The New-York Tribune Newspaper, August 6, 1866, Page 4

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T EogiY = QAmusements. - WALLACK™S T ATER THIR EVENING ot ho 311 AMU : wn Hiysot, W. R oV Heasn, ) Flord, Charkes Fisher, 1 ¥ 10 © Wil 3. K. Brow Mire John Setion EVENING o Brougha WOOD'S TiE A OUGH D ) snd tol TER AMOND—FIA DIAYOLO, company THIS EVENIN e Woriell Siater N MUSEUM. BARNUM'S AMES . DAY AND EVENING- IACK AND OILL. M: ¢ ¥ 84 luil company. ( NURES THOUSAND CLURIOSITIES ik CAROLINA @ 0l ¢ TIEATER TS BVENING. ot 8=THE ICE WITCHL M Mark Smitl wier Sisters and full company. Grand Get Cim Webh Sisters. the wova Upera Chorus THE ELFIN DELL. ERRACE GARDEN. Thirdave Tins FVE W E—111L0. THOMAS'S ORCITESTRAL GARDEN CONCERT. Frosraume varied every eveaing. Fifty Cid concert. CHIARINI'S CIRCUS, THIS EVENING » be Bleecke: st. Pavilion, Rodsizues et Lspiuom Neison Biotire Marvelons Ethiopinn Pr Seivmatian, Don A. Marqie: and 1ol cowpany, Performances every oom, Six uizhte bou e OLD KOWERY THEATER THIS EVENING of © —THE NCOLO TROUP ATLAS-LIVING I \ERIAL BARS live, and Mile dor of the A Bnoinress Nolices. A CLrAr COMPLIXION AND A HEALTHY SSIN can « pores of the skin are obstru o the Biood i8 i e imp De. JAse's AxveRative will, how of the skiv, and will thoroughly cleenss the v, resiore Lo por Liood, it willelso remove (Le cbstinate state of the pores. and froe o A teial will e perspiration from sl lunprritien aud gros pu epiablish ite efficacy. Sold by all Dra [ S i i OpINIONs 0N MARSDIN'S CHOLERA (0% A ogyman: T constdss It lnvaiisbie in ail cases. A Physician: 10 has enrtaisly bees very wuccessiol. A Hotolkeeper We cans. roeiven exempt with this remedy 0a baad A Doogzint: Of all Chiolora Medicines 1 thisk this the most reliable. Foice $1 Depot, No. 437 Brosdway W PLEDGE OUR KEPUTATION FOR TRE FULFILL- suwr of what weleie decare. Jualwest every instavce whe: ethe foian 25 or ) minutes sfier Mrs '\ ixsrow's of will be fourd in , T fering f-om pais and exba TRING SYRUP has beed ¢ Sute wdwinistered. Cutes dyscntery end diswrien end wi s regtate the bow: L. 5 cente s bottle, LEVETT'S AROMATIC SWIETENIA, for clea waservin: the teeth, giv e f » ‘I.PE'hw(dfig‘ th, end ©o Le @onth, Try it ¥ ¢ Waie k Co. Ge wista groere ly. WaARREY, iox Inpia K he agency of the oods of 1} Tere may be ad e se, No. 2 Park-phsce For Buaxs, Piurs, Cory, Cosns, Bruises, OLd Fouwes, SALT Riwon end oll skin disesses, we know of no rewe ol certain os DALLEY's MAGICAL PAIY EXTRACTOR. Soid by at Drvggiste, and st Depot. No. 49 Cedaraio, N. V. 25 Centan fABY JUMPERS.—A new invent chrealar w wis 1. Tispais Ne, Also, Cuir Hobby Herees, wings and T Wineox & te ¢ hiand Pari o yiex of W ork contwining bot s on the same pince o gou s No. 506 Browtway. TuE ARM AND LEG, by B RaNk PaLue Whe “best™ free to wold i Choatitot, Phila; Asorpl. NV, Seanduiient imitations of L« vate Mawvi « AND BUmGLAR S1ive eanted parfoct'y dry. A Mocchouts Sarss Manvis & Co %0 Pdway, n I Tas ELLIPTIC LOCKSTITON SEWING-MACE Wi (e atest improvement. anil uiie i INCOMPATABLY THE wer POR PAMILY sk biivin S 0L Ne. 6 Broadvey Agenie wated De. LANGWORTHY 8 Npw Presmioy Tross cu ¥ igptuses without pun of i g orst cases soliciied. Call wolasn HELNBOLD, & B TROSSES, ELASTIC STOCKING: Ades, Seyporrems. ho —~Manen & € oty o No. 2 Vesey st | elfgorenck LOCK-STIT N SEW o bis worid Frokesen Spwixe PENSORY BaND- eal Care Truse Office atteudant, TAcin Macures Col Ne. 5 | IupROVED LOCK-S7T1TCH MA ‘-l.-hm Umovsn & Farer Mort Koot re o ———— e Crover & Bakik's HiGrist Presiosw Erasin Borrem SEwine MACkiNes. (o7 faaily ose. No. 46 Bioatios ines for Tailoes and 56 MACHINE CoMPANY, CHEMICAL POuAVE Restores ( Hau ond (ron faling oot remcoves Jandrod by Kusutos. Ne. 10 Aster Honse, aod agaA "Howr BewiNG MACHINE COMPANY. —LLias Howi 3. President, No. 699 Broadway. Areuts wanted. | Dyseepsia TaBLer, 8. G. WELLINGS, 10 in € and Deartburn. Sold by il Drogeists Wheetgr & Wisox's Lock-Stiea Bacurey and Berroxmorr Macw:ixe. No. €23 Broadws, SuwiNg parmiesichons brus e I Cartes Vignette, $3 per doz 6% cegtivts cogiotes ’l.“.l.:wl " ¥oskug & Lyox's New Family Sewing-Machie Agva wanted. One macoine free of large, No. 9 Death of Farini. ‘Charles Louis Farini, the cclebrated Italian a and »atesman (whose death 1¢ snvoanced by the Atlantic Tel- wgraph), was born at Russi, in the Reman States on the 224 of October, 1822, Having studied m s with suceess, he woon became famons for geveral exosllc trbatises on various discases, as weld as for his ¢ tiona to seientific journals; but hecoming mixed up with he political movements of 1841-43, ke fell uuder the han of the Pontifical Government, and was driven int exilo. ¥lo resided successively at Marseilles, Paris, Florevce and Muxin, following bis profession, and when at length the munesty of Pius IX. permitied Lis return to Lis country, B0 was appointed Professor of the Clivical Department in Owmmo, Subsequently the reforms which were inaugurated baviag opened to him a political career, Lo was fimt appointed Mivister of ° the Interior, after wanl olected o Member of Parliament, and ulti. woaloly nominated by Rossi superintendent of sanitary poatters and” of prisoners. Farini, whose political wpinions were of the moderate order, refused to adhere to Whe proclamation of the Republic, aud conseqnently rotired into Tuscany. Afiér the French army had estab- Yighed itself in Rome, he sought Lo resume his functions but was opposed by the three cardinals, who conducted tho Government in the nawe of the Pope, and was thus again to go into exile. This time he went to Pisdmont, where hit great abilities were highly appreciated, wud every afforded him for exercising them in tho public wrvice, After editing for gome time the Busorgimente, he was appointed Minister of Public In straction, baving & seat at the same time in tho Pied- puontese Parlisment. He plaged an important part in ‘e atitring events of 1850, On the expulsion of the Duke of Modena, he was chosen Dictator of the Duchy, aud mided greatly in bringiog about the annexation of Modena | 32 mew cases occurred in tie intended for fnsertion taust be wath o5 of the writer—aot necesartly (o § suty for bis pded faicte Al bustnens letors (3r this otice sbou'a 0o adls Now York We cannot undertae Lo raturn veiect ewsedts Tas Tuin | The Tribume in STEVENS BROTHERS, (Amencen Azen | st Covent Garden, W A for They will also receive 8ol T Trisoxe AT SARATogA.—Thoraton, newsman for five cente, and bis boys sell {2 on the saws price. raries 171en1istts THE THIBUNE at Saratoga. sel's tho Thi! Le sidowalke ta front of P ‘NEWS OF THE DAY. ————— TIE WAR IN EUROPE. Wo bave, by the Atlantio Cable European nowe to Saturday Angust 4. According to 8 London dispatch dated August 4, Austria bas formally consonted to withdraw from the Ger- man Confederation, 1o lose Venctia and Ler part of Schlcsv ig- Holgtoin, and to pay $10,000,000 as expenscs of the war. The Germau States noxth of ths Main are to form @ Union under the guidance of Prassia, and the States south of the Main to form an indopendent union, The Frassian army had oocupicd Mannbeim and Heidolberg in Baden, iy the arrival of the Moravias, off Fatber Point we have news to the 27th of July, Onsbatday the first armistico be tween Austris and Prussia expized. On the 25t na ariis- tico was concluded botwoen Aus'zi . and Itay, The Prossians had an engagement With the Austrians be but it was stopped by tho announcement of tue news of the A Hungariau legion bas been oryn i command of Gen, Tiapka, nutabering 9,000, Lt was p.ejuriog toiovade Hoogarr. The Ttalians had made great prociess io the Southern Tyrol when news of the armistice wis FOREIGN NEWS. The suspension of the Labeas ecr Treland is to b on- tinusd. On the the House of Cem of the Bill for this purpose, Mr. Gladst e suppost-d 8 went, aod 4ok iu terin of tue actiou of tar |l States Governwent toward the Fe: on of the right of the peopie to holl m w be referred—with the consent of the Government— ., f " authorities for their de: 18 vone'dered that ernment is de iating s Keform Leavus. The Liberal party in Cansda have been fou r | endeavors to have the Upper Cluuier of the 1. " Lower Cauads under fhe new eorsi.iution electiv of appointed by the Crown, a moiton to effect boy t | been defeated in the Legislative Asse y ! mojority. NEW-YORK CITY. On Saturday morning, while Lcw rd B, Tin e wos passing through the Bowery, Luvio t containing bills for colicction e iers » propesty of bis employers, Messts. WA provision doalers at Nos. 14, 15 and 17 Virst ot & a | Canal.st. he was met by the notorio « J.mes Mebou 1, s Casey alias Bargess, and two comp s ions, wio ases 1o o, strikiog bim violontly in the face il trying to vold & A policeman coming to bis assistance, the wssaiiont we rested, and subsequently released oo hail BCholera is to Lo d ) the ciy of I but inoreasizg in the pullic 1~ utons. O Friu t | deaths. A pazic seized the po'l Jail delivery took pluce, acatterin Lad becn expesed to the infeciion city, to sow the sesds of poisen themselves. Thers w night 10 deaths. Clolera o Truaut Home, ! | Asalesman in & sagar esiablia! ame of Dexs, from the city after | transactions, in which bi large amount. Nok whereabouts of the absentee. Ono-third of the rortality of the week ending Iast Saturday, was ca ber of deatlis, howover, was very | previous wegk. The exact nunl will not vary far from €00 Thed: ' f or an average daily wartality frow 1 1« A carioan in the employ of Messs lie e & 3, e chants in Fultonstreer, while utio o pling 1o ¢ “ | the horse-car‘track in Chathau & neertiap day afternoon, was throwa from |« seat, (he v over his breast, produc w1 oworrh 10 the City Hospital, where be shor v atterwalis espired. Proceedings have been fustitui-y .4 tie Sixt. i-triot Court, | before Justice Barrett at tie 1iisdoave. R alroud Com! | pany for refusing to fare tickets 4t 4 ¢ Venieat poiot, ac | cording to the recent iaternal reve: ¢ Lt { Moreis Klein died on Friday t 1.~ New-York Hospital from | | scalds received by the boiler explo 100 at the sugar Fetinery in | Leona, on the £3a ult. Tids s the third death occuriing | from that aceident | Soperintendent Kennedy's quart.ry poport for July 31 sets | | forth that during the last three mo i s there were 1 this ity 0 nrrests of person.. for ull esuses by the police, of which 1 by et mer waally o un Satur. Tewas takeu . » Pruss victories were ne Towited to send Com eacl Assembly District, oo such Dis thiat :thie Frussisn violones were B i o4 i 195 Delegatsato represant them i asid Con v due to thee ney of the needle gun, b - clgates to Lo chosen at Conveatious called by the e superior intelligence of the Prussian offieers T Assncably Disirict oig . | Austrian correspondent of 7he London Times states bl gl .’}‘,‘_’J;," " | that the Government the necessity of yeorganiz. | Lrosamp Cganiu 11, Horkins, | . < | Canmex A iug the infantry | Jomsi ’su'-(-. ur p ). o, The Anstrian army has ereatly suffered from tho | ruron Haiis, | menerals, one of whom, Clam- NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, MONDAY, AUGUST .6, 186b. should continne to be the weapons of the confederated pions of Oppression and Caste, the Right will yet triumph, and ours becomea laud of Universal Justice and Universgl Liberty. tobe paid. As the acconnts 1355, to ascertaln w ed, it 13 impossible to make must be cl any payment before th s 1st of September next, On our inside pages will be found an interesting of answers to correspondents, elaborate re- 1e Educational Conventions, another of Mr. Clarence Cook's letters, with correspondence from Saratoga, accounts of the crops, and a great v aric ral information TIE RBASIS OF PEACE. Thie Atlantic Telegraph puts us, this morning, in " | possession of European news reaching to’ Saturday, ¥ 1 August 4. The most important intelligence concerns thie progeess of the peace negotiations between Aus- tria and Prussia. As was generally supposed, the former power agrees to withdraw from the German Confederation. Prussia does not, however, insist upon demanding the reconstruction of the whols of under her leadership, but restricts to the States north of the River Main, leaving all the States south of that river to cstablish an independent Union. This latter body would accordingly embrace the Kingdom of Bavatia (4,507,440 inhabitants), the Kingdom of Wurtemberg | (1,743,223 inhabitants), the Grand Duchy of Baden 754 inhabitants), and @ part of the Grand of Messe-Darmstadt. The Principalities of | zollern-Ilechingen and Hohenzollern-Sigmavin- @en, which at present belong to Prussia, as well as the Principality of Lichtenstein (7,150 inhabitants), | . E | also lie within the bounds of this Southern Confedera- | P;m,“‘ zockless folly of a city ofotal has precipitated » l tion, A her the proposed Southern Confedera- { & ‘ o tion would number upwand of £,000,000 inhabitants, b o leaving abont an equal number to be united with soon allay, The New-York Times finds comfort in speaking of opean dispatches received throngh the Cable 5" and * bocus-pocus.” It The Times would like to inquire into the matter and to experience o sensation in the way of journalism, we shall be happy to show it our bills, The Times, also, does not be- lieve in the Atlantic Cable, a way these third- class papers k in New- L v and the t will not be questioned, It is in | b own reports of the conclu- § sion to w tho cause and ¢ paic in Brooklyn, which good sense and a fair sures of the Health Boardshould | 7 that 33 new cases of cholera | itentiny, the District iltation with any of the He sase forthwith of about onc ito tho disc It is tl m, and, until we learn further, we must treat it as of almost eriminal thonghtlessuess. The penitentiary is situated in a dirty quarter, surroundod with the conditions whi make the epidemic welcome; and there the Board Health will find plenty of work for thir Lauds before the ill-judged me; » of the Brookiyn Attorne made matters g That officer should b to severe accoun — Prussia, Tt is safe to say that the proposition will greatly Vational party throughout Germany, which will only be consoled by tho hope that, the two Confederations once established, the pressure for coms plets union will soon become irresistible. The cession of Venetia is, of course, embraced in | the basis of peace. We gee that the Ttalian papers « | generally assumed that, in view of the pon-interfer- ence of France in the war, the cession of Venetia be- o void, and that that province continued to be | rded by Austria as an Austrian and by Italy as an Italian province. We shall soon learn whether the new agreement confirms these views by ceding | Venetia directly to Italy, Southern Tyrol is not mentioned, and i ion to Italy was, therefore, probably not pres Anstria, of conrse, abandons her claims to Schles- wig n, which will now probably be annexed | to Prussia, It is generally expected that the Prussian | vernment, to couciliato the Scandinavians, will retrocede the northern di<tricts of Schleswig to Den- torney, witho brities, ¢ d prisor act which caused tl reg Tho consequences of the Kebel victory in N Orleans were not diflicult to predict. Does it need to be told that wide-sprend apprebension has been cre- ated among all the Union wmen living in o minority at the South under Rebels armed with the President’s late telegram? We have pews that within three days since the riot thousands of Unionists have left New-Orleans, warned a cuth, while in Mobils tho ‘persecution of loyal men | M7E- Las recommenced. A or agent of the Preedmen’s | UNION STATE CONVENTION. an, ot the first or tho last vietim of the absurd | Ay 4 meeting of the Union State Committee, heldat nd devilish batred of those Who a0 SLriving SIever | Garatosa Springs, Angust 3, 136 the following resolution \in against the march of the civilizer, has been | was voan 1y adopted Murders will not censo till | Jeoired. Thata Uuion State Conveation be held at SYRACUSE, iered in Louisiasua, move the stone of sacrifice. ON WEDNESDAY, THE FIFTH DAY OF SEPTEMBER NEXT, ok, noon, for the nomination of vant Gove: o, Canal Comm o1 at the November el of New York, who desice the maint the Urion, the sapremacy of the Constitution, and the compieie sup- 2 of ta causes of the lats Revellion by sl apt snd eliciout e warmest partisans of - Austria are compelled to adwit the superiority of the Prussians, The G i Augsburg, one of the leading organs of Austrian tment of incompeten (allas, who was ap- | effects of uepotism in the appoi yieeo | onriLes K W 0 pointed by the Government notwithstanding the pro- bui. Freeo test of Bonedek, was to be court-martialed for unmii- " itary conduct in one of the great battles of Bohemia. | | Oar Annual Election occurs this yoar on Tuesday, 1o that not quite nine W the as ng of our State Couvention a f tho polls. Within that time, our n Congress, Assembly and County Of to be made; and the Fall canvass begun, prosecuted a 80 deepl The pe« Vi feel the weakncss of their Government, that on the departure of the Em- press from Vienna, the people in the suburbs loudly | sed their admiration and preference of the Prus- | Cxp! | some claims and arrearages remain to be paid, there game shall stand baek, at least for this y Tt us nominate, in every instance, the man who ought to go to the Assembly: if be obstinately refuses, we then stand justified in tuking the next best: but never let a man be nominated because he wants to go, or becanse some clique who have an ax to grind are bent on sending him. Now is the time to see to this, and to search out capable, wise and pro- foundly estecmed citizens for our Assembly candidates who are able and willing to canvass their several dis- tricts by townships, wards and school districts, bringing home to’every fireside the great truths which ought to give us the State this Fall by at least One Hundred Thousand majority. Brethren! the time is short, Tet us this day resolyé that it shall be improved to the very ntmost | OUR NATIONAL DERT. The {act that our National Debt was redaced more than One Hundred and Twenty-four Millions of Dollars during the yesr which closed on the 1st inst. is be- lieved tabe without a parallel in the annals of na- tions just emerged from a tremendous, desolating war. There is nothing like it in our own history. If we could go on at this rate, we should pay oft the last dime of our Debt within the next twenty years. Every onesupposed that the Debt would be largely increased during the year just closed by the payment of arrearages, claims, suspended accounts, &e.; while the pagment of volunteers mustered out of service since Aug. 1, 1865, must have absorbed at least One Hundred Millions of Dollars, aud probably far more. But the amonats actually due to contractors and ou | other unliquidated accounts were less than was sup- posed; while claims for food and other property taken by our commanders; from loyal men appear to have been serutinized with adequate rigor. Despite the great reduction of taxes *and the extra bounty just voted to our faithful defenders, it is now clear that our Debt is mot likely to exceed the ascertaived amount. For, while | are some Millions now due from Southern railroads for rolling stock, &e., sold them by the Governm most of which will ultimately be realized; while it is most unlikely that so many claims, suspended ac- counts, &ec., remain to be adjnsted as have already t been settled and satisfied. And, while the great re- ! duction of taxes just effected must make a large | Lol in the receipts of future years, we trust this | will soon be filled by the increased production of many articles still taxed, and by the augmented effi- | ciency of our taxing machivery. Cotton and Tobacco will pay far more in the ensuing than they did in the last year; Incomo will probably pay more; so will | the receipts of Railroads, Theaters, &o. Aud, if Con- gress had seen fit, to reduce the tax on ‘Whisky from | %% to 50 cents per gallon, we believe that article | would also Lave paid mo The present tax is so 1 that it is more generaily evaded thau paid. { On one point, Secretary M Culloch will not permit | us to nnderstand him, Why he should persist in keeping so large an amount as $137,317,332 in the Treasury, while he is paying interest ou §118,665,470 of Temporary Loan, is our standing perplexity; and now, when his heavy Income Taxis about to come in, his doing it scems tous a giave misdemeanor, He onght to have paid oft least more than he did up the thereby decreasing by some interest of the Debt and brivging its principal below $2,700,000,000, Mouey that has been used in paying off our Debt can neitlier be embezzled nor used to | inflate speculations; or, if it be g0 used, the Govern- ment is nowise responsible, How much longer must we ask why the Treas not reduced and the National Debt paid ofl, to the farthest extent con- stent with the prompt satisfaction of all current de- ! to 1t 5 balance i mands? [ ——— E | slan Goverument. r 1. And ne before was it 50 necessary l tl ass should be matic, thorough and a | Grave questions are at issue which were | t argued befors the people of our State; all | ales of the Republican-Uni s | to basuch, THE SUFFRAGE QUENTION, There being no longer a question that the martyred Unionists recently murdered in New-Orleans were were defonse- ) ~'!\u;h_lm-:!—m:m_\ lm:hr;n: ;vhil‘- th 8 ; | who bave proft aro daily arrai Lo "“"’""';"""‘_’ ‘;. L conuse thEY | g our Reprosentatives in both Mouses of Congress | were peacefully secking the enfranchisement of't as calpably ditato ing tho restor- | Blacks, the affiliated Rebel, Copperhead and Johnson journald are driven to the necessity of justifying the use of means deemed requisite to prevent such enfranchisement. Yet recent epostates are compelled to evade or at least befog the issue. | Thus The N, ¥. Times says: { the States lately in revolt against the Union | to representation in Congress. “ Why not admit loyal Members at onee " they ask; as it it were pos- » open the door and thea exclude those who t not to pass throngh it—as if those who owe ts to Rebel votes would not act as their con- | any | the more | 16,508 were males and' 5,202 wore toi cles As the 54 o'clock p. . was passing 0p § | yundred-and-twentiet: Downing, killing ber aligost iustan‘lv. 4.0'clock on Satarday afisrnoun & m. Bonneil. aged 27, residing at No. o the roof of 1he bui 4 and wasseriously ivjure up train of the New.Haven Railroad wu Baturdsy, when near One- | it 1800 er o woman named Mary | 6 Southst., foll to the gron | Natuasiel Moore was ined $30 i the Court of Sp | slons, on Saturday, for o ain trade | designate a particulsr man of store po! On Saturda A Fernando Steyman aged nine was drowned in the East River, at the foot of Seventg-second. st while bathiog. Dold was hosvy on Saturday. opening st 1494, seiling dows to 147 and closing W bonde of all causes wern very strong and in sctive do Miscell ahares wers | irregulsr, After thebosed ¢ daud prices gove verument | sliy lower, batat the 1 6 elock board atwas stronger, sndclosed stesdy. Money contin.es very rasy per cont. with lazge transsctiozs st the lower Tates. Exchange iy nomial. GENERAL SUMMARY Cen. Sheridan Las issied an order to the effect that martial law will be continned and enforced in New-Orleans so far a8 may be required for the nreservation of the peace and the pro- tection of life and promerty. Dr. Dostie died yesterday at 4pm. The statement of tie public debt, dated the 1st of Augast shows that the total debt is 2,770,416,608, while tae amount in the Treasury is 817,517,352 the amount of the debt over and above the cash in the Ureasury being $2.633,000.970, A de crease of $20,552844 in the totsl debt is shown by the siate” ment since the last s*atement made on the Iat of Juue. ‘The Treasury Department bas issued a circular for the rega- lation of the custows aceruing from cigars and tobacco uuder the new Tuternal Revenue law, and also a cireular concerning special taxes under the act of July 13, by which licenses wero abolished and special taxes substituted therefor. Four convicts made their exeape from Sing Sisg vrison 03 Sstarday while the guard at the quarry was ssleap. They possessed themselves of citizens' clothies and doffad their striped uniform. They are still ot large. A meeting was held in Norfolk on Wednesday for thes zurpu of appointing delogates to tho Philadelpbia Coarea- o8, p ‘The old Moyamensivg Ilall in Philadelpbis, which was recently taken as a cliolora hospital, was burned en Saturday. An indignation meeting had been beld the day before, - A man named Poole was murdered in Newark on Saturday moruing by e wan nemed Ira Munn, the proprietor of a hotel. Poole entered the houso withr some friends, and a dispute aross | taat Soatk: Caroiica may be re “ There are lipent, wealthy ould di —as if, 50 long as all the | ofe t whom thera | Rebels are enfranchised and nine-tenths of the bearty | Unfouists of the South di sed, it is of any | e wifh sufirage, | practica! eonsequence whether her repr atives in Congress ean or cannot swear that thoy never rolun- | tarily aided the Rebellion, Never before was it 80 necessary that a canvass be ol district.of our State; never ain that such a cau result in immonse advantage to the cause of Truth, Justice aud Human Liberty. Whatever may be the | sing election, the Republica od at least Ty lative popular vote it our Stat 1 called to meet two weeks A candidates for Congress wight all have be ted, and the canvass at all poiuts opened, n than September 1 The Rebels, Copperheads and Jobnsonians, are hold their grand Convention in Phi I1th of August; our Convention should b 1y to nnmask their sopl i reverh their de- ated, decimated Unfon. r in Philadelphia on the | autbentic utterance to their | Congross —The Times & of the lately re 5 better—knows that'there is not olted 8tates whose ex-Rebols will | consent to ‘*ipvest intelligent freedmen with suf- | frage,” nor even‘those Blacks who were born free, and | have made themsolves *inteiligent, wealthy and And, though President Livcoln urged na Union Convention to enfranchise * the ! carried into ey Vids must was it 50 reputable’ 1 Thous T e Convention patlantly i March 1564,) the Con ture to do jt, but thwidly romitted the question to the Legislature, | And, though | dent Johnson rens' insubstance | this recowmendation, saying (in his lotter to 1765,) ** If you conld ex- | «to all persons of color who | Constitution of the United States in il to all persons of color who own real estate valued at not less than 0, and pay taxes thereon, you would completely vm the adversary, and set an example for other States to follow,” Mix ention did not ve to ! delphia on the | e been so | tr, catled as pro expose i\ their wisreprese fiance. The iste of the Sou Ath of September te At ssippi nor any other | reconstructed Styte has, up to this hour, conceded the | wrongs, their afllictions, and their hopes o tight of Suffrage to any colored person whatgver. | Convention should have been so called thar ) And, if they failed to do so when urged by President { two or .three . of our ablest and noblest ! lity exists of their doing it | citizens should have beendeputed by it toconvey to our | . Southern brethren assurances of our sympathy and | Time and again bas The Times misrepresented the | watchful interest, and our stern resolve that their sufs Radical position with regard to Suffrage, iv defiance | feriugs shall bave aspeedy end, and their eruel inmo- of our reiterated and explicit corrections. Right weli l’ lators be kept out of power in/Congress till they shall | does it kuow that what is demanded is fmpartial Suf- | have ceased to murder their neighbors for having been | frage; but it is resolved that its readers shall be kept | truetothe Usion, It was of the gravest, most urgeut ignorant of the truth, We state, therefore, for the | most palpable consequence to the righteous canse sixth or seventh time, that any regtrictions on the Right | that eur State Convention should have met s x.:.n of Suffrage which shall apply impartially to Whites and | a5 possible after <the Raudall Niblack gathering Blacks will not be olyected to by the Radicals. We pro- { of our encwmios ; and for weeks we have pose none, require none, but will object to none that | labored to that end—with what result is skown above, apply to Wiutes and Blacks alike. If you insist on | We can now only urge the earliest possible meeting of reading and writing, or any conceivable literary test, | the Union Congress, County and Assembly Commit- we shall only require that education be free to | teesin every district and county, and she call of Nom- inating Conventions to meet at furthest not later than Johnson, what prol since he has gone ove to the enemy ? | tion, but he did not q | in that capacity. We are accused of having, jointly with the National | Con ndeavored to blarney * the Irish voters™—a { charge el we, can bear complacent Let those | Jjournals, De ratic and otherwise, orzans of the | Admini how the use of prostituting the; . | opinio of our d; ABKANSAS, The people of Arkausas decided uot to involve | they have respeectfully memorialized | and comparative ignorance ** migiit not inst.; | 5,000,000 the annual | | cotemporary’ their hostility to the War for M y nover protendod to support it nor favop it., They held the Rebels to be clearly right and the Governwent utterly wrong from the start, Fhey dep. recated all “coercion” but that exercised in belialf of Slavery und Disunion, Their votes and speeches were in accordance with their convictions and theje wishes, If the acts of these Democratic leaders are often cited in Repub lican journals, it is becanse they ind. cate the real sentiment and amimus of their Pm,’. We cite them as witnesses whose record is unquaes tionable. 1f James Brooks differed from them in agy thing, it was that he bad the more cunning and tha less honestys d Perhaps tho reader may be asisted in estimating T TEIBUNE'S vaunt “that it is not the custom of this joursas to make enterprise in vaunting outdo enterprise itse'f" if will take the tronble to compare an *“‘original " article on fifth colnmn of the seventh page of Thursdas's TRIBUKI with one in the first cofuma of the atm page of The Times of Ju ~ 20, Tue TRIDUNL's evterprising * original” is mostly wor for word from our columus, tho only variatious being cert omissions and a few bungliog altezations evidently wmade hy somebody to disguise the theft, T Iu reply to this,we haveonly {ostate,that the :rm- in question was furnished to us by a person calliny himself John W. Kennion, as an origival article, and paid for as smch, The editor in charge of tta City Department revised and privted it. not knowig, it had been published by The Times, The following v is from our accounts on file: Nesw-YOBK, July 27, 1965, Ww-Yorx TRiuNe To Joha W, Keunlon, Dro B . . B . To articls on Paper Collars, &¢ g y Joux W, Kr It will thns beseen that the article was accepted in good faith, and that the deception was one of th swindles which adventurers are constantly endeavor ing to practice upon journali Instead of makiny such a thing a matter of emulation, journals shoul unite to punish any person who swindles a newspaper by selling false news, or secks to geatily degraden natures by infamous and disgusting “sclle.” Wi stand ready to contribute our share to: these wretches, no mattor what journal as common enemies of literature and dece The Central Commitu Tennessee have called a Convention, to meet in Nash ville to-day, wherein will be discussed the policy Men. 'n? k¢ holding a National Convention of Colu call states that while the colored men do not o be exempted from any of the burdens of ¢ tizonshi, National roaknegs st and State Exeentives and law texts, at the instance of bad men, to cans people to suffer wrong.” The colored mer first of all, the great necessity of union selves, and independence and self-re The Daily News speaks of a plau of pa follows: ““Wonld not & plan which shoull meet the sanction o* Hampton com: in rolina the support of s 1397 of the people of ul 1 nd who shall say that a personsi State contere such men as Hamo! tive men of the North of a1 siad Whigs, War Detmoerats, 1 uco Lke M 13, and even +aesult in the cure a major r New-York? The composite are, we sups pose, those who gote onall sides, and don't vole when they have & mind to. epoiut. The *cc med the Randal! Conven- Trimes fils to see doubtless tor —The themselves in the Slaveholders' Rebellion. They chose @ majority of Unionists to their Conveation of 1861, “These voted to stay ia the Union, and ad- journed. After the reduction of Fori Sumter, they | were reassembled, and, under the false cry that Liacoln | teas waging unprovoked war on the South, they wers nimous vote for Secession. used to concur, All and threats ‘were t-ied on him in it danger of instant immola- L Secessio pt over the | o faithfal to the Tuiou. And | Rebel power was broken and the | ed—unone but loyal mea votin usly chosea Governor, He is yet ser goaded in One man alon manner of e vain, He was in im: State, but 1 writes to Waskington that Prasident has ruined the Union ca i els are now Johnson's poli Arkan:as—that tont there, and will fill all the offices election—that the press is unanimously Rebe s eall fur the Soul ¥ short, all is lost that was re- gained by th mes thinks the Con, not the disaster. Whichis L the premises, Gov, N - ———————— THE IRINR VOTE, | is respor v to be the bet neutral L try in a es of Irish | wn, and we shall revoke that just atic oficiousness which The World “blarney.” We gave earnest counsel l 1 oblgations of this ¢ ble desire to please the en Rupersory liberty and our Lipleased to te to onr Irish fellow-of ment as ono likely, to bring much slaughter and no liber ut we did not insult their cause, or call every one a thicf who endeavored to strike a blow for | his native land. It does not need to be said that there is a great difference, every day growing wider, Dbetween those Rebels of the ram-holes who a few years | ago threatened to burn down the office of Tie Tris CNE, and the ranks of earnest Irishmen who sincerely Dbelieve in the progress and brotberhood of their race and all races. When Congress gave its sym- | pathy to Ireland, it did no more than what it had re- peatedly done for the cause of other suffering pation- alities, Hungary, Greece and South Amecrica, and for the oppressed poor of our own country. If intelligent Irishmen come to understand at last that the best friends of Irish liberty and advancement are thoso en3 against the Fenian move- | as one of themselves, nod Parma to Piedmont. 1n 1860 we tind him in Nsples | bstween him and Munn about prepayment, when the latter all, and that the miscreants who burn negro school- ns Commissioner from the King of Italy, ussisting in the | stabbed Poole with & knife in the breat, the blade penetrating v t arengement by which Naples was to become part of the | almost to the heart. The victim lingered until 11 a.m, Muun pow Italian Kiogdom. He held office as Mini is 1o custody. Uommerce and of Public Works in the last mbln.‘:: :: An officer of the Fresdmen's houses and lynch or ravish White teachers therein, | the 10th of September. Give the people smple time who, in the name of freedom everywhere, shall be punished like other felons. If you exact a | for consultation and action, so that no :slmp-junl;z;m'u(s sk’ “all rights, forsll” cfa thiy conniry, property test, we shall only insist that the means of | can be taken: to which end, lot the calls issue at once, we shall nmot Dbe dissatisfied or disappointed. " | Sovoral of the Irish organizations bave al- Cavour, snd earnestly defended the policy of alliance )un-'l‘nmndl‘!y. hcouoqn::«’nl the failure of his health, owing to- close spflluflon to_his public futios, he declined eutering the i of Ratazzi but in hd&‘cnfly&.{!muflm decree President of the Cabinet. 'This post il heal 2ot him to resign in March of the uflm. year, Mix won Minghetti taking his place, the Parlisment at the ur m bim & grant of 20, francs and & fi..-u. incipal works .:va the whieh several editions, » History of Italy, and Iounlonlnmlhm; o Giadstone, . 'DRATH OF JUDGR PIERSON AT NEWARK. - The friends of Judge Thomas B. Pierson will regret lsarn of bis noon from fhe paralytie with hioch he was . He was W the fith of ..-.unum‘: extited wth the business e of eur iy, bar'a Dbeen in the manufacturs of " nd wes i ARl Tourt of Common Vieun of s oieerion vt o of l‘&m A promivent mewber of the Damoc: v. ©ue of its leaders and counselors, anl was bighly :fle.,'z',;y' Wo{k ndy througbout tue county aud State, (e was one of the oldest wembers of the Odd Fellows sud Masouio orgauizatons, aud was & Past Grandel the fo; e fratornity, INewark Courigr. ath. ! lust seseton of Gongress to all those clerks who received salar. L fes of B1.400 or under durine theBaeal vear exding June 3, Bureau, ia Jacksou parish, La., v:; ;;Irdm‘d.zenuy by highwayme: " on, iel Whitman, late €hief-Justice of the Maino Bupreme Court. died oo the 1st fast., % l:m. ey " aged %0 yoars, at East 0 Governor has appointed J. ¥, Snodgrass of New-York aud Gen. Jobn :z‘lll’oun d‘:llflll. Herkimo r County c_-u.--’ .‘Mflh‘“ establishment of a Nationa | At the fifth dey's session of the Dental Convention ton, on Satutday, it was decided uwwm.(lr’:: ‘1&."..'."‘.'.2;‘..".‘.‘."?‘.‘..‘ the last Tuseday of July, 1867. . of the Union Pacific \ Loy Railroad were laid ‘The Franklio cotton mill was seriously injured Iarge quantity of cotton burned, at Chduul-:’h o Toss, 20,00. A factory used for the manufacture of kit | e<pecially for the Two Hundred Thousand of them | people will gladly and proudly support them if we can | late civil war was loss loyal or patri Jackets at Guilderland, Aibsoy County, New.York, was | totally destroyed by fire ou Saturday. Los $60,000; iz surance, $40,000. The Secretary of the Treasury has been besioged by parties cutitied to the #100 additional compensation granted by the acquiring property be made as free and secure to Blacks 85 to Whites. If you say that criminals, vagabonds, and fhose who do not usefully earn their living, be excluded from the polls, we counsent, if you make the rule applicable to White and Black alike. It seems to us selting the thing rather steep to re- | last year which we hop will now be generally fol- quire voters to be * intelligent, wealthy and reputa- | lowed. Thenominations of Messrs. Tremain, Cochrane ble;” but we demur only to applying these | and Judge Selden revived the days when our legisla- tests exclusively to that persocuted, dowa- | tive balls were irradiated by the genius and eloquence trodden race, which is denied, so far as possible, | of such men as Elisha Williams, David B. Ogden, every opportunity to acquire wealth or intelligence | Silas Wright and John C. Spencer. Many such are and every incitement to achieve a good reputation. | still with us: they could be induced to serve in We demand for the loyal Blacks of the South, and | the Assembly if properly solicited to do so. The 50 that all our candidates shall be in the fieid at the earliest hour consistent with their proper selection. l';l'iflll‘l in every district! we beg your instaut atten- tion to this! v The cities of Albany and Rochester set an example who fought for tlie Unioy, all the rights which are | only get them duly nominated, The cbief obstacle to conceded and secured to those who fought to break | this inheres in the fact that the nominating conven- }lp_tlne Union and destroy the Republic. This | tious are Lubitually packed by the partisans of some is simple justice; it would be bad faith to require less; | ambitious nobody or the promoters of some rascally nd Fhu defeated Rebels should be grateful that we | job, to subserve their selfish ends. Let us firmly and reguire nomore. And, ready spoken, as became thewm, in favor of fmpartial freedom bere as well as at home; and, should the mass of our Irish fellow-citizens take profit by the example, they will do no more than heed the manly words of Mr. President Roberts, who lately counseled them not to lend their aid to the oppression of any of their fellow-men, whatever be the color of their skin. - The N. Y. Express asks : *'What would the Republican Editors do if Vallaudighaw and the Woods should die " Answer.—Ii any one has ever intimated that the course of ** Vallandigham and the Woods " during our otic than that of Gustavus W. Smith or the Hon. James Brooks, wo are sure he has done those eminent Democrats gross injustice, And this imputation Cannot justly b ap- plied to Tue TRIBUNE. Messre, Vallandigham and Ben, Wool differed trom | Lough outrage and murder | vigilantly resolve that these gentlemen snd thoir little | sowe other Demoerats in hasing been frauk, oveny | ine hanks bearing on bis calling, be ut a gl His reading is done | or friends, his writing by other paid the closcat attention to his pre it is asscmoted to support anit aman who volratecred to be the There is much curio 10 v by what law the P t has remove clocted Goveraor . of I a, and appoint woremey-General of the State a Dictator, withi ¢ the Culted States forces, ‘The party whic <o diead the cone tralization of power m + Constitational aue y the P lers the restoration rnment, . is restored destroys miral Farrn i Qivil War, eorverses with Farrazut withan: plese . is quiet and o 1 his mans He is withon tis . Mo talks the men with whom he has bee oG od T the 1. war, aud the siitling eveuts that have attended Lis caser with modesty, 4d is o givi rs the Lion’s share of pn)s& s asily a vessel may,bo lost by what are tions” which mislead by variations of e ch vaziotions are subject to no known L 2l cxperience of the ablest. He wl oceasions he came to defeat dlgasser owing io the negligenes of some subonlin ate ot 1h+ misenderstanding of an order. His judgment is cbari, tavle toward those who Lave been lesa successfel than him- He weazsthe new digoity that 4 nation has bestowed m with the simplicity of his eartier yoars. A few s about the Admiral and his ea to the public at this time. PERIONAT, APPEARANCE eal Farragut is the last man 12 o crowd that lected as the brovest officer the best quiet, and wiobtrusiv. manners, with a voice sof und pleasan.; his face ¢ mildness and humanity sw:le of good pature and couteatme: But u faw moments of convers: 8 well read 1 ah n general liters . The flash of Ris ey , and that his skill and success are well carnedy 1S YOUTH. Aduiral Farragut has a royal ancester. His father wag an officer of rank 1a the little United States navy of 1800, He was selected for Lis courage and ability by the Presi- dent in 1806 to proceed to New-Orleans and look afier the t-eason of Burr. Our Admiral ws born in Tenuessce, in Knos County. Whea Mr, Lincole onlered him to New Orlaans to look after treagon, the Southerners claimed hin. It was geverally uuderstood thas e of Louistana; and he was he soon gave the’ coumy; Adwizal Farrugut was 8 natl approached convietion, men at the South to uanderstand that a8 not ouly nos: a native of Louisiana, but was simply a citizen of the Union, and knew no allegiance but to the bag of II.I country. My father,” aaid the Adwmiry o dawn to Nev-Orleans to suppress the treasou of Aaron Bum: I have come down to suppress the troason of Mr. Daris. Myfather did his work; Lexpect todo miue,” At16years Bo entered the nayy. Ho was then what was called an Ho was fast and gay, eonkd swear, driuk, smoke and chew. He found those habits would not aid his promotion, and he broke them all off at once, and never resumed them again, His oaly sou isn eadot ab West Point. When he was about 10 years old, the father said in his hearing, that when he was old enough to make a compact and keep it, he had a bargain to ofler L The son rose up and asked his father to state the terms of the compact. The Admiral said, * The proposal that [ intead to make is this. If you will not smoke nor enew tobacee, driuk intoxicating drinks, nor strong wines till you are 21 years of age, I will then give you $1000.” “fam old enongh to make that bargaia now,” said young Farragat, “Lwill aceept the offer.” The bargain was closed. - And one year ago, on the attainment of yomug Parragut’s majority, the cash was handed over. RISK IN HIS POSITION. Admiral Farmgut, while abroad, was gia-struck. The blow affected his sight, and he has nerer revovers! tge use of his eyes. Reading and writing are ditienlt; but he has keen observation, intuitive perveption, su ability to jump at conelusions ra; accomplished youns man.

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