12i.Vr_tss. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1864. .vg- We can take no notice of anonymous oommu. tdcationa. We do not return rejected manuscripts. sir Voluntary correspondence is solicited from all parts of the world, and especially, from our different military and naval department& When need, it will be paid for. Sherman ;Unopposed. To us, the military problem seems not what SHERMAN but what the rebels will do.. For the first time in the war, a great' Union army has been liberated from the • necessity of defending a position or con fronting a rebel force, and is able to move independently in any, direction its com mander may choose. The presence of an army so large and well appointed as that of BEEKMAN in the very heart of the Con federacy, inspired with a just confidence in its . strengtb t perfectly untrammelled and almost tthOpposed,nis'a new element in the war, and revolntionizes the entire situa tion. „BglatMATI moves into the granary of the South' and nylon the centre of its great railroad conxiuxiication. Unless his march is thwarted, he will cut the Confederacy into pieces. We cannot invent a plauSible plan by which the rebels might interfere with his movements, The facts are stubborn, and persist in showing the absolute safety of •Snsnnrax, and the improbability of- any rebel force overtaking 'or meeting him. LEE is locked up. HOOD is held by THOMAS. These are . the only armies large _enough to give SHERMAN any trouble, and the rebel troops at Mobile, Charleston, Wilinhigtoneven, if time permitted, would have to abapdoxi these important points to our besieging forces in order to combine. Every battlement of the Confederacy is menaced by the Union armies, and the concentration of its scattered forces for the purpose of opposing Saannart is "a wadi cal impossibility. Yet the rebels must do something, or abandon the central South, with the certainty of losing Richmond and all their bopes. The correspondent of. the London Times, at Richmond, writing a month ago, admitted that ".if SHER MAN 'IS able to extricate himself from his present critical ,(?) poSitiori liY!'ither baffling or outwitting Hoop, there will be reason for a:pprehension about Richmond during the coming winter :the like of which has never existed before." This confession iti eYi dently true in spite of its bad English. The movements of SHE .MAN must end in the isolation of Richmond. It is reported that Petersburg has been evacuated, and some color has been given to the rumor by the weakness of the rebel picket lines on the James. Too hastily, it seems to us, it has been inferred that LEE :has sent part of his army southward. This would be to invite the ruin which threatens him, and anticipate the inevitable termina tion of the siege. We Gold it to be self evident that LEE can exNrid no help to the Cotton States, and has - difficulty enough in taking care of the rebel capital. Nor can HOOD, still at Florence, escape the vigilance of THOMAS. In the meanwhile Slia - amax is advancing with fifty thousand men on -Augusta, and every tramp of that steady march makes the hollow ground of the rebellion tremble. What is his ultimate object we do not care to guess, but all around him are the storehouses and the in ner cominunications of the Confederacy. It is not what he will,do, but what the re bels can do, that excites speculation, and unless there are armies in the South of which nothing has ever been heard, we must believe that they can do nothing. The situation is sound. It inspires just confi dence that a great victory will be won, and in General GRANT, who, in the organiza tion of the complex campaign which begun with the simultaneous marches on Rich mond and Atlanta, has shown military ge- The Chicago Plattbrm and the Georgia Assembly. Misunderstanding is very easy, where there is an evident reluctance to compre hend. The Boston Courier refers to " the similarity of propositions in General BUT LEP.'I3 late speech at New York and in FORNEY'S' Press to the second resoltition of the Chicago platform, so much vilified by Republicans before. the- election. This fact had attracted our notice, but we con cluded to wait and see if the Administra tion papers would at length discover, it." As not the slightest similarity exists, the Courier's waiting is likely to exhaust its patience. The- second resolution of the Chicago platform defined the war as a four years' failure, and demanded an immediate cessation of hostilities. No -where in the columns of this paper can such a demand be found. On the con trary, we assert the success of the 'war, and - while we believe that an offer of amnesty to the Southern people might be made with great results, - we are unwilling that the war should be interrupted for one mo ment to await their reply. General BUTLER certainly said nothing that the most ex pert of sophists could construe into an ap proval of tile peace policy which has just received the emphatic condemnation of the people. But if the Courier is clever at - finding fancied resemblances, it may wel come a real and 'radical similarity. The General Assembly of Georgia, on the Bth instant, passed a series of resolutiona, of which the following is 'the most signifi cant : " That we hail with gratification the just and sound sentiment coming from a large and growing party tr. the Worth, that all associations of these American. States must be voluntary, and not forci ble, and we give a hearty response to_ their propo sition to suspend the conflict of arms and hold a Convention of States to inaugurate a plan for per manent peace." Commenting upon this, the New York Daily News coolly remarks : "It is worthy of attentive consideration that the principal features of - the platform enunciated by the Chicago Convention are pronounced - just and acceptable, and it is certaiffly much to be deplored that this community of senti ment on the part of two powerful parties in the contending section's should be rendered of no avail to the peace of the land by the policy of this. Administration." Now, if the Courier'must confess that the open and honorable anxiety to make peace, shown by the friends of-the Administration, bears no resemblance to the humiliating propo sals of the. Chicago Convention, it may console itself by the earnest approval that Convention has had from a rebel legisla ture, which at the same time announced that the " independence of the Southern Confederate States iiistly claims frbm the world its recognition as a rightful fact." European:Recognition of Mexico. The London' Gazette of November 4th contains the following official announce ment ; "WINDSOR CASTLE, Nov. I.—This day had an dienee of her Majesty. Senor Don Franolsoo Arran poi; envoy extraordinary and minister plenipoten- Clary from the Emperor of Mexico, to deliver his credentials. and also a letter from his Imperial Ma jesty ; to which audience he was introduced by Earl .Russell, K. G., her Majesty's principal Seoretary of State for Foreign Affairs." This means that England recognizes the change .of Government in Mexico, and accepts Napoleon-established -empire there as an fixed fact. .In this the Bri tish Cabinet has not led, for it' merely follows the example of. other European Powers. The 'Pope, NAPoutc•N of Prance, ISABZLLL of Spain, Vsoion-Emmennw.. of Italy, Louis of Portugal, LEOPOLD of Belgium, FRANCIS JOSEPH of Austria, and some:Minor. sovereigns had preceded Vic- TOBLI cif England in receiving an Ambas sador.fl7nn MAXIMILIAN Of Mexico. This is not a : mere formal matter, but a great deal may depend upon it. The Empire of - Mexico •is•now admitted into the comity of •nations,Which gifes it a right to call on all sovereigns who - have so admitted it for aid in time of Youbld.• ' in the event, for instance, ,of the United States endea- Voting to . carry out the Monroe doctrine in the siiittherirpait , Of. this North Ameri can colitingiit,. if MAilltItIAN were ; to ;call on the Enitipe n akPoWet's for ai d,. . no doubt they would helP , him 'with. money, arms; and men. • Long ere this ; 'Mextrirrt,uN was:to have sent back • toyrance a large number of . the ' soldiers by whose aid Nero/arm? placed hi* upon the throne which is Gallic WARWICK erected on the ruins of, the re ;public in Mexico. He has not been able to part with these French soldiers, for , he is not yet in a condition to dispense with their assistance—the power of the strong htmd, as the _Celtic proverb calls it. A. conside rable part of Mexico:is mot yet under imne rial rule. BENITO Jima's, who was re elected to the Mexican presidency in June, 1801, , no longer Occupies the, capital, and, indeed, cannot be said to hails any govern mental power in the land; but is trouble some to MAXIMILIAN, sometimes.even dan gerous, at the head of a large guerilla force. Until order is restored, a process which is gradually taking place, MAXIMILIAN cannot send away the bayonets which literally up hold his throne. He is to have some other aid from Europe, thotigh not much. His brother, the Emperor of Austria, has pre sented him with a regiment, which, how ever, is a long time , on the way. Eis father in-law, the. King - Of. the Belgians, has got up a regimerifwhichis to serve as body guard to the Empress, and a Polish regiment has been recruited by tacit permission of the Czar and the' King of Prussia, to consti tute the nucleus of a new Foreign Legion in Mexico. Meantime, MAvrAmakri and his wife are doing their • best to conciliate the Mexicans. They are amiable, liberal, cour teous, and perfectly unassuming—but it may be doubted whether, if they possessed all the cardinal virtues, they can perma nently possess the good wishes of thellexi cans. One fine day, we have little doubt, 3fAxnarmerc and his CnAULOTTE will re joice to find themselves once more safe on European soil, freed from the vexatious cares of almost phantom regality. While the Mexican people continue in a chronic state of internal dissension, it is impossible that any form of government . there can be prosperous and .permanent. The Freedmen. The annual meeting of the Pennsylvania Freedmen's Aid'Association lastinight was a gratifying proof of the interest taken by the people of this State in the elevation of the:colored race in the South. What has been done for the improvement of the Freedmen is astonishing. The transforma tidn of-thousands of embruted slaves hito self-supporting,. money-saving, educated, and progressive men and women has been effected , in less than • two years in the sea islands of South Carolina, almost entirely by their liberation from bondage. The schools •and churches established have been but subordinate agencies ; the oppor tunity has been given to the black man, and he has used it. We agree with Mr. REUBEN TOMLINSON, one of the speakers at the meeting, that the problem of-recon struction of the pnion, upon a basis of entire, freedom, is not to be solved without the education of the freedmen. Education in its highest sense—presupposing schools, labor, possession of land, and responsi bility—once begun can never be stopped ; and the race, once educated, can never be kept in slavery,• Captain Fisk's Stratagem. The poisoning of the Indians 'who fol lowed Captain FISK'S expedition is par_. tially explained by the accounts published in the St. Paul papers. Some of the emi grants of the party, to revenge themselves against the constant harassment of the In dians, left boxes of their food, saturated with strychnine, upon the road. Nearly •I a hundred of the savages, men, women, and children, died from the effects of eat ing it. As a measure of retribution or pro tection, such a stratagem could hardly be justified in the very last necessity. 'The Indians have been far more cruel, no doubt, but massacre and poisoning cannot be justified by civilized men. That strych nine was so freely used, and that Captain Fisx seems to have been well aware f it revoltinges to the act..a._delillere._ — anu enaracter: — . is it possum that no other treatment but that of strychnine will keep the Indians from tomahawking the women and children of Minnesota, or scalping the emigrant . trains from. St. Paul ?• What if the Indian, too, uses strychnine, or distils in his own savage spirit the essence of a thousand murders and revenges for the Borgian stratagem of Captain FISK ? "Now THAT the people have given their verdict for the re:election of Mr. Lincoln, the minority are everywhere resolving to support the constituted authorities. It is not too strong to say that there is well-nigh a united North in purpose to maintain the integrity of the nation, and that in every town, and city, and State the people are for saying to the commander-in-chief of the army and the navy, hold 2n and hold out until the United States flag floats over the whole of the Republic.), This is well said by the Boston Post; a jOurnal that opposed Mr._ Lnworar's re -election,_ but we are glad to see is not dis posed to make the spirit of a political can vass the precedent for its course during:the four years of an established Administra tion. • WASHINGTON: • WASHINGTON, Nov. 21. COMPLIMENTARY LETTER OF THE SECRETA RY OF ,THE NAVY TO LIEUT. CUSHING— CUSHING RECOMMENDED FOR PROMOTION. The Secretary of the - Navy has addressed the fol lowing letter to Lieut. Cusurrior : NAVY DEPARTMENT, WASHINGTON, Nov. 9, 1864. Sin: Your report of October Soth has been receiv ed,, announcing the destruction of the rebel iron clad Steamer Albemarle, on the night of the 27th ult., at Plymouth, N.r.O. When; last sunarrier;the Department selected yon for this important and perilous undertaking, and sent you to Rear Admi• ral dummy, at New York, to make the necessary preparations, it left the details with yoarselfto per feet. To you and your brave comrades, therefore, belongs the exclusive credit which attaches to this daring achievement. . The destruction of so formidable a vessel, which had resisted the combined attacks of a number of our steamers, is an important event touching our naval and military operations. The judgment, as well as the daring courage displayed, would do honor to any officer; and redounds to the credit of one twenty. one years of use. On four previous occasions the Department has bad the gratification of expressing its approbation of your conduct 'in' the face of the enemy, and in. es oh instance there was manifested by you the same heroic daring and innate love of perilous adven turea mind determined to succeed, and not to be deterred by any apprehensions of defeat. The Department has presented your name to the President for . a vote .of thanks, that you may be promoted one grade,' and your comrades shall also receive recognition. It gives' me pleasure to recall the assurance you gave me at the com mencement of your professional career, that yon would prove. yourself worthy of the service to which you were appointed. I trust you may be preserved through further trials, and it is for yourself to determine whether, after entering upon so auspicious a career, you shall, by careful study find self-discipline, be pro. - pared for a wider sphere of usefulness on the call of your country; Very respectfully, • Secretary of the Navy. Lieut. W. B. OUBRING, U. S. N., Washington. THE LOAN SUBSCRIPTIONS The subscriptions to. the seven-thirty loan last week amounted to $2,054,00D. PERSONAL Brigadier General Jour; H. lloaear WARD, of the United States Volunteers, is mustered out of service, and, by the same official order, army officers who, may be reported as aids•de camp to him are required to join their regiments without delay. Condition of the Rebel People of Lou Islam. The condition of affairs in that part of Louisiana under rebel control is said to be most deplorable. The. long, dread winter is at hand, and the towns and the country generally are tilled with a populae tion . whose prospects, at the best, are but precari ous. This Is rendered now doubly so by the action of the rebel Government, which renders ivorthless the little savings In rebel money that the thousands of families (many of them soldiers) have been able to make, by not giving them the facilities to ex change the old issue for the new. Without any money that Is acknowledged in the markets of Texas, where beef Is supplied, the people are forced to do • without that, although it is near their hands in thousands of pounds. The Louisiana Democrat, published at the rebel capital—Alexandria—niakes loud complaints of the distress wo have described ) and adde No wood for fuel can be had, although Umber is' plentiful and at hand; no labor, no axes, no trans portation ! Doubtless there are. a, row . among us' who will be enabled to pass through the winter without much actual angering - . but the majority; the mass of the people, must and will be upon the verge of starvation and freezing long before spring Again, thieving, plundering, pilfering, and horse stealing seems to be the order of the day; not a night passes but some poor unfortunate has Ills horse stolen, or a house is entered and robbed. If matters are suffered to go on as they now are, it will not be long before men will be knocked down in the streets in broad daylight and robbed. - KW. rule appears to be 'in the ascendant, and runs riot night and daY. Is there no remedy? Cannot Boole one Interpose and cbeok itt God help the people, for they are certainly as patient as they are un fortunate.ll Edwin Foriest's Coriolanne. Edwin Forrest deserves the rare credit of having teetered an almost lost Shakspearean creation to the American stage, and given to no a new stand ard, in a character of the highest mark, embodied in his own genius and inspired by the genius of Shakspeare. This is altogether fortunate, for Par. Forrest is now as near as he can be to that ideal att.!. tide which, when the actor, like the hero, takes the the pedestal, types and sublimes him. Coriolanus Semis to have wetted for Mr. Forrest, and equally appears to , have been left to him; with this his des tiny as a Shakspearean actor is complete, and Co riolanus will be the crown and symbol of all that he has done. To say this Is to say much for the power and capacity of the actor, for the new character is of the full Shakspearean stature, and peer with any individual of the drama. Shakspeare has made his Coriolanus a bold personality ; created him in the Roman mould, out of the clay of which epic he roes are made, and placed him In a world which makes Its heroes dramatic. Heroules, never conquered, because he Hied only in the world of the heroic, and his trial was only physical, after his twelve labors rests like a god in the immortality of sculpture; but he was a body, and Coriolanus is a character. Ajax defying the lightning is only epioal ; Coriolanus, warring with the Roman rab ble, is dramatic. Place Hercules or Ajax in that world which torments its heroes for their fame, and tries them for their ambition, and the product will be not unlike Coriolanus. Better than a deity such as we read of, he was a man. Shakspeare seems to have taken down mythology from the block, and put it into his crucible, or else at the bar of Shakspeare Coriolanus has, indeed, had his trial among the gods. Shakspeare's hero is not found wanting; ho is frail and strong enough, and, in fine, enough of a man to be a character, and enough of a hero to be a god, in the artesuperstitiefr of the Roman idea. We have said that Corio/anus is a bold personality, and in more senses than one. "Nothing, if not critioal," s lago applied to himself, with a moaning for all cha6,oter of his kind. "No thing, if not personal," may take moaning equally wide as the motto forth° more physical character. Educated only to become a hero such as the Romans worshipped in war, he even exceeded the standard among a people who had devoutly loved what was imperial, but were still base enough to think far more of themselves. Coriolanus was not less selfish, but was never ban, From his earliest life he was a self-seeker for the heroic. War was a .combat be tween persona, and the leaden; stood out on the stage, man to man. He was, all in all, a soldier, and •his opposition to fate and men was en tirely personal. Hie principle was pride, which seems to have been, after all, the main Ro man principle, and, thus tested, Coriolanus was the "noblest Roman of them all." He does not need to invoke the fabled gods, andseldera or never does . Sbakspeare make him call upon them, foY he is a SOrt of god to himself as well as to others, and the help of men he could well desire to do without. Against the whole Roman Senate. he places the contrast of his individuality ; before the people he looks down upon them with hardly disguised con tempt ; he sets against all around him the person ality of Corte/anus. If he represents any principle at all, it is that of the heroic against the vulgar, the patricianiagainst the plebeian; and such &princi ple is merely his own personality—a cause which is his own, and none other's. So absorbed in his own individuality and class, his la not a charaoter to absorb the people's, Not to be impressed, but to impress; not to discover, but to fight—this is the eharacter of Coriolanus, in whose barbarian dignity is portrayed the best of his time. Withal he is a generous friend as he is a stubborn and irrecon cilable foe ; noble, if not magnanimous ; sensitive to all that is mean, and no politician whatever. He cannot abate a particle of his justice, and never any of his meaning to save sympathy. • We should judge him ill if it were only by the scurvy language he uses toward the people of Rome: Much of this tirade may be justice, but it is of tha hind which belongs to the executioner. But worse language than what we have quoted we may par don In battle : "All the contagion of the South light on you .You shames of - Rome! you herd of Boils and plagues Plaster you o'er, that you may be abhorred Further than seen, and one infect another . Against the wines, mile ! You souls of geese That bear the shapes of men, how have you run From slaves that apes would beat'? Pluto and hell ! All hurt behind ; backs red, and faces pale With flight and argued fear ! blend and charge home, Or, by the fires of heaven, leave the foe And make my wars on you ! Look to't ; come on! If you'll stand fast we'll beat them to their wives, As they us to our trenches followed) , here is grand spite, matchless vituperation, and heroic temper, not out of place on a battle-field, but misapplied when the soldier Coriolanus talks thus to the peaceful people of Rome. Brit it will be dif ficult to give an estimate of his character partially have judged, himself, if Coriolanus ever thought of such a task ; or who, from their own miscreation, make up character as Banim his Da mon and Pythias, or Sheridan Knowles his excellent Virginias, with the stage carpenter's line and rule. The metal of which Shakepeare moulded his heroes was never found in the mines ; the artificer worked like nature, subtly kneading the good with the bad, and shaping a countenance to awe the aim ple and to puzzle the crate. His villains do not too Suddenly repent; Mg. goad men SOmetimeS swear; his murderers know how to scheme, and when to strike; his saints have some knowledge of the world; his wise men do not always discourse mo rainy.; his fools are often as wise ; his characters do not devour th'emseives or each other, or invert them selves out of pure virtue, but move through a real ex perience, feeding others—ln turn being fed. They are to be interpretedln the mirror of their surround ings ; for Shakspeare has created a world of divine balance, not omitting in his economy even the law Of accident, where his characters are their own tri bunal, 'and where fate falls like the stroke of na ture. Coriolanus is groat in his mixture of strong -elements, not as one entire and perfect moral chry solite. Shakspeare gives to his every character a logic of its' own. Rlchdrd and. Macbeth justify their crimes, and the speech of Coriolanus presents in it self all-sufficient reason for its use. This Indivi duality sometimes puzzles the judgment, and makes the reader slave to his intellectual sympathy. Let us, therefore;judge Carlo/anus as much by the testi mony of his enemies as friends. Both may be right, and yet neither ; but a tolerable judgment may be gained. Menenius Agrippa, friend both' of the people and of Coriolanus, is the chief critic whom ShakEpeare has placed In this play; but evidently his sympathies are caught up In his hero, and he is too partial a judge. We must be lieve him, however, if he tells us that the people are base, and we must make amends for the partiality with which he counsels the rashness of Ms strong willed friend, who heeds Menenius as little as ho heeds the people. - On the other hand ive have Junius Brutus, enemy of Coriolanus, and friend of the people—no doubt a less reliable judge than Menenius. With Vohannia and Virgilia, these make up the main personages of the tribunal with which we try the character of Coriolanus, 111 s mother, Vo• /umnia, can hear witness to the pride and ambition which he inherited and was taught; his wife, the tenderness of the lover; his friend, his manliness and generosity ; his enemy, his scorn and hate ; but all will certify to his . rashness and pride. Let Azjidius witness his ability : 'lst Soldier. " He's the devil." • Anf. "Bolder, though not so subtle: , Brutus, his treatment ',)f tLe people : "You speak o' the people • As If you were a god to punish, not . A man of their infirmity." Afenenius delivers his highest - eulogy-and defence " His nature is too noble for the world ; Be would not flatter Neptune for his trident, Or. Jove for his power to thunder. His heart's in's mouth ; What his breast forges that his tongue must vent, And being angry, does forget that ever• He heard the name of death:: • - And we might almost believe—in the grand otitis . trophe of his fate— " Oh, he's a limb that has but a disease ; • Mortal to eat it off, to cure It easy." For Corte/anus seems as noble as he Is proud, and too good to perish. But his pride was only sacri ficed when hie virtue was murdered. Fate, to kill one, had to destroy both, the god with the man, and thus taught only the old natural lesson that "pride goeth before destruction." Easy as Manful fondly thought it was to cure him, he was indeed an in curable. Rash to madness and to-the very sublimity of personal daring, this very defect made up one of the grandest elements of his character. Man rushes to death when he emulates the gods. The few words ofAkfidius explain another of his dell oienCes. He lacked policy. But so subtle and uncer tain are the uses of character that apparent faults ire comparative virtues. Anfidiva had what Corio /anus wanted ; he was politician as well as soldier. But this very possession made him interior to eerie /anus; f6r, had his character been as simple, he would have been as great. As it was, he was only a rival and not an equal. Subtlety gave Anfitlius weapon for murder,. hilt not for , conquest: More able, more noble was Coriolanus, who, from the height and might of his soul, conferred victory upon Others, but never stole a laurel. Just, at the root, his virtues grew insane from pride, and his worst fault was expression. We cannot go further, and say that such a heart might have been - reserved for the dagger of , a Brutus; it is enough that he was slain by Akfidirds. The world, which he scorned, could not endure his life. After his death he became more than man, and was venerated. This is hisiepitaph. Though "Corlolanus" seems to be constructed on the simplest prlncipfes of Shakspeare, the Roman architecture of this play is as great as his more Gothic creations. Re has worked in narrower li mits; perhaps, but has, therefore, compressed his power. "Action narrows, thought - expands," says Goethe ; but the distinotlon is not so wide, after all. Sbaspeare's plays of action give us his thought praclicalized, but not the less great. "Lear" Is grander in proportion, but " Coriolanns" is as fine in kind. In one we have the universal drama of forlorn and storm-vexed old age—the immortal poem of wreck in a misery as wide and lamentable as the sea; in the other, the proudest oak, beleaguered by the forests and the tempests, hardly ever shaken, but at last struck by the lightning. Nature, in all her forms, seem equally fine, and Shakspoare, to the 'drama, Is Nature. In'the image of his own thought he created his 'character, and Coriolanus !s not more himself than Shakspeare. - - GIONON WELLES, , what need for the aotor to play, or the critic , o see, those superfine Romans and Greeks of Knowles, Banim, an Payne,:after one glans at the 'real Roman of Shakspeare 1 Like the "noble indian, ,, the . " noble Romani has been tnnehMill-: uEed. One . good, honest; bread:and•but er kompi of the old time we setdoin see: Zn . .StialtsPeari r however, his chiraoter be not debased; , Init. ex plained, by the highest science, and what, with his considerable virtue, we have. Booze knowledge * * * 11 What's the matter, you dissentious rogues, That rubbing the poor itch of your opinion make yourseivee scabs 9 * * * * * * What would you have, you curs, That like not peace nor war 1 The one affrights you, The other makes you proud. Ile that trusts you, Where he should find you lions, finds you hares. * * * Your virtue is To make him worthy whose offence subdues him Aid curse that justice did it. Who deserves great ness Deserves your hate, and your affections are A sick mans appetite, who desires moat that Which would increase his evil. * * * . * * • ..... Go get you home, you fragments) , Ist Scene, lst Act. THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA _ TUESDAY, NOVEMBER, 22, 1864. ofprandium and jeufaculunt. The un-She.kipearean Greeks seem to live upon their own virtues, j est as some Christian .martyrs ,appeared to have feasted upon their Bibles ; but Shakspeare's heroes ate beef. The capable actor who passes from Knowles into Shakspeare must live a new life, which the atmos phere of Shakspeare strengthens him to live ;•but he has also much to learn and unlearn. Only wise who, like Dorgan's "Charmer," can say, '• Unharmed I play with tiger thoughts,' need try the serpents which Shakspoare'a drama keeps for his Hercules. The play of Coriolanus” is especially a siiiteis . for such a genius as Forrest's. This character is the type and crown of his acting. Stern virtue; geni%•. rosity, magnanimity, ambition, manly tenterne4 7 power of scorn and pride and daring, the alipetir of the soldier and the hero—these are the attributeii of those favorite characters In which Forrest is most applauded by the people. To these may be added the more phenomenal exhibition of despair, as in Lcar, and craft, as in Richelieu, though In the latter the author only permits us to See the little he could reveal. Mr. Forrest's power is simple as it is great. His weapon for action is the short Roman sword; his motives and his feelings mainly the grand and simple passions. He is perhaps more practical than speculative, but not the less intellectual. He has been called a phy sical actor, and, in the more intellectual sense, the distinction contains some truth. Shakspeare was also a physical writer when :Ile wrote ,6 Cori°. hms." Bearing .the triumph of this °karate ter, Mr. Forrest may well be contented with the distinction. We have Said that the ale- metals of the play are comparatively simple; but its passions are complex enough in their exhibition to afford a grand Shakspearean study. Mr. For restpersonates his character bodily, and as though be bad 'met it and become absorbed by the law of ate ray. It would be bombast to claim it as a perfect in terpretation of the Shakspearean idea—this has never been claimed for any actor; but that it exhi bits the elements of Shakspeare is all the praise that the actor and the world can require. The play, as performed last night at the Academy.of Mask), is far from being wholly that of Shaksp.eare. The actor's Coriolanus, therefore, to a certain extent, must date from the traditional adaptation - of the poet, snoh as we find it in Lear and Richard. As a stage imper sonation, Mr. Forrest's Coriolanus is worthy of the highest applause; as a view of Shakspeare, it oast-, nut be perfect, but it is invalu able to art. All the best • qualities of his fine voice and unsurpassed dignity, of bearing ; the clear analysts of his reading ; vigor and resolve of action and masculinity of thought—* have here their fullest development. It has been charged that the actor ls.sometimes too slow for his character, and hangs fire of its impetuosity ; but at least .he catches up to it, .without ever having lost his identity, . and the moment of lightning • fines him ready and great. Mr. Forrest's reading, often said to be slow, evidently proceeds from the principle that great thoughts and greet actions require deVelopment in delivering, and that history and Shakspeare take their time. If he errs by- Shakspeare he cannot be charged with error by the adapted text, which; we think, strips the character of some of its palliation, and gives to it an unvarying bitterness and scorn. ,We do not find the great in vective of the battle field in it, which first explains the character to us as that of a soldier. As the play proceeds, Brutus and Sicinius, for all that they were demagogues, deserve our sympathies as patriots. The way in which Coriolanus asks the "voices"of the rabble, leads one citizen to believe that, he was mocked, another to excuse the new consul for his idiosynoracies of speech ; there must then be occa sionally something more of manner and ha bit than mere design In his expression of rudeness to justify the slight uncertainty which exists in the minds of the rabble. Mr. Forrest's splendid invec tive was sufficiently checked and qualified to show the variety of his character, and in this he proved the student and the artist. His admirable readings were numerous—as, for instance, his speech to Ca minius after Conlon. Nothing, however, exceeded the familiar dignity and tenderness of that - to Tits.' cilia on his return to Rome : - “Thy gracious silence, hail !" Wouldst thou have laughed had I come coil:tried home, That weep'st to see me triumph 3 Ah ! my dear, Such eyes tho widows in ()orlon wear, And mothers that lack sons." f This, too—a speech before the Senate—was one of the unnoticed excellences of delivery : "I bad rather have one scratch my head the sun When the alarum were struck than idly sit To hear my nothings monstered." The whole scene of the rabble excitement, when Coriolanus is threatened with the Ta.rvion rook, was finely worked and grandly climaxed, the antis- Bodes of the scene giving all the opportunity which the actor desired. Better exhibitions of theatrical art merely are seldom seen in our general stage tragedy than the group and agitation of this tumult beating against the rock of Corioianue cha racter. This speech of Mr. Forrest's could not be surpassed: "Thou wretch, despite o'erwhelm thee ! What should the people do with these bald tribunes On whom depending, their obedience falls To the greater bench;'. &0., &c. The stormy nature of Coriolanus Is not easily allayed, Mr. Forrest showed also how he could create the tempest, how to develop it, how to sway it, and how to break out again in determination : cc Let them pull all about mine ears ; present me With death on the wheel, or at wild horses' heels, Or pile ten hills on the Tarpelan rock, That the precipitation.might down stretch Below the beam of sight, yet win I still Be thus to them.” uv• •• •••••• • ........,.... va—uscoolina..)111,1112111110.0711,3-31M1.17 rant in the delivery of Dlr. Forrest. Possibly we: shall hear it complained that he has not ranted enough by those who do not mark a snore measured and less impetuous hate in the parting speech of banishment: , "You common cry of curs ! whose breath I hate As reek o' the rotten pens * * * * * * * despising, • For youtthe city, thus I turn my back: There is a world elsewhere." We pass on to the scene among the Volsoians, • where Voiumstia and - Virgiiia entreat the delivery of Rome from Coriolavus. Admirable as anything he has done were the few expressions with which' Mr. Forrest hinted the grief of his hero, looked up In the sternness of • his vow. This 'grand pathos subtly explained the conquest of nature over the heart of the sold/or. The Roman blessing conferred upon his boy, the welcome to his mother, the final sorrowful sacrifice of the fate which redeemed Rome and slew Corio.' /anus, marked the happiest inspiration o£ the actor : "Oh mother i mother ! • "What have you done I Behold, the heavens do ope, The gods look down, and this unnatural Beene - They laugh at. ,, This was as grand as granite. Another speech, beating its rashness against the statesmanlike ad. vice of Iro/uninia, was thus finely spoken : Men. " Repent what you have spoke." Cor. ,6 For them 1 I cannot dolt to the gods Must 1 then do 't to them?" Here Is the pride of the character In epitome, and. Mr. Forrest gave the'key to its interpretation. 'The crowning passages of this scene, "Away my dispo sition, and possess me some harlot's "BMW, ac., were not less judiciously and characteristically. given. Again, in the second provocation before the people, we have the storm unloosened, and the "Berserker rage" of Coriolanua tearing the pie. beian : "The - "fires P the lowest hell fold In the people ! Call me their traitor" •' * The expression of this was full of the experience. of the chara9ter—the desperate repose after strug gle and before catastrophe. In the last act we had in general what was theatrically,•if not dramatical-. ly, the finest representation.•lnthis scene, the actor. Is full of ibis action, impetuous and grand, and,' upon the spur of retort, rushes upon his fate as to a, battle. More we Wish to say of the intellectual triumph of Mr. Forrest. In the produetion of the play he has done wisely and liberally in surround ing himself with • all the' magnificence of stage effect, and in giving to the life of the play appropriate cestume and numbers. Those who sup port him "have at least the merit of action and spi- . rit ; and there are storm and cloud enough to justify the actor's thunderbolt. Mr. Forrest has achieved no 'ordinary success, even among his own many striking successes, atd the whole production of Is Ooriolanns," as it is presented at the Academy, is . something of a revelation to our theatre. a - Icsmowen Catorrs.—lf we did not lino w 'that the Circus now at the Continental Theatre is the best that hag visited the city for many years, we' should' not give it such high praise. But it is really coin.' plete, and many of its performances are wonderful.l This week the management offers anew progranime; introducing some trained dogs which give literally . astonishing performances. Mr. Kennedy, .a new and capital clown, appears, and several remarkable acrobats. The strict propriety of the entertainmene s not the least of its .merits. . Thanksgiving Proclamation of the Go. vernor of Delaware. • : STATE. OP-DELAWARE, • EXECUTLVE DEPARTMENT. In humble acknowledgment of. the •goodneSS and mercy of Providence ; in gratitude to the Almighty for innumerable blessings, and in conformity with the proclamation of the President of the United States : I, WILLIAM °Ammon, Governor of the State of Delaware, do hereby appoint and set apart Thurs day, the 24th day of November instant, as a day of thanksgiving to God; For the courage and fixed determination of the American people to preserve the liberties and the integrity of the nation ; • - ,For the brilliant victories He has vouchsafed to our 03811803 For the thousands of men, woman, and °Caldron whom, during the past year, He has made free ; For the prospect of an honorable and permanent peace, through the suppression of the rebellion ;. For the measure of happiness and comfort, health . and strength, that He has given ; For the protection of our parotids from harm, and our homes and firesides from Invasion ; . For the preservation or the peace of our State during tlmee of great public excitement ; For the rich products of the field, and the frog and the vine, bountifully supplying all our wants. And I do further recommend that the 'friends of our soldiers and sailors, as far as practicable, share generously with them what God has provided,and gladden their hearts and nerve their arms; by Bend ing such articles or substantial food as may be safe-. ly conveyed to them in season for this.day of thanks. and that in the same generous spirit your "kindneol be cheerfully extended to their families rand that' the poor and unfortunate may not be forgotten, either in an abundant supply of food or in wiring that the rigors of the coming winter may be temper ed to them. And 1 further desire that each and every person may fervently and earnestly pray - to the 'Aimighty to guide the counsels of our rulers ; to maintain the - Integrity of our beloved country; to hasten the day. of universal freedom ; to make us a purer add a better people; to bring peace and happiness to our land ; to suppress all evil aild sin, and to reunite us more firmly than ever in the cause of justice and liberty. And as the nation now suffers by reason of the unrighteousneSs of her people, let each citizen humbly acknowledge his transgressions, and ask that the love of. God may constrain him to purity of life ; to unwavering integrity in business ; to earnest and devoted patriotism ; tea manhood equal to. the great responsibilities of the hour, and to a' deep and.everpreEent reverence for the God of all power, goodness, and love ; ; that fits favor may be alms propitiated, and that we may show ourselves worthy of the. Inestimable boon of olvii and ran= ions liberty which He gave us through the blood of our lathers. God save the Republic,' . • . in testimony whereof I have hereunto set-my and caused 'the great evil •of the State to ber affixed at Dover this twelfth day : of Noieniber,ln • they ear cf our Lord.ono thousand eight hucidred and sixtY-four, and of the Independeriee of the United States the eighty-ninth. . By the Governor: WELLI.AIit 0 ill eoN. SAIVL M. fleaargororr, Jr., Seo'y of State. THE WAR, MYSTERIOUS MOVES OF GEN. LEE AT PETERSBURG, Ills Line On the James Greatly Weakened. AN EVACUATION OF THE TOWN SUSPECTED Nine Unwired Rebels Entrapped at .Atlanta, WHEY EtTER. AS ROBBERS AND REMAIN AS CAPTIVES. BEAVREGARD STILL AT FLORENCE. HIS MOVEMENTS CLOSELY WATCHED BY T 110311.9. Price Driven Completely out of Missouri, NO TIDINGS FROM GEN. SECEIVITA.N. GRANT'S ARMY. ' vißixo AT PETEREAURG—WITHDRAWAL OP REBEL TILOOPB—RUMORB OP THEE EVACUATION OP Pe. TEMBEURG. WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.—Information from the Army of the Potomac, dated yesterday, says a good deal of firing was heard on Saturday la front of Petersburg on the Appomattox, but, as far as has been learned, without any important results. Deserters report .that the rebel troops. on the James river have all been withdrawn with the excep tion of a skirmish line and enough men to man the guns in the forts. Up to yesterday morning there had been almost continuous rain for thirty.six hours. Rumors had reached the army that the enemy was evacuating Petersburg, but they were not gene rally believed. The Monohansett came to Washington to-day in place of the regular steamer Cossack, which 'ran into a schooner on her downward trip. The Cos sack accidentally ran aground near Maryland Point, *hen It was discovered .that three holes .had been knocked into her bottom, jest above the water-line, In' her collision with the schooner. The steamer Outdo came •to the relief of the Cossack, and took off her mails and passengers and conveyed them to Fortress Monroe. DBATHS AT PonTßEss AfONROB. 1 . 013.M/2138 alownoa, Nov. Ig.—The following are among the deaths in the hospitals at Old Point since the last report: Dwight Williams, 203 d Penn. sylvania, ; John F. Sharp, 55th do.; Tobias Brown, 199th do.; Andrew J. Rifle, 58th do.; Samuel A. Chrifty, 188th do. ; Charles Di. Swift, 211th do. ; Jacob A. Warner, 203 d do. SHERMAN-BEELVIREGARD. NINE IiIINDNIID REBELS ENTER. ATLANTA. YON FLUNDIIN I AND ARE CAPTITIM:II-HOOD AND BEAU- REGARD STILL NEAR ELORIINCE. CIZIOIVITATI ) Nov. 21.—The Gazette'g Nashville despatch says that military affairs are unchanged and comparatively quiet. The rain continues, and the roads are in bad condition. Road and Beauregard are still in the vicinity of Florence. , Nine hundred rebels arrived at Nashville on Saturday morning from Atlanta. Prisoners think ing Atlanta evacuated, they rushed la- to pillage and plunder, and were captured. Tbe rebel sympathizers at Nashville are gloomy and disconsolate in consequence of the anticipated results of Gen. Sherman's movements. Accessions to our army are arriving daily from the North. SHERMAN'S ADVANCE MOVEMENT—InitAIIRKG&RD'S POSITION AT FLORENCE OF EXTREME DICLIOACY BIINFALO, N. Y., Nov. 20.—Brigadier General l3wrry, Sherman's chief of artillery, arrived here yesterday seriously ill. lie left General Sherman at Kingston, Ga., at nine o'clock, on the morning of the 12th inst. General Barry says Sherman has all the infantry, cavalry, and artillery he wants. The men had re. calved eight months' pay, and their outfit has bean especially adapted to a hard and rapid winter's campaign: The morale of the troops is unequalled for efficiency and vigor, and General Sherman will carry his army triumphantly through the work he has to do. On Monday night last, Hood's entire forces, in• eluding Forrest's cavalry, were in the Immediate neighborhood of Tusounnbla and norenco, Ala., watched by the troops under General Thomas, of such strength as will render an invasion of Pew nessee impossible, and even the withdrawal of Hood, lor service elsewhere, an operation of extreme deli. CaCy. BBBBL REPORTS ABOUT SAISBILAN. It seems to be the general impression of the Rich. mond Journals that Sherman ismarohing on Selma. They have no news of his movement except that he was on the 18th near Macon. An.account of a bat tle is given betweein 7,000 militia under Cobb, and seem that the general belief that the rebels have no foice to . oppose Sherxnan's advance is pretty well founded. BATBTY OP GENERAL OILLYhf. Lonisvira.u, Nov. 29.—General Glllera is safe at Knoxville, with his command. In the attack on his outposts, our lose wounded, and miss ing not exceed 400 men. PRICE RETREATED OUT QS" MISSOURI'. lIRADQUARTERS ARMY OF THE BORDER, CAMP ARKANSAS, Nov. 8, via Fort Scott, Nov. 15.—T0 General Davies: We have just concluded the pin . suit of Price, whose rear•guard crossed the Arkan sas river, under lire of our guns. He left another of his guns and his own carriage, which, with other arms and equipments, have fallen into oar hands: We are now rid. Of 20,000 or 30,000 half-starved bush whackers and half-starved vagabonds, who I hope inky never return to disturb the peaceful inhabitants, north of the Arkansas river. He is also beyond our posts of Fayetteville,'Fort Smith, and Fort Gibson, which are now safe, S. R. Cluiriti, - Major General. DEPARTMENT OF THE GULF. aNNERA.r., CANDY okr.a . SLIGHTLY WOUNDED. Nxw Youx, Nov. 21.—The steamer North Ama rioa has arrived, with New Orleans advlces of the 12th instant. The papers state that General Can by,s wound Is not serious, and that he is doing well, and will be confined to his quarters by It for only a short time. The cotton market was quiet, but more buoyant, owing to the trade regulations being removed. A Matamoros letter says that there is a large In crease•in the trade between that port* and New. Yolk. The amount of goods warehoused in 11.1ata; moros is immense. . The papers contain no military news. NAVAL NAL CAPTURES Or BLOCKADE-RUNNERS Admiral Farragut cOmmunioates to the Navy De partment Intelligence of the capture of the Prus sian schooner Panoha Larppa, by the United States steamer &iota, in October last, while attempting to run into Velaeco, Texas: She had an assorted Cargo. InforMation from the West Gulf Squadron has been received of the eapture, on the sth instant, of the schooner John A. Hazard, by the U. S. steamer Fort Morgan, laden with mediolnesmron, and other contrabands of war. Also, tho capture of the schooner Lone, by the same vessel, with a cargo si- milar to that of the Hazard. TILE DEPREDATIONS OP THE FLORIDA. It appears from a memorandum book found on the pirate Florida that she captured and burnt, from March 29th to September 2Gth, the following ves sels: 4 . Ship Avon, of Boston, Mass., sixteen hundred iota guano ; schooner Geo. Latimer, Bath, over one thousand barrels flour and other merchandise ; brig W. C. Clark, of Boston twenty:Elva thousand feet of lumber; bark H. A. Stevens, of New York, with lumber; bark Golconda, whaling vessel, of New Bedford, with eleven.hundred barrels of sperm and seven hundred - whale oil.; schooner. Margaret G. Davis, of New York, in ballast ; bark Greenland, of Brunswick, with nine hundred tons of Govern ment coal; bark Gen. Berry, of Thoniaston, hay and straw ;• bark Seelinda, of Eastport, in ballast; schooner Howard, of New York, with fruit; bark Idondamin, of Baltimore light ballast. The Flori da also captured the ship Southern Rights, but her cargo being English, she was bonded. The steamer Electric Spark, with an assorted cargo, was sunk. THE ELECTIONS. RETURNS FROM PENNSYLVANIA, NEW YORK, ILLINOIS, AND MICHIGAN, PENNSTLVANYA. Eli Slifer, Secretary' of State, has addressed the following letter to the Tribune: Six: The statement made in the Tribune a few days since, that the Derisocrats had several hundred majority on the "Home vote," as oast In Pennsyl vania, has brought hundreds of letters. from with out the State for certified copies of the "Home vote." To save a very large correspondence, you- will please state that the official vote, as certified to this office, from moat of the counties, includes the entire vote, without anything to alstinguish between the votes polled at home and those in the army. I have made application to the Prothonotarles for separate returns, but am told that they have-given the returns, as certified to theta by the Return ' Judges and as that body has adjdurned sine die, there is no way of getting them together - again. It is therefore impossible to obtain the offloial "home vote" from a number of the counties, and as the vote was so close Its to require the °Motel returns to decide It, the fact as to who had the majority can never be known nor officially an nounced. Tito " Home , t and soldiers' vote combined, as re turned for members of Congress, is as fellows : • Union 255,981 Democratic 242,122 --- Union majority • 13,859 Truly yours, ETA SLIPER, Secretary of the Commonwealth. llenuisnuno, Pa., Nov. 19, 1884. NEW YORK. We haVe return,s' says the Tribune, from all the counties In New - York State except Erie and St. Lawrence. Without these two, the vote for Prod dent'stands : 1864. 1860. Lincoln 544,057 338,892 Democratic 943,798 297,618 Tinton majority , Erie gives 812 Demogratio and St. Lawrence about 7,OOCUnIon majority. So that Mr. Lincoln's majo rity will be• jest about 7,600. -The' total voto of the State Wlll reach 780,000, or 55,000 more than in 1850. leturns for Governor are full, except from Otte. mung; Erie, and St. Lawrence. They foot up thus : • 1864. . " 1862.- Union .342,681 273,868 Democratic 340,629 • 288,614 Union . .. .... 052 Dem. maj.. 1046 The three counties to cot:nein will .bring Gov. Fenton's majority up' to about 9,000. His vote in all save the three counties named is 1;310 more than 'Lincoln% while Seymour runs 60 votes behind McClellan.. There is, however, a mistake in the vote for McClellan in Lewis county, where he has 900 more than given in onr table. This reduces Lin coln's majority to 6,000, and leaves Seymour nearly 1,000 behind McClellan. ILLINOIS. The majority for Linooln and Johnson in Made is 84,683. Gen. Oglesby. for Governor, has 35,000. The Congressional vote in the First, Seoond, Third, Sixth, Eighth, and Twelfth distriota is as follows : FIRST DTEITILIOT. Cook Wentwoith's majority.. Union gain since 1662 SECOND DISTRICT. This district elects General Sohn F. Farnsworth (Union) to Congress by 12,621 majority. THIRD DISTRICT. Washburn°. Stiles.' ' Waehbnrne. Stiles. Counties • Union. Dem. !enmities. _Milton. Dem. Carroll.... ;..1.931 414; Ogle ' 3 236 LW. Jo Dm/teas:: .2,604 1, 72118tepb en•on • .2, 696 1,231 Lea—. 2 662 I.lo7lWhiteelde.• .2,907 1,021 Total " 15.736 V.ra ah burno'a majority Union gain ainco 1662 SIXTH DISTRIOT. Cook, Casey, Cook, Casey, Counties Union. De /11. ICounties. Union. Dam. Dn Page 2.118 517 'Kendall 1,757 483 Grobd r 1 449 76.71 La Salle 6,199 4,491 Kankakee— . 2,118 5171Wi1l 3 262 2,897 Total Cook's majority ..... •• Union gala 6ince 1852 RIGHTS DISTRICT Cullom, Stuart, 1 (lounges Union. Dem.i Counties. Livingston... 659 .... DeWitt •• •• Woodford.... •• . . 414 . Logan Tazewell...... .. 140 Sangamon - Masan 1,420 .•• • • 1 Total Cullom'a majority 1 767 •TWELFTEI DISTRICT. Baker, Morrison, Baker, Morrison, Union. Dem I Union. Dem. Randolph .... 206 C1int0n............46 M0nr0e....... 1,0651 Washington St Clair..... 1.465 Madi50n.......... 115 Total .... 1.601 1,433 Baker's majority Diflefllt4AllT. The returns by counties, as far as reeeived, are subjoined : Lincoln. McCgan ..."Maj. Maj. Lincoln. IticC' lan. M.J. MAJ. Lapeer •••. • . • 300 •• • • Lenawee 1 200 • .... Livioaeton••..• • ••• 355 Macomb ....•• li9 :Midland 160 .• • . Monroe ....... 672 oat m • 3.50 Mnekemon..— 2.50 rf ewaygo 160 !Oakland ...... • 40 Ottawa .. 200 Saginaw ...... 160 St Clair . . ..... 131 flantlao ' 933 IShiswaseee • • ISO • •• . Allegan 300 Aipc-na • ..... 15 Barry 600 $ip..... .... • ... 13errien •• 250Braurh 1,583 Calhoun 1,200 Cass •••• 300 Clinton 115 Eaton • • •. 430 Genesee . 7;4 'dTraverse. 800 Gratiot .700 .13 ills - dale-- .2,109 Huron 150 Ingham 6 lonia . 834 fusee 98 Pabella 125 Ja el, son 107 Kalamazoo • • •1• 0 00 hest 465 •• .1 Totals. —16,091 3,734 Lincoln's majority on the home vote 11,257 The-above returns are from nearly all the coun ties in the Lower Peninsula. When the full voce (Including that cast by the soldiers) is announced, the majority for Lincoln and Johnson will probably exceed 20,000. Horse.Stealers In Maryland. BALTIMORE, Nov. 2L—Yesterday morning, at 3 o'clock, about forty rebels were discovered crossing from Maryland into Virginia, above Edwards' Ferry, having with them some fifteen er twenty led horses and a number of head of cattle. They are supposed to have crossed during the night. The provost marshal of Montgomery county, as soon as informed of the matter, made such inquiries as led to the belief that there Is a concerted horse and cattlestealing movement into Maryland by Moseby's and other guerilla bands. The troop was led by Harry °Motor, who left a note pinned to a wall in a deserted building, stating that his present raid was only a forerunner of what was to CORM Arrest of an Alleged Pirate. TORONTO, C. W., Nov. 21.—A man, answering the description of Captain Bell, the leader of the Lake Erie pirates, was arrested at Guelph, C. W., on Saturday, and has been brought to this city, Ills examination will take place to-morrow. The Quota of New York State. ALBA . PI Ir, Nov. 24.—Provoit Marshal General Fry has written to Governor Seymour expressing a de sire that a more careful examination be made in the towns and cities of persons liable to military duty, with a view of reaching the correct quota for a fu ture draft. Governor Seymour has issued a procla; mation accordingly. Death of Ex•Glovernor Fairbanks. BosTon, Nov. 21.—Ex-Governor Fairbanks, of Vermont, died yesterday, at his home in St. John burg. • - Storm at Baltimore. Bevrntorta, Nov. 21.—A heavy easterly storm, which set in on Saturday night, still continues. • NEW YORK CITY. • NRlv Yomr, Nov. 21, 1884. THE RVBNING STOCK BOARD. 10 P. M.—Stooks firm. Gold 221,E ; atter the call 222 X. New York Central 120 X, Erie 05X, Hudson River 119 X, Reading 137%. Michigan Soutaern 70X, Illinois Central 126, Cleveland and Pittsburg - 105, Cleveland and Toledo 109 X, Chicago and Rock Island 104 X, Fort Wayne and Chicago 103%, Ohio and Mississippi certificates 36X, Cumberland Coal 47, Quicksilver 84X.- MEETING OF THE FREEDMEN'S RELIEF ASSOCIATION. Large Assemblage at Concert Nall last Night, Speeches by Bishop Potter, Boy. Phillips Brooks, Mr. Benben Tomlinson, Mr. Wm. Y. Mitchell, and Mr. C. D. Cleveland. CONDITION OF THE FREEDMEN IN THE 801JTH. A Meeting of the Freedmen's Relief Association was held last night at Concert Hall. Before the time appointed for the opening of tho meeting, the hall was closely packed with a large audience, at least half of whom were ladies. The proceedings throughout wore oharactitrized by great unanimity of fooling, the audience seeming to coincide entire ly with the sentiments of the speakers. The meet ing was presided over by 'the Right Rev. Bishop Potter, and was opened by prayer by the Rev. Chas. D. Cooper, as follows : Almighty God 1 we come ilitt) . Thy presence this evening to ask Thy blessing upon the Muse which has brought us together. We• ask .that Thou wilt speed our labors in aiding and Christianizing the unhappy bondman of ''the South,. Aid ns, 0 Lord ! in the work which we haVe in hand, for without Thy aid we are as nothing. Vouchsafe us Thy presence, that all those present shall go from , the hail with full resolve to do their uttermost to help those who have, by Thy blessing, been mide free, and those who are yet enchaineo In bondage. ADDRESS OF BISHOP POTTER The Right Rev. Bishop Potter then briefly ad dressed the meeting. Be said that the meeting was held under the auspices of the Pennsylvania Freedmen's Association. They meet to-night under auspicious circumstances, although the skies are lowering and the rain pouring aown, for in the • horizon all is bright. The sun is beginning to Shine and soon it will be full day. There is a purpose in the people not only that the Union should not die, but that elavery.ehould die. [Applause Re who bad observed this contest in its beginning mast have seen that it was necessary that slavery should perish, and as events have transpired one after another, they have prepared the way for the emancipation of .all the Southern slaves. What may be the effect of a sudden transition from slavery to freedom has been a question which has caused misgivings in the minds of many •of our friends. But that has been well provided for in the past, and Is being provided for by dur associations; for by helping them yen help thepoor; being whom they aid. • Two years and a half ago we met to gether for the purpoSe of consulting as to the means of helping the nogro,-and determined that the best way to help him was to teach him to help himself. A system of industry has been organ ized, schools established which have already given the most substantial proofs of * success. They are not merely schools of letters, but of industry, neat ness, order, and.of Ohristian charity. In one word, they are the seminaries for educating the whole nature of these people, and such schools have been established in Alabama and Tennessee, and, most successful of all, in the capital of our country; 40,009 pupils already throng the halls of these institutions. we, who have come in at the eleventh hour of this labor, claim no share - in the honor ; let it be given to those who labored in the onset. The solu tion of the question of liberty or slavery here is in the progress of settlement, and affects the condition of the whole African race. Slavery killed hero, must die in- Cuba and Porto Rico, and then the slave trade must die too. • . SPILEOU 07 MR. B.BUDIEII TOMLINBQN. Mr. Tomlinson,_on being introduced by Bishop Potter, was warmly applauded. He said : I appear before you this evening , at the request of the Pennsylvania Freedmen's Aid . Association, for the purpose of making a brief statement of the pro gress and present condition of the Freedmen in the Department of the South. Most of the freedmen in that department are to be.found on Port Royal, St. - Helena, Hilton Head, Ladles', Paris, and Ooosaw Islands. These islands are usually described by the general title of Port Royal. At St. Augustine, Fer nandina, and Jacksonville, Florida, there are also collected a considerable number of freedmen, but, as I have already stated, the great proportion of those withinour lines in that department are to be found at Port Royal. There are in the department about nineteen thousand freedmen, from four to five thou sand of whom are refugees from the mainland and from adjacent Islands -once occupied by our troops. When Port Royal fell into our hands, about ten thousand negroes and only one white man were found there. And just. here let me say, that one reason of the great success of the free-labor experi ment in that department is found in the fact that none of the old'masters were left behind to interfere with the plane adopted for the elevation of the freed men. Another advantage was this : We were so entirely cut off from the mainland that there was little or no danger of raids from the enemy, and thus a measure of security, one of the most impor tant conditions of regular and faithful labor among an ignorant class of people, was obtained. Bat a better and more substantial reason for our euccass than either of the foregoing Is this : the negroes are men and, being men, they therefore naturally and inevitably do better under theconditions of freedom than of slavery. I am speaking of men and women who are just emerging from chattel slavery, the bru talizing and degrading influences of which are of course to be found in every thought, word, and deed of their lives. And, in order that you may fatly ap preciate their improved 'l:condition, you must con stantly keep before your minds the loathsome pit from which they have been dragged; and I would hal/rayon also remember that it is we, and not they, who are, in great part, responsible for the vice, weakness, and ignorance that stand in the way of their elevation. They are an ignorant people. When our troops first occupied those islands I sup pose there was not one person in a thousand—man, woman; or child—that knew the alphabet. I want to get clearly before your minds what their condi tion was before I say one word as to what it now is. As we understand the term, there was no such thing as a domestic circle known among them. They, of Course, saw its operations in.the families of their owners, and, as the event proves, as soon as they had the opportunity strove to realize for themselves its benefits. • It is stated by all persons familiar with the facts, that the negroes of, the Sea Islands of - South Carolina were the most degraded to be found anywhere in the South. The reason for this was, of • course,•because they were so entirely out oft from all contact With the outside world. Hundreds of negroes on - those islands knew absolutely no other world than the plantation or island on which they lived. On'some of the plantations, from one year's end to the other there was searcely ever any; white man , seen, except the overseer.' Understand,' I am not attempting to portray the horrors of slavery ; I have not the power to do that. I am only trying to show you some of the' Tenons why slavery on those islands p..rodueed greater degradation than elsewhere. Now let the state. some ;facts facts sho*lng , the progreis of these freedmen. In addition to the large crap of cotton found on these islands when our troops took pos 130SeiOn, there were also found, inconsiderable Tian titles, corn and potatoes. " These latter, or a great portion or them, were taken for military purpose., and hence the negroca were compelled to draw more lit the Way of "rations" f;om the Government Una Wentworth, McCormick, Union. Dem. ..<. 18,057 1 4 7 280 --2.642 7.425 8, RIL 4 600 ....16.903 . 9,632 9.692 6 2U ..4,028 Cullom, Stuart, Union. Dem. 1,4" ••« 2,640 853 SL •Tcaaph...• MO .... Tuscola 400 •... Vaa Baren•.• 574 .. Waehtenaw.. •••• SOO Wayne (Dot.) • ... 1,631 was best for them, or than Under other circumstances would have been needed by them. The usual pittance of clothing_ allowed by their masters had not yet been doled oat to them,and really the greater port-lon of the people le ft were inan almost naked condition. Only those: , who have passed through a winter on the sea islands can realize the suffering they felt during that first winter of freedom. I have not time to detail the various measures adopted and carried out for their benefit during each successive season since we have been among them. I content myself with saying that, at the end of each season, the mass of the people was in all respects in a better condition tban when the season began. I went to the Department of the South in the summer of 1862, under the auspices of this association. At that time nearly all the freedmen in the depart ment received " rations 1 ' from the Govern ment ; at this time not-more than five hundred rations aro issued, and they are only issued to persons who would be paupers Under any circum stances, and in some instances. to the wives of soldiers. When our troops Mat entered that de partment, the people were not even decently clothed ; to-day they are well clad, and the. rare thing is to find any one among those physically able to care for themselves who is not comfortably and well clothed. At the . sale of land which took place at the opening of the season of 1863, four plantations were bought by the freedmen living on them, and worked -by them for their own benefit. One of these places produced a crop of cotton worth four thousand dollars aanother a crop worth fifteen hundred dollars ; another a crop worth one thousand dollars, and the other a crop worth between three and four thousand dollars. At the sale of land that took place at the opening of this season a number of tracts of land were bought by other neoroes, a and they have been well and faithfully cultivated by them. The crop this year has universally suffered from the ravages of the caterpillar, and this, in ad dition to the fact that many of those purchasing this year paid twenty and twenty-five dollars per acre, will prevent them from realizing as much as was realized by those that bought last year. Besides this, all those lands reserved to be sold in small lots to the freedmen, but not yet Bold, have been worked by them for their own benefit with a fair degree of success. One of the plantations just relerred to, owned by Harry Mao Millam_whe was formerly. ploughman on the "Eustis place," would to-day, if sold with the stock and improvements, • realize for him at least four thousand dollars. It has been a common thing during the past season for coloreG men to pay one, two, and three hundred dol lars apiece for horses and mules. This will give you come idea of the amount of money earned by them. In addition to this, large numbers of the freedmen are building .for themselves new houses, and at the present price of lumber in that depart ment this Is no slight undertaking. It evinces not only the possession of meat's, but what is mace bet ter. a desire to have for themselves a home which they can call their own, and which may be made tlie centre of comforts and joys heretofore unknown to them. I am sorry that I-have not with me the figures that would show the number of laborers employed on the plantations last year and the amount of money paid them. Instead of that, I will give you a few individual oases, which will, I think, enable you to form some judgment as to the general prosperity of those who are employed as laborers for others. And .let it be understood that the sums or moneyl mention as having been earned by the different parties are In all oases exclusive of their provision crop and of the money received by them from the wale of melons and vegetables of Tallow; kinds. Anthony and Venue, both of whom are over seventy years of age, received last year as wages $194 80. Both of Leese people had been " laid by," as It is termed..for several years, but under the incentive of freedom and wages a new spirit was put into their hearts; and fresh blood in their veins and they workedont the result I have , given you. The following amounts were paid to persons on " Coffin's Point Place" : To Aaron and Judy, $236 48 ; Abel and family, $210.57; Amaratta ' and family, $335,24, ho., he. I might mention any number of suite instances, but it is scarcely worth while. Let it be remembered, too, that this prosperity Is not the result•. of high - wages. The people get fair wages, bat without in-' dus try on their part, their present prosperous con dition would have been an. Impossibility. I will not. be understood as giving rose-colored pictures of the condition of these people. I am too deeply Sensi ble of the faults of their character and condition to do anything of the kind. Bat whatever may be their tapirs, laziness is not among them. Give them lair inducements, and they are not only willing; bat they are eager to work. There was, and still is, some repugnance felt toward the old kinds of labor; but just as soon as they realize that labor on outran is as profitable as any other kind of la bor. they perform It cheerfully. It seems to me that I need say nothing more to convince you that, in so far as the freedmen themselves are concerned, their material prosperity at present, and in the future, is secure. Oar duty toward them is another - and different question' upon which, - though hold ing decided opinions, I will not enter this evening, except to matte this general remark that, if there is. any 'class of peopte in the country wee have priority of claim to the confiscated- lands of the South, it certainly is that class who Dave by years of suffering. and unrequited toil given, to those lands any value they may now possess. And far ther, that no - plan for the reorganization of South ern society will be complete that does not include the division of those immense tracts of land, and their sale in limited quantities at reasonable prices to the poor whites and the freed blacks of the South. I ought to say a word with regard to the system of la bor adopted under the wise and beneficent authority of General Saxton, and which, so far as any system can do it, has, in connection with other regulations established by him for the government of the people . , assisted in developing a healthy and natural social • mondition. Under this system no other compulsion than the necessities of the people le resorted to, or needed to secure from them faithful and steady la, bor. The people work by the job entirely, and they are thus enabled to choose their dean time, and the proprietor -is not compelled to watch them. The employers and laborers enter into written contracts with each other, and then both parties are held rigidly to the bargain. Each laborer is allowed sufficient land on which to raise provisions for himself, and is thus secured against want of food. Under this system, simple and requir ing but few agents to Carry it out, the people have Steadily advanced toward independence. In my opinion the Government did a wise thing in appoint ing and continuing Gen. - Saxton as military Go. vernor of the Department of the South. It has been his policy from the outset to Interffire as little as possible with the deemlopment of the people. He has not attempted, as some have Said, to force them into a position they were'unpre; pared for, but has been satisfied with throwing around them such protection as was absolutely ne cessary, trusting to the natural course of events for the-rest...General - Saxtonid an honest, pure, and Capable man, and the friends of the freedmen and of the country owe him a debt of thanks for the faith fulness with which he halt fulfilled the duties of his position in the face of many obstacles, and for the Jealous care with which hp-has guarded the rights of the poorest and meanest or those within his jurisdiction, One word now as to the social order existing among these people. They haVe many vices and petty weaknesses of character, but they are all of the kind you would naturally expect:CO find among a people brought u p under the system of slavery. These vices are, of course, see rious obstacles in the way of their elevation, and try seriously the patience and faith of those who work among them.. Petty thieving and lying pre vail, of course, to a considerable degree, but as a set-off to this, let me say that they have a sense of honor, which, under the circumstances, is very.re markable. My room is open at all hours to all comers, and there are often lying around arti cles thin must tempt them, but I have never yet had anything stolen from me. The worst, at the same time the moat natural, feature of their social condition is their loose ideas on the subject of. marriage. This is a matter that gives us more trouble than any other ; but even in this regard great improvement has taken place. And lam glad to think that there is gradte ally growing:among them a public sentiment which will in time be efficient in correcting this evil. They have great respect for law, and for those in autho rity. Any decision, no matter how unpleasant it may be to them, is always submitted to quietly and respectfully; no matter how unjust It may seem to them, they are always satisfied when they know It is the law. With regard to their progress in educational matters, I regret my inability to lay before yen facts that would oar ry Conviction to your minds in • a way that no general statements.of mine can do. The ordinaky duties of my position, which take up all my time, do not lead me into the schools, and, as I did not anticipate when I came North being called on to speak before a meeting of this . kind, I did not pre pare for it. This I can say, however, I know of no teachers in that department who tire not enthusias tic over the progress their pupils make. I also know that the adults show their appreciation of the ad vantages of education by making many sacrifices in order that their children may attend school. ..I also -know many boys and - girls who can both ask and answer ordinary ques tions with regard to the geography of the country, and who, in reading and writing, will com pare favorably with white children of similar op portuniiies. And to sum up all on this subject; I knott of no reasonable human being, white or black, in the Department of the South; who doubts the willingness or ability of these children to avail themselves of all the advantages of education, The great need of that department, as l_suppose is the case throughout the country, Is the mamas of educa tion: There are teachers enough cent to the De partment of the South, but there is no adequate accommodation for them and their pupa. Nearly all the teaching during the past two years has been carried on in cotton houses and barna, with no - thing but Tough brards for seas, and without proper light or ventilation. It is in this direction that the benevolence of the North can make itself felt.. Give the freedmen the protection of law and the disolpline of law, and, so far as all their physical wants are concerned, they can 'take care of them selves. But they are not now, and will not be for some years, up to the level of providing the means . for their own education, and in the present state of affairs the Government can do but little in that di rection. It must, therefore, be attended to- by the people of the North. And, ladles and gentlemen, I believe the people will accept the work not only as a duty, but as a pleasure. A way has been opened through which we may to some. extent coat pepsine these poor creatures for the wrongs which by our connivance and sanction have been inflicted upon them. Let us welkin that way, remembering that education will not only tit these children to meet worthily the responsibilities of freedom but will make it certain that they can never be re-enslaved. I wont from Morris Island to Hilton Head in company with a rebel officer, a i resident of Charleston, and a member of the South Carolina Legislatiere. The .question was asked him whether, in the event of oar being worsted in the war, the South would re enslave the negroes. Be replied that "he hardly thought it would be practicable; the negroes would know too much." Pour in, then, the sunlight of education among them, that they may remain free, and worthy of freedom. In conclusion, let me say that the efforts of this Pennsylvania Freed men's Association are known and appreciated in the Department of the South, not only by Gene ral Saxton and those who work with him, but by the freedmen themselves, in whose behalf these efforts are made. The Sunday before I came away X took occasion to tell the people, after the church services were over, wheat was that had sent down to them the commodious and comfortable school house which' stood opposite the church, and which had received its finishing touches the day previous, and I am sure, from the "Thank Gods" and "Amens" that greeted me, that so long as that building stands the name of the Pennsylvania Freedmen's Association will be a pleasant and gwateful sound in the ears of the freedmen of South Oare/ina. SPEECH OP MIL WM. g, MITCHELL Mr. Mitchell, superintendent of the colored schools in Tennessee, was next introduced. He said he was here to represent a band of devoted tenotters of benighted scholars, and, indeed,- of God's poor. The progress of the army under General Sherman has emancipated an almost innumerable multitude of bondman, who have flocked to the North. Be ginning at Nashville, we have between ten thou sand and fifteen thousand colored refugees, forming at least one-third of the population. Of these, the contraband camps contain but a few hundreds. The others, have industriously built cabins for them selves in the suburbs of the city. Here is the first colored school-house erected in Tennessee. It is the gilt of the people of Pennsylvania to a benighted sis ter. The teachers are competent, the pupils eager to learn, and the pfincipal is a graduate of the Phi ladelphia Normal School. A large amount of goods are sent from the humble workshops of these pee. pie to haughty England. With the name of Penn sylvania, although they know but little of thegreat Commonwealth, come grateful memories to these colored people. (Applause-] The duties of a su perintendent are multifarious. Letters are to be written to soldiers' wives, complaints listened to, and innumerable things attended to. The speaker here read.a letter relating to this condition of thinks among the freedmen in Tennessee. The letter re lated.several very pathetic circumstances about the poor negroes, who, with but little means of support, drag out .a wearied existence there, and are yet happier than when they werein bondage. They are in great need, and yet they all say that, although their Caps have been dark since they have been free, yet they are brighter than any spent in alavery. The little.oolored children are frequently named after their great friends of the North. Edward - Everett, • Horace Greeley, and Andrew Curtin have plenty of little namesakes in Tennessee. ,The most lamenta ble circumstance of the condition of the Aid Society in. Tennessee is the large number of women and children who are constantly arriving. But , they -who say that the colored people will not work for themselves mistake greatly. The negro knows the value of a greienbaok • as welt as a -white . man, , and will work as hard for it. In (menial) of women and children, and men unfit ted for the army, enough was raised to support thensalTee, and, but COI a raid Made by the rebels upon them, to give to the Govesmolatt. At d r . freesboro is the Caldwell School. Tnis is the th',., - of the aohools numbering between. 300 and sse puts. They also have a night school; conduotedre; the Fame system at one was lately conducted Raspberry alley, in this city; among the degrad,7] there. When, by were c ut order, all the ati,„„7 for the teachers were cut off, the eolonod pe.Vie e e „ -4 forward, and have since supported them. The 0 - 1 7„ dren are studying geography, writing, atrd wee" To them their lady teacbers are the goin g pr1,. 4 earth. They hang upon their tit.s, and e tate them in everything. The fourth scoot t ll 4 --( as sociation is at Stephenson, Ala. It Is the rouge est of all our stations. This School was organized last spring - There is also a school here for the education of the "poor whites," the most abje c t people In all ore ation—negroes not excepted, h of the most interesting points of our labors t; at Huntsville, Ala., where the fifth school of our ea. Sedation is located. The'princlpal's mine is itev er . Shippen, a name almost classic here. The cotdtto of ho colored people when' this school was e3t : . blished was truly oeplorable. They lay about, a died in the streets. Now their condition Is es . tirely changed. Half of the population of Hu t t, vide are black, and they number 1,500. Oat of these only twelve draw rations from the Gove rn , went. The opening of the school F 73.4 a very lots. resting occasion. The speaker here paid a tributs to the Christian Commission; which he Fald h i d indeed been true to freedom. In the adenin e „ f teachers by our association a religious aphis k deemed to be an absolute necessity, but sects are not In the least regarded. All work together In the noble task of elevating the nation's freedone e , Never before has such a field . whitened to the he t . vest. and never has there been such a glorious a rel , of reapers. The speaker had visited In Tennesse; an old mansion of one of the tc souther° prloatiott The house and its adornments outside were splendid in appearance and noble in design, but on entering how different the prospect! All the ottametne were destroyed ; the banquet hall was deserted, All the furniture, except two pier-elass.e. was mutilated and demolished. A few books were left untouched. Near by were some dwellings or the freedmen, which contrasted favorably with of their former master: Oa the one hand were re. hellion, devastation, and ruin ; on the other, r m . dam, wealth, happiness.pp. A. 1 [ atiSe.] No on e class of men stand higher, in the public estimation, than the colonels of colored regiments. They a te e noble set of men. I might speak of the noble drew Johnson (great applause] ; him who has been Chosen as &fitting companion for him who, wheuh l was asked to revoke his proclamation of °mention. tion, emphatically refused to contemplate such pa l action. SPEECH OF BEV. MR. BROOKS. He said that after what had been said to-nieta there need be no complaint in regard to want of in formation at these meetings, as there had been i n regard to previous ones. All could -go away well informed. Every thoughtful, charitable man only wants to know time things in regard to a projected operation. lat. Ia this work necesaaryl 2d. Is it practicable ? 3d. Dave the correct means been adopted for its aid l Let us .coneilar these things to-night. lie thought that he could answer an these questions to-night. Ist. Is it necessary, Let us go back a few years, when the ne. gre was here among us a slave. In the history of the land there have been but three schemes in rezard to. the negro: keep him in perpetual bondage. 2d —To emancipate him gradually, and transport him to a distant quarter of the world, where we would be troubled with his reproaching ghost no longer, and 31, a few dreamed that he might be emancipated, and 'yet kept among us. To the first question God aa. swerea that the negro should not be kept is booth -age, and we have lately leaned that the morel means was utterly impracticable. So suddenly hat the masa of freedmen been poured 'upon us, ;hat transportation has become entirely out of the ques tion. We come to the third means as a necessity.ane we must acknowledge that for the solution of It we are not indebted to those who have- held back from us as long as possible, bat to the original Abe • litionists. God, as it were, stepped in and chose it for us. Tho Government could not take care of these freedmen because it has as much as it cu do elsewhere ; for though we believe it can • do all that is necessary, we think that the people should tale all they can off its handa. The brat recognition eta negro as a, soldier was by the Government by its ' order for the enlistment of rae first colored regiments. -They have established freedmen's schools in front of Fort Wagner and Port. Hudson, and even before Petersburg. And the negro stands welcome nos by the side of the white man, and the cracking of -his ritle.is each time the snapping of some one of the fetters that bound him. The Government has done an immense work, and Is going to do more. They are taking in hand all the efforts of the citi zens In the same directions. A freedman's bureau is certain to be established by act of Congress the coming session. The Government is at the head of the school system in Washington; and, indeed, all over the country. The second question is, is the thing practicable t I believe that there is an utter absence of proof anywhere that the negro 13 in any way, intellectually or morally, at all inferior 'to the 'white man ; but this belief is not necessary to the present question. The speaker then related his experience among the emancipated freedmen is -Washington and elsewhere, and glowingly de. 'ploted the contrast between their condition before and after their emancipation. The white specula. tore, shame to them, are making money oat of the colored men who have been made free. The pre. sent condition of the freed negro, as one can sad upon the most casual observation, amply prover that our second question should be answered in the affirmative that it is practicable. Since Gene ral Butler had solved the question which perplexed the Administration In the onteerof the war by de. °faring the negro to be contraband of war, It has been settled that the emancipation of the negro was practicable. [Applause.] We now come to our third plan. This plan is the best because it is the simplest : at once to emancipate them, to do it slowly, and to colonize. By going through the schools we can see how eintpiethe third plan Is. What we have heard to-night proves it - amply.. In Washington there are twenty.or thirty little schools, all well filled by the colored thirsters after knowledge. The speaker had stood in these schools and felt awed in the presence of the teachers—women of education and refinement, who had devoted themselves to this glorious task. They labor even on Sunday—[ap plause]—teaching the lessons of our Saviour. Tans we see that the work is necessary, for God has shown the way and said, "Dolt." It is practicable, because it is in man's power, and can we not see that the way adopted is the proper way, by a visit to the schools and camps of the colored people. [Applause.] The Ohrletianity of the land EihoUld Identify itself with the greet work of abolition" which is now being completed; that this land may stand up with the Devil east out; that'll, may look its God firmly-in the eye. May God bless this work, and bless you in aiding soma little ig the advancement of it. As the speaker con cluded-he was greeted with tumultuous applause. REV AVV . 9. OF BIBROP POTTER , Bishop Potter now Said that, the sitewS of warafe the same in this land as in every other. All our operations require money. Last year we resolved to raise 8100.000. Fifty thousand dollars of this has been raised, and now fifty thousand more are needed. Let us not pause now, when our labors aro so much required. SPEECH OF C. D. °LEVEL LND I ESQ Mr. C. D. Cleveland then read a resolution that the sum of fifty thousand dollars be raised, to be placed in the hands of the Freedmen's Aid Associa tion,. in the furtherance of their noble work. He said he had left this country three years ago, when it was enslaved ; now , he came back to it rase. For the last fifty years American citizenship was no: worth a, snap of tholingers. Now it was worth the world. We now see what a noble race we hare been keeping' in the chains of bondage so long. The spaakercompared the white men of Virginia with tne aegroes of the same State, and said that the best blood flowed in negro veins. "'Ley were the first families of Virginia. He said this contest should not be called a war, hut the slaveholders , re bellion. He was a peace Dian, as he had always been, and he was not r ow advocating a war, but the employment of a mightypolice force to pat down an organized mob. [Applause.) The resolution offered by Mr. Cleveland was now put to the meeting, and unanimously adopted. A gentleman in the audience proposed that a sub scription should ba taken up at once from those pre sent, but on account of the difficulties of the pre ceeding fie a crowded room, the proposition was not adopted. The meeting adjourned shortly after half past nine. • • • LARGE Posrriva SALE oss Boors, Bso- GAIIS, TRAPP.I.LING BAGS, .FELT HATS, &C.—The early attention of pnrchaeers is• requested to the large assortment of boots; shoes, brogans; travelling bags, gum shoes, &c. ; also, women's and misses' trimmed felt hats, men's caps, &c., embracing sam pies of 1,100 packages of first-class seasonable goods, of city and Eastern manufacture, to be pe3 remptorily sold by catalogue, on four months' credit, commencing this morning, at 10 o'clock, by John B. -Myers & (Jo., auctioneers, Nos. 232 and 231 Market street. DO 46 - 41IP VA. aujrizA EYBRY DEBORIFT/O/f OF POPULAR HATS, for ladies and children, including the celebrated " Con tinental, for sale by Wood Sc Cary, 72i Chestnut street. Making old hats new 12 also promptly ale tended to at this establishment. A SERIOUS CASE Oir BUILT TIVEATMICST.—The Government, we see, has been swindled out of soma two hundred thousand dollars in the way of reruns and income tax, by the New York brewers. But besides their beer they have been brewia , for them selves trouble, and we hope Secretary Fessenden will snake them hop around, teaching them bet how to barrel up their beer, and stave oil their dues to their country. 'While many brave and patriotie sons are brought to their bier to support the coun- try, these fellows, with their •beer, try to defraud it. A suit of "true blue' , from Chas. Stokes & under the Continental, should decorate one, and a suit of half-and.half, such as they wear at Sing- Sing, the other. . PRIZES THEM Hrowr.r.—Mrs. . S. A. AIIOII World's Hair Restorer and Zylobalsamum, or Heir Dressing, are prized highly by all who use them. Careful study and experience has made them whit they are acknowledged-in foreign countries as well as at home—the only valuable preparation for re storing, invigorating, beautifying, and dressing the hair. Those who use them- have no gray hair or bald spots. Every druggist sells them. SS-tali:73t A DEsritArtLX SyruATION.—A young lady adver tises for a young gentleman to act as an amanuen sis. He must be able to write in cypher, and when not engaged he will be expected to read poetry with feeling. He must expect to be kissed when.she Is pleased, and cuffed when she is not ; and if he Is very good indeed he is to be treated once a year to an elegant snit from the Brown Stone Clothing Hall of Rockhill & Wilson, Nos. 603 and 605 Chest nut street, above Sixth. WARILANT.BD TO PLEASIL—The 31 ,Florence" 13 the only perfect Family Sewing Machine warranted to give entire EatLsfaction or money returned. 2.!4t GICNTLEMMVES RATS—An the latest stylea st Charles Oakford & Son's, Continental Hotel: TEE " FLoanntoi , ' does ail kinds of Family Sew• ing, from the heaviest . Woolens to the most delicate Mnslies. n 022 6t Tan " FLOnnuon ' 0 does finer and nieer work than can be done on any other machine, besides making four stitches with the same ease that others num one. n022•6t "THERM. IS NOTHING Lisa IT," - "A. Gem," "L Household Treasure," "Works Like a Mout" " Would not be Without It," such are, the expreE' slons used In favor of the Florence Sewing 1115. chine, sold at 630 Ohestna street. notrl-a PcaoEAßsas' may rely upon getting the best PtO at Clutrles Oairiprd Continental h OWL BARMAINS IN GLOTICENG I Bargains In Clothing, Bargains in Clothing, Bargains In Clot in At Granville Stokes' Old Shod. . At Granville Stokes.' Old Stspdi At Gm:Mlle Stokes , OIL Stitt& At Gvanviile Stokes' 014 Std No. 609 Chestnut Street. sos Chestait Street. No. 609 Chestnut Street. No. 609. Chestnut Street. LApi AND :CRILDRELN% HATEt—Lata t 8 t 1166 4t ~pTlofl Oakitini k Sax's, Continental BoteL ''YE S Ean s 'Ann CATARRH % successfully tre' d , Bs by J. Isaacs, Pa. D., Oculist and'Aarlat, 511 Pico artificial gym Inserted. No charge for esanasiti°a' Lanese' Finui--An elegant assortment at (. )) 1.?: 64 Oa .fora & Son's, Continental lioteL