TOE PRESS, SEDDAILY (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED) rur m y Jojilit W. FORNEY. ognos, 1.0 SOUTH FOURTH STREET. THE pAILY PRESS, To City Subscribers. is FIGHT DOLLARS PM. JAN/rEll. ID advance; or FIFTEEN CENTS PER "Wnxic, payable to the Carrier. Mailed to Sub scribers out of the city, SEVEN DOLLARS YRS . ANSTOIR Tins% Downs AND FIFTY CENTS FOIL O N E VOLI.AR AND SEVENTTIV .FE Invariably In Mum* Crams FON VIRE% MONTS% Or the time ordered. inserted at the. usual rates aradverits emeius o% YOIO EEILLY PRESS, Maud e d to SobseriberB; V Mat DOLLARS VCR MN, .th_lsl7:maiffsgastmos nt:= .ttss+ FRIDAY, JULY 21, 186 s TOE NEWS. this morning, three We print, exclusively , WIC interesting chapters from the last vol -line of the report of the Committee On the onduet of the War. These comprise hereto ore unpublished correspondence between Ge :Olds Sherman and Grant and Secretary Stan. te n. and the result of an inquiry into the 0111- „ ,, l oy of light-draught monitors, and also of investigation into the causes of the massa ' f the Cheyenne Indians by Tinned States h . in Colorado Territory. erueral Hardie, Inspector General, on duty the War Department, has written a letter ha certain charges made through the *me Nov York Tribune, to the effect that he and ,-errteury Stanton were averse to having entliolie priest visit Mrs. Surat before her c:,,cation, and that when the pass admitting 31 ,, to the prison was given to the said priest these two officials exacted apromiSe from him that he would not proclaim on the scaffold her junceence. The letter will be found in another column. The Union State Cot Trenton. General Till convened yesterday, Patrick presided. Resolutions were adopted celhirsing the Administration ; rejoicing over ilic end of the war; thanking the soldiers, 53 ilers. and foreigners, who had sustained the government; and pledging the State to adopt Constitutional amendment. A resolution in tsvor of negro suffrage was tabled. Marcus 3, IrAnt was nominated for Governor. ' Tliv Washington Chronicle of yesterday de pies that Col. Baker ever, directly or indi rectly, received a cent from any person who &nod hi with false imprisonment. The Chronicie also sayr. that Mr, Lineeln ordered 0 the arrests of bounty jumpers, Ste., which sate taken charge of by Col. Baker. A fatal encounter took place in Poughkeep sie, New York, on Wednesday evening. A 3nun named Stevens, who was one of the oars- Neu ill the vanquished boats, having been charged with treachery, knocked his accuser own, breaking his Beek. upwards of two hundred applications for 3nrtioll were received from rebels, at the At torney General's office yesterday. Among the a pplicants were ex-Governor Brown, of Ten -la-sec, and Judge Ridley, ex-Chancellor of same State. New Orleans advices say that the wheat crop ei Louisiana is better than ever known before. Wirral Canby bas been assigned to the COM :tdul of Texas and Louisiana. Generals Kirby Price, and Magruder, with others of 3,Ar note, and some four hundred followers, : 12 „,i gene to Mexico. Maximilian had delivered to amoral Brown the Confederate property nhich had been sent into Mexico prior to the i.44:eanittion of Texas by our troops. The Right Reverend Alonzo Potter, EITISCO- Bishop of the diocese of this State, died in c m Francisco on the 4th instant. His remains Ilave been embalmed, and will be brought The commencement of Harvard College, on Wednesday, was very largely attended. Major General Meade had the degree of LL. D. eon firred upon him. Yesterday, many regiments arrived at the Volunteer Refreshment Saloons, en route for home. Among them was the sOth New York }regiment, and we regret to say that some of the men in this organization behaved in a very outrageous manner. They stabbed a - citizen, and ivJlen the police attempted to in terfere, they charged bayonets on them and ;rove them off the ground. Gem Herron has sent information to the In elan 'Bureau that a council of twenty tribes of la.iians, who had participated in the rebel- Eon, have asked for a restoration of their for -kited rights. The heirs of President Lincoln own ow) inualred and sixty acres of land in lowa, con ferred upon him for services rendered in the llack Hawk war. Gon, Ewell has been released from Fort War- General Meade bad a public reception at Entail Ball, Boston, yesterday. A Sian Francisco despatch says that Billy Mulligan, a notorious character, had shot two men and was attempting to shoot another, - when he was killed by a policeman. The subscriptions to the 740 loan yesterday Amounted 14,611,000. The stock market continues unchanged, there being little or nothing doing. Govern ment loans were a little lower, and with a de clining tendency. State and city loans were weak, and for railroad shares the demand con• banes very light. Breadstuff's continue dull, at about former 'Attu. 1,0 bnshels of new oats, the first of the • xenon, sold at 60@65 cents per bushel. Cotton "is dun and lower. Sugar is firmly held, but There is little or nothing doing. Provisions are befirCt. the high views of holders cheek Mt-I:less. Whisky is rather firmer. Gold closed in New York last night at lax. NEW JERSEY. The 'Union men of New Jersey met in Convention at Trenton yesterday, and no- Illinatect Hon. ISLinctrs L. WARD, of Essex county, for Governor. The Convention vas one of the largest, and most decided and earnest ever assembled in the State. The firm determination was expressed to redeem New Jersey from the misrule of the Fait three years, to adopt the Constitutional amendment, and place her, where she of Tight belongs, in earnest support of the Government. To this end all other issues ^sae made subordinate. The returning ve terans took a deep interest in'the proceed hip', and it was principally in deference to their wishes that Mr. WARD received the nomination. Three years ago, at a time vhen the North was despondent under the progress made in the suppression of the re bellion, and demanded more vigorous ac tion by the Administration, Mr. WARD eras defeated by Governor PARKER. He *was regarded then, as now, peculiarly the tokliers' friend, from the fact that he de voted his entire "attention to their interests. For four years he has kept, at his own per sonal expense, several clerks busily em ployed attending to their personal wants on The field, and to those of their families at bone. At every pay-day they made him 21, . , depositary of their funds, which he 'dis tributed according to their directions, free of all expense ; not unfrequently advanc ing large amounts to relieve the necessities Of those at home when the pay department Was P That gallant cavalry rider, Major Gene ral KILPATRICR, presided over the delibe rations of the Convention, and was also honored with a large vote for the nomina tion, which was entirely unexpected by Jinn. THE SPEECH of Mr. B. F. PERRY, the hew Provisional Governor of South Caro lina, pronounced on the 3d of July, before he was appointed to that post by President Jonnsori, is variously commented upon by the public journals. Some of its passages ire not, certainly, assurances that he •ill discharge the duties to which he has been called with much heart in the re- Elevation of the Government on the principles asserted by the President. Ile vas chosen because he was believed to be no only genuine Unionist in the State, af ter the thorough dissection of treason by President JontsrsoN to a delegation of South CtillAilla petitioners for Government sup- Port. It is obvious that Mr. PERRY would a)eyer have been asked to aid in the work of leconstruction, had all his views been known at the time of his ,appointment; and it is manifest that if he attempts to rule in the spirit of his speech, he will be of little use to the people of his State, and of less than little use to the Government* There is, happily, nothing fixed i n these provisional governments--nothing that may not be changed or checked before at ripens into a settled evil; and hence Mr. TERRY'S bad faith, if it is contemplated, is lot incurable. It will be a comparatively easy thing to send into South Carolina a perfectly loyal Governor, even if such a -one is to be taken from a North ern. State. And if, in that Common 'wealth colored suffrage will have its first full trial, with all its results, it will be a poetic, if not a pious sequel, of the infa- Taous heresy of State Rights, as taught by IeALIIOuN, and 'Praeticed by RIIETT, REIT; BRooKs, and HAMHOND. W note with great regret, the death °I the amiable and accomplished wife of JOTIN Ross, Chief of the Cherokee Nation. She died yesterday, at her hue- Pand's residmee 7 is this city. '... ''' '.., '-'4 0 11 44 .tc t i --a F . ktk%,'l•q l 4: I I , 4 .• - / Ai: ~ 1 .., '.,•' ;v' fC, -.''-'';! . . . 1141(--• i ... .. ?- 'l ' -Z•' t 1 '" '‘•ilr,f,i••.--,V .-', '' • ~ ,-ix I T -'• .. '" ,- . L i c .. ~.„/ A, ..... ...,t.„.,.....,;,___---„ . „\,,, _.....,,,,.....4.,,,_„„, .. y ... 0.,.....,,' ' ~..n 0 •••......... 'll 1 a 11166. - . ?O‘%Pillh 4-11 0011 -- ---< ......m..... • ~... k -9°- -.' i I -,• ry MIMI _ ~ .•„„, - - . - . - .... - r .._ r i t . „v___ ,_.. _..... , ____._.., : ... - _ -f7- .„..____,..__ ,_ ii , , ~,_ f,),,,...,", ~I rcs 0-t-a1..1 _--I_l_,.: :• 4 2 4?,,—_______ __. .._,..„.... 7.......-„\.,,C. __ ........7 „,....... : „_,..,.......,.„ ... ..„,\,,,..,„„ .. ,„..,,. ...,,,_...._,,._ ~,.,_...._,.„. _,.., 6Y v _...„.___ ..____ .....__. ~_.__,.__ ...,_....„...,_„_.„...›... ............„ ...••••• • ~........... • . • ‘, ' ; i- -- ...... ..'--- . VOL. 8.-NO. 222. DEATH OF BISHOP POTTER. The intelligence of the death of the be loved Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the Diocese of Pennsylvania, will awaken profound and universal sor row. ALONZO POTTER died in the City of San Francisco, on the 4th of July—a day made holier by the gratitude which hailed a perfect victory over slavery, and a perfect peace on the grave of treason. The Chris tianity of Bishop POTTER made him a pa triot. He saw a better way to serve God by loving his country. He no more halted in his faith in the cause of the Republic than in his faith in the Bible. . Like his pure and almost angelic colleague, Bishop Bow mmq, his sermons palpitated with the patri otic spirit ; and the 'blood that flowed for the flag was rich with that of his own off spring. Bishop POTTER was born at Beek man (now La Grange,) Duchess county, New - York, July 10, 1800. He graduated at Union College in that State in 1818, became a tutor in 1819, and was elect ed Professor of Mathematics and Natu ral Philosophy in 1821. Having studied for the church, he was ordained dea con in April, 1821, and priest in August, 1824. ' In. 1825 he was elected President of Hobart College, but declined the post. In 1826, he accepted the rectorship of St. Paul's, Boston, where he remained till 1831, when he became Vice President and Pro fessor of Moral Philosophy in Union Col lege. He was highly honored by eminent institutions of learning, and wrote and pub lished•several standard works on religious, scientific, and philosophieal subjects. Bishop POTTER was that rare composition—a wise, good, and useful man—without pretence or self-glorification. He was, in his character, an example of his profession, and he died, as he had lived, in the fulness of ,con fidence in his.couvictions and the assurance of a blessed immortality. When he left the 'Atlantic for the Pacific border his friends feared he might never return, his health having been precarious for several years. His loss will be deeply and widely felt. It is surmised that Bishop STEVENS, who is high in the ranks of his sacred call ing, will be called to preside over the Dio cese of Pennsylvania. LETTER FROM "OCCASIONAL.,' WASHINGTON, July 20, 1865 Secretary Seward's convalesence is cele brated by a combined and organized as sault upon his official conduct, conducted by men who profess to speak "by the book" and who volunteer a superfine at tachment to the honor of the nation. It would be useless to oppose to these censors the fact that Mr. Seward's ex perience . and sagacity were never more essential to his country than at ' the present time, and that at no moment of his chequered career has he been more widely honored and trusted. The men who have resolved to make common cause against him are not to be deterred by such conside rations ; nay, it might be safely said that these very considerations have suggested and stimulated their hostile demonstration. The distinct charge substantially stated by Mr. Montgomery Blair, in his speech at Hagerstown, Md., on the 12th of July, is that, under his instructions, Hon. John Bigelow, American Minister at Paris, agreed to surrender the cause of the Republicans in Mexico to the French invaders. I copy from Mr. Blair's speech, as follows "But the Emperor of the French is not left to infer the acquiescence of our Government in his policy in reference to this continent from even these pregnant facts. He has it coupled with a justification in the handwriting of our minister, under the authority of our Secretary of State. Louis Napoleon's minister of State, N.:B,ouher, read in the French Legislative body this extract from an official communica tion of oar minister, Mr. Bigelow, containing nn assurance of our submission to the estab lishment of the Mexican Empire, with a view to disarm opPosibun. tr. At...fr0..." tatives or the French people, and to quiet their discontents. The Moniteur, the Government onicial paper of France, reports Mr. Bigelow's words thus: • 'We (our Government) do not like, of course, to see a monarchy established in Mexico; we prefer; of course, republican in stitutions, but-we respect the will of the pee pie ;, we can unclertand how Mexico, that was for a long time ruled by a monarchical Govern ment, would like to return to that form of government, and we would not go to war for the sake of a form of government.' The worst enemy of Mr. Blair could not ask a more overwhelming weapon against him than the authentic reply to this sweep ing and circumstantial indictment. When this answer comes, it will be so complete a triumph of Mr. Seward, that men will won der that his enemies should have given him the opportunity to make it. What its spe cific character may be, need not now be stated. Indeed, the original charge, al though proclaimed in a prepared speech, after due advertisement, made so little im pression even upon the political adversaries of Mr. Seward, as to show that it was re garded as a blunder that would be surely and speedily exposed. And hence, with: the exception of the mere personal ene mies of the Secretary of State, it was• treated with marked indifference while those who repeated it took care in their comments to leave a wide door open for re traction and retreat. Most fortunately for this people, and for the mighty interests in volved in a firm and statesmanlike manage ment of our domestic affairs, anti especially in the management of our relations with foreign Powers, William H. Seward is at the head of the Department of the State. I write these words not by way of compli ment to him, but in the spirit of sincere congratulation to my countrymen. " THE BATTLE-FIELD." The following meinorablc lines, from the matchless muse of WILLIAM CULLEN BRY ANT, possess a touching and thrilling signi ficance now. Any one who, for instance, visits the environs of Washington city, or traverses the District of Columbia, and the adjacent counties of Virginia and Mary land, will be sadly yet powerfully im pressed by the presence of peace, and the rapid disappearance of the ravages of war under the luxuriance of the garniture of mid-summer. The robe of grass and flow ers is strewn over thousands of graves, and absence of troops, the silence of unguarded forts, the music of the birds, the lowing of the cattle, and the healthy handiwork of the farmer, who resumes his happy toil in the the very waste of the strife, make up a most suggestive picture. And then, to crown all, the victory was not for nothing. It was won for Truth, and its fruits will be ga thered in the endless harvests of immortal years: TIIE BATTLE-FIELD. Once this soft turf, this rivulet's sands, Were trampled by a hurrying crowd, And fiery heart and armed hands Ilneounterkl in the battle-cloud. Ah I never shall the land forget How gush'd the life-blood of her brave— Ouslikl, warm with hope and courage yet, Upon the soil they fought to save. Now, all is calm, and fresh, and still; Alone the chirp of flitting bird, And talk of children on the MIL And bell of wandering kine are heard. No solemn host goes trailing by The black-mouth'd gun and staggering wain; Daen start never the hate-ery 0! be it heard ag tl ain. Soon rested thoswho fought; but thou Who minglest in the harder strife For truths which men zagty_e not now, Thy warfare only ends AVM life. A friendless warfare I lingering long Through weary day and weary year. A wild and many-weapon'd throng Hang on thy front, and flank, and rear. Yet, nerve thy spirit to theproof, And blench not at thy chosen lot. The timid good may stand aloof, The sage may frown—yet faint they, not. Nor heed the shaft too surely cast, The.hissing, pturging bolt of scorn ; For with thy side shall dwell, at last, The victory of endurance born. Truth, crush'd to earth ; shall rise again: The eternal years of God are hers ; But Error, wounded writhes with pain, And dies among his worshippers. Yea, though thou lie ripen the dust, When they who help id thee flee in fear, Die full of hope and manly trust, Like those who fell in battle here. Another band thy Sward shall wield, Another hand the standard wave, Till fromthe trumpet's mouth is peaPd The blast of triumph o'er thy growl. THE APPLICATIONS FOR PARDON INCREASING. REBELLIOUS INDIANS RETURNING TO WEIR ALLEGIANCE. p7.llriO , Niiiih.llo4ltill'ADO:NDOlial*MS o l4 Nearly two hundred applications for .par dons wore received again to-day at the Attor ney General's office, all of which, with few ex ceptions, were from the 1(20,000 claii. Among the applicants are NM S. BROWN, ex-Governor of Tennessee, and Judge RIDLRY, ex-Chancel lor of the same State. The Indian Bureau has received information from General Hann" stating that recently a general council was held in the' Chickasaw country, at which twenty tribes of Indians were represented.. TheSe "indium took part in the late rebellion, and now, like their South ern white neighbors, want a restoration of their forfeited rights and privileges. They have agreed to call in representatives to another grand council, which will probablybe held at Fort Smith early in August. At the gale of Government vessels to-day, the side•wheel steamer Commodore Bead was phrehaSed by J. BRANDT, of Baltimore, for $lB,OOO. The side-wheel steamer Commodore Barney was purchased by the Fulton Ferry Company, of New York, for $35,000. The side-wheel steamer Morse was purchased by the East Boston Ferry Company for $25,500. The side wheel steamer Thomas Freeborn was pur chased by Anthony .lieybola, of Delaware, for *13,000. The propellor Anacosta was pur chased for $3,300 by Thomas Clyde, of Phila• delphia. The steam-tug Verbena, was pur chased by E. Chadwick, of New York, for $8,950. The propellor Henry Brinker was pur chased by T. B. Howell, of New York, for $5,200. The propellor Dragon was purchased by J. Brandt, Of Baltimore, for 46,100. The large schooner Adolph Hugel was purchased by R. A. Robinson, of Absecom, N. J., for $5,600. The propellor Crusader was purchased by Thcpas P. Morgan, of Washington, for $9,000. The schooner Win. Bacon was purchased by Win. White, of New York, for $5,600. Most of these vessels had been attached to the - Potomac flotilla., and have been out of commission for a month or two. The large side-wheellSteamor Banshee, a cap tured blockade runner, and the side-wheel steamers Yankee and Jacob Bell were with drawn, they not bringing their appraised value. The Commissioner of Pensions has decided that the re-marriage of a widow terminates all claim to a pension from the date of such mar riage, although she may again become a widow. Col. Baker and the New York Bounty To-day's Chronicle, speaking of Col. BAKBri and the New York bounty brokers, says: Every one of the arrests complained of was made upon the direct authority of President Ens:co/az himself, as we positively know. The Chronicte, on the authority of Col. BAKER, also denies that he has ever, directly or indirectly, received a penny from any one of those who charge him with false imprisonment, assault and battery, and With receiving money for their release from imprisonment. Appointments of Collectors. The President has made the following among other appointments of collectors of customs: Alexandria, Va.—An - Balm JAMESON. Bath, Me.—ROLAND FISHER. Saco, ke.--o. B. CrrArmoußNE. Troy, N. Y.--LEO. KIRCHNER. St. Louis, Mo.—it. J. HOWARD. Alton, 111.—Jauss Nswrow. Portsmouth and Falmouth, Me.—CKARLES J. TALBOT, And A. EDWARDS Register of the Land Office at Montgomery, Ala. The President, for satisfactory reasons, has pardoned GEORGE WATIOWARD, who VIRE COE. victed and sentenced to be imprisoned for five years for passing a counterfeit treasury note. The Movements of Miss Karr's. Miss HAREISi yesterday acquitted of the charge of murdering BI3B2.OICFGAS, has gone to the vicinity - of Baltimore to recuperate her_ THE' LATE CHARGES AGAINST. SECRETARY. STAN . TON RELATIVE TO THE ATTENDANCE OF A PRIEST ON MRS. SURATT—CARD OF GENERAL • HARDIE—THE SECRETARY OP WAR EXONERATED —TRUE STATEMENT OF THE CIRCUMSTANCES. WAR DEPARTMENT,.WASHINGTON, July 20, BM D. H. Craig, General .Ageni of the Associated _Press: Sta : Referring to the special despatch to the New York Tribune from Washington, of the Nth instant, published in the issue of that journal of the 17th, relating to the eireum_ stances attending the issue, of a pass to the Rev. Mr. Walter to attend Mrs. Suratt, I beg to state that the facts in the case are as follows. On the 6th instant,the Rev. Mr. Walter called at the War Department and asked for a pass to visit Mrs. Suratt in the military prison, say ing, if I am not mistaken, that she had ex pressed a desire to see him. I submitted the request to the Secretary of War, who at once said that . _ a pass might be given. Neither the Rev. Mr. Walter nor myself then know of the approval of the sentence of the Military Com mission in the case of Mrs. auratt. I sent Mr. Walter a pass, but afterwards fearing that the pass signed by myself might not, under the circumstances, he accepted by the officer in charge of the prison, in orderthatthere might be no possibility of disappointment in the ad mission of a clergyman to afford the necessary spiritual service, I. sent Mr. Barry, a clerk in my office, to see Rev. Mr. Walter, and to tell him that it would be better .not to go en the pass sent, but that I would again see the Secretary orWar, and •as he had assented to the visit of the clergyman to the prisoner, would get a pass signed by himself, as otherwise there was a possibility of his being put to the trouble of going to the prison without being enabled to secure ad mission. It was also a part of my design that Mr. Barry should impress upon the Rev. Mr. Walter the necessity of good faith in the use =of the _pass when replaced. After thus sending Mr. Barry to rather Walter, I went to the Secretary of ,War and asked his own signature to a pass as re ferred to above, upon his signing which I said to him that I was confident the pass would be used wholly for the purpose for which it was asked, a professional visit to administer the sacraments and to prepare the person to be visited for death. Upon Mr. Barry's (my mes senger to Rev. Mr. Walter) return, he in fermed me of the violent and excited lan guage of Father Walter with regard to the trial and its result, winch he (Mr. Walter,) it appears, had heard after leaving the War Department. On this, I went myself to see the Rev. Mr. Walter, to caution him, as his well-wisher and as a . friend of the Church, and in my private capacity entirely, with regard to the use of, language so inflani- Thatory as that he had indulged in at this, " time of great nubile excitement." I intro. , duced the conversation by stating that what he had said had made, an impression upon the mind of my messenger, who had repeated his remarks to me. I explained to him, as I have said above, that there might be a possibility of his not getting into the prison on my pass, and that I therefore asked the Secretary of War for a pass signed by himself, upon giving which I hail said that I was confident it would not he used for any other purposes than that for which it was asked, and I wanted him (air. Walter) to be so governed as that I would be safe in the assertion I had made. Mr. Walter had displayed so much excitement and temper, that it was a duty of , charity on my part, in view of all the circumstances,to induce him to 'pursue a more discreet course, and to counsel nim to be silent, as became his place on these topics. I asked him in a friendly and kindly way to promise me that he would desist from. talking about the matter. Mr. Walter's eon vietions as to the innocence of the prleOner, or the use of any proper efforts, believ ing her to be innocent, to avert her exe cution, were not made matters of objection. It was to the inflammatory character and effect of his observations at this period, when the public mind was .agitated, that my attention was directed. Unnecessary, idle, and any discussions and harangues coRIPt not butte mischievous just at this Moment: and since it appeared that Mr. Walter could not approach the subject with temper and dis cretion, It was better he should let it alone. This was a confidential conversation between myself and Mr. Walter. As has been seen, the visit was not at all official, but entirely • that of a private individual. My motives were laudable. They were to restrain imprudent and mischievous discussions, and to ensure the use of the pass to be given in the faith in tended when it was signed, and then to make my assurance good. The visit was not sug gested by the Secretary of War, or even known to him until the present time. On this, paint, after what I had said, I do not see how Mr. Walter could have understood me ass• prompt ed by Instructions in my conversation. In re ! plying to Me, the Rev. Mr. Waiter was. very violent and generally denunciatory the range of his conversation being quite Table. Ile h.a, rangued upon the Administration. and the re bellion, and dwelt with bitterness.on what he called military tyranny, etc. He said probes bly all that he is represented in the fourth paragraph of the article in question as haying said, and very much more than a prudent' priest, a loyal citizen, or a man of common sense would have said. During all this time I was endeavoring to counsel. moderation, re monstrating against his expressions, and en joining prudence. I do not know that I sought I o patronize the Rey. Mr. Walter at all, and tho Phrases which allude to this, and the indtignant rejoinder of Father Walters donot bring tomy mind the recollection of the scene described. 1 did not tell him that he should not have a nass if he did not promise to say nothing of Mrs. Suratt's Innocence. Annoyed by what he had said, I was about however, to leave the room, and to defer giving him the pass, remarking, "I will Bend yon word as to the - s uss in two hours," when he said, "1 pronliam" intended within the two hours him the Secretary of War, and to say to that I was convinced,_ after what had taken place, that Father Wafter was not in the proper 'dis position and frame of mind to be a, suitable religious attendant upon the prisoner, and that A wider the virmustiartees, the eeryi4wi OCCASIONAL WASHINGTON. WASHINGTON, July 20,1805 Applications for Pardons. Repentant Rebel Indians. Sale of Government Vessels Pension Decision. Brokers. 6ITBTETORI; APPOINTED Pakdon of a Cony t. MRS. SWEATT. PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY. JULY 21, 1865. another priest should be procured for her in stead. When Mr. Walter said that he pro mised, 'satisfied that he had determined to be governed by the considerations of prudence, I had suggested, and believing that he would perform what he had undertaken, I gave him the pass. Nor did I, when I designed to with draw from Father W. without giving him the pass, by any means intend that this act should have the abet to deprive the prisoner of the services of the clergy. My view, on the con trary, was only that some other priest should go. "in fact, another priest did go, besides Mr. I'alter. It has been my fortune to bethe means of sending the elery to attend many during this war in need of their services, and I never threw a straw in the way of any clergyman of any faith visiting a 'penitent loyal or disloyal person, living or dying, when his services were called for, 1 could not see or know of a per son of my ova creed dying without giving any assistance in my power to secure the attend ance of a priest. With regard to the denials. of the passes to Mr. Walter to visit the prisoner, when I am referred to in the last paragraph of the'article in question, Father Walter stated to my mes senger that he had been requested by Mrs. suratt, shortly after she was - arrested and 911302C4 tO Viat her, but that he had refused to do so, not wishing to have his ' , name con nected with it until the trial was oven , ' I did not seek to meddle with Mr. Walter's convictions as to the innocence or guilt of Mrs. Smelt, nor did I attempt to restrain him from the use of any proper efforts to bring his con victions to notice in quarters where his repre sentations might be of avail. So far front this,. an hour or two after the conversation referred to, when be called upon the War Department, and told me that he could not get admittance with the daughter of the prisoner to the Exe cutive Mansion, and asked for my asSistance, gave him a card to the acting military secre tary of the President, asking that gentleman to see the Rev. Mr. W., trusting that this means would assist him in getting his case be fore the Executive. _ In conclusion, I distinctly aver that the Se, cretary of War expressly and readily assented to the visit of a Catholic clergyman to Mrs. Suratt. He made no condition as to any con viction of the clergyman as to the guilt or -in nocence of the prisoner, or as to anything he might sayon the subject. JAMES A. HARDIg, Inspector General, and • - Brevet Brigadier General U. S. A. NEW JERSEY POLITICS. MEETING OF THE UNION STATE CONVENTION, Emphatic Resolutions Unanimously Adopted. MARCUS L WARD NOMINATED FOR GOVERNOR. TarterOtt, N. J., July 20,--Tbe RepubliCall. State Convention is very largely attended. The delegates are made up of substantial men, Hon. J. T. Nixon was appointed temporary chairman, and addressed the Convention, urging the sacrifice of all side issues for sue. cess. R C. EeMlle, Of Mercer, was appointed tem porary secretary, and Capt. George Halsted assistant. Committees on resolutions and rules of or ganization, ie., were appointed. A resolution to refer all resolutions on State and national affairs without debate, brought out a strong speech from George Halsted, of Essex, in favor of elevating the colored man to the right of suffrage. AFTERNOON .S.ESSION. The Convention reassembled at two o'clock The Committee on Permanent Organization reported General Judson Kilpatrick, of Sussex county, as President, whieb was received with applause. A Vice President from each county and a Secretary from each district completed the organization, Upon taking the chair, General Kilpatrick made a stirring speech, which was loudly ap plauded. The Committee on Resolutions reported a series, as follows: Ist. That the war had not been a failure ac cording to the Democratic declaration at Chi cago, but had terminated in an honorable peace. Std. Abraham Lincoln, his memory and ser vices are never to be forgotten. Id. The Administration .of President John son fully endorsed, and promised a hearty and united support. 4th. Sympathizers with the rebellion still to be watched. sth. A long bill of indictment against the Democratic party for its treason and hostility to the War and the country, and its aid and en couragement to the rebellion. 6th. The Constitutional anti-slavery amend ment must and shall prevail in New Jersey. 7th. The untold blessings of freedom from slavery. Bth. Gratitude to the army and navy for their valuable services. 9th. Economy - . tare. o citizens of foreign birth for 10th. Thi , .o 4 -.S. t .,..pressing the rebellion, and -thilig - the country which had adopted them as its own children. Mr. George Halsted Called for his resolution in reference to the rights of colored men ; and after some excitement, all were postponed until after the nominations. The Convention was opened for nomination, and, after Marcus L. Ward and A. G. Cattell had been nominated.o3, delegate from Bergen nominated General halpatriek, which took like wildfire, and he was nominated by the dele gates from several other counties. The excite ment was so high that a member proposed to maKe the nomination by acclamation. The friends of the other candidates insisted on a ballot, and the first ballot resulted as follows Cattell, 265 ; Ward, 250 ; Kilpatrick, 149. Second Ballot—Cattell, 190.; Ward, 244; Kil patrick, 231. Third Ballot—Cattell, 142; Ward,.999; Kilpa trick, 218. A motion to take e k ieeess Fourth Ilalloh , -Cattell, 148; Kilpatrick, ; Ward, 349 ; and Marcus , L. Ward was declared the nominee of the party for Governor of the State, and the resolution was made unani mous. The resolutions of thecommitteewereadopt ed, and Mr. Halstead's resolution on the rights of the colored people was laid on the table.. The State Central Committee was appointed and the Convention adjourned. Speeches waso made by General Kilpatrick, Mr. Cattell, Mr. Seovel,3l.r.Rolieson, and others endorsing the nomination. The Fatal Affray at Poughkeepsie. POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., July 29.—Considerable excitement exists here in regard to an affray which occurred last night, on the corner of Main. and Water streets, resulting in the death of Thomas De Mott. De Mott approached Wil lie= Stevens, one of the crew of the four oared beatFloy, which wasbeaten in the great race on Tuesday, and. accused him of selling out to the New Yorkers. Stevens earnestly denied. the allegation, and on Mott repeating it, struck him a powerful blow with his fist, knocking .him down and breaking his neck. Stevens immediately gave himself up to the authorities, and is now in jail in this'city. He bad no intention of killing De Mott, and feels deep grief at the result. Coroner Haight held an inquest on the body to-day, when the jury brought in a verdiet.•im accordanCe with the facts. Considerable. sympathy is manifested for Stevens. — Harvard College Conanaeneement. . GENERAL HEADS MADE AN . LL.D. Beeman, dzdy 20.—The eosnusencement at Harvard College yesterday, attraeted.a more numerous gatherinw, with greater manifesta tions of interest, than has attended its exer cises during the past four years of war. The literary exereises of the graduating class are well spoken of. Governor Andrew and staff, General Meade and staff, and Generals Bend and Alex ander, with • numerous other distinguished soldiers and civilians, were present The following honorary degrees were con ferred: Master of Arts—Rev. Samuel Dowse Robbins, of Framingham; Rev. Samuel Hobar ley, of Boston, and Professor Maurice Perkins, Of Jnion College. Doctor of Law—Charles Beck, of Cambridge, and Major General George Gordon Meade, of the United States Army. Sporting Items. MONTIMAL, July 20.—A game of billiards, for V.,000 in gold, was won last night by Dion, of Montreal, beating roster, of New York, 396 out of 1,500 points. Worm - mans, Mass., July 20.—The annual re. gatta on: Lake Quinsagamond will take place on Saturday morning, July 29th, for the cham pionship, between Harvard and Yale• Colleges. The sum of $650 is offered in prizes, as fol lows: Six-oared boat, $2OO and $75; four-oared boat, $l2O and $5O; single sculls, $75 , 0.nd 025, and a purse of *lOO for a wherry raee, open only to Messrs. Hammill and Radford. A Pablie Reception to General Meade in Boston. BOSTON, July 20.-TA public levee was held in ranueii Hall this P. M., in honor of General Meade, who was introduced toe. crowded as semblage by Mayor Lincoln. The General expressed his thanks for the courtesies extended to him, mid in a few well chosen words urged the claims of Abe disabled soldiers to the fostering care , of a grateful, country. , Release of the Rebel Gel:Aerial Ewell.. llosmox, July 2A—The wife of General Ewell proceeded to Fort Warren, yesterdaymorning, with an order from President Johnson, for the release of her husbaud, on taking the oath, of allegiance. ilewas liberated, and both,left for the South last evening. The Mitrder of the Joyce Cht!deem. BOSTON, July 20.—The examination of John kftewart, who is under arrest on suspicion of being the Murderer Of the Joyce chi:Wren, is assigned for Monday next. The Monitor Agamentteas. PORTLAND, Mo., July 20.—The doubleiurret ted monitor agamenticus arrived here this morning, from her eastern trip . New - York Central Railroad Dividend. AIMANY, July 20.—The Directors of the New York Central Railroad today declared a semi annual dividend of three per cent., free from the income tax, payable on Ute In% of August NEW ORLEANS. GEN. CANBY IN COMMAND OF LODI SIANA. AND TEXAS. Kirby Smith, Price, and Magruder none to Mexico. TREY ARE FOLLOWED BY FOUR HUNDRED OTUERS, WITII TWO GUNS. Maximilian Surrenders the Rebel Pro perty in his Hands. CArzo i July 19.—The steamship Continental, from New Orleans, with adviees to the 12th instant, arrived here to-day, with five hun dred and fifty bales of cotton for New York, and three hundred and twenty-live bales for St. Louis. One hundred and thirty bales of cotton for St. Louis, and three hundred bales for Evans rite passed here last night. The 'Red itiver country will raises no crop but corn this year, except in a few localities. Vessels badaailed from New Orleans for St- Petersburg direct, with cargoes of cotton be longing to New Orleans merchants. The wheat crop of Louisiana is better than it was ever known to be before. The sugar crop is not as large as it was last year. [SECOND DESPAVeiI.]I IST&W OBLXAIPI3, July 18.—Xiddling cotton is quiet at 47e. Gold, 146. Gen. Canby now commands the Department of Texas and Louisiana, reporting to General Sheridan. The steamer George Washington, from ]Tow York, arrived here on Sunday last. Brownsville (Texas) advises of July Bth state that the rebel Generals Kirby Smith, Magru der, Price, Shelby, Douglags, and Jackman, with four hundred men and officers, two guns, and a large wagon train, have gone to Mexico. Governors , Moore and Allen, of I,oulsiana, Clark and Murilay, (7) of Texas, and others of less importance, are in that part of the State. Late reports confirm the delivery of Con. federate property to Gen. Brown, by order of The Federals recently captured five Bred bales of cotton and a large wagon train, conveying quinine, saltpetre:, &c., to Texas. , The Imperialists have evacuated Camargo, falling back:on Monterey, abandoning the en tire country. They were much annoyed 04 the march by Cortina% ' • CALIFORNIA. Confirmation of the Death of Bishop Potter. SAN FRANCISCO, July 10.—Billy Mulligan, who WaS expatriated by the Vigilance Committee of San Francisco, in 185 e, and who after Wards raised a vOlunteer regiment, which he was not allowed to lead to the war shot and killed two men, while in a fit of delirium tremens; and was about to fire again,when he was killed by a policeman. Be had defied all previous efforts to arrest him. Bishop Potter, of Pennsylvania, died here a few days 'since, and his body has been cm balmed, and will be sent East. Schuyler Colfax and Lieutenant Governor Bross delivered speeches to an immense au dience in this city, on Saturday night. They start to-day for Oregon. The steamship Golden Rule (1) arrived yes.. terday from Panama. [The name of this vessel must be wrong. The Golden Rule was wrecked lately.—Brn. Rams.] MOBILE. MOBILE, July 19.—Two trains collided on the Maptgomery and Mobile Railroad, smashing three ears, l illing Ave negroes, And wounding several passengers. MISSISSIPPI. CAIRO, Jul' . 19.—An arrival from Eastport Miss., brings two hundred and fifty bales o !cotton. Among the 'passengers is the rebel General Roddy, who has applied for pardon, and ex pressed his determination to be a good citizen and. obey the 1aW.5....ana..u5f.3 his innuenee to NVW- Ndu"K-icil BIIHNING 'OF THB SHIP WILLIAM TIBLEION A letter front the captain of the steamship Lafayette has been received by the agent of the _Freud' line of steamers in this city, de tailing the rescue of - the fort four perSollB from the boats of the ship Wilifiain Nelson, re cently burned at sea. The sulYeiers were well cared for by the passengers on' board the La. fayette, who raised 2,862 francs for their bene fit. Among the saved is the captain, first and second officers, steward, cook, and sixteen sai lors. The remainder were passengers, mostly mates. DEATH or BISHOP POTTER A private despatch from San Francisco an -1101111068 the death of Bishop Alonzo Potter, in that eity,•on the 4th inst. RETURN OF TROORS, The steamer Charles Thomas, from &Wan. nab, JulSr 17th, has arrived with the 128th New York Regiment, Captain Davis commanding_ • The steamship 'Hagar, from New Orleana on the 14th . instant, has arrived, with the lath Massachusetts Battery, Lieutenant Nichols, and the 26th New:York Battery, Captain South: worth commanding, THE EVEIVING STOOK BOAUTP Gold, 1.121,4; New York Central, 85 1 4; Erie, tßy t ; Reading, 103 t,/,. ; Michigan. Southern, MX; Pittsburg, erhi Rbelt NZ% ; Northwest ern preferge_ i ct 62N Fort 'Wayne, 'MA; Quick silver, br Mariposa, la. Market very Restoratioo the Wm% of Time. From the Item York Times, 20th:) • Many 'mestere dAsappointed in not finding a more rapid transformation of Southern charac ter. They read of a - great deal of bitterness yet towardii th&National Government, of a loyalty that is Simply submission, to the strongest, of continued adherence te.the doc trine of State rights, of a disposition to- Op press and' persecute the freedmen; they con clude that there is but a poor prospect that the South will ever assimilate with the rest of the country;.and look forward to an indefinite prolongation. of military rule, or to never-enn ing disorder and wrong. From this state of mind naturally comes an inclination to. try rigorous measures and summary expedients. This view of flip subject is false and mis chievous. We never had a right to imagine that. the South would be metamorphosed merely by being vanquished by force. Human nature is capable of no such sudden change— least of all the tough stuff of Americannature. We are too apt to apply Northern standards to. Southern conduct—Mak - Ng too little• allow ance for the immense difference of education. With our anti-shivery principles and: our. in bred reverence for the national ilag - ,.we can. hardly appreciate what it costs a Southerner to acknowledge that anegro has natural rights as sacred astas own, and that his "sovereign State" has not the first claim to his allegiance. It is almost. impossible for us to estimate the novelty of the situation in which the Southern man now finds himself, and the extreme dif ficulty of his adapting himself to it.. All thecivilideaa , civil ideaa, all the social habits of his life time, must be Changed I An his conceptions of citi zenship, of. loyaly, of State dignity, of the. relations . of. races, of the title of labor to re spect, of political economy, of natural justice,. of the divine ordinances, of the precepts of Christianity, must be adjusted to a new order of thingai contrary to all he has ever seen or felt. Werewe, on awakening to-morrow,, to find Ourselves the subjects of Queen Victoria, our Old nleas anti habit would hardly ex perience a, raider, shock than the old ideas and Wills of the Southern peole have sus tained by the sudden break-up of - their social system. The troth is, that there is cause for surprise in the readiness with which the great body of the . Southern people recognize the- real aspects of their new situation, and the neces sities it entails. They have generally yielded with far, better grace than was anticipated befofie. the war closed. Though most of them have not. at. yet Shownany particular devotion to the Government,few of theinhave eZhibited a contumacious or sullen spirit.. Their gene ral disposition is to follow the coarse indi cated by the Goverment, in the hope that it will finally bring them out of their present calamities. Nothing like enthusiasmisshown in this; nor could it be expected. Their-spirits, if not broken by their defeats and their miSeries6 have been too much depressed to admit, of a recovery for many a day yet. They move, for the most part, passively; bet it is an excellent thing that they move at all. Every step forward will strengthen their faith in the Government, and prompt to new • exertion. Gaining new assurance that they have the cordial good will of the Northern people and that it is possible to' live with them in brotherhood, and new proofs that all their material-interests depend upon a coa -1 formity to the same principles and systems that have secured for the North its ,unparal : leled prosperity, they will gradually come to , our own ground, and thoroughly identify themselves with us, in act, thought, and feel , mg. Markets by Telegraph• BALTIMORE, July 20.—The Flour market is firm; sales of 1,500 bbls Western extra at $7.623§. Wheat active at $2.10@2.20 for white, and 085 @1.95 for red. Corn dull at 98c for white, and , 95e for yellow. The Provision market is Arm, with a light stoek on hand. Whisky—Sales of Western at $2.15@2.154, CINCINNATI, July 19 Wheat firm; prime red at $l.Ol. Flour firmer and 25c higher. Whisky in good demand at $2.07. Provisions firm Mess Pork, $29. CHICAGO, July W.—Flour quiet. Wheat doll and 800 lower; sales of No. 1 at 141.99@1.09 1 ,41 No. 2, at 98@990. Corn active; hales of N. lat 56@570, and No. 2 at 514455 c. Oats dull and I OD2c lower ; sales at 3934@40c. Provisions firm. Freights steady ; on corn, 8 1 / 4 0i: on wheat, 90 to Buffalo. Ilighwines dull. _ . itScui s ts, shipatents. Flour 31,00% Uhl. 2,N0 bbls Wheat %mu, bus. 30,000 bus. Corn 134,pag bus. 258,000 bus. Oats wpoo lasts, 00,000 toot THE RECENT TRAGEDY IN WEST ROXBURY, THE CORONER'S MUST AND VERDICT. [From the Boston Advertiser of Wednesday.] Yesterday afternoon the inquest in the case of the recent murder of the Joyce children, in Buzzers Woods, West Roxbury, was resumed in Elliot Hall,beginning at about half-past four o'clock. Coroner Ira Allen presided, and con. • ducted the examination of the witnesses. The jury having answered to their names, the several wan if : . e l witnesses presentO'Connell; to weretesti testified duly that sworn. The The first person examined was— w lived in Jamaica Plain, and was acquainted with John Stewart, the man now under arrest charged with the murder ; witness further tes tified that she saw him on the day of the mur der; the prisoner came to the house of wit ness between half-past six and eight o'clock, and asked for some supper; he seemed to he in liquor; witness says she saw blood on his right hand, and on the cuff of his coat, and a spot on One aide of his shirt-bosom; alto saw blood_ on the door before she near him in the house'; witness could not say that Ste wart had been in the house before, but he said that he had •been • he said he had been at work for a man near Taft's tavern that forenoon ; witness tes tified that she asked Stewart how he cut his hand, and he answered that he cut it with a piece of glass; witness could not say just how long Stewart remained in her house; he went out shortly after supper; he came in about 11 o'clock Tuesda forenoon, and asked for some thing to eat; hi e s aunt, Mrs. Leonard., was pre sent when he came in on Monday evening, and ;remained until after he went out; there was something said about there being no butter on the table, but witness heard no other conver sation between them ; witness heard her say that she saw film in the yard on Tuesday morn ing ; believe she said that he slept in the shed that night; he had on a serge or alpaca coat, black felt hat, dark pants, and pair of shoes,- three or four days afterward witness heard that his aunt.told some One that she thought he had been fighting ; were through tea when Stewart came in on Monday evening; she said nothing about seeing the blood on his hands at that time ; had heard her own little boy say 'that he saw blood on Mrs. Leonard's door that night. Pauli]. Wallis testilled.—Reside on Centre street, Jamaica Plain; witness was positive that between the hours of two and three P. M. on the day of the murder he heard the scream as of a child in great distress which seemed • to come from theil ti e Ire , _on or 'masers woods; it was a very unusual scream, as of a person in great distress or fright; did not often hear any thing of that sort where he resided; wit ness testified that he heard the scream twice ; the second time the sound was fainter than the first; thought it was about half-past two o'clock; witness bad no doubt that the sound came from the direction of the woods where the children were found. Michael Hews teetified.—Worked for Mr Thomas Motley about Mx weeks; Went to work for him on Tuesday; worked around the farm house most of the time ; witness was en gaged in hoeing potatoes one day when Mr. Motley told him to take care of the hay; then heard John Kelly say that lie saw somebody in the woods that day who looked like Mr. Foss; heard Kelly say some days afterwards that he could swear who the man was if he had a mind to; o e t c h hi is ld w reil af h ter ad he been heard found; that the bodies of could not say how the subject was introduced. Michael Reagan testified.—Worked for Mr. Motley since the second day of April; recol lected the day when the children were found; was hoeing potatoes on the Whitton farm on the Monday when John Kelly said he saw the man in the woods . ; it was about four o'clock Kelly looked at his watch to see what time it was; just then he said he saw the man, and when he looked around the man was gone; there were four of them working together ; witness knew the place where the girl was found ; it was only about dye minutes' walk from where they were all at work hoeing the potatoes;_ witness passed Buzzy street in geing up from dinner, and saw persons on the road When they were going down .to Mr. Motley's house ; Kelly said that the man he saw was a low-sized, broad-shouldered man, like Mr. Foss ; witness worked in the field that day un til about live o'clock', has talked with John Kelly about the murder since he (Kelly) left Mr. Motley's; Kelly remarked that it was a bad lob. • Joplin Kelly testified.—Had worked for Mr. Robinson about a month ; before, witness worked for. Mr. Motley; left the latter's em ploy on the 15th of June; was hoeing potatoes on the Monday - previous; had his watch hung on a tree near by where he was working; went to look at it - between eleven and twelve o'clock, and went to dinner at twelve; . was gone to dinner an hour ; witness stayed m the field - at work until half-past three or four o'clock,• had no recollection of looking at his watch - during the afternoon; when he looked at his watch in the forenoon, he saw a man eomingalciwn the woods; he - was a stout man, and looked like Mr. Foss ; knew afterwards it was not Mr. , Foss, because he did not come up to them ;. the man: was coming straight to wards them.whdirille , Sairldin • witness was at Mr. Motley's faiminaltien last baturday night; the man he saw , . appeared to be going straight down toward the railroad bridge; had never told any one that he knew tlae man, and. could swear who he was; witness said he knew - Miehael Bow's wife; said-he saw her at the farm+house last Saturday night; had never spoken about the murder to Michael Reagan, or Bows, or Bows' wife, or wife's sis- i, and a low black liossuteffirt; faded brown over the shoulders ; witness could not swear tbat he 'had_ ever seen Mr. Foss so dressed ; only looked at the man a minute; it was before ffinner;only saw the man once; had told the Boston police officers about the mat ter; saw Thomas Follen that day lying down under a tree Wthe road, when Witness, with the reot of the men, went to dinner; there was a boy with WWI I and he was there when the men returned.; Knew a man by the Name' of Thomas, who-works in the miilatMill Village; never talked with him about the murder ; it . was this person that 'witness heard reading about the discovery of the murder, from, a Boston newspaper ; witness could say how many days before this it was that he saw the man in_the wood's, Mary Owen testified.—Lives at Mr. Motley'S house ; she remembered the day when the obit dren were found , ; never had heard John Kelly say anything about the murder; witness had not been in the woods since she had liVed in Mr. Motley's family; heard somebody say that John Kelly said lie-saw a man there the day of the murder. NEW Yonic, July 20. • Mary Flemm g testilleit—Liv j e o sa nu at e Mr i s ly . M h o a t- d. ley's ; heard some one say that h seen a man in tho woods; never had aid that she, suspected anybody . ; never had seen -or heard anything about the place that led her to suppose that anybody there knew anything about the murder,. Catharine Abbott testitted.—Lives in Mr. Motley's family; heard of the discovery of the bodies of the murdered children that even ing at about nine o'clock; had heard nothing said about it more than what previous wit nesses have related. Alvin Foss testified.—Lives in the stone house on the Whitton place; was not in. Mr. Motley' woods on the 12th dal of June ;.does not know of the men being a work there on that day; the, distance from where the: men were at work o where the bodies were found was such as to render it probable that any loud outcry would• have.been heard; witness did not see the children or any strangers about the woods on that day; was about his home most of the forenoon and during the after noon; had fregnently, seen, persons strolling about the woods on ploasureovho came from. the other direction. J. M. Bowers testified.—Lives in West Ded ham; carries on the sausage business, and also farms it some; on Monday, June 12th, witness saw a boy and girl near Nute's.Corner, at about 12 o'clock, perhaps a quarter before twelve;. witness was in a wagon, and his horse was going at a slow trot; the girl was in advance of the boy a few rods ; they were on the side walk 5 the girl was. stout-built r should say that she wag about eighteen years ohl the boy was well set; the girt smiled, she passed; could not say just how they were dressed; next, witness met a. man with a basket ;. the man was probably about forty years of ago, and was sun-burnt; first took him for a Ger man; should known him again; he had on a' cap and blueish clothes • he was walking slow, and was a good ways' behind the children, nearly down to the horse-ear station; next met a woman • erossed,.the track. and Met three young fellows, dressed in citizens' clothes;. the clothes were dark; one of the fellows. shouted to witness;. he was younger and smaller than the others; witness could not de-. scribe either of them,, and. clid not thinkhe could identify therm; they came from, the horse-car station ; the • irl's hair was donenp• in what the women call water-fall; think.she had on a dark bat. . . William Quirk tested,_ Worked far. Mr.. Motley this summer ;,four of the Men, were hoeing potatoes on, the Mmiday before- the bodies were found; went to dinner at twelve o'clock; Kelly took out his watch between three and four o'clock; he said at that time that he saw a man in.the woods, and said: that it looked like Foss.;. witness did not see the man himself; Kelly said it was a middle-sized man; witness was quite sure that it was.inthe• afternoon; he left working on the potatoes at about four o'clock,. and went to work in am. other part of the field until sent away by Mr: Motley; witness had never talked the matter over with any one; had no suspicion, of any one about the place as having committed the murder. ' John C. Blanchard testided.—Resides ja maiew-Plain; was at Ms..Wellington?s.on. hem day,Vrone 12th ; saw some strangers„two men, a boy and a girl, in a ewn•ryalr wholnquired the way to 'Forest Gilts station i'bOth•raeut had on gray suits and straw hats, and, one had black whiskers ;,the girl had on a light dress and a black-silk. mantilla ; the carriage was a side-swing carryall, rolled up all around, and looked as though it had been newly varnish ed; witness heard an unusual noise—a scream, from the direction of the place where the boy was found ,• Jt was justhilf-pasttweiveraelock; heard another and a similar noise• about half past two o'clock ; this sound was not se loud as the other, but quite distinct ; heard it four or dye times; it seems as though it proceeded from a person exhausted; witness thinks he drat 'communicated the fact to Mn Welling ton, and has since spoken of it to • policeman McDonald. The testimony of this witness concluded the evidence.. The jury then received the case and retired. After a few moments tionsulto talon they returned with two distinct ver. diets, as follows : On view of the body a Isabella N. Joyce, tbe jury on their oaths ‘ do say: "That she came to her death on the twelfth day of June, eighteen hundred and sixty-five, after the hour oflaM.,fromwouuds inflicted by some sharp instrument in the hands of some person or persons to thejury unknown." And, view of the body of John S. Joyce, the jury on their oaths do say " That he came to his death on the twelfth day of June, eigh teen hundred and sixty-five, after the houx.of 12. M., from wounds inflicted by some sharp in strument in the hands of some person orper sons to the jury unknown." Each verdict was signed by Coroner Ira Allen, Thomas Motley, Lorenzo Smith, John W. Burnham, Samuel Gist, Andrew J. Chase, and George 'T. Bradley. It was after half past seven o'clock before the session of the jury was closed. TBEITINONY OP TUN PHYSICIANS--MILS„ TERMINI HELD Pox TRIAL IN THE RECIORDHR'S COURT. The preliminary examination of Mrs. Ter hune, on the charge of assaulting Miss Amelia Pransted, with intent to commit murder, was condoned before Justice T. H. Brown yester day Afternoon. Previous to. examining any w itnesses, Roberta Hervey,. Esq., eouusel for. the accused, stated that en the part of his Valent be would wave it/1 oxpAiagytion,aud The Chiehith Tragely. THREE CENTS. leave it to the court to fix upon the amount of bail he would require Mrs. Terhune to furnish for her appearance for trial at the next term of the Recorder's Court. In order to satisfy himself as to the amount, Justice Brown considered it necessary to have the testimony of the physicians who had ex amined Miss Franstedls wounds. Accordingly, Drs. J. A. Allen, R. N. Isham, and B. P. Rey nolds were summoned to giYO their evidence, which was as follows : J. Adams Allen, M. D., sworn.—l am a prac ticing physician in this city; t have examined the wounds'on the person of Miss Fransted they are simply skin aerate/tag!) and a small cut in the eye ; the instrument may have per foratecl the eye.—i am notcertain it did, as she wOuld not let me, examine-'it, and 011.% . de.nor (Reynolds) cautioned me againstremoving the cover placed over it ; she will get well the cuts are mere trifles—not serious wounds ; it is possible the instrument, a dull one, did Per forate the eye, and the other cuts are, perhaps, through the skin, but of no moment ; I do not think the wounds are at all dangerous; Dr. ishatit examined her With me and said he thought the eye was somewhatinjured, but the other cuts of no consequence. R. N. Isham, M. D., sworn.—l am a practising physician ; I have seen the wounded woman, Miss Fransted, twice—the day of the assault, and today; I have just come from visiting her • she is very comfortable, and is doing wen'; there are seven wounds upon her per son the one in the eye is the most serious, and will probably cause her to lose the Use Of the organ ; the wounds in the neck are not fatal ; Dr. Reynolds says she breathes through the main wound in the neck ; it is a superficial wound, that is, on the surface; I cannot give a thorough opinion in regard to. the wound in the eye, but it will probably result in its loss; I do not consider the other wounds dangerous; I saw Miss Fransted the day she was injured; the wounds are almost healed ; she has been well attended, and the surgical operations performed in a satisfactory manner. 13. P. Reynolds, M. D., sworn... 4 am a phy sician, and have had charge of the wounded. woman since the affray ;1 was not the first person who attended her; the wound in the eye will cause its loss; the wound in the neck is quite deep, extending through the trachea; I have no doubt she will lose the eye. Cross-examined by Mr. flarvey.—l consider Miss Fransted now completely free from dan ger; she has been carefully treated, and the wounds are healing very fast ; there will be no permanent trouble with any of the wounds except that in the eye; the wounds are not what I should term akin scratches; they are very deep, the one in the neck reaching through the trachea; I should say the wounds were made with some sharp instrument—a dirk-knife—as they are long and narrow. The prisoner's counsel hoped, now that the Justice was satisfied Miss Fransted was in a fair way of ultimately recovering, that he would reduce his client's bail to some reason able say $2,,5i11y as that was all sufficient to meet the ends of justice. negideß, Mrs, Terhune was already held in the sum of $5,000 In a civil process—a suit in trespass having been brought against her by Miss Fransted to recover VO,OOO for damages alleged to have been received by the said Amelia, whom she (Mrs. Terhune) had stabbed a few ;lays ago. The Justice did not think the amount sug gested by counsel sufficiently large, and there fore he held her in the sum of *5,000 for trial at the September term. Of thy Recorder's Court. _ Mrs. Terhune, while the physicians were giving in their testimony, maintained the most stolid indifference, except when the name of the destroyer of her earthly happi ness was mentioned. Then she would for a moment awake, as from a dream, and casting a sharp, hasty glance in the direction of the speaker, as , muoh as to say, "What of heri" and again assume her theughtful mood. She is a strange woman; and if it were not known beyond a doubt that previous to her assault upon Miss Fransted she was a virtuous wife and kind mother—upright and honest in all her dealings—the observer of her demeanor since the affair would be -Justified in setting her down as a: heartless, deliberate murderer. —Chicago paper, Tuesday. 1111URDER WILL OUT. sequel to the Late Cicero Murder Case —An Arrest of Suspected Parties—The 'Examination—A Resume of the Mut , der. From our Chicago exchanges of Wednesday we take the subjoined: Two interesting criminals were brought be fore Justices Millikin and Sturtevant yester day afternoon. The evidence brought to light certain facts connected with an atrocious murder which was perpetrated last Novem ber, at Six Mile Ridge, near Harlem, and which, it was thought, had been hushed up and forgotten. On the 20th. of NOVember—the Sunday before Thanksgiving Day—a tailor named Patrick Maloney, residing at Six Mile Ridge, was shot dead in his own house, by two men, who bad never since been discovered. From the testimony adduced at the Coroner's inquest held at the time, there was no doubt left as to the manner in which Maloney came to his death. It was clearly a premeditated and deliberate murder, perpetrated by some cold-blooded ruffian. . . It appears that on the Sunday night referred to, Maloney and his"wife wore awakened about nine. o'clock, by a loud knocking. Mrs. Ma• loney lighted.ti ce,nille, while her husband went to unlock the •fiticitt'l No sooner had he opened the door than lie called to his. wife for assist ante, and both attempted to Close it in the face of two men who were attempting to gain groan, ivMwiirai4..sluits were then fired marked, "That'll do; now conidong. loney expired in about ten:minutes thereafter, and the wife, with five children; passed the re mainder of the night with the corpse of the murdered man, in a state of terror which might be well imagined. Suspicion fell 'upon some of the neighbors at the time, with whom Maloney had quar reled, and two were arrested ;but noevidence being produced which Would implicate them, they were discharged. The coroner's jury found a verdict "that the deceased came to his death by &shot fired at the hands of some person or persons unknown to the jury." From that time to the present nothing more was heard of the murder, and people soon for got it. For eleven months the officers of Chicago . labored hard, and have at last succeeded in • arresting two men. One of the prisoners, Wil ' ham Corbett, is a low-browed, evil•looking ruffian. He is well known to the police in Chicago as a notorious bounty-jumper and rowdy. He earned some notoriety lately in a gentle on the west side, when he nearly killed an officer. FOr that offence he was tried and condemned to fifteen years in the peniten. "tiary. The Other, Patrick Fleming; is a dis reputable-looking, stay-haired man, appa rently about fifty years of age. They were both snatched from the penitentiary to answer this grave charge. The following testimony • was adduced yesterday : Honora.Doyle ney, the wife of the deceased, related the Mr . eumstances of the murder. The next witness was Philip Brennan, %hack proprietor, No. 117 South Canal street. He said that the prisoners came' to Isis house about eight o'clock on Sunday, the 20th of No vember, and hired a hack from his driver. They drove out with Some other man whom. lie did not know, and returned about mid ,night. The horses were sweating, and seemed `to have been over-driven, The man who drove them out was William Gubbins, who ' was regularly employed by him. Wm, Gub bins was then sworn He had seen the pri soners before ; one Sunday night last Nevem ' lies he was engaged to drive them to Six-mile Ridge ; when lie arrived there, they told him to stop and turn the hack roundrwitla , the horses' heads towards the city. Theirleftchim. and went away. In about•ten minutes they returned, and told him to drive last. to.the town. Corbett, who sat beside him on the out side of the carriage, had a revolver across his arm, with the muzzle pointing towards him. After proceeding some distance, Corbett re ' , marked that "a man who don't play square ought to die." He (witness) did not hear any shot tired, and he did not see where the men went to. It was a wild, stormy night, the wind blowing frem the westward. on being cross-examined, Gubbins made a few (KIM'S ' slims which excited suspicion.. lie said he heard soon afterwards that a man had. been killed that night. He told Brennan that he did not care about any more jobs ,such as that, because he thought there was something wrong ; he supposed. so from. the way they made him drive into town; on the way home two !shots were fired by the men who were inside the hack; one Said. to. tile ' other "Save one shot ;" when they arrived , at the Ridge, the men told him to. turn. out the lights of the hack • it was a very dark night i and he did not do t. On further examination it appeared that Gubbins did not sleep that night or the next ; his mind was ill at ease "he felt seared, thinking that some wrong had been done ;" he was afraid to mention the cir , eumstanee to any one, in ease some of the seen. would kill him. In fact it appearedfrom Gab ; blast evidence that .he had been "terribly scared" all along. The prisoners were then asked if they had anything to say. flCorbett said that lie wont out that evening • on an excursion to the country; Fletning,and the other two Men, whom he, did not know, hired the hack and he went with them.. He was then asked what they did .when they left the hack at the nidge I He replied, "we Welk a ramble• round' the, country, and came back again." He further volunteered to say that a plan had been laid against him by Captain Kennedy, who. had some grudge against him. Fleming declined to make any statement. The justice, after maturely considaring the evidence, came to the conclusion that there were strong grounds for suspicion against the , The prisoners, and committed:them:for trial. Governor Drownlow's Plait . Oryn. Governor Brownlow having been questioned as to his platform, replies through the columns of his paper,.the Knoxville Whig, as follower "We are for the Union as it is, and the en forcement of the laws as they are, both State and national, until every rebel lays down his arms, is killed off in battle, or in. private, or is hung—until this Wicked. r ebellion is crushed out, and men cease to abuse the Federal all thoritles, or talk treason even in privatellfe. We are for no compromise with rebels who have bees in arms agaluattheEederal Goirern meet three or four years, and have only laid down their arms because they were whipped; we are for no truce with rebels, no pardon for pirates, no complicity with thieves, and 110 parley with murderers. We are for thepolitt. cal party which will stand by the eountry, sus• lain the United States GovernMent, and not think of withholding men or means from the President until the nation has asserted its in dependence of organized mobs at the South and in the North, and until the. whole world shall see and acknowledge our power to crush out the great conspiracy. "We hold that no man. in any section of the country, North tfr South, should be permitted to hold °Mee until he has taken an oath that he has never done, written, or said aeyuhin against the authority of the Governatent of the United States, or in any way give n aid ' comfort, or en couragement, to its one mies, or to the men waging waragainst the Government. Being grossly deceived by man in the South, who went into the rebellion,we will never sunnort any man for any who honor or&rofif who was a seeesSieniat, or aided in e unholy work of oppressing, the Union people in the South, or who, persistent- IY ativoceted the prosecution of the war brought on at the SOUth.. "Denying the right or seeessien, we held that no State has ever been. out of the Union, and consequently we deny to. Congress the the franchise question, hold right to regulat e _ ing that each sate aft ?having elected a lOyal Legislature, h sa y 'V are loyalvoters and who are net s ; a pro sa vid W ed Q 'that no - State shall enact it law on this sablect at war with the Ny0,5191113 of UV! ZiAtleatil C94ooAgtkoros • THE WA.R. PRESS. (PUBLISHED WEEKLY.) THE WAR FAROS will be sent to subseribetv by 15511 (per annum in advance,) M IN 09 Five conies 10 00 Ten enpl" ' 00 00 Lerner (nem t h an Ten will be charged at gm mew rate, $2.00 per copie : The *temp istpit ,a t io i no proommly Om order. nod in no inatenee can thin terms be deviated trio% ein they alum very little more than the wet 0.1 !WPM PwitTnalte" are requested to net us WOOF for Tea Wen Passe. gar- To the getter-up or the Mils of ten or t,Wentri all extra copy of the paper wlll he given. STATE ITEMS. The Harrisburg Itegraph of Wednesds.j evening, speaks in 'the following manner of the Paesenge4 Railroad" of that city: " The workmen engaged on this local improvement are pushing forward the work with great rit. pidity ; and we understand from the eon'. tractor, that the road will be Completed and in running order along the whole line, from Camp Curtin to the Pennsylvania Railroad depot, by next Saturday a week. One hundred and forty men are now actively engaged in' the construction. A new and beautiful car' was plaked OM the track to-i/gy, and by the time the road is completed, Other oars, Cie gantly finished and ample for the accommo dation of the publieivill he run. As an evi dence of the success of the road, it is only us cessary to state that with one car running, over one thousand passengers have been ear riea over the lint, DJ far as finished, in ORO day, making a receipt per diem of over, Yg. two dollars.,, The Harrisburg 2e/egraphhas the annexed in regard to the triumphal archon erected in that city "Some of these structures, whiell formed such a beautiful and magnificent fea tere of the great Unlori Celebration on the Fourth of July, have been remOved, and those that remain are getting decidedly rusty, The sun long since withered and scorched the last particle of greenness out of the once tasty and elegant wreathing, and the entire appear• ance of the arches has assumed a look of di lapidation and ruin. All the arches that yet remain (except that in Market Square,) might as wen be removed, as their abeenee would be much more pleasing than their presence a they now stand." A. curious animal was killed near Albert's Mill, Lebanon county, a few days ago. • It was about two feet in length, weighing about four. teen pounds, with legs six inches in length— its hair black and long. The hair of the hinder part of the body had a very curious substance et the end of it, being White in 0010 ? and somewhat resembling the pin feathers or pout. try, but stouter and more solid. The animal was put up for preservation. The body of a young man was found float. ing hi the river near Oil City, on Monday last. His name is supposed to have been William E. Smith, and it is believed came from Buffalo, N. Y. An inquest was held, after which the Joey was decently interred. The grain dealers of Lebanon met at Core many's hotel, in Lebanon, on Saturday last. The most important part of their business, we understand, was an agreement to be uniform hereafter in the prices they pay for grain. —Most of the oats crop in Bork County, which is very good, has been cut. In another week all the crops, corn and potatoes except ed, will be safely gathered, *Unless bad weather should interfere. Harrisburg has a atroot•aralnkler, and the people would like to See it in motion.—Harris burg Telegraph. The circulation of the Pittsburg banks both State and National, is estimated at $lO,- 599,774, Peaejaps are Ma dollar* a, basket in Harris. burg. Harrisburg wants a street•sprinkler,—. Philadelpltia Press. The Allegheny Base Ball Club is coming on a visit to this city In a few days. The drug stores of Lebanon will hereafter close at nine o'clock in the evening. HOME ITEMS. At Newport, R. 1., sea-bathing commence.* at eleven o'clock, and the streets are alive with carriages proceeding to the beach. From this hour until ono o'clock. bathing dresses are worn. At one o'clock the beach is cleared of ladies, and masculine " go in" in a state of nature till three o'clock, when, at the heisting of a flag, the bathers resume their Clothing and proceed homeward. The St. Johnsbury Caledonian says that a number of men of the Bth Vermont Regiment met their surgeon, Dr. Gillett, at Essex June., tion some nights ago, after they were paid off and discharged, /mid entering the par whore kV was seated, pelted him severely with eggs, anti then pitched him out of a window. A woman called at one of the military Mikes and desired to know when her husband, who she said was in the army, would get killed: She remarked that she had a " right smart " offer of marriage, and she wanted to know whether her "old man " would come home again. A machinist in Brooklyn, N. Y., by the name of Wm. L. Ryan, thought ho would got his, living as easy as 'possible, and "set up , " for a physician. He lost his first ease=a littit child—and is likely to get into trouble on ail count of it. It was a newsboy by the name of run He was the last person to leave the building, and succeeded in saving many articles belong ing to the employees. Miss Smith, of Utica, was about to marry a man that Mother Smith did not like, The old lady could not prevent the marriage, so the bought some arsenic and swallowed it. She did not liVe to dislike her daughter's hue band. On the. .iith of July all the dining-roma servants at the Louisville Hotel,. withoutcere mony, joined the Freedmen's procession, leav ing the landlord and clerks to wait on their guests. Two young men were sitting on a door.step in Iprilagileld, Mass., the other day, when a young woman, with an infant in her arms, came up h and, laying it in the. lap of one of them, bade him take good care of it, and left. The States which elect Governorathis fail are lowa, Maine, Massachusetts,Vermont, Min peseta, New Jersey, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Vir ginia. The University of Virginia, at Riabmond, will soon resume its duties, with highly en couraging prospects. This venerable institu tion was founded by Jefferson. A New Democratic paper is to be started in Rockford, 111., next week, entitled the Peo ple's Press. Robinson, the Maine soldier, who saved Secretary Seward's life, has been presented• with a farm. Connecticut is discussing a bill to tax the liquor dealers—wholesale, forty dollars; re• tellers, twenty dollars. —A lady in Indianapolis committed suicide. because her husband refused, to take her to an ice-cream saloon. They have a daily paper at Salt Lake—The .Thleseraph. A man in New York jumped twelve feet and one inch for fifty dollars, Texas will produce a cotton crop equal to any before the war. A pickpocket In Buffalo has- been , sem. tented to !five years in the -State prison. Twolmarwhave recently been killed in the town of Briliton, Comet county, Wisconsin. Oregon: yielded eight million of gq . ld duet , last year., FOREIGN ITEMS. In one othie harangues in.London,..Father Ignatius pitched into worldliness, dress, balls. operas, theatres, Rotten•row, and things in general. He mentioned, too, that the davit_ was present, but did.not introduce the gentle man. Ultimately he offered, should it be proved to him that Jesus Christ ever wont to a ball, to dance a polka with any one present, which would have been a highly diverting exhibition, though: Fathon Ignatius• does Mit wear crinoline, says a London letter. By the last r‘ uroPeati matt we hear of is. startling balloon at eident which had happetted. is Ireland. Mr. CoswelPs balloon, after hay. tog ascended from Belfast with ten people in the car, effected a perilous descent, owing to the valve at the top not acting. properly.. Eight of the Eeronauts. suoceeded in. getting out (sours of them severely injured), when the balloon again ascended with two gentaol/1011 still in the car, and nothing bad' einoo been heard obit. Bagier, the operstie manager, Ma bees dispossessed of the management of the Madrid opera.. The Spanish Minister of the Interior now manages the opera home at the Spanish capital, and advertises for an impreesario for six year's, There are five emaidatee ) among them M..Bagier, and. the Seleetionwill be masts by a high functionary belonging to the Ges• verement and three cyleiresades (amateurs). A special train left Toulon recently for' Paris, laden with a complete collection of wild beasts, which arrived from the extreme East by Sues, and was conveyed to Toulon by the , transport Uhose, front Alexandria. This zoologistal collection is composed of some very rare animals, intended for the Jardin dee Plantes. The Emperor Maximilian has given eons tracts to Americans for telegraph lines from the 'United States through both the easterrk and western sectione of the country, and Is.„ offering great intim:muscats to capitalists to work the rich and exhaustless mines WHOA w hich Mexico abounds. The Free Church of Scotland has in esn. section with it 434 congregational day seheele fr ' 100 side and Industrial schools, 30 missicassry -, s t o c h t al aa , I 7 , 0 4 . r w ar e m n a u s m • ? e e h r o ° a l a S t , ea n c o h r e m r s e s ja i ci e s 4l ll vi a d t of scholars, 51,118, The Canadians aro holding n billiard touts. moment, for the championship of all Cassada t at Montreal. Phelan and Gavitt, of Neje; York, are present. —A patient in the Worcester insane asylum fancies himself dead, and sneers at his controls nions who have not yet deceased. —One firm in London advertises. to the• amount of it 210,000 per annum. .All the parts, nets Isave grown immensely rich. —A woman its is prison in England, tor bare, ing her child's eye out with a, red bet slrewer. —ln twenty-six years Puna hats had but and libel suit, and it has lampooned. everybody. —An " Exhibition of Inseetis " to be 04' next 'novelty in r#Tl3. •