders wiil go on limping to the end of time. . The Society for the Prevention 'n?Crvd:y to Ani mals bave issnod a printed cireular giving the laws and legal procedures affecting those who injare the | tion is afford brutes. They are priated to meet the popular eye We do not wonder | I PR iy e them circulatipn. We remark here that che receut Florida Turtle case bas been dismissed, as g OWing no malice; but the Judge has ruled that it is w‘i" denco of malice for & witness of apy actof craslty 10 & dftmb animal to-eause the arrest of the offonde)r. The World opposes a Protective Tarilf in Qfi" fashion: ** The agriculturists of thé manufacturing States may profis by this injustioe, as well as the manufactarers themselves. A botter is afforded for their farm 'products. The Yurdens of the system heavily opou the Siates distant from the seats of the who recelve o more from their farm products than it depeuded upon foreigu market, and who sro to pay for manufactu double the prices. for wi they be procursd if Sootini did mot mako tbem artiilally dear. —Now will some one attempt to tell why all our States should not be munuZtuflng'Sumv Take ald Virginia, forexample: Sho has ample Iron, Coal, Salt, Lead, Copper, Gold, Water-Power, Timber—in most of which Nevr-Bngland is deficient; bor climate is moro genial, her goil more fortile; sho 18 ‘mearer to Cotton aud to both the West and the South; and, now that she has Freo Labor, We hold that there are very strong in- ducements to epen mines, erect furnaces and establish factories, in Virginia rather than in New-l:n;l-'d. If, then, it be truc that Protection insures high prices for Metals and Fabrics and large profits to their pro- dueers, and that **the agriculturists of manufactar- ing States” are thereby profited, why shonld not Vir- ginia, Llinois, Missouri, Minnesota, &e., be sigmally | benefited by a policy that tempts fresh investments i mannfactures? Will somo one undertake to sagt * With all deference to that oficial preventer of eruot ties to nnln'nls. who prosecutes in behalf of an animal so emotionless as a * turtle,” but thinks it a iy to drown dogs by the hundred in dog-days, we believe that the. present nuisance and cruclty of the Dog- Pound can be reformed. Wby bas this nuisauce, which is the continual robber of useful and valuable dogs, never been made to pay its cost? Dogs are captare®decoyed and stolen, and taken to the Pound, where, after a day’s notice for reclamation, they are packed in a tank and forthwith drowned anid suel’ agonies as make the spectacle (we are told by those who Hhave, witnessed it) more pitcously appalling than that of a public exeention. Something better mightbe done for an guimal which is the favorite of the household, the pet and companion of our children, the most expressive and sympathetic of ull bis kind, and who, beside being of some scxvice to farmers and countrymen, is of no small e, in common-place lives, asamute and familiat, bumorist. So much can be said for the dog, but less for his wholesale taking off. | Extremely few cases of aectual hydrophobia occur to make necessary the drowning of thou- sands of dogs i the year; and the public and the dde~ tors are humanely and rationally gettiag rid of the su- perstition that dogs arein natnre bound to get madin dog-dnys. Ifthe brute conld plead in its own be- half, it would probably argue—RBecauso one man gets the cholera, what is the use of hopelessly killing all? We, thorefore, venture to plead for the dog o fair chance to get ong of pound, and to cegape drowning, by being Sold. Many useful and valuablo animals, never reclaimed, are destroyed gvoty year, 454 jult such animals would find ready purchasers at a general sale, whieh, with fair management, might be made popular, entertaining, and even respectable. Fortho rest of the condemned, we suppose, 1o mercy is prae- ticable except in the manner of their deaths; but we notice a proposition to utilize their fat, bides and bone by making oil, glue, phospbates, leathes, and even shoes. There is aspecial bid for the leather of the Newfoundland dog, which can least be spared of sup- plied; and our only objection to this plan is that it demands more dead dogs than use, mergy, or neoessity | justify, > The Locomotive Eogineers of this country, having perfected an organization which embraces tour thou~ sand members, have issued W responsibly sigoed ad- dress to failroad managers, wherein they make $his proffer: » +To assure you that we wish to obtain only that which any fair- minded aran witl say is right. we are wiling to 8 o Lmit any point of differonce that may arise on any sich as wages, of other serieus questions, or oll matiers Shat in the least eadangers the stoppis: «f 1Le road, to arbisretion. | o Cowpany chooss & mamber (1o e agrced wpov) of rustworthy offieials from otber s—tle Koglicers to do | the same. If they cannot sgree thon, to huve power to choose | some aisintercsted outside party, ond iv this vay settie all dic- potes. In doingehis, you forever prevent the possibilisy of @ Strikc, and this ought to be au isducement auficicat 10 wap Tant you iu making the experigent, Lic public wust approve £ | of an arrangemegtol this kind, tual Cileciua'ly prevent | an interruption their business, ¥ prioeiple of i urges you to d forever prevent thet nocdiess destroyer yroperty—a 8 this agree- Lot we will eowmprising nearly weps will be observed ob your pari ¢ siga & eontract with four thousand nawe all the best Locomotive Engincers in this country, and a8 i~ dorsers we think we could get a msjority of the’ Moster Me- chanies throaghout the country, wits o Lirge nninber of Saper- intendents, aud we bope some of the Presidente. Tiis weare | wiling to do.” | —It scems to us that thi: is a Peasonalle propesi- ion, and that it should be weepted. We speak not ! for the Railrodds, nor the Eggiticers, but in bebalf of * | the general publie; Which sufiers by strikes and con- | tentious between employer and employed. We urge the railroad mauagers to take up, at an early day, the above proposition, and cither adopt it or show cause for declining. We tinst they find it acceplables —— The Daily News says: *There e rea'ly no more 1easen why the € rant lands to aid 1a the cugstruction of 4 wan why it sboul | grant money to i Sourl Caroliua or aeehnal in V. t Radica's would make, and how wdignastly would they to the Coostitntios, if any snch propesition wis inti ml 1nto Congress.” One reason for granting lands in aid of milroads in Miunesote ivhores in the fact that the Union ewns most of the land in that State, o that every railroad there constructed iucreases the accossibility and the valua of its property. Another is fonud in the faet that every railroad there constrneted invites seitle ment, and thus inereascs the population and wealth of the country. But why should “*a row” be & in the case supposed by The” Nows? Congiese paid largely toward the co of the Loutsville and Portland Canal, which is eutirely located in a-State where' there were 1o public lands, 1¢ constructed the National Road theaugh Maryland, Virgmis and Pennsylvania, where there were no public lands. We believe it paid Inrgely loward corstmeting’a canal aoross little Delaware. Wi beg leave to ubsorve that tere fs one ** Radival™ tnat would not raise ““a vow™ becanse public movey was expended wholly within Virginia to subserve omq great National henefiognt euds. o ot B —— The postmasters of th: Konlh woere in defwlt 2200, . 000 or more, of which 166,60 hos Leen alggady paid in, some of it," we hear, under pic Southeripa- pers, we observe, ol w the colleotion of this debt, because the Govermnont did nol in the it place protect its agents in the in Kiates, and decanse allegiance was therefora v It docs appear, howevér, that they kopt moncy from the United States Treasury to spesd ow tho Kebellion, and not to save for the Government, | The question, umjp". is mot one of puuisiuweat, bui is @ matier of the simplest obligation; wod the dglanligre will har® to pay the ateermos. furt avod. “The,cigar and fobaccq. mjanfacturers 40 not veom at all ploased with that portion of Mr. Opdyke's reso- lation offered a few day< ugo n the Chamber of Com- “mereeswisich affewts Uit i of tiade. They 4o pob agree with Mr. Opdyke in thinhing that commerce will soffer if foreign cigars aso prohibited. but incline ta the cogtrary belief, ns the leaf s far ware My than the munufactured article. Toey say it ed to labor bere, they will wat o times the present (rausportation to bring thegribe e -4 5o P