■; jt 1; ftedfetd !jjttim. B KUFOBU PA„ FBIBAr, *A¥ *, W AND STlit THS COME. 7~ f The leaders of the rebellion are being raft idly picked up and put in secure quarters, whence they may be forthcoming at the call of the Government to answer for their crim Almost every day witnesses, BOiae addition to the numbers <■ tJeff. Davis.' Clem ent C. Clay and General',Wheeler have re- j eently arrived,at Fortress Monroe where quarters we being prepared for their safe keeping. The rebel Post Master General, Regan, Gov. Vance of N. C. and Goveror Brown of Georgia have been iti the custo dy of the Government for sometime; Qov. Harris of Tenn. is now added to the num ber. Breckenridge. Treflhotm, Benjamin and others are still fugitives front justice aud liable to be picked up at any molnent.— These worthier who once prated so loudly of the weakness of our Government, are beginning to experience the legitiinatc fruits of'their ioliy, arid see a development of strength and vigilance, that bodes them no good. Instead of the rope 0/ mind, of which they onfe spoke so contemptuously, these valiant representatives of ih chivalry .are beginning to be troubled with unpleasant visions of a rope of hemp. - n ENGLAND AND THE TARIFF SYS TEM. 1 The'following extract of a letter from ode of our most distinguished representative in England was received here to-day, and will attract considerable attention.— New York Tribune. "Great efforts will now be made by English capitalists and nunufacturers to induce us to reduce our tariffs, and permit them to do all our manufacturing : they are beginning to Stir this matter already. Our warm, personal friends will be put forward to move the mat ter, such men as John Bright, Goldwin Smith and others who have stood by us through this war. I have seen decisive evidepee of this purpose here. Personally we owe them very much, but we may frightfully abominate their free trade principles. Thw will struggle hard to break down our tariff. See if this does not prove, truei There wijl be a terrible pressure put ou the Government." The abovp extract the source From which our industrial interests are like ly to suffer, now that the rebellion is 'over, and the. incidental protection furnished by the premium on gold is taken "away. Our old enemy and rival, since the day the Stamp Act was passed, has never ceased her efforts to break down OUr manufacturing in terests and monopolize our markets. Here tofore she has been so successful that her friendship has been more prejudicial to us than her ennrity, She "preaches tree trade to the world, hut keeps her own counsel; and practices what she preaches, only in those productions which she can famish cheai>er than other countries. She practices free-trade ih iron and cotton manufactures, because "her immense capitalists anil skilled workmeh ,enable her to manufacture cheap ly. All-articles that are produced more cheaply 'by other nations are compelled to pay heavy duties before they can he sold in British markets. Suchis British free- trade.. If the advocates of free-trade in oui country would only take lessons in political economy from British practice, instead of from Brit ish preaching, we might long ago have been able to compete with British, wares not only in our own, but also in foreign markets. Just at this time "it is of the highest impor tance to us, to guard carefully against eyery attempt toiiyure our manufacturing inter eats. On them we must depend for a large portion of the revenue for paying our na tional debt, and nothing will so surely and speecfily bring us to national bankruptcy as neglecting to protect and foster our manu factures. We are in more danger to-day from the preaching of British fVee-trade than from all the cannon and bayonets of England and France combined. THE THIRD SERIES OF SEVEN THIRTIES. The great success of the 7; 30 Loan must always be looked upon as one of the most powerful evidences of the strength of the United States Government, and of its strong hold Upon the confidence and affections of the people. On Saturday, May 13th the subscriptions were over thirty million dol lars, and for the week ending on that day, over ninety-eight million dollars, and in the three months that the loan has iMen in charge of Mr. Jay Uooke, >mr five-hundred million dollars.. These large receipts will' enable the Treasury to. pay off our armies as they are disbanded, and to rapidly discharge the various obligations that have been in curred during the war. History will show that a great war debt to individuals ■ has never before been so promptly paid; and we all will agree that Secretary MeOtiHoeh deserves great ctpditfor the ability he has manifested, not only in securing the mean*, but for the financial skill he has displayed in so directing these vast receipts and dis bursements as not for a moment to disturb the equilibrium of commerce, embarrass in dividuals, or in any way tighten the money market It is ddubtless true that the Sec retary of the Treasury liiight havd negotia ted the remainder of his loans at six per cent interest, instead 0f7:30, bat so much •valuable time would necessarily have been lost in popularizing a new loan that the great object of the viz : an' immediate supply of money sufficient to pay all the debts incident to the war, wouldhave been defeated .and besides, the difference of interest would not have been equal to three days' expenses. 'The policy may have looked "penny-wise," buyhe best financial authorities, as well as common sense, pro nounced it '"pound-foolish." As it is—and will be, no soldier will go home without his greenbacks, and the floating debt in the shape of vouchers; requisitions. &a, will be wiped out as rapidly as the proper officers can audit and adjust the accounts. The Second Series of the 7;30 Loan was exhausted on" Saturday, May. 13th On Monday, the Secretary of the Treasury au thorized Jay Cooke, the General Subscrip tion-Agent for lL .S*Securitiea, ta. t/mYJB subscriptions for #230,000,000 of a Third Series, which is all that is authorized by' Congress, and is without doubt tlie last loan at this high rate of interest that 1 will be of fered by the Government. is nochangejn tha terms or condi tio* of this Third Series, except tbit the Government reserves the right of paying in freest at six per cent, lu goH of aw--' en and three-tenths in currency—a right which would presuppose a return to specie payments, and make as per cent, in gold i even better than the high rate in currency— a consummation most devoutly to be wished. . /'The rivilegn of converting the notes into 1 5:20? six per cent, gold bonds at the end of three years, or receiving payment at matu rity, at the holder's option, is retained. ' The first day of the Third Series opened with a subscription within a fraction of five millions, and the month of June will certain ly see the last of the 7:30s out of market. Hovf early in June we cannot predict, but parties who wish to make sure of a portion would Jo wiell to be in time. Fill particulars may be found in our ad vertising columns. ft THESE FOUR YEARS. It would be well to look back over these last four years, and review what we have learned in the terrible school through which we have passed. 1. : We have leaVned a lesson of trust in God; It was hard work to believe that we could do and bear all we have and live- We knew that God was just, our sins were great and punishment our desert Why should he spare us, and sustain us, and save us from our and bring us out into a grou| and wide pliieo ? In OUV distic.-wie, reverses, divisions and embarrassments, it has iometimes appeared as if we were for sakefi of God and were going on the rocks. What awful disasters hare attended our arms ? How many times has rebellion wax ed vaiu-glorious and confident ? But in the darkest hours God has been with us in infi nite mcrcv, holding us up when we were ready to faß, and at last bringing our ene mies to lay down the weapons of their re bellion and submit to the Government they sought to destroy. Unless God had been on our side, the cause would have beep .lost He was with us because right was with us. God is Bight We will always try to be right and then always trust God. 2. We have learned our own strength. It Is a great thing to kuow that we are able to carry on war, under the most trying and dangerous circumstances, tor four years ; to put a million of men into the field ; to sus tain them and pay them; to pursue all the ordinary and many extraordinary branches of business with success; to enjoy unexam pled pecuniary, moral and intellectual pros perity, and finally to pass through a civil war of gigantic proportions and come out of it with all our energies unimpaired; our public and private, religious and education al institutions flourishing; and all this in, through and after four years of unparalleled draft upon our resources. 3. "We have learned that this is to be one nation, one people, one government, one Union, now and forever. The men of the East, or the West, or the Middle, or the North, or the South, may go wild on the theory qf self-government, and imagine that our original principle of independence teach es the right of revolution whenever a stab 1 or section chooses to set up for itself, but we have fought that radical doctrine down. We have spent 2,000,000,0QQ dollars and sacrificed half a million of human lives to settle the principle that self-government means the right of the majority of the A uieriican people to elect their own rulers, and the duty of the whole to submit to the government and laws. That radical and disorganizing doctrine which has often been taught on the floor of Congress and in Fourth of July orations, that any portion of a people may throw off their allegiance to the existing government, and set up an other whenever they are able and disposed, has been trampled into the dust by the heels of a million American soldiers in arms. It is dead and buried, we pray God it may have no resurrection. 4. The same lesson is the eternal repudi ation of the doctrine of nullification and secession. That is only another name for revolution or rebellion. Webster was sup posed to have annihilated this heresy.— Jackson thought he had slain the monster by his Proclamation. But it lived. The evil was scotched, not killed. We have ju dicially put it to death now. We brought it to trial. We gave it a fair chance for its life. We arraigned, tried, convicted, senten ced, and executed it. It was abloody work. We fattened the worn out lands of the South with the blood of secession. We buried the monster deep in the earth.— Whcq Lee and Johnston surrendered and Davis fled, the last grasp of secession was given. It has been a long, fearful, awfnl argument But conclusive. Secession is dead. So is slavety. We all knew that sla very was a great evil and a fearful curse, the incubus of the South and the reproach of the land. We formed the Union with it, an existing evil, and we of the North stood by the compact, and intended to stand by it We had sworn to our hurt, but we wouM not go back. But the ways of God are past finding out. The Slaveholders re belled, and the rebellion was the kn4ll of slavery. It was the worst possible way of ' putting an end to slavery, but God permit ted the wrath of men to work out this grapd exodus, and then he restrained the remainder. We have learned that foqr yeaks of war could do what forty years of argutnhnt feiled to do, and when men would not do the right thing in the right way, he organised a machinery that has suddenly revkilutiomxed the whole system of South ern labor, and grren to four millions of slaves the station trade heretofore imposed in the territory of the United States, east of the Mississippi river, save those relating to contraband of war, to the reservation of the rights 4: "The state of affairs is utterly beyond comprehension to one riot on the spot. * * * An officer applied to one of the comman ding generals ror quarters, and told him he would like to take a certain house. 'Whose is it It is that of an avowed secessionist of the blackest kind —the most infernal vil lain in the Confederacy.' Oh, certainly re plied the general, 'you shall have it. If he's a rebel, of course vou ban have it for Government use. What is his name ?' Brigadier-Ueheral Windsor, of the rebel army !' 'No-o-o-o !' said the General ; 'No; you. can't have his house. Why, he was a classmate of mine at West Point !' * * * "If you wish a favor from head quarters here, put on a gray uniform, and you can get what you like." The officers of the late rebel army swag ger about the streets, sneering at the Union officers and coddled by the women of the town. > "There appear to be more rebels in the city than Union men." There can be no doubt of the truth of this representation, coming as it does directly from an officer of position and character ; and declaring what he peisonully knew. It reveals a state of things that demands the instant intervention ottliC V\ ar Department, and the removal of the officers who allow them, and much more of those who prompt them by their conduct and opinions.—N. Y. Tim e*. mm ■. _ '' THE stages in Kansas caunot accommo date the crpwds that are pressing their way to the gold Wrine* of the Northwest. Rebel Ideas of Education. A CURIOUS GEOGRAPHY FOR BEGINNERS. The New Bedford (Mass.) Standard* of Tmnday, says: 'The managers of the late Jjouthern Confederacy took all pains to em buc the rising Confederate generations with a due spirit of nationality and sense of the importance of the position of the Confeder acy among the nations of the world, not to cy in the universe at large. Among other means of promoting this Feeling they caused to be prepared a series of school books, one of which is of a 'Palmetto series,' being a vuography for beginners, by the Rev. K. J. Stuart, with a vignette in which the Palmet to is the most prominent object. It purports to be printed in Richmond, and is very neat ly printed and illustrated with maps and en gravings. After the preliminary definitions, and some lessons in physical geography, we como to what interests us most, political geography, and we learn that "The division of mankind into nations is as follows: 'ln America: The Confederate States, the United States,' Ac., Ac. "Turning over a page or two we find Richmond, Ya., placed next to London and Paris among the cities of the globe, and as 'remarkable for the elegance and refinement of its people, who, like the citizens of Nor j tbik. are as hospitable as they are intelligent and noble. : In reference to the history of the Confederate States, we learn that when Virginia adoDted the Federal Constitution in 17*8 the Commissioners of the State were directed to annex the condition and reserva tion of the right to withdraw from the fed eration at will,' and that in the exercise of, this reserved right she withdrew from the United States in 1861, and also refused -to allow the troops of the Northern States to pass through her territory to subjugate the other States which had already seceded, and that she became the principal* seat of war of ! Southern independence. The first collision | of this war, we learn, occurred at Charles | ton, and was occasioned by the President, I ulectcd by citizens of the Northern States, i attempting to seize, provision and occupy | the forte in the harbor, and turn their guns • on the city they were designed to protect ; We also learn that 'every effort that human i ingenuity could contrive, by immense re ! -lourcos of money and vast armaments on I sea, and land, was made by the Northern | Government, to capture the capital and oth er important [daces, and break up the po litical organization of the Confederacy; but that "hv the constant, evident, and acknowl i edged aid of the God of battles and King of j nations their efforts have all failed; ami at | vast expense of suffering and blood the people of the Southern States have fought : their way to political independence, and the : respect and amity of the great nations of i the world. "Then we have seyeral pages devoted to i the productions, flora, scenery, launa, and | manufactures of the Confederate States. In I reference to Great Britain, we learn that its j common law is embodied from the great : principles of the book of Leviticus, and that ; the crown 'derives its authority from the | acknowledged Supreme Ruler of the universe, by Divine right, & statement which is con firmed by quotations from the pyayer book i in a foot-note. The Emperor of France is l highly eulogized as a brave general, humane i and wise Governor, and sagacious statesman, | who, without interfering with the relfgious ! and spiritual jurisdiction of the Papal court, j and the Mohammedan divan, has gradually j emancipated the people who were under I their political thraldom.' | "In a note in reference to the Dead Sea j we learn that it was explored Dy an Ameri { can exploring party under the command of | Commodore Lynch, of the Confederate States navy, leaving it to be inferred that I the expedition was inaugurated by the Cou- I federate States. j "Passing over to the United States we learn that there are hut nine of them, be | sides what remain of the original thirteen, and that in the year 1861 the Federal Gov- I ernnient ol these States, by a sectional mi- j nority ol one million seven hundred thou j sand (out of a total vote of five millions), j attempted to subjugate'the Southern States j by military occupation,' which occasioned the j final separation of those States, and the for ; mation of the Confederate States of Amer i ica aSj&n independent Government." The Sentence of Arguilles and his Con federates. i Arguilles, the Spaniard, whose surrender j to the Spanish authorities created so much j feeling in the country to the prejudice of the j State Departm 'nt, has been tried, convicted i and sentenced to nineteen years'confinement at hard labor, a fine of SSO,(KX>. and perpet ual loss of civil rights and functions ; and for nineteen years thereafter, should he live so long, he is to he subject to the vigilance of the police. At the time of his offence, Arguilles was Lieutenant Governor of the District of Colin, in the Island of Cuba, and it was thought the exercise of his offi cial functions that he took from a slave ihip a number of negroes, sold them into slavery and pocketed the proceeds dividing of course | with his confederates, fri addition to his sentence, he is ordered to restore to the purchasers of the negroes the price he re ceived for them, indemnify all who suffered damage by his proceedings, and [jay three ninths of the costs of the whole judicial proceedings against him. The Presbyter, D. Jose Hilario Vaides, who gave a certificate, of the burial of the negroes sold out of the slave ship is con demned to eight years of imprisonment and forfeiture of parochial benefice, and to pay two-ninths, of the cost of judicial proceed ings. The remaining confederates in the scheme are sentenced to imprisonment for terms va rying from five to nine years, indemnifica tion to purchasers, and payment of the re maining costs of prosecution. The speculation in the slave trade has proved a very dear business to all concerned. The ship was fitted out, and the slaves im ported by Arguilles as a matter of specula tion, and the certficate of death employed to covet- up the transaction. It was the abuse of his official position as much as the nefarious character of the traffic, that ag gravated the character of the crime.— Cm. Coin. ASTOUNDING DISCLOSURES. —The testi mony taken before the Washington Milita ry Commission reveals some extraordinary facts. In that evidence, which goes over nearly two years in time, and includes the sworn statements of a large number of per sons who can have had no collusive purpose in view, there is, we take it, superabundant proof that the serine of assassination, in somefonn , was agreed to and approved in rebel military circles twenty months ago; that the Richmond authorities hired and j naid the conspirators money; that Booth, ' besides being a hired assassin himself, was engaged to hire others; that he was empow : ered to offer thousands of dollars for the aid ; of a single confederate; that he did offer this for the co-operation of a New York actor named Chester, who, fortunately for himself, refused the bribe; that Sanders, and the gang who act with him in the Prov- were privy to the plot; and that every step in the conspiracy was with the cogni zance of Confederate officials. The business in which Booth engaged was opened near Swift Run Gap, (in the Shenan doah Valley,) shortly after tne rebel defeat at Gettysburg in 1863. Booth first offered j his suggestions in a rebel camp; and Beall, who was hung the other day, was the first volunteer for what was to be thereafter 1 known as the "detached service." Shortly ! after this, Booth was found "in funds, | and upon thfese he made various essays in 1 perfecting the conspiracy, until the thing took the shape it did on the 14th of April ' last. APPREHENDED SLAVE INBTIRJUTCNON IN CUBA.— The Colonial StandardUpt Jamaica has the following startling intelligence : I Prom a conversation which we nave had with a gentleman who returned to this city from Cuba in the Jamaica packet, we learn ( that matters in Ctlbn have begun to assume , a threatening aspect. There was evidently a i deep and bitter feeling of revenge slumber- i ihg among the negroes, which only awaited 1 a favorable moment to burst forth with irn- ' measurable fury. Already had several es- j tates been burned by the torch of the iucen- \ diary ; and so deep add silent was the plot that no clue to the perpetrators had as yet been discovered. At Guantanamo, where the first two fires occurred, an overseer of a large property had been murdered, and two companies of troops had been sent thither from St. Jago, in order to suppress any at tempt, at rebellion. On the departure from St. Jago, on the evening of the 22d of March of the Jamaica packet, t wolargt fires were plainly seen from deck. Little doubt is en tertained by our informant that they will be found to be the further acts of incendiarism. Our next advices from Cuba, then, may be anxiously looked for, although the Govern ment is most watchful in keeping from the public the least information which might give a clue to the present wide-spread dis affection. CAUTION TO EMIGRANTS.—AS a measure of warning to foreigners intending to "emi grate'' to Mexico, under the prouiiee of grants of land, etc., from President Juarez, the agents of Maximilian publish an impe rial decree, made in July, 1864. which de clares that all contracts made by J uarez after his departure from the Capital were void, and that all that he might thereafter make would be Void, and not only that, but the person entering into ,them would be liable to punishment. The pronuuetarnento is republished because it has come to the knowledge of the Emperor that settlements are proposed to be made out on the Pacific coast under contracts made with Juarez. "Emigrants" will, therefore, take notice that to get possession of the promised land they must not only go to Mexico, but fight for their heritage. We suppose that many of them are going for no other purpose. This proclamation will sound to them as harm less as Chinese thunder. A SCIENTIFIC PROBLEM. —The Suez Ca nal is not yet by any means finished. The two ends of the canal, that is to say, the works required for the entry from the two seas, remains yet to be built, and it is exact ly these which the English engineers decla red to be the most important and impractic able part of the enterprise. There never was any doubt in any one's mind that the ditch through the level sands of Egypt could be dug from one end to the other, if the money was provided to- pay the work men, nor even that water enough could be found to supply it; this, in fact, has been accomplished, and it is only to see its cen tral ditch, with three or four feet of water in it, that M. De Lessen has invited dele gates from all parts of tne world. The ends in the two seas are yet to be built, and the practicability of their serving as entries is yet to be proven. ONE or THE RESULTS OF ABOLITION. — The abolition of slavery in the Southern States, which will become a reality as rapid ly as our armies advance and take posses sion. will practically nullify that clause of the Constitution which restricts representa tion in Congress to "three-fifths' of •all other persons," thereby meaning the slaves. The effect will be to increase the represen tative population of the South to the extent of two-fifths of the emancipated blacks, or about one million souls. This augmenta tion of numbers, however, cannot be felt in Congress, though all the rebel States should at onee be reorganized, until another appor tionment shall T>e made under the census of 1870. But when that event shall occur it will strengthen Southern influence in the national councils very materially; and those States which had the largest number of slaves will be the greatest gainers.— Pitts burgh Dispatch. MEXICAN SILVER.— The New Orleans True Delta in a late article says: "The question is asked where do all the specie go from Mexico ? The receipts at New York are very trifling. We, however, can give some information on the subject.. The British West India mail steamer, the February packet, landed at Southampton with about $1,970,000 earlv in March. The greater part of this was Mexican dollars re ceived from Vera Cruz. We also observed another shipment of nearly one million dol lars a short time since. Euglaud realizes all the profit and advantages from her cordon of mail steamships ramifying in eVery quar ter of the world, under subsidies for mail service. The steam marine of great Britain is monopolizing the passenger and carrying trade of the world. THE FRENCH MINISTER.— The Marquis De Montholon. the new French Minister at Washington, does not come to this country an entire stranger, unacquainted with the habits and feelings of our people. He has resided much in the United States, having been attached to the French Embassy many years ago, having also been Consul at Nor folk. and at the Beginning of the rebellion and for some months afterwards, Consul- General at New York, When we complete his record by stating that he has been mar ried fQ£ many years to an American lady, the daughter of General Gratiot, we say enough convince our readers that the Em peror Napoleon has made the selection of his Minister with tact, and chosen a representa tive who will be agreeable to the American people. MEXICAN NEWS. —Late reports byway of the Mississippi river from Matamoras. are to the effect that between four and five thousand republican troops appeared before that town on the 29tli ultimo ; that its sur render was demanded and refused, and that a spirited fight between the imperialists and republicans ensued. Business was suspen ded, the streets were barricaded, and many of the citizens were fleeing afiross the Rio Grande to Brownsville, Texas. A report reached the mouth of the Rio Grande on the 4th instant, that the Republicans were iu full retreat. We have heretofore had ru-! mors that they had occupied Matamoras. Later advices will have to DC waited for in order to decide upon the true state of affairs in that region. EMIGRATION EROM IRELAND.— Letters from various parts of the Dish provinces i show that the people ore already preparing | in considerable numbers to emigrate during j the spring, their friends in America haviug j assured tnem already that the war is nearly over, and that the restoration of peace will be followed by a brisk demand.for labor. ; One communication from the county of Longford states that there are five of the . female for one of the male sex quitting the country. In every instance the moDev to pay the passage or a fVee ticket came from .relatives on the other side of the ocean. A LETTER from Paris, received in Wash , ington, shows clearly that there is no truth in the report of English Journals that Na poleon has proposed an alliance defensive or j offensive with England, for protection I against the T - nited States in Mexico or Can-! ada. ,j is sta £fd that the representatives of the : c hristian Commission, who paid a "visit of I ceremonv and respect" to the rebel General Lee, at Richmond, nave been recalled, and theft authority to act as delegates revoked! by the Commission at Philadelphia. Three View*. THex AXB sow. From the Lou- From the Lon-iFroin the Lon don Time* on do* Time* of. don Time* of Nov. 26,180.j Sept. 14,1884.| April 10,!85. "It if evident, "The public "Theeataatro. on the mnallextj will admit that phe wem* oom refteetion that < thej have not 'piste, Jtnd in all the South, even been miagnidedit* accessories if united, could by ourrotumeaUicaJcolntcd toiro never resist, for We ai(l that the press people three months the north could nev- with a feeling greatly prepon- er subdue the that the work derating power south, and the is accomplished, of the north." north baa now and that the civ. proclaimed the 11 war i* really same conclu- at an end." sion." THE FRENCH ACADEMY.— The establish ment of an Academy in the republic of let ters may be, as some suppose, an Utopian scheme, and the United efforts of Acade micians may have produced but little ; but it is certain that the French Academy has made an imposing appearance in Europe. It was specially charged with the composi tion of the dictionary, and the extension and purification of the language. Yet, when l hey published their dictionary, that of Fu retiere appeared as a formidable rival; and Dr. Johnson did single handed for England as much as the forty "immortals" did for France. Furetiere (born in 1620. and died at the age of sixty-eight) began life as a lawyer, and ended as a monk. He was elected to the Academy, but for having prof ited by the labors of bis colleagues in com posing the dictionary which bears his name, tie revenged himself by writing tutting sa tires, in yerse and prose, on his late col leagues, and often had the laughers on his side. Voltaire confesses that the great char acters of the literary republic were formed without the aid of academies. "Forwhat he asks, "are they necessary? To preserve and nourish the fire which great geniuses have kindled." The Academy published the first edition in 1694, and the sixth, and 1 believe the last, iu 1835. PECUNIARY RESULT OF THE REBELLION. —The foreign holders of Confederate hoods will feel "darkly, deeplv, beautifully blue" on the next advices from this country. An intercepted letter from the rebel Adjutant- General at Richmond, complains that the writer has nothing but Confederate money, and is starving for food, and an an old darkey in the rebel capital refused a hatful of this money for a drink of Jamaica ruin, but on the presentation of a five dollar greenback managed to procure enough liyuor to satis fy the thirsty throats of his patrons. These gentlemen abroad, who have staked their pile on Le< and Beauregard, will head the insolvent lists shortly, and t here will he no pleasanter music for loyal ears than the sound of the auctioneer's hammer in their Bouses. Let them reap as they have sown. IT is represented that the interest in the Mexican emigration scheme, in New York, is unabated, and the rush of young and able bodied men to the different stations for the purpose of registration and learning the par ticulars of the expedition has not yet serious ly decreased witnin the past few days. Many of the immigrants from Europe, now arriving in considerable numbers by each steamship, are absorbed by the expedition as well as residents of our own country, whose term of service has expired, and an occasional butternut is found who will enter his name for riches and honor in the land of the Montezumas. WHO IS PRESIDENT OF THE CONFEDERA CY. —We are in the receipt of numerous communications raising the constitutional question as to who is acting President of the Confederacy, now that Jeff. Davis is in our possession, and Mr. Stephens will not assume the responsibilities of the office. The query is a timely one. but a moment s reflection would have satisfied our corres pondents that Mrs. Davis is the legitimate successor to ber husband's duties. When he ran off with her jietticoats she had no al ternative but to put on the breeches. And iu view of the language she used on the oc casion, we venture to predict that foreign nations will make all haste to recognize her as a beligerent.— N. l r . Times. THE petition circulated among the color ed people of North Carolina, to be presen ted to President Johnson, after referring to the friendship of the late President Lincoln and the proverbial kindness of President Johnson, their love for the old flag, and the services they have peiformed both un der and tor it, a-sk that the elective franchise be extended to them, saying they cannot see the justice of denying that privilege to those who have been fighting for the coun try, while it is freely granted to men who have returned from four years fighting a gainstit. Then call attention to the fact that up to 1835 free colored men voted in North Carolina without detriment to the in terest of the State. THE INCOME OF THE PRINCE OF WALES. —The friends of the Prince of Wales repre sent that thisyoung gentleman is in needy circumstances, iu consequence of the in creased duties devolving on him, since the was called into retirement by domes tic affliction. His gross income does not much exceed SSOO, 0t. Yesterday, however, the long lines | of his advancing columns were plainly visi- I ble, marching down the crests oi hills upon I the opposite Bank of the Potomac. ! THE Dispatch, a paper published at Aui ador. California, has been surpressed by General McDowell for exulting over the murder of the President. The editors were I arrested.