The New-York Tribune Newspaper, August 14, 1866, Page 4

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Amungements. WALLACK'S THEAT U3 O THIS EVINING st §—ODONNELL'S MISSION-Mr Brousham, ). C. Dunn, W. 8. Andrews, 1. B. Philiips, T. E. M o E. Juimson, Miss My Carr. rin, Mis TERRACE THIS EVONING at GARDEN CONCERT. ninth sonees ORCHESTRAL evening, Fifly Y THEATER 100L0 TROUPE= —AFRIAL BAR Deiphive. and Mil R Buginess Lotices. - TERVER AND AGUE EXTINGUISHED. Martyre to ! teriittert Paver, s word with yon. The responsibility ke for your il ing rosts upon yourseives. Just us surely ea yon o} to-dag, o will shake to-mo:Tow, Hosrerren's LeaRATED STONACH BITYRRs xtinguis 1 the dis u Had you taken Vs geaial tor € w8 pres ouM have no need of it asn foe it renders tho syst minemetia fevert. Bt since yor neglected the pragaution, rid yeareelves without delay tmpersions to o of the sarnlamt- b ragtting ta ke oniy rolisble semedy. Bresk the Jila with g Hosrarrax's Birrens nd thay will return no o, This s the exjer of thousands Aol Wil be v Quinfue is a slow weane of el £ it It nauseous s the last degree; more dangerons than the malsdy ftaclf; in way ouses it utterly fails. How different is the effect of the Brrrens. y e action is rapld; they are o the palate; they sta a0t only eatirely harmioss, bt tend inevitebly to strengtben the avg lifs; they mever have failed, and it is coufi wind that they never can sail in aoy case of Fever and however iuveterats in its character. To be without Hosverran's Brrrens erwittent or Remittent Fever is siniply utmm and pr daly Ago 10wy raglon infostsd 40 rwisot safoty and A Cupar HEsp o BrsINEs i tha wure result of & Bo Covangss Watss befure breakfost. Coonea WaTEn Comes Brurovayess Creans THw Hxap, SuARPENS THR APPETITE. For Grvenat D3piLiTy Axp Dysvepsia take Espina WATAR 8y ALt Drese; 1nay purify, strengthen and invigorate, ey creats s L ke e aro an antidote bo coange of weter mrd dlet. Thoy strengthen the aystem. They potify the breath and cure vour stomach They core Dyspepsis and Constipation. They guo Live: Complaint and Nervous Hesdache. ‘s PLunration BITTeas nave cared mare cases of ch wel t and pereo o siamp over the cor ot got it, report to botile. 1f ang raxr & Co. Anow Me To Say a4 Worp o bosn usiag Mrs. WiNsLOW's ScoTHiNG SyeCr in o, and woa'd not be wikhout it 0p ary considerstion—{Extrsct from J. D. Adams's lattet to Chicago Thuen. 1: wiftens ths gums, taduces faflampiation, cares wind golis aud corrects acidity, gives ¢ v fanily since firat introduced in this city. T think it sn exc ates the Lowels, 1d health to the child an morts the motber, Mori AND FRECKLES. Ladies aificted with dissolorations on the face. cal'el Jath Patehes, or Freckles, should use Purux's celebrated MoTu AXD FRECKLE Lo wiox. 1tlslnfaliivte, Propared by Dr. B. C. PERRY, Dermatologist, No. 49 Bobdat., Now York, Sold by all Druggfste in New-York and eluawhore. Prics $2. WiLLoox & Gress SEWING MACHINE. ble (o Tip 1o use o wear, at the * Iriand Park Triai. an the i bt it THE ARM AND L.BG, by B. FRANK PALMER low to officess and civili Dy 1,609 Avod 0 in SpoexE: 3p aod relish u's “ Paent o graduated measure g HAGnTY Bnos Agents, N, Y. AGUE~STRICKLAND'S AGUE REMEDY is & certain sare. It bas #t00d the test of years in the Valiewe of Mis swippi and Dlissonri, and s the sovereign remedy i ol Lhese distaicte. 04 by all Droggists. SE00oNp-HAND SAFES in large numbers, of our own wid othars' make, Lakon i exchapge 1or cur new [atent ALDM asd Dur LasTeR Saves. For asie low. Manvix & Go , 265Brondway, ard 01 Chestiiviat, Fiiln —— i Tng 1y¥a NowELESS LoCK- 430w vk —Mawuiactured by Prawsn, Bxav; Lo Chronic Dnspegsin. Constipation and Piles can only b .—rm:-'-!ly L the newly disc: ed Positive Kemedia ‘ed frou lanatory Gircoies o8 Wil divesses. Une W W R, Poabig, N Y $1imen L SkwiNG- mspory & Co., No. ¥4 Bowery N. Y, 08888, ELASTIC BTOCKINGS, SUSPENSORY Bavp- l:ll u(o, # Radical Cure Trum Office endaat. S u e Verrs L FLoRENOE LOCK-STITCR: BEWING-MACHINGS—Best $a ths world. FLORENCE SEWING MACHINE COMPANY, No. %5 broadway. ImprovEp Look-Stiten Macmixes for Tailors and Manoiactarers. Guoves & BAKER Srwixe MACHING CONPAXY, Mo 4% Brosdway. . % orT's CHEMICAL PoMADE Kestores Gray Hair, Ln'.u it gloasy and frow falliug out; removen da: drufl, the tineet dress used. Sold by Rusuros, No. 10 Astcr Houre, 61d cragginte. " Da. Laxawormit's New Premics Tauss cures without pain of ence, Worst casensolicited. Call WY Rainadis, No S Brosiwey. Bewine MacHISE Ct . —ELias HOwE, expsta TABLET, 8. C. WiLuises, for ndiges- and beutbum. Boid by all Droggisie e e 1? 80N's LOCK-STITCH BEWING -_— PR ool ST Aoy 3 EYERDELL s Broadway, N. Y., Wiv- "w—‘:“fllm&hd%m oot il.;- vor FrEmDMEN.—A large number of e 9y e Z’féM)ofls DailyTribune. { TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1866 The Atlantic Cable. The Diarg of the Cabla Expadition which was pub lishod exclusivel; of Satarday last, wi TRISUNE, road, mailing, five 0t postoript odition of THr bo publis s morniag. Prioe, in wrappers ready for No notice ean betaken of A tions. intended for insertion must be 1 by tha name and ad droes of, the wriker— atily for pubiication. but ae & gusr, anty for his £0od faith. Al bustnoss lettars for this oios shoula be sddressed to “The Tuiw nace uxr,” New York We oaunot undertaks to rotarn reissted Communications. e e, The Tribune tn London. TEVENS BROTHERS (Aw e Covent Gcden, W. € ), ore Axcn | Triey wilh also receivs Svasomrre ————— e e 17 Henrietta of THE TRIBUNE .. 8ArATOGA.~Thornton, newsman 1 his Boys sell it on Advertisoments for this wi Tassusn mast be handad in > Day NEWS OF THE DAY. THE WAR IN EUROPE. By the Atlantioc Cablo we Lave Baropsan news to the Lith inst. (vesterday). The demand of ths Emparor Napolaon for the restoration of the fropsier of 1814 is 0ppos»d by tho official orgen of the Prigtian Goveramant. Great excitement provails] in Vienna; thers were to be numeroas trials for high troason, and sulace was ealling for the abdication of the Emparor, P'russia formally sapports [taly's claim to Venetia ol's issuo of Tne WEERLY i FOREIGN NEWS. Lire Czar of Russia tiad visited thg Unitod States squadron at Cronstadt, and a grand pablio reception had been given at $t. Petorsbargh to the officers of the ajuadron. “There is no politioal nawa of importause from England. 1o the Canadian Parliam storday & motion made to submit the new constittion (o A voto of the poople previous to tio Confoderation act being put in forcs was nogatived, as was also 8 motion for takiug ths sanse of the Canadian Par- liament on any chaoges whioch the British Parliament might wmake in tho local coastitutious of Uppsr aud Lower Canada, NEW-YORK CITY. The polios are etill aotive ia their eadeavors to rid the city of pickpockets. Many of thew have already left New-York On Saturday James Davis, a notorious thief, was arrested. Refusing to have his photograph taken, he was sent to Bluck- well's Taland as & vagrant Oor 50 days. Thirty-eight fatal caase of cliolora wore reported to the Health ofticer of Cincinnati on Friday last. In Chicago 22 onses of cholera wore roportad The total number of deaths in this city for the week ending August 11, was * from cholera. In Brook Iyn there were 378 deathe, 113 being from cholera Mayor Hoffman bas vetoed the elovated railway solems r Groonwich-st. Friery and Ferris ars 4o b0 excouted on Friday next st o'elock A, m, Gold closed yesterday at 1431, altar ment stocks of sll dssucs ar doing. The railway ah. pon the Jowest quotations of Seturdsy. A% th ek et w tied eud genereliy lower, 04 thers wss o strong prassur ¢ Westoru i hares, which dec.ind frow § @4 per peat. Afto the market was dul’, aud c.0sed sieady, Mouey romaine at 4@5 par cont on call, with ex:oplioual cases at 3 par cent. The statemens of tho City Banks shows a1 fucreas: $1,624691 In gold, and a riliog gvin i do Tho Treceury Do partment during the week privted fractioual curreney to the amount of $1391,000. se 3 at Lo Govern with more wite GENERAL N | The various delegatos to tho Philad:Iphia Randall Bolters' Convoation met yesterday, oach delegation ppointing a | Chairman. In the eveuing the Chairmen held a meetivg for the purposs of arranging a plan of operations for the Conven: tiow. Fersando Wood refuses to act as a delegate, as he does mnot wish to dostroy the harmony of tho Couveution, and lay it open to the attack of outside enemios. Honry Clay Dean, ulso, refuses to serve, on the ground that the intoutiou is to sell out the Demo- cratic party. Strenuous eforts wers wade to get Val- landigham to withdraw from the Couvention. even Southern men advising him to this cou hut e persistently refused. Gen. Stesdman intends offeriug a resolution to expel all delegates who were opposed to the war. Vallawdigham's fellow delegates from Obio also refuse to countensnce hiw, and it is doubtfal if he takes his sent fu the Convention. ‘The arrangements for President Johnson to attend the Doug. | las monument celebration at Chicago have now been com | pleted. Seoretary Seward will accompany bim, as will other 8. ton this morning; after a brief stay at Pliladelphia they will this city at noon on Thursday, most destraoiive hal-storm Lias Iately visited Srcamors, Tl Fields of ripensd grain wore destroyed, and nearly every | window in the town was beaten in | seven and eight inches in circumference fell by miliions. | estimated that damage taover a quarter of milllon doilars has | been dove, “T'he oxports of petroleam from this conntry o Europe, up | to the present date, have baon four times s large as that of | the preceding year. In 1865 thers were 7,816,972 gallons ex- ported; this year 30,134,142 gallona hiave already been skipped On authority of Mr, Vallandigham, The Empire, Dayton, | Oisio, states that the report that the President refused the re. | mowned Copperkiead an andicace, whon be was last in Wash- | ington, is absolutely false, | " Gen. Toussess, ia respoass to an inquiry, sayw that if he can be redlected to Congress without & seramble be will be per fectly satistied. A grand trotting Fair commences at Buffalo to.day. asd will continue for four Aays. Seversl horses arecotered, aad an ex- citing time is anticipated. Ou our inside peges will be found fall reports of the University Convention at Albany, aud the National | Academy of Scieuce at Northampton, Mase, Mr, Cook tells the sfory of bis interview with the venera. | ble and illustrions Sully. | The loyal ¢itizens of Louisiana, now in this City, have called a meeting at Cooper Institute for to-mor- row (Wednesday) evening, when they propose to set forth the facts of the late massacre, and to ask for the victims the sympathy of loyal men *hroughout the country. We bespeak a general attendance of those who honor loyalty and mean to stand by those who in the darkest bours steod by-their country, —_— ‘ . Mr. D. P. Wilson, SBpeaker of the House of Repre.- sentatives in Coloralo, is certain that the President | was at first anxions that Colorado should be admitted, | but allowed his hatred of Congress to erovk hix noble | intentions. The violent way iu which the President | devoured bis anxiety, is detailed by Mr. Wilson, who says that the Président avowed to the Coloradg Sena. ! tors, Messrs. Evans and Chaffee, that he’ wae ‘only kept back from recomméuding the admissioniof - Colo- rado from fear that he would injure them “‘with the | d—4 Radicals,” When the Radicals vetoed the biil for admission, the President sent for the two Senatorsy apd asked TTem 10 ‘HgM 0 indotement o} *my policy,” wijgh they bluntly refused to do, nobwithe Ut he gy o 4 3, Thu Tl ud ! the part of Moses, In “making treasou odious,” wion have oemgregated in Washington slnce ths Ser, %20 ' in the case of the Froedmen's bill, not: to mention bis R i volunteer | Now.Orleans telegram, the President’s Copperhead BoBes &3 ¥OE | Lo bag upset all bis owh m iea] intentions. Sebool st Washiogtor, axd | - pfl:‘-’bpn'::fq- } Muyor Bmfi EM the resolutions of the dasti peogic. kae st inter- [ Board of Couneilmen anthorizing three Patent Rail- § horsei n hin gy g S clevated lines in Green- .Y s | wich-st., . “the Bowery, and the Third AL e oe 1n 02a . the one orw.end e TrisoE, I its st of Ang, 4, 1666, meu- Jonsd the nawe of Mr. Kdward Price of Springfeld, 1), a5 wus of those who A from practicig io the e 1 T ived from Mr. Price a copy of s official combunica- :u, informing him that tbe Paymaster-Gegera), fully satisfied ; ontire lunooenoce, Lag restored him to business witk his W gheor(ully walke i Gosired cormgciloy veducd | and Ninth-aves. Tedsons given are, first; | that the Councilmfen Bavé, o8 isual, made o reckless Vbargain, snd, second, that they have doge it in viola- tion of the act and, . intention of the Jegis- { Inture, whicls "logE g0 asserted its rightful | aulhority in (he matter, and more recently proposed to investigats the welbods and routes of { travel by & committee in concert with the Mayar. | Without any ioguiry worthy of the name, the city's | reprobate gnardians have voted fo give away thieo ‘monster privileges at a very sunll profit to the city. The guccess of an experimental section of Lalf a mile, Acowiding 10 the jndgment of the Conncils, entitles the railway mouopbiisis ¢~ coustruet through the wholy | length of tho ialand. The fhrde £razts would bo ver- Dany TrRIsUNE | \od entire in Tus Sexi- WEEKLY | Whateveris | | * #1.454.000 10 loans, & loss of | members of bis Cabinet. The party iatend leaviug Washisg- | | Memphis and more recent!y Huil-stones moasu=ing | 1tis | b petual, heyond revocation, and pay the city bat five per cent on gross earnings, after all taxes are de- ducted. The Mayor does ot think this enongh; nor do we. THE LESSON OF ADVERSITY. The North American (Philadelphia)—always mod- orate and cautions—thus speaks: “Tn Kentucky, es in Maryland and Misouri, the Union pariy committod the grave error of refusing to give the sul- Irage to the froedmen as an offset to the Rebel element. The negrophobia was so strong that these men risked their own political ascendaney rather than do an act of justice to the unfortunate Blacks. In Kentucky, the * Unior' party gener- ousiy aided their own defeat by refusing to dafranchise the tobels, whils st the same denying suffrage to tie Blacks, and and thelr surprise at the swiff result is rather atertainiog. “ From Maryland we have recent advices wiich lead us to expect o similar result. Had the Lide-bound U\ men of aryland only been wise in time, and given he sufftage to cedmen, they might with impunity Uave alowed the 15 to vote. In Missouri,the Republican party, though mere thoroughly wide awake, seems doowed to fall & victim t» similar causes. 1t 13 the intention of the Rebels to surroind the polls in all the Afstriots where they have a majority, and compel the officers to receive all the votes they offer. In all probability, they mijght suceeed without this, for the returned Rebels are very numerous. The colored suffrage would have prevented the saocess of the reaction, but was refused when the opportunity offered, and now it is too late. “In Arknnsas, Gov, Murphy despairs of ary chaace of prs- venting the snccess of the reaction. We had supposed that this State was anong the trastiest for the Union under her Jew auspicss, nud confidently expected her to be smong the oarliest to ratify the Constitutional Amendment. It iseven hocoming doubtfal if we can continue to hold Tennessee. So that, in point of fact, the Border States are about to revert to the hands of those fn them who aotively participated iu the Rebeliion, or sympathizsd with it.” —The North American does not state the case 80 forcibly as the facts warrant. In Kentucky the I'nion Legislaturo restored to them the Right of Suffrage, after again refecting the anti-Slavery amend- ment to the Fedaral Constitution. They of course left the loyal Blacks under foot. The Relels there- | upon took full possession of tho State, and they will keep it. Henceforth, the Rousseans, Crittendens and Hobsons are as powerless in Kentucky as the Blacks they refused to enfranchise, Who mourns for them? “MR. GREELEY AND JEFF. DAVIS.” The Times, under this head, says : It is hard to understand Mr. Greeley. He is opposed to the imprisonment of Mr. Davis. Bat, if iried and found guilty. Mr. Greeley would be atill mors opposed to his execution; for ho objects to hanging avybody. The only other alternative is to *lot him go,’ 4 We cannot soe that it is ‘shameful ' to imprison & great criminal, and one who not only imprisoned, but tortured, starved aud poisoned, tens of thousands of Union soldiers, ven 1f ho did not sazotion the assassination of President Lin: There is bat one consistent way of explaining Mr. Greelay's courso; which is, that having invited and encouraged Davis and othiers to go into rebellion, he focls bound not only t0 g0 bail for them, but do what he can for their reloase. . “ But then, while 80 willing to lot the loaders *go,’ why is he 40 hostile to the masses of Ktehels, and even to loyal South- crument Why, if the loaders are furgiven, does he oppose the restoration of brotherhood among the people 1 Notes by The Tribune. If Jefferson Davis is a **great criminal,” who has “ tortured, starved and poisoned tens of thousands of Union soldiers,” why is he not tried 7 Why has he been kept fifteen months in prison without being ev dicted? The Times is in the confidence of the P’ dent and the retary of State. Can it not in some kind of reason, pretext, excuse, apology, for the persistent neglect even to imdiet Davis for the flagrant crimes whereof he is accused above? Why should such a notorious, gigan- tic criminal as Davis is charged with being be forbidden for months to communicate with his counsel, and when at last they get into court and plead for a trial, they b sent away without even a promise that they shall soon be brought face to face with a jury? We cannot help rogarding the imprisonment of Da- vis as a swindling farce and cheat. e has been kept immured so long that only the willfully blind can fail ! to see that there is no purpose to try him with any intont to conviet. He is kept in jail awaiting a favor- able time to let him out. If tried, there will be a quarter of a million spent on lawyers and witnesses, with no idea of obtaining a verdict. Meantime, the sceming lion is constantly assuring the prey that he is no real lion, but only Suug the Joiner—compelled to roar and show his teeth to save him from the blood- thirsty Radieals. We refuse to play the part assigued us in this paltry business. The prisoner is not to be punished—he is not even to be tried in earnest—stop the farce and let him go! —The Times knows better than to adk “why we are 50 hostile to the masses of Rebels.” It knows that wo are hostile to none of them, and that, in time of need, we proved this at our own cost. When *‘the masses of Robels” set to killing Unionists, as at ¢ Now-Orleans, they compel us to resist them; but we much prefer that they behave themselves so that we shall not be obliged ta do so. The Times well knows that we hope and labor for a “restoration of brotherhood among the people.” That is the end and aim of all our efforts, It isa “restoration” which tramples Four Millions of loyal Southerners under the fest of domineering, perse- cuting ** Rebel nasses” that we object to and are striving to defeat, We scek & * brotherhood” that will include the whole American peoplo—steadfast Unionists as well as ex-Rebels—all we ask is that the former shall not be put under the feot of the latter. The Times is in favor of & ** restoration”” which makes the Rebels of the South supreme over the rights and Tranchises of the loyal Blacks. We protest against this, aud demand a *‘reconstruction” which shall secure to all, including loyal Southermers, Equal Rights and Equal Laws. —8hall we again be accused of *‘opposing the restoration of brotherhood among the people 1 men, who will give hearty welcome to Soutbern meo inn | temper ‘wmoog ud. They are not and th rious. Their howpitality, at whieh ¢ merce are now sucering, will be e Demooracy of Pl who now are cordinlly sctiug with if, exi thobrase, theaficted, the conqaered So close fellowahip, and ly, ‘ldl give them . waid toblis Convention the very first men in Penosylvania. Fvery fiving ex-Governor, excopt the one who is mn&un.n the Mint, will be there. Threo of her Chief Jostices, IB ,n”'mmn. will be there. They~-we mean the Domocratio eldgnies from Pennsylyania—will be there to advocate meas- ures of tolerauce and moderation, and to see that the retarn of the Sonth 1ute the councils of the nation shall not be thwart- ed or obstracted by u&n toats, or any of the traps 10 con- #clenoe pateated by ingennity ‘The time has gone by 'M’;'I::Eha';“m’u' and territied by in it will be hearty. i the 5o ith_the South, 1In her sorrows uncemplaining resignation, fu her craving to apebis Sk e Bodecod o3t his sy gty St prople mpathy: the S h, and it is t! it "t s Ao irelborss we Wikl givover repressntiuves. PV R e The Age is very modest in its enumeration of the persons to be present and give the Southertiers wel- come. It forgets jts own eminent sons, ngt to speak of many of ourown distinguished towzxmen. Mr. Reed will ertainly bo thare, as ong sho did some gentle ) Wjflhéauibf‘m Mr. Vaur, under the ce of some discreet and careful friend, and Mr. Woodward, regretting that Pennsylvania did not go with the Sonth; and perhaps—who kuows '—A Vener- able Pablic Functionary,who once occupled the Presi- dential chair. We hope Jorry Black will not be ab- sent with his Seripture and Shakespeare, uor the President’s bosom friend and counsellor, the Hon. Tom Florence, with his heart in bix hand givinga cheory weleome, Ohio will_send the gnshing Mr. Vallindigha memorable for & certai dime subscription. ‘A of plates at the Wigwam door wonld help this won- derfully. Indiana will be represented by the gallaut Voorheex, carrying A Cane menorable in recent ora- tory, and by the valiant Milligas, whose not being banged is an irresistible argnment against capital punishment. Tllinois will have Ler own Brown- ing —nove more iu the 'wey of s little parion: o - so—and open to wniRedEy R tainers if the Soutberners cowe largely. Iowa will of conrse baFe the pure-miuded Menry, Clay ‘ Dean, and Wisconsin tha nlw.j.%pmg Doolittle. The gracions Mr. Randall will be there, with Tuby of choice batter (commend us to i“w Philadelphia butter) | o jhogoughly leavened firead for the bullgry Rejit- { licans. l({ I{Nrfvmiie prompt and vigilant, snd Rebels were disfranchised till last Winter, when the | 2 ] | olds nreo NEW-YORK OAILY TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1868 e show himhow consistently he has kept the record which began with Fremont, and indicates an inevitable and painful close. If Mr. Lightner of Colorado is absent, certain engagements with the police, connected with peculiar transactions, will be remembered. New-York will of course have her most illustrious sons. The Secretary of Stats will write a letter in the loftiest hoarding-school style, and say somethiog sweot' abont Tammany Hall. Wo shall send the overwhelming George Francis Train, now practicing daily in the cares of Newport with the choicest pel by the fascinating and bewildering Mr. Brady, who, wo believe, goes as the special Presidential dove. Possibly Mr. Hoffman may go to speak the voice of ram-drinking in New-York, and give rebellion only such a welcome as rum conld give. Mr. Dix, with his sheathed sword, and his commission s Consul to Turk’s Tsland we believe (we really for- got the place), will make ornate and eloquent speeches. Will he say anything about shooting down the enemies of the flag? Horatio Seymour may be induced to purr around the leaders, and smile dimly, while James Brooks will claim high place by reason of his record, Little Sunset Cox will go a York Hoosier—something between Sandusky and our Rebel friends will find him. Above all things, we shall send the venerable aud |$1||~lri-nx:s Thur- low Weed, with his wagon load of rich men, and Raymond as tiger. T. W. bas driven many Wagous in his day, and Raymond has done his share of riding in all sorts of vehicles, but never such a wagon a4 {his, Vanderbilt and Stewart, Roberts and | | and packed, and going all the way to Philadel- phia this sultry weather, enconntering the peril of road, to stand by the Union, and the Constitution, massacre, and indorse the poliey which gave us the murders at Memphis, In fine, the Convention will be a meeting of mar- velous odds and ends, the reconstructed shreds nud patches of rebellion; cunning men from down East, who cherish their small prejudices as a misor holds ou toa penny; gangs of rough-and-ready men from New hooters in politics; several solemn old men slvania, who will stand by the Constitn- tion as it ought to have b two thousand years ago; & Maryland delegation, with an andacious, restless leader; Virginians, inwardly mournful uncompensated emancipation, willing to the Dbest bargain they can make in st style of the traditional Y old pro- - fossils from North Curolin ith Carolina implacables, with the whip-hand itching; sants, who supported rebellion conservativel; will do it again, if you bappen to give it the nam reconstruction; Mississippi gentlemen, who are ( termined to reconstruct by burying the negro; pirates from the Gulf, a little soiled by the work at N Orleans; and chevaliers of the most rancorons ki all the way from Texas, Here are all the elements fora splendid pot-pourri: a gennine conservative chowder; and though conciliation between Copperheads and cx- Rebels is not a good way to put the Union together, we have not a doubt that Disunion will be consoli- dated finely, and that all the delegates will continue 10 swear at their enemies in chorns. If they dou't, they will have a terrible time of it in swearing at each other. There will be a swarm all over the wigwam, from platform and pillars to dome and rafters. It will be a small vessel to hold all its elements of tem- Everybody will be there whko can pay passage-mopey and hytel bill, and who has opinion of any kind to be conciliated reconstructed — the Col. Murphy who has been convieted of murder, the Colorado delegate who robbed a store, and declared “‘that the ui who did it ought to be hanged for it down tothe Judge who was so unfortunate as to have presided at the trial of Jobn Brown, There will be men of fosail respectability, who are willing to open out old essays on the Constitution in most any company: and we pity them! There will be sermon on sermon of law-abiding piety to mesmerize the spirit of Rebellion until it is time for it to wake up; but the Conveation does not propose to operate to cure or kill auything unless it be negroes, wond party 3 alragd that it must behave itself, and miond its manners in good company, and on the other hand, the Woods and Vallaudighamites will not be kept out of their own wigwam. There may be a quarrel in the Couvention ou strict natural principles; but if the Randall Conservativos surrender everything, and our Southern friends concede nothing, there will bo peace in the wigwam, and the Tammany chiefs may smoke over it. over accopt pest. an and | THE FRONTIER OF FRANCE, A dispatch, dated Paris, the 9th of August, and published in Tug TRiBUNE of yesterday, states that the French Government hiad addrossed & note to Prus- sia, pointing out that the great changes in the polit- ieal organization of Germany render it necessary that ** the French froutier should be rectified by an ac- cession of territory to France,” and that in a farther communieation of the 8th of August, to the Cabinet of Berlin, the French Goverment demanded * the restora- tion of the French frontier as it existed in 1814, A Borlin dispatch, likewise dated the 9th of August, says that Prussia had not yet replied to the French demand for an extension of the frontier to the Rhine. ‘The Paris and Berlin telegrams are not, as some of our cotemporaries in their references to them seem to assume, identical. We have already briefly indicated in our issue of yesterday that such is not the case. The Paris treaty of the 30th of May, 1814—the highly interesting deseription of which in Allison’s ** History of Europe” we give on another page—restored the French frontier as it existed in 1792, before the out- break of the revolutionary wars. At that time, hardly a single town, which, from 1815 up to the pres- ent year, belonged to the German Confederation, lay within the frontier of France. The treaty gave,bowever, to conquered Frauce, in excess of its old landmarks, the towns of Saarbruck and Saarlouis, Which now belong to Prussis, the town of Landau, situate in the présent Bavarian Palatinate, and the towns of Charlemont, Marienbourg and Chimay, which new . form part of the Belgian Kingdom, The grant was taken back by the Second Paris Peace of the 20th of Novewmber, 1815, a8 a punishment for the new distarbance of the peace of Europe by the restoration of the Napoleonic rale. Y The only years in the entire history of Germany from £57 until the present day, when the Rhine copstituted the recognized frontier between Geg: many and France, were those from 18501 to 1814, The victorious armies of the Republic had, in 1794 and the following years, extended the French territory to the long.coveted goal. In Febru- ary, 1708, the French Commissionér Rudler organ- ised the conquered territory into four French prov- i first Treaty of Paris changed it as above stated. Though France has thus bad but a very brief pos frontier hae Leen French Jolicy, an hardly be doubted that a majority of the people would | simplicity, worthy indeed of the primitive and pas enthusiastically join in a wat undertaken for its con- | toral ages, ifit were to ignore the existenco ,r bodie’, | quest. 'The main reason by which France has sup | of men ke these, who will take what they wn get, | ported. ber elaim is that the Rbiue is the “ natural” *of France to the éask Louis Napoleoy lesly this view, evon it ho bag pgeording bles. Mr. Wood will be early, accompanied perhaps | | New-York—and a very gabby, frisky little Sunsct | Dréw and Leonard W, Jerome '—comfortably jammed | ferry and canal, and the Camden and Amboy Rail- | and Andrew Johnson, to defend the New-Orleans | The Ray- | given to mnderstand | session of the left bank of the Rhine, the Rbiue | connt. s"' centuries the constant aim of | neither love liberty, uor even at the present day, it can | abide by law. Congress would exhibit a charming | ;:‘ | | to the Paris dispatch of the Oth of August, limited his present claiws to two Prussian and one Bavarian towns. While the majority of the Freuch people are in favor of establishing the Rhine fronticr, the Germans may be said to be unanimons against it. They take the ground, that the German districts on the left bank of the Rhine are among the oldest parts of the Ger- man territory, that the people have always spoken the German langnage, there beiug at present in an ageregate population of 4,000,000 no more than 10,- 000 who speak French, that the peopte are intensely German, and show, on every occasion, that they waut to remain Germans, The German people, therefore, unanimonsly indulged the hope, that Prussia would meet the French demand with a flat denial, This hope, as the Transatlantic telegrams published in our paper this morning inform us, has been realized. Prussia has not only rejected the French demand, but a semi-official paper of Berlin calls the act of the French Govesnment *‘absurd.”” That tells France that if she decides to throw down the gauntlet, Prus- sia will take it up. All that we know of the senti- ments of the German people from German and foreign accounts leads us to anticipate that the response of the Berlin Cabinet will be received with immense and un vus euthrislasm, The most inveserate op- ponents of Prussia in the Sonth-German States em- phatietlly declare that fo the case of a foreign war every German district should cobparats with Prussia ] for [L} defenze of the common Cerman interests. We | shall soon hearef the same manifestations in the Ger- | iman provinees of Austria, especially in Vienns, where the people receutly roceived the Emperor with & general clamor for his abdication. All these ara highly siguificant signs of the times, clearly proving, as we have always expressed the expectation, that the sndden movement awong the srman people will rapidly extend over the whole territory of the Old German Cgnfederation, and 'hl‘u the people will not shrink from the most gignmt:_r foreign war for the defense of what they consider their fandamental right. NEW-JERSE By the following card, it will be seen that Senator Seovel urges a special sessionof the Legislature of Now-Jersoy expressly to ratify the Constitutional We trust this may be done; and we ting Mr, Scovel's Amendment. | welcome the snggestion s ind | measures which it hus adopted—the es{ablishment a permanent and genuine peace, based upow the very commonest principlos of that Demooracy wpon which this Repablic is founded. Evsry measure tending g this will be hateful to the scum of Southern cities ang the spawa of Southern plantations, For @ thousand reasons peace is precisely what they do mot want, But if we are true to ourselves, if Southern loyalisty only staud firm, peace we shall Lave, aud a peace, too, | worth haying, Chaplain Conway, whoso total denial of the charges of the President’s anti-Bureau Commissioners we are more thaun inclined to belisve, reports some equally credible testimony bearing upon the Rebel disorderin Lowisiana, Iu October last, Gen. Canby said to Mr. Conway that **if thinge went on as they were then, not six months would pass ere every loyal man would cither be murdered or driven from the State.” It is mot yet quite 50 bad as Gen. Canby' expected. The loyal men have been s tenacious as the Rebels; hut the riot at New-Orlesas has taken place and added a large figure to uncounted assassipations, while thousands of Union men have undoubtedly left for the North, The General is roputed & cantions man, gnd #he President will agroa with us that he is uo¢ & prophet very wide of his mark. Concerning Judge Abell’s card to the Judiciary, calling upon them in offensivo lauguage not to recog- nizs the Freedmen's Burean, this spoech is report of Gen. Sheridan: " “Mr, Conway, T have read Judge Abell's card. T eonsidee it an iosult to the Government, u’ the man himself o daa. gerous to be at liberty, Were I ia the 3 ment, and weze it not that Tshoull deem it improper to - fere with mattors pNflellg. belooging to Gen. by, I cer- tainly would take Jnd‘l Abell, put hit oo a boat, at ‘lllfld and keep him there till he could learu to this Goverament. ‘The fact is, these Rebels want to out of New-Orleans, hut we'll show them that we are Bot goiag to leave hore, by G—" This langnage is rather emphatic, and we cannot praise it piously, But if Geu. Shoeridan’s opinion has, undergona any change for the wor slnce he Nev: Orleans riots—if Le thipks ihat loyal men are revolas tionists and conspirators, to (be utter oblivion of yes wr!ny whon Reiéls were hatching mischief—he bas wasted his profanity at too much expense of his mor- aliy, We do not beleive it. wretehes who were sacrificed to popular justice and purpose to act henceforth with the Union party: Caupex, N. T, Ang. 11, 1866 To the Hon. Mancrs T, WaRD, Gocernor of New Jerscy: 1 regret to see au indisposition manifested in_certain quarters | to convene the Legisiatures of the differont States to ratify the | Constituional Amendment recently proposed by Copgress. | Whatever reasons may exist for this course in other States, T | Lope o se whatever will be permitted to prevail ing of the Legislature of this State Torsey was grievously dishonored titational Amend- w e g the first to express her approval of the just, proper and necessary amendments which baye bees consfitutionally proposed by Congress. It may be for other States to await th clection of new Legis- I3tures, aud it may be safe for us to do the same; but no Lexis | lature which we can clect can now he deemod 80 certain to dis | chargs this great doty as the one now in existence. The next Logisiatare may do this; the present one is certain to do it 1, by waiting, we lose tho present opportunity, the loss .may be irreparable. T am impelled to write this letter, aud Idoit after miuch hesitation, by a sense of duty to my eonstituents, wery many of 1 earnostly entreat me to define my position for such ratification. Dby ber long refusal ment, and she st coneerns the fafure of the upon this question, which so nearl Kopobiic. -1 have, eretore, no Fight to 1 . - Permit ™ then, most earnestly to Tequest your 0 oo the Lag o mentioned, veue the Legisiatore of the State, for the at w3 early & dav ag may be thougat gonvenient, I remaiv, ar sir, vory t{gly yoars, »iis M, SCOVEL, » T 100 ator for'the Conuty of Lumd\.‘!x. oUT OF THY OWN MOUTH. The Richmond Whig in a most rampantly rhet quo, calls Mr. Thaddeus Steveus Yan old dovil in- carnate,” declares the report of the Committee of Fifteen * false, atrociously false,” and swears that the majority in Congress ** have lost all manhood, all truthfuluess, all personal honor.” If this be 3o, it is fortunate that the country has in the White House such a fine conservatory of these virtues, and that the Philadelphia Convention is abont to meet to bring them agan into high fashion, under the auspices of the seli-denying Thurlow. The offense specifically charged upon the Fifteen, if we understand representation of the condition of public o) the States lately iu rebellion. Hear Tie Whig : *‘For eight months the Committee of Fifteen, under the pre- tanss of colieeting information as to the state of feeling in the Boathern States, has been engaged in examining vigums nineteen oat of twenty, we shonid rather say forty-nine out of fifty of whom were known beforchand to be hostile to the South and 0nposed to the Pres *5ii's resiviaiivn pu 380 t voluma of evidence they bave eollected ard prioted is false, atrociously false. The same may be said of all the evi deuce on the subject of Southern affairs thet all otaer Radical Committees have hunted up aud spread before the country,” —This wratbful ebullition bubbles and sputters at an untimely moment. The writer should have waited until the blood which was shed at New-Orleans had clotted, and the corpses there wanufactured by Se- cession magoanimity were stark. In view of the testi. mony afforded by recent events, the evidence of *‘the forty-nine ont of fifty,” Las ceased to be of much im- | portance, There is no deception in a secession moh; There can be no mistake about the senti- ments of “bad” Mayor Monroe, The tales which dead men tell are true, in spite of the pro- verb. The New-Orleans massacre has made the Report of the Fifteen obsolete. While in the prineipal city of the late Confederacy, men march to murder, with the outlawed Rebel flag flying over them, and the chief municipal officer egging them on, we submit that it requires no Cemmittee of Fiftean to inform the country that its wouted fires still glow in the ashes of Mr. Davis’s extemporized common- weal of white men and eommon-wo of bincks. It would be amusing for its exceeding impudence, if it were not too serions a matter to ammuse ve, thus to find The Richmond Whig complaining that the Radicals * recoil from no orime and hesitate at no atroci The Congressional Radicals, black asthey are painted, are hardly to be censured by ruflians who | argue with six-shooters and convince by killing, de- | cide luw questions by massacre and sustain the public peace by wholesale assassination ! Facts arestubbornthings. How can Southern gentle- men, who boast themselves Conservative, expect Con- gress Lo be over-eagor to admit to the duties and re- | sponsibilitiesof membershipmen who, not many moons | ago, were iu arms against the Government, and who will tell you now to your face—tho more candid of them—that they have done nothing to’repent of, nothing they would shrink from repeating under like circumstanees. The convalescent devil 0¢s not even | article, full of the vices and the verjuices of the status | fury in New-Ocleans.” * Justice and fary " is 8 new | concatenation; but Rebel malignity can expose itseli ! Ltill more shamelessly, as witness the disgusting and ferocions temper of a Mobile paper, which says that Dostie’s body, “boiled down,” would make good soap” for ** Yankee school marms,” More brutal dov- iltry could not be contained in a scoff, and the evil spirit of the Richmond paper will have to try bard ta rpass it. One of the Columbia journals in South Carolina Detrays the marks of severe singeing. * History," says the Columbia oracle, **is searched in vain for & parallel in wanton barbarity and fiendish cruelty” | to the way the war was waged on the part of *‘the Yankeos.” After such a contest * would it not hava Deen true manliness in the viclers to have said—We want no guaranties for the fature?” We do mok veally believe it would, \ | . H RE A | Conncilman Ballman has earned a right to the re- pect and thanks of every public-spirited citizen for | | the bold manner in which ho has confronted the rob- bers of the city, That the enormous gas-swindle wil [ not be fiually aud hopalgssly perpotrated will be dug. principally to the efforts of (his official. Tu spite ol many rebuffs by the ‘“ring” majority in league to im- | poverish the city, Mr. Pullman has voted persistently against every measure of suspicion and villaing Lrought forward by the advocates of plunder, Congress has provided for tho organization of four rogiments of colored infantry and two regiments of | cavalry for the Regular Army. This is but a proper recognition of the services of the colored troops im the war for the Union. Let those whose duty it is see that the heroic men who disciplined the field- hands and trained them to be good soldiers, are also | remembored when officers are to be sclected to | maud thgse regiments ! We received an assurance from Washington a day Il or two since that Sheridan's dispatch, which we de not think was fairly printed in The Times, would be printed fu fall. As yet it has not been done. We understand that Sheridan desires tho publication and | that Grant also wishes it. So the matter lies be- | tween the Secrotary of War and Mr. Johnson. We presume there is no longer a question of the dispach being garbled. Wo are anxious to know to what ex- tent. The Times charges Tue Trisuxe with garbling Steedman’s report, Not being favored like The Times with an advance cepy by mail we were com pelled ta have a full abstract telegrapbed, Our abstract wad fairly made, and we printed it as it came to us. T Times's charge is disingenuous and tricky, and is made with the hope of being able to parry the effect of the | dreadful suspicion now lying at its door in reference to the Sheridan dispateh, ** There is no Abraham Lincoln President now,” said Mr. Vallandigham in his Kontucky speech, Val- landigham is about right. What followed must have bightened the effect of his exultation. “Give it ta | him!" (meaning Lincoln) shouted one of the Kebel crowd. We have an idea that they aud Vallandig- | ham did “‘give it to him,” and that he died of it. That is why Abrabam Lincoln is not President and Andrew Johnson i The Helena Biot. A0, Monday, Avgust 13, 1666 ‘The report from Memphis of Tiotous proceedings on the part of the Sixteenth colored infantry, st Helena, is pro= nounced false by the ofticers of that regiment. e —— Crope in the North-West, MiLwAUKEE, Monday, August 13, 1806, The fbllowing Teports have been received with te gard to the crops: Kilbourn City, Manitowoc. Port Washington, Now-Lisbon, pretend to play the-monk. He yells his execrations as of yore, and vents his batred with pristine energy. | Nor arc his motives far to seek. Those who play for | a great stake and lose are mot nsually in the bland<' | est of humors, But these gentlemen leaders, whether they be prominent or obsoure,* who ‘are neirber | morally nor legally recoustrncted, who are uot to be | trusted, and who know tbat they are not to be trusted, who hate the Union now as. heartily as ever—these pests, warplots, nuisances, with their-geeat or little | fallowing of desperadoes and adventarers, care mueh less for restoration to the rights of a citizensLip whicl ' they never valued except for the opportunities of is- chiel whichiit afforded, than for keeping np an uneasy | Wfib néme of Roer, Rhine ad, Mosel, | justment by acts of gratuitous und exasperating defi || Nount e and Sarre, baving for their capitals: | ance. Since the suepension of hostilities opou's 1 | AYC1AiCapelle, Coblens, Mayence and Treves. This | scale, these men have never hesitated to regew them, | arrangement was recognized by the Peace of Lune | with every opportunity offering, upon & smell one, ville, fin. 1801, aud continued until 1814, when the | Forced to-abandon large operstions, they bave be- 2 taken themselves to o guerrilla warfure, and buily and | bluster, stab and shoot, upon their private &c- Their hearts are unsubdued. They | are they willing to | | | hut‘}\g will be satistied with nothing |.»“ fhin o The i«guhtian whigh has - ; heeb Saaliciously stamped a4 Radical bas Vie object, whatever the and unsettled public feeling, and for postponing ad- |, Gu Se La Crosse, Prairio Du Chien, Wiseonsia, no damage. Sparts Oconomowee, Portage, Dawes and Madison, Wisoonsin, ouse wire aamaged. Northern Iows, litths if any damage. Weath er clesr and ool Rochester, Mioneapolis, St. Paul, Red Wing, Mingesots, little or no damage. - Along the Minnesobs Riv we damage in tbe vicinity of the leke, eepeciaily nea; Milwaukee. ‘The weatber 13 now clear and coel all oyer the ‘West wid Nogth-West, INviaxapoLs, Monday, August 13, The second meeting of the National Schoal 8 this sdd tenden of the Publio Bohools of »-m'a'-lndanu-'nu:bl' of tign, W was received with fu e e —eee A Dusastrovs Fresupr—Ox: HoxpREp Boaw ox O CREEK DESTROYED—E1GHT Bauzsis o Ol LOST.—The Ol Gaty Register sy “Te T g Teaviest rainator, ot the season 000%sred 1t me like the burstiz g of o waterspout, Easly this 8! "':h:'-,r"“‘.-md ':;‘ the reins #nh above 3 casville, piee. Wo dde”, y'¥ise in the creck. A lacge ¢ laden at various poiats “.oru loase by the force of the together in Ahm:' "!fh :r:fi!l;d ¢ whole. w‘r‘:‘-’k'::‘::ml and barrels of oil. Luches to this hour (10 o'elock a. . % 75 0 100 boars oI% 80 P to %000 hargelsof ol 33, sol will bo saved, Tue o or naints aloag the .m:"‘f.'flc 3 3N [+ | i /

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