IWorii Inquirer. BEDFORD. PA., FRIDAY, NOV. 10, ISO LIGHTS AiNIJ SHVUOWS OF THE LATE ELECTIONS. While the results of the late elections present many features calculated to rejoice the hearts of all good citizens, they also present some features of a character to make every patriotic citizen blush that even thus much of alia in closeness and moral degrada tion should mar the character of our na tional political system. The grand aggre gate majority of 450,000 is the most bril liant vindication of our people from the charge of sordid, mercenary motives that ever graced the annals of political hi-tory. That the people should condemn by snob overwhelming majorities, a policy supported by all the blandishments of power, the emoluments of office and the allurement* of almost unbounded patronage, is the most sublime proof of the purity of the patriot ism and the incorruptibility of the virtue of an educated, intelligent democracy. Never before were a people so tempted, by bribery, corruption and veuality of every kind, to support a party policy, and never was such an overwhelming rebuke a lmini-torcd t<> i !ic inflated pride of delegated power. Never was nation so disgraced by its representa tive head, and never was bloated egotism and blinded bigotry in its pride of power so completely emasculated by an insulted and indignant people. Such exhibitions of pub lic virtue, intelligence and patriotism are the most cheeriDg evidences of the progress we are making, as well as of the safety with which we may rely upon a virtuous and in telligent patriotism as the bulwark of our republican institutions. But while we thus rejoice over the general healthfulness of our body politic, we cannot overlook the fact that the seeds of a dire leprosy, though com paratively dormant still exist in our political system. That a few Judaseswere found among the high as well as the low, that some grown gray in their country's service and crowned with her fairest laurels, that others distin guished by deeds of valor in upholding the "Starry Flag" on Moody fields, should be tempted to barter their laurels for paltry office, or sell their life long principles, born of honest convictions, for the empty promi ses of a defunct political organization, t hough a matter of national humiliation, is scarcely to be wondered at. That the filthy slums and dark purlieus of New York City should pour forth their druhken and licentious tide of human depravity, to roll up a majority of 47,000 against cleanliness, sobriety, decency and the observances of a christian Sabbath is a dark and shameful stain upon our na tional escutcheon; but even this has its bright relief in the fact that the sobriety and virtue of New York's rural population is sufficient to hold this tide of wickedness, crime, wretchedness and misery in abeyance. That all the immense patronage of the gov ernment should be boldly, shamefully, defi antly, wielded for partisan purposes by the chief executive of the nation, is a fearful comment upon the integrity and virtue of our public men; that it should accomplish so little is the grandest vindication of the moral integrity of our people. After such an exhibition of the incorruptibility of the people, the apostles of liberty and humanity may take a long breath, assured that, though constant and continued effort is ever neces sary, the crisis is passed, and the long agony and bloody strife of the past will yield, in the future, a sure and rich fruition, in a larger liberty, a stricter justice, a truer humanity, a more abundant prosperity. WIIITF.n SEPrWTIRES. Vice ever shields itself beneath the cloak of virtue. The father of lies doubtless in vented the subterfuge. It has been prac tised in all ages and has not been permitted to fall into disuse in these latter days. An dy Johnson and his parasites admonished by the people's anathemas have proven them selves but dull though willing students in the art ot clothing their crimes in the garb of virtue. Their latest effort in this line has been to order the prompt dismissal of all employes of the various departments whenever they shall have been discovered) to be fast livers, habitual tipplers or fre quenters of public resorts of ill repute of any kind. This is all very well ; but as long as the President and his friends continue to indulge in all the various excesses by which 1 hey have brought the White House into such ill repute their efforts to reform the departments, will avail hut little. They would succeed better br setting an example, before they begin to preach virtue to their official employes. From all accounts the White House at present is in more pressing need of a thorough purging from these evil practices than any other locality in Wash ington. It would he a good place to begin. Drain the fountain and the stream must of course fail. MORA I. ASPECT OF eOPPERHEADINM. The most striking illustration of the utter depravity of Coppcrheadism is seen in the election of John Morrissey, to Congress, in New York city. Perjury, bribery and the most revolting political corruption wc were prepared to see but tliata community having the least reniainingspark of virtue 01 -en.-c of shame should .o far forget itself a.s to insult the moral sense of the whole country by nominating, and electing to Ooncrt =, a man like Morrissey, the convict, jail-bird, prize lighter and keeper of a faro Lank in the purlieus of that modern Sodom, is a more deliberate display of cool contempt for all moral restraints, than our people were prepared to see exhibited, even by coppcr headism in its worst estate. The disgrace ful licentiousness and drunken revelries of Johnson, the open defiance of the law in Pennsylvania, the wholesale and deliberate perjury in Maryland, are fitly followed by the crowning disgrace of sending, to repre sent them in the Congress of the United States, and support the President's policy, one who has frequently been indicted as an accessory to murders, who has made a fortune at prize fighting, and faro gambling, and who has served his term in the peniten tiary. Worst of all, Morrissey is a true representative of the character, x as well as the politic*, pf the majority bifegoetit- TiSF. VERDICT OF THE PEOPLE 5 RECDXSTBHTIOS. Congress acted wisely in going to the peo ple on the basis of the amendments on the reconstruction question. The people have su-tained their representatives, with an emphatic apd overwhelming majority oi some 450.000, and the return of not only a fully su-fained but even increased strength in both houses. When Congress meets again, it will not be fainted hearted and doubting. It will not grope in darkness. The earthquake of the election has puri fied the atmosphere and driven the clouds from the political horizon. Henceforth the way is plain. The people and their repre sentatives have met face to face, they have seen eye to eye, they are joined hand in hand, and their hearts beat in unison. The peop'c have declared that loyal men shall trie the country and fix the terms of recon struction and they have appointed their rep resentatives to enforce the decree. Ihe recently rebellious States have it now in their power to accept the amendments and return to the councils of the nation, if they refuse to do this, there will he no dallying. The action of Congress will 1 e prompt, decisive, radical. The country is weary of uncertainty and suspense, andif the amendments are rejected, will sustain Con grass even to the extent of remanding the rebellion - States to a territorial condition, appointing over them Governors, and ruling them as ferrritories until they accept the lenient conditions offered them, enact con stitutions in accordance with the cardinal principle-of our republican institutions, and display ,ueh a spirit, of loyalty as shall enti tle them ouco more to a place in the sisterhood of States. t. The Republicans of Cumberland Val ley raised a club of twenty-iwo far the X< >v York Tribune a short time since, and for warded the money, but owing to some strange freak of the mail arrangements it did not reach its destination. We hope that our friends, with the a .i-tanee of the Tribune , will hunt up the lost funds, and that tiro Tribune will be sent regularly into that region, where for thirty years the op position to Democracy did not exceed ten or fifteen votes. At the last election the Re publicans polled 74 votes and with the as sistance of the Tribune and INQUIRER, we expect in a few years to come out square. THE PEOPLE'S VERDICT. —Andy John son appealed from Congress to the people. Tim peoplo have answered. From every State untainted by the virus of slavery comes the same response. An aggregate of 450,0' 0 majority reverberates in thunder tones from Maine to California the verdict of the people. Andy Johnson has beenweighed in the balance aDd tound wanting—wanting in honesty, in sobriety, in honor, in integri ty, in virtue, in loyalty and in patriotism. A DIFFERENCE. —The weak-kneed Re publicans who went over to Copperheadism, under the impression that "mv policy' was to be the winning card in the fall elections but who, now that they have seen the error of their ways, are coming back to the old party, are receiving hosts of most ungrateful wipes" from their new found friends. Here is a specimen on Henry Ward Beecher who, only a fow wenlcr ago iron ally petted by every Copperhead paper in the States : "Bcecherhas slid back into the Radical ranks, where he came from originally. No better could be expected from the Puritan ical. smooth-faced, glib-tongued AtninidaF Sleek, who on a certain well remembered occasion, had the impudence to nominate beast Butler as the next President of the United States. The Democratic party is better without these dodgers than with them. Never did the sun shine on a great er coward than this whiffling parson ol Ply mouth Church." . BITTER experience forces the I nion men of Maryland to the conviction at which their brethren of Louisiana arrived .through a bloody test —that impartial suffrage is the only defense iff the loyal, and the oniy cure for the rebel, in the South. The issue, so long evaded and postponed, has ripened in Maryland through the heat of a contest won at the expense of those who fought to save the State which others attempted to destroy. They can now well afford to set the justice of impartial suffrage against the wrong of this mishap ; we doubt if anything but defeat would have taught them, or any other large class of men in the South, the lesson. But it would be strange if the men of Mary land could not advance to the same views which even Judge lleagan, of Texas. ex- Secretary of the Confederacy, has had the sagacity to announce. — New York Tribune. BgrUA Toronto, C. W., dispatch says: The police authorities are instructed to cause the arrest and detention of all the suspicious characters in the city under the habeas cor pus suspense act passed last session. The act empowers magistrates to cause the ar rest of any person suspected of countenan cing or encouraging designs against the Gov ernment or people, and commit him to pris on, jhere to remain, without trial or bail, till the Sth of June next. Yesterday arrests began. Four men were committed ; James and John Dudley, Charles Cash and Alex ander Nicholson. The Dudleys profess to hail from Brooklyn, and are moulders by trade. Cash says he comes from Lanca shire, England, Nichobon from Scotland. It is cxpccu- J to be proved that Pudley i.i an assumed name, the proper one being ITone gan. TUE PRESIDENT SURPRISED BET NOT CONVERTED.—A Washington dispatch says: "It is understood that the President lias been assured so positively of certainty of success in New York by Thurlow Weed and others, if the course in relation to appoint ments marked out by them was followed, that lie firmly believed that State at least would indorse his policy. The defeat of Join Llogan in Missouri also considerably surprises him, as he regarded liis re-elec tion is unquestionable. His intimate per sonal and political relations with Mr llo gan makes bis defeat particularly unpalata ble. There is. however, no reason to -op pose that tlie emphatic condemnation of bis policy by the loyal States will induce him to change his course in regard to reconstruc tion. REEI S KINO, our diplomatic agent at Rome, had lately a conversation with the Pope, who seemed very much c mcerncd about the Fenians. Pio remarked that it would be for the advantage of all parties if the United States should take possession of Canada, and incorporate it into the Ameri can Union, rather than allow the Fenians to possess themselves of it. He thinks the Fenians can never do anything to affect the British rule in Ireland, but that they may turn their arms against Canada. Cardinal Antonelii, Mr. King says, is a cordial ad mirer of the policy of Mr, Johnson. —•, - LORD CLARENDON'S health is rapidly failing. A partial blindness which has recently afflicted hint ia attributed to cxces- THE ELECTIONS. New York. NEW YORK, NOV. 11.—The Tribune** dispatches up to midnight, make Fenton.'s majority 15,468. .Missouri, ST. Lor IS, NOV. 11.—Of the nine Con- V suian from this state, seven Radnjals are c rtainly elected. , . „ Our returns are .sufficiently full to render it certain that the Radicals will have a good working majority in both Houses of the Legislature, though the exact number is not yet definitely ascertained. Of the Representatives, according to the best information obtainable and the returns thus far received, we judge that eighty five Radicals have teen chosen, and twenty-three Conservatives, leaving twenty-seven districts to hear from. The Radical majority in the State, by Congressional districts, wiQ be about 23,000, but Jackson fell largely, and Anderson con siderably* behind t'ae ticket on the vote for School Superintendent. The Radical ma jority will be over 25,000. The returns elect Blair to the Legislature by 14 votes. Wisconsin. MADISON, NOV. 11. —Additional returns received here show the official vote of the different Congressional districts with highly gratifying; results. The Republican majori ty on the Congre. ional vote in this State, is not less than 20,000--a gain of over 100 per cent, on the vote of 1564. ChailesA. Eldridge, the only Copperhead in the delegation, will rejjrosont tho Fourth Congressional district. His majority is not large. The Legislature is more than two-thirds Republican, there being in the Senate twenty-two Union members and eleven Copperheads. In the House there arc seventy-four Republicans and thirty-six Democrats. Thi- will render the re election of Senator T. O. Howe to the Fortieth Con gress a certainty. Minnesota. S ST. PAUL, Nov. 11.—As returns continue to come in from the more remote counties they show large in creases in the heretofore reported Republican majorities. Donnelly's majority become - greater by every return. There are no Democrat c gains except in one or two counties. The State will give over 10,'Xff) Union majority. Illinois CUR 'A'10, Nov, 11. —T'RO Republican majority in Illinois will lie at least sixty thousand, and probably in excess of that number, i n the Democratic Congressional districts the official result has not yet been ascertained. G. B. Raurn has certainly been elected in the Thirteenth district; Kitchell has been defeated in the Eleventh di trict by S. S. Marshall, Copperhead; and A. -f. Burr. Copperhead, is probably elected in the Tenth district. In the Ninth district, the result is doubt ful, though the Copperheads claim the elec tion of their candidate, Lewis W, Boss, al though future returns may put a different face on the matter. Shelby .hi. Cullum, Republican, has gained the day in the Eighth district after a good fight. lowa. The official returns will show the .Repub lican majority in this State to be very nearly 40,000. " .Michigan. The latest returns from the State include 37 Counties and give G '•v. Orapo an aggre gate majority of 25.800 The 24 counties un heard from in 1804 gave an .aggregate ma jority of 1,215, as they :re mainly new counties in which the population has largely increased in two years, we have undoubtedly made decided gain- therein, and our mu fw:ifv in the Htnto * \,l OS. 000. Nevada. SAN FRANCISCO Nov. 7—A Carson City di patch says that the Union party carried the Nevada State election yesterday, by about 1, 0< A majority. Mnssach usatts. The latest returns from the State leave no doubt, that the Republican majority will be 70,000. Kansas. LEAVENWORTH, Kansas NOV. 9.—The Union Republican majority in this Sate is 15,000. A large majority of the Republican can didates are elected to the Legislature. The indications are that Senator Pomsroy—who carried e very di-triet in his county the first time in fire year will be re-elected. New Jersey. NEW ARK. N.J., November 9. —As the returns Lave become more nearly perfect, we are enabled to state as the re.-nit of the election as follows : The Republican ma jority in the State is a li tie over 2,On>. The majority for Hasjey, Republican, In the Fifth Congressional District, is 921. That of Hill, Republican, in the fourth District, is 465, Iltiyler, the independent Democratic candidate, receiving less than 290 votes in the whole District. Newell, Republican, in the Second District, is defeated by si small majority. Delaware. WILMINGTON. November 9. —The claims the following as tlie vote of the State. The Commercial thinks it too high for Saulsbury, the Democratic candidate: New castle county, for Riddle, 179; Kent county, for Saulsbury, 925: Su --ex county, for Saulsbury, 707; total for Saulsbury, 1,695; For Riddle, 179. Democratic majority : n the State, 1,516. Sussex county, Broad creek and Little creek united give Saulsbury 446 majority, a Union loss of 112. _ Cedar creek gives Riddle 7 of: them. A candid co-operation with (kingress ' on neutral questions, aud a dignified al-sti i notice from pushing a controversy in which he is poWi't lc -s. :. tho cours-- which Presi dent John-on will doubtless think it wi o to adopt. The Times reasons in this wise: From the verdict of Tue .-day there is no appeal. 'l*he judgment remitrc 'by four Stat a month aeo was held up a.- one likely to i c reversed. The :i ,v: at has been heard, and nine .State - have disposed of the point* in is.-ue finally, and with no chance <>i rever iiiil. There i no further room for doubt or equivocation; lb country indorses the ac tion of Congrc...; upholds the Constitutional A mendmcnt as'the basis of compromise, and e. ji'iicitly declares the Democratic party un worthy of its confident I'pou the re. uit the Tribune says: Here, then, is the reply of the loyal and still a J valuing North to the challenge of the Pre: ident in syllables as [ lain as the hand-writ ing on the vvali; that one hundred and twenty-six radical Congressman are elected out of a whole re pi i mentation of on hundred and sixty two. We recapitulate as follows, showing a fatal policy i- weighed in the ! 1 ance and found v.-if-ina. Mr. Johnson committed Li- i : i foe- to ruin; the North responds with radical majorities in nineteen Stale-. Nut an inch of -3 ha-'been yielded by the loyal vote, s i in view of whatever . iod work may remain to bo done, the North is resolved to maintain its standing army ofloval majorities. 'J'ite New York II raid remark.-; The m nerai results of the late elections, from -Massachusetts to Mi- -o.iri, are .-.vc. vvlml mingly in favor of the Constitutional Amend ment ;i9 the ultimatum of the victorious North to the Southern Stut,.- r.-;.-n<(V .. the rebellion. This great L-.-uc at the cui.di tivttttf op'*ortt'i (' > inG re.-turai wn of States is now lix ■ I to the end of President John. >u's term in the tv -third Republican vote secured in I Oh Houses of Congress as they now stand till the uli of March, ls'GT. This is the grand, all important 1 ->n of these Noviiuber elections —t le.-son whi in the administration canno safely disregard, even it so inclined, an i which the States unrecognised by C nsgre will 'hi well to ac cept as their only alterna -ive. The extreme radicals, in the next piuc . have bceu em phatically admonished in a!!these autumnal elections, from the Atlantic to the l'a -ijc ocean, that their revolutionary schemes-of reconstruction are utterly repugnant to the people of the North, and therefore utterly impracticable. We are satisfied with all these results, and especially satisfied as to the wisdom of the cmr ; adopt cl by this journal from the significant verdict of the Maine September election m the great issue which is to mark the new dispensation of this Republic in the fulliHm nt of it-- mani fest destiny. The ( bmni'-rcial as.-eia . The question at issue was the poli ;y of ret a-truction, an 1 the decision isa raiu • the policy of the ■President and in favor "1 that of Congrc. ; . The people have vir:: ati" ratified the Amendment, and they h r.e virtually .-aid to tiie South, Accept tit ; e terms and < .one ?>ackto the Union with loyal ilepre-rnfa tives in Congress." Congr. -s, bv admitting the Tennessee members, have shownn will in: ness to aflirm this method of recon (ruc tion, and contact with the people will strengthen them in their conclusion. It has also shown them dial there i a feeling in f. vor of strong guarantee.: and if the South shall now turn it back upon the Amend ment and ..ullenly fall i aek upon what it deems its dignity, there are n, n in Congr.■ who will be .stimulated to enact severer eon ditions, and so re open the closing wounds made by the war. The EK niny POT;' put it in this light.* The Republican parfj. y tie . • elections, retains power for two \ mere. Mr. Bcccuer said very truly that, v.. i managed it might return power half , e. .tui.; but to achieve that, or even to keep if ■country with it lining the next year.-., it needs to act ] '■ tidently, t putablest .statesmen ihv. . J, '. slio v cli.'tL it ptto.vcsuos UiO'iera ti-.-n astt'i II ...- vigor, and that it knows of othei interests in the country 1 hi - that one to which all discussion ha ; fixed it. hith erto. ®®The Iler'tld" * Washington special say En-ign A. J. Kane, of the Navy, has arri ved in Washington in order to answer charges preferred against him by Mr Pock, our Minister to Ilayti. It is all. " that Kane gave up certain papers < ntrus ' him bv a prominent Ha.- ien rebel to Pre-d --dent Geffrnrd. tb reby exposing a plan '•> assassinate the latter and jhis Cabinet. by blowing up the principal nr onals in Port au-Prince, and burn the city." The charge is that Kane received two thousand dollars in gold for this *< : v•. f/jy Tho Uerald'x Havana coric pondenee says: Monsieur Pes. inior, Maximilian's chamberlain, arrived r ei ntly in Havana, on the Manhattan, from Mexico. His atten tion seems to be devoted to an inspection of untenanted knu-t in that city. G-cn. Mar coo, the newly appointed General of Cuba, arrived at Havana on last Saturday, to relieve Gen. Lercundi. THE Arkansas State L ci-latuve met on Wednesday, and next day the Governor's message was read. It deprecates political excitement and favors the encouragement of education railroads and improvements. The Governor recommends the State Legis lature to cary into effect the principle of the Civil Rights Bill, and barely intimates his preference tor the adoption of the Constitu tional Amendment The general tone of the message is mild. A PROCLAMATION. | In The Name and hi/ the Authority of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania—AN DBEW G. CURTIN, Governor of the said Commonwealth. WiIBREAS, It hath been the good and worthy 'custom of the Commonwealth to set apart, annually, forth ' special ack nowledgment of the goodne of the Almighty, and for expressing, by the whole people, at one time, and with a common voice, the Thanks an l Praise which through-' out the year are : pringing from the hearts of men; therefore, 1. ANDREW (I. CURTIN, Governor of, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, do by this my Proclamation, recommend that the good people of the Commonwealth observe TM( RSDAY, THE TWENTY NINTH DAY OF NOVEMBER NEXT, as a day of Thanksgiving and Prayer, and do then a -soluble in their respective churches, and places of worship, and make their humble thank offering to Almighty God for all Ilis blessings during the past year. For the abundant gathered fruits of the earth; For the thus far continued activity of In du try; For the general pre: erration of Health; Attd : pocially for that in His Divine Mercy, He hath stayed the threatened Pes tilence. An l, moreover, thatthey do beseech Him to continue unto lis all His Blessings-, and to c nfirtn the hearts of the people of these ( nit .1 States, that.bv tli lawful force ot ihiir will, Deeds of good Justice. Wisdom and Mercy may be done. Go. mi under my Hand and the Great Seal of fh State, at Harrisburg, this twenty-ninth day of October, in the year of our Lord one thou uid eight hundred and sixty-six, and if the Commonwealth the ninety first. BY THE GOVERNOR: ELI SUPER, Secretary of the. Commonwealth. THE SOUTHERN PRESS. Opinions of the Elections- Defeat of the Amendment Rendered Certain. WASHINGTON, NOV. B,lßfiG. —The Rich mond papers of to-day all contain comments ou the elections. The following extracts -how the general tone. The Daily Dispatch -Say .5^ ''"The elections render certain the defeat of the Constitutional Amendment, even were it. doubtful before. That is something 1 lie grateful for. We trust that whenever • Southern States go into the Union, they will enter it without the humiliation of con dition- precedent that degrade tlieui in the dust. They were defeated in war, but pre serve 1 their honor. Participation in the Washington Government is not so dear to them thai they should sacrifice this, the last thing that i- left them, to enjoy it." The Daily Times says: "Those results have surprised none among us but that clns of sanguine gentleman who were eonstantly nrcdi ting miracles for the salvation of the S uithcrn Confederacy during the dark hours • fi:. briefhiito y, In what way the radi cals will abu.e the vast powers which they now po - ess. it i- as v< ; impos b'e to con j■< tare. They may -ithcr in-iat upon :ho a ioptaou of the Constitutional Amendment as the measure of our humiliation, or they may H-card it an 1 demand something still " ling at our hands. Rut one •u . is now open to 11?. which Leon -latent with both honor and dignity. We can re ft. -0 to be made parties to the schemes which have b n devised for our degradation. We ■■ a i.hu* pr. -ervc that honor which defeat could not take from us, and trust to the h oiling influence of time and bettereounsels. Bur come what may, the Southern people should enter into no covenant terms which will t!icu Th<>;* ort> now f: ithfully ol>e\ ing the laws and the Con stitution ol* the I uited States; they will do nothing more." FROM MFX I CO. Tin Liberals Steadily Driving the French and Imperial Troops lo the Capital. NKW OKI.FANS, NOV. 10. —Advices from Chihuahua to October 17 have been received, j uatvz is therewith his ministers and eight j hundred toldiers. Th>- d 'psitment coni ; ii.-inders will not : nd him any troop.?. E*- ! cobado has moved again t Mejia, at San i Lui.-- Potosi. Four hundred Finch and eight hundred Mexican Imperialists hold Durango. They are expect; d to t ill back on tiie capital. Both the Juarez and Imperial Govern ments arcs exhausted in finances. Juarez is levying forced loans, extraordinary contribu tions and confiscating property. His hopes are dependent on the quantity oi Liberal loan taken by the United States Govern ment. He has greatly oppressed the Atner i an lv-ident . having taken $5,000,000 in cash, and they have sent a memorial lo Washington. Maximilian's prospects are very l ad. He must leave with the French. The Liberal generals and lawyers arc un d irstoou to favor Ortega, and only recog nize Juarez because he is recognized at Washington. Juarez has annulled the Loui iana-Teliauntepec grant, and made a new one lo othei Americans, who pay 3100,000 in cash and re-imburse the holders of the Sloo grant the money paid for it. A fine cotton crop has been made in Chihua hua. All northern Mexico, Durango. is in Liberal hands. The Mexican territory is li ce of Indians, I ut that of Texas is full of thc.ii, the frontier military posts being unoccupied. FROM WASIiINGTOX. Mass Meeting oi Fenian*- Our Rela tions with i-.uglniid -U.S. Troops to go to Mexico.--Granting of Pardons Stop ped. • NEW YORK, NOW tube a 10. — TH e ILiuM's Washington special pays: A mas - meeting of Fenians was held in Washington yester day, at which Gen. Ileath, Capt. Geber and others delivered speectn ?. Resolutions were adopted protesting against the senten ce- of Lynch and McMahon, and thanking tit President and Secretary Seward for ti; ir interference in behalf of the prisoners It i understood in the diplomatic circle that ur relation! with England are improv ing. The British Government has unoffici ally shown such a friendly spirit that it is bs lieved the indemnity claims will he .•■- ttled without an ultimatum for this side.- It, is more than probable that such are now our relations with the Juarez Adminis tration (hat United States troops will soon enter Mexico. The President has almost ceased the grant ing of pardons to residents ofthe Southern State-who were engaged in the rebellion, and it is insinuated by those qualified to sj■' ak on the matter, that no pardons will be granted for an indefinite period to those who led in the late insurrection, or those who accepted office in the United States, in a civil or military capacity, previous to the rebellion. The same authority states that the reasons which have it fluenced the Pres ident in'thus restricting the issue of pardons are of a political character, resulting from the recent elections. New Jersey U. S. Senator Appointed. THEN TON, Nov. 12. G JV. Ward has appointed Fred. L. Fre iinghuvsen U. S. Senator, to Oil the vacancy earned by the death of Senator Wright. <3S> > * Departure of Camholl, Minister to Mexico, sailed to-day for Vera Cruz. EUROPEAN NEWS. fly the Cable.--The Mexican Qiiestioii-- Maximtlian to Remain in Mexico. NKW YORK, November 9.— The pajtcrs of this morning have the following aes patehe over the cable : The If*raid's Par is correspondent says : General Castelnau will arrange forthc retirement of the French troop from Mexico en masse, as Napoleon thinks that a march by detachment would be inconvenient. It wit* considered that France wou' 1 be relieved of two incubi, Rome and Mexico, about the same time. The Km press of Mexico, now called the Pi inccss Charlotte, is said to be afflicted with a religious monomania, always bewail ing the injuries done to the Church in Mex ico, and that her case is hopeless of cure. It is said the unfortunate lady had just at tempted suicide by jumping from the win dow. Hie IlrmhVs Dublin Correspondent says; The bright banquet in Dublin promises to be a grand National affair. He gives ex tracts from the letters received by tlie Ex ecutive Committee from leading personages in reply to the invitation- - . The sentiments expressed by Cardinal Culleu and others go to show that Mr. Bright is likely to effect such a re union of all good and worthy Irishmen a- will secure tie legitimate re moval of cxi-isting grievances. PA urs, November 7. —The ships which h re been ordered for the service of remo ving the French troops from Mexico arc ready to sail. The Monitcvr of' to-day says that Maximilian will remain in Mexico. BkuLIN, November 7. Prtißwa futeg in the appointment of Baron Bue-t as Minis ter of Foreign Affairs of Austria, an attempt on the part of the Cabinet of Vienna, to interfere in questions considered settled. If this view is correct it will compel the Prus sian Government to complete more quickly and surely its national work in Germany. VENICE, November 7.— King Victor Emanuel, the ruler of united Italy, entered the city at 11 o'clock this morning. The Patriarch of Venice received his Majesty in the church of St. Marks, where a te denm was chanted in honor of the event. The reception given by the authorities and people was magnificent and great joy was manifest ed everywhere. The crowd w Irish turned out was so immense that the troops were unable ••••fib- before the King for want of spa- •. . vtiorial Guard of Venetia has been uoi-oized. TEXAS. * Hopes that the Constitutional Amend ment *.vil! soon be Itatifted--- Disgust of the < •-nservatices. (>.vi,Vii-'ns, Nov. s, 1866. —A di.stin fttishevl politician of this State, writes to 'lake s Bulletin, of this city, that Govern or Throckmorton will soon cali an extra se.s -ion oi the Legislature, on some pretext, in order that it may ratify the constitutional amendment, and thus prepare the way to complete rehabiltation. By this mean- he seek-; to avoid the inconsistency of sending two mes a.: to theLegi.-latuie—oneagainst and one in favor of the amendment —at the same ses-ioo. The Conservatives are dis cus- . and accuse Governor Throckmorton of duplicity on account of his recent special message. n-r, < INDITION OF THE NEGROES. GAL VISION. Nov. 9. —The committee on the jud'dary of the Texas Legislature report that the sudden change, as well as the pres ent condition of the negroes, requires that they should he protected by wise and just legislation. Their removal, however, can not te aplished for many years to ecu)". It II governed and controlled by out 'aw . ti. / wid be by th who know noihimr <■!' their true wants and capacity, so ttiat IN HI it- '—rpetnatcu which has been acu tired by force. Tbe Condemned l'eiiiaiis.--stuniored Coin mutat ion of Sentence. XI.\V VOUK, November 9. —The World's Qui bee .special says: The correspondent between tie Canadian Government and Her Man- • ms illative at Washington, is under : ■ .tl ; have resulted in the recall of the death sentence recently pronounced against the condemned Fenians, and the substitution th ofor to imprisonment for a term of ;■ . Wells, Bell and Flanm; 1 lnvc been released without trial. The ae : >f the Govt rnment in commuting the tie;,; . nl< uci - will probably be made known i v iy in a lew days. The A iuis al (uizcile, tiovernnient organ reiterates its statement that the British Government has instructed it representa tive to -ee that the Fenian prisoners are only tiled by a regular tribunal, but afforded 1! the benefit of the most humane penal code. The Unit i:n ore Imbroglio.-—The Matter to be biought before Congress. NKW YORK, November 10. — THE Trib une's Baltimore special says: The action of the President and Governor Swann in con nection with the late election in Maryland will la: brought before Congress for investi- j gation. A. >■ "jority of judges of election in j Baltinio . signed a memorial to Con gnp. • against the admission of Archer and Phelps .o .-eat.-, on the grounds of illegal registration by Governor Swann's registrars, and stating their belief if tlm registry mv. had been properly enforced that Thon; and Stewart would have been elected. Jf 3s T; to owing was publi hed in Huf pc/f M> . .ten yeai? ago—long before the pres nt "dead duck era: A Memphis i '. respondent gives the fol lowin .. passage on a debate between Andy Johnson, a candidate for gubernatorial hon ors. and Gustavus Henry, generally known as Gus. the Eagle Orator. Andy closed his speech with this annihilating declaration : "We tact this Eagle, and 1 can say, with an honest heart, that he has none of my flesh upon his talons —none of my blood on his beak. This was good, and would have been a stumper, but the undismayed Gus immedi ately i to his feet and replied : "'"Pi true ;he honorable gentleman has u>'t t..- Entile, and bears no traces of having L *t f i (■]■ iis talons or blood upon his b" ... Ai. s tisi..t strange, my friends; for tlm . u : hr.' know the habit--of our na ti iii bird know full well that he feeds upon carrion!" Such a shout and such a discomfiture made Andy quake, but didn't defeat him for tlov ernor. SCHOONER WRECKED, LOSS OF LIFE. — ( ;. iiii ■ '..-patches of Nov. 12th says : Tli"* -liooijer Worthingtou, with ore for (T aveland, went ashore on Sunday night. In reseuiug the crew three men from the life boat were drowned. The vessel wfts not badly damaged and the crew are safe. T:m: lu i.'l of the greathouseoftlio lloths ehi Pamir lames Dollolhschild, at Paris i - i• ito 1 in a critical state of health. lie i- oni.i • dug sop of the founder of the ho. .. 1i- at pre -cut the chief of the Par i ; l-uucli, and is said to be the best finan cier of the family. A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF JUDG MENT and Promissory Notes, either with or without waiver of exemption, for aaio at this office nov 2-CG f \ 00K AND PARLOR STOVES, at y B. Me. BLYMYKR err. 1 d^c' They strengthen the system and enliven the mind. They prevent miasmatic and int: rmittr-nt fever They purify the breath earl amditv . .}' the Bvomach. 1 bey cure Dyspepsia an IVor ;ip.i:; They cure Liver Complaint and Ne voits ilc-d --aehe. They make the work strong, the languid hril. liant, aud are exhausted nature's great resto-ei They are e-mpoi - 1 of the celebrated ''ali-a- a bark, wintergrcen, sassafras, ro -t, and herbs in preserved in pcrfec iy purc'St. Croix !um 'for particulars, see circulars and testimonial? around each bottle. Beware of impostors. Examine c\crv bottle Hee that it has our private I'. S. stamp r.omutila ted over the cork, with plantation scene, ar. ; our signature on aline ?:oel {date side label. S c that our bottle is not refilled with spurious end dele terious stuff. Any person pretending to ell Plantation Bitters by the gallon or i.u i:, is an imp; stor. Any person imitating this bottle, or selling any other materiel therein, whether called Plantation Bitters or i . t. is a e;imi : i! under die I", s. l.aw, ar,U will be -o prosecuted by us. The demand for Drake's Plantation Bitters, from la dles, clergymen, merchants, r—it is cheaper than the doctor, and should never be dispensed with. "In lifting the ketile from the fire, it tipped over and scalded my hands terribly. t The Mustang Liniment extracted th pain, r us ed the sere to heal rapidly, and left v liltle scar. CIIAB- FOSTER, i2<> Broad Phil. Mr. S. Litch, ol Hyde Park, Vt. writer "My horse was considered worthless, (spavin.) Lut smccthe use -I the Mustang Linimcrr, 1 have sold b tut for $l5O. Your Liniment is doing wonders tip here." AH jcnuinois wrapp din steel plate engravings, signed ti "V. We.-tioout, Chemist, and also has the private V. S. stamp of DEMAK BAUXE.S i CO. over the t -p. Look closely, and It .<#; decched by Ci