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

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7.953. NEW-YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1866. last was 1ot paid. 1t was then promised that it should be pain m October. The Government has as yet made uo provision for the four willion dollars necessary for this Prrpose. but notice bas been given of a forced loan to be levied on the interior of the empire. They do not dare to make foreed loan in Constantinople, where !l the wealth of the country is concentrated. It would cauee a comme- tion and -mrx{d hear too heavily on the rich Pashas; but the interior, it is beileved, can be oppressed 10 any extent without danger. The modus operands of @ forced loan in this: The Pashia of each eity or town calln the leading men of the communities, and, according to his judgment or eaprice, assigns 10 each wan the amount of money which ke i¢ to pay over within ro many days If pad, that s the end of it. There "is Do pretence of l(nying back priveipal or interest. It is only by complinient that it is called a /oan. If the money demanded is not fortheowing, the unlucky subject is im- prisoned ut once. The Pasha expects to Teceive about much for himeelf, in the way .of bribes, as the whole wimount which he receives on the loan. This is easily wanaged. because if any man is an enemy or refuses to pay the Parha a bribe, his share of the loud can be putat #0 bigh a fignre as to consume his whole property. There i 1o check of any kiud upon the Pasha. He is required to raise tho money. No one in Constautinople ever asks Low 1t is raised. e BY THE ATLANTIC CABLE TO OCTORER 3. QUR SPECIAL €ORRESPONDENCE. — ‘THE INSURRECTION IN CANDIA TURKEY IN ‘A BAD WAY. P THE SUFFERINGS OF FRANKFORT FROM THE WAR. What the Russians Think of the American Embassy, LATER. Binee writing the above—[we have published thie letter in our issue of Rept. 29, Ed. BUNE]|—the Levant Herald bas published a letter from the insurgents of Candia to the President of the United States. It wonld net be strange if the uncasy American Congul at Candia had bad a hand in this letter, but Mr. Seward will hardly think of scnding Gen. Grant to the Mediterranean with” an_army.to drive the Turks from Candia, 1f the Cretans only wish a * fu- vorable mention” at Paris and London, they may get it, but it will be likely to do them more barin than good. RUSSIA. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. Liverproor, Oct. 3.—The market for cotton it firm. . “Middling Uplands ure quoted ot 15 pence. The sules to-day ug © gregute 16,000 bales. LONDON MONEY MARKET. 1. 4—The money market is quiet MORE ABOUT THE AMERICAN EMBASSY, RUFSIA AND ITS PEOPLE—A RUSSIAN PAIR—FAVORABLE IMPRES- SIONS MADE BY THE EMBASSY—THE FAIR IN NIINI-NOVGOROD—THE TRADE FROM THE EAST— REPRESENTATIVE MEN AT THE BANQUET TO THE AMERICANS—EMIGRATION TO RUSSIA—TIHE 81G- NIFICANCE OF THE VISIT OF THE AMERICAN EMBASSY—IMPRESSIONS MADE BY THE EMBASSY. From Uur Special Corigspondest. O THE VOLGA. Sept 1, 1666, As a supplement to my last letter, I have now to tell you more about Nijui, The fair elone woull have afforded interosting material to write about for a week, while ] am obliged to cut short with what I saw ina day. Ttis the old, easy, Eastern style of tradiog which isin vogne in Nijni. A bargain is undertaken as one would begin a siege, and the price turns upon the indi- vidually attractive and repulsive poles of ware versus Loxvox, O Consols for wmoriey 194 AMERICAN SECURITIES. Loxvoy, Oct. 3.—The following are the quotations for Ameri «ean Securities : Erie shares, 52} ; 1linois Central shawes, 78 U. 8. Five-Twenties, 70} THE EASTERN QUESTION. PR #rom Our Own Correspondent. CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. 4, 1866, INSURRECTION IN CANDIA. Candia, or Crete, is again in arms against the Turks. ¥ we were to beliove one half of what we read in the * French papers, or one balf of what is reported in the strects of Constantinople, my letter to-day would be filled with Battles and massacres. The truth is that o collision has yet taken place be- | cash n the heads of buyer and seller. Each one tween the troops and the insurgents. Tcan state this | seats himself quietly, and procesds s ically, I saw with great confidence, as it rests upon the authority of the | some Bokharans in lico shop which sends §1,000,000 worth of material to Persia and Beloachis and the officers of the United States gunboat Ticonderoga, just amved at Smyroa from Candia Therevolutionary move- wient has thus far followed cxactly the course of that which took place in 1833, I do not know the exact - Jation of Crete, but the proportion of Mohammedans to country where old Alexander halted, men with dingy faces, and dark caleulating eyes, who had the appenran of having lnid siege for several days. When the batte are properly trained there is & tunible of an average o per cent in swall traps, such a8 o traveler would buy for remembrance. Of our party mavy bought precions stones, Grecks is vers small, and for 50 years nothiug bas kept | inlaid cups, e. Fixed prices arc scarcely kuown in the Greeks,down but @ large gwrison of Turkish or | the Eust, whic cat Lind b The as troduc t these xlow cust The overland tea trade general ot Egyptian troops. In 1822 there was on the island, ari€ing from the utter desp who bad been oppressed and plundered b auce by the Janissaries, The people fol desperation that they utterly destroyed two k #ent to subdue them, They beld out very great. At one side of th thay bed prectieally gained their fndepd forined by the fair, scattered over a_ grea 7 dllied powers epped in and dec looks liké a suburban cat rd emptied of its beasts thr shouid be giver emet Aali of Egypt auything else, you way 4t rows of packages in raw ltered from the weatber ting. In the mud or «r hlocks and boards hides with 1 and sky only by a fu dut between these rows, stumbli aud waste wat aud the Cretaus were equally disgusted w ¥ order and | as intolerable ptian rale for a time secured goc b s of the East and Wos: prosperity ia the island, but it soon b ) as that of the I othier revolt took | meet each other and tran a8 in tea, amounting to pince. The Monammedaus and the troops were driven into | several il s worth in a mouth. If you w the fortresses, o national assembly was fory d an | to see o saiple of Any package the mer-hant rats n ir sppeal made to the three great Theso Powers | auger through the & of which the bair inside immedi interest in the people by urgiug afl ely closcs the aperture again, fetehing ont a spec but troally wanifested their tender T i thut there is 10 ¢ them to suhw: hekd out some months, yielded without any fighting. Th ere pressed 1o exeented. In 1841 another serious insurrection broke ouf brick fo and Kalune aud the Greeks meintained themsclves for four months, | of the fighting some bloody battle yellow as ds which is pre- *From that time 10 the present there has been conetant | cisely like hay the two kinds which do not difficulty on the islaud. It has come back into the hands | find their way in iropean and Ameriean markets, of the Turks, but they have learned nothing from expen- | The Iatter is” delicious. A case of it b five or six euee. There hes been mothing there but wisrule, | hundred dollars, was presented to Mr Tox. Tea in druak aud tho people bave been constantly under the | at morning, noon and night n Russia, and the Americans influence of emissaries from Greece, urging them | are all in love with it 18 10 me better than that to revolt. For eny months they be which is ¢ honly “memorizlizing the Turkish Government to reduce their If 1 were to atiemp! stion of the taxes and give thew sowe eivil . It been all in | traders at the fair of Nojui, I i to the title wain. They chosen sort of mational assembly to press | page of any common school googr No cod their claims. The Turks tried to break this up, but it bas | tumes of the Tartars and Persians a Taces withdrawn to the mountang and declareditself permanent. | may be soen. At the fuir you w pure or mixed, geerally the latter. The Persians, in their long curly wool caps, fashioned on the principle of a stove pipe knocked flat at the top, seemed to me the most pic- turesque people there, ax they were generally tall and favored with very it as the hawk nose, but course like a_scy! of Nijui is Tarfar, which is not at sl stran recollect that eastern Russia once formed a Many wurders huve been committed, and the Mohamme dan population bas taken refuge in the fortresses. The Tarkish Governar has been ordered to disperse the Rebels, but he reports himself as suffering so severely from the gout that hie cannot take the field. The Greek provincial government bas made a very temperate, but carnest ap- Ph.l to the Eusopean Powérs. There the matter rests, e Porte does not really dare to take any extreme meas- wres, and the people hope to gain their ends without actual | Half the working populatio 0 when artar king- sighting. I understand that the Porte complains that the | dom, the capital of which was Knsan, 200 miles further | “Americau Consul bas furnished the Rebels with arws. 1t | down theriver. The Tartarsare like the Russians, a good is beheved by mauy here that the island will be ‘again | patured, quiet people, but they dress differently; the dis- Tlie troops now oceupying the island are | tinguishing feataro being generally the little Chiinese skull given 1o Egypt. Ej , a part of the 18,000 men loaned to the Sultan by the ( Egypt, at the time when be was | secking o change the order of succession in favor of his own soi. Otbers think that it will e given up to France, others that it will be annexed to the Kingdom of Greece. My own impression is that i the insurgents hold out well, at will retain & nominsl eonnection with Turkey, but be made really independent, on a busis similar to that of the “Danubian Priccipalities. This result would satisfy the people of Crete, and would be wore agreeable to the European Powers than any other. 1t would prepere the way for final independence, without bringing up, just now, the question.of walotaiving the in- Turkish Em; cap, or some oddity of foot genr. Atthe Exchange we saw specimensof the productsof eastern Russia, which consisted wainly of cereals, rock salt, fish from the olga and Caspian caviar, iron, and » few common-place munufactured articles. The furor 1o see us was immense. More than once the ranks of our party wese broken by charging “hordes " of these formerly sav now very harmless and sufficiently servile, races of the blood of Genghis Khan, who were only iutent upon seeing what they conid see. Wherever the beards grow long, hovever, the are met by the most deafening aud uever tiring hurrabs, showing us Low sineere the ih ians proper are in their rejoicings at the opportumity to welcome some genuine foreign friends. Much of the trade which oomes to Nijni from the East atill travels the entire distance by axle, or on pack auimals, along the apcient roads which cross the southorn Gral from Kiatka in Asia, but the great bulk mukes direct for Perm on the wostern slope of tue Ural, and is earricd thence to Nijui by steamboat down the Kama, Tea and Siberian irvn are sure to tind @ _market, but other Asiatic will thus be prepared all over wll the islunds for the final di: tegration of dhe Empire. No one hopes now for the final .eureof the sick man.” The only question is whother he hall be allowad to die a patural death or whether his end .ehall be hastesed by interosted pliysiciaus. THE DIZFICULTY IN MOXTENEGRO. European Tuskey and iu The question of Montenegro was regarded asweitled, | goods, which are not sold nt Nijoi, are carried home again at the end of the war last year, but it scems to | when the fairis over. What a* comment on the luck of Do as unsettiod as ever. The Muntenegrins dewmand | gixed prices aud the enterprise of continental Asia! The She immedime withdrawal of the Turkish troops | moralof it is pointed enaugh in the fortunes of colossal size wade by {oreigaers ou the Volga, who bave studicd themselves into the lanzuage and nature of the people sud adapted themselves thoreto. ie dinnor given to the Americans at Nijoi Novgorod and such su extension, of territory as shall give them a port in the Adniatic. .In apswer to these demands the #urks have laggely ineroased their gammsons in the iuterior of the country, and have concentrated a large army ou the rontiers. 1 i have sent & fleet inte the Adriatsc,and | reprosouted vast wealth, often in the person of sowe plain, e e (o 1be cominand of the'| wusswamning ol feiow, who would be takea In New-York forces sbout Montenegro. for o dealorin 0'd clothes—not Jows, because the Jows _An view of theee wurlike proparations the Monteuegrians | have not been tolorated nor oven allowed to live in some ‘Dave seut anambassy to Vienns .and St. Petorsburg to pray for aid. The relations between Russia aud this Sittle awountain Pramejpality have long been wost intimate and -Russia hias exereived i sort of protectorate there. We<an- not&:dm thereselt of the present appeal, but it is not unlikely to complicate mattors 1 European Turkey. If Ruseia does net interfere.it will be only because she#oss that her time las et yet quite come. Turkey is 00t likely 40 yield anything thore unless she is foread to do so. Mon Aenegro has always been a thorn in bier side, and the wili- parts of Russia, like Moseow, ifor exampl | within eight years; but Russians af themiddle or peasant class, who wear the long coat, kuows to Western Europe ouly a8 the costume of the Polisk Jows. 1f wealth exists amonz the late unprivileged classes in Russia, 1t_docs not show itsdlf ju Parisian dress. A peasant who succceds to wealth remains o peasaut in name, and genorally, alsa, su fasbion, though he be the first man of a town, or the occupant of a princely man siou. H expected 1o Bear this i mlxnrhl his iuter. .dary oceupation of the country bas given, during the {ast | eourse with the powers that be, and bis obeisancos to the yoor, ‘uul quiet to the surroumding | great 1o of the land. Onl; 0 “the emancipation oountry. there s a gradual o this eramping ot ecaste. lffll'ln\( Thut bold act of the Emperor's made labor. Now tho ex- igencies of the times are torciug them to cxercise their SEW OPPRISSIONS IN EGYPT. “ThePasha of Egypt came to Constantinogle last Spring .aul spent ineredible susns of money in bribing the Nultai | wits in various ways. which they were by no mesns obli t Y i s W ch they ) obliged and i e court. He volunbunly increased bin amrucl | to do horetc That same strong will of the Emperor's Aribatesome £300,000 sterting & year. He leut 18,000 wer | yppointed boards, corresponding to County Commissiooers 20 the Sultan free of all expense, and evriched every om | with who took a their bost lands, if they saw fit, whe ready to sell his influence to the Porte. All this was dope to chsuge the order of suecession ix pt. It was fixed by mfl and by the lew of the %0 thet the throne wonld bavo pussed to zhe eldest Arother of the presens, Vieezoy. &t was changed i ¥ decree @f the Sultan to the son of the Yiceroy. Now all theve bills ere to ke paid. and the Viceroy fhas ‘sddresscd & wemorial 4o the Porte, announcing bie intene tien st ance Jacgely to inerease all the tuxes losied in L, Felldheen ! Whaevet dances you must pay . Your old hlue sliirts most be shortened. your | and geve & small portion to each peasant, to he paid for 37 years, moantie issaing o sert of certifieate for lund so taken, which bears & vaiue v the market wuch like paper cerrenc f anybody foels a desire to emigrate to Russia, to count- ermarch_against the- star of empire,"” now 18 their time, Yoease laids of & splendid quality way be hought for & wong, the proprietors wot hwwing med yet what to do with it to make it Kmr- ble,with machinery, and a proper uuvlml;n:d‘!mngd tl ti,uuku;n. ’l;wym:lu of lhbur Ih tein- mirily high, as in the ¥outhern Ktates, but this will sco allowance of blaek Lread and sugus-cane must be rediced. | f:gvlm iself toa very wioderate standard, acoordin :: ¥ou have xow neither sel nor body which you cun eluina | theprincipdes of demund and supply. fn every village :{won; but jyun must cut ehort gour hours of rest | thare is now au Elder? whose ceptzact for o mauy work harder. ~ You alresdy work for nothing «ad fiud | hands is us vinding on the uts s though they were n:mq.m 'd.ovimmm.d'm ynlgr n:c p‘;iv-ll:ne ‘un.“ ' Atill serfs; 6 tint mdved the change in Russia bis becn ! er the patenginl ¥ slavery 4 vil s 10 s e g8 f oo g AT ui I ‘ 13:‘;’: s slavery npder nfividuls to & serflom to the the bt ther condinou is regulated by liberal Jaw) ‘Thaseof your resdess who have borm fn Egypt will appn- pervision of o petriarehal old mulyuf!hrlr ow , elato as node otbers can what fhis <irefyl ¥nROBDEORENE | i very smeliorated. Besie. the peasants have learped L amentw: all the tares in Egyptare to b largely vuercas. | Low (o votp cack other anid their superiors ip10 office, for the manguement of thedr own local aff and they sin- THE PRISCE OF RAMOS, The islabd of Sawaon 18 hleased with & Christian prinee, | desstand very well 1he exinnecment this hae choncd o o pather -« Greek prines, ted by the Forte. He | their own diguity and importatoe. owes his sppointnent to Sir Heury Buens, the late Eoghieht A 0 i uf siich a stage, fa order to i& wife baving been & pacticular frjend of pee, i en et the appropriates particular that is genemliy co; jee of which T t‘u" w P 4 i be bie, even in Constantinople, Wwid A o ish The. of the Liland bave just scut to Constantinople L Lo tuly. el this e greoiugs of the libernted wivs ton, for thers hak been « |icadence oa thepart, of the ars h wind of dyiizaion which o rew of the Jewry fabrigs of - b of nte sgeinst this worthy il o officiul has Bpon sept 1o Senios u?'mmnmu them, - A» 8ir Henry is w0 longer here to defend his pro- m wan is hkely 1o oy s doserts. There i eon- exeitement oo iy ialond, but it is not |.=.-|, 0 l 10 iiny o threalk, 3 trgnid Mages ous s A FORCED LOAX TO BR LEVIXD, Woull you Jike ~vAlbe iterest due on tho nutional sevt of Lorkey mJaly | aro winkisg iu s 1 Weil, s wonid 1. Butk wi . ‘ 1 tourney 3 Kus o snddenty biows U trye Kiud of an wpression vo | o tell you more abont it after we get back to St. Peters- burg. "There are so many classes that it is not safe to strike an average hastily: but I am sure that if we are not angels, an enlightened spectalor witnessing our reception, { wight think so; and the more (the ruling classes at ouce comparatively poor) because the main portion of their roperty, after ail, consisted in the ovm-nh:s of huma, intelligent classes, (who see in ux only an o inary unse- lected body of oficers from two common naval ships, who did not know they were going to Russia till they got to Newfoundland, sometimes finding themselves not guite equal to the brilliant sssembliges of the best 5O~ ety of Russia into which we are mtroduced), know enough to look 1o our chicfs as the representatives of our country, and at the same time stand %0 little on ceremony that punctilios are never seized ngon, from utter absence of ull inducement therennto. Mr. Fox, 1 think, makes a good impression, and I should say does as well to pepresent our country and its principles as any man that eould bave been selected. Unassuwiug, but dig- nified and self-possessed, he converses freely and quite in- telligently on any subjeet, and at a prover time does not fail 1o have s gallant word for the ladics, To reeeive and make appropriate response to the distinguished Lonors which have been sbown him as the representative of America, was a task which probably not one outof a thou- and would have accomplished more haudsomely. In say~ ing which I am only giving my own impression on a subject which I am sure the TRIBUNE wishes me to have an opin- The impression of the Russians, T think, will Le that of a wide-awake, honest Republican, who understands bow much truth and how mach umbug there is in the wonarchical way of dving things, but is tolerant of uny form which pmplishes the well-being of the governed. From what I cau learn, Mr. Clay, our Minister at St. Petersburg, who accompamed Mr. Fox to Moscow, is also thought very well of at Court and by the Russians gencrally, though & quarrel exists between bim and some of ihe Americans at Moscow, because ho didn't invite them to & certain dinner; and, indeed, quar- vels of that kind exist all round. Clay is s quiet, casy- going sledge hamimer; and, as ho seemed to me, very hok- est, and very good-hearted, But he made the mistake of introducing Mr. Fox as * Captain” Fox, which raised a breeze that took a day or two to blow over; as Fox wished 1o be recognized only as a civilian visiting Russia on a special mission. And Clay,ignoring the Coreul and Amer- ieans at Moscow, has made themn feel so bitter that th will not fail to do a!l in their power to have him removed. Furthermore (to show you, while I am about it, how the air keeps stirring), Murray once mado & speceh in which things stubbornly had fo get a littlo mixed; and Beau- mont, unfortunately, afterward alluded to ** the eloguenco of the previous speuker”—following which event all tho officers of the Miantanomah got tired of being feted and made ssil for St. Petershurg, 8q it is only the Augus- tinians that are accompanying the Envoy of Congress up the Volga, except the Secretary of Legation and yours truly, who'mn an old hand at this business, of N‘('vamg distinguished consideration, and might also tind a thing or two to growl about. PR A GERMANY Tt FRANKFORT. THE WAR—CURRENCY AND EX- jon upon. SUFFERINGS FROM CHANGR--THE PRUSSIAN 0CCUPATION OF THE CITY —FRANKFORT'S GREAT BLUNDER—ANNKXATION TO PRUSSIA, From Our Spe-ial Corresvondent. FRANKPORT-ON-THE MAIY, Sept, 13, 1896, It is difficult not to sympathize with the people of Praokfort in their misfortanes. The city, whieh dates trom Charlemagne—which was & Free Town of the Em- | pire, with Imperial privileges, then of the Confederation, and the seat of the D, the eity m which Luther onco lived and Goetho was born—a city rich, prosperous and independent, which had survived the storms of & thousand years, wnd whose liberties even the Congress of Vienna respecte month's unequal confliet, cprived at once of its freedow art of its wealth, its hope of future finap- iuberitod dignity of it it sl retains s the v spect which misfortune can always claim, Tho Cathedral 1n which the mporors of Germany far- merly crownod was crowded on Friday with a people that would welcome back the worst of those Emporors to save them from Prussian rale. They listened to o sermon full of s in its tono and of re tion i its piety; but where were the thunders of Rome t o woull have been Innnehed against the Protestant nsurper ! What o Joss to the lovers of the pieturesquo in Listory that the thunderbolt manafuctory is no longer flourishing' Frankfort 18 in truth one of the grestost suffs victory of Prussia, She seems likely to lose ov Al pre-omine Hitherto aho has been the money- ( presiding over the transfers of 5 shifiing values were & souree of neo 1o evorybody else, but of coustant f Fra wrt. When the thalers of ny, Frankfort seraped off us of Austria weot norti, levied & toll on them. 1 believe the Kothsehilds never knew the when they econld not con 10 ke the rate of exchange favor Frankfort, city wan the middieman and once distributed iminenso quantities of zoods—Istterly, mors of money than any- thing else. It was hete that the Austrian loans have always been put on the market—an operation of doubt Austria, snd still more to her subsequent cre of wure guin to the bankers who negotisted themn. these loans were alwags on the lorin basis, but Pr | will 1o longer tolerste the lorin of Austrh in it likely that wn Austriau loun cau be of takon in Fraukfo ‘The thaler crowds out the unhappy forin. Were there official probibition sgainst dealing in Austrian securit Prussin well knows bow to discourage sud hamper such financial operations as she disupproves, and she cortaiuly will not be inciived to help Austria in money inatters, or | leave ber o mereautile foothold in Germany, out of which she has been forever banished as a political power. Nor Prussian policy be mitigated by 2 will the rigor o a with to continue = the prospority of Frank- fort, The city has fallen under the displeasure of & K. to whom the sentiment of pity is unkuown in poli- ties, and Bismark has given notice that Frankort need expect o fasors at his haods. Tt is not for the interest of Prussia that the city should pe the headquarters of finance, for Berlin 18 to be the headquarters of everything. And Frankfort, though she becomes Prussian in nawe, Wil have a chance to remember what fate befalls those wha oppose, but have not strength to rosist. Already one large partof Fraukfort capital bas been trausferred to Paris, another 1o Augsbu d @ third to Berliu. Not even for American securities is Frankfort any longer the chiaf Kuropean market; she is outstripped and superseded by Berlin, sud the transactions on the Bourse of the Prus- sian capital are enormous. These Romias of the nine- nth century, are to experionce~ as Macaulay said of the Saxons under Frederick in the Seven Years War—the full force of that tremendons sentence of Tacitus, ** Subjectos tanywam svos, viles tangnam alienos,’ ‘The traveler who goes to Fraokfort need not expect to find curroncy aud exchange suy more in his favor now than formerly. He will be wise if Le makes up his mind to accept the maxim that exchange is always against him. 1f lie doos Got expact to romain longin Souibers Germany, Tot him mako uo effort to undorstand it coinages nor to resist being cheated in small change. Adhering to this an will cost bim o few floring extra, but will repay bim in good temper and that eojoyment of travel to which 5Wv] tempor is casontinl, Dou't quarre! with those poor orils of ralway officials aud botel clerks, aud kutschers (8 very anbdued species of the genus kiown iu America ‘as backmen). If you keep your temper, a they will amuse you imwensoly nd why shiould you not pay for beiog amused ! I happened to waut t my hofel for & five pound Bauk of Eaglaud Looking into Murray, | discoverad that my five pound mote ought to bring we sixty florins, and s it is always worth while to appear to Know about these watters I puf ou as much of a Jew look as I could muster at short notice, and told my hotol enshisr | should be obliged if ha wonld be kind enough to give me sixty orins for this five und mote. Instantly the eashier pricked up his ke @ terrier with s premonition of rats, tarned his l'll'rp eyes on e, and saw throngh my shallow affectation at thie first glauce, “Oh yos,” he said, “certainly, sixty, that is right, all but the exchauge you know !" I'h?)lwnl out @ piece of paper aud Covered it all half & minute withe lot of microscopic figur might have served to calculate the latitude and longitnde of Frankfort. “Oh yes,” then said my cashbier, “sixty, k.' change, that will be just fifty-nine ton”—meaning fty-pine florins, ten kreutzers, whereupon he handed over ueous collection of Fraukfort bauk notes, silver | florins, and copper kroutzers, supposed to repra- senfthe above amouut. 1 was not at all equal to {he oc- casion, and did uot pretend to count it, but suggested that 1 was going to leave Frankfort, and should ‘fn Prussian money. “ Oh yes, certainly’ ' —figures again, Frunkfort currency diasuppears and a still more wiscellaueous collee- tiou of Prussian thalers and silver groschveis spread before we. The clever little rascal 1 think charged me o second exchange for giving Prussisa in place of Frankfort money, and Ibelieve, thongh on sueh points I would not assume io be positive, that bis bereditary fumiliarity with accounts proved worth to this eashicr on this oceasion sbout fifiy congs in sitver—which is at the rate of two per eent ob the amount of the triusaction, and would be deemed, | llllrfit', rather clever 1n Wall-stroeiy fwxterual signs of Prussisn conquest there are not many. Khatteeed walls and ruived houses you wift fot find, but the Prossion eagle is evorvwhere, and the ble and red nuitorn and the bra ped belmets gleam wong cvery street and fill the gusrd houses and. ocoupy the wal's,” Fulkensioi, the nsne of teryor to evecy Fravklorier with florius in his steong-hox, is gone, bui 3 Prossian Colenel reigns in bis stead as. Conrmavdant, and daily ot zhe Hotal de Rassie ou the Zeil, with hLis reeiffental staff wnd Ioe officers aboit Bim o wither side the table d'bote, The Commnndant looks, ug most of ti4 Prusstm field offiecrs of regiments look, like & soldier and weentlman, and pot ke the robber which Frankfyrt Lgighers, fancy binte T gricve 10 Lave o add flfat Fthe Coluner ate Wie gdinyer wnthm- *uife, und that ' . ' and reatlirmed—finds itself, in the shock of & | the misuse of the knife at dinner. his officers followed his example, with entire loyalty and without apparent reluctanee. Tndeed, 1 first saw here that cculiar chopstick bandling of the kuife and fork, which i quite indescribable to one who has never seena Chinero performance at the table, but which enitieal friends of mine assur & 10t 1088 COMION AMOTE & certain cluas of Germans than i§, among a cortain class of Americaus, ‘fhe remark of Oliver with h an ‘Wendell Holmes, that he weould rather sit at dmner a neighbor who disblicved in the Trinity then witl orthodox Christian who carried food 10 his mouth with & knife, deserves circulation in Germany not less than at home. ll{ stay in Frankfort is so brief that I bave seen and shall Bope to see but few of its citizens, and cannot learn much of the private misery following the Prussian occu- pation. Be it more or less, itis the fortune of war, and will get not mnch pitied from the world which res) success, and believes that in war & blunder is worse than @ enime, Undoubtedly Fraukfort blundered llwfxethm and at its miserable letsurc is paying the penalty of a vast misealenlation, 1don't eare to waste sympathy on the rieh banker whose vaults are @ little lcaner for sian levy, Ho can afford it. But I am told the rich bankers contrive to make the exaction fall on the poor who are not bankers, and that real suffering follows the forced payment to Prussia. 1 do not Kknow what the facts are. 1o kuow that all the Fravk- forters with whom I talked had the air of men who had passed and were passing under the yoke, ond there wasa general opinion that in fature it would be well for peace- able citizens accustomed to mercantilo affairs to leave polities and war aloue. There was a very polite and uhnflnfiwmn who showed me through the rooms of Goethe's honse, and who, when be found I was an American, did not hesitate to talk freely about the condi- tion of the city. Lest I bring somebody into trouble let mo hasten to say fie was not the janitor of the house nor other- wise conneeted with it. * Ne{ther Frankfort nor I, norany of its peou said this man, ** shall ever regain what we have lost. Wo shall be obedient subjects to Prussia, Heartily loysl we can never be.” | have no doubt he spoke houestly, {u it does not follow that bis speech involves blame 0 Prassia. Of the millions whom Hismark ap- nexos there are few except the 90,000 citizens of Frank- fort to whow union with Prussia does not prowise dreater prosperity, better edueation, and a larger politipal freedom than they eujoyed under their hereditary rulers. —_— MEXICO. — News to the 17th of September via Havana. REMARKABLE SPEECH BY Attt MAXIMILIAN. Havaxa, Sept, 2, 1866, The steamer Ciudad, Condal, yesterday brought dates from the city of Mexico of the 17th inst. The official pa- pers report that the guerrillas were continually getting worsted by the Imperial forces. ‘The auniversary of Mexican independence was cele- brated on the 16th by a grand review on the Plaza de Ar- mus, and a 7' Dewm in the Cathedral, at which Maximil- au attended, accompanied by his court and all the public fuuctionaries and dignitaries. The President of the Coun- cil of State addressed the Ewmperor, who replied in 8 dis- course, in which he stated that there was no lasting pro. gress, no political development or human triumph without hardship and blood; that he was still firm in the seat, not- withstanding all his difficnltios, which the votes of the na tion had cansed him to occupy; and that it was not in troublons times that a true Hapsburg would abandon his ost; and as the majority of the nation had called him to nd their sacred rights, the Almighty ought to protect himn. The Estafette asserts that His Majesty is resolved to pot himselt at the Is wead of the National army to fight the re Almonte hud resigned the position of Minister to but his resiguation had not yet yet been accepte Mejia left on the 12th 1o take command of the Active measures were 10 be Third Division at San L taken against Rumors were s wmpico, arreat that Ortega was acting as Presi- a with (Gens, Negreto aud Pricto ax his the Juarist gurrison st Chi- of Ortega after killing g Juarez to fly to Paso huahus Bad pronous the Governor, Tenazas, and ca del Norte. A new programne, conservative in its political sensc, is promised daily by the Imperial Government. The Era snnounces that Maximilian would soon leave on bis projected journey to San Luis. Palaeios remained Governor of the State of Chibuahua. He s afriend of Ortega, and is the anthor of a protest against the farther continuance in office of Juarcz as President. st accounts, Escobedo was at Montercy and had impose had boen greater at Saltillo than at Monterey. SAN FEANCIS00, Oct, 2.1t is asserted that Maximilian sont an order countermanding the evacuation of Nonora; that the Freneh Admiral, having embarked all bis troops, refused to disembark, CANADA. EXECUTIVE COUNCIL AND THE FEXIANS—DISCOUNT ON BILVER. Orrawa, €W, Wednesday, Oct. 3 1666, The Exoentive Council sat several hours last night. Tt 18 reported that important dispatches relating to the Fen- inns have been received. The Board of Trade have passed a resolution that Amer- cun and British silver be taken hereafter at 4 per cent dis- count, CHAMPION BILLIARD MATCH—PEAT EXPERIMENTS— OURLING MATCH, Tonox1o, €. W., Wednesday, Oct, 3, 1866 McDevitt and Dion play billiards in Montresl on Fri- day for the cbampion cue aud $1,000. An interesting experiment regarding the use of peat for fuel has been tried by the Grand Trunk Railway Com- pany, which proved perfectly successful. Nogotiations are making for a curling match between the Montreal and Manchester (England) Clubs. T f barley in the Toronto market yesterday agons reached 60,000 bushels. e — CHINA. ACTIVITY OF THE REBELS. Sax Fraxcisco, Wednesday, Oct. 2 1860, Dates from China to July 13 say the Rebels in the Province of Yang-Chow are much moro formidable thun was supposed. Every leader sont inst them, except one, had met with dofeat. In one battle, the younger brother of the Viceroy lost 2,000 Enfield riles, and, out of 1,000 cavalry en, , ouly 100 escaped, and the fate of supposed to have been no better, ———— CUBA. (ON OF IMPORT DUTIES—A LARGE FIRE IN HAVANA — THE GOVERNOR-GENERAL — QUARAN- TINE—FINANCIAL—SHIPPING, HAVANA, Sepl. 0, 1866, The Royal order of the 20th of August, by which ex- port duties are suspended in Cuba for the period of six months, coun! ting from the publication of the order in Havana, was [lmNi-hmi for the first time on th 206th iost. The order will teud, it is supposed, to saimate the trady of this island. A large lige occurred here on Thurs night. Trot- chw's provision-store snstained a loss of $100,000, In viaw of the fact of thore beiug considorable patroleum de- posited in the store, the Governor has orderod, ai llowed one month for his order to be carried inte effect, that all peteoleum shall in future be stored outside the r«‘ in some isolated house? mong the passsugors of the Ciudad Condal, from ;ar: ('rlnlklil roported an ex-Coufelerate General, bis ol {wo “{ H)n-rufir country=seat on oneral is to move into town from bis , and preparations are beiug made 0 i Marianno ever since quarantine regulations are still in force hange on New-York is 20,70, Tye Cuba is expected to arrive to-day from Ne: to Baltimore, She will touch here and take p ™ for New-Orleans via Koy -W est, there to be o the Liberty, touching on her way to Baltimore. : The Stars aud Stripes from Philadelphia arrived yester- duy. ~Orlenns — VIRGINIA. ispatch to The N. ¥, Tribune, NokroLk, Toesday, Oct. 2, 1566, The special term of the U, 8. District Court ix {oumsd sone die and will not be held until convened by “hisf-dJustice Chase, ‘The next term will be held at Rich- moud on the 12th of November. W, J. Barry, clerk of eourt, went to Richmond vesterday to promnlgate Judge Uniderwood’s order. Jeff Davis will not be tried this terw. X et Rpech ‘ THE MICHIGAN HORSE #AIR. Hpeeinl Dispateh to The N. Y., Tribune. Karanagoo, Weddeaday, Oct. 3, 1566 soverul loans on the population, aud emigration | THE PEN MASS MEETING IN PHILADELPHIA, DING CANVASS e SPEECH OF THE HON, HANNIBAL HAMLIN. —— Hpecial Dispatch to The N. Y. Tribune. PrILADELPHIA, Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1866, One of r.ost important of the series of public meetings Leld in this city under the auspices of the Uunion League took place to-night. The Academy of Music was crowded. The Hoo. Issac Hazlehurst presided. He said he intro- Qnced the Hon. Hagnibal Hamlin as one whose name was linked with that of Lincoln and made grand by the nsso- ciation, [Great applause.] Our istinguished guest is & noble and tricd statesman. [Great applanse.] We welcome him to-night because he has scorned the wrath and defied the oppression of power. Mr. Hamlin was received amid tamuits'of applause. Mr. Hamlin on addressing the au- dience said: "Mhose general plandits speak no nncertain sound. They come from the lips of men who are loyal to our country, and they assure me that you, the people of Philadelphia, are” deter- wined to sustain the Congress of the United States. It is no bitter contest that I wish to enter upon to-night, my friends. T spenk to those who represent the fumilics of thousands, aye tens of thousands, of those who have fullen i defeuse of the Union. 1 am to-night the guest of the Union League of this city, whose praise is on the lips of the loyal men throughout the country. I emember three years hence the days that 1 spent in Philadelphia, before the battle at Gettyshurg, where many of ur fullen braves e sacred in their graves. T remember that I time distinetly, beeanse it was then that the backbone of the Rebellion was broken. We. have come here to uight for,con- Itation s the best plan to adopt, and decide the grand gues- tion—what comes of the legitimate results of all these battles. {Nensation.] We have now mived at that point that we, the people, desire to kuow on what_terms the people we have eon- quered shall be restored to participation in our torm of govern- ment. 1 believe that the symptoms are that will weleome them back at the earliest moment. T wish them to resume their enrliest position, but I dare not and you dare not, and I use the word earefully, until equal rights are allowed to every wan L\prl?"w] i the name of three hundred thousand men who 1ill both Northern and Southern graves, by all the ob- ligations ‘of those who atood in_our. defense in an bour of trial, we dare not be otherwise. [Tremendons ap- lause.) T am tirel of these long avid constaut struggles. would welcome them with n arms and speak with them and to them nccording to the grand poliey of Abrahum Lincoln, *With charity for all and malice toward none,” But have we not the right to determine that those whose bands are steeped with bood shall not determine our future ! Have we not paid enough. my friends ! Have we not contributed emongh toward ‘the expenses of this Rebeltion to reserve the rifh( to us to determine the terms aud conditions in the final settlement ! [Great applanse.] But we find the country in a terrible condition. One asks another why s it so! Stripped of all extrancous couditions 1 can state the position of public affuirs in o few words, Executive wempation on_the one side, and Congressional legislation on the other. There are many side issues, but they all revolve on these two points. [ask the audience, Mr. Hamlin cou- tined, do 1 not express my old opiuions ! I usk and expect of 20 man to indorse these opiufons unless he hetrtily sustains them. (Applanse.] Lsee by the good will you manifost to- ward me that L am in the presence of friends.” [Laughter o great applauee] T have several questions to ask of you. Lrst ix what ought to have been dove when the Rebellion Japeedd, The tizst of his answes, he said, wos o tration. [Loud appinuse.] ‘Treason sgainst ® highe e that could be After & severe and eaustic attack on the pro Buchanan at the commencement of the Rebellion, Mr. Bamlin contioued as follows: Thoy eall me radical, and yet T am very conservative. Look at the propositions placed by Congross i the resmionil wwendments before the people. Mr. Hamlin then ably di ¢ prov ixion of ti nendments. To would Live gou He would have said to every man in thy American Congress who renigned wien ¢ was i dis peril, (o every forvign consil. 1o evesy lnied 10 JOU T *a and huve lie and oll your ¢ivil vights, bt you can ever participate as i office-older in this couwitiy. [Applavse.) 1 usk l_ym; wy friends, if theve is not justice. in this, proposition! But now we e told that this chs of wen whow [ bhave men 1 to you do aet belieyve that they hwve furfeited any. hey had, conceded the abolition Slavery was the very substratum of the Ry u et to them coded this much and demanded nothing, and yet ient of the United Ntates, agninet the recommeindations and thie authority of the Representatives of the people, the Cong of the United States (immense: applause] endeavored to ow the authority of the peogle and pluce the whole ‘oW biuuds exelisively instead of obeyiig his That treason was o erime that onght to be punishe you, ull of wy frieuds who bave come here to he name of the patriotie dead T o yow, any other terma (aan that tre punished.” [Great applause.] Ti have been doue, and coming from the little State of Muil in ndyanee of the con that Stat pla Fecognizes no own opinion, el that think thas in the suftrage ought to have been demarded. The § » held in hix hand the settlement of this controvessy, but he aud be alone bas involved us in all the trouble that ok resulted from it. {Applause] Mr. Hamlin then nddressed the audience on the true issues of the present diffeulty between the Excentive and the Legislative Depart- ment of the Government. 1f the President had executed il the Juws that Congress enaeted, thing would haye been prosperous and harmonious, but under the gnidanee of the Recretury of Stute, whom he thought hed the President tnto hix present dittienitios, the President has fuiled the Ameri- ean people when they wauted his aid the most. Mr. Hamlin then quoted rom ‘the Constitution of the United States to show the subdivision of the Legislative inl powers of the Goverument. He ex Sectiou v, definiog IMFIIM of the clothing Congress with all legialative_power for the publie welfare, Mr, Hamiin then continued earthly or can L Jaws passed by our Congress—I menn thie Congress ted States, the representatives of the people. are United States, und not the Pre We ure freemen, motntuin them. The President th who know our rights and dare hurel exercised & power which i his opinion the merest ehild in the community would not have thought of. He argued that the t to appoint Heister Clymer ppoint 'rovisioual Governors for ol wll power to the President during power to appoint Civil Governors uthority t it either Govern President hod s muc ernorof Pen Southern States. He cone the war. but be deuled during peace. He Lad ar or legislators prescutatives und uot b that he requires to b tagl seceeding States _certuin condi power to make such a demand. good, sober commen sense where o oue side awd exelude from red iuto o lengthy argument theu said : Now the did e et the power to leg the other! Mr. Humlin the on the political issues of the duy, and whole = thing could have been settlod, but the Presi. deut undertook to dictate lris - terms. He - declared the President guilty of bigh erime and misde meanor. He armuigned the vast andience assembled to-night aud before God of high misdewesnor. He then alluded to ompt of the President to corrupt the ministration by dismissing them unless they s policy, and declared that no adiinistration, sinee fiad marked such moral turpitade. (" Nensa- hen said: We bonor labor because lubor m of government. We honor the man rt, but despise the man that ests it Langhter and applaise. | A;eruubk- wnd argumentative address in favor of supporting the views of Cougress, Mr. Hamlin closed amid loud applause. OHI0. A SPEECH PROM SENATOR SHERMAN. Senator John Sherman of Obio delivered a fervent speoch on the peuding mlucl‘nt Cinciunati on the 28th low! H inst, We extract the fo Now my friemds, this s the spectacle prescifted hetween Cougress aivd the President of the United States. I do think au impartial ese matters, ot as an idlo thing whi o but_ like sober jurymen. 1t does secm that the dispassionate judgment of the Awmerican one all Tor the South that wo enght nd that they must now (g the terms we pi ay that 1 am o Hupkel, £ Colservati®d S little backward; #o Tum. 1 o voj deny it. 1 always prefer to gy ‘can ‘hde guined, to seek that ivhlvw “attuinable. people will be that we have 1 1 believe * that the adeption of the comstitutional T T R s e or - the. Urifed States” would by the requisite to stand upon them. Lam k hem, £ was willin oo "('i.m:?’n‘{..‘- m, b one,of e £ ntors of the State of Ohie, he people of the ::mnmmiA od l‘“ylha‘!'h_;‘ m:u- ?:,v : bees deprived of all ¢iril goverument B e e gt to take 8 boud from theu for the fitus: of this conytry, I say that ibese amepdments are judt i nd fair, 'Am‘n them if you will, come in and he white man in the South equal to « white man in o will a5k nothing of you except the simple thing t a few wen to oftice 1o & little while, and -iu u short o 1o doubt that the requisite two-thirds of Congress ¢ them of that. We give them theso terms—liberal, Now if Ilmllfir all “llll'tvdr;l\l'ull:‘ltrnuna they should refuse t t thew after o full and fair trial, then, wy friends, there are Impwnemmt One s to let these Rebe! take that increased political power, to govert rco#lg again and make laws w5 or to place thd form- of te "Upion puty upon the doctrine “of ‘wniver sal suflia Tremendows - applavse.) My friends, 1 am not i lfi posizion of the wan who mak r_n affor andl won't give the other sid A falr chance, Thopo that” every Northem Kate will adopt Tho “conscitutional awendnient, New-Jersey the least, hias ta'ken the lend:— Bet, then, the Southern States contemplate, for & while, the | acke: fet then Jook st il Thing us we Jook at it ; let thém debate it among themselyes- it dominant controlling powet there. Let that offer stand as the last offer by us, and the'mosi Hberal that will ever be made. Let them understand that if they won't take that, the aame sowet thiit conqiered them onee will impose terms aipon them v 40 say Vo thoge \l-u they won vqwu‘ [Grvat Vorth wiut Sauth, of all yolitieak part ¥ who winihl (ke vip these: oomstitutiom amendmouts and real Haom n%lfl Wi sl thdt Was @ liborul Wi isuly offer. 1¢ Je b yetecttdy if, by the treaghery of the man whom we ejectady far T hexer saw wman vet The Horse Fuir opeped yosterday most promisingly. The weather was splendid the.entrios Jargor than évar | 10 POWCT the Southern peopte Are Gty led to Aloct thiat Col P atigutional Amindment, $he let us place dur supcstractire d befre, Tho horsa, Gray Bagie' won the twoqinjle toof. | B SEGHLL Plhers T e paners 1 o TV & - Yool halt “nt © ke it (Applanse ) Thiey'isk . yau NEW-ORLEANS. 3| afhumt yourieid oY b raan gt el o et 4 g i ind when = the time ~ comes. . [C pplswsad, ) The, PROTEET PROM DAL ADRLL, | { | day has not ne by, and thy «:nmuujm?:..l“-m arkl New ORLEASS, Oct. Sa—Jadgo, Abell publisbed b | des will be, that if there is i protert againet (he yawertions e Uy Gen, Bulrdsawpncially s il (Bat we whl* take (i Lm.:lmg s g Uy oo, o el el il i Court. ) et w0 e 1 . ) :| aribune, N ———— PRICE FOUR CENTS et SPPRaRTSRAS St in to this rel . Iation. but power over curselves. It is -"-""m-- i committee of e I . instituted a_joint Lave been in the Cougress of curs, and there has pever been a session that we have two or three joint committees. Whenever i ted questions arie upon which it organise joint vt o cast peproach apou thia m“-:a ©cal. But that it has been the most conservative commi ver sat in the the United 1o any one who will of six Senators and of Reeonstruction ever defy these men to answer the question. ‘was to 'H‘: that proposed might b:.'ld of lh‘: )Yn‘}u of that s best not to adopt it, as the States wonld render their power of contrbili gress. Whatever might be measure, it was thought best that @ universal test for the qualification chusetts they allow none to vote who eannot read in Ilinols they allow unuaturalized other States ":\Zu don’t allow until ke has turalizd 8 States they dow't allow colored people to vote at othiers they allow them to vote if they are only half was, thervfore, t not best to pass a constitational amend ment that would fix o universal rule for the qualifieation of M I-hl"h.l'nmu‘o::" m 4 Ag‘!‘ ue“nl proposed to i:fl was to question aside. 5, it wax There rebellions. States s conquered territorics. - Whatever nlflll be said ubout the theory, it was thought best by the Cotw- mittee to lay this proposition aside also ; and s0 they laid axido every Radical measure brought before them. In fact, 40 Couser- vative was this Couunittee that the firet ition of ?m! ment reported by it was defoated in the Senate of the Uuited Aum:? 3 beeause it was not Radues ter of the Committee and i designed to excite undue prejodice against this. mode deciding the watter. it of the 3| voters, o —-— __ILLINOIS. \ DISCUSSION BETWEEN GEN. LOGAN AND COL. DICKEY. Gen, John A. Logen and Col, Dickey, the eaudidates t large for Congress in Illinois, bal & long discussion at hondale on Monday last. we extract the following: My friend Dickey, after mfllx for three Whl{ Presidents, talks now about whitelivercd Abolitionists; yet, he wis an ad- vocate of John C. Fremont in 1956 (great cheering), asd in 1560 he voted for Mr. Buchanan. Col. Dickey—1 never voted for Buchanan in my life. G, Logati—1 take it back; I meant for Donglos. Now, what kind of & record has he_got on Douglas ! He was fint opposed to the repeal of the MH eompromise; then, when R ueias pasned the Sebraska b, he thought Doiglas wes iry. ing to swindle, and he opposcd him then. Then he turncd ronnd and advocated Douglas on the bill—against it at first aud for it afterwanl, That's the kind of record ‘wmy friend Dickey hus to stand before the Democraey with; yet he talke about white livered abolitionists, and calls me to “aceonnt for the re- cord 1 buve before the war. Why, his record politically has been #0 bad all his life that he has uever heen elected 19 any office in his life [cheers), and he never can be. [Reucwed cheer- iog.) Well, now, let us'¢xamine o litde further. T want to take up the questions as he has them here, anid #ift them for n moment. S tell me not that the people of m’m thear rights, Tell me not taey bave Wall, sir, bas Jeft. Duvis these States have fo forfelted their rights us citizens.” forfeited bis rights us o eitizen t Col Dickey Do you want an answer ! Gen. Logate-Yoil can say yes o no. |Laughter. No aswer 1 Here is the difference between Col. Dickey und wyseld: Lam in favor of ame & the ution so that Jemd. I caanot go to Congress, to keep them out for all tie to wome, and then if they huve got nny Joyal men in the South. in these Tebel States, after they have adopted these provisions of the Constitation, to send them 10 Cougress amd wo will admit tlem. make JOUr aecusations agniost ¥ is keeplog out the States. How # You ont by keeping Kebels out. 1 @i yo@ ember in my first spoech 1 asked Col, Diekey Wow wasy Joyal men Congivss has kept oat toll you, these Statos have not elected o 1asn o Long Why don't you answer that i mad fibont ot of Tiebels have been kept out and my friend Diekey that (Janghter). and ho xays Congress s keeping sh their seats knows excetly how thut i, wid awer it because he knows the fet. 1f my friond. goes 46%¢ ) ‘o you imd. at Congress for for exeludding threm ! dereinnd what kind of an ungument this man, Col, Dick haw e (0,700 to ARy - He e sHOWN you e sympatiies traitors, sinee he wants the votes of 40 0r % uf tiem 1 might baye Ve didk not way “ongress during the vated down e purpose Of sup) Jmve got thelr Ly my friend, Dicke Uty are Whippiig s, have got wo dghts, Wt as whip thew thoy gt Fights. Accoriig 10 your i the battle of Shiloh on the first day W hen they drove us 10 the viver, they liad 1o rights, beepuse they were W hippitg e gl Dut the next day whea we whipped them then they bad pights # the urgument, that is dueriug (Laughter and cheers.] That juute we whipped the war they had so rights, but the T want to see where these rights come they get them ! " a man forfolt his vights to the Government. aid by his own power « y wot. The Geovern- give himself his vights aguin ! evtuinly Jias 0 give the rights to him. He forfeits his nights to nd he must appe 10 country for bLis rights. vd their yighis o the country, aud we pro- I » thel? righis back again whei we get roads— that's all. [Great cheering.| That is the ondigion of thie thing, and that is the position he puts kims4f in. Now, T sy thie: 101 go to Congroms—unl 1 expect 1 will—{cheers) 1 mever will vote to. wlwit o Rebel 10 Congrves. I will make a Rebel take a back seat if ean. Now, my friend Dickey, if you are scared to death about the negro, tell me why it is that [u your convention—that weeping convention, where they all mvdl and where they wade Andy shed tenrs when you ean to tell him what you hiad dose—why Iwu;n:mdyxn uhrpll:ln n::?lwm in that ‘convention i -;-- ug Ay Jobuson's polie; ing ves o stand it. when here i oy Shscser o Soviigee e Saariogs o whie L sy 1 want you to allow all the negroes t vote whe ean read and yrite and own #230 warth of pre Are you for that § That s what Andy Johuson you ,L«Td your to stal by him. W/ § you've gor it T will rewd it. s Dero. sl be protected i all his rights, the ame as the whito it (A ¥ . 1 have ot got 8 copy bml);lk\-m::fi A il rights of person and property.”] Very well; that fs what you sy . that s strouger than what we Personal rights. What are they ¢ Do sou mean by w1 D iberty. That ia what you say. [Cheern| Now, T waut miy Dickey i i ol his mare’s nest which he has found. auswer we nest time. AN BANTIIQUAKE. San Frascisco, Toesday, Oet 2, e r'm shup Im| o mmm-.‘nm MM: of an o at atdp. m. nmm—' wnd pearly all the fi?-uyu in sbaken down. The sensstion on the ship was terrific. She o though over rocks at great speed, while were sbaken down which the most violent gales bhad not disturhed. In the sonthern parts of the island large rocks were tora up and thrown down the mountain. “The shock lasted 40 seconds, No lives were lost. The ves Russian Governor-General, who sent & steamer to the ship o assistance, and took her to sea without m i T'““&l J “'::..V:Hm U.P::.‘.:m finished to-day. mfi ose 3 ‘1\- cvads Union State Convention et at Carson to- ' fien e ‘.iwualhm are quiet, Yellow i Potosi, $)12: L , $3%0; Logal ‘The bark Clars . snlr\’oton-u, brings 6,000 chests and 40 jars of tea. Ay Tung, & Japanese prince en roufe for Ysle College, cawne 4 passeuger on the same ARRIVALS—GOLD FROM BRITISH COLUMBIA. Sax Fravcmco Oct. 3,—Tho steamer Goldea City from acrived W-day with dates from New-York to O e stoumer Orizaba from Columbis River brings $247,000 1u treasure. ’ ’ TEXAS. THE BESHAM INVESTIGATION—~FRONTIER PROTECTION. NiW-ORLEANS, Tuefl..(]fl»br 2, e, Gen. Sberidan returned from Benham, ongioal T morning, whither be hud gone to in the tion of that town by incendiarism .&n States soldiors. _The wing points cided upon unofficially CAUBO. disturbance is not ot, but there racas two soldiers were wounded, other alightly; that later i the night » buraed the business part of the town, and that wero b Gty b b ol more nid investigation. Gen. Sheridan, to accomplish the pnrpurrmflnud Al investigating committoe. Gen. Nhe has decided on giving the frontier Tesas gottlers full protection against hostile tribes, g g BASE BALL. YHE EUREKAS AND TUE NEWTON TOURNAMENT. The Eurekas of Newark, contrary nouncepent, baye ln(:vl.u g0 to the New wment. They will i!n&"o{ and the couquering game o Friday. THE {v!l%l: ';rounum. AUBTRY, <5 st the Arctio of @ and At Iy the former—score, 2 to 19, The e e e M R T Buffulo and Exeelstor of Rochestor. called. on: seceunt A 8 even, The E oo T saieh 5 Borso morai s and P The utateh for the. ball /| on y, Tho throlving match takes place ou. snik & 301 ©oy 1y v 'MATOKES INPRILADELPTA . o . Ouke he-The A o RSB, Otk S e A mm\.‘:.;..u_ ed ur‘nmzy g el b

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