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WALLACK'S THEATER P J$ O'GRIEN. Dan Bryant A, 1 Davon Rinzgoid, Geo. Holland, J. F. Fis- | &, J Brown, Miss Ross Coons, Mrs Muk Bauith, Mr WINTER GARDEN. THIS EVENING at 8—O'DONNELL'S MISSION—Mr. John C. Dunn, W 8. Andrews, Ii. B. Philiips E. Mor s, J. fins ¥ Jobuson, Miss Mary Carr. WOOD'S THEATER. NLON BROTHERS—MIS8 KATHLEEN CARON. THIS EVENING- O'NEILL=MASTE " FRENCH THEATE THIS EVENING-ITALIAN OFERA—IL BARBIERE DI BEVIGLIA. BAR RICAN MUSEUM. DAY AND E HE_MAGIC BARREL—THE BCHOOLMASTER . Fox and full company. ONE HUNDRED TH! OLYMPIC THEAT THIS EVENING. at 5—THE ICE WITCH—YOUNG ACTRESS. e he Webb Sisters, the Fowler Sisters and full compsny. A gorgeous Finale, THE ELFIN Opera Choras, ____TERRACE GARDEN, Third-ave. THIS EVENING at 0—THEO, TIOMAS'S ORCHESTRAL OARDEN CONCERT. Programme varied‘every eveuing. Seventy- Clird concart, FIFTH-AVE. OPERA HOUSE. BUDWORTH'S MINSTRELS—Dick Sends, ud Hodgkios. Notices. To Curk DiaRRuEA, DYSENTERY, CHOLERA MOR- Can BUs, ASD ALL ArrECTioNs OF TEE BowsLs, UAS JAYNi Moxarive Bavsax. Rewd what fe said about it: The Rev. Rurvs BABCOCK says: To the Sammer of ‘30, when (he Cholera was prevelent end fatal, | suffored from an attack of this dis «easo for sbout 30 bours, but it at leogth entirely yielded to the fres ee of JAYNE'S CARMINATIVE. By the (ime'y uee of this wedicine, wevarol otbers were cured to my kuowledge. Cmas. ¥. Manxey of Co. 1. Seveaty-fifth Ind. Vol writes: While in Murfressboro, Ter duty by an attack of Distrhea. Being groatly reduced, avd fuiling to dorive any benefit from the treatment | wan eceiving, T used Javns's Carmixamiva, end (his tenedy eventoally cored me entirely. in Jaue, '63, 1 was laid up, uufit for |Jasran Povrsox «f Holmesville, Ohio, writes My son was taken sick laat Fall with Cholers Morbus, which erunped bim severely. Notbiog would stay oo kis stomach until 1 Juse! Jaxxw's Canxivavive, which gave bim immediste reliof snd Jmally curel him. %be Rev. W. G. . CoxxixGuAN writes from Sbanghai. China Ihave cored over one huudred cases of Disrthes with the Car- |muloative Balsam. It checked the disease after evorything else faiied. by ol Droggists. A SINGLE TRIAL oF Mus. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING Brave for children testhing uever yet failed (o relieve the baby sad ovsccome tho prejudices of the motber. Tewillr \sufferer immediately. It not only I ees the child from pain, but regu- Matos the stomach and bowsls, cares wind colic, corrects acidity, and |cures dysentery and disrrhes. Gives rest and bealth to the child and icomforte the mother. L S A e M o NAT™OSAL Ur1ox EXecuTIVE COMMITTEE. —A meet- of the Natious! Union Fxecutive Commities, appointed by the ational Uaion Convention st Baltimore in June, 1304, will be hld at Astor House, in the City of New-York, on Mondav. Sept. 3. at 12 ock. Huxxr J. RATNOND, Chairman ieve the poor little oops the head clesu end the bair healtby, restores zray hair to ite jual color, imparts pew life and strength to the weakeat bair, stops falling out, is & delightful bair dressing, and unparalleled as s remo- My for nervous besdache, Ref-rences, our best physicians aod chem- Beta in the country. 8old by all druggists and fashionsble hair-dres. ors, mnd ot wy office, No. 1,127 Brosdway, New-York. i Samam A. Cmevauizs, M. D. 's NEW REMEDY ¥OR CATARRH thedisease st ite f untain bead, removes pain in the temples ¢ ‘offenive diachargos. obstruction of the breatling jabas, aud obliterates this Lerriblo disese in il ita forms forever. “wawp for pamphiet to GxumiT Nowtox, No. 11 Anw-st. " METOALFE'S GREAT RukoMaTIc KEMEDY is the most wonderiul remedy ever brought before the puthe. A gentle Smon of this city who had lost the use of bis bs, and bad used tehes for over six months, bas bren couplétely eured by ove bot- | le. Tell your sfflicted fr eads to try | MARVIN'S NEW PATENT ALUM AND DRY PrLASTER e AxD BumorAR SiLven PLaTe Sares. Highly oramental, and | Nmmn’;:’:::’ dry. Also 8 large sssortmient of Baukers' and | », N and 721 Chestnot st., Phila. — A + Tag ELLIPTIC LOCKSTITCH SEWING-MACHL the lstest improvements and sttachments; INCONPARABLY vou u.lu-v&l. Exurric 8. M. Co., No. 543 Broadw: wanted. WiLLcox & "h...il D’_Xfin ou the same piece of goods. ARM AND LEG, by B. FRANK PaLMER, LL. D. — officers and civilians. 1,00 Boston. Avoid #ree to goldiers, and low to end nestnat-st.. Phila; Astorpl, N.Y.; 19 Ureen ot., itations of his vatenis. A Cure warranted or no charge made, Rheumatism, eurslle, Gout, Asthms, cured by Dr. Frruen's Rusvaaic Rex x. Purely vegetable. Reduced from $10to per bottle; Ageuts, | Vi—lhfl’llll%':. . \\'-\Itl 'f’ agents. N { Ty 1 B8, ELASTIC STOCKINGS, SUSPENSORY Baxp- | ans, ke.—Maksu & Co.'s Radical Care Trus Office . Lady sttendant. DR, LASGWORTHY'S N¥w PREMIUM TRUSS cures o licited. Br \ptures without pain or inconvenience. Worst ci Hxrupo: FLORENCE LOCK-STITCH SEWING-MaCHINES—Best u the weeld. Fronexcs S¥wing Macwine Coxpaxy, b Mmul_vlv k. ATEINSON'S BALSAM OF HOREHOUND. Botanic Laborstory No. 230 Grecowich-st. Sos Advactisemy St ImprOVED LoOCK-STiTCH MAC ufactarers, GmovEm & BaKEs Sswing Macmixs Coxraxt, R oaioge =33 o1 i cov n ool s s Morr's CueMicAL Poxape Restores Grey Hair, imape it flm{ and from falling out : removes dendruff; the fiest dross $og used. Bold by Russron. No. 10 Astor House. and draggiate. GrOVER & BAKER'S HIGHEST PREMI Errron Suwise Macwives for fami'y use. No. 495 F it . Hows Sewixe Macnixe Coxpaxy.—ELias Hows, . President. No. 699 roadway. _Agents wasted A WaEELer & WrLsox's Lock-STitem SEWING "Macmixe wnd Borro) Macmixn N { Cartes Vignette, 3 per dozen; Duplicates, $2. All pegatives registered. K. A. Ly 2. 160 Chatbam-st.. N. Y. v ELASTIO B W.aylug the Cormer i New Museum. { Yesterday alternoon the New-York Museum As- siation, of which Mr. John Banvard is President, Jaid the ner stone of what they propose shail be s Museum wortby !of the City of New York. % The corner stono was iaid with Masonio ceremonies which \were very fmnressive, The Manhattan Chapter of the Order of Free rad Acceptod Mes ne was present, snd R. W. Hoimes, MGrand Master, was in charge of the ceremonies. oimes wpeke at some length in favor of & place of amusement like the one d, in which people could receive in etion and enjovment without beiog subjected to deworalizing influ- .n&lg“. conclusion of Mr. Holmes's remarks, the ceremony of aying the stone was performed. After it bad been put into is deatioed place, the Chaplain of the Order read the Masonio rayer. The Treasurer of the Order then poured out upon he stane s quantity of corn, the Secretary made a libation of ‘wrine, and the J onior Grand Warden poured out the oil. pose that tho rew buildiag will prise Nos. 1217, 1316 1321, 1 Broadway. E}m have a frontage of ¥5 feet on Broadway aud will extend k 200 foet, The front is vitrified by way of addiog to the vg. Commodious baiconies ore to " ntal observatory will surmount the weole. It 18 to be built of brick, and will be four stories high. In the rear of the buslding the theater is to be located, the ®jocture-oom ” betag beneath the theater. Ta the latter. @cientific experiments are to be exhibited, illustrated some of those at tho Polytechnic Tustitute e of the theater. it s said, will be the . and the scenery of a superior eharacter. A gallery of paintings and engravings and 8 hal! of statu- ry will be among the aitractions of tbe mew institution. Rlich, the association promise, wili be opened befors the close ®f the year, at an expoase of about $300,000. et — e PERSONAL.—Among the arrivals at the hotels are Benator Creswell of Maryland, Baron Stoeckl (the Russian Winister at Washington), and Mayor Hoffmao, at the Claren fon; Gov. Curry of Oregon, ¢ the Metropolitan; Gov. Jen Kins of Orogon, Senator Wiltiams of Oregon. Gen. Schenck of Oaio, the Hon. G. F. Edmonds, M. C,, of Vermont, Senator Anthony of Rbode Island. and N. G. Ordway, esq., Sergoant- ‘et-Arms of tie House of Representatives, at the Fifth Avovue Siotel: the Hon. Zadock Pratt of Prattsvills, the Hon. Willisw ST Lufllow of Talip, Joshua Vao Zandt, esq., at the St. Nicho, Tue Moseum Association proj 3 1 srected, and an orn Sas. Gon. L. G. Estes and Mojor V. W. Lavdor (late Awsist. | pyitin 8 Crooke, James Jouraan er—— ent Adjitant-General and Chief Commissary of Subsistence taff of Gev, Kilpatrick) arrived in this city last upon the steamship Charlos W. Lozd, and are stop- Jing at the Fifth Avenue Hotel. ——— Fie 1x 788 Boweev.—Between 2 and 3 o'clock ‘muy morning a fire broke out on the second floor of the ailding io the of No. 276 Bowery,oocupied by A.Hoffman, ame maker. loss was about $600, on which there was hnn? Mr. Lo 850rp. who ocoupled the tbird floor, about $100, on which there was an lusurance for $600 in ‘Btayvesant Tusarapce Co. J. F. Golding, manufacturing New-Derk Daily Cribune, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1866, | | The Campnign Tridbune. As tho campaign opens subscriptions for Tur | WerkLy TrBoNe are rapidly inoreasing. We print the fol. lowiog oo of many interesting lotters tnclosing subsoriptions . Tr1aca, N. Y., Aug. €, 1856, To the Publisher of The N, Y. Tribw Sin: Inclosed please recoive ot eck for 860, for which pleass send me aa wany 00pios of Lio CANPAIGY TEINUNE a8 that will pav tor. The above fs the resalt of about two bours'{abor, and I boartily wish that some ons woull devoto at least the same Amount of time for tho eame purposs in every sohool district throughout the entire State, aud ths result would be told at the coming elootion. d “ Tallsmanic Tompkins " Is awske, and every Jecapitation of officivls by the ' my policy” guillotine adds a stardy working veteran to the great cause of equal rights to all. Very truly yours, Bruox C. Howeil Ses advertisomant on 5th page. i The Tribune lo London. RROTHERS, (Amencan Agents for Libracies, 17 Henrietts waleof THE TRIBUNE aviemanre STEVEN; . Coveat Garden, W C ), a1e_Agent They will alsa ceceive Sevaonien Te Cerrespondents. No notios can betaken of Anouymous Communications. Whateveri intended for inssrtion must be suthenticated by the name and ad dress of the writer—not necessarily for publication. but as eusr, AL businsss letters for shis 0Bice shouia be eddressed te “The Tris onk,” New York. We canuot undertaks to roturo rr ‘ected Communications. e — Trk TRIBUNE AT SARATOGA. —Thornton, newsman ot Saratoga. sel's tve Tribunk for five ceots, and bis boys sell iton ew alke in front of the pr.ncipal hotels at the ssme prics. NEWS OF THE DAY, ——— FOREIGN NEWS. Wo publish this morning news by Ocean telegraph to tho 28th inst. The troaty of peaco has beon ratified by Prossia, The war being at an ond, Italy has bogun to dis- band her forces. Austna is about toissue bonds to s large amount for meoting the extraordinary cxpensos of the war. Mazzini will not accept the amncsty of the King of Italy, preforring exile with his Democratic principles to becom- ing subject of Victor Emanuel. Maximilian's expectod downfall is creating foars in Spain for the continued pos- session of Cuba by that Power. The Reform Mecting in Birmingham last Monday is described as partaking of the enthusiasm of the like demonstrations during the Reform agitation of 1832, Lamorande, the French defaulter, who, it will be remombered escaped from the custody of & deputy U, 8. Marsbal a short time ago, sailed from Quoboc on Saturday in enstody of French officials. It is stated that the Gover- nor General of Canada has telegraphed to England for more troops, ho being in dread of another Fenian invasion. DOMESTIC NEWS. A fight has ocourred near Fort Reno between the In- dians and the U. 8. troops. Seven of the latter were killed, and two wounded. Thoe Sioux are very trouble- some, and have run off a large quantity of Government stock. In New Mexico the Indians aro engaged 1o the indiscriminata massacre of all the Mexicau inhabitants they can find. Hoad Center Stephens addressel & Fonian meeting at Troy, N. Y., last evening, giving his % upon the Fenian situation and stigwatizing Gen. Sweeney 88 not truo to his party, although personally brave. Mr.Stophens will endeavor to orgamizo cirelo in Troy, where tho majority of the Fenians belong to the Roberfs faction. A large and enthusiastic soldiers’ moeting has been held at Peoria, Illinoig, where resolations were passed condemn ing the courso of the Administration as calculated to fritter away all that loyalty ~ained over treason, all that patriotic valor achieved “ iinst armed Kebols, all that troedom won of the hosts . ( Slavery The corn erop in L otte, adjoining countios in Missourt, have hoen seriously injured by the prolonged drought. Iu Central Georgia the cotton crop is reported a total failure from the same cau The base ball mateh batweon the Excelsion and Eureks Clubs et Nowark yesterday resulted in the former winning the game by twelve runs. At noon yesterday Gen, George W, Cullum rotired from bis position as Superintendent at West Point, und Gon. Pitcher has assumed comwand. Radical reportors are not in favor at the Post-Office Do- wartment, Washington, the chief clerk rofusing them the ist of tho new appointments of PostmASLOrs. THE PENDING CANVASS. Senator Pomeroy in » pesch at Leavenworth, Kansas, reviswing the political situation, said in conelusion that wo must stamp on perjury and treason the brand that justly attaches to such criv aod not grant them the re- wards that belong ouly to the loyal and patriotic. Tho work in Indiana goes bravely on. Governor Morton is stumping the State, and is aavertised to spoak in the counties of Henry, Hendricks, Dearborn, Owen and Clay, running up to the 18th of Septomber. At Loxington, Ky., a Convontion of Radical Union men has boen held, and pointed to attend the Phil- adelphia Convention. Gov. Oglosby of Tllinois has reqaestad Senators Yates and Trumbull to attend tue Convention of Southern Loyalists thas ia to bo held in Puiladelphia ou the 34 of S«ptember. At Westohester, Pa, the Union Republioan Conventlon nominated the Hos. J. M. Broomal: for the Sixth Congres- o, Carroll. Ray, and | sional Distriot, CITY NEWS. Fonr certificates of douth from cholsra were roceived at the Bureau ot Records and Vital Statistics during the 24 hours ending st 2 p. m. yesterdag. Of these two of the Y{ununn died in Battery Darracks Hospital, oue in Red fouso Hospital, and ouc in Wost-st. Four cases of chol ara wero reported yesterday in Brooklyn. Notwithstand- 1ng the epidemic of the present scason the mortalit of Brooklyn has been smaller than during ¢ period last vear. From January 1 to deaths numbered 4,36 ring the e August 1, 1866, the mortality was 4,307 The Metropolitan Board of Health met yesterday after- noon and after adjournment visited 8 wumber of the slaughter-houses of the city for the purpose of u hasty in- spection of their condition. The Fenian Sisterbood have published & lotter to the Irishwomen of America, in which they ask for aid for tl suffering countrymen, anl stato that a fair will soon be held in this city, the proceeds to go toward th eration of Ireland. AND MARKETS. STOCKS Gold is higher, and has been loaned at 3 16ths. The closing price is 145§, snd the extremes of the day 148321451 The | transactions in Government stocks has been larger than usasi, Lat the advance of yesterday was not sustained. The market is strong at the prices. In State bonds and Rallway mortgages 10 changea of importance. Ba area aro firm, The mis cellaneous list is not _specially acti ha low priced are kept industriously before the p: ¢. but there ia no dispo- sition shown to buy thom. At tho was firmer. After the Board, closed firm. Money is abun stock broke: for the amount offered to theo. sommercial paper no change. TP On the inside pages of our to-day's issue will he Jound correspondence from Vienna : The Public Hualth; | Femanism ; Law Intelligence; (Commereial Matters ; Market Reports, and many other items of local import- ance. Tee universal desire of the Unionista of our City to alists about to assem- groot and hear the Souther ble in Convention at Philadelpbia, will surcly be gratified. The Union League Club will doubtless take the matterin hand at an early day; so will the Uni Our City will send many of her bast men to Philidelphia next week; and they will doubtless prevail upor: several of the most emi- neral Committee. nent Southern Unioniats to come hither and address them the day after the adjournmeat at Philalelphia. These matters will doubtless receive attention at our istrict meetings on Friday evening e . « ProsidentJobuson,” says The Times, with asinister obsequiousness worthy of one of istopher 8ly's sorvants, ** bas the very happy faculty to express nobls ideas in terse, compact phrases.” The Times evidently waats Mr. Johnson to believe this, if nobody | olse, ——————e Brooklyn has chosen a larze and strong delegation to attend the Loyal Convention at Philadelphia, in- | cluding such men as Mayor Booth, ex-Mayors Georgo Hall, Edward A. Lambert and F. B. Stryker, E. L. Sanderson, Demas Strong, Jobn A. Cross, Geus. Jesse C. Smith, H. B Samuel I, Roberts, Gen. Baird, wo are informed, has been relioved at bis own request, and bas thus hosorably auticipated the prejudicial consequences of vindicating bimself from a wrong perpetrated by the President. Gen. riots, some featnres of which ate clsewhere shadowed Sheridan is atill at work on the investigation of the | | Gen.Shoridan offically Teports to the Presidont | SRR NEW-YORK DALY TRIBUNT, in the company of Grant and Faer agnt, both of o4 to attend the Donzlas modin- it is understood, have prom colobration. Mr. Johnson is a well-knit, sized, muscular man, with a rough countguance aud keen cyos, and fow graces of manner, and we supposs there will be & woll-defined and gencral anxisty o comparo (ho Presideut’s pyhsiog- nomy with bis spoken charcter. Tho people will be curions to mark, too, any distinction betwoen the present Chicf Magisteato and his lamented prednoes- sor, who, like Mr. Johnson, came from the rauks of the people, but was a type of a different education aud intelligence. Mer in groat stale must undergo the ordeal of popular criticism, and 1t is fortunate in some respects for the President, certainly fortunate for the country, that he does, and that this fact will lend its intorest to the usual honor extended to the high office of Chief Magistrate. “PEACE.” President Johnson told the Philadelphiang yescwr- day that what the country needs is Peace. 8o we think. And, in order that the country may have Peace, it seems to us indi:pensable that the Govern- ment shall protect the people of the South against such wanton Robel massacres as those of Memphis and New-Orleans. ** First pure, then peaceable,” is the order indicated nearly two thousand years ago; and 1o improvement has ginco been made on it, so far as we are advised. The Evening Post is one of the most effective cham- pions of the President's policy, so far as regards the immediate admission of representatives in Congress from the States lately in revolt. Wequoted from it yesterday the assurance of a Southern planter that no Republican could make a specch In his neighborhood without being shot on sight. Another correspondent writes The Post from Texas [he dare not allow bis name and residence to be printed] as follows: “I'he nutsber of orimes of violence committed in Texas Is incredibls. For rlll:F'-, in & small county adjoining to this, #3 porsons are indioted for murder, In worso counties there are no indictments, because witnesses dare not testify, and fgrand Jurors dare not indict. Since the war, though over 500 men have been indioted for murder. . s white man has been con od and punished. Yet I have known of in- stances in which freedmen have been over-punished for trivial A negro was sontonecd at Waco to the Penitontiary % for stealing & gingor-ct As o matter of Humilton pardoned him. o the clerk of Bl C by the side of bis wife, returnin, Justico at once mounted, Austin, to ssk for troops to ma connty; be cannot return home without them. ing asked for a gur- 7, it will only be from fear of retaliation on the part of his sons, three of whom have beon in the United States volurteer servioe. Even they can scarcely protect ||mi:-dhmr ‘s life if (he troops which are to bo sent shouid be withdraw “ Every dav I Loar of murders ot freedmen. Sinoe 5 o'clook this afternoon, four new ones have been re, here. The disloyal ppress the mention of sueh occarrences. “'Stould there be another outbreak in Tex s, very many Union mon, es well a8 8 !:v?‘ at onco be massacred in order to brioy roien of terror as would make the South & uoit. “Turee freedmen were murdered in or near the line of an adjoiming county a faw days ago. The wagon which one of thom was driving was robbed of all the fine goods tained. The other two freedmen were shot by the same who is belioved to be their former o The of one of them waa cut off, and they were left tion has bean, or probably will ba mad auy Union man were to move in the matter 1t would be at the peril of his life. ““The brave and loyal man who told me wan applied to by o freedman. man of one of dered—for advice. The freed and report tne facts to but be ap; tion of freedmen, would oy about euch Another bout writing down the ted thew, said to me, all 1 oan do 1o hold my Jounty just now.’ nod added, * I keep no money t expenses, 1 can do not fecl wafo st own in i my house. but & few dollvrs for curr take care of myscll in the d e —Such is the ** Poace” which Mr. Johnson has se- cured to Texas—a ** Peace” which butchers Usion mon by wholesale, and supprosses all mention of their murder. They have * Peace” now in New-Orleans— the more devoted Radicals having been murdered, the next earnest driven from the State, the Froe-Sta Convention forbidden to meet, snd The Lowisia Tribune suppressed—such & Peace as there would have 1 in heaven if the devils bad been allowod 1o have it all their own way. Such *‘Pesce™ n nearly universal in the South, The Texan aforosaid further writes to The Evening Post a4 follows: “ Matters are worse hers than is The war is not over yer. disloyal than they wore in the Spriog of 1861 in arms inat the Natioual Governmect amy day. United force bere and the civil oftwers of the United States oment are tolerated for the present. because the Rebel leaders think that by the aid of Prosident Jobnson they wrill soon be able 1o control both at bowe and at Washington. "1t 90 much as & moh s30uid do vioknce in 0ne of the citise of the North. T ill again be ia srms. The Rebel ieadors have excited they eaunot eontrol. The ides dissemi uated smongth n in this: Ttat they must folgn loyal and, If possibic, be thereby readmitted. That doce. they ex pout the Seath to control as of old, and te latroduce what they ol * paonae* in the ul10s of Slavery. “Indosd, mnce Gov, Hamilton went Nortd, in divers local'. ties disioyal men have conmultel together as to when y would be able ‘1o begin to gather their niggers,’and bave openiy expressad their convictwn that *Amly Fohnson means o give us buck our niggers' In one connty I have heard of persons who have ‘bought the shance’ of negroes, as they ex- pressod it, at 810 in specie per head. 1 . wa they el themmelyes, * Conservative’ leadors, adherents 1o beli maclves, or t le cen wniil the Sta ned ower t thetr ru kmps dowa vio for the time being. —The Post favors the turming over of the State to the rule of its ex-Rebels and to the uncondi- tional admission of their representatives to Congress. The I people of the North and West do not con- cur in that vie GRANGER ON THE SOUTH. Gon. Gordon Granger has been making a report to the President on the disposition toward the Federal Government of the jeop'e of the South, whom he has lately visited on a pecial mission. Gen. Granger— though evidently lsboring to make things pleusant, so fa1 as he honestly an—says: * The peopls of the South bo divided into two classes. There is the industrnl class, laboring earnestly to build what has been broken lown striving to restoro prosperity to country. interestsd muisly in the grest question of pro- viding food and elothig for thomselves aud These form the great maj class; an utterly irr ho were the ¥ 4 ehiefly spen Lueir time lounging nd bars, in dicken-fightin boen killed; but those xho remain Il ¢isturbing elems daro doing mue! hief It is this clase r of tue poorer Whites who have formed gangs for horse-stealiig. It is they who, in somo inatarees, have made attacks onofficora of the Freedmou's Burean, and ted tho fresd e Ttis thoy whortford the wain pretex s among tho people of the South foeling of bostility bwerl the United Siates Government. Bat they are not the nproscntativos of the Southern people. They form but o indguificant mnarity in the commupity, and ren they are actisted not so much by a feeling of oppo- sition to the Governmest as Ly a reluctance to earn thelr own livelibood by bosest lnor and indlvidual exertion.” —There is a large measure of truth in this repre- sentation. There b a large class of well-meaning, law-abiding, peace-oving people at the South, whose impnlses are just ad humane, These neither porse- “ Yankees" aor abuse the unhappy Bl arcall ou the side of Peace, O gambli These many of them bat cuts Their and Law, But they are depbrably deficient in the acti manded by their cotvictions. They let ** I dare 1 wait upon “ I woull” Had they been fuithful to their convictions, tiere would have been no Secession and no Civil War. They Lold their hands and say Itis too bad,” wha they should do and dare to it better. The * utterly irresponsible class" deseribed by Gen. Granger perpetrate such atrocities a3 those of Memphis and New. Orleans; the other chss allow them to do it with im punity, Thera certanly have not been less than one thousand distinet cass of wanton, inexcusable negro- killing by the “‘utbrly irresponsiblo clasa ™ since 5 but we can reeall no single instanco o murdere or murderors, if White, have boen prosecuted, arrated, tried, convicted and pun- md 3 tica accorded to the Backs are afforded by the mili- ! tary tribunals and the Froedmeon's Burean, forth. The President's visit to New-York to-day will be o ol o, 10 b A made peculiacly iptoresting by the faot that Lo travels that ¥ is now a gmve question in Now-Orloans Northern men ¢ live Liere without bLeing in constant dread—whother Wiy cau bo protected in | ifo aud proporty, nd hae e in_ tuo courts” wl whon | out saorificing lives 13 | ished according o lav. Al the protection and jus-’ WEDNRIDAY, AUGUST 29, 1860, fwu'm Doots it that the Thuga are *‘an utterly irre- eponsibie class”—that ** they form hut an ineignificant minority”—=o long a4 they burn wegro schooi-hous Iynch teachors, and butcher *“ Yankoes and freedmen” at will? Ax a clase, the gentlemen of the South have abdi- cated. They ought to be the protectors of the Freed- mon whose labors created thoir vast wealth, and whom they are henceforth to find more useful and less burdensome than they formerly were. They should bavo hailed and emphatically sustained the passage of the Civil Rights bill, They should now be foremost in demanding Impartial Suffrage, s a safeguard not only for the Blacks but for themsclves against the disorder and ruffianism of the “utterly irresponsible class.” who oporate as negro-killers and horse-thieves because of their ** reluctance to earn their own livelibood by bonest labor.” In short, thoy ought to sympathize and oobperate with Industry rather than ruffianism. And, 80 long as they shall neglect their proper dutics, and thus proffor impunity to the law-defying, the South will continue in a state of anarchy, and they will be to blame for it. THE FORGERY ON SNERIDAN. The N. ¥. Times stands mute in view of our expo- sure of its guilty tampering with the fair fame of one of our'country's most gallant and cherished defenders. Priir H. SHRRIDAN ranks among the vory first in the affoctions of the American People. They know his loyalty and truth, and what he states as fact they are acoustomed to believe. When they heard, therefore, that he had sent a dispatch to Washington which tended to exculpate Mayor Monroe and his Police “thugs,” and, by consequence, to shiold Andrew Jobn- 80N from popular execration, they were porplexed and bowildered, They could not believe that Sheridan would send such a dispatch; yot there was the dis- patch, printed in The Times with his signature ap- pended, and without a hint of any erasure ot sup- pression. And when wo—judging from internal evi- denco—challenged its authenticity, pronouncing it either forgad or garbled, The Times repelled the charge in these explicit terms: **The teath is. that THE TRIBUNE is mortified, first, booause ita cwn information touchiog the riot has been moager and unreliable, and, second. because Gen. Sheridan's description of the conventionists mewiralizes its eforts at mis tion. Hence it quarrels with the journal which outstripped it, and now, s o last stroke of policy.” it concentrates a inence i blind denial of the genuineness of & doo cannot olherwise dispose. Am to the dispatoh, it is not necossary for us tosay that it is it purports to be—a dis. and that the ohrn‘:.l o of aJournal whi Torging or garblisg is tho impudent invention of 8. w mo‘ll ‘Ml-ll'"y distorts lutelligence to suit ite political P arposes. — Now look once more at the dispatch as given by The Times, sido by side with that same dispatch as Sheridan wrote and sent it: THE GARBLED DISPATCH. THE TRUE DISPATCH. The Times, A From the Correspondence. New Omurans. Aug. Gen U, 5. Uraxt, Washi 7. 8. GRANT—Genaral : You oo are doul ¥ u are doubtless aware of serious riot which ocoarred in riot which occurred|this city on the J0th. A politi- oity ou the J0th. Alcal body, styling iteelf the Con- Falumliudy. <‘..‘ itaelf the tiol lifi. met on the Wth onvention of met on the for, as 30th for, as it is alioged, the of romodeling purposs ' of remodsling * the titation of 'the ut_Constitution of the Iyaders were poiiticel agitators u‘fi..:‘. Theloaders were politi-and revolutionary men, and the tators and rovolutiouary action of the Convention was men, aud the action of the liahle to produce breaches of Convention was liuble to pro- the public peace. I had made duce breschea of the public'wp my mind to arrest the bead poace. 1 mado up my men, if the proceedings of the mind to arrest the head men if| Convention were calcalated to Y disturb tho |u-1-||my of the Department, but I hiad vo cause Depart- for action until they committed o the mean the tranquiility of the meot, but [ had no causo for the overt act aotion until they oom‘u':uud time, oficial duty ulb,l‘ulu 3 ites Tezas, and the Mayor 1 nd during my absence, onpprossed about 160 nded. {the Cowrention by the use of thing 18 now quiet but I deem their polica foree, and in s it best to maintain o military doing aitacked the members of supremacy lu the city for & the Conveniion and a party o) fow days, uotil the affair is two Aundred megroes and w fully inv . T believe fire-arms, cixbs and knives, the sentiment of the gooerslmanner s0 WARecsrary ity is great regret at airociows as to compel mi to and ihat ic was m About ade Whites and Blaoks were s 1th-| killed, and aboat 160 wounded Kverytuing is now quiet. but [ doem it bost to maintain oisy the overtact. About 40 and Bl ero kil sosssary oruell police oould ba any arrcat they saw i M oamaudi it 1 “ou. Commanding mi supremac; £ % (for » trw days. anid the afair s fully investigatod. [beliove the sentimeat of the goneral o ma oy sreois. ond an that the police conld have made any arrest they saw fit without sacrificiag lic. l Maj. G —The Times cannot find shelter in blaok silonce. It owes an explanation to Gen, Shoridan and to the pub- lie. It knows that Gen. Sheridan’s first impreasions of the trus nature of the New-Orleans massacre were strongtlenod by further investigation, s that he tole- graphod next day as follows: NEW OuLEANS, Aag. 2, 1850 U, 8 GRANT. General. Waskington, D. C. The wore information L obtain of the affair ol the 3oth in this city, the more revolting it bacomes. 1T WAs N0 RIOT. 1T WAS AN ABSOLUTE MASSACKE WY THE POLICE. WHICH WA NOT KXCKLLED (N MURDEEOUS CH!ELTY KX THAT OF Forr Piow. 1T WAS A MERDER WHICH THE MA) OR AND POLICE OF THE CITY PERPETRATED WITHOUT THE SHADOW OF A NFCESITY, Furthormore, 1 ELIEVE I W4 PREMKDATATED, snd every in dication poirts to this. I recommeud the removal of this bad man. 1 believe it would be bai'ed with the sincereat cation by twe-thirds of tho populstion of sim city. Thers € of inseourity on the part of peopis here on Acoount of this man, which is now so much increased fiat the suraty of Infe and property doas not rest with the civil anthirity but Wik the miliiary. P UL Sumianay, Major-Geoeral Commandiog. —Boing thereupon eatechized (Aug. 4) by the President, in questions artfully devised to elicit an- swors inculpating the Free-State leaders as responsi- ble for the fray, Gen. Sheridan responded (Aug. 6) characterizmg those leaders as **political agitators and bad men,” and Gov. Wells as ** vacillating," but showing clearly that the wholesale buteheries of the police and their abettors were wantonly parpetrated on unarmed and unresisting men, and adding— SIT 14 USELESS TO ATTRMPT TO DSGUISE THF HOSTILITY THAT FXISTS ON THE PAKT OF A GREAT MANT HERE TOWARD NORTHERN MEN; AND THIS UNFOKTONATE APFAIR HAS 50 PRECIPITATED MATTERS THAT THERE 8 NOW A TEST OF WHAT AHALL BE THE STATUS OF NOWIHERN MEN—WHETHER THEY CAN LIVE HEKE WITHOUT BRINO IN CONSTANT DEEAD OR NOT, WHETHER THEY CAN BE PROTECIED IN LIPE AND PROVERIY AND HAVE JUSTICE IN THK COURTS. 1t the matier is permitted to pass ovor without & thorough and determined prosecution of thoss engaged in it, we may [0k Jor frequent scencs of the same kind, nok only here, but in other places, “* No steps have s yet been taken by the eivil auth Arrest citisens whwwors engaged in this massacre, of rbo perpetrated sugh oruelties. The merabers of the tion huva baon indicted by the Grand Ju arreatod aud beld to-bail. ~ As o whetker aut ample yusiice > the guilty parties on both my opinion wngguivocally that they cannot. whosa gourse I iave closely watehed for many a consider one of the most dangerous wen that we have here to the peace and quiet of the city. —Such are the deliberato conclusions of an anti Radical West Pointer, whom the country believes and trusts. Arethey not directly at wac with The Times's garbled, misleading dispatch? Do they not stamp | theutterance of that fabrication s & most flagrant abuse of tho public confidenco in the interest of traitors and assassing? Will The Times oxplain? I it has boon misied and used to palm a fabrication on the public, will it say by whom ? opprobrium now resting on its shoulders? any dofense, lot the public see it! If it has MromtGaN holds her Republican State Convention at Detroit on the 30th instaut, and the last of ber sic Congressional Couventions on the 5th of September. Nearly every ona of her Countios will bave nous nated its Republican ticket in Angust. We don't want to ask how sho will go—these early nomina- tlons assure us that she will go right i The Post seos danger abead, From the President's usarpations of authority? No; for The Post ouly re | gands theso as well-meaning ‘bianders, that must bo | talked over, and not talked down. From tho Presi dent's violent language agaisst Congross! Not that eithor; for The Post 13 veadsy at any time with a trim leador to insist that ho shall apologize, though he vever doos. From degmded and defeated loyalty iu the Soutl? No, fur The Post proclaims the Presi- dent a truo friend al liberty, T tho Philadelphin Convention? Nuy for that, after all, is & good thing i its way. Whaere, then, is the dauger? Nowhere el than from the Radicals, of course, who will not Or will it choose to bear tho load of | oousght, ¢b make the wholo Cougross of tha people e s ki et S ——. vt slave fo the whim and will of ful and | Mr ing man who eeks to precipitate States into tho | the ropOustIuGlory pywcs belopged especially to Uniot a8 violantly as they wore butled ont—whio dare | Conaress, 0 its obligalion to guaranteo conati not answor such bloody signals as those at Memphis and New-Orleans by opaning the doors of the nat 1o Robels without challenge or guaranty. . “MY POLICY” REVIEWED, On taking the Executive chair Mr. Johnson began to shadow forth a policy, which it i interesting to note step by step of its dovelopment. His policy has not been without interruptions and spasmodic somer- saults and gyrations—but such, as it is, it remains the nondescript policy known by the pame of the President. First: The Presidont laid down the principle that a State in the Union is always in the Union, whether it rebels or not, & mavifest absurdity according to the Executive interpretation. Else, it was a gross wrong to_fight for the purpose of bringing back States that wore already in the Union, and entitled to all its rights and privileges. Else, why were not Gen. Sher- man's and Johnston's terms of peace and surrender promptly accepted and ratified by the Government, with Mr. Johnson at its head ? Is it not manifest that the President has been laboring fora yearto do what Gen. Sherman, in accordance with Mr. Andrew Johugon's professed principles, proposed to do in a month, if the people would only permit it ? Second: Acting on tho principle that the Btates were always iu the Union, and entitled to all their rights and privileges under the Constitution, the Prosident procceded to treat them as conquered territo- ries, imposing on them military garrisons and pro- visional governors. Third: Still acting on the principle of aforesaid, the President orders conventions of State representa- tives to remodel constitutions; prescribing what amendments shall be passed, and insisting, in several instances, that the conventions or legislatures shall undo their work. A plain case of dictation, surely, if States are never out of the Union and sovereign when in! Fourth: Proceeding in the development of this doc- trine the Presidout declares bis intention to *‘recon- struct ¥ and “restore " the several States, thongh it is plain, according to the Johnsonian doctrines, that States nover out of the Union capnot be restored. Fifth: Advancing steadily to the rear of his theories, the President recommends the adoption of an amend- ment basing representation on white population—the same in effect and substance as the one pat forth by Congress, which the President now repudiates and de- nounces. At the same time the President writes to Gov. Sbarkey that ** restoration” will be ** subject to the will of Congress,” which the President with strenuous consistency now violently aseails, and en- deavors to overawe and oserrule. Sizth : Still moving on steadily by somersaults, the Presidont orduins that elections shall be held, whereby leading traitors are sent to the door of Cougress to demand admission, the President backing them loudly with abuse of the leaders of the House and Senate. Notwithstanding all this, the President declared that “iraitors siould he punished and treason made odious.” Seventh ; Pressing on indomitably the President continnes the operation of the pardon manufactory, whereby i vels are reconstructed into voters. A million of unfranchised loyalists receive no pardon for the color of their skin, though the President once professed to be their ** Moses," avd claims the right to manufacture net ouly \voters by the thousand but judges, legislators and governors by the score. FEighth : The States being always in the Unicn, the President declares that such as are out of it are not yet restored to peace. At the same time, in virtue of his early Mosaic character, the President recog- nizes the right of an armed Rebel militia to disarm loyal blacks, whonce result & few murders not worth mentioning. Nineh : The States iu Rebellion having been recon- structed, primed with legislatures and capped with governera, all parlomed for the purpose, the Prosi- dent declares that they are mew in the Union and en- titled to admission to Congress, whatever Congress may say as to any right in the premises (see Presi- dent’s confession to Gov. Sharkey) to control the work of restoration. Tenth: Pendingall these aots, the President recog- nizing the binding forco-of euactments of Congress, proceeds to appoint Rebels to-office in plain and di- rect violation of suchenactments, regarding a special session of Congress to determine on the affairs of the country as entirely supererogatory. Fleventh: Texas being, according to Gen. Sheridan, & place comparable only to the lower regions, and, according to Gen. Custer, unsafe for Northern men, and treasonable all over, the President thinks that, in virtue of the dootrine of State Soversiguty, it ought to be recoguized and admitted, notwithstanding that it is impossible, uuder the condition of things in that State, to bring to fair trial hundreds of Rebels indicted for capital crimes against Northern men and Union- ists, while blacks are imprisoned for many years for trivial offenses. Neverthelass, the President pro- claims peace. Tuwelfth: Almost at the same timo the President writes a t gram directing the military to take part with the Rebels while the latter were engaged in a frighthful massaers of undoubted loyalists—white and black—a massacre which Gon. Sheridan says was contrived by Rebels, but which Mr. Johnson and his supporters avow was altogether duo to an illegal Con- vention, which, nevortaeless, was held in parsnance of United tes authority, owansting from Gen. Banks and i <ident Lineoln. 3 wise, having resior-d 4 sovereign State (always in the Union) put out his hand to destroy it by interfering to depose its lawfully-elected Governor. Thirteenth: The Supreme Court being the chief tribunal of the land, betors which questions involving the legality of rival bodies claiming to rule in a State muat, of course, be tried,. the President recognizes the verdict of & potty court a @ sovereign pretext for a telegram and a rio* —to first, the most unfortunate that could come from 4 President, and the second thy most atrocious and crinunal that could ever assail innocent people. Al thus the President did in respaet to a “ sovereign State,” whose Governor he omor- turned. Fourteenth z that Tennessee -paght admitted, a3 soon as-possible, into the TJaion, the Presidont Mtterly theow obatacles i the way of ita admission in or the consti’utional amendment which b himself proposed Fyjteenth - The Prosident, having thus coafilently completed his ** worl »f restoration,” turng on Con. gress snd calls its acts nsurpation, notw! thata that Congress has never ordered the call.ing o latures, appointed provisional governcas, dictated constitutions, or sot asi he governorsele the poople. Congress has pewer over the su'pject of ree struction—lot the President be witness for it; but the Prosident asserts-that it has no other ‘dusiness except what the President bas ar cogated, Unless Congress chooses L) admit the me'a whom he caused o bo elected, withont any further Gonstitutioual guar- auty equally binding on all the Szates—a guaranty perfoct eorrespondence with the President’s own origi- nal secommendation—he declares that Congress is nsurpatory. Who is the real asurper? The Congress, which stands by Mr. Johugson's original professions, or the Prasident, who ropuifiates all that be said a year ’ The Prosident insista, not very strongly, that he has boen earrying out tha lste President Linceln's plan of reconstruction. Wa have already shown the complete falsity of this protanse by showing Ar, Lincoln's own declarations ard practice, Mr Lincoln, like Mr, Johnson (804 his sommunication to Gov. Sharkey), boligvd inat restoraion was sublock to Congross, 1y beliovi 7 beliovi E taApprov tationally W CFery- wiato “a ropublican form of government,” s Bo wight bave added: “to pro- vids for the gemeyal oeljer The Prosidont s oriled thy mwasa®™® 4t Momplis (0 mo politioal cause, but tw ‘*au unsettled conditiom of socioty.” What does he thick of the ome at New- Orleaus, which opened such A fierco war om & relie of the late murdered Prosident’s policy *—surely & rolic to be treated carefully by his succewsor. Finally, comparing what Mr. Johnsou said and what ho contrarily said, what he has dono contrary to whit he did, and what ho bas said and done contradicting® both act and profession, we ak the jury of the Amer- ican people what ground-and-lofty policy has broughk about all this topsy-turvy? y Mr. Vallandigham, in a letter to his Dayton (Ohio) organ, denies that the Philadelphia Conven- tion * was & Democratic Convention,” and that *‘the Democratic party is bound by either its platform oe itsaddress.” He likewise says that the Democratia Souators and Representatives ““ ought to have knows and some of them did know that the secret purpose of the Convention was to break up the Democratis party;” so the Vallandighammite Copperheads would not go into the meeting until its managers gave the assurance that *“ it was no part of their purpose te form a mew party, sod at the Couvention to give up both the new name aud the new party for the present.” This disclosure, added to what Mr. Val- Iandigham says following, is all that we want to make plain, beyond all doubt, that the Convention of Doo- little, Dick Taylor, Orr & Co., was an unmeaning and valueless dumb-show and was ** without form and void:" “ But tha danger is vot all passed yet, and it bohoovos the of the Democracy to seo to it that their ‘leaders,’ sa 10 more mistakes. Codperation is ouo thimg; d fasion are quite another. The next Ndod Convention must aud will bs Domocratic, and assembled undee the auspices of the Democracy as a party. The 'National Union Committee’ has been permitted to strut aod fret ite brief bour ou the stage; the mimic monarchs and tinsel kioge have played their parts, while the Democratio superaumer- on the boards and behind the sceucs, and the Demooratia crowds in the auditorium—pit, dress-cirelo, galieries ali— have lent themselves to exalt the swelliog scene. But the “rebearsal’ is now over, +nd the nctors who so vastly enjoyod their ge s airs and state, and who for & time seemod M’ to fancy themselves the characters they rmnhl. are mero men again. When the great drama in real lifs bogies, other scenes will be enacted and other men per| - The Texas Convention, which sent delegates to the Randall Wigwam, charged the Radicals with falee- hood in saying that the people of the Stats wers “yiolent and vindictive toward Northern citizens snd adherents to the Federal Union during the late war.” Yesterday we printed a summary of the laws passed by the Texas Legislature during the war, which show the truth of the charge. Allegiance to the Union was made a penitentiary offense, and misprision of treasom forany one not to denounce a Union man. Now the accounts from Texas show that without such laws the Rebels continue to act in their spirit. NorTH CAROLINA bas rejected her revised Consti- tution by a majority of nearly 3,000, The Newber Daily Times of the 23d inst. says: * There is now. no doubt, but that the new constitution bas been rejected, and that fact we consider bad enor l"m misreprosenting the cause of its defart. Wo Bave b based its rejection npon the ground of opposition to President Johnson's theory of reconstruction, and we now repeat that that is the trus cause. In every county, 8o far as our ki - edge extends, whers the leading men of influence are and honestly lugporl?l’l of Mr. Johoson's policy, was carried by Landsome majorities. while in countise wharn this alasa of our fellow-citizens hold the Ruffia dootrins, that Mr. Johnson is a usurper and cannot call Conventions, &o., to remodel and resuscitate State governmenta, ranfication was lost by largs majorities. ' Let the truth be tid, though® the heavens fall.’ Henry Ward Beecher been invited to act as Chaplain for the Johnsou Soldiers’ Convention aé Cleveland, and it is to be hoped will consider such & courtesy an insult. Chaplain Moody, about whom the story is told that dv:ing the siege of Nashvillo be prayed and Mr. Johnson swore for its deliverance, is to be the Chaplain of the Pittsburgh Union Soldiers" Convention, and Mr. Beecher may profit by his ample. Mr. Moody still prays as loyally as ever, but) now he kneels to the President to implore him. toy stand up like & man —_— The journal edited by the Chairman of the National{ Committee appointed by the Convention which nomi- nated Lincoln and Johnson labors to show that the platform just adopted at Philadelphia is subatantially identical with that adopted at Baltimore in 1364, If you believe this, Mr. Chairman, wby have you net called a National Convention of that party to set forth its view of the present state of affairs? Why not invite all the Unionists of '64-to your Philadel- phia gathering? What were you afraid of? Hon. (iarret Davis, Senator from Kentucky, is ona the magnates of the Natiomal Union Jobnson purty. It is bat a faw weeks since he proclaimed’in tha Senate: ++ Pass your Freedmen's Bureaubill and Civil Righta bill, and henceforth I am the enemy of your Government, and will spend the feio freble remmants of my life in efforta to overthrow it.” —Mr. Raymond’s Address closes with a kindred menace. These foiks are first-rate Unionists when thay everything th em———— can h; The World has truly declared that the Southern Confederacy failed because nearly balf its inhabit. ants bad a direct personal, palpable interest in: ite overthrow. Such being the obvious truth, what shall wa think of the hoesty aud good faith of those pro- fossod Unionists who resisted and reviled the- polioy of Ewancipation © What says The World » — Mareus L. Viard, Governor of NewsJersey, h-[ gziven Henry J. Raymond another proof of the genoralt detostation of his conduct, in a manly- letter wieh we print elsewmhere. Mr. Raymomd wail earned thi indignant rebake when he inv 1 Govy Ward to joia he betragal of his party. He shouid bave kaowni botter. ALl men are not Cowans aud Doolitties —— e The Union men of Pennsylvania est:mate Geary's majority at 3,000, Unfortunately, the eleotion tak place in October, for if we cou'd postpons it a fo \omstrations of Rebel insciance and{ most eloct him unanimously.! gth of the Uaion parlyy 2 of ita pos months the dor Northern treason would lay adda to tho st lates of Eve for paoot aceun Wo have the best of authority for stating that A’ jor-Gien, D E. Sickles, commanding the Depart-| mont of the Sotth, has not authorized the uss of Lig pame i connection with the Cleveiaud C Jivention, and declines, whilo on daty in his present commaud, to tako part in political movements. e o The Union mea of Lexington, Kentucky, bave sp. pointed delegates to the Philadelphia Couventiom Every day adds to its importavce, and shows how thoroughly it will reprasent the patriotsm of the Bou B k Rogers cectitied, in sfon, that “*the Address™ of Mr. & Couvention, 18 8 Wo trust Mr, Ray. late Jolnsou speech at Wad Raymond at tho late Philadel masterpicce of statesmanshi mond’s ambition is now satisfied The publication of The New-Orieans Triburax bas been resumed. We infer from this that Gen. Fberdan is too prond to ondure that a logal journal idould be suppressed by the wiob, aud (Las sssured ¢he proprice 40t that their lives and property shall 40 protected. e We biave, inour correspondeace from Ottawa, an fmportant statemant af the eondiglon of the Canade baaks,