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AMUSEMENTS, — WALLACK'S—Fire Fly. Leading character by Lotta. BIDLO'S GARDEN—Otenvach’s Opera Boutfo, Barbe Blene. REW YORK THEATRE—Fool New Company, ew Fcenery, #e. Matinee on Saturday at 21M BROADWAY THEATRE—Doucicwult and Read manes, Fon! Play. Woon'’s MUSEUM—A Tronpe, Siamese Twins, Raby Woman, &e. IRVING HALL—Auz. Si-Grand Moving Diorama, 100,000 Moving Mechanical Figwros. a ns The > Su THURSDAY, AUGUST : : ‘Termes of the Sra. " sane “nm pes year Ten copies to « Twenty copie addres . per Nine, conte Brnixees Norte ‘ J only for the space Laven AbVentisntent® char teeny ie Ww Weeaty ir adtowe changed wilt plone + Waexty, and lar to give thelr old State, Connty, and well as the new place to which they wish ibeeriptions wilt also n so dling tn their te eet wre of alent. If m avouey and U then regia save # good deal of trowdie, ee The Police and the Rufians. The numerous assaults npon the police by the dangerous classes in this distri awakened a very wide sproad feeling « surity among our law-abiding citizens, They perceive that tho gravest crimes are commit tel ayainst policemen with comparative impu. nity, and naturally look forward, at no dis want day, to a period of anarchy as dinastrous as that which prevailed during the rots of 1863, Police magistrates, whose duty it is to deal with those desporadoes, treat them with ill timed tenderness ; while too often the higher sourts, when appealed to, are no Jess delin quent. No wonder, in this state of things, that quiet mon talk wildly of taking the law into thoir own hands, through the agency of a vigilance committee, It is but natural that in gach times men should become excited, and propose remedies which a calmer con: sideration of the case would show were un called for, The remedy does not lie in vigilance com: mittecs, but, ax a correspondent suggosts, in vigilant committees to fee that only Buch men are elected to office as mur. derera ond robbers cannot control. It is not singular that all sorts of wild ramors should be magnified, at such times, into facta, For instance, a correspondent wr “learned yesterday that Real, the double-dyed murder of Oliver Sinedick, w: bailed three or four days after being arrested 4. ‘Phat political latlueace did t—he betng a con: jon of the Sheri, That he nas be MI that he never will alone hanged, as he rieuly desery We have heard the same story about this man’s release on bail before, but have aseor. tainod that itis wholly unfounded. Equally bascless is the report that Margaret Wolch, r Creighton, is at largo on bail, So faras we can learn, District Attor. ney Hall is resolved to prosecute and to secure the punishment of every Aujustifiobly lifts his hand against a police. man, Let the officers be careful not to use andue violence, and we believe they will | sustai in ANY Measures they inay feel called upon to take when driv en toextremity, ——— ¢ Coming Man Come among the New York Democracy. The alvent of Brrek Powrnoy to this city t have ine. even man who qT sitive Democracy aay well be co 1 Brick is aman of genius. Tho manifesta: sions of his anind are not such as all persona tan always adinire, In fact, some must be paived and many revolted by them. But such imupressions do not afford a correct Manderd by which to judge Brick’s individu: ality, Heisalaw unto himself, He travels by his own torchlight. In some respects he temiuds the analytic spectator of Honace Gnuncey, They aro very different men, but they have points in common. Brick, like Grealoy, bas the great advan. tage of leing In earnest. He understands ais own ideas, He believes in them, In Jeod, he loves them with passion. This is what he means by being red-hot. It gives aim great hold upon those who sympathize with bin, Briel Te deflos public sentiment fle dares to outrage the feclings of the whole community in order to express his opinion just to his own taste, have no terrors for him, ‘To obuse an adver sary he will risk a thousand prosecutions, fis vocabulary is rich in defamatory epi thets, and he loves to put them in. 1 Fillain, scoundrel, redhot epithets to som others, are wenk and cold to hin, His black guardism is bolder and more orig’ ual. It is usual to say that he app elass of the population. ‘I'his is not exactly torrect, He is no friend of will never be af. glars. His tn what is ordina arc political. is brave. Libel suits r 8 ton low mi shops. with thieves and bur do not seem ym: He i nt view, that point of fanat self, hates them and all thoi: warisover. If it wore in li nune that, like the Cuanies O'C: store everything slavery included. t, Le would at once re follow him, their bosences is political. They are men like himeclf—tivves, red-hot, uncom- promising. Of such were the hundred and eighty-five thousand who vote! for Vallan- 3. It was the very nothing could shake digham in Ohio in 1 crisis of the war, b the positivism of their D moc copper was able to stand the ver, test, Sois Brick Pour traitor by a Ravieal 6 lis delight. Tt ia evident that the Democratic wir pullers of ths ety do not yoo . M—Anelish Opera Houtte Ile to run to Ilis sing A fanatic, and it is to those who carry pol'ties up to the red-hot he addresses him- He delights in being a Copperhead. He was opposed to Abolitionists before the war, he opposed them in the war, and he un ly now that the power, We pre- pure nud upright fanatic ack to the old condition, If it is a base class that To be call nnery with a cordial weleome. They are affnid of | him, He is in carne st,and what a terror an earnest mon is to those who make politica a J trade! ‘The sincerity of his belief ie a per. * | petual menace to the hypocrisy of their pro feasions. He can't be bought off. To soap him and ewallow him isa task beyond their facultics, There is constant danger lest : nome of his wild esnpades should «mach {the party crockery, ‘The alarm of the por: fumed polticians of the World, with their enormous learning and aplendid rhetorical pinel « deep in the presence of Pom They fecl that their glory has departed | when an original Democrat, rongh, reckless, pr \ shocking, dashes upon the stage. But it is all useless, Pomeroy will have his | place, He can make epecches as well ax | | write eercaming erticles, and the Democratic | Jimames will Believe in him. His power | among the Domocraey of the eity must grow | | and widen. ‘The Rings will do well to make of hin as much of a friend as they ean lis not likely Ghat he will attain high office. He ie too extreme in his views and utterances to be choson Governor of Senator, But he can rule his party by and by, if he chooser, and beatow 2 on others, Not very son ‘There is Ul in the public mind a » We suppose. prejudice against Copperhead. t that | may be forgotten as new isenes arise, and | then the apostle of Positive Domoerney may have his day. | aie | The Irish and the Next Governor, | Thore is a protty strong movement among | the Irish in favor of the nomination of Hexny C. Meneny for Governor, Marly | ie a good Irish name. Tt is sometimes wed as the eynonyme of potato, of which the Irish nd, Likening Henry C. Murphy | to a potato, he ie one of fnir size and medium quality. Spirit is obtained from the potato | by distillation; and perhaps that would be | the way to devclop it in My. Murphy. Tt is | not # Much the potato we object to as the | Lott in which it grows, and which ia fall of Vriers, and brambles, and thorns, and all | manner of unpleakantness, | Many people suppose that Mr, Murphy ie an Trehman by birth, But he is not. He is anative Am 0 are ie Whether the negroes will support Mr. Murphy, we are not Informed. ‘They «em to be rallying around the Democratic fag in the Southern States, and they may do so here. Possibly Judge Lott may ald Mr Murphy somewhat in this respect. We ap- prehoud that if he has any great strength anywhere it must be among the negroes; it does not appear to be with the whites, But we foar that his manners have prejudiced them against him, for in this respect he is greatly their inferior, The colored man is naturally polite, The essential thing for the Irish to con sider is what kind of a government they want in this State, know what kind of a government they had in Ireland. They have not forgotten the oppres. sion which drove them from home, They lave come hore, not because our climate ix softer or our pastures are greener than those of their native land. ‘They have come here because of the greater freedom which they find under our institutions; and because here every man has a chance—a better chanes than a poor man has in Treland—to do something for himself and for his chil. dren, Now we appeal to the Irish that it isnot a mere namo—albeit, it isa good Irish name —that is wanted for the office of Governor. They must look beyond names, at things—at principles, atinen, It is advisable that the Governor should be a man imbued with wind, genaine democratic principles. The condition of affairs here will become a8 bad as it isin Ireland, unless the pe ave alwayson their guard against the first departure from the principles of a free grov- ernment. We must not have a man for Gov. ernor, however unobjectionalte in himself, who comes up under the shadow of a tyran nical Judge, : ‘The Democratic party has plenty of good men in this State to whom no such objection will apply. Some of them should be nominated for ¢ It was currently reported just after the sudden death of Mr. Peten Caccen, during the session of the Tam Convention, that the last words he uttered were: “Stand by Seymour!” Mr. Cacgen wasa delegate to the Convention, and, we need not say, one of its ablest and shrewdest members, He was an ardent advocate of the nomination of Judge Cirase, ond had ¢ 4s inuch as any other man to bring the Now York tion to the resolution of proposing the f Justice as its candidate, My sustained . Sevworr, and the nomingtic th » What Mr, ©. his fervent ejuculatic Was to second ond all | eant by ) Stand by Seymour eymonr’s exertions to secure the nomination of the Chief Justice; and it is not question, presuinptuous to say that, but for his lamented death, his tact and firmness,and his great influence with Gov, Sevaour, would protuably have secured the result uy whieh his ardent mind was so ine tently fixed. mee Gen. Lonostneer entertains a very clear notion about the working of things down South, He is for Grant, Cotton, and the Negro, He believes that Gr: ion will give peace tothe South, that the cotton crop of this yeur will bo worth two hundred millions, and that the negro is and will be as good a citizen us the white, No wonder the Gencral is tabooed by inany of his old associates, It seems he origi- nally preferred Chase for President, ———— Tn the beginning of the Crimean war, the Russians vacated the principalities of Moldavia aud Wallachia—countries near the mouth of the Danubo—which were immediately afterward taken possession of by the Austrians, The majority of the inhabitants were displeased with the presence of the Austrians, und discussed many plans among themselves for ridding those countries of their new rulers, Ona beautiful evening in December, 1854, a company of German merchants were assembled around a bowl of punch in the town of Bucharest, The oceupation by the Austrians and the future of the I ities were discussed by this company, when one of the parties made the following proposition + All present should prepare a communication to the then Prime Minister of Prussia, the well- | science free trade for Englisbu find an American lion in her path when she makes | his festital entrance Into Bucharest, A Roun nian of the name of Bratiano, who was one of the signers of the memorial, was at the side of Prinee | Charles during his installation, and afterwards | became Prime Minister of Rowm The gen- | Ueman who proposed and wrote the memorial is Mr. Wiittam Avrenwasx, of the city of New York, who since then has received the acknow- of the reiguing Princ «t idea of the the elevation of Princes Charles, — Gen, Frank Brain's scheme for carrying resulting i | Missouri by secret military organigations hes ber wh € up all auch me of the Mor Better a blown by troubled them. , Gener t, is better 0 con sehem with de means, than vic ry by secret Tt costs something: to yet a aeat in the Bugtish Par! ‘The avernge amount spent by the mombers of the present He war £6,440, and the aggregate minount ox 1 was wbout €2,700,000, in wold. ‘There wns Voters diccovered another venth magnitude. What a the bursting of that jars and the Earth must Satuniay night D asteroid of the © cattering of free glob casic have vc The President of on of the Philadelphia city railroad companies bas & proposition to nductors to fix the amount of fares they shall be required to return as collected ench day at a certain figure, and lot thom take what they ean collect beyond that amount in lien of wage + words, the conductors are to hire the drivers, horses, and use of th Poad at so per day, and make all they ean ont of the pas- sengers. This is an idea which it might be well for our New York railroad com; Their officers ¢ ductors withhold from @8 to @5 a day fares collected by them; and by fixing « amount, which they would be sure of, th save some of this lost money cialis ci England threatens to demand of China en with that country; or, if refirsed, to force it upon the Chinese, She will its ¢ ertain might essay, — The bitter fecling which prevails against the Emperor of the French, among some of his subjects, is strikingly Mustrated by a receut o¢- currence, A son of the late Gon, Cavaignae, who, with other noted French Republican was thrown into prion by the Emperor at the time of the coup d'état in 1852, hus been receiving his education in one of the noted public institutions of Paris, the Lyce Charlemagne, end during the past year guined some of the numerous which are publicly awarded to the students, The distribu. tion of these prizes took place at the great hall of the Sorbonne, The Minister of Public Instru tion was present, and with bim the young Prince Imperial, the Emperor's son, who assisted in ring the prizes into the hands of the re- When young Cavaignac's name was 1, Le half rose from bis seat to comply with the summons, but bi ther, who sat near him, in- terposed with a forbidding gesture, and in obe- dience to Ler he refused to go forward for bis ‘The reason for this act, on the part of ¢ Cavuignac, is presumed to be ber unwillingness to see her son appear A fair flold and a free fight | of Com.) OBITUARY, —s Elliott the Painter, ‘The Sow yesterday avrning contained a brief totographie announcement of the deuth of Charles Loring Elliott. ‘That annonncoment has been ro- colved with heartfelt forrow, not alone In the pro | fessional crete of thts elty, of whteh he was the m knowledge head, bat throughont the tind—wher- ever art Wine stndents and qtmirers, Thronghout the rank® of a profession, the members of whieh | <whether jnstly or not we do not pretend to aay are proverblally pronomneed to he jevlons of the pr tensinns of thelr fellows, Fitfott has for years heen | conceded a place second to no other ment has ever been sought as an if productions, Killott was a rent portenttprinter—perhaps the Freatest that has lived fn this country ines Gilbert Stuart, Ie py 4 an exteortinary fealty of | eolaing the chametor of Ma antject. Tn sore eases, | howewer, when he wes under the Infunce of Nquor | shite painting, he represented Nie sitter ae in the same condition. Some of hia most prominent por+ | tenite of patie men are more or lees marked by thi peentiarity, He was a free, generons man Mme If, s painted with a free and genero uthority upon and timely disco Dy hia fr ry of his whereabouts and carly age of fonrtecn, he made of the portrait of a clorgyinain, which he palnt edt with three colors only—bhiek, white, and rose Pink, ‘This portrait t* tn the possesion of his faurnily, and shows that even atan early age the artist had wequired @ delicate sense of wrtin the arrange ment of the drapery, the tonterness of the expres sion of the mouth, the modeling and the freedom of touch in the painting of the hair, seme of wh charactertatios are apparent in bis latest ploturce About this time his futher was driven to areedto to the bov's wishes and permit him to study the art he +o ardently admired, and for whieh he betrayeg «uch fomistakable wenias With a bounding heart the young man hastened to New York and beeame a pupil under Tramball, and afterward under Quidor. On completing hia studies, he commenced a portralis of Commodore ond Mrs. whieh he received flity dollars each, trait painting the more certuie and remunerative branch of the profersion, he ajplied hlinseif almost exclarively to it. Returning to the western part of the State, he met with much #icecns in this line of art, whiels he practivod In that region for ten yeors, and ti returned to w York, where he at once took rank as one of (he greatest American portrait paintors—a position that few lave challenged, and none dixputed. OF late years be hus resided in Ale hany, where he died on Tucsihy evening, afer an lines of about six weeks, undaubtedly produced by over exertion and undue application to tile labors, Elliott was beloved throughout his profess! and in the entire circle of bie acquatitance it is doubtful fe had an enemy, He was ever generous, considerate, kind, and affectionate, His «octal qual tien were of the most charming watare, Full of ancedote and humor, Le would delight and ente A company for Lours. and invariably create mirth and good feeling in a party, however disposed the as sembly might be to dullness and stupidity: He had an excelent theoretical knowledge of human nature, and War quick in diveerning the darneter and worth of men, though, owing to his emerous nature, not always 80 able to apply his alaost intuitive per- ceptions Inaclrcle which he most frequented ty this city was ‘one man, Who, by common consent, Was a vated bore, but out of dererence for the teclings of the gentlemen who had first introduced him, be was tolerated, ‘The pecullarity of this obnoxtous individual was am ove weenlng predilection for large quantities of wine, Venderhilt, for Vinding por. to reecive a reward from the hands of the son of the man who had treated her husband with such indignity, The incident has created the profoundest sensation at Paris, and the excitement has been intensified by a re. port that young Cavaignac was to be expelled from the Lyce. Mad Cavaignac, it will be remembered, is the daughter of the famous Swiss Protestant banker, M. Odier, . —_ What's the use of Moxtooweny Bhar, tong « member of Mr. Lincoln's Cabinet, and also the dong member thereof, spouting in Maryland to help Frank into old Ben Wade's place? Mary- land is sure to go for Seymour and Blair, so that ‘scloquence there is all so much er wasted, He ought to go over into Pennayl- vania, where there da contest, and a pretty hard , between the rascalities of Radical and ft Ashe has been in he ought to be able to do a slashing business in helping eithe ——— ‘The British Society for the Propagation of the Gospel among the Jews is at once a use. less and an ex ve institution, For the ending April, 1868, it# oflicers succeeded in e lecting and paying out £7,945, without making @ single convert! Over 000 were thns, it seems, spent in supporting a set of men in doing work which resulted in nothing, — va Scotia has been snubbed, ‘The Im- perial Government got Sir Roundell Palwer and Vernon Harcourt to argue its side of the case, and th lawyers have concluded that the Blue Noses have no rights which the Imperial jovernment is bound to respect, There is @ ng favor of Taneyism about their logic, Wi now want see what Mr, Attorney-General Wilking and Mr, Joseph Howe willdo, | We hope they will be equal to the occasion, ‘The least we k for is the extinguishment of the Crown law. yers under the thundering logic of Wilkins and Howe, Asto fighting, we do not believe they have got up to that point yet; but the kettle is boiling furiously, and there's no knowing when it may boil over, If the President would only go down there on his approaching summer excur- sion, we should soon see a Boston tea party in the ten-mile long and ten-futhom deep harbor of Matifax, even 2 se clovel — Life in Texas must be charming, when F political opponents warn you against coming to their pubhe barbecues, under threat of instant death, Can't the President direct the army to put a stop to such violence? —_——— The Chiuose Petegravlr, known Manteuffel, intinating to at there would be an excellent chance for providing a throne for the Prince of Hohenzollern-sigmar xem, Who had a short time before given up his principality to his eousin, the King of Prassia, snd who was then Living at Dusseldorf” This proposition was immediately eorried into exoeu ou, Eleven years after this the son of the same Prince was elected Prince of Roumania, and had To the Eitorot Thedun. Min: You ask how the elvetric telegraph ean be employed fu Chinese, where over £0,000 characters ave used ta the written Hinguage, Itis proposed to employ a system (a French tnyention) by yhich exart copy of the orisuat writing or drawing ts prestnceat by the his wn been practically available 1 seusting drawings, dutog:aph letters, or anything cl hat ean Le aise vith peu os Nyash upen a Aa su TLLEGKAPHER, Lw Your, Aug. 26, 1869 and an equally prominent avertim to sharing the bills, Ov one ocearion this centiemin’s pecaliaritios were under discussion in his absone, when Elliott's opinion was asked. * Yes," vald ENlott, * he ts w bore, He isagrest bore, When le bores he bores with such an almighty big anger.” Elliott was in the habit of visiting the studios of bis professional brethren in a sochl way, and was always a welcome guest, He invarably had « plea- sant word for his fellow artists, and wemed to delight Jn encouraging the younger meinbers of the prot sion, He never criviciseu their work unkindly, nor, indeed, would he criticise at all uatess urged to do 40, When pressed, be would stady to find the good points to praise and overlook the Memishes. But if he was foreed to point out the deferts, he would do it ina manner to avoid mortifying the vanity of the patnter or discouraging his thor, Ile opinions upon works of art, however, were not sought by professional artists done, but some. times very indifferent and very coreeited amateurs Would Josist on his criticising thei sroduetions, On ‘one occasion « man who had as mich perception of palnting as a boot-black had made 1 most execrable daub pretending to represent a relative, and nothing would do but that dseeit, Sothe great Painter, accompanied by a friend, pad a visit to the m where the wonderful characerture was tle posited, On entering, both gentlemen were nearly choked In thelr efforts to suppress the langhter that came unbidden at the sight before them, Eliott, to save himself, hastened to the picture, thus placing his friend and the Would-Dofartiet beilnd him, After closely exanduing the daub long mough to choke ywn his risibilities aud master himself, Killott quietly remarked, “Well, it takes fy a great scope,” leaving the amateur to find the meaning of the erticlem, Artists pronounce Elliott's pictwe of Mayor Harper, which now hangs in the Governor's Room t the City Hall, his masterpiece, As this, howe" Isa question of taste, authorities may differ. That subje nh, With white hair and black dress, with features strongly marked—was one that the artist most delighted to work oa, Indeed, his greatest eforts and most marked successes were on old men, He lias painted but few ladios and no chil dren that have been prominently mentioned, “Dr. Carnachan" was a subject that gave the artist much Feputation, He also painted the portraita that adorn the Albany Comuon Council chamber, and which have been #0 much admired, of Governors Morgan, Seymour, and Fenton One of the most remarkable and best productions Elliott has loft is a cabinet sized portrait of himself, in ‘cloak and very broad-brimmed slouched hat, whieh Js now in the gallery of Marshull O, Roverts, Esq., of this city, Among his last{works wore the Rey. Dr, Chalmers, John ¥. Williams, President of the Metropolitan Bank, and 8, B, Chittenden, all of this elty, His ple- ture of Gen, John Cochrane brought him the hand: nome price of $5,000, From the middle of Mareh to the stl day of July, 1968 he had painted ten par= traits (one @ haltlengtt), ch iuecesant toil Was, HO doubt, the cause of his death, For these portraits he received the sum of seven thousand four hundved aud fifty dollars, As soon as these were fu- isued he returned to his home at Albany completely worn out, aud never took up tir penell again, Mr, Fred, 8. Corzens, one of Elliott's most lutimate friends, Who Was at his bedside during his last wi- nutes, Writes as follows : “It is seurcely mecessary to spoak of bis. gré metits oe an artist; these of@ alreaty known tn art history of bis country ; but few kuew his ¢ ing qualltlos ax a man, TEiiott was one of the gen- | Mest spirits that ever breathed ; ae simple as @ girl, \t pencil. | His r@fosel An the worl ; by roughly without at | wae a great ple: conveniences of a never Fold one), a the seu! ptor, phice for an desired, It in be: arta library, de, MWfe in gniet @ | when. | woul |? | r * A | wander, } an bea with | cotors bere his peneil to t familiar tm, anid, for he ts th: che be willine to « wh Klierly want Ent knows, sald t meaning Veen led te tions of the Bor of Chat ns bomile to ihe they were when li them. and lay before Sonth, nid wh tivmiry other reat fond the other eny been reared toget womlously Prosec it At the close of the Hon. ALM. H Anderson, M: val) He reterred terms of great views oxpressed some as T frank, and clear st in the South, th: i Roser feeling Be printed and for the Confederate wil think proper. and all of the pron uests of the fim nearly alt and yet full of the finest a Ness, While!) never show*'d fully fo his Inti of whom a was wrest! | bitn,* ime to time hi ho bough after Won ted them up until they ¥ cecupled were sodets his bought was formerly cwned by his frend Palme Tt overlooks a large garden, and te artist or poet to live tn ax could be Ascorated with Works Of vinent, wins ie retuined and his 1 on the sofa and look arot with teors in his eyes. paint outa week before he Aled hie mind seemed to On Sate ay be had bis penell and palette her all to his keep should there bet hotween the races, bats reclproeal Inte Growing out of the fact tat ench te dopend ” lasted some hours, Hut Gen. Ro nnd protested aguinst ny he onnonne: Temain until Sunday. quested Mr. Stuart t tn the same frank, h bad with our great Union, their’ friendl, detestation of earpet their desire for ti country will aper in aecordance with the su which shall set forth clearly and full Southern #tatesmen sign it, for their signatures. “prune still in bis voom with him, issued, us I stated yesterday, but turthe maniles ve dint be of the few men,’ writes one oF e to lim to have a Hone, one, move inte 11, fit it Up, lense the old fideo keep on, AN Mc heerfulnes, ut T have knowle: beyond that award ¢ models of comfort, rings aeeamnn ated, . and As RuccESsively Mt: it set of tools and | Work at little contrivances, which add eo much to the ‘Then he would buy a new ‘or he the houses he Thre lant hows He had just finished, eb the tine eke ad a vision oF Is last efte | Ani what Robert Lee sald then and there the Son en on ntiment of ber 6, me you at thers belteve, the oth were in arms y.nnd the trath 0: the South ¢ Northern people, tn a te form that cannot be dispnted, the tre stae othe focling as hw had found it everywhere in iis ti ives tent ane nesdiny ves, Apart irom approval r this a number of genth . Stuart, Gen. Bet he intended to do on his ar to his ng with Gen. 1 dl readily consent iceling oft celing of the poo regard for, th irs, Radical Gen, hod gentler r honor, her tienes knowing that wi. who Ina very fluent «his opinions with a hern correspondents of tl eal press, o8 weil me by the speeches of the leaders y, that the people of the South are just Trion now as dur fs much embiitered agatuet the Norther ere hat they the negroes with mdendly hate because taey have been freed, ond but for the strong arn of the milltery would rednee them to a state of practical slavery, and perpetrate all mannor of outrages upon raus has in vi eri, of Danville, ealied * leaving this restoration to the Union Rosecra Kentlemen bere, omitting xpression to the eam i be requested to estion o of his death, 'n large studio in the upper part of the | house in whieh there i only the empty easel, Ehullo, In which he hoped to past the evening of Ms wed. At the tine This Abe ine He Feit that Approae most beanta ial rt was 10 c No artivtt: ever had les of sendem' mannertem. i nting, and oa fell fete " et af avity in the expenditures ; for Instance, o ead ee poln had alr of never recovered, ir rorernt days he tiny Heel iach | Every ‘head tat ho painted had an ate of | oor in anh breathed hie last a quietly as if an ine $015,000 in his aent, another | ortsinlity and ef He wae not always | f, ‘allen aaloep. & more fortunate individual got | #ueceeatal Aranghteman, bat hile pi | aire are in porteet order, and oe methoatical ger he had. been Dustaers { of $7. The heavy expe attoned. | fatttte pawed unnotiend, He wa ‘ ed for. a in tepen sirearast 7‘ in fa Well as the uncertainty of being | Nehtend ede ae well ns ofcotor, and delighted tn | Mp, Kitlott'a remains will be browght to this elty es oaiion sPastath takes | Dh'Md And innmly effects, But be knew alo how to | for interment in Greenwood Cemetery, in compliance hace hed ine piaginhtts,.hinshon : | work finely, and to give an extreme fuith toa pie- | with an expressed wish moe long ago. most of that body conserrative on the qnestion | ¢ of dissotuti It is exy 1 that the coming Fillet woe born In Sefpio, NOY in tet. Ata | Rosecrans Consultiug with the Confe contest will be even 1 expensive than the | very early age hie iathor, an architect by profe Gene . ‘ t £ aut omoved to Syracnse, where young Klllott was placed Con pear ont mond Whi fast, Tewould be i a bed pel bes: Tei T a eneas dus Weta atte: | a, Waite. MouraoR as, Aug. 22.—The are ti wout of the average cost of a set in oar | Inn store, Arainat thin calling the hon une: Y rival of Gem. Rowcerais b Feuterday ere 2. of how * Jaks and prom 1 gen) +o strony robelied that hts | ated quite a stir among the male sojourners here, one man gave and mude, and how ibeklon worked t Nee compolied to take Blin away, | ANGeer umes otune nattor tie tices or he wake his Wwe ane versonal Influence, | *4 the effort w nest male to educate to be for the pur: hdd gtiedls Mae oeshh wedi te tha | Mitt an areditect, ‘The Indy however, ers Tas is more common, by pandering 10 the | way equally averse to this professton, One of his AB gti Ep Passions of men, and selling both himself and | ourtiest, tongest, and most intinnte friends relates of ‘opped in 8 his constituents, Such « de nt would be | hina at this parted of Iie life that, 60 trong wae his eviews with nore interesting ond valuable than the Corpora. | inclination te painting, he need to hide awny to Ine eB ie Bi tion Manu r instance. | duige his p On one oF m he locked hin states was very eatin ——_ sell Into his bedroom tn order to palut * The Bern. hu There are more stare in the firmament, ing of Moscow. ‘This was in midwinter, and in aw Sianer was aver Gen bases off sid we bogin to think, thanever Horatiohad putdown | Mewse not provided with the convenionecs for heat. ifr beblipeited Papehiriyeee oxtio | Ing #0 common ot this later day, and the only ar. 1, figored a in bis philowphy, We do not wean Homario | 198 0 eommon ot Nhe fo Ra i ge Srrwova, but Shakespeare's Horatio, Lost | ™ bl and conciliation end a restoration oftie Governny fentiment, i correspond: ere winny honest, well men In the North and West who’ Inve mnlerepronenta- he Revell the war, and ate He proposed, therefore, that the general of! rs of the Confederate ariny, representing as they |» the valor, the ehtval: inite series of paintings representing in tr | i Gen, [ee donied that the people of the Sonth are 5 dinate wer ttrected | Inimical to the Union. They want peace, and loug ving’s sad) Foulding’s works, whieh ‘atteveted |: ett Wats fe tueir univornal Coutimlont ab bre ee ie ® good deal of attention aid placed him up- | haw been able to nscertuin it, und his opportunities on the high road to fame, Later, be painted | have been many, from frequent conversations nnd extensive correspondence with representative per sons In all parts of the Bonth, Ax to their animosity to the negro, nothing eoald be further from the fact, Sald he, there ts no. on the nployine it have ver, and there is a natural affection he patriotic nd i* 90 Interesting Interview, which nen, Ineludin i, Gen. J, leaving, he with hho ition of things ople as to the hegroes, th em * ric iy was tows yet been decided upon, but it is prob- nm known to Gener wow existing in the Sonth. This will warded to ull the general officers of army, and such revrosentatis¢ A DAY LATER, have been here wil is deemed desirable should At the same time the « erquested (9 add guch comments as they niu SUNDAY, Aug. 24—Gen, Rosecrans i still here, minent military men and clviliag in conference with A. HL. Stephens, while L write, is i be an addres than this has not been determined apon, The mission of Gen, Rosecians is far more nmportant than any one be- Heved the day of tis arrival. A General who had arranged to leave to-day was requested to postpone hie departure, and beat once ordered. hie’ trunks to his room, ———— luside Views of Politics—Michacl © whole difers ado ji Th e offices, ni a kind of political ould be character ath nowing lations, it olitteul very c t the erupt, Trove for: mussel century has cad bee ‘ue from th to the © Board of lous swindle in Theeud is uot the aggregate whole country teach ite citizer There autumn, in this i politleat career, distribnte any think themselves ton for vancem There are otbei noi! elocted this time, multiply oflices ed. If Mr. Bradl he will, no de for this office competition. think a rogur We have deeply sures ond on will prevent s one, p mueh th vfect Organization. ie ways to do { iN be understood, wit Ma ement oF % eit, Au argument for the ople under IU fy to be” found in. the tact is ‘Vet rich—it has the ‘but poverty cn ever political wisdot, some rich places to be gi cre is the Regis tics, Judge Michael Connolly e, He will get it, and that will Swish his He will Have forty or fifty piaces to w four or five thousand mon who especially ; ving Wrought and speut money for his ad- r offices to be filled, Ma; n for Governor, December election for Mayor. Ty ley, wow Senator in the New York Ls Nato be a candidate for the oice, ent to our condition of having nentiy Atied for public oflce, chat It ts Kelly were to permit his name. honor, We ea yernor of tae State, esti This b Any im to establis! junt on roposed by 4°4 Jo New York exerts a powerful influence on the wuntry, and no part of the country cai to what the city indotng. ‘There is a now in regard to the distribution of offices, inully elective, are really distri: Dated at the option of x smal! body of mei forming y of our tempt to another junta of + Wt is only when » hus Veen me intoler= the Tammany people—when there were men pal reform iy the bi in worre plu Audit,” about to exp et; for the city of nothin rs 0 if owing “Plat will leave rh on the head of th ey geta the" resul he cleeted, ¥ 0 be disagreed with Mr. elus! will be honest Join ‘iven to & wan otlon of true publ * own behoof, ne, f Mayor Har we *Connsel fur the Corpor Old Judge There are several cundidates have upsct their calcu: y st quarter of & This has sin 1843, reas'a ridicut York, in wealth of the mn away t 6. As things: entitled to his consider pian, by the rules of the party, Ie entitled to a s ated, he will be pat forward, © think there could be no ‘gt to see Mr. Kelly yet Go- Ye have never told tilm so, Bat he holds, tn our estimation, an exceptional post: tion, He is the only man we have over kuown pal Hiely called honest, that we were not disposed to Kelly on mea- jons in the Democrat party, We have osked lim todo things th: Knowing us to bea friend that Le would be son Jose—on the ground of consclentions conviction. have respected bis conscience tu not know how the peo he has relused— to © Wedo ing us le of New York feel; but if thoy know what ls good for them, if they know what ing and fraud in the city nt, We ean tell them that the man who wil Vern: know belly lon,” is that) t Ne iuteresis to tuilsed of. We will speak of them in due time, Hut vow we cou relations, Mr. Fi State Distri tnd true represe ne to offices tha Who NOW fey rst im this cily), ative of bis court long to Bederal ants the © Neer nal, | the be wishe@to bo returned for i farn him—and, like sensible people, they wi require hin: to ho very particular abou face, In the Pith District, Mr. Morrisey will in the sume relation. Doth these gentlemen will go | Kee ‘ashington whenever tier votes are nerd rest of the time they will understand that th Sted States Congress has become obsolete, From the Sixth New York District it is suid that a corpet bagrer, of the nnme of San Set Cox, wants to Fan as Congreseman, Mr, Cox, yeat oF 80 ago, lived in Olifo, and didn’t find bik living good there as @ Democrat, ‘o have heard, on what we deem rood eon that this Mr. 8. 8. Cox, carpet bacwor in New York, denica the Domoerade. form, aed ny the Dive: ‘Twenties are to be paid in gold: If. x he wit misrepresented im thie regent, wo eat tell him he Reed not be at the trouble of rmining in bis Astriet. Tr thet distrlet in to have a bondhobkler's exndidate, it | Manet Ve a Mack Republican, Mr Cox ts 4 very clever politician, as things go, bot he will not do, among the People of New York, the tries to ran in the inte: ests of the bondholders. "fle may take his carpet-bag and stay in Sta term, thoy will re- not Island, Th reeard to the other Congressional districts we Mr. dunes Trove not heart, exeopt as to the ebuliily Brooks is to be returned without contest popes, lang expericace is a bt oll nation rotation In ome t Togtalntors out of place ; except fi tiefretion with thelr doiige, ingen nwo « Kood man, pmecensd, by. the toust judicial In w thoweand But yet with a qnartor of more than | Rovetter! Adu placed! If you worse, Heis full time to understand that of for the b | benent of om are not uit for the | Arter some fong schooling, we think the American pramie, will come to thie way of look But th not yet, We may heip 0 Je Ny a ventitit ‘wise we Wn Of politicians, Uiat are alw Tho Republicans at the West scom determined Prov the Des 4 Register, A {If Front Blur is the were faked him the a re womld iy Denoersie principles, whieh bus d candidate deny, ho ever, that Fr anythiig-—but a t that he is'as tompernte as Noal Dow. hn Perhaps he is. when nt home; but when abroad, away from bis w aanmy, Le ien't—as we will slow. On Sanday, Ang. 5, only n iittic over a fortalyht ago, Frank Tair was at St. Joreph, Mo., on bis way to the monatadins to attend to hiv duties us one of the Commissioners of the Paeific Railroa running from St. Joseph to Connet! some reitroad laborers to take hh ear, With a full yard, the, i th No tevin Mts, he hired throagh on a hand apply of Frank's favorite bever- ‘od, baton reaching Ham bursis, of this State, they” hid heeowe jemoralized,”* that they laid up for repairs, Ar- riving there i the afterndon—and stopping at the railroad eating house kept by Mr. Scovilie—the dis Uneuished genius of the new revolation lad his Preswneo wmmounced to the tait came flocking to pay due homage to their chict. Well, It so transpired that they “homaged™ too mmol, and by 8 or 9 o'clock the party were as dentik as evon Domoerats ev and the “head centre” Was the boogiest of them all. The nolao of the eon vivialists attracted qnite 9 crowd, and it {« nid that Bl:ir gave them morte antics, ents gags, and grown and-tolty tumbling, toon they had ever freon cus, So drunk did he Guaily become that he wae picked up from the floor and carried bodily to bed by two men amd pat away out of aight of the titteriug disputable. We Ne men who saw and more too, ie, the r of the hotel, expresses h oe 10 Miduvit to the statement; and we dety any disprove the Lact) a ay (et.) News, Aug. U. the most enthusinstic meet ‘that by One of up on the spar of the nome at occurred city, was beld by ity at the Court How day evening the object of which was the urgnization o ved Demoeratic inh for Dougherty county, r the meeting assembled apd at the time of organization, the alarta of fire was given, evidently intention to break up the meeting. Au old. ing which has been uset fora hospital in the end of the eit n destroyed, and when Mt was ascertnined that object of the fre wi defeat the object of the meeting, it only xerv strengthen the numbers, bled, and Virdell Neil (colored) was esi when cheer after cheer and shout after shout for Sey monr and Blatr filled the ball, while the Albany brass band sent forth its soubetirring and inspiring mu —the meoting enlled to order; specches were m by Col, Nelson Tit, L. P. id. Warren, and W Oliver, on the part of the wiites, pions Of Democracy, Geo. I. Colein, and William Duncan, on the part ; ‘The meeting then went into an election of oMcers. Wm, Duncan was elected President, aud Virdell Neil Vice President, ‘The *peeches on this occasion were well timed and well received, and the colored Democracy are de- termined to carry the county for Seymour and Blair at the November election, adjourned to meet After tho election the seeding again on Satarday a next, af the Court Honse in hoped that every colored Demo: this elty, when it is to constitutional liberty, as crat, and every friend well as the colored friends of the Radical party will be present to hear the questions of the hour dis- cussed. The meeting was well conducted, ant ad- Journed in food order, and with the best Of feeling ‘and with contidence in the succes of he party, —<—<————— Political Persee! From the Frankfort (Ky. Kentucky. Will the Courier, of Louisvill that rmeci, drilled calling themselves the “Regul ators” > {yor in the counties of Marion, Boyle, Mercer, colo, Auderson and others, and ihe victims of Wiel midnight Work Lave becn Composed almost wholly of Union ment Every man punished by thom in the last six months haa been a Union man. Does the Courter dare to deny that this organizetion has kept Union men from voling? Itt dove, it states at whieh evidence in our possession proves W be as true. Will the Courter dare to deny that a secret 0 ganization of Democrats exists tn many portion of this State, with a lodge in Louisville whom work is to secure atovery hagard the supremacy « thelr cause, and are bound by a solemn pledge to give each other ald and assistance? If it does, it #0 sintes In the Ince of what It knows to be trie, A gentleman pasted through this clty Inst week, on his Way out of the State, because the rebels of Anderson had threntoned fim with violence for da:ing to maintain, publicly and freely, his preference for the candidates of the Union party, Another Unton citizen of the same county, a man of property and re- spectabiity, hae been ordered to leave on the simple suspicion tliat he informed the Inw authorities of crimes perpetrated by a band of Ku Kiux on a nuin- ber of peaceable negroos, He will leave ms oon as he disposes of his property. A letter received from @ General in the Union army, now resident 1, Southern Kentucky, Informs us thut'the Ka Klux have given ‘arnings and erected gallows in the vicinity of the residences of Union men in his tection, ~ —— Brick Pomeroy on Mr. Lincoln, To the Bacon uf The Sun. Sin: In reading your article on the above sub. fect, Twas struck with one thought, which ts this: Pomeroy ts not » man to make hasty judgments, or totake anything for fact without proper proof. His great success in Lusiuess life shows this. Granting thin, ts It to be supposed that he would deliberately state that Mr. Lincoln Is in hell, without having the best broof of that fut? I think not, Of course I do not know what extraordinary menus of reliable in- formation Brick may have with said pleasant region, or whether its illustrious head centre is 9 stated con- tributor to Lis paper, but should suppose that the ev: idence of his own eyes would be the mo Has the saintly Brick been m lately # New Buunswick, N. Ju. Aug, M4, 1968, — From th a The Young Men's Democratic Union opened their new rooms last night, at the corner of Commerciat Adverse Club second way and Tie» oF the oecaton Wy ance bronght dow) Herald pubiisie World treats hin the thet that ar downt it me shows & littlenes « eet, ‘The big card Hriek Pome His appear. thunders of applause.” ‘The meroy's speoch in full, Ty ith silent eontempt, and ignore uch man was present. ‘This is © on. the part of the World, It mud disereditable to any news: paper. He leu » crow Jenlonay that indicates fear. A liberal, enligitened, ‘and honorable gentleman Would never resort to uch litteness against a rival, Marble if mistaken if he hopes to put down Pomeroy by retusing to recognize iim, sentative of Now York Democracy, and will become the leader and the idol of the crowd who swell the Democratic majorities tn the eity. The occupa tion o flunkey of the World is gone. He had n his uttention to cultivating his mustaches, k” Pomcroy ts the rising star in the Demo: cratic camp, fe is the true repro- ee Exouisa Estimate or Guy, Grant. — The Saturday Review, which rarely compliments any- thing, particularly anything American, thus refers to one of our countrymen: A viography of Gea, Grant appears oppor\uvely, and wo doubt jatentional: ly, Just on the eve of the Presidential election, But At duy time the record of the life of one really great General Wiow the North has produced rust bm in- teresting and valuable, not ouly to his couutryace, but (0 the world at large; | Grant's character appears to be that which we Labitually associate with mnih- tary herolsia—that of the simple modest, unailected, Dat ouewiiat sent and reserved soldier, apt to ds: Gain elvilinn interference and ignorant tritick m in uy 1, but paying to civil lay and to itv & rus soldicrly obedience | to pay off the Democrata for thelr atorios about | Gnant's alleged intemperance, They have aceord- | ily got up the folrowtie | FRANK BLAIR DRUNK—HOW THE DEMOCRATIC ROME | NUM SPENT SUNDIY IN TOWA =IE 18 CARIUED DEAD DUUNK TO HIS ROOR, | SUNDL ~~ =Napoleon wears a #100 Panama, Square parasols are making their appears ance. —Pierre Soulé is said to have inherited a large forvane, =A velocipede race by the Hantons took pleco recently on Bosten Common. —€90,000 were won by « young Bostonian in a Havana lottery a fow days since, Major Pauline Cushman is managing a theatre at Yonkers. —Mark Loinon, the editor of Punch, Play the part of Pelerag. =A Cincinnati physiciau, 73 years of age, now dles his twenty-first baby. —George Francis Train is in excellent healtt spirits, notwithstanding his long Imprisonme =M. Rochefort is in Belgium to avoid his sen tence of imprisonment, — Miss Siddons, @ great-grenddanghter of the English actress, is about to # city. MS. about te ani bert, son of Stephen A. Douglas, delivered 8 polities! speech ata Republican meeting aines, At Pasg sland, ex-Alder Dodge took over 500 pounds of striped thes im one day, and @ total of 711 pounds in a day and a half, =At Liverpool, Bag., a public plunge bath hag been by 1 thrown open, at a cost of $25,000, and A number of swinming priaes were offered, 8. Be of Philadelphia, eldest r of Kawin Booth, will resume the drama’ 1 next winter, He has not been on for twenty year: —A bass weighing 49 pounds was reer canght by a Newport (R. 1) fisherman, but whee Tanding It a shark seized and went oif with the b. part nf it —Curious insects, about the size of house flies, the progeny of white ea iiiare, are ravagln, Uy horse chestnut trees ia Conuccticut, and stelpplag them of their folinge. ak washers, a substitute for iron and leather for carriage cut aud bent to shape by mo chinory, i tie Inst invention of a New Bedford 1 eh —Planchette is said to be not always reliable* A gentleman who wns inforined that it would on awer anvthiag, boaght one to answer the door bell, but found it wouldn't work, The Radicals, wherever practicablo, have hen: hed “ Blair's Rhetoric” from the public rehools, ‘They find it impossible, however, to keep Kk out of the newspapers. Tho Lavaca (Texas) Commerciat learns thot the cotton worm has appeared in countless millions, ond ts destroying the crops along the Guadatupa river, —The Ward Brothers have addressed # note to the editor of Bell's Life in Loncion proporing to row any four Knglinh boutmen a reo of five or six miles for $5,000 a side; the race to take place tn Kiygland or America, ae hall be agreed upon, —A counter suit brought by the Spiritunlict Home against old Lady Lyon, for the return of 2500 worth of jewelry, hae been orranged, and the action discontinued, Peace is restored between tho partion —" Nick,” the Saratoga correspondent of tha Boston Post, ently the “Grecian bend,” with singular feliesly, Uie “colic stoop!” “Why don't they try Peppermint lozenges ¥"’ inquires Niek compassionate: ty; “it might help the poor things!" —A Richmoad young lady found a burglar an- der her bed, and belabored Ishn 0 soundly with « press-board that she thinks he will not he able to sit down comfortably for a fortnight, And she was ia wn evening tollet too t —Mr. Horace Grecley has bought a splendid garden farm of Sackett Benlum, in Hamden, Conv., for $5.00, The New Haven Register, rather doubt ful authority, says: “Of course Horace hopes to ne up here as a carpet-bagger, and vote for Grant in November.” —Cuptain Gregor has discovered the remaine of an enormous animal ut Koorings, South Austra: lia, Atmong the boues discovered ts a part of the lower jaw in which the tecth are imbedded ti inches, ‘The tecth measure two and a half inch acrons the surface each way, —Dr. Vinton believes that Williams, the Epis copal preacher, was the lost Prin France, Louis XVII. Suppose A curious bit of history—u If he was the identical Jost Prince, he was the beat of all the Bourbons, for he did not live to curve France by his reign, —Frauk W. Potter, of the Newark Courier, it seems, was present when Gen, Wool offensively ree fused to shake hands with Gov, Seymour at Salein, Mass, It is just hke the General, and his golug for Seymour for President is just lke Mm too, The weathercock ix not more changeable, —The annual announcement of one of the Bate timore Universities has just appeared, It announces that its professors are mot only Southern born, but served in the Southern army, and asks for support almost on that ground alone, In stating the merits of its professors, it dwells at length on the eminent services rendered by thom to the * Lost Cause." —The tunnelling of the Alps goes on slowly but regularly; 8,884 metres have been tunnelicd, and 8,885 remain to be finished, ‘The work accomplisled lust year was 1,551 metres, and about the same will be mode im 1868, It is estimated that about two and a half years will be reyuirad to Anish the tunel. From May 1 to June 1, 54 metres were deitied from the Swiss side and 61 metres from the Italien side, —A Southern family which had lived for nine years in Berlin had a inndsome quadroon girl whom thoy bad always treated as a slave, She had never re- ceived any wages fur her rervices,and the head of (he family had repeatedly brutally maltreated her, It was only the other day that #he accidentally learned that slavery was abolisied in the United States, She tine mediately left the house, went to a lawyer, and sued her master for her wages for nine years past, In Buffalo, one day last week, a young loafer named Buchanan inveigled trom her home a young tady, daughter of an influential and the two proceeded to the residence of a minister, and were married, ‘The bridegroom's parents, learns ing of t Fut once acquainted the bride's father, who took her home, having procnred the arrest o the bridegroom for vagraney. Next day he was con- vieted of U offence, and sent to the workhouse for sixty days, ‘The young woman's parents are taking steps to procure a divorce, Mr. Dickens picked up this story during bis jist visit to America, and the English papers are re- peating it with evident enjoyment: A man in this country knew everybody. Name what celebrity you could, Palmerston, Guizot, Arago, Landsecr, Live ingstone, Mario—no matter, “Ob, yes! T knew hin very well Indeed.” At last a provoked eynie asked “Did you happen to know the Siamese tw! ‘The omniscient but conselentious speaker at once replied, * Well, one of them I knew ex ingly well, but Lam not quite suse whether I ever happened to meet the other." —In the Rollins House, Cheyenne, talking with a friend, sat a Mr, when another man, nae not known, came up behind them, and addressing himself to Sumner said: *G—dd—n you, you have seduced my wife; I'm going to kill you," and sulting the action to the word, shot him in the fleshy part between the shoulder and neek, Sumner got drew « pistol, and remarked that he'd like to have hand In the little game, “I beg a thousand pardons." sald his assailant, “I mistook you for another man," Sumner returned his pistol to its pluce, The other Was arrested, but at Sumner’ instance discharged. He sald it wasa mistake, and he shouldn't appear against bim, —The students of Paris have been making fomewhat of a political demonstration, At the ans nual distribution of prizes at the Sorbonne, on tie 10th, the young Prince Imperial presided, and Wiisy 1, coldly received, The son of the lite we, (he republican Prenident, who was seized und cust Into prison at the time of the coup @' état, was wmongst those to whom prizes had be: awarded; but when summoned to walk up to t Prince Imperial to reccive his pring, the lad, who was accompanied and encouraged by his mother, obstiuately refused to move, Som» of the students present loudly cheered thin “wet of defiance, when the ceremony bad concluded the ag communicated itself to the streets, where shouty of “Vive Rochefort,” “Vive la Lanterae,” and “ Vive Cavalgnae,” are sald to have been heard