EVENING Ji nA a IIMit tm A, lr Jill 0 "VOL. VI.-No. 100. PHILADELPHIA, FiUDAY, OCTOI3EE 2G, 18GG. DOUJ5LK SHEET-THREE CENTS. WENDELL PHILLIPS. Creat Spwch Hi New York Wholesale Denuncia tion of the President, the Cabinet, General Grant, ihe Republican Party, Congress, and the Father! of the BapubUe A Cabinet Picture The ConstL lotion a. Swindle, the Proposed Amendment a Swindle, the President a Rebel and Mobocrat General Grant in the Most Humiliating Position, and Ben. Butler the Han for the Lienteaant Generalship The President to be Impeached and Sequestered from Office Pending Trial, Etc. Mr. rhillips having been introduced to the audience, proceeded to speak as follows: A YEAR AGO AND NOW. Ladies and Gentlemen: This is the 25th day f October, 18C6. On the 2."th day of October, 1665, standing on tbla platform, I ventured to say tbat the President of the United States, instead of being a mistaken friend, was a deter mined enemy of the republic; tlmt instead ot being a comrade to be conciliated, he was a loo to be opposed; thai instead of a bulwark to bide behind, ho was an obstacle to be removed. -1 ventured to Bay that the Robcliion, defeated In Virginia, bad taken up its headquarters in the White House. About one-tenth of my audience accepted the statement, anJ nine-tenths received it with hisses or silent indignation. An event ful j ear baa rolled over our beads since; and 1 think it tbe proportion were taken in any audience in the land to-night, the nuuubcr tbat d Ween ted irom me then would agree with me to-day. (Some applause.) TUB PRErtlPENT TDK TOOL OF THE BKBEI.S. Her plot is )ust what It wa-i in 1801 -to be the Government; and in thirty davs alter the death of Lincoln stie had her tool her will ing, conscious, pliable tool seated in the White House. (.Cheers.) They say Johnson hag betrayed the Republican party. Betrajed it 1 To whom f To Weed, to Richmond, to Cagger, to tbe Democrats? No I He didn't stop long enough even to ba counted in that camp. lie betrayed both to the actual Rebels south ot the Luc. Your cuildieo, in my opinion, if my instincts are right, will seethe evidence in black and white before the 4ih of July, 1867. Andy Johnson was hand in glove not with the Democratic party he didn't linger long enough In ihatcauip to betray u tut hand and glove, with thrs prisoner at For tress Monroe and his coadjutors. (Aoplituse.) Yen, the peril through which the republic found its way will appear in fifty years' time infinitely more fearful than it doe now. His tory does not show us a dingle instance of a large majority surrendering its purpose after one unsuccessful eflort. And to-day the South, under the leadership of Andrew Johnson, renews its purpose, as every ujujuniy iius uune unaer similar circuin fight tbat same tight between oligarchy and freedom over again inside the Hue. Thin hnttia bM to be fought over again by us as the nation. I believe this, that the President of the United Stales lor the last twelve mouths has been the conscious agent of the leading Reoels at the South to continue this war in ita new phiise in the phase in whioh they originally meant to origiuate It they to be tbe Government, seated in Washington, recognized by foreign nations, with control ot the treasury, of the army, and ot the navy. 1 CABINET FICTTjRB. Well, what have we to lobk to to meet that plot? What (nave we to protect us fr.im this vile rebellion, which the l'resideae btmtielf Iirh instituted within the lust Fix months t There is the Cabinet is that nothing r What are its materials? An Attorney-General, selected be cause he would be a ready tool of the President because his experience in the dirty practices of liia piofession have made htm lit for the lob; a Secretary of tbe Treasury, f much at one with his master that in the lolloping out of this pro ject he is more likely to be tbe tempter than the tempted; a Secretary of tbe Navy, whose incom petency for the work Is such that hia very hold ing of the otiiee is a farce, and whose thorough corruption is so notorious that any honest act in his Administration must have been on nversieht and a mistake (lautrhterl a mun who never had any opinions, but who was j always ready to surrender himself to the bid ding ot his master; a Secretary of War, whose j career is utterly inexplicable; his next act may give us tbe key tbat will mane it intelligible on the theory of honor, but at present it hangs nnder a cloud; a Secretary of State, whose best friends condone his weakness on tbe sole ground that age has dimmed the energy ot his prime (sensation) is there any force in tbat Cabinet to withstand iUchier? THU VOICE OF THE PEOPLE, But Congress and tbe Republican -party exist and they can withstand him. Well, the Repub lican party is mighty; tbe States have spoken unanimously spoken but tbe States which have to speak will tpcak more unanimously still, r&pplause.) WHAT THB BEFFBLICANS PROMISE. But the Republican party undertakes to pro imise in the canvass that, these amendments accepted, the South will bo admitted. But you , aay to me this is not a fair statement. I allow it needs no addition, for the state ot the political .canvass is unprecedented. Rut all I have said is fair when the leading journals and national .and State committees hold this langnnee. Go with me to the caucuses addressed Ty General Wilton, of Massachusetts; Ashley, of Ohio; .iniW Kel!ev. of 1'hiladelDhia: bv Governor Banks, of my own State, and by Bout well, of Groton by any man from Massachusetts to St. Louis, standing lace to lace with his constitu ents. Wbat is his language? Tbat be would jiot admit a sinelo Southern State till tbe black roan has a vote. And while tbe Tribune and 1'oel and the whole of the national and State committees are pledging to the South this boon, the leading men of the Republican party, face to face with their constituents, are declaring that tbey believe nesjro suffrage indispensable to any sale reconstruction. Banks bets gone further, and told his consti tuents in Kssex that not only was he himself convinced thoroughly that negro sufl'ratre is the inevitable and indispensable clement of any just and Fafe reconstruction, but tbat be knows for a fact that the maloiity of tbe House ot Representatives believethe same thing. (Cheers.) And why did they not vote for it? Go to the people's caucuses, and you will there tlnl every man in lavor of negro suftrage, and you go mi to the House of Representatives, anl then is there no man for suffrage. You may remem ber reading that when Charles Lamb was a vountfster he was taken to the burying ground, and he there read all the tombstones full of praises of the dead; he turned to his moiher and aske: "Motner, where do all the bad folks go V (Laughter.) So when you have heard these impartial suf frage speeches In caucuses, you go to the House ot Representatives and ask where suffrage is, and echo answers where f It reminds me of a person who, when a lury broueht him in guilty, eaid, "Gentlemen, individually you have my deepest respect; but as a jury my thorough con tempt " lLauohter.) So I am forced to sav to tboec individual speakers in Maine and Indiana and 'Ohio and Pennsylvania Gentlemen, w?ou Lave my unmitigated and unmixed confidence and respect; but in the House of Representa tives yon have my unmitigated contempt. (Ap plause and laughter.) . IHK CONSTITUTION A BWINDL1. I There never baa been a compromise in Ameri can political history. We have elevated a rwindl into a cemrom.lie and dignified it wu stances, sne leaped into the saddle the day Lee's army surrendered, and to-day her obieot to to take possession of the White House, mid he name. The white rare of the North and the white rare of tbe South came together in 1789, and sacrificed to their joint advantage the rights of the absent black. A swindle, and they called it a compromise. Prussia and Rula met together and dismembered Poland, sepa rated it into fragments, annexed it to their re spective kingdoms, and called It a compromise. A swindle I TBI CONSTITUTION it AMENDMENT DITTO. The House of Representatives and the Senate, seated under that dome in safety, because tour millions of blncks held their place in tbe soale while the balance trembled between North and South, with a Rebel President, swindled their allies ont of their rlehts and gave it to the coun try as a compromise. TBE "T4UBUNE" A SUPPORTER "OF BAREFACED SWINDLES. And the New York Tribune bowed to it. as it has bowed to every other barefaced swindle tor twenty years. (Laughter and applause.) And Mr. Gieeley says it I would be only soft spoken and conciliate, it I would only use gentle terms and lead men without their knowing where 1 Yes, he paints himself driving Jell". Davis into impartial suffrage, while the great Rebel thinks he Is running to the establishment of the Con federacy; like the irishman and bis pig who thought he was goinz to Cork while turning his lace to Dublin. (Laughter.) A suirswtive pic ture, but which is the pig and which the driver? (Roars of laughter.) THE NKGROE8 THROWN OVERBOARD. But it is no matter of merriment, for the Re publican party do not beiieve tnat these Consti tutional amendments are conducting them to Impartial suu'raee. The masses may be delnded for a moment into the idea, but the leaders know and accept tbe amendments because they know that they are conducting to the perpetuity of their own party, and, possibly, tithe salva tion of the national finances. Tbey know it in their own hearts, and they accept and enforce them because they know that, in order to per petuate the party aud save tbe finances, they throw overboard the burden of the negro's claiinp. GREELEY NOT TO BE TRUSTED. That very same leader, your great, and even in some respects, meritorious journal, eighteen months ago. when 1 undertook by way of pro test to announce that it ever the Congress of the United States accepted the'Southern debt, I wou d agitate lor its repudiation to my dying dar, and thus advertised them ot it before handthat very same journal warned me not to run a .iit against wiudmllls eighteen moulhs. Later, to-day, these sain statesmen pas the Constitutional amendment to avoid that very conjunction which eighteen months ago they called a windmill. (Laughter and ap plause.) And these are the radical statesmen you are called upon to trust;! I d ..n't deny the service!' of that great editor any more than I do the services of Senator Wilson. I don't ask you not to respect them. I only ask you not to trust them. (Renewed laughter and applause.) The Constitutional amendment, as far as the nepro is concerned, is a swindle. Don't pollute the respectable word com promise by applying it to the Constitutional amendment. The negro is sacrificed to political exigencies: he is "round between the upper and nether inilf-stoncs of the Repnblicau party. THE RtBEL DEBTS. If you exclude the wgro from voting, how long will it. bo before the old dominant race at the South assumes Its former position nt the head of the State ? How long on the position of finance will they remain in the minority ? How long will it be before tbey have the same political nirenirth tbey bad belore 1861? 1'hey have ued it for hfty years with unmitigated triumph except in tbe one matter of Kansas. Why should they fuil in time to come? Vice-President Hannibal Hamlin told you tbe other night, it not on this platform, on some other, how be was uppioiiched in the Texas demands with, bonds offered at five dollars which his vote was to make worth a hundred in twenty-four hours. With millions upon millions of other securities floating in the House ot Representatives, with fifty or sixty Southerners wielding them, how soon will not revolutionary enthusiasm chill and the ordinary temperature of political virtue bo reached? How soon will the financial question be made a football, as every other political ques tion was when the South was dominant of old. REJECT THE AMENDMENT. The Constitutional amendment Is not only a swindle it would give us back to the same po litical denomination that ruled this country up to 1860. Put your foot upon it. Scud it drift ing, and send Congress back to its hall to ndmit no Southern territory at present not, perhaps, till long after the 4th of March, 1809. I don't believe in reconstruction, with streets running down with blood and free speech suicidal. The South la repealing once mere her old maxims. Tbey must be rooted up, smothered up. and covered over with the rich growth of Northern emigration and brains aud money belore you can begin to talk aoout reconstruction. TBE IMPEACHMENT OF THE "REBEL-IN THE WHITE HOUSE." In' Older to this, tbe very first task I would set to the reassembled Congest before they loon at the amendments .:" ttr the word reconstruction, is to impeach the Rebel in the White Uoue. (Great and prolonged applaaso.l Lot the traitors ot Louisiana and South Carolina take care of theniselvet We are rows to attend to that machine the Govern ment that belongs to n. (Cheers.) The first pro cess to comtuenoe, I say, is to impeaon the Rebel who has usurced tbe fuuctions of President. (Con tinued cheers and applause. ) ttebl n too dignifltid an ampliation for the niobocrat otitis Wblte lioue. Ye; does he want a mob in New Orleans; he ig nores Governor Wells. Does he want a mob In Baltimore ; be recognizes Governor ewann (Choers.) jaw or no law, tstate or no state, iimueu autnoruy or omnipotence no matter what a mob and tho result. IMPEACH ANV DEPOSE. Impeach the moboorat of the White House as the first st-p, and tbe s.cond stop is depose him. ( Ap. plause, ) Ad impeachment is of no va'ue it, whi e ic drasrsit slow lenirtb through the Senate Cbamber tbe impeached party wields tbe power, commands th army and navy, and tue patiouare of the Gov ernment against we impoacnioa nouseana me judi cial feenate. The laomcnt the Executive of tbe United Htates is impeached, statesmanship, and tbe Constitution and me necessity oi tne aour, uiotate thathisplacosbonid.be supplied (appiauso) till an acauittaf restores him to olfloe. or condemnation imposes noon us the duty ot choosing a nw frost- aeut anu v loe-n esiaant to supply tue piace oi uie dead and too deDOud. I know men ihrinK from this, and say it .is an attempt at interfering with tbe functions of the juteonuve. vui tne twustitution UDueriasei 10 give us power to impeach in such a ihape that ordinarily sneakiDtr. it w ntierlv unapproaobaD e. There is no chance that in ordinary times tbe Presi dent oi the United (States thall be ever practical1 liable to inipeaohinetit. buch an emercreney as the present, such an uprising of tho popular entbuslasm as tho civil war, has left us tbe only concurrence of C'rcumstaucos that renders it possiole, aud that same emoreeDoy dictates that we should ex haunt the arsenal ol constitution! weapous to make It efllcmnt. As in the case of the hnaiish nation In 1088 maklnff the law of the realm inside tbe con stitutional piocedents a iarce and a sham, it would be a farce and a sham to attempt to try the irei dent while he remains in ofline. In the nature ol the trial, in the concurrences of the constitutional re mod v, there is nothing to re pudiate the step, while there is evervtblng in the ciu'ouistanoci to diotate it. I say, tnerefor, im peach .the r esideut, and while he is on trial e questerhim What is the advantage? Why, then, we ran tbe machine (Laughter ) 1 hen you would see an undivided North and a loyal cation manag ing its own govornmrnt, commencing at once, and the moment ttiat Rebel hands tear the holm. .New Groans is safe tor New York capital and New Tork men. (Applause.) The moment the Senate of the United States brea'hajhe breath of lU own sp rit into the Uovernment, Maasaebasetui must remodel Louisiana. Not till then. But men aav yon ) nard the party, yon einbaraoa ibe present state of affairs. These are rood argunwti, sayi the Tribune, but you isaet apt attempt it. ITAB'LITT IN GOVERNMENT A GREAT DEFBCT. Gentlemen, tbe great deloot in onr Uovornmoat Is that when we once accept a pivotal man we have to keep him for tonr ers. Andrew Jackson wnnn once plrnted on this tioverumont lasted tor four yean. It is a rreat defect, pe. haps an Inevitable one, in the machinery ol republican institutions. In hug ai d, when the people are weary of Earl John, in an tonr tiiev have Karl Derby. In twelve hours, if thev are weary ot him, tbev may put John llngtit at the head ot tbe Government. (Cheers.) The cjuren roverna oniy in the sense that she roln. bhe dees not rule In the true tene of tne word she det not govern, hhe on y reigns The Eng lish machinery, therefore, within tho limitation of it atintooratlo level, otieys at onoo the re educated popular impnhe. With n, in ordinary times, we must wait tour years belore tno uovernment can ngbt itself. CAftKOT WAIT Till. 1WW. In ortlinarv times we shonid be obliged to bear Andy Johnson till the 4th of March, 1809. But bis treacheiy, hl.t coliu-ion with Rebels, his resistance to the laws ot Conn ess, the blood of Now Or eans oa his conscience, his sins against the whole essence and spirit ol the hour, enable ns to remove him (applause) and I, for one, am njt for waiting two long years to commence the inevitable initiation of reoon-tructmg bonthern territory. 1 am not for waning two years wbne a Ke! el in tne wntte House tuiids nn the Southorn arlstoorac, gives it strength. collision, organization, prosperity, and capital. I am i ot lor watingtwo tears, with ibe States of the - cntn in tne Senate ana Hcuso. on Hamlin's man. to ii anipoiate tbe Uovernment into subrnt-sion. THE PRESIDENT TO BE IMMKDIATKLT DEPOSED. cnuimtnoo to day by sequestering rebeidotn from the tioveinmcnt, tbe control of tbe uovernmntal machinery b tbe nation, and that is to be done, not oniy oy me lmpt-acnmeni oi Air. Jonnon, ont by stquos erinc him from office widle he trial goes forward Jlaik you! there is bnt one p rob em before ns Johnson and Senators and Representa tive are t nppnts. 1 he nation has but one business. It is to make tbe idea which conquered in this war dominant down to tho Gull. (Applause.) It is to mala free speech, free printing, freedom of commer cial energy and eat- rorlse tti:i law of the republic. When that j roccss commences peace couimences, Whtnlba' process commences reconstruction com mencesnot till then. All that I say to you of partic, all that I say to you of imiemchmcni, has no Individual purpose. Jolinson is but a weed, to be lorgottcn, 1 hope, to morrow, Bnt remove him in order to bogin tue great national duty. This is our only object. It seems to me tbat in talking of men on this qnestlon we forget the very essence otoor duty; wears chop ping logic. We aro amusing ourselves with emptv words, while wo are constantly lore. ting that our oi. I y and indispensable work is not yet even btguu. Not only that, but we have not arranged the machinery bv which to begia it; we have not re moved tho first obstacle to lr. HUMILIATINO POSITION OF GENERAL GRANT. Here Is Genet al Giant, (he aimed baud or the Government, and men l.uk his name wiih euliuuW of honor. While Andy Johnson is responsible, in a primaty tene. lor tbe mussacre at New Orleans, in a tru sense Ulysses Grant is icsponstble also. ( A uead silence. ) 1 be most humiliating position occu pied to-t.av by any United States man on this con. titieutis occupied by Ulvsses Grant. (An individual on ilio platform attempted to endorse this sentiment by clapping his hands, but the a'idionoo indulged in a vi rv gaueral reprobation of It by hissing, and cries of "No, no.") Mr. i'hiilips, lesumlog, said: Well, yon h is me. Have we conquered New Orleans or have we not? Does it belong to us cr to Jo.i. xiavis? (A voice, in a verr faint tone, "Davis.") It does. The theory is it belongs to us. It it does, wbose btisinoss U it to sco that the streets of New Orleans are safe for everv man who has a light to walk under the flag ? (ibe same weak voice, "Grant's.") Tne armed hand of tt e Government, wreathed In tobacco smoito and tallied in the rott breezes ot the lake, white tna national bai.nor was clinging in every .Southern city to ttio flagstaff, heavy with Union blood! Ima gine Iicland in reboilton. Imagine it subdued. Imagine tbe news to oomo to London whilo tno Iron Dnke" field tho W ar Oflico, that an Engltih man cheering lor Victoria bad been murdered in tbe at reel ol Cork. Do you suiipooe Wellington would have gone on a private iauni with the Queen to the Isle ot Wight or the Highlands? He wou d have been, in six hours, in the street ot Cork ; and it tbore had been soldiers enough in tne-Hritlnn Empire, it would h .ve been sato lor Englishmen to walk tho?e streets. (Ap plause ) General Grant can anticipate trouble in Maryland. He knows beforehand tbat there niav be bloodshed in the streots oi Baltimore, and he can hold long Cabinet councils with this man and that to see that there is no riot tbat can lavor radicalism lu Baltimore. W by did be no, know of a riot In New Orleans? If he did not know, why aid be not hurry to the spot? I claim it or the war arm of tne Government tbat if we have conquered the South, it should oe sate lor a Northern man auywoere where tho flag floats. (A plause ) What is it to me tbat the flag floats in satoty on Faneuil Hall, as it has done for sixty years? if General Grant is a general, at the head of the military foroos ol the United States, he is there to inaae tuat flag my protection as much at Memphis as in tbe streets ot Boston. GRANT AND THE PRESIDENT. If he has not troops enougb to do it, why don't he cometoConrrecs and say so? If be bas troops enough to do it, why didut he? Doe any man hinder mmr ii were i any Hindrance, u ii nis ouiy 10 ceil os about it, (Checrs.l If the bead of thena ioual forces is not permitted to make the streots of tbe nation sale lor its citizens, who is it that hinders him? Ihattaot he owes to the nat'on. imagine the nnanimitv of tbe Northern rebuke, aud the utter, abso ute annihilation ot Andy Johnson, if Ulysses Giant had said at the time of tbe New Orleans massacre, "1 wanted to prevent it, but was not petmitteo." W hat I claim of Northern men, politicians, and generals alike is, that it to their knowledge there is treason in turn places they should say so. (Cheers.) I don't ask them to submit to the indignity of otfioe when they are not permitted to discharge i s duties. Now, while New Orleans and Memphis aie possible, I assert again, and I say that .you will agree with me, that tho most humiliating position occupied by an American is held by the General of the United BtateSj (Hisses, aiid some app aiis. ) OBANT AND BEN BUTLER. I have compared him to an Englishman. Let me at the risk ot some Stato partiality come near borne, l'ut our Ben Butler in his position. (Loud laughter, cheers, and hisses, equally intermixed.) Give him command ol tbe force of the Uuitod States. (More laupb er, app)aue, and disapproval.) Do you be lieve New Orleans would have been possible? (Cries oi "No," ''Yes," and continued meniment.) But it by some unforeseen accident it had taken place, do you suppose that Mayor Monroe would have lived to.flav to boat that be had defied tbe Government ot the United States, and pouted out InlUie streets of New Or eans the blood of its most loyal citizens? Men say Grant stays in his position lost tbe President should put a worse man in. Do you suppose that Congress would permit this if Grant should resign? Do you suppose the arni of tbe United (States oould be lod by any ono against fcherman and Grant with Congress behind tbem? It is tho idlest fa seliood iu (he world. TBE QUESTION OV TBE SAT. Wo have a set of men in power, one-half of whom aro intentional traitors, ana the other half propose to watt untd the 4th oi Marco, leaving thu Govern mei.t to hitch and stagger on witn a ftraitor at the W lute House. I want to hear nothing about Consti tutional amendments. I want to hear nothing about roeou. traction I don't caie what becomes of Jeff. Davis. He is older than the ark. (Laughter ) Tbe question of bis punishment landed on Mount Ararat and coos to picoes thane. (Continued laughier ) The qcestionot to-day is whether the President is to be allowed for two years to bold the Government over the edge of Niagara, and wi elher Senators and Lieu tenant-Generals aro to stand irom motives of "ti que' to silent, and journals are to preaoh concilia tion. I sav, Nol Tbe war is not ended The fight recommences in a n-w shape. If General Grant has sui rendered as Sbermau rid to Johnston if he, like Sherman, has surrendered to Johnston, let us knowir. ibis people aro bound ana sure O save thu nation. Wo have got every element upon our side. Co Bridge said that Governments were made up or three elements: One, and the first, was sub missiou to the laws, tbe power ot co-operation, t le power to aot together; seooud, alleglauoa to some thing, to law or ebartei ; and the tund was, loving your national brother better than any other taiug In tbe world. 1 he North had these three elements the South had not. We were organised ; we wero law-abiding citizens, we worshipped tbe common law of the Con stitutiou. It atood to us In the p aoe of Bonaparte to Frenchmen or Cbarlos tjtuartlo a Highlaudinau. Illinois and Massachusetts. Ohio and New York, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin were bound to each other closer thaa any other States oa the face of tbe glob. Tbe element ot nationality were ours, and with the army and nary La onr hands w were sure to crush out Rebellion, and we are sure to do tt again to-day. (Cieat applanse ) Bnt all we want is an honest, plain-spoken, intelligent man to our leal BE DOES NOT FEAR TBE PRESIDENT, 1 do not fear the President. Fear him t No! I never icad one of hit speeches, I never heard of one ot his acts thai I was not reminded or a siory I have read ot the manner the Russian peasants on the outermost province of Russia nave ot Rilling tno bear. lbee peasant are too poor to buy niuikcts, and the bear's aide is impervious to any arrows they can make, so the banters practise upon the Ik m 's creduiitv. The bear loves honey ana will do anything to obtain It. So they go to an empty bee's net and fasten a peg above a hoie where the beos have built, and from this peg they hang a cannon ball or large stone and wheu the bear comes to push bl bead In lor the honey ho moves the stone and it comes back upon him with force. Angry at the blow be gives it another toss, and it returns on him with stronger force. Iio raises himself again, and in his rage he pushes the moving penou nm witn greater sirepgtu, but back it comes with additional momentum, when he swiiigs round the whole circle, to use a late pbiase. (Laughter.) Well, now. Vermont was a good bio, but Maine waa better. Ohio was appalling, hut In diana was terrifio, and Pennsylvania was a settler. (Great laughter.) When Ma actio setts and New York, and Illinois, and all tue rest oi the Stales swing in tbe ciiole, we will have no I oar or tbat indi vidual obstacle. (Laughter.) ANXIOUS THROUGH THE REPUBLICAN PARTJT. It is not through htm that my anxiety exists. It Is through the licpubllcan party, anl Congress itseit, for the sake of its Ovvn expedienov measures, and feariul ot aeh other, and fearlul of certain re-ults. are anxious to postpoue iho battle; as it when Lee and Giant met in their final eno ia.it r thev bad commenoed collating tbsir troops, and then postponed tue fight f-r twelve months. NO POSTPONEMENT OF THE CONTEST No postponement of tbe fight till the 4th day or March, 1869. Tne fight began on the 5th day ol De cember, 1806, and irom that hour the machine in to be exclusively ours. Do your ooty, and iu 186) wo shall be in a for different state from this. TRAITORS IN THB WRITE HOUSE. We have bad traitors before. We had one in the White Bouse. He called hlmseli a public func tionary igteat laughtcri-and last year he bas been writing a book to show the world why his treason did not succeed. We have got hi twin brother in the White House to-day ( aughter) and he calls himself a "humble inuivtduat." (Great laughter.) Let us do our duty in December, and long belore tho 6th ot March, 1809, he will be making speeohei to explain why his tieasondid not sucoeed. (Ap planse ) Mr Phillips then retired, and tbe assemblage dis pelled. ELECTION INTELLIGENCE. West Virginia. LAKOE UNION GAINS BOREMAN RE-ELECTED GOV ERNOR HUBBARD EE ELECTED TO CONGRESS. WnEELiso, W. Va., October 26. Returns thus far received show gains on the vote for the Con stitutional amendment Inst May, which was car ried by upward of 7000. Hubbard is undoubtedly re-elected to Congress by a large malority. This county is in doubt, but-returns show Union gains. Boreman is certainly elected Governor. The election for Stat oflicers and representa tives to Congress took place yesterday. The re sult, as far as known, is given above. The ticket is as follows: Republican. Democrat. Governor Arthur J. Boreman B. U 8mith. Sec'y of Stato. .John 8. Wiicber....?. M. Kennedy. Auditor J. M. He Whorter.. t'eter Danell. Treasurer Jacob rl Bristor.. .John S. Burdutt. Att'y General. .Thayer Me. viu....N. Richardson. JudjieC'tApp's Edwin Maxwell... Caleb Bagves, Conprtss. ... 1 C. D Hubbard D. D.Johnson. " 3 BanJ. M. Mltohen..E W. Andrew. " 3 Uaniel Palsoy .... Governor Boreman and tnree Republican Conpressmen were elected in 18G4 with little or no opposition, the State eiving Lincoln and Johnson a mujoriry of 12,714 out of 32,!5U. An eleetion for members of Legislature was held in October of last year, resulting in the choice of 07 Unionists aud 9 Democrats. Ohio. OFFICIAL VOTE CAST FOB SKORF.TABT OF STATE. -Secretary oi Rtate- i --Secretary of States. W U. Ben. I W. H. nn- Couniles. Smith Le Fever. Counties. Smith. LeKever. Adains. . 8(164 2012 Logan. 2.W4 4171 1449 Allen Asliland .... Ashtabula.. Athens. .... ''7 Lorain... 2208 Lucas.... 9.16 wadlson. 1706 26i4 1441 2278 1679 1639 1669 2H1 237 28S1 A68 1825 1603 4i07 169J H'4S 4'KI 1912 2119 41H3 1614 Mi 2647 1210 Malionlag , 2WIS Anglalze low JieliimnL 3A3A Broun Butier. 8021 Can oil 7ftl Champaign.. 2760 Clarke XV I leimont,.... 34B6 Clinton 2H44 Columbians.. 4248 C'osboo'on.... Oim 2236 Marion 1M3 8A6f Medina 2772 3I(2 Meigs 2IIH1 4726 Mercer 763 1177 Miami 3716 1836 konroe 1(169 1960 Montgomery. (623 3613 Morgan 2146 1499 Morrow 2219 ?:tH7 jinsklngum.. 4M1 2472 N obi 2153 3179 O tawa 892 (697 i aui' iiig 7M 29 1 Petry 1720 166 Plckawav.... 2661 lMlll-iie 1037 1797 irtaije 836 3441 Prabte 2717 1318 Putnam 1164 6490 KlchlanJ 2957 li'M Rons 3272 1370 Handaskr 2407 40t Mcloto. ... 2619 lftSS 8oneca..T... 2979 19i3 Bhelbr 143 1S341 mark 4M19 236 Summit 1717 1449 irumbnil 4623 1W1 Tuscarawas.. 2997 1402 Hnlon 2206 26M Van Wert.... 14H2 1H10 Vluion 1876 27 M Warren 3943 20AJ Washington. 3796 100!) W.Tns 3343 1763 Williams I2H2 2471 Wood 2783 "i7 Wjandot..... 1731 1394 404u TotaI....2W.J(tt Crawford mn Cuvnboga narke Detunoe... Delaware . Kric Fat' field... Fave't... Franklin., r'u ion.... 2SH1 11)72 2027 2MBS 21W 1N17 4S2 2066 119 is;2 1761 ln.1l 3)14 3162 t'allia. a... nil 2166 Oeauna 2A12 Gre.ne 3V6.I Uncrnsey .... 2711 Bnnillton....2211H h.ncock 2272 Hat'ilo 1749 llarriMMl 2122 Henry , lOus Hkliland 8060 Hocking 1 lift Holmes. 842 Huroi 4010 Jackson M29 Jetleraon 3210 Knox ..-:y Lake 2402 Lawrence.... 2346 Licking 33M 2U1 3141 20; 4012 1676 17,1.1 3iTlS 127H 1290 13D3 1742 3169 34r2 1631 1838 1926 213,606 ' William n. Smith's majority for Secretary of Sttttc, 42,606. Total number of votes cast, 4Ci),9()H. A letter from Borne states that a band of brigands a short time bank entered the viilaee of Acuto, in the territory Anagni. and seized upon five persons belonging to the principal families of the place. They carried them off to the mountains, and gave tbem to understand that tbey must pay a large ransom, giving one a s iiled box to be banded to the mayor of the vllliure. The boi arrived at Its destina'ion, and on being opened was found to contain the ears of four other prisoners and a letter saying tint', it the whole u3i demanded was not re mittitJ, tbe heads would shortly be gent to their friends. One Martin Reau, who is about to he tried at. Deux Sevres, France, is accused ol having fioi-oned, first, his brother-in-law, Pierre fleau, nl53: then. In 1850. his first wlie, Jeaune; iu lht5, bis second wifo, Julie; and in 1B6S his dam liter, Adrle. It appears that, Martin Hoau wnH accustomed to say, "The more wives you take the aicher you become;" and is supposed to have committed tho murders for which he is to be tried thtough motives of cupidity. On the death of bis daughter Adole, an infuut, he became eu titled to a certain sum of mont-y settled on Lcr by her mother. The swor! which Garibbldi presented to Colonel Chambers, who was instructor of mus keiry to the Italian Volunteers, is of English miiko, and was worn by the General thrjugh tho campaigns ot 1859, commencing witn the expedition of the Thousand to Marsala. This sword was the samo taken Irom the General after the disastrous episode at Atpromonto, but lie again used it during the late campaicru. On forwarding it he wrote to Colonel Chambers: 'In all the periods of the cao.paigu you have been the true representative of the great and generous people of Knglaod." A successful experiment was made in Mon treal recently in smelting iron with peat. Thu trial was made in McDougali's car-wheel lactory. The cupola was charged with two layers of iron and anthracite cosl. The third or topmost layer was iron and peat. The time was forty a 5 notes Wb tlfau with coals alone. THIRD EDITION FROM WAXHIKOTOW THIS AFTERNOON. SPECIAL DESPATCH El TO EVENING TELEOR APH.J Washington, October S U Cienerals Grant aid Sherman (eneral Sherman arrived here last evening, and to-day Generals Grant and Sherman have been In consultation with the President relative to the military portion of bis forthcoming mes sage, the Utah troubles, and the Indian war. Secretary Stanton. As I have already informed you, Secretary Stanton will not resign until the first of the year, and he will not do so then If the President is impeached this winter. West Virginia. News from West Virginia indicates that Gov ernor Boreman's majority will be nearly 10,000. All three of the radical Congressmen have been elected. X More Changes. Secretary McCulloch has written to the Presi dent, urging that no more changes be made in the Cutoms Department. He Is afraid of being swamped with Democrats. The Case of tbe Baltimore Commissioners. Annapolis, October 20. The investigation of the charges againt the Police Commissioners commenced ot 11 o'clock. A large cumber of witnesses were preseut. The counsel of the Commissioners appeared and announced tbat they came to particinntc In the cross-examination, but did not withdraw their pica against the jurisdiction of tho Gov ernor to pass final jutlgmcnt. Mr. Schley, for the petitioners, objected to the petitioners' coMusel participating in the in- veitiuation unless they withdrew their plea against the Jurisdiction of the Governor. The counsel are now arguing that point. Markets by Telegraph. Krw Vork, October 26. Cotton ouiot. Hour stesdv ; sales ot 12 000 bbls.; State f 00 a 12 76; Ohio, inw.njua); veBiru, i' luiz zo; ."southern ft)2'6t)ajl7. Wheat lu2o. higher; sales of 7000 bush ; Milwaukee Club, 92 40 Corn aduanoed 2'3o t sa'ea at SI 13m M6 Fork firm ; sales or 1400 bbls. at 84 00 a87J. turd iulet at 14i15ie. Whisky steady. Gold. 148. FOREIGN NEWS. European Advices of Yesterday by Atlantic Teleeaph. Ministerial Crisis In France-Treaty of Peace Between Prussia and Saxony Ratified - General . Von Benedek Placed on the Retired List-Manchester Mills Work- ing on Short Time Latest Commercial Reports, Etc. PRUSSIA. Itatilicatlou oft lie Treaty Between Prus sia aud Saxouy. Berlin, October 25. The treaty between PtusRia and Saxony has been ratified. Pursuant to its provisions Snxony Is to pay ten millions of florins. Tho army ot' Saxony has already been dissolved. The Baden Hoiise of Deputies has rejected the proposed alliance with Prussia. A Change of Ministry Probable. A belief is still current lhat a modification of the Prussian Ministry will take pltce as soon as Count Bismark return to Berlin. Herr Forken beck, President ol the Chamber of Deputies, will enter the Ministry. AUSTRIA. Benedek on the Retired 1.1st. Vienna, October 25. Field-Maishal B :nedck, of tbe Austrian army, hits been placed on the retired list. Financial Conference at Vienna. The Prince de Joiuvllle has arrived at Vienna, where he was received with great marks of dis tinction. Financial conferences are betas held in the city, and one of the principal bankers of Hol land has been present at the sittings which have been held up to the present. The Austrian Uov ernment has declared to the members of this conlerence that Austria is resolved to fulfil all her engagements to her creditors, and that sjie has no intention of reducing the rate of interest on the public debt. The x-Klng mt Hanover. The ministry of tho ex-King of Hanover denies, in ths Vienna iournals, the statement thai King George had released the Hunoverian public oiticials from their oath ol allegiance. Tho King, it appears, only informed the Secre-taiicE-Geueral of Hanover that all public func tionaries were allowed to serve tbe foreign power which had usurped nis kingdom, but that Irom tho moment tbat their rightful sove reisn returned to his dominions, their oath of allegiance would return to full force. Austrian Imperial Proclamation." It is atuerted that the Emperor Francis Joseph will shortly iwue a proclamation to his people, coneeived in terms not over friendly to Prussia. FRANCE. Humor of a Ministerial Crisis. Paris, October 25. Rumors are current that cha iges in the French Cabinet are imnluont. Tbe threatened rupture Is caused by the Empe ror's insisting on the negotiation of a large loin. 1 is now said tbat the French troops will leave Homo in December. GRI ATBEITAIN. The Mills of Manchester. Liverpool. October 2t Evenin"'. Ithash.ien decided at Manchester to work the mills only uu uon time, Yesterday's Market Reports. Liverpool, Oftober V Noon. The market for Cotton Is quiet and steady, with an estimated das sale of 113,000 bales. Middling uplands opened at 15d. Tho Breadstuffs maiket Is unlec. The market for Tallow Is hrm. LONDON MONEY MARKET. 774; Five-twenties, t!84, THE CABLE TARIFF KEDUCEC. A Dimlautlonof Fifty Per Cent. In Rates. New Oblbanb, October 25, No. 115 BEOiDwir. Mr. D. H. Ciaig, General Agent of the Asso ciated Press Dear Sir: It givea me pleasure to inform you, and through voathe public, that on and after tbe 1st day of November the tariff on all messages passlug through the Atlantic cable will be reduced 60 per cent Very truly, your.&Und, Crura W. FuiP. London, October 25 Noon. The Money mar kt t is sltL'hllv easier. Consols for money, 8!i. The fnilowlutr are the openintr prices or A mo- . . !-:.,. ...a. 1 1 1 .' i . , I . unties: on, oi'j: iiiiuuift ..ei:nm, LEGAL INTELLIQEflCE. Court f tlnartsr Sessions Over and Terminer Jtidires Allison ana Pi? rue esse eallea np this morning, was that or oiibert Whitman, who is charged witn killing Danti RJn. ler, on tbe 13 h oi August last, In Si. John atrot near Girard avenue. ' 1 he bib of Indictment was read to the pilsonsr, anl he pleaded not amity. 1 be ease was opened on behalf of the Common wealth by Thomas fl. Dartght, Esq , who stated tne faets to be proved to tho jury. 11a inteuded to ask the Jury to reader a verdict of murder in the tooond degree. Dr. William A. Piper waa the 6rt witness sworn t I retudeat the southwest eornercf FllVhand Brown streets ; I was eal.ed In to aae tlamel King er on the 12th of Aagnst at a bouse in 8t John street, a few doors above Poplar; I think No 921; waeu I first went to see him 1 found him snffprinn rrvatly from external injury, and upon examination, I found that the whole aodotnmal reeloo was vreatiy bruised, nirid, and swollen; upon further examination, I found tbat tnere was an evidence of strangulated hernia. small hole was made, tbrourh whioh the bowels protruded, bat so small that tbey oould not be lorrcd back ; this was not the caue of hi sorter iDjr, which was something different t.-om tbat ot the hernia, as it r.sulied irom suflboatiun; 1 rava him medicine to relieve this suffrrinar, out all to no pur pose; thl distress waa caused by the contents of be boweis emptying- themselves into the abdomon. I honed to re leva the hernia, and tbereuy re'ieve the man somewhat, and in denv so I ma la use of the ordinary means for rednoina; iiemiat I lodod Ibat it resisted ah elihris made, thouvh these eflurts were not wlia, mig t be oatlod vioient; 1 did aot use such violence in this ease as I would hava used if I were examining a roan who had not been other, wise iDjureo, who was in penent health; It not )ie dinir upon the pressure that I thought itnrht to make, I desisted, fur 1 lolt satisfied that that was not the cause ot his terrible distress I attended until he died ; 1 was not present at the pos'-mortem examina'ion; I dosiron to be there, and -would have b-en there had I received proper notioe. Cioss-exammed He was a man about fo.tr years otaee;in feeble heal to; afewmon'hs previous to his death I prescribed for him; he was then suffering from difficult respiration: it waa evident to my mind that his death bad been the result of very great violence j it could not posslb'y be said to result from over-exertion, or a jar; but it might have been caused by his coming iu oontaot win an thing in a tail. Dr. Sbaploigh, Surgeon to tho Coroner, sworn I discovered no external mark ot violence, but I discovered excessive inflammation ot the perito neum The cause of doath was inflammation of tne bowels. Ibe remainder of Dr. Shaplelgli's testi mony was simply a reiteration of that of the first wttuess. FINANCE AND COMMERCE, Office of thb Evenino Telegraph, Friday, October 20, 1866. There was very little disposition to operate in stocks this morning, bnt prices wen wicbont any material change. Government bonds were .1 1 .. 1 1 A tV.'ina n,l .1 aA lMllllill. U1UJIJT Jii:ii. AUunv I inra dviu n. jtw lyiuu j , 99 was'bid for 10-40s; 113 k for 6s of 1881: and 114 for old 5-2(s. City loans continue in fair demand. The new issue soil at 1011014, a slight decline; and old do. at 97, an advance of 4. Railroad (hares were inactive. Calawissa pre ferred sold at 30430g, a decline of i on the closing price last evening;' Philadelphia and Erie at 82, a decline of 4; and Pennsylvania Riilroad at 67J, a slight advance. 123 was bid for Camden and Amboy: 60 for Norristown;58 for Readine-; 67 for Mine'hlll; 39i for North Penn gylvanin; 67 for Lehiarh Valle.v; 28 J for. Elmlra common; 42 lor preferred do.; and 48 for North ern Central. , City Passenger Railroad shares were un changed. Chesnut and Walnut sold at 65; and Thirteenth and Fifteenth at 20$; 88 was bid lor Second and Third; 64A lor Tenth and Eleventh; 70 for West Philadelphia; 16$ for He3tonville: 30 for Green and Coatee; 14 for Lombard and South; and 28J for Germantown. Bank shares wore hrmVy bell at full prices, but we hear of no sales. 146 was bid lor First National; 111 for Sixth National; 103 for Seventh National: 150 for Philadelphia; 135 for Farmers' and Jlechanies': C8 for Commercial; 05 for Northern Liberties; 100 for Kensington; 66 for Penn Township; 100 for Tradesmen's; 68 for City; 57 for Commonwealth; and 70 tor Corn Exchange. There is no cbanse to not'ee in the Money Market; loans on call are offered at 45 per cent.; first cla"S mercantile paper continues scarce, and ranges atfiom 67 per cent, per annum. Quotations of Gold 101 A. 51., 148; U A. MM 147; 12 M., 147: 1 P. M., 1474. PHILADELPHIA 8T0CR EXCHANGE 8ALE3 TO'DAl lieported by De Haven A Bro , No. 40 S. Third street BEFOEE BOARDS. 100 sh Readine Railroad 2d 68 1-16. FIRST BOAKD 60 U S 7 80s. Aug 106 i 69 sh tlonam Gas. . 9? moo euros new. ..101 lOOshUohfipf 864 SblUO do 101 eOOshCatapl. .Its 801 zisiu no... iuu tuusu do.lotssSO. 80 1000 do 101 800 sh qo. loUsl6 80 9800 oo v. .101 12 sh Pb sc E. 82i Sit 00 do. . . . (5. . .101 126 sh O A A scrip. . 46 10"0 do 101 100 sn Ocean e 61 1600 do.... old. o 97 J 20 sh tnos fcWal b6 66 Messrs. De Haven & Brother, No. 40 Sonth Third street, report the following rates of ex change to-day at 1 P. M.: American gold, 147i U8i; Silver As and ii. 140; Compound Interest .Notes, June, 1864, 16j ; do., July, 1864, 164; do.,. August, 1864, 16j; do., October, 1881, 14 j ; do., December, 1664, 13j; do., May, 1805, Hi; do.,. August, 1865, 9j; do., September, 1863, 91; do., October, 1865, 8j. Messrs. William Painter & Co., bankers. No. 36 South Third street, report the following fal?S of exchange tc-day at 12 o'clock-: U.S. 6s, 1881, coupon, 1133113i; U.h. 5-20s, coupon, 1862, 114ilH$; do.. 1864, HOSOUOJ; do., 1865, 110J ftilllj U. 8. 10-40S. coupon, 99t!l00; U. 8. 7-3)s, 1st bsries, 1001004; do., 2d ser.ea, 106 rl0oi; do., 3d series. I05i(f!l05i; Compound In teiest Notes, December, 18C4, 132!l3i. The Coal tonuage on the tJchujIkill Naviiratlou lor tho wet k ending Tons Cwt October 26 1866. was: 82 781 00 Corresponding week last year 26,624 00 Icoroaso for the week. . .. 6,210 00 Tonnak'0 for the season to Dot. 25, 1860. . .1,1' 837 11 Corresponding time last year vuo,b?0 18 Increase for the rear 800,496 18 Philadelphia Trade Report. FniPAT, October 86. The Flour Market continues as Arm as ever, and there is a steady demand for liouu consumption, but tnerj it no lcqviry tor shipment, as present high prices leave no margin ior exportation to any quarter. The sales reach 8400 bbls., includ ng 160) bbs Northwestorn extra lawnyat via ouia iu ior common and ohoiooj 150 bbls. Ohio do. at $16; 400 bhls. winter do. at 9U; 860bils cxirasatlflOlUO; and superfine at 7-76 8 75. 100 bb s. Rye flour so d at $7 60. I Corn Meat no change to notioe. the What Market, in conieqnence of the limited reoeipta and nocks, ig cimet. l'n la a good de mand lor prime quality, lor m llfur pu-poses, at mil tS'Sn'j.o K?!e 01 Peunsvau'sand .vou hrn red at 810(48 26; white may b quoted at f3 86'8-40 itve in fa steady request, aud commands f 40 y busfi. Corn is in lair demand, aud holders are Urm i '"Jni6"!'8 of' 1000 busi. ycliow at 1 20 and 2000 hi sh. We.te-if miKed at SI 19 Oatlare new fTouthT110"'' d 8000 bWt' 10 636"' Mo sa es ol Barley or Malt were renorted Cloverseed mfets with a moderate tnunlrr mH sells at 78 64 los. timothy tiiJ.iS?m V2V 83 C2'1 F"xi Vb ' qu"Xtia?i6 Provisions are quiet, and prloes are rather weak huiall sales of new Me s Pork lt ZIZjuT. prime mesa at M282 60 Pickldd HalJwwUtaJ a,-,.1,d. "e,, bon ders, lbio. Sra ' -' W1S7 and unto Vt