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4 | SR e i Amnpsements. T el BARNIMS AMERICAN MUSEUM. DAY AND EV JONE HOUSE ON THE BRIDGF— My, ©. W Clarke ard + ) compsny. ONE HUKDRED THOU SAND CURIOSITI! S i OLYMPIC THEATER. * U AN-WINKLE—Mz. Joneph Jeffe YNESDAYS and SATUKDAYS— THIS FVENIN Muss WITCH MATI on. ¥ - ORCHESTRAL ery oveuing. Eighty- K. OPERA HOU. THIS EVEN DWORTH'S MINSTRELS—C. J. Hogan, #. Haghes AY THEATRE. NDRY. M3 THIS EVENING- ROBE dwin Adane. T WINTE DEN. THIS FVENING — Forowell Benedt of Mr. Jobs Brosgham.— DAVID COPBERFIT | D FOCAHONTAS. 1PPOCHEAT L PHIS KVENING= L1 ARD TOURNAMENT—The Champlons of America = THIS EVENING YOK—~Great Pasisienne Gule: Troupe. TRYING HALL THIS EVENING-TF & Cooke, Miss Ross Cooke, M TIMONIAL CONCERT—Miss Mary 1. anny Stockton, and otbers. NLW YOR ifi}:ni:}l\ A R Bl K ST M CHEEERING FACTS FOR THR BILIOUS. Fovory day demonsirstes more cloarly that Liver Complaist, in al ite distroasing forme, coi ied snd cured without difficulty or Itisss obainate diseass, but ite obstivacy is not ios. remedial and restorative operation of Inconvani-nee, proof axsiust the pertiis Hosrerren's Srouacs Brrrama. L ¢la the organ to ite duty. Tt muat secrets he fulaence of the Bitters. Their of rebeilion into perfect harmony That gonial correct o wegululy sad bealthfi |y @rblon hrinzs it back from s wwith (e Jaws of heal Wors is ohe or b e ayes are tinged wi e, i€ the appetite ts zoue. .t retarus; if the digestion is impaired, it 4ntostorad ; in brief. L'« vex the symptoms of the complaint may be, and whatover the pha ssumed, a cure ds cortain, Such are (oo wnifscon offocts of '1is - paration where bilious disease has been wlroady doveloped; but 1n “ains where there is terely 8 constitutions Moudency to liver comp! i, 1t may be preveuted throughout life by | ixutities, of this palatable ntidote. These 1 b serlously pondersd—or, rather, they 1u—by all persons of bilious habit. Lo, it conses; if the skin snd the whites of wperfluous bile, they recover their natura the rogular use, in swn facts, and sho honld be promptly 8-« Qi ¥ICIAL STATEMENT. CxrurAY BrrTERS (.5, A., dated U. 8. Hospital, Newark + soldiers under my charge of obstisate 1 defied for weeks the usual remedy sut hesitation use it in similer oa while CriwzaN Brrrens will thorongaly eradicate tro dise ystem. Forsale by sl Druggists, snd ot the Dopot, No. ¥ vat., New-York. -4 b DALLEY'S GALVANIC HORSE SALVE i pronounced 6y ll who have used it the very best Horse Ofntmeat in use. Itis «constant’y curing ceses of long standing which have been given up as Ascursble. Serstches, Golis, Sitfast Sores, Swellings, Stiff Joiots, Beviecs, are rapidly and certainly cared by this Salve. The very best Hoof Onimont in use; 50c x. Sold by sll Druggists and st the D Whitehead, Sare Quinine will only » TMMENSK. o demand for RoGER'S FRAGNANT ODONTOLINE it becomiig No dentiftice introdced in the market bus Fiv lamadion f: What & delightful ar breath, and i4 perfectly herm 1 whea purified by the use o all druggists, perfumers aud fu D Tl Agers , 1866, on Thurs- mavufictare, and Caps. ud extessive Bpedevg. R CATARRHE te Duntain-hesd; removes at once c"- " 1o heed, offensive discharges, obstruc- o the [reathing tubes, ¢ breath, and obilteratos this loath- womo malsdy. in all e forias, forever. Send stamp, for pampllet, to Grnnrr Nowox, No. 11 Aon-sk. CATagru! Posinive Cume! Avold the delusions which have pever cured one sase. Wr. R. Prince, Flushing, 3 discovered & POSITIVE PERMANENT Doue, obuained Sovereign Remedialo—will satiafy ol persous tory citeular, ove sarip. WILLCOX & GiIDBS SEWING MACHINE. « (emples, noisen “Ata oam is oty and isss lisble to rip 10 0se or wear. than the Lyt s apers ™ ot e and Pork Tt Sewd for the * Report” and sempies oul etk ititohes 0 the same pirce of goods. ‘No. 599 Broadway. “Manvin's NEW PATENT ALUM AND DRY PLANTER _ Pian axp Bumoran SiLven Prats Sarss. Highly omamental, and Ay ptoeily dry. Aldo s largs sssortaient of Baukers’ and Mscohants’ Sarms MARYEY & Co., 265 B'dway, and 721 Chostnut st., Phila. - Use Owseygr, TaE HoxEY oF OAK, And the taeth will be white aud beantiful as polished ivory. Soun Q Hites, Worcestar, M Propristor end Munof.ciurer. st ¥or e by all gt . AT WHOLESALE—CHILDREN'S GENTEEL WAR- sanvap Copper-Tipyed Boots snd Shoes, Sewed and Pegze phdiiitad L L. Tur ARM AND LEo, by B. FRANX PALMER, LL. D.— Tho * beat” (res to soldiers, ind low to officers and civilisns. 1,009 Chostast st Philn; Astorol., N.Y.; 19 Green ot., Boston. Avold {rudoient mitasions of his patenis. 2§ MaoAME JUMEL'S MAMMARIAL BALM AND PATENT p the astaral besaty of the fors: on phywiologioal 369 Cana) ot. " METCALYE'S GREAT KHEUMATIC REMEDY is the say sure cure for Rheumatiom ever known, and it is ss wocderful in #to aboes aa certain tn ien offect. 1 (GROVER & BAKER'S MACHINES FOR SALE AND TO day. Dress making . M 8, Frura, )d W07 Brosdway, and_Suspensory TRUASRS, SUPPORTERS, Mouthly an ory , wholessle or retail, «f Popaas e beat and chexpest in the worls _Aw No. 545 Brosdway. gt 1 X Tar Howr Sgwixe MacmiNes—LOCK STITCR.— ®or Families snd Manufscturers. They sre world-renowned. ! " Hows Macwivs Co., No. 899 Brosdway. Ne York. Morr's CHEMICAL PoMADE Restores Gray Hair, Roope i oy und fom fullc out; removes dandruff; the fiest drens- Ing owad! Soid by Rosurox. No. 10 Astor Houss ead druegists. _ Trussss, ELASTIO STOCKINGS, SUSPENSORY Eaxp. kc.—Manew & Co.'s Radical Cure Trum Offce fosey-st._ Ludy atiendant. ck LOCK-STITCH SEWING-MACHINES—Best FLORENCE SEWING- oupaxy. . Ev‘-!al Frorsx o the wacld o, TMPROVED LOCK-STITCH MACHINES for Tailors ant Pomsisctares, Gwvaa & Baxen Sewine Macwive Cowraxy, Qlw. “ELupTic SEWING MACHINE CO.'S INCOMPARABLE geve Sriecn Suwine- Maouints._Agents Wanted, 843 Brosdway. Guoves & BAKER'S HIGHEST PREMIUM ELASTIO rvom Sewive Macuixas. for family use. No. 485 Broadway. WhHEELER & WILSON'S LOCK-STITCH SEWING Maomiws sod Brrownors Macwiwn. No €05 Brosdway. Cartes Viguet dozen; Duplicat ] P il g A o Phaaeri Us CRISTADORO'S DYs—Approved by universal ssolamation s the finest extent. Fuctory, No. 6 Astor House. NewYork Daily Cribune. RIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1866. f —— THE CAMPAIGN TRIBUNE El g, THE BALL MOVES ON. The following are a portion of the subscription let- [ | It there is costiveness, it dissppears; if | your publishiv | | ' NEW-YORK ‘DAILY TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SMPTEMBER 14, 1866. aver to secure 8 Unlon vlotory, Our tows in for 200 ma- jonity in the right direotion. ~Yours, D. Lewis, P. M. CoBa, Bept. 11, 1866.—Inclosed please find draflt for 8% 16, for which send me 27 CAMPAION TRiBUNEs. Yours truly, J. H. HALLACK. Mmbnmrdwm Conn., Sept. 12.—Inclosed pleu:{ find mosey order_for 830, for oase send 100 copios of your CAMPAIGY TRIBUNE. Y:”‘:-L W T. Erues, blican Commitise. Pacirie, Franklin County, Mo., Sept. 10.—When Jobu Brown was executed™ was in Chaftanoogs, Tennessee. The sentiment then exprensnd among planers was that ' Your Honor " wight be the neztlo “moing.” Ooe veutured to say us wuch under my own roof. I dared not reply for fear of the consequences but know that be was at that time oo of your subseribers, to excuse which he eaid: L will do hin the credit of saying Tue TRIBUNE is the ablost paper published.” 1 believe your paper would do good here in our midst. In- closed please find four ($4) doilars, I wish tho - KrMi-WEEKLY . Let ft commence s0 a8 to énclude tho coutents of ‘WEEKLY of Septoaber 5 Respootfully, C. 8. BARRETT, ‘l‘olen?i rator and (Radioal.) Rususorp, All. Co., N. Y., Sept. 10.—Wo were subserbers and readers of The Daily Times for a unumber of years, but Jast Winter we became disgusted with that and subseribed for ous year to The Dasly Herald—being certain what 10 expeot from that wo preferred it 10 The Tymes. Wo stood The Herald during the Winer; through the Seasion of Congress, and even (brough the Rebel Convention at Phila. Gelphia; but the ** Presidential tour” ia too muoh for us aod we cave. If you know of any geod Aonest Democrat you oan recommend to us we will have e balance of our subscription 0 The Herald sent to him, and if it don't mako bim & Repub- liean before the President l=flllfl 10 Wi ton, then we thiok he ought to be turned over to Ben. Butler or some other man who *knows” that the obivalry oan be governed. In: closed find 85, for which eond us ThE DALY TRBUNE, sod oblige yours, NokToN & ELMER. Howmgr, Cortlandt Co,N. Y., Sept. 12.—I take muoh pleasure fu inclosing a draft oo New York to you for which please forward 102 copies of your CAMPAIGN TRIBUNR, commeneing with the ondieg on the 6th inst, 1 shall be able to ndd more mumbers to tins list before the closs of the weok. Yours for the oause, CHas. 0. NewtoN, Horsg Hxaps, Chemmng Co., Sept. 10.—Inclosed find draft for 830 for 100 copies of Tix CAMPAIGN TRIBUNE The Union Radical Republioavs of Chemung ers awke, and detormined if bleto defeat the combined Copperheads and O J There are but§few of the supvorters of Lincola who have Jeft s, and that fow are either small office- holders o disappointed office-seskers. and havo no inflaence. Tisis is true to w man. The rurel distriots are sound to the core, and more earneet thaa in jths eleotion of 1361 The ro- turas from Maine and Vermont obeer and enoourage ua. Yours truly, P, WINTERMUTE. CamiLuus, Onondaga County, N. Y., Sept. 9.—In- closed find draft for §30, for whioh plsase send me 100 copies of THe CAMPAIGN TRIBUNE, for distribation at this office. Respeotiully, J. B. WARDEN. GLOVERSVILLE, N. Y., Sept. 12.—Inclosed find draft for 0, for which you will pleaso send me 100 copies of THE CAMPAIGY TRIBUNE. Allow mo to suggost the propriety af the Constitutionsl Amendment in THE CAM od lettiog it remain there until after she PAIGN TRIBUN clection. There are thousaads who have porer read it Tru.y yours, 5. SextoN. Avrrep, N. Y., Sept. 10.—If you are in favor of treason being made odious, aod traitors taking back seats. you may forward to my addross £7 copies of TTr CAMIAION Tummusk, for which find inolosed $10 40, with taree hoarty clicers for Congress. Respectfully yours, Wi, R. BURDICK, P M. Lina, Sept. 10.—I send you $10 more for THE CAMPAIGY TRINUNE. You have sent mo 2. now you will piease send we 3¢ more, which wake up tlo 60, according to your terios. Send tbe back numbers from August 29, 1866, Please send theu on the recelpe of this letter. T stall you the otber £10 whioh will make up the whol 100 which 1 promised as #oon as Jobnson removed the Post-Oftica. 1 wish to loave 8 good number of Radical newspapers for hit to oiroulate. Yours, &¢ ., ira Goprrey, P. M. HopkINTON, Mass., Sept. 12.—Inclosed I send you cashier's check for thirty dollars (830), in payment for 100 copies of THE CAMPAIGN TRIBI Ploase send by mall to my address. 1 may wish to add number, as wo did not cow- mence tojoanvass until o-day. Yours, traly, A. A. SWERT. Scoria, N, Sept. 11.—Inclosed please find certi- fied obeck of $30, for 100 copies of THE CAMPAIGN TRIBUNE “There buve heen no TRIBUBNES received at this office for several years, but there are now indications of & mach betier state of tuings. Send tbis weok's issue, as subsoribers are becoming impatient. Very respestfully, K. Z. CARPENTRR. Fowrox, N. Y., Sept. 11.—Inclosed please find a cheok for 830, for which you will plesse sead mo 100 coples of | Thr CAPAIGNY TRIGUKE, commenciog with the present week. This is the way we intend to help Andy's policy. Yours, &e., L. D, Parey. OAKFIELD, Genosee County, N. Y., Sept. 10,—~In- closed find draft for 820, for whioh forward to my addross 100 copies Canraiex TriBUNe. Respeotfully, C. B. Cnasueriiy, P. M. ELYRIA, Ohio, Sept. 8.—Inclosed I hand you draft for §39. Send 130 copies of THE CAMPAIGY TRIBUNE to E. C. Griswold, at Eiyria. The poople seem auxious o vote. io. : 1t will thander on the Westorn Roserveon election day. We do | not support Vallandigham or any of bhis ssseciates. . Traly J. H. BAYNTON, Rusarorn, N. Y., Sept. 10.—Please find inciosed druft for 835, tor which please send to my address 100 copies of your CAMPAIGN TRIBUNE for throe months aud one copy of Trk DAILY LeisuNe for six months. Please send diatoly or have them comwenoe this week, if yoo ¢ truly, 16, Atrexs, Bradford Co., Pa., Sept. 10.—Inclosed plense find draft for $30 for 100 copies of yo A paver, d0copies o be seat to my sddress at Adle 0., F'a, and 10 copies to the address of Joha N. Griffin, She- shequin, Bradlord Co., Pa. Respoctfully yours, Coas T. HuLe. ® Hauoes, Sept. 12—Inclosed find & draft for $30, 100 subseri from_the littie town of Hamdea for Titw Cauraion ‘Although we have several subsoribers to DALY TRIBUXE. and & large number to the Sryi WELKLY and WEEKL®, there bas not been the slightest difficulty in ob feining o very short notioe, the subsoriptions hore forwarded. A large proportion of the Lnhabit ot our town are thrifty and h-lelluluflowh ‘'who have been since the orguuiaation of the n.:,- Jioan uu‘:d-:n-lu t, a8 to make (his the banner %-‘:. Febaaon: whi rusade to the of ¢l dear| {10 party of 2l leyiag to Soaks wm’y 4 o tomb y demoralizin, e 3 gt 16 80 oves, not onl Pioeas ar 8y heard from, to draw 4 ofthis town one single indorser of the **my bat on the contrary, hes slready made several proselytes, who will give s their Yotes at the coming siection. Yours traly, W.N. GoLpex. TrumaNsBUrG, Tompkina Co.. N. Y., Sept. 10, lm-—lnulouddplam find & draft for 835 10, for which send me 117 coples of THE CAMPAIGN TRIBUNE for three months. Yours, STErHEN YOUNG. Gexeseg, N. Y., Sept. 10, 1366.—Inclosed please find draft for 836, for which pleass send 120 copies CAMPAIGN TrisUNE. We kuow of but three men in this town who have been Republicans who now ng::n Johnson's po! know more then twice that u. who will vote ou ot for the first time, this Fall—men who have always, horetofors, voted the * Demooratic tioket." Yours, Al LAPHAM. New-Hamporen, N. Y., Sept. 10.—Please find in- closed ehsok for 830, price for 100 copies Cax. ¥AIGN TRIBUNE for throe montbs, which you will be kiud enough to send to the address below. Vtr( traly yours, J. TALIMAGE VAN RENSSELAPR. New-Lesanox Semives, N. Y., Sept. 10.—Iu- closed find cheok on Pittafield National Bank for $30. for which please send to my address 100 coples of THE CAMPAIGN TRIBUNE for three months. Yourstruly, H.D.Gav, P. M. New-Castre, N. Y., Sept. 10.—Iuclosed ploase, find €30 for 100 copies WEEKLY TRIBUNE for the Campaign. Address N. A. Baxks, New-Castle, Westobester, Co., N, Y. 1f not asking too much, it would be a great favor if you woald send 30 copies of the above to Mt Kisco. Yours very respect fally. WM. BANKS. ST. Aans, Vt., Sept. 9.—I herewith send you #10. I want you to send 26 copies of THE TRIBUNE to some place where in your judgment they will do the most damage 1oy policy” sud advance the cause of right. Hopiog that the cause of right may prevail, I rewalu yogss, &o., v YW Wi ! J. Burorss. CpsTRAL Bripag, N. Y., Sept. 11.=The Philadel- phis Convention, the Presid sieotionsering tour. his speechios and bis treachery to the p.ll‘ that elected him to officy "’i&' yw Union 10 the hiybrid concern known as ohs y, even Becoss P‘ L stronghold of ion Demo- Fats. On the con! it ouly serves to stimulate the lovers of the Union and I 0 extra exertion for the sucoess of our ticket, and we have no doubt of our final triumph. I pur- ?ut dstributing & number of CAMPAION TRINUNES among are lukewarm or who take -ar{:n. and some who do, and those who foubiful, knowing that 1 must do good. I buve & st of 17, and may increase the number from time to time.d You will find inclosed 87, for which please send the papers, and oblige your respectfully, Joux H. Houol ‘Postmaster, Central Bridge, Schobarie County, N. Y. HoxriveToN, L. L—I inclose check for $30 for flh of Tur WEEKLY THIBUNR for the Campaigo, 100 more Please send these to Joun Robbins. Postmaster at Yours, THoMAS J. Aye! Aye! Captain: You wero the first man to sond & elub for 100. How many more clubs do you propose to send 1—(ED. TRIB. yours, m the Republican ranks ey platform gt TERMS. t Sopie o ihres ot Somion Lo thres mont Coples for tkres monibe: Payable for o in advasce. The papers to be sent to one Address Tan Tuipvxm, New-York City. THE TRIBUNE T8—NO. 1. The New-Orleans Riot. Its Offiolal History. We shall issue this afternoon, & Traot containing an suthentio History by efficial documents of the New-Orlesas Riot. Price five cents; 840 per 1,000, Orders acoompanied with the cash are solioited. Address Tuz TRIBUXE, No. 154 Nassau-st. Now- York, THE TRIBUNE TRACTS—NO. 2. Number two of the Tar Trisuxe Tracts will con- tain the proceedings of the Southern Loyalists Convention, and will be ready in & few days. TO CORRESPONDENTS. T W) ~:~» ‘mecessariiy for LR TO ADVERTISERS. We will thank our sdvertising customers to hand in eir Advartisements st as early an hour as possibie. 1 received sfier § ¢'clock they cannot be elasstbed under their proper heads. NEWS OF THE DAY. & P—— FOREIGN 'NEWS, ‘We have Earoj news by Cable to the 12th iost. The that in agsin ting the Eastern ws. The Lon- ha hod. uestion Yy 3 that the M porial “Tha impory Nogolqon by to:t LA B W Mexioo to eonfer with Maximilian. Tits arrangements for peace betweon A®xiria and Ttaly are progressiug rapid- Iy. * Another heavy shipmont of gold to New-York has just been made. DOMESTIC NEWS. The first day of the Hoboken races took place yesterday at Sscaucus. Thare was 8 goodly attendance, but not so large 68 anticipated. The frst was o hurdle race of two milos and eight hurdles, for ich thers were five entrics, vig.: Zigzag, Nanme Craddock, General Williams, Becau- cus, and Lady Wolf. Nannie Craddock was the winper. Time 4:014. The next waa a mile dash for & premium of . Six horses were entered—Kinglethwood, Richmond, Fordham, Lady Dan Bryant, Lady Blessington, and Blackbird. Kinglethwood was the winner. Time 1:45]. The last race was miile heats, bost three in five, between Kinglethwood and Lady Blossington; threo heats wore run, Kinglethwood winning the two laat. Time—1:50; 1:50; 1:534. To-day i3 & steeple chase over three miles of fair hunting country. The base ball match for the championship came off yee- terday st Hoboken. Over 15,000 spectators were Izmenr. The contestants were the Atlantic Club of Brookiyn and the Mutual of New-York. It was a most exciting game, and resulted in the Atlantics gaining 17 runs t the Mutuals 15. The Ohio Ri and is still rising. Nw : season, and steamers are departing freights. At Newburgh, last night, there was one of the most en- thusiastic meemfi over held in that city. It was under the auspices of the Soldiers’ and Sailors' Assogiation, Hrhu were made by Col. Newton and Gen. Van Wyck. o voters of Newbnrgh intend giving & rowsing majority for Fenton and a Radical Congress. ver, at Parkershurg, Va., is 10 foet deep, vigation is fairly oponed fur the ly with Western THE PENDING CANVASS. John H. Ketchum has been renominated by aoclama- tion, ne candidate for the XIIth Congrossional District of ew-York. NA Bht:kflonvenfinn of Boys in Blue will be beld at Bur- i , Vt., on the 17th. On the 18th & similsr moeoting will be held at Hartford. The rnrpun is to eloct dele- gates to the Soldiers’ and Sai ors' Convention to take place at Pittsburgh on the 25th. Tho Hon. Hamilton Ward was unanimously nominated for the XX VIIth Congressional Distriet of this State at Homesville, yesterday NEW YORK CITY. In the Noelte Extradition caso yesterday before Com missioner Newton, the prisoner was, after considorable delay, produced in Court, and gave himself up to the Uniied States authorities. Mr. Lapsugh, the Counsel for the Prussian Government, made a longthy srgument, after which the cas: was adjourned to admit the produe- tion of an important witness. Noelte will probably be turned over to the Prussian Government. ‘The third snnual regatta of the Union Yacht Club came off yesterday. The stake-boat was anchored in Gowanus Bay, about’a mile below Buttermilk Channel, and the cotrso was from the stake-boat to the buoy off the South- West Spit and roturn. Only two boats wero entered, the Fonchie aod Glance. At 10:25 the vessels started; at 1:51 the Fonchie reached the stake-boat, boating tho Glauce by nine minutes. At a meoting of the Board of Health yesterday & resolu- tion was adopted directing the Sanitary Superinteadeat, with an inspector and sufficient force, to proceed to Port- eheater, North Haven and Morrisania, and disinfect those laces where cholera has prevailed. ~ An lpl»mpnn\mn of ‘m,ooo was made to this city and $5,000 to Brooklys. STOCKS AND MARKETS. Gold closes at 1454, after solllng at 1464. The supply of cash gold has been abundant to-day, aud large amounts wero bor- rowed flat. Government stocks are lower, and the oid 5 204 quoted at 1101 110f, new at 1084, 10 40s at 93, and 7.308 10542 1035, At the Socond Board the market was heavy. Money on call is 5 per coat, with lower rates on Goveruments, In oom mercial peper no change of consequence, Ta Freights, the on- gugements to Liverpool are 21,000 bushels corn, at #4d., and wer ateamer, 7,000 bushels corn, at 5id., 1,000 baies cotton, at E6),, und 9,50 hoxes cheess, at 5. To Londovs 21000 corn, at 6{d. To Brem 400 hihds. tobaooo, at 12+, 6d . 600 cases tobacco. at 7s. 6d.@8a. 9., 6,000 bushels rye, at 43d., and 80 tuns tuns_logwood, st 15. A bark of 460 tuns was ohartered with 3,500 bbls. petroleam, to Antwerp, ol e €5 On our inside pages of to-day will be found a Re- wiew of Barry Cornwall's Memoir of Charies Lamb: the Public Health; Police Reports; the Turf; Base Ball Match for the Championship; Commercial Matters, and Market Reports. The address of the Massachusetts State Convention calls Mr. Johnsou a dangerous man. After the Maine election the Democrats have more reason to think so. —e A soldiers’ meeting was held at Louisvills, Ky., on Waednesday, which adopted resolutions praising Gen. Rousseau for caning Mr. Grinnell. This was bad enough, but they made the matter worse by indorsing Mr. Johuson. — The false pretense that Gen. Grant and Admiral Far- ragut indorse the President's policy is oxposed by s dispatch from Colambus which we priut this moruing. The people have not been misled on this point, as their discriminating cheers have constautly attested, It is the usual custom of Mr. Seward to address the citizens of Auburn on the night before the election. This year, the Democrats have engaged the principal hall, and he will address them. Could anything more forcibly point the sad moral of his apostacy ! — Mr Johnson will be glad when he is back in Wash- ington, but the people will be even more grat- ifiod. He chose to make his tour an elec- tioneering journey, and his speeches an endless tirade sgainst Congress, and now reaps the benefit of the mistake. We regrot suoh scenes as that at Pittsburg, last night, and regret more that the President provoked them. The history of bis trip, says The Nation, seems like an evil droam—we wish it were no more. ——eeee. The Massachusetts Union State Couvevention unanimously renominated yesterday all of the State Officers, from Governor down, and the ticket will, of course, be redlected by a vote probably larger than that of 1865, when Gov. Bullock bad but 45,606 majority. In that year the full vote of the State was not polled. This Fall it will be different. Senator Wilson predicts 100,000 majority, which is not too much to expect if the gains in Massachusetts corre- spond with those of Maine. The Conventiqs thon received the Southern loyalists, who were enhusias- tically welcomed. We print in full the douueut speoch of Gen. Butler. ORGANIZATION / The Republican-Union party in this City is t be en- tirely reorganized forthwith. The new formatio of As- sembly Districts required this; but it was necesary on many accounts, Our basis of representation was so monstrously unequal—200 voters in certaiv lower Wards baving as much weight in our Genenl Com- mittees and Nominating Conventions as 2,50) living + up town"—that gross abuses aud wrongs vere in- evitable. Then certain managers had ** got tte run” of the old machinery, and they ran it with aneye to No. 1. Tt was high time to wipe out and take a fair start. ‘The State Convention bas done wisely in drecting a reorganization which shall be radical and therough. Fach Assembly District is to be represented in our General and Nominating Committees by a nunber of delegates proportioned to its vote for Lincoln in 1864, There is to be a fresh registration made in each listrict of all the legal voters who support the State ticket nominated at Syracuse; and those thus registered are to be voters in our Primary Mdetings hereafter. The registration in each Assembly District will be made on Monday and Tuesday evenings of nert wek ; and we exhort every Republican not only fo be promptly on hand for registration, but to urg his friends and neighbors to do likewise, Letu, for once, have our committees and nominations mad by the great mass of those to whom they must loog for support. Let quiet people who usually abstain ‘rom Primary Meetings be induced to register their panes, 80 a3 to have a voice in matters of the highest ptblic concern, Cliques and cabals derive all their bateful influence from the neglect of their duties by the great body of citizens; if every man had his fair pat in selecting candidates, wo should seldom have bad ones, Friends in every district! let us have a full ngis- tration! It is desirable in many respects; it willcost nothing but an hour of Monday or Tuesday evening to each of us. Speak to your Republican neighbors, and urge them to attend to this duty ! 1Mz Johnson had taken the ground that no erms could rightfylly be Lopgsed upon e Relel Stplsa s fsa o va i T AR A kel LA and that they might uucondldqin{ly roturn, his course in respect to Congress would be, jn some sort, able. As itis, his violent denunciations of Congress have no foundation in reason, and every argument directed against its action applies with greater forco unpardonable sin. against his own. OF THUNDER. ‘When the badly-fagged party of Pretorian tourists | 8 serions and growing abuse. got the news from Maine, we can imagine & perfect chorus of exclamations. * Thunder!" said Mr. Sew- ard, emiling with agony. *Thunder, by —! " said the President, with his usual deistical playfulness. |.country, «Thunder! " echoed the bob-tail of the body-guard; finest generals, the greatest navy, and then, by way of cousolation, they all went to dinner and the decanters. ‘Without designing to lecture our readers upon elec- tricity, we beg leave to observe that there are two kinds of thunder—the theatrical, which they mal with gongs in the play-houses, and the real article, from the right-hand of Jove himself. If some zo6logi- cal proprietor will be good enough to lend us an ele- phant, we will engage to get up a great deal of thun- der of & certain kind in town snd country. Aswe march the beast from one settlement to another, the little boys will come out and cheer. Poor child- ren! let them cheer! they have never seen an ele- phant before! And a President may be but a beast of smaller growth. Wherever he goes, 309 soors-of- sights come togother to find out what he is like. The moment he shows the tip end of his proboscis, the crowd begins to bellow. There is a deafening tripli- cation of huzsas, The proud man puts in an appear- ance; and “ Drest in a littls brief aut i el "1 Plays such As make That is ** thunder; nothingbut thunder !"—and not a bit like it. The noise which a Thirty Thousand anti- Administration majority makes down among the piney woods of Maine is much nearer the real reverberation —the live thundor leaping from crag to crag. I must be admitted that we have had three very remarkable storms this season, There was the Connecticut tem- pest, then the Vermont gale, and now comes the Maine hurricane. There is no mistake about it; when the people thunder, it is no gong, nor tin-pan, nor sheet-iron business, but thunder in real earnest. Other States are also getting ready their little exhi bitions. New-York is expected to thunder vigorously and sagely; Pennsylvanin is near enough to make itself heard in Washington; Ohio hasa way of thun- dering of her own which is very expressive; Michi- gan has a fine voice both for size and quality; Massa- chusetts never yet failed to perform well. There will be a succession of thunders like that produced when the jolly Dutch ghosts play at nine-pins on the Cats- kill mountains. There has been nothing like it since the long-roll of the loyal drums awoke the slum- bering spirit of the North and West, and the young meon of the land burried to the rescue of the Constitu- tion. “My Policy” is a very large elephant, but “Vox Populi " beats it to flinders. They have a fine menagerie in the White House, but, if the President will come down the Avenue, and take a look at the next Congress, we will show him a collsction of mem- bers worth all his R e o s B INVOKING THE CONSTITUTION. The great Reform demonstration at Birmingham has created no little alarm among the Tories: and for good and suflicient reasons. With a clearer vision, aud & better appreciation of the situation, than The New-York Times—who tells us that revoltion in England is o moral impossibility—the English Tory press is evidently sorely disquieted at the threatening aspect of affairs, and earnestly deprecates the agita- tion for impartisl suffrage which has just been inaugurated in the old country, a3 of mani- festly revolutionary tendency, aud, therefore— according to the ideas of the reactionary party, at least—dangerous to the best interests of society. The Tories are accordingly urged to Luckle on their armor for the fight before them, to meet agitation with agitation, to take their stand upon the Constitution, and to make their appeal to the peopl arging upon them the sacred duty of rallying in support of the time-honored institutions of the country. We have just been reading one journal of no mean repute, that makes an almost frantic appeal in this strain to the *Constitutionalists:” “Will you still be apathetic?” it asks. ** Will you still do nothing, either by press or platform, to save the country 1 Will you still refuse to confront agita- tion with agitation? Will you insaunely imagine, with the conrtiers of Canute, that the rising tide of rebellion can ba checked and controlled by a smile of contempt ! If 50, the Constitution of England will not long endure. If so, Republicanism of the worst type will shortly replace a constitutional govern- ment.” All very fine this; but it strikes us forcibly that such a mode of dealing with a vitally important question is but a resort to the old device which in- justice and oppression have ever employed to hinder the cause of truth and right. Mr. Bright and the English Reformers are charged with appealing to the passions and prejudices of the working classes, To what, we ask, are appeals of this kind addressed, if not to the preju- It looks dicos and passons of the aristocracy? prudently conservative, and has the complexion of patriotism about it, to inyoke the Constitution; but who does not sce that here Constitutionalismn is dragged in to justify wrong in the upbolding of class logislation? If, hoyever, the Togies are to go before the English people with the Constitution in their hands, then it is safe to predict the speedy and utter defeat of the party. The Coustitution, in its essence and fundamental principles, recognizes no political class distinctions. On the contrary, it was framed, and is intended, to secure to every reputable and law-abiding T wrong of the matter whether these lotteries are car- citizen his fall political rights. Its broad wgis covers all. It knows no exclusion, save that which the wrong-doer himself creates by his own evil deeds. That it bas been perverted trom its original purpose to serve selfish and party ends, is no reason why it should continue to be abused,but constitutes rather the strongest possible argument in tavor of radical reform. By all means let the English Tories go before the people with the Constitation in their hauds. They will find it a formidable weapon; only—it will be turned against themselves with terrible effoet. But it is not in England only that what is called Constitutionalism is pleaded in defonse of oppression. It is not in England only that it is wickedly sought to to destroy liberty with weapons robbed from her own armory. In this country we hear a good deal now-a- days abont the Constitution, and the necessity of pre- serving itintact. From the depths of our hearts we say, let it be so preserved. But we want the Consti- tution in its integrity, ‘We want to see the Constitu- tion on which our free Government is based operative in all the amplitude, all the loftiness, of its original sacred purpose. It proclaims, asits fundamental axiom, that all men are born free and equal. It guar- antees to each of the States a Republican form of government. It deals with man as man, and it recog- nizes no government save that which is the creation of the whole popular will. We too, then, plead for the Constitution, but for the Constitution in its fulness and its purity, And we have no misgivings as to the result of such a course. Both here and in England a fair and dispassionate appeal to first principles in this matter will be certain to seal the doom of the oppres- sor and to assure the complete triumph of liberty. A colored man inquires of us, in behalf of his peo- ple, ** What have we done, what have we said, that the North? Wo have done nothing to offend any excus. | man?” These are sad questions, but the colored peo- ple are guilty of an offense which Rebels and Copper- heads cannot forgive—they are Free. Freedom is the THE FOOL AND HIS MONEY. There is need to-day of & vigorous protest against It seems that, not contont with the achiovements in paths of hon- orable distinction which have made Americans justly proud, mot content Wwith having the best the best government, the bravest army, the Admiral Farragut, and Hoe's Printing Press, the Mississippi River, the New-Rochelle Blackberry, Niagara Falls, Mr. Morse and Dr. Franklin, two inventors of chloroform, three Webstors, aud so forth and so fortb, an intermin- ke | able list of great names in every department;—not content with this altitude in excellence, we are striv- ing to reach an equal eminence in badness, and are just now turning our attention to the getting up of lotteries, the mezo reading of whose *‘schemes,” as they are well called, is calculated to reduce ‘the hearer can be picked with impunity by the unscrupulous inventors of these frandulent dovices. The reader may think we are in a jocular mood, but we ate only so far moved to laughter as a man may be who sees that even wickedness has a ludicrous side, and that, painful as it may be to see innocence duped, it is not always equally painful to.our unre- genetute nature to see greediness overreached by éun- ning. But, we are by no means disposed to treat these lotteries a3 a jest, however little to be pitied we may think the greater number of those who buy tickets. We do not forget that the smaller number, however small in proportion it may be, must always be made up of those whose very ignorance supposes & condition of life in which the loss of the price of & ticket is serionsly felt, and to whom the possession of a line engraving of any picture under the sun, must seem a mockery when they compare it with what they have parted with, or with what they hoped for. And, yet, it is very difficult to know just how to attack these organized swindles so as to squelch them ef- fectually, They are most carefully planned in every instance to elude existing laws mado for the very pur- pose of repressing them; and they assuure by their pretensions a high place among the agencies of social refinement. The most delicate euphemisms vail their inherent rascality, and under the name of Art Unions, Art Associations, or Gift Enterprises, they conceal the fact that they are simply lotteries open to all the ob- joctions, and liable to all the censure that belongs to those traps for the unwary. If we hold our tongue about them, and euffer them, day after day, to lay their nets without & warning, we are reproached by the gulls that they so plentifully make, with indifler-{ enee to the public welfare; if, moved by wrath, we try to pillory the rogues, they impudently face us, and threaten us with libel. And, so, we are too often tempted to let them go their ways, and plunder unob- structed, content with keeping our own pockets but- toned when we go by their doors, and with warniog our young and green acquaintances in private to do the same. But there really is no reason why so many people should be victimized by these thieves, as we know there are, in a country like ours where we boast of a widely diffused intelligence and education. How can any man who thinks at all, iow ean any man who reads his newspaper daily, and cons the oft-repeated stories of the tricks of scoundrels, small and great, be ready to swallow with eager appetite a similar bait when it is offered to him? Think of a man of ordinary intelli- genoo perusing serfously any one of these preposterous “ schemes " which are now being advertised all over the country so persistently, and at such an enormous expense, and then deliberately going and purchasing & ticket, as if he believed all the prospectus has told him ! He will turn away from a beggar who runs off her glib roll of lies, some of which, must at least, judging by | the patent rags and leanness, be founded in truth; he | will give asoldier—who tries to support, by the sale of books or newspapers, the miserable maimed life the enemies of his country have spared—the cold shoulder, and perhaps the insulting word; but the stories of the lottery-men meet with his respectful attention. It seems wonderful, but so does every species of fatuity, Tars than for the discredit of having been * taken fa. Therefore wo see little hope that these swindling un~ dertakings will be arrested by any outbreak of populae i n. And that they should find their coup de grace in the suddenly awakened perception of our people to the truth that riches are mot made in n day™ or in any practieal beliof in the good old law about the “dignity of labor” is equally hope- less, The dignity of labor is something tha world never did believe in, and never will. Men in the mass will always shirk labor when they can, cither by slaveholding, office-holding—which is only another name for slaveholding—begging, borrowing, stealing, murdering; and 8o on, and there is no 1sa in thinking to oure it. And until it is cured, the ourse of lotteries will endure, and people will buy theic tickets and be duped until their money is gone, which, it may be added, will go & long time before theic credulity. No, the only way to cure this evil is, **to stamp it out” by stringent, persecuting laws; to hunt it down in the courts, to drive the men that deal in it and profit by it, from decent society, and to braad them in the public prints and in public places as de- all | to that state of stupofied astonishment that bis pockets | liberate swindlers, far more worthy of tho State- prison than the majority of convicted thieves. —— THE NEXT CONGRESS. The Hon. Jorx H. KEToHAM was yestorday mom. inated for reélection to Congress in the Dutchess dis- triet with enthusiastic unanimity. He will be plected by a bounteous majority. Thus far, the Republican-Unionists of our Stete have made nominations for Congress as follows: X. Datchess, Columbla—Jonn H. Karonsn; XVIL 8. Lawrence, Franklin—Casein T Hocevss, XX Herkimer, Lewls, Jeflerson—Assaon M. Lo, XXL Oaeida—Rowsos Consrens; XXIL Oswego, Madison—Homr Covaonins, XXIV. Cayagn, Wayne—Tusossns M. Pounsor, XXVIL Chemung. Steaben, Schayler—Haouiuron Wine; XXVILL Monros, Orlcans—Roswsst Hu, XXXI Chautavqua. Cattarenges—He ow Avaman. —Every one of these is 8 Membor of the preseat House save Mr. Churchill; and be succeeds by rota- tion Mr. Holmes, whose course meets the hoarty ap- proval of his constituents. Several of them are among the ablest as all of them are among the firmest op- posers of the President’s ill-starred ** policy.” Most of the remaining majority Members will likewise ba renominated, unless they peremptorily deeline, as three or four are understood to do, New-York has eighteen opponents of the President’s polioy in the present House; she will have more than ‘twenty in the next. A WAR DEMOCRAT. At & municipal dinner given at the St. Nicholas on the 22d of February, 1863, aud prosided over by Magor Opdyke, John T, Hoffman oufraged .the pro- prieties of the occasion by a covert but bitter sttack on President Lincoln and his supporters in pross- cuting the War for the Union. He insisted that the North was equally culpable with the South for in- citing the War, that the whole army was devoted to Gen. MoClellan, and coutinued: “ Although we are bound to pay ubedionce to the Govern- meat, nothing forbids intelligent men to discass the policy of P at all hazards, discoss it; %0 condusted as nod the Government. The will, aad they will insist that the War shall be 1o make Jree” —John Van Buren, Samuel J. Tilden, Thomas C. Fields, and other Democrats, spoke on the occasion but no one insulted the Mayor and other Republicans present by a Copperhead diatribe but John T. Hoff- man, now the Johnson candidate for Governor of oue State. The Erening Post asked us a quostion with regard to the Hon. Thaddeus Stevens, which we answered as frankly aud.fully as we could have done if giving testimony on oath before a judge and jury. We can- not see, on reviewing that answer, how to make it clearer, yet The Post keoping every part of that brief answer from its readers, says: ** T TRIBUNE still refuses to apswer our questions. * * * ‘we ol Tae TRIBUNE {s not opposed to Mr. Steven's influence in the House; it does desire to see Lim agaln he leader and master of the Repablican party in the Honse; it does not condemn the ey of conflscation, n‘: degradal tion of the States, which be has recently aunou nor wil it wara the Republican party against s policy as dao gerons i W lod suswer. —The Post says this, well knowing it to be false that THE TRiBUNK ** does not condemn the poliey of confiscation,” and kuoowing also that the only * degradation of the Stat>s" we favor is the legal to the cool and the sane; and perhaps nothing is more idle than to attempt to reason with those who seem determined to be deluded. ‘‘When a woman hesi- tates,” says somobody, ‘‘she is lost. When a man hesitates, he wishes to be lost.” And the man who is taken in by these gift enterprises, or lotteries called by whatever name, only declares that he hankered after the pleasure of being swindled, and ought to be congratulated on the completeness of his gratification, rather thau pitied for the extent of his loss. But, some reader with more than childlike inno- cence will ask: ‘* After all, suppose one does get the groat prize 1" Let him open his cars and listen, for an answer, to the rumors that already begin to come from the West: _“*The firm of Ludlam, Hale & Co., conductors of the ‘Great North-Western Gift Conoert,’ * falled ' oo Mouday, the 13th, and those who invested are minus their money and gifts. One of the firm had absconded with 875,000, and {M others were pre- paring to leave when the police arrested them.” And, already, from Chicago we hear a report that & panic has spread among the purchasers of tickets to the great scheme there, and that it is seriously proposed to have no drawing made. Any day this bubble may burst, as others have done before it, and it certainly will add nothing to the public confidence to be told that it is not yet known whether so-and-so, who is abundantly able to do it, will consent to pay back to the ticket-buyer the money they have in- vested, in case the schemo is abandoned! The cool impudalfie with which these bogus promises are made to a presumably asinine public, is as nothing to the cool impudence with which these promises are broken. But, after all, it has nothing to do with the right or ried out in accordance with the published programmes ornot. They owe their succéss prinei u-ifl 0 causes; one is the light estimatiod in which Amori- cans hold money, and which is quite easily compati- ble with the worship of the dollar which, if you will, is their characteristic; the other is, the eager haste to be rich, which we share in common with the rest of the world. We think nothing of a dollar, in one sense, though far too much of it in another; and we aro, one, and all, infected with the wild delu- sion that fortunes are eomu'ndy being made by chance, by accident, by luck, by any means, in short, except hard working and plain living, snd until economy becomes & more popular virtue in America than itis at present, we suppose there is very little hope that the number of dupes to these enterprises will be considerably lessened by any amount of warning. ‘We believe it is etiquette, now, to think five dollars the smallest sum that a gentle. man can give to anybody for any cause or service. ‘We are on the verge of an era when even the boot- boys will not ““do the heels” under that trifle, and it follows, of course, that anything which costs less than what is popularly known in polite circles as a V is of no account whatever. Tiokets for gift enter- prises, when at par, are usually placed low, in order to attract a larger shoal of weak fish and gudgeons, and it is taken for granted that the whole bulk of the loss will be so minutely divided among individuals that the suffering will be easily borne. Where the prizes are made fabulously large, indeed, s in some recent instances, of course the tickets are held by cases. But human nature may be relied on for the made ridiculous, and most dupes would rather suffer | we should be hanted and shot down like beasts? than expose their folly needlossly; and American equality of their loyal with their disloyal citizens. Had The Post allowed its readers to see our answer to its question, they would have detected its frand. Its talk of our *evasions” would have been rendered ridienlons and detestable by simply printing our reply to its question: so it suppresses this, aud tells ita readers that it is what it is not. And it takes oare neither to print nor to answer our inquiry whether it desires the reélection of Gov. Fenton. Such i The Evening Pest. Is it strango that its subscribers are dropping it The New-Orleans Tribune thus speaks of the condi- tion of loyalists in the South: “‘When & teacher to some village and Fp e e o e colored children, be is tarned b dlfl ool beral principies speaks parishes, stabbed or killed, When s man liberty aud humaa righte in our country be i at onos threatened with assassination. There is no political libarty in the Soutb, outside of a fow cities, aud even fo these olties, our flag. the incendiaries of Mobiie ~Orlosas and Mempbia toll the tale ond the liberties wo onjoy. SOUTHERN LOYALISTS IN OUR STATE. Arrangements aro being made by the State Contral Committse to have oue-third of the party ot Sonthern Loyalists visit points on the New-York and Erie Road and the interior of the State. Among others will be Gen. E. J. DAv1S (Union army) of Toxas, Col. WesToN Fuxt of Missouri, Mr. VAN VLIE? of Texas, Judge E. Hrssrann of Louisiana, the Hon. LoBEN20 SHERWO00D of Texas, Col. 0. B. HarT of Florida, Col. F. T. Lipesosgngx of Missouri, and other members of the delegation. Word will be seat by telegraph to the various points to-day. ommittees along the route, who desire speakers at offier foints than those that may be indicated by the State Central Committes, will ploass telagraph to Col. ¥lint, who will be with this portion of the delegation. i T Fakh. T.éulll[urq/flll. Y. Tribupe. 1§: Lam a candidate for Congrass ju Editor Ray- md!l district. Tam nominted, .fl. 'n*:‘ln s ll:.'n demand biim to mest mo ou the stamp, a ls Doagles and - coln, Srerury H. Beaxow. (Should these distitguished personages coma in cok lision on the stump, tha listening thousands will of course be delighted and edified. We apprebend, however, that & majority of the voters of the VIth Distriot will choose some third person as their next Representative in Con- grese.—Ed. Trib.) < W™ k) A QUESTION FOR THE POLICE AUTHOR- ITIES. To the Editor of The N. Y. Tribune. Sik: Last evening [ attended the convened at Union and poocts of Mr. Hunaicutt of Virg nia "b:l lk:' .I:"-h:‘: gon«l and Tnn by urmm- of the assembly for Audrew ohnson. 1 groaued nn.?omwm-hun.m hen It:a;.yd A re repoated groaned again. ring of loyaliste As soou as 1 could ngf lboh :p s::!d h. wos ::'!h.mn“d ! I ve e woul took the hint and u{)ournod inside ¢! o Taotiute” Now ln: no n::.dy, .:!dl'h?du like to kn ican gathering) not a8 . my political egemy a8 hhfl_m‘:’a‘c &‘lln—m e well calculated to create disturbaace. However, nok wishing to enjoy a free lodging for a night or two, [ heeded his intimation and profited thereby. lflhu right ! that nmn is not ailowed to exprass his opinion st sn assem- ly for that particular pu ] A Bo St 12, 1985, ¥ (N BLus wio Hates TRArmoRs. speculators at. @ great advance on the original price, | VT Uxto LEaaus CLUB.—At the rogular wonthly and the loss is likely to befmore serious than in other | meeting, beld last evening, at the Uaioa Leagus Club. » ro- ception was given to thoss of the Southera loyalists who re- possession of a good deal of the pride that fears to be | Dained in the oity. Ths foliowiag gentiemon wore proseat: | Judge Hoisland, Louisinas; Van Flaet Toxas, . Flind; Lsidergerben, Missourt; Mr. Stroag, M i Judge Barsett, Tennosseo, and soversl mombocs of (ke Loague. The Whe aee we persoeuted i 4he Bouth aod qursed i | hpouas nature ganes fac less 0z L 1038 9F @ o dul- | provpwdings wage #eh pade il