The New-York Tribune Newspaper, September 1, 1866, Page 4

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Coxanrsss anp Emeize Waress ars used with ths greslost sudcoss in Wiy traatment of dyspopels, tausows dlesassn, ot aad chenmatism, sod Amngements. BROADIWAY T « THIS EVENING-NAPOLEON~M Liiugwoll, Mise Alice Gray. ACK'S THEATER THIS EVENING (TANUS O'BRIEN —=Daw Beyaat A, 1 Davoaport, Charles Kisher, 8. 2. Rinzgold, Geo. Mollwd, 1. ¥ P Williameon, G. F. Brows, Miss Ross Gooke, Mre Mack , Airs. John Selion S WINTER GARDEN TS EVENING ot 8-ODONNERL'S MISHION-Mr, Lo X K o o Je D T E M By o 4l WOOD'S THE o, A THIS EVENING—HANLON BROTY O'NBILL=MASTER CAKON. aceofala, constipation, i3 with dacided advantage in palamonary complainte Diaboten. gravel and ail disordsen of tua kidasys sod blsddar find e «ffoctive remody la WAl Cotumpian Waree, gy apa-fally sxealloat o dissawss Provcian ro Wonexs. Thoss wators boiog, Poan, NATonat UNADICTERATSD, may ba taken with 8 safoty which n3 ARTIPIOAL PREPARATIOY canrival Thoir favor aud offects ars alike plosssat. They lmpsr y to the complexion which 0sn s’y by eotained Thair passvacing ase v Mary Cas ER LERI-MI# KATHLEEN FRENCH THEATER. EVENINO—DEBORAH, THE DESERTED JEWESS— acote—Maiiuee si 1. BARNUM'S AMERICAN MU ¥ AND EVENING —THE = MAGIC SCHOOLMASTER — Mr. ¢ Fox and full compe HUNDRED THOUSAND CURTOSITIE ) Mise a (raahnen aud be fron from obatruotions bly reators haalth and vigor At wholosals 0.1y by Horoaxus' Sowy, when the syste: will almost i £ sale by sil Druggiots 2 4 o Proprietors, OLYMPIC THEATER. THIS EVENING, et 6—last Night of TH B WITCH- No. 92 Bookman-at., YOUNG ACTRESS—Mr. Lamy, the Welb Sisiocs, (bo Fomler New-York. foras A gorgeous g — B —— i Waesisr & WiLSoNs LOUK-STITON BEWING Rt full compeny. O ‘wale, THE ELFIN VE TERKACK GARDEN THIS BVENING at #—~THEO. 1 OARDEN CONCERT, siash concert, Maomixs and Borronuous Macuim No. 625 Broad “Cartes Viguotte, §3 per dozen; Duplicates, - ne . 169 Chatbam wWork Daily Cribune. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1836, ESTRAL . Baventy A HOUSE MINSTRLS—~Mick Sands €. Heury (RVING HALL, THIS_EVENING—ORAND CONCERT-M Moster B. Mo'eubaver, Mr. Win. Castla, Mr 8. (o W. Colby. THIS FVENI LD, BOWERY TN On, vtk TiCKED NEWS OF THE DAY, OF LEAVE W FE=Mr. O. L. Fox, Mua Faoay Heeriog. s R T Business Notices. FOREIGN NEWS. Wo bave nows by the Atlante Cable to the 3lst ult. ratiications of penco have bean exchangsd botween Powers, Detatls of tho proceadings Tug GreaT CALivoryia Wixe Derot! ligerent Ouax Co.. No 8 Cedark., Now-York. Jitadelphia Convention have reachod England, o vol — | and the news bis cansed an immodiato advance in the 7‘.- Advartiseneat i o T The Times exulta over the I.}..-a »f Confodr ate honds, So Couvaent, and arguos great things from its action. prossing is 1ho demand from Canada for mors troop that another cavalry roziment is about to bo seut ovor. The . 1zar has ontertnined the United States Embassy at a ban Worns ov VITAL INTRREST. and propose exity and perpetuity W ill the taousands who read columus of (tivolous vorbiags overy | of the Republic. ‘The poasants of Russia have addressod sssing cordial fraternal feolings toward the United States, Cholern is spreading in Rus- United Statos steamer has saluted the Brazilian 1a, in apology for the seizure of the Florida. avo hooa repulsed by the Argentine Jouvy 108808 ) lotter to Mr. Fox, ex day devote five minutes to the perussl of a fow (acta which coucera thom nearly? Our text is Health, and we wiil pul our commeutscy inte e nuishell IWeakuess is indirectly tho cause of Wil wickuess; for € nataro be strong enough to resist the wocbid inlluonces which pro- duce illaess, of couree they are power'oas. Seek strangth, thecelore Tuvigorsie and reguiste the system. Whea the quicksiiver Tangs from 80 1o 90 degrees in the shade, the most athistio are eufeebi-d DOMESTIC NEWS. wol the wosk are prostrated. 1t is at sucis # time that such a0 80 | 00 v g bion Course, yesterday, thore was & race be- twoen W. T. Clack, Sid hcats, best three in Joe Crocheron was the winuer. vigorator as HOSTETTAR'S NTOMACH BITTERS i uegentlynceded. What ace the efocts of this rare Vogelsble Tonis Would that all who have known its beasfits could condemso their ¢x- |y oacingtailer of the Nassau Bauk, George H. Perionce tuto this paragrap'. They would tell ¢ | Briggs Ry'nun» has boen arrostad for abstracting over their health, they must use this great safeguard $100,000 Trom the coffers of that institution. He lost the fnflaences. They would exhort the wesk Lo dis p at fxco. Briggs 1s o married man, 35 years of age, 3 aud impure stimulants and cliog to this wholesome sud un | aud n tonc and alterative as the shipreckad mariner would olfag to & raft | ortaty of the Toterior Harlag, whose resignation was o0 stormy sea. They would, of dyspeptic pauze retiored, of app> | in some short time ago, rotired frow office yestody Ute resturad, of shattered neisen roatrung, of headachos cured. of disy | b2 was succeoded by Mr. O. H. Browning. Judge E ordered fanctious regul! Jdris diswipatad, of minmati | monds, Commissioner of the Land Office, also vacated his disdares baftlad of fever d, of liver complaluta arcestod, | posi which 18 now oceupied by Mr. Wilson. of hoat, privation sud ted, swd choor(ul A telograph from Liout.-Gen. Sherman to Gen. Grant wows tontorad. Such are statas that the roports of Iudisu troudles on the Plains Lave heen greatly oxaggoratod. No difficulty bas occurrod, none is approbended, sud no wmnall bauds of Tudiaus ace roaming sbout intent on mischiel. Danial Byrno, late warder of Richmond Bridewell, Dub- lin, is ot with a lettor cxonsratng C. O. 1. R. Stephens | frotn the chargss of being & British apy, and explaining, fix Toctod. i0 & measure, how the cccaps was ¢ THE PENDING CANVASS. 1t is rumorad that George P. Lincoln, who was lately removad from the Postmastemhip of Brooklyn, will be the Union candidate for the Third Congressional District of Now-York. Stnator Grimes of Towa has declinof to be a candidate for roélection. Whon he serves out his prosent term, he will have boon 33 years in public life, begiuning as a mem- ber of the First Térritorial Legisiative Assembly. Accounts from Tennessee say that the corn crop in that State is groater than during previous year within the memory of the oldest inhabi e Mestings were held in the differont Assembiy Distriets of this city last evening, and delegates wero appointed to | sttand thé State Convention in Syracuse Sept. 4 J. 0. Broadhead is the Copperhead candidate for Con- grossional honors in the I1d District of Missouri. CITY NEWH. Yesierday there were two fatal cases of cholors in this s bitherto borne au irr proachable cliaracte # They purify, strongthen and iuvigorato. Tuey ereate & heaithy sppotite. chauze of wator and diet. yetewm. strengihen the They pusify the breath end cure sonr stomach A Eiteyhepin i o o T Tver Complaint and Nervous Headsohs. wis have cured moie cases of chronic weakness boly and want of vitei onergy, (hax any moedicine the wor'd ba ‘roduced. Tiey are particuturly sdapted te delicate females and persons of sedontary occupstions. " Obseive (ho proprietors’ private sismp over the cork of each bottle. 1f auy dealer Las not got it. it to P. H. Duagr & Co FiFry PER CENT VED By Ui BaBuTs LAsoR-SAvING Soar. | B. T. materisls, CONTAINING X0 sre the most_ delicate fabric, e will pot shrink after used in hard o st water. od for wool It may be d ot Rinds. Oue pound ' —_ e Direliioss | city: 4n Brooklyn thare was ouly one. Frou all sccounts oont W e soft sosp from | { 18 little danger of the disease agsin making its ap- a circuler containing ona pouud of this sosp. F Aa¥l dizections for mee priviel i German, Ask yost @iocex for *B. T. Babbitt's Soap. and take no otber. Now. 64,65, 66, 81, 08, 0, 0. 14 Ir YOU HAVE A SUFFERING CHILD, @0 wot let your prejudices. or the prejudices of others, stand batween $hand the relief that will be absclutely sare to follow the use of Mas. Wimson's S00tuING Syve. Mitions of mothers can testify that | 440 0 perfocily vafe end reliable rer 1t reiieves the child from @oln, and cures dysentery and disrchos. foflommatton, cores wind colic, and carries the infant safely throngh | Uhe teatbing pericd. Cranps, CoLic, CHOLERA, Summer’ ('omplmm,; Dysentery, Diarrhes, end all Affections of the Bowsls, are cured < y 2 B’ 4 promptly and effeciaally by Dr. . JATNK'S Camuinative Bataax. EF" On the second page of to-day's issme will be etog plossant to tho taste, it 1 rendily taken by children; and baviog Jfound important news from South America, Commercial smaiotalued its popularity for over ity yoars. the proprietors conte | Matters, and Market Reports. doutly rssommend It as & Sandard Houseliold Hewedy. oid by all Druggins BravTiFoL Aaik. —Chevaliors Life for the Hair Toops the Lead c'ean and tie buic ealthy, restorer gray bair to it erigiasl color, twparts pew lfe and strength to the weakest halr, stope 4 falliog ot is & delightful buir dressing, and unparaileled as a rene. &y for nervous boadsche, Retsrénces, our best physicisus 8od chem- i the country. So and (aubionsbie haie-drossers, ‘end st my office, No. 1,123 Broadway pearance to any extent, To conssquence of the raiu, the meeting of Soldiers and Sailors that to have taken place last evening, in Union-square, was postponed until Monday. 71 Waalitngton at., N. Y. STOCKS AND MARKETS (Gold 18 higher, and closes 142). The extremes of the day T Asia at Boston brings 814,000 {n specie, and the Arizona from Aspinwall §1,7,0.¢, Government secu- ;{lu. without exception, are lower and dull st the clove. orc is & steady flow of 7.5 aud 6 per cents from the coun- {1y for sale. 7The effeot of Lhe recsat advance is (9 BILTACL 6. carities from all parts of the Union, and to cause an socumula tion of them bere. At the Second Board the kel was heavy. Money on call s 45 per cent. and stock houses make up their sccounts readily. Eeat short bills can be soid at 5 per cent, aad good at 5j @6 per cent. Tt softens the gutns, redaces The Eighteenth Ward of this city has sent a re- markable delegation to the Philadelphia Convention. Hawilton M, Wm, H. Evarts, Peter Coopor, Daniel Drew, are a few of the prominent names, Judge Durant, who has beon quoted as an enemy of the Constitutional Convention of Louisiana, has now explained that his chief reason for opposing its meeting was the danger to its members, Guyry', Your Carprrn's Hats. Lavies’ and € Fuks, Ac. J. I Tamwr, o, 400 Brosdway. We are receiving letters from all parts of the State, inclosing subseriptions for Tug TRIBUNE withdrawn from our neighbors who have supported the policy of killing. Some of these we publish at request of the writers, Renator Harris will leave for Philadelphia to-day to sttend the Convention. Senator Morgan finds it im- possible to go, but states that he trusts that the true and tried men from the South who assemble there will receive assurances of sympathy and encourage- went in which be will cheerfully unite, B o Commitiee, sppolated by the ote in June, 1854, will be held at York, cu Mondsy. Sept. 3, at 12 hairman. Ler TEEM LBAVE THE FIEL There is no longer opesing for other and fuferior Hair Dyes, since CHRIETADORO'S | peouion was latioduced Very seon ADORO & fain Dys will be the only ove veed by ladi | Nothing is sked for 1 bot. tril wnd 0o favor. Apglied and wold, wholes !?fl Wig and Sca'p atablisbument. ATIONAL UX105 EXEC of the Natioss! Usion Exec Usion Convention at Bel'in Rator Houss, in the Citg of New- o gieekacen HExuy J. Rav0rD, D, Sprunt, Secretary. A - WiLLcoxX & Gress SEwiNe MACHINE. “ftapeam is stronger and less Yable to rip u use or whar, than the The mussacre of negroes near Baltimore, in which T A R e [ ol e loingoeihhindes’ | 4 camp-meeting was broken up, and colored wor- T EE T r— i 3 © CaTaRRE.—Norten's New Remedy for Catarrh shipers beeten and shot, while praying to God, may not be directly traced to the policy which permiised ;': &“' nfl’-’“&"&fi‘i’.fifl'&"&‘ ‘sestoiog v i : L4, B R vers & o s forsaa. forewwt the New-Orleans massacre, but “here is certainly an for pawphlet to JERx1T Nowtow, No. 1} Aun-st. intimate relation between the official action which a fir .‘A!lm Lzo murders the hopes of a loyal race and the diabolical -!_:Ld bate which is gratified by the blood of individuals, The Rev. Henry Ward Beecher has written a lotter approving of the Cleveland Convention, which shows thet the war Las taught bim nothing, while he has forgotten Lis own teachings. He is ready at once to abandon the freedmen to their old masters, to with- draw all military protection from Union men in the South, while every day shows that our armies are necessary to prevent other massacres like that of New-Orleans. Mr. Beecher's sophistries are answered by the telegrams of Gen. Steridan, He cannot ac- cept the Chaplaincy of the Cleverand Convention, and he is fortuuate that accident prevents him from pray. ing for & eause which, we fear, will too soon earn all I ey A Cure warranted or no charge made, Oout, Auhiey, eured by De Firs vogeteb Haduced {is bostle; Agents, e s et G cpta o) e > TioN | ForeTHOrGHT ' '—Have your Medicinee oo Sromme's et Graduated Botte, thereby obaising P O Honnry Buos. Avens, N. Y. ¥ I “:I‘-—!fluml:l Iuvl“ B‘,mnl'i; a mw-‘n viood the test ot aleve mua-mm’-'yh e lected Qe vumbers, of our own our pew patent ALUN sad rosdwey, Brst foor. ‘M Livies, 6o To MiLLER & Co.'s, whej ¢ .unf-utw.m-:hy:n:;iz’flfl good men's curses. X 1 CHINBS—LOCK 87i7¢B.— | My, 8, Parker Coon, st & recent Democratic meet- Yur Hows Sivise Mg K Er g |"H“|§&;’£mwnfimx'wfl? ingin Milwaukee, declared Mr. Johuson's conduct . “rsa NomALESS LOCK-BTITOR BEWING: | “greater than that of Washington—it was worthy of our ' & Ce, No. X.v. | Savior. By bis conduct, Andrew Jobnson bad placed himeelf above all other human beings—he was greater thau Ciesar, greater than Washington. But one per- son—and be God—bad been tempted as he was and resisted.” This blasphemy has never been paralleled. In & similar spirit The Wilmington (N. C.) Dispatch thus curses Mr. Stanton, not for what he is doing, bat fofwhat he has done: ** When hig mortal gareer ends, ho will basten below to receive the avenging tortures | which have been prepared for bim in tho infuriated liell ta which he is surely destined, where the crack- Erasic £100K1 Susei Ba T s Co's Ra Co T O iy cianes, i LOOK-BTITCH_REWING-M ACHINES—Dcrt Fromexca bxwine Macw ¥z Cafuv. No. 505 Brasdwary. vED Look-ST17cH Machings for Tallors and i Groven & Baxen Sewixe Macuifs Cowraxt, 8y, od s Guont b v | his d'w arhiurg L gty NEW.YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, there, where at last in soms small dogroa the ovil he s done may be properly punished.” e— THE PHILADELPHIA CVONVENTION. The Convention which will bs organizad on Mon- day in Philadelphia was called by eminent, fire-tried Southern Unionists, aud originally contemplated a gathering of delegates from the South only. It was called to meet in Philadelphia because (as The Na- tional Intelligencer truly averred) such a Convention would not be permitted to deliberate in any Southern City. Tnmany localities which will be represented, dolegates have beon chiosen secretly, because publicly advertised meetings to choose them would have been broken up by violence, s the Constitutional Conven- tion of Louisiana was on the 30th of July. The *‘ Bor- der States” of other days have sent large and able deh‘gstibus;‘ and it is probable that each of the fif- toon ex-Slave States will have representatives present. It having been suggested that dalegations from the old Free States, commissioned to couvey to the bunted, stricken loyalists of the South assurances of Northern sympathy and fellowship, would be wel- comed, such delegations have been appointed from noarly all the steadfastly loyal States. Probably not loas than twenty ex-Governors are among them, with at least one hundred Members of Congress, Some of these will be precluded from attendimg Ly the ur- gency of home duties; but there will, nevertheless, Lo gathered at Philadelphia & strovger and abler ran 8oils Convention than ever yet met on Ame; We presumo the Southern delogates will first organ- ize by themselves, and that those from the North will do likewise; but a common fesling, a common purpose, insures that they will be practically one Convention, whether formally so or not. And this will be the first distinetively, avowedly anti-Slavery delegated assemblage wherein all the Soutbern States will bave We anticipate from its delibera- beneticent tothe Union and its been represented. tions results si unconditional de e PRESIDENTIAL COURTRSIES, Times feal polit el geuersly respecta s bare may fairly bo coneratulated blo beariog during the Prosident’s —That is the simple truth, We, who do not ap- prove the President's policy, did not forget the con- sideration due to bis bigh office. We could not ap- pland the faithless politician; but we did not forget that Andrew Jobuson is Chief Magistrate of a Re- public of Thirty Miilions. Buck being the case on one side, what shall we say of the other? What of this guest of the prople who repeatadly, while entertaioed and honored by men of all parties, made barangue after harangue charging the great body of those who elected him with being | “opposad to a restoration of the Union,” and saying of them, ** I intend to fight out the battle with North- ern traitors Will The Times give us its opinion of the propriety and decency of this sort ol language nn der the circumstance e E NATIONA COMMITTERE, Mr. Henry J. Raymond was & member of (bat National Convention of the Republican-Uniou party whereby Abraham Lincoln was renominated for President, with Andrew Johnson for Vice-President, at Baltimore, in June, 1464, Ho was there placed ou the National Union Committee, whersof he was made Cbairman. That Committes appointed an Executive Committee, whereof Mr. Raymond was also made Chairman, with Mr. N. 1, Sperry of Connecticut as Sec- retary. Neither of these Committees, so far as we are aware, has met or otherwise acted ince Mr. Lincoln's reeleotion, The Evemng Post haviug urged that the Northern | Republicaus should pay more attention 1o their Bouthern allies, and the Southern loyalists having resolved to meet in Couvention at Philadelphia next woek, spontancous movements Logive thew an earnest of Northern sympathy and support were made in various quarters; and, among them, several members of the National Committee nnited in a call for & meet- ing of that Committee at Philadelphia on ) nday next. Several days after this oall was issued, Messre, | Raymond and Sperry put forth call for the Erecutive mmitteo of the National Committee o weet in thes City on the day aforesaid—a manifost dodge to dis- tract the Natignal Committee and preciude or weaken its meeting at Philadelphia as called. The vir & Baxiw's Hioiust i:[nlmul ELastic | Aapias Mocwiym (or lahy ves. Fo. “‘,:g.,- { ling blazes aro leaping and licking their tongues in VERDEINS, Tow-Vork, | foftms o of bis aliital, . Maya JuskGed | 5o co, heston Lis opproach | those miserable promises 1o Py, wee World thereupon flies to the succor of its recent con- vart—stating his ease as follows “In the neual course of thiags, the Repubiiean Kenco ear 1808 Dt Mr. tended the e Radis wront rage, and detormiued to depose ommittee. d. by im bilndelphia me . But the scheme cucoun hils diffcalty: that Mr. Raymond is the ouly person who has suthority to call a meeting of the Committer, and he was wot very likely to load himaolf to the Radicals to bo his own execatioser. Sowe members of the Committee, therefore. iwsued & gard of his sutbority, for & meeting of the Erecutiv mittes in Philadeiphia ou the 34 of Seplomber, that is, Mouday.” —No such thing. The Philadelpbia call is not for & meeting of the Erecutive Committee, but for a meet- ing of the entire National Committee. The assertions that * the Radical members” of either Committee *‘fell into a great rage,” and ** determived to depose” Ray- mond, are utteny gratuitous. 8o is the cool assump- deiphia Conventi Committee fall into him from his chairmanstip and ejoct bim from th They would tLereby formally excommun o lcation, sl other Republicans who f tion that * Mr. Raymond is the only person who has | authority to call & meeting” of the National Com- mittee. It would bo strange indeed if that Committee were paralyzed and precluded from ever meeting again, because its Chairman had turned renegade. As to Raymond's dread of an “executioner,” it is only another illustration of the truth that “The thief doth fear each bush an officer.” His dodging the meeting of the National Conmnit- tee of the great party which has hon d him, and which be has betrayed, looks badly o bim; but a quornm of the Committes will doubtiess convene in Philadelphis, whether the Johnsonites attend or stay sway. They probably. act wisely in keeping ont of sight; but the Committee will be no more incom- moded by their absence than it would by their pres- ence, THE ADVANCE The Times—which, like a crooked mirror, distorts everything it reflects, makes the ugly fair and the fair frightfal—will net even let the Atlantic cable rest in peace on the bottom of the sea, but twists it into an argument for the President’s policy. Itbas claimed that the Randall Convention would raise the value of United States securities in Europe, and upon that empty sesumption bas accused the Union party of seeking to ruin the National finances. Because the Union party repudiates the Convention, The Times bas affected to dread o terrible fall in Five. Twenties and Seven-Thirties in the European markete, But the cable will not be made an instrument of this calumny, We ask the attention of the people to the following important dispatch: LoNDON, August 31,—Advices received here of the actwn of the Philadelphia Convention have had the fest to materially advance the price of Rebel bonds, Here is the testimony of the infallille barometer. Evyery vacillation of the wa® was faithfully repeated in the rise and fall of Rebel and Union honds in Europe. The surrender of the Rebe'lion bauished the Rebel | securities from the Bourse a\d the Exchange. One T0r ALilGab & WOTlidues uy (ugs. pted in tho Now | hope of the destruction of the Uuion, again this oountry in the marts of Europe, sud the Ran- dall and Doolitile Convention is the cause. There conld not be amore startling proof of the uttor waot of nationality in the P'resident’s policy than the riso of Rebel honds whicl it has caused, It is a terrible trath that the encouragement he has given to the South against the almost universal wish of the loyal North, and to the surprise of the world, has given the Rothschilds and Barings reason for belioving that the Rebellion will rodeem its pledges. The Philadelphia Convention was his creature; the Rebels he had pardoned, the office- holders be had appointed, the men he bad seduced from their allegiance to the party he had deserted, these were its members, and their action was solemnly approved by him. Yet this action has “had the effoct to materially advance the price of Rebel bonds!™ Mr. Jobnsou shed tears when he heard what the Conventiont had done; it is time for himto weap aghin, DOING DOUGLAS, The President complains that the Froedmen's Bu- rean costs too much money, while we are of opinion that its absence would cost us a great deal more. Those who do not think that the President himsolf is too expensive an article will find no objection, of course, to the extravagant escort which the President takes with him on his political funeral tour to the tomb of Douglas, The procession, exclusive of a great many supernumeraries who are paid by the job, is about as follows: First: The President of the United States, whose salary is $25,000 a year, and over $2,000 per montb, aftor all expenses are paid by special appropriation of Congress. Second: Gon, Grant, Adwiral Farragut, and Gen. Rawlins, who aro paid for rations, horses, servants, &e., &¢., in addition to a plump body of salary, all of which they deserve nobly. Third: Secrelary Seward and Secrelary Welles, who receive jointly about $16,000 a year, after other expensos are earofully provided for. Fourth: Gen. G. A. Custar, Admiral Radford, Gen, McCullum, and a balf dozen brevet brigadiors and colonels, all drawing pay from the Government and touring gratis. Their items for servants, horses, rations, ete., etc., stretch out like the tails of & Basbaw. Fifth: Gens. Yullerton and Steedman, pen- satod royally for their jaunting erusade against the Freedmen's Bureau, and now entertained at the same figure to look on whils Congress is abused. Sizth: Senator Patterson, Gen. Rousseau, Marchal Gooding, Mr. Doolittle, Surgeon-Gen. Darnes, (it is impossible to travel without a surgeon, though the exchequer must bleed for it,) and a large number of inconspleuous gentlemen, including Major Seward, Mr. Spofford aud gentlemen who find thei the train, and are “ the guests of the na tue of an expensive batred of ** Radicals.” We have thus condensed the Presidential muster, | which is longer or shorter according to different | stages of the journey Douglas-ward, and we have, no | doubt, omitted the names of a number of first-class expensive guosts, whose botel bills are a proverb for ! hight, dopth and breadth. Say that the President’s | tour, before it is over, will eost the nation a hundred | thousand more, aud it becomes an interesting | query who is to pay for it? If the President, {as we have heard it rumored, bas an idea | of returning to Washington by way of the Sonth, we | will only have to double the bill. It is too much to | be expected that gentlémen who denouncs Congress will do it at their own expense. We make ooly a | rough guess of what the traveling libel on the | representatives of the people hikely to cost & nation of tax-payers, how mach the Presi. dent's disjointed declamation and the Secrotary’s te- dions jibes will aflict us per word or yard, and what the hotel bills of ail these extra-paid conservative gen- | tlemen who gramble about the Freedmeu's Bureau | will come to at a given rate. Whatever the amount way be, this poor, abused Congress of ours must foot the bill magnanimously. ING REVOLUTION ENGLAND. £0 absorbing has been the interest of the recant war in Lurope that but little attention bas been bestowed upon the movement now progrossing in England, which prowises sooner or later to bring about the most radical changes in the logislation and the Government of that country, ‘We refer to the agltation for Parliamentary Reform. The defeat of the moderate measure of Reformi introduced into Parliament by the late Russell-Gladstone Ministry has led to & result the very opposite of that which it was confidently anticipated by the opponents of the bill would be prodaced by their antagonistic action and their unexpected success, They had evidently formed # false estimate of the state of the publie mind on the subject of Reform. ‘They mistook guies- cence for apathy, patience for indifference; aud the absence of clamor for change they regarded as proof positive of contented submission with the existing state of things. They were troubled with no scruples, no apprehensions as to consequences, in defeating Mr. Gladstone's bill, for the very solacing reason, to them- ¢s, that,the country, prosperous beyond all prece- ] dent, cared little or nothing for Reform. But they have be ofully undeceived. The defeat of the late Administration on a question of popular rights at w THE IMPE) | once became the signal for & general uprising of the l masses, and now Rom every part of Engiand wo have news of mammoth Reform meetings being held, at which the greaest enthusiesm is manifested in favor of an extension of the suffrage. any concession whatever has produced a correspond- ing boldness on the part of the people and their leaders, who now demand the full measure of justice. At the recont mass meeting in Binningham, the key- note of manhood suffrage was struck, John Bright, in his speech, declariug himself in favor of the prineiple; and, judging frow the present temper of the people, and from the enlightened zeal and indomitable energy of the principal promoters of the Reform moyement, it geeme certain that nothing short of an extension of the suffrage to this point will satisfy tbe popular mind, The * evil day " for the ruling classes is evidently approaching. The last Ulow aimed by Toryism at popular rights Lae recoiled upon its own head with terrible force; and it would seem that the time is mot distant when the English will bhave a popular government in reality, and not a6 has been the case heretofore, in name only, We regard England as on the verge of a wide-reaching political revolution, destined to sweep away privilege, to open up avery avenue of publio bonor to humble ‘merit, to abolish those odious distinctions which exist at present botween an imperious oligarchy and the great bulk of the people, to unbar the doors of the { reat national seats of learning to the people, with- out regard to the religious oreed of the applicants for admission, and to give the workingmen a fair chance in the race of life, In the concussions which must precede the new order of things, the monarchy may remain unshaken; but a new deseription of sristooracy—the order of merit-—will be certain to dis- y of feudalism, which has Lecome an place the no anachronism. The N. Y, Times &8, “ Passing trom Loulsiana to Missouri, wo in Anmh'"'n-;pn. ‘At New-Orleans the Rt few uificant minority, effoctive only for mischief. In Missouri they huve the upper hand. ‘They have encoted laws to suit thelr purposes. fn.m ted tests o pery to thelr exelusive + Fleteher a willing fnstrument in all Wwhat Missouri is under Radical rale 1" na" the Radicals aro not an insig- power, and have fu C ] Thoy are & majority in that city and The audacious and violent opposition of the Tories to | 1866. disgrace | franchised, doprived of public eduoation, of any voice in the Government, and aystomatically robbed, by Rebel $tato and local anthority,of the arms thoy carned in fighting for the Life of the Union. And whea a Cou- vention meets to devise means to enfranchise thew,: it is set upon by Rebel Thugs and sooras of it3 backers atrociouely murdered. ¥l +In Missouri,” the Rebels are distranchised on one side and tie ks unfrauckised on the other. Po- litieal power is restricted by the State Conatitution to the loyal Whitee, The Blacks quiotly submit to this, the Rebels mean to vote in defiance of the Conatitu- [ Radical] purposes,” simply deny the Right of Suf- frage to Robels, active or passive; the “tests” are oaths of non<omplicity with the Rebellion; and no one but a Rebel, in deed or heart, can possibly be troubled by them. These **laws” and **tests” “snit the purposes” of the Radicals by excludiog Rebels from power, and not otherwise. Of course, the Rebels mean to vote, and will vote. Their votes may not be connted in the State canvass, but they will poll them, though at tbe point of the bayonet. Gov. Fletcher, the State Constitntion, the law, the registry, and as much more as you please will not suffice to exclude the votes of Rebels from the ballot-hox. Though there be but forty placesin the whole State where thoso votes will b accepted, they will kriow thos places beforehand, and will be prepared to make the most of them. Had the White Unionists been wise enough, brave enough, to en- franchise the loyal Blacks, all would have been safe. Now, the Rebels will vote while the Blacks canuot; 80 that the result iz doubtful. 80,000 legal votes; the Copperbieads cannot legully poll 50,000; aud yet it is possible that they may play their old Kansas game so boldly as to be a trimuph. Were they to obey the Constitution and law, they would not make a show of serious contest. —_—_— The reason for believing that many of the Southern delegates to the Randall Convention very reluctantly submitted to those of the resolutions which were at all patriotic, is sustained by the protests of the Richmond aud other Southern journals. “In the name of the people of Virginia™ The Lynchiurgh !'irginian solemnly repudiates the loyal pa:t of the platform. * God for- as to acknowledge ourselves to have been ‘trai- tors' and lawless eriminals duriug a four years' lieved ourselves s asserting Constitutional rights, and s honestly vesisting unlawful oppression.” It ** goes hoartily,” however, *for thie objeets of the Couvention,” that is, for the restoration of the South to power. The Mobile Times is unaffected by the em- braces of Gov., Orr aud Gen. Couch. The following is an emphatic example of the defiant spirit in which the Rebels shake their fists at Congress, and demand an entrance o ils halls: **Our lachrymatory powers are much too hard to be moved into action and tarn the fountain of our tears into the channel of repent- anco for what we did and thought, believing it, then as mowe, just aud holy in the eyes of God and man, The *maintained* the authority of the Constitution and | | | | | was obliged to write, resolutions were prepared to avoid hurting auyoody’s In the same breath tho insulting declavationt is rob the States of their social and dowestic instizutions. Is the South—the poor, weak, insulted, aud now pros- trate South—to (all down on her knees, aud beg par- don for the rwrongs she has suffered 1" It is yet too early to hear fully the Southern opinion of the Conven- tion, but the suppression of debate, and the temper | of the Richmond papers, and those from which we quote, indicate that the Rebels will very roluctantly submit to those words for thi Union which, in deference to the North, Mr. Cowan Carefully as the address and feelings, we find that patriots are disgusted with the Convention for its sympathy with treason, and traitors are offended because of its lip-service to the Unfon, i , at its late Commencement, would wot allow Mrs. 8. W, Dodds (a graduate) to read her esany, because she wore a Bloomer Dress. It bas | Joun Faiconer, since been printed. Here is a sawple of it: “‘:::;;:‘ L‘:’:::"::"z" “The alphobet of trua gover has scarcely boen mas | A 'l‘lm.-. ('M“ngln_nqnl:wl‘l:l- tered. Wearestll dllu::ln rd to first principles; ight ts shinin, "0, ment i the law of wocial rel Detter tood, eivil governments wust correapond with them. * And ahall America—sbe who Loasts of Saxon lineage, but in whose veins courses the blood of many n distinet race—sball #ha not be able both to establish and fim.l'v mainiatn & govern- ment based upon the browd principles of Justice t We, of all people, claira that we ure thoroubly eosmogolitan in thougdt 20010 foeling, bemmed in by vo narrow prejudice, per ns conform to our asser it professes to be- A Governmest whose rey d in brain, not 1u ok and s loyal beart. *“(Om the broad pages of history. whether read of human governments, of social relations. of religious belief, vr of sci- entifie knowledge, thore is written—Progress. Religion be. gon with the lowest deptis of idolatry, imworality, aud super- | stition. It now embraces the sublime principies taughs by Jesus. Goverament once meast unconditional obediernce to | Wypieton, Bensuiy ¥. Pipper, oue man., It DOw siguifies something vastiy differeat. 16will | Jackeon 3. Schaite, Siaclair Touse come to mean the est Good to All, (hrough the protection of INDIVIDUAL BIGH It strikes us that such suggestions are worth list- oniug to, oven though they emanate from & Bloomer. — TeNsRssEE.— The Nasheille Gazette (Rebel) thus ponders the different modes of bringing that State ! | once more under Rebel rul 4 The people of Tenneasoe have before them threa alterns- tive courses. among whi ooke ooe. First, they way decide to take th ure eleotions of cutvoting nebise law, Second, they may in b ssiou of the entire St 2t o Il abrogate the Frene. d upas gensral popul .q[ux dded o fourth aiterustive ha he people would ever consent to the per- manent rule of present contemptible oligareby. Of the three jost menti 1 rst is too uncertaln for our ap- rovel; the second postpones our deliverunce too long; the ird (s the speedient and wirent, If the wl it. 11 the proclamation. now expected by some, should be lssusd, entirsly and anequivoeally ren ng all military coutrol of the States, we shall certainly the Conveution. not be in session more than & week, and will cost but lisie woney. Couventivi thal Stae Gowermment ered it possible t Texas RecoNsTRUCTED.—A private letter from Texas contains the following siguificant statement: #'We bave nothing new here. Politics run bigh. Ocr Pro visloual Government suded on the uth of month, aud the 10 Almighty The Radicals can poll | bid that we should ever be so mean and craven | struggle, in which we always declared and be- | j | Sevenreenth Diatrict.—Delegates—Robt, C, Brows, James R, annecessary declaration that the war just closed has the rights of the States, is rather of a derisive natare when read alongside of that declaring that this abominable ontrage and public robbery—the Abolition | | Proclamation—has eradicated Slavery, now and for- at & President, even unaided by Congress, could | it need | nextwas | loch, W. N. Albro, Congrosiio; Juckson, Jobu M. Rulazd. of the city last evening, for th alternates to the Tuion Stats Syracuse, Sept. 5. The foilowing were elocted: First District. —Delogates—T mouth, Oharles P, Shae uu%u‘u:?t"’. Orr, €. Menzel. Wm. E. Smith Secomd Disrict—Delagates: H Dousis Mrk Lanigan, Alternates: Joaeph Behr, with powes to fill va Third Districi—Dolegates: Plumb, William C, Hiona. > 1 8. Duvall A , Willi A T Strorg, Eliot ¢, Cowdin. Kuntz, John Foley, Our Sints Couvention. Hehioharie County has appointed the Hon. 5. H. Coblaahilt; John N. Gandaor, Sharon; Manry E. Absal, Schohare, Altarostes, James Tanner, Joromiah MoCul Clinton County has appoistol 0. K. Wi " John W. Lynch, Plattsburgh; George Wllloo':,“rfnu’ Middlstown, Sullivan Co., has sppointed Gag, c‘n, - Van Wyek, the Hon. H. B. Low, and D. D, MeKoon, ; Tioga Conaty, Owego Distriot, boping that the injustice may i time be remodied; | William D. Lincoln, T. C. Poatt. Queecs County, (Loyal Leagus), has appointsd ¢, tion and Taws. ‘The **laws, euactod to suit their | Strag, Col. Goorgs C. Eiliaon, aad Sacuuel Smith, Primary meatings were held in the Assembly Distriotg Nathan Ki TosContrall James Wisiarsetomgr Lo isirict —Delegates: Owon W. Brenaa: ual Delagates, J. M, Doge aldson, Weidman Dominiok, Cuarlss W. Shaver, Joha §, B. . o election of delogates ang - Convention 1o be hold in Bonl. . Woy. Cuaries G. Loask, Shay, cancies, loy, sr, WA drew Bloakley, James K. ker, Alternates; Thomas G. Bsl s, Thomas Mulligas b . Alternates, Jmp‘. 'i.g\ ;u . Senanth District,—Delegates, Gioorgs B. Dezas. Willism H, Alberteon, Gen. Charles W. I Tr};”n‘h‘;d";;"(:m ghih_District.—Del | lller'r. e Delegates, Jamos McLaren, Ji | Jumes M. MoC |~ Ninth Diatri | Sherwood, Is Oxton, Tugh o Dayton. Alter ner. McKinney, Alteroates, Thomas B. Bills, riin, Samuel L. Kaonedy. ~Dologatos, Clatles S, Spencar. Horatio N, acliog. Altern, Fawira L, Mreiet oo D nates, Alex. McLeod, Wa, Tonth Districr,—~Telegates, Benjamin Merritt, Ssmuel Cage | treil, Wi, T, Ashwan, Alteruates, Stephen L. Kaapp, Joha Lobdell, Wi, H. Falconer, Giliad B. Nasb, | eount the votes. ‘Ibey had opene | when scme peraon who had obtain | out the gas and left tie room in that ensued the balluts become tired, being unable to com ticket was probably chosen won Hezleton, Jobn Duke. Altes “art ict— erts, Hemyy Utley, Koediger, David McBride. Ottiwell, Orlando L. Stowart. | Gent. Jobn A. Foster, James M. Fijrenth District —Delega D. Van Baren, James B, Hunt. “ulver, Charles H. Cooper. Naumann, Wm. Banh, Louiy | Watsen, Willlam Richardson. | James B. Pertit, i. P. Allen. Districts of Brooklyn last even egates 10 the Syracuse Conveat, elected First DI | Third District.—Delees Volney Green, Teuth Ward, and ‘Ward. Alternstea—Dr, ( Sawue! W. Thompson, Te ard, | Ward; Heratlo N, Ho | Wa 1 Fifik District W. W. Goodric i'wentioth War Elev Al tieth Ward. | Simmous, Beujamin Wilson, Buckman, Jobn ; Scvonih Aseembly Dratries.—Dele, Mitohell, W. L. Hubboll Distrier D«u.-;: 8. Bogue, C Cabe, J; Horao, “Thompson. Phillip J. C slicbas, Henry Fourt, Jobn W. Britton, Thomas Little, lrdl;-‘ Robert Haydock, Thos. ay Parry. Oakley, George Hen! Tenth Dist ¢ Richard: 0o, Kl. Tailer, C. J. Folsom, C. A. Zal Fowrteenth Districi= Daniel Drew, Lucius tr, Cooper, William Laimbeer, Seligman, Richard H. Green 0. Rul’m oph B, (Gitessen, Simon Sew: 3 D. Van Schaick, Dr. Zodley, Severteanth District.—Edgar Ketebam, ittin , Thadeus B. Wakel | Tuarsday, the following del | the Club {n the Philadeiphia Poter Cooper, Greeloy, lasac i, Wales, ¥, 11, Palon. ). H. Guitoan, i Bl llar icherd illiam T, Booth, Thom Daie, H. 1. Plerson, ford. ) Voo Nosteand, Wiklem B $3E. ¥ I ELIT TR T E- PHEY- P ] 3828 8x83a82cE0s8ls SEebiEts FESFEEeidEEssEsE i =t h Eleventh Dis:rict,—Delegates, Jokn V. Gridle ablo to claim | ver, Jobu Goiler. Alternates, Jumes L. Hastie, Alex. Willse, Desegater—1 Alleruates. tes—Jobn | Haw, Jr.. Tsrael Gillett. Alternates—Dr. D). ¥. Marshall. Thos, Fovrdk District.—~Delogates—Sicws d. elegates—Charies Jobnes, Niath Wand; th Ward; Anthouy F. Cas ates—Da | R of¥%an Brunt, Eleventh Ward; Kobort D. Besediot, Twes- dirik District Delsgates.—The Hon, S. T. Maddox, Ross, dames Gridiey. Alteroa tobert ¥, tion - den, Clristopber R. Robert, W o, jr. George Grivwold, Dolano, [ssa Sherman,” Georzs W. Bluat. John C, Hamilton, L. A, Dowley, Willard Park R. C. Hawking, George '8 Away, O. W. Curtis, Dewntug Dver, J. €. Watd, Edward Cromwell, Chaties Butler, Seorzn 3 Sirong, Wibism T. Robert Warren. 3 eorge Wilkes, J. b b anks, oA Albert Maithews, y, William 11, Lee, J et Nerth Carelina Klection. Iulv-l.lu. . Twelfth District ~Polling was continued in this dist : | o, 21 Aveoue D wath 9y, me when the .-xm,.‘l‘.'.i'&".‘. d but few ballots, Low ed aceess to the meter tu darkacss. Lo the confusion scatiered, and the tellors rs- plote. the coust. The folio Delegatess Wiliam Bores g5° ruater [homas Hays K V, 0. Hunt. Robert Tanci Hoiman, Adaa intrict—Delogates—Waldo Hutehins, Josa D, Alternates—FHeary Leasy, 1 homson. Whits, Wiliem rtecnth District —Delogates—Amor J. Williamson, James Alteruates—Aliss Conper, Alieinates—L. N. Fuloe, Primery wectings were held in the various Assawmbly ing, for the election of dab jon. The following were ict —Delegates—A. H..?‘uu. Sevenleenth Ward; . W, Godard, Eighteenth War u Oukes, Flatbosk | Alterustes—Jtohn L. Spader, Eighth W Slias B. Datohar Yighth Word: Gen. P, 8. Crooko, Flat istrict,—Delegates—Jobn Casbow, First Ward; welfth Wi es—Lowis Lowls, First Ward; Walter 3. Gove Sixth nd Coarles Parker, Twellth Ward, e " oseph Noeves. Fourth Wi . ey, thWard, and I ¥. How vid K. Jones, Nintn Ward; Stephaa L Alloruates—The uvrlu W, Smith, Watson Sanford gaty Tazcob Worth, Danid vention. ! First District—Major-Gen. Hiram Wialbri A Gen. Gusta C ot m. Higgios, Thouas Burke, Ira H. Tathill, G David Abbey, Wm. Coslaa, h District,—Jaokson 8, Schultz John C. Chambertais, Robert L. Seott, J. W, Rich- Adriance, ¥. ) Saith sed Eli Taglor. ‘Sizth District—Tacob M. Patterson, jr.. Louis Schtaldr, Tog, Benj. F. Sebanfler, Simeon Lelasd, R Scott, F. M. Adriunce, §. . Clau! J. McKiever, Th Hawilton Fish, William M. Evarts Prosper M a3 Little. etmore, Pole E, Tremaice, W . . Al Dtioy Fields . Gieorge Opdyke, William C, Bryast. A. U arnuw, J. Avstin Stevens, E. C. Alelgh Tavingor. Pairisk o Charica W Hall D Frasow mhall, the Hon. Ser Michael Fallibee, , Dr. Louis Naumaun, Peter . aries Natbusius, Nicholass L. Brusdage, Geori Charles Kugler, Wll#n-fl. Waterman, Ji o Robiosor. Horatlo Pallen, Jage 8. Husted, < At & meetiog of the Unfon Lesgus Club in this eity.. tiou was elected to i rid the true loyal meu of Texns, = - Baldwin are r 3, clon at Phfladelphia, = ‘ passed o atate of ‘;‘ i S R i e Surder on Bbip-Beard. The latest returns from Kentucky give Duvall over Paovipexcs. R. 1., W 31, 1886 . Hobson & majority of 37,387, *Plie vote by Congressional | Ahebrig Otean Ware of New-York, Capl. Ui s districts shows us the comparative strength in mass of the | this Port Groat, Hurbor, Rabamas, hab 07 roee of - scaman named Crow, Rebel and Conservative parties: 1 wivg 000 Hobasn, 3,17 4,722 Thy 6,833 973 at 1 o'clock in the morning. 6,658 8,843 as the 6,260 — ck bim od G :,lg Totuls ... 97,060 39,473 Lreaking in Nfll ) vote, with Letcher and Ferry Countles to The whole hear from, is 156,553, Perry aud Letcler combined are not expeeted o poll more than 800 votes—uearly all of them for Hobson. Dixise oF Tius MoTisr ov A Queey.—Her Maj- sty Queen Finma of Mawail, accompanied by Miss Spurgeon and Major Hopkins, arrived ot tho Brevoort House, in thi Qity yoaterday, from Canada, Ou the arrival of the party Moutresl, Lor M reouived o telegram from Siu Er oine or motber, and departed io d night, in order to ax which sails to- Coa The statement for of 5,865 bales of Sea Island Cotton, m—.#“lll 522,372 bales for 1 » l'nk, £ h-lu‘fi‘ldhn.. at .Ix Receipts, Uplands; total, 11 1560, Sales of the Striet Middling, 32@82e. 82 balos; stock, 5,535 bales. statistios place the crop at 2,000 Hoston, acutive Copst of M gsoncluiqetise b plas oen x, 8. C., Friday, Aug. 31, 1968 hows recel Tt 107821 bales M3 bules; Careful estimates ,000 bales, ) 1] P I PR ——— - basappointed W. Suith, | L, M. . Tora s, Hee | Chartoa |, vl;m‘lmum: Dnh B, Dwirs,

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