+ +F ca guttiligenon. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1865 "The printing presses shall be !Tee to every person who undertakes , to examine the pro ceedings of the legislature, or any branch of government; and no law shall ever be made to restrain the right thereof. The free commu nication of thought and opinions is one of the invaluable rights of men ; and every citizen may freely speak, write and print on any sub ject; being responsible for the abuse of that liberty. In prosecutions for the publication of papers investigating the official conduct of offi cers, or men in public capacities, or where the matter published is proper for imblic informa tion, the truth thereof may be given in evi dence."—Constitrition of Pennsylvania. Meeting of the Democratic State Central Committee The members of the Democratic State Central Committee will meet at the Diehler House, in Harrisburg, at 2 o'clock P. M., on Monday, the 6th day March next, to decide in regard to the meeting of the next Demqcratic State Convention. C. L. WARD, Chairman Dem. State Committee. HARRISBURG, Feb. 2.5 th, 186.5. Fred. Douglass at Reading. The Eveniug Record is a loyal little sheet published daily in the neighbor ing City of Reading. It is loyal, we mean to say, in the modern acceptation of that much hackneyed term. It sus tains the Administration, and is will ing to aid in securing the rights of citi zenship for the negro. That is the test of true loyalty in these days—devotion to Abraham and Sambo. The Record is enterprising too. It employs a phon ographic reporter on occasions of great importance. Such, in its estimation, was Friday night last, when the negro orator Fred. Douglas addressed the loyal ladies and gentlemen of the good city of Reading. Our enterprising little cotem porary has a report of his speech, which occupies about three solid columns. In introducing the speech it says editor ially : " We have the satisfaction of laying a Phonographic report of the Lecture of Fred. Douglas, on Equality before the Law," before our readers,' (Reported by Mr. James Wall) which we are sure will be carefully read by everybody: As we predicted it Would be, the large Keystone Hall was crowded last night. Reading cannot boaSt of a more intelligent or respectable audience, nor has a lecture ever been received with more satisfaction." A few short extracts will be sufficient to show to our readers what the lecture was like, which so highly delighted that loyal, intelligent and highly respectable audience. Fred. Douglas said : Tne Democratic Party had the reins of Government fora long series of years. They held that slavery was essential. The Republican Party is now at the head of affairs on this great continent. He had to tell that party that as slavery is what it is—they were to be strictly logical. Hitherto we had read the Declaration of Independence with limi tations—'' all men are created equal " except the negro ; so had we read the Bible with limitations—" of one blood God made all the dwellers upon earth," except the negro ! Yet the American Eagle covers us, and we simply ask that you extend to us the same rights as you accord to other men. The difficulty with us has been your lack of recogni tion. The North had legislated in their prejudices. He was there to ask, in the name of justice, for the American peo ple to put themselves in the logical line of Liberty and Equality to all men. We want the ballot-box, and the jury box. You have given us the cartridge box, and now we want the other two. We are subject to law in this country ; for its infringement we are addable, and suffer imprisonment and even death; and the law presumes we know right from wrong. He wanted to be in Con gress or at any rate, to have a voice in sending some one else there. That sounds like pretty strong doe trine, but it is only the utterance fron a negro of the same sentiments ad vanced by the gentleman who now rep resents this district in Congress; am for whom the loyal men of Lancaster county voted. The negro, Fred. Douglas does not ask too much of the Republi can party when he demands that i shall be logical. To be consistent i must follow its doctrines out to their legitimate conclusion ; as Thaddeus Stevens did when he boldly declared himself in favor of making " all men equal before the law." Fred. Douglas demands that, only that, and nothing' more. He met the charge that the negro is ignorantin this wise. Said he: " But, it is alledged, they don't know enough! He scouted the idea. They know enough of law, and of taxes, and the negro knows as much when sober as the Irishman when drunk." There it is in plain language. Fred. Douglas feels himself of sufficient im portance already, not only to demand the right of the negro to vote, to sit in the jury box, and to be sent to Con gress ; but he indulges in a fling at one class of white men, and evidently regards the negro as the superior of the Irishman. Had he been lecturing else where than in Old Barks, it is about as sure as anything can be, that he would have coupled the Dutch and the Irish together in his comparison. We might beg the pardon c-of our readers for devoting so much space to the speech of this orator of the Repub lican party, but for the fact that we consider it necessary from time to time to make a note of the utterances of the leading men of that organization, in order that the people inay,see where they are drifting. To confer all the rights of citizenship on the negro is one avowed object of the leaders of that party. That is with them a cardinal political principle to-day. It remains to be seen whether the masses will blindly follow where they lead. .11e - A Washington i,etter to the Bos ton !Transcript (Republican) states that the Senate Finance Committee, which was instructed to examine and report what losses of public securities have oc curred in the office of the Register of the Treasury 'during the last year, have already discovered two losses of Li S. bonds from that office—one for 530,000, and the other for upwards of 51,200,000. These are in addition to the loss of $lOO,OOO mentioned in the annual report of the Secretary of the Treasury to Con gress, in December last. The total loss so far ascertained in that bureau is $l,- 330,000. ze- The Bucks county papers are filled with advertisements, mostly of sales of real estate and personal pro perty. The Intelligeneer of last week has twenty-two coh o imns, and Demo crat has about the sane number. The people of that county understand their business. When they make sales of real estate or personal property, they not only get hand-bills, but they also have them advertised in the paper, The result is that they have splendid sales, plenty of buyers, and get big prices. THE Canadian press are in a violent ferment in consequence of numerous al leged violationsof the neutrality laws by our people. Kidnapping, they say, is quite prevalent, and large gangs of Ca nadians are taken over the line, without passports or examination, ostensibly to chop wood, where they are treated to food and liquor and then met and en listed by Yhnkeerecruitingagents. The Le Courrier de St. Lryaeinthe states on what it claimsas reliable proof that "the ,purnber of-Canadians who have enlisted ,aims the beginning of the war is placed at 43,40. Of this number, 35,000 were Freneh--Canadians, no less than 14,000 of whom hay.e,died on the battle field." elar When the three pm}' correspon dents, who attemptedtp,puss the batter ies at Vicksburg were reported to have been lost, General Sherman is - credited with the humorous comment ThEit't good! We'll have dispatchesgA?Ny . 4'92 . : „bell before breakfast.', Special Southern Trading Permits. A list of special cotton and other per mits, furnished to parties who were thus allowed to trade with rebel States, has been sent in to Congress. Among the names are the following : Robert Lemon, recommended by Ward H. Lemon, 50,000 bales from any Southern State: A. 0. BrummeL recommended by John L. Reese, 5,000 bales cotton, 2,000 bar rels rosin, same amount of turpentine, 2,000 boxestobaaco, Virginia and North Carolina ; E. W. Gould, reccomxnended by M. N. Falls, 6,000 bales cotton, Virginia and North Car olina ; Hooper C. Hicks, recommended by surveyor at Baltimore, 3,000 bales cotton, 2,000 barrels rosin, same amount tar, same amount of pitch, and a quarter nillion shingles, Virginia and North Carolina. At an early period of the war, Presi dent LINCOLN issued a proclamation forbidding all citizens of the loyal States from trading with the inhabitants of the insurrectionary States. The wisdom and justice of this interdiction were not questioned by the public. It was supposed that cutting off the trade of the South would tend to put down the rebellion, and no one ever dreamed that the President could be so base as to root out the business of the people in general, only for the purpose of enriching him self and a few favorites. Are his hands clean of the profits of this war? The Mrs. Grinsley transaction is not forgot ten. The Secretary of War's letter, re. commending Mr.,Lincoln's "old friend from Springfield " to the Quartermas ter at St. Louis, has not gone out of puhlic recollection. The paragraph above given raises new suspicions ! Robert Lamon, on the recommenda tion of Ward H. Lamon, had permis sion to trade for or steal fifty thousand bales of cotton wherever he could find them. Nobody else on the foregoing list had permission to trade for or steal more than five or six thousand bales. Why this great difference in favor of Larnon ? We don't know Robert La mon, but we do know Ward H. Lamon. He (Ward) hails from Springfield, Illi nois. Lincoln took him to Washing ton and made him Marshal of the Dis trict of Columbia, a position out of which any honest man may make a fine living and any scoundrel may make a fortune. Lamon is supposed to have made a fortune. It would be interesting to know how much this pet of Lincoln's cleared on his interest in the fifty thousand bales. It would be still more interesting to know whether he divided with his old chum. Fifty thousand bales of Cotton, obtained as these must have been, ought, at present prices, to yield a profit of five or ten million dollars. The Senate or House ought to appoint a committee to inquire into this Lamon cotton business. Does the President grant cotton permits on condition that a share of profits shall go into his own pocket ? If not, how does it happen that Ward ',anion, the second self of the smutty joker, can get for somebody of his own name a permit covering the enormous quantity of fifty thousand bales? Not only does Lamon's permit cover the extraordinary quantity of fifty thou sand bales, but it gives permission to get the cotton in any Southern State.— The other parties onthis list are restric ted in their operations to the two States of V irginia and North Carolina, but La mon is allowed to go wherever he pleases. " pent-up Utica contracts his pow ers." _Does a credulous and confiding public suppose that no member of the President's family was to receive any portion of the profits of Lamon's cotton operations ? Will Old Abe go out of the Presidency poorer than he went in, as did JEFFERSON and others?" CAPT. Ii..,BERT T. LINCOLN, son of the President, left the eity to-day for the front, under orders to report to Lieut. Gen. GRANT for service upon his staff.—Wash. car. Ball. Nun, Pell. 21. Bob Lincoln got home tiOm college some time ago. He had reached the age at which free Americans are subject to be made slaves by: order of his father. There was a draft inipending. Three hundred thousand more white men were wanted to fight against the Union as it was before the traitorous Aboli tionists subverted it. It would not have looked well for old Abe to have ordered the enrolling officers of Washington to leave Bob's name off the list, and it would have cost a thousand dollars to buy him a substitute. There was an unpleasant look about the thing, but old Abe smoothed its wrinkled front by a stroke of masterly strategy. He saved his own reputation for self-sacrificing devotion to his bleeding and Africanized country—he saved Bob's character for patriotism and courage—he saved Bob from the draft, and. he saved himself a thousand dollars, the cost of a substitute —by commissioning Bob as a Captain and assigning- him to duty on the staff of Gen. GRANT. Is any "Union-loving father," any " loyal mother" or any " patriot daugh ter" afflicted by the-thought that the Prince of the House of Abraham Afri canus may come to an untimely end on the gory field of battle ? Let all such apprehmsions be dismissed at once. Like the war horse of the scriptures, Bob may smell the battle from afar, but he will never get near enough to it to risk the abrasion of his cuticle by a Con federate bullet. Real staff duty on a hard-fought field is not unattended by danger, but such fancy staff duty as the first-born of the King of Rails will have to perform at Grant's headquarters, has no more danger in it than there is in selling tape behind the breastworks of a dry goods store in the peaceful City of Lancaster. This thing is disgustiug. It is a sick ening and contemptible sham. And this is probably not the end of it. In due course of time a lying telegram will come along, informing the public that "Copt. Robert T. Lincoln, the gallant son of our patriotic President, has just returned from a successful expedition into the enemy's country, which he has conducted with great skill and courage," but the particulars of which will never be known—not even to Bob himself. In the event of a battle taking place between Grant and the enemy, we are sure to hear of Bob. The despatch that reached France from the Crimea during the Russian war, might, by merely changing the name, suit Bob's case ex actly. It informed the world that— The attitude of Prince Napoleon was admired by the whole army." The Prince, surrounded by a glittering throng of officers of the Bob Lincoln order, lied assumed a very graceful " attitude " on horseback a long way off from the field of battle. If Urant's staff needed an addition to its numbers why was not some Captain, Lieutenant, Sergeant or private who has had experience in the field ap pointed on it? Why was Bob Lincoln, who has given no evidence of courage and is not known to possess any mili tary skill, put on the staff? It was done to save him froin the conscription ordered by his father, which is dragging the poor man from his weeping wife and wailing children, and sending him to the front to be shot down like a dog. What say you, citizens of Lancaster county who are liable to the draft—Democrats and Republicans—is that the sort of patriotism you admire in a President—the sort that consigns you to the forefront of the battle, with musket and knaps.43k, and assigns the President's son to staff 4pties which will consist entirely of drawing rations and eating them ? A case is pending in the New York Supreme Court in which a child was left in pawn or pledge for the payment of a debt. After the Rebel Armies are Defeated What Then ? We have repeatedly expressed our be lief that the overthrow of the military power of the South would be discovered to be but a single, short and uncertain step toward a satisfactory solution of the really vast difficulties which present themselves to this nation. If the only problem for us to solve were the de vising of some plan by which the re bel armies might be defeated and broken up, our future would present a more cheerful prospect to the thoughful mind. We may, and in all probability we will, be able to accumulate a military force before which no organized army of the South will be able to stand. We may occupy every Southern seaport, reduce Richmond, disperse every rebel army, and reach a point in this struggle when our troops may be able to march all over the soil of the South without meeting organized resistance anywhere. But will we have restored the Union and brought back peace and prosperity when all that shall have been accomplished? We fear not. Indeed, we are fully con vinced that the very saddest disappoint ments for the people of this land are yet in store for them. A strong writer in the London Quarterly Review has some remarks upon this very subject, which we commend to the considera tion of every candid reader. He says: " Any other people would have learn ed from the history of Poland, of Scot land, of Spain, and of Italy, what the forcible subjugation of a brave nation means, and at what a prodigal sacrifice of blood, and treasure, and civil rights, it has to be maintained. That the se ceded States can never return in amity under the power of those with whom they have fought in so many bloody campaigns, the Northern politicians themselves are beginning to admit. If they are held at all, they must be held by force. Their vast extent will be oc cupied by a people hating their rulers with the bitter hatred which Poles bear to Russians, or Sicilians bore to French. Before the South can be conquered, a very large portion of the white males must have been killed off. But the chil dren are still left; and they will grow up to look upon the hatred to the Yankee as a sacred tradition, to which they will cling with all the intensity of enthusiasm which men feel towards a cause for which their fathers died. The reconstructed State will thus present the'curious spec tacle of a country of which the larger and the more fertile portion is inhabited by a profoundly disaffected population. ' Large garrisons will have to be main tained in all the important towns; a huge gendarmerie must be organized to protect railroads and rivers, and to raise the taxes which will then be necessary. The press will have to be kept under rigorous censorship. The writ of habeas corpus must he permanently suspended; an elaborate staff of police spies must be maintained to conduct the arrest of possible ring-leaders, and to check the first symptoms of revolt. In fact, the whole apparatus of repression by which `order is maintained' in Venice and in Warsaw, will he the only tenure by which the liovernnient of Washington will rule over more than half its ter ritory. How burdensome such a mode of Government will be to finance, how ruinous to trade and industry, how deadly to political freedom, the people of the Federal States may convince themselves from the experience 5.1 Austria and Russia. It may be safely assumed that not much ;II he left to them of their own liberty by a Govern ment which is encouraged to make so little account of the liberties of others. It seems hardly possible that a hostile population can be permanently govern ed by the sword, over so vast an extent of country. The cost of doing it, if it be done efficiently, would be so gigantic that the richest nation would pay by a speedy bankruptcy the just penalty of the attempt. If it were done ineffi ciently, of course the yoke would be thrown off as soon as the means had been collected for doing so. Even in the inconceivable contingency of such an undertaking being successful in a period of repose, it clearly must break down at the first approach of troublous times. Any disaffected party within the State, or any enemy from outside, would always (summand certain and sure allies in the population of the sub dued Confederacy. A prop( (sal fuss been made by the Northern papers, and echoed by liberal philanthropists upon this side of the Atlantis., to dispossess all the landlords of the South, and re people the Confederaey by granting their estates to Northerners. This bar barous idea furnishes a fair sample of the humanity of the minds in which it has arisen ; but it is fortunately im practicable. At least, it may be suffi cient to say that it is without anything approaching to a 'parallel in the history of civilized times. A faint anticipation of it was practised by Elizabeth, James 1., and Cromwell, in Ireland ; but the experiment has met with but indifferent success. Unless the North could afford to keep an army to protect each of the new landowners, they will have but a brief enjoyment of their ill-gotten pro perty. Men who have suffered oppres sion of this kind are not usually very squeamish about the time or place which they select for their revenge. The new landowner might get his property free; but it would be upon the tenure of act ing as walking target to all the dispos sessed Southerners Within a radius of fifty miles. Under these conditions, it is not likely that the confiscated estates will be the subject of is very keen com petition on the part of intending emi grants." Such are some of the difficulties in our future pathway, as seen and pointed out by a foreign observer, one who may justly be regarded as a more disinterest ed witness than any one of ourselves, engaged as we are in the contest that is going on. The considerations presented are serious ones. May we not well ask: After the rebel armies are defeated— what then? Roger A. Pryor The following appeared yesterday in the editorial columns of the ,Vational Intelligyncti. The facts are interesting, thoilgh very ungramniatically Mid: General Roger a Pryor reached here on Thursday evening, and immediately called upon the President. That func tionary intinlatel to the General that he was mainly intlebtudi or his libera tion to the fact of his kindness to our wounded p , risoners in the hospitals at Richmond, and added that Gen. Grant was not altogether favorable to his pass ing his lines upon a return to Virginia. It seems, however, that the President has directed that he shall be passed through our lines, and he has accord ingly left this city. We were present with General Pryor on Friday, when intelligence reached him of the execution of Beall, at which he was very deeply affected. Bell was a companion with him in confinement at Fort Warren, and lie had in his pos session his diary, which abounded with religious sentiment and resignation to the fate that impended. General Pryor, like General Lee, does not think that the rebel, cause is in ex trcmis, but that a victory over Sherman might turn the tide of affairs. At any event, the army can sustain itself for a long period of time. He spoke well of our soldiers and particularly of our su perior strength in cavalry. Referring to privations of Federal prisoners in the South, he remarked that the people there were frequently driven to a dire point for food. His own family had not had meat but once a week, and as for tea and coffee, &c., they were out of the question. In the vicinity of armies the people were much reduced in provisions, andthe family of Dr. Cornelius Boyle, whom he saw at Gordonsville in 1863, were in that con dition at that time. The rebel army was then moving north toinvade Penn sylvania. A block of teuenlent houses was burned at Chicago on the afternoon of Wednesday last. Some twenty families were rendered homeless, besides losing all their property, Five stores were also destroyed. The entire loss was upwards of twenty thousand dollars. The headquarters of an immense gang of thieves, robbers and counterfeiters in the State of Illinois has been discover ed, and eight men and two women be longing to it have been arrested- A large amount of property, supposed to have been stolen by this party, has also been found and identified by the owners, The gnpplies of Assam and other India teas are said to be increasing rapidly, with larger profits to the importer than are afforded by the product of China. A Disgraceful Exhibition On last Thursday a scene was enacted in the United States Senate which dis graces the age and the country. Mr. Trumbull, of Illinois, a leading Repub lican, but a man of decent deportment and gentlemanly feeling, asked leave to take up the bill to provide a marble bust of the liite Chief Justice Taney for the Supreme Court Room. Thereupon the following debate ensued: Mr.-Trumbull (Rep., Ill.) asked leave to take up the, bill to provide a marble bust of the late Chief Justice Taney for the Su preme Court room. Mr. Sumner (Rep., Mass.)—l hope not. An emancipated country ouht not tomake a bust of the author of the I)red Scott de cision. Mr. - Trumbull (Rep., of Ill.) said Chief Justice Taney was . not to be looked at in that way. Mr. Sumner—Let me tell the Senator from Illinois that the name of Taney will be hooted down the page of history, and an emancipated country will fasten upon it the stigma it deserves—a disgrace to the ju diciary of the country and the age. Mr.,Johnson (Dem., Md.) said he',Could not hdar such remarks applied to the late eminent jurist without entering his protest against it. The Senator from Massachu setts should remember that Justice Taney was not alone in the decision, that a ma jority of the court concurred in it. Mr. Johnson then spoke of the high private and personal character of the late chief-justice. The resolution was taken up, and after some remarks against it Mr. Sumner moved to amend it by striking out the name of Roger 13. Taney and inserting that of Joshua R. Giddings. Mr. Trumbull (Rep., Ill.) said it was customary to place busts of the chief justices in the Supreme Court. Chief-Jus tice Taney might haile erred in his decisions, but he had great ability as a lawyer, and high personal and private character as a man. Mr. Sumner then withdrew his amend inert. Mr. Hale (Rep., N. H.) was opposed to the amendment, because the name of Judge Taney would always be associated with Dred Scott, and that of Dred Scott with Judge Taney. Believing this to be the fact, he would not vote for the appropriation of money to perpetuate the memory of the Dred Scott decision. The most that could be asked of the anti-slavery men of the pre sent day, was that they be permitted to let the memory of Justice Taney rest. Mr. Wilson (Rep., Mass.) said he had no heart to follow' any man to the grave; but he felt it his duty to vote against the reso lution, and it seemed to him the millions of the country who were horrified by the Dred Scott decision, would be surprised to see Senate of the United States voting honors to the authors of that decision. The nation. was horrified eight yerrs ago when that de cision w s produced, and since that time the Ifted Scott decision had been the scorn of the country. It was an outrage on hu manity, and the memory, of it, with his, was unworthy of respect. Mr. Wade (Rep., Ohio)said it was useless to talk of the legal ability, 6:c. of Justice Taney.. It would be better fin. his memory if he could he made out a fool. The higher the character for ability that was made out for him, the worse his memory. • Pending the consideration of this subjee the senate, at o'clock, took a recess. Never was there a more reprehensible exhibition of mean bigotry aud foul mouthed fanaticism than is displayed in the actions and the utterances of Sumner ) Hale, Wilson and Wade as reported above. None but men lost to all sense of honor and common decency would have made such a disgusting ex hibition of themselves. They show themselves to be the very incarnation of bitter hated and unrelenting ani mosity. The same spirit would unearth th 6 hones of Washington and scatter his sacred dust to the four winds of heaven because he was a slaveholder, and did not think it wrong to be such. How is it possible that a restoration of the Union should be brought about, while such feelings are publicly exhib ited on the floor of the United States Senate? What man of gentlemanly feeling would desire to hold any close relationship with a party of whom these foul-mouthed fanatics are the represen tatives? The Clearfield Prisoners The Clearfield Republican has the following article on the prisoners from that county, in regard to which we noticed a one sided statement in the Repress of last evening : We learn that the citizens of this county, lately confined at Fort Mifflin, have been removed to Harrisburg, and, excepting those of Knox township, are expected to get their trials this week. A Major Johnson, a Volunteer officer from Connecticut, has been appointed Judge Advocate, who is represented as a high minded, intelligent gentleman, not likely to be blinded by false oaths dictated either by personal spites or the cowardly fears of real criminals. This is all these much wronged men and their numerous friends ask. We are unable to learn the reason why the citizens of Knox townships— who were the last of the victims of this " Reign of Terror " were not also to be tried at this time. Those who are expected to be tried this week are Major Wilhelm, Jacob Hubler, Samuel Lansberry, J. Blake Walters, 0. P. Bloom, and the Brady township men. It is especially gratifying to learn that the stories told about certain of these prisoners having made certain disclos ures, implicating others as well as them selves, are as false as the spirit that dictated them is mean and contemptible: Reports were in circulation that some of these men—having been persuaded that they could thus secure their own release —had sworn to certain statements about proceedings of a disloyal and unlawful character, implicating many other citi zens who have not been arrested. But it is not true. These men have no conceal ments. They know nothing of them selves or others, that deserved the ven geance of outraged law, and they were not mean enough to perjure themselves to escape these indignities and gratify the vile scoundrels who, for political vengeance, have caused all these out rages. That they were approached for this purpose, and appealed to in the most earnest manner, we are well aware ; but except in the case of two or three non reporting conscripts (mere boys) their efforts were almost a total failure. How deep and damning the ignominy that must attach to the villains who thus sought, through the presumedfcars of their victims, to injure their neigh bors ! When these scorching, blister ing truths, with the names of their ignoble authors, are made known—as they surely will be—it were better they had never been born. The War Progressing The Confederates have had a streak of bad luck running through the last few months—indeed ever since General Sherman commenced his triumphant march from Tennessee into Georgia, through the heart of the latter State to Savannah, and from thence into South Carolina. First Atlanta was evacuated —then Savannah—then Columbia— next Charleston (the cradle of the re bellion)—and last, but not least, Wil mington, in North Carolina, if it has not already fallen. All of these im portant places have been surrendered to the Union forces almost without a struggle, and it looks now as if the military strength of the rebellion was being concentrated in the neighborhood of Richmond preparatory to a final and decisive conflict with the combined armies of Sherman and Grant. Indeed, it is supposed by many that even the latter city will be evacuated, as its per manent occupancy, it is alleged, does not enter into the plans of the new Commander-in-Chief, General Lee. If this be so, the great conflict, which can not be much longer delayed, will take place somewhere farther inland—per haps near the dividing line between Virginia and North Carolina, or in the neighborhood of Lynchburg, Va. A few days, or weeks at farthest, must bring about the fearful collision, and it is useless, therefore, to speculate upon the occurrences likely to transpire in the near future—especially as the line of policy adopted by the commanders on either side may be changed by cir cumstances beyond their control. /Stir One hundred years, pearly, hav ing transpired since American Metho dism began, that denomination is taldiag measures for an impressive celebration of the event. Southern News Rebel Financial Measures [From the Richmond Examiner, Feb. 21.] Among the financial scheme's in Con gress is a bill recently introduced by Mr. Russell in the House, to authorize the impressment, of cotton and tobacco at a price appraised in specie, to be paid in six per cent bonds at par ; or, at the option of the owner, the cotton or to bacco to be returned in kind within a specified time after the end of the war. The bill has been ordered to be printed. Arming of the Negroes. This subject grows daily more prom inent in the Richmond papers, and the current is all one way. The Sentinel says: It was generally known that both Houses were in secret session yesterday, on the bills to put negroes in the army. It is understood that the' bill On the subject passed the House yesterday, and it is believed one of , the same character will pass the Senate to-day. As they differ in detail, the subject will come before both Houses again„ There is but little doubt of the adoption of the measure. • The Commander-in-Chief and the rank and file are in favor of it, and it is growing in favor with the peo ple. We understand, says the Sentinel, that a vote was taken yesterday in Pickett's Division on the queStion of employing negroes in the army, and resulted in a very large majority voting in favor of the measure. Exchange of Prisoners The Sentinel says : We congratulate the friends of the returned Confederate prisoners; and the gallant men themselves, upon the ar rival of the twenty-five hundred more at the landing in James river. One thousand were brought up to the city yesterday, and the remainder are ex pected to-day. A large number of Fed eral prisoners will be sent down to-day in exchange. We understand Colonel Hatch has been sent to Washington to facilitate the sending off a large number from that point. The authorities of both governments are heartily engaged in the good work, and will receive the heartfelt thanks of the poor fellow, both friends and foes, who are thus permitted to visit- home and friends again. It is the earnest-wish of every good man that nothing may occur to stop so humane a measure. Gen. Grant is proving by his acts that the charges of Butler against him were not true. Going- North Fourteen hundred Federal prisoners (sick and wounded) will be sent home, on condition of exchange; this morning, by flag of truce. No other prisoners now remain in this city, and, as the two Governments have recently fixed upon Wilmington as the most convenient port hereafter for conducting such busi ness, it is uncertain whether any more prisoners will be exchanged from this point. Resolution in Congress In the House on Monday, under a suspension of the rules, Mr. Perkins, of Louisiana, reported back from the Com mittee on Foreign Affairs, the following resolutions, with a preamble: Resolved by the Congress of the ( 'on federate States of America, That while Congress regrets that no ultimatum is left to the people of the Confederate States but a continuance of the war or submission to terms of peace alike ruin ous and dishonorable, it accepts in their behalf the issue tendered them by the authorities .of the United States gov ernment, and solemnly declares that it is their unalterable determination to prosecute the war with the United States until that power shall desist from its efforts to subjugate them, and the in dependence of the Confederate States have been established. Pcsoired, That the Congress has re ceived with pride the numerous noble and patriotic resolutions passed by the army, and in the gallant and unconquer able spirit which they breathe, coming from those who have for years endured dangers and privations, it sees unmis takable evidence that the enthusiasm with which they first dedicated their lives to the defence of their country is not yet extinct, but has been confirmed by hardships and sufferings into a prin ciple of resistance to Northern rule that will hold in contempt all disgraceful terms of submission ; and for these ex pressions in camp, as well as for their noble acts in the field, our soldiers de serve and will receive the thanks of the country. Res()lrcd, rk,- at the Congress invites the people of t lese States to assemble in public meeting and renew their vows of devotion to the cause of independence ; to declare their determination to main tain their liberties; to pledge themselves to do all in their power and fill the ranks of our army ; to provide for the support of the families of our soldiers, and to cheer and comfort, by every means, the gallant men who for years, through trials and dangers, have vindicated our rights on the battle field. Rcso/red, That confiding in thejustice and aided and sustained by the Cod of battles, in the valor and endurance of our soldiers, and in the deep and ardent devotion of our people to the great prin ciples of civil and political liberty for which we are contending, Congress pledges itself to the passage of the most energetic measures to secure our ultimate success. The Examiner on the Situation The Richmond Examiurr of the 21st concludes an article on the situation and the prospects of the opening campaign as follows : There is not at this moment so much to alarm us in reality as there was last May. It is true, we have not so many troops ; but neither has our enemy, by agreat deal. On that occasion, too, Gen eral Butler could and did land his forces at City Point, without any effort or loss ; but this year Sherman has to fight his way through many a swamp, and take or turn many a battery, and leave many a blue-coated corpse behind him ere he can hope to see a Virginia railroad. It is hoped, not without some degree of confidence, that the President will not this year relieve General Beauregard in the very crisis of his campaign, and ap point General Pemberton in his place, with orders to the latter to slip round to Sherman's rear and march away to Moble. But, barring this, or sonie other equally enormous blunder or crime, it seems evident that Sherthan has before him a much more difficult and perilous part of the grand campaign than Butler had last year. And in the meantime his devastiug march through South Carolina is no more conquering that State than his great raid through Geor gia has converted Georgians to the " Union." Richmond is safe if all parties con cerned do their duty ; that is, if the new Secretary of War is energetic, and if the new commissary shall be found to have some elementary ideas, about food ; especially if Congress proceed at once with such legislation, for the purpose of giving General Lee control of large numbers of negroes, as that general asks at their hands. Promptitude and deci sion are important in this matter ; yet it is understood that many members have long speeches to make-; and one, they say, has even threatened tohe heard for two days—going down into the very first principles of human society and soaring to the sublime future which is reserved for the destiny of our species— and the roads almost beginning already to dry under the winds of March. Two days! Why Sherman can march forty miles in two days. If this measure is to be adopted to in crease our means of national defence, it were well it were done quickly, in order that there may be at least a portion of the now material ready for the work of the coming struggle. In the meantime let it not enter the thoughts of any citi zen of Richmond that the city is in any greater danger this spring than it was the spring before. There is the strongest probability, too—all the omens indicate —that this will be the last campaign against the Capitol of Virginia. Proclamation of Governor Vance to the People of North Carolina. [From the Richmond Examiner, Feb.. 21.] We find in the North Carolina papers a proclamation of Governor Vance, is sued on the 14th inst., relative to the recent " peace negotiations." The fol lowing are some of the concluding par agraphs of this patriotic and stirring paper: I trust and believe that there will be little difference of opinion in North Carolina as to the propriety of continued resistance. The great argument which will be brought forward to shake your honor and intended to excite you to despair will be that successful resist ance is no longer possible. Some will tell you that we are already subdued that the enemy * outnumber us ; that our fighting men are all slain; our re sources all exhausted, and we might as wellsubmitnow. This, mycountrynaen, is false, and as frequently proceeds from a craven or a traitorous, as from an hon est but mistaken spirit. Great as our calamties have been, straightened as we are for all supplies, both of men and material, I tell you in all candor that when I survey oth condition by the light of human history, I see no danger which threatens to be fatal to our cause, except the depression ofspirit among the people and the still more dreadful risk .of internal dissension. So long as we remain one and determined, it is not in the power of our enemies to sub due us. "But except these abide in the ship we cannot be saved." All things may be supplied if we were but possessed to that bold and manly spirit of resist. ance of tyranny, of which liberty and independence are born. Thatalone can fill the widow's barrel and still the orphan's cry, can cast cannons and build ships of war ; can raise up armed men from the dust of the dragon's teeth can wrest tangible realities from the very jaws of impossibility. Withoutit, numbers but add to the ignominy of certain defeat, even as the Persian mil lions were whipped and shamed by the three hundred in the mountain pass. Are our men all slain ? Over four hun dred thousand names yet stand upon the muster rolls of the confederacy, to say nothing of the many thousands who shirk. Where are they? Thousands upon thousands absent without leave, are lurking in the woods and swamps of the South. Are our provisions all gone? Hundreds of thousands of bushels of grain now rot at the various depots of the South for want of transportation, and this transporta tion cannot be protected because these absent soldiers are not at the post of duty. Oh, my countrymen! if you would but rise to entreat, to shame, to drive them back to their country's standard ! Has our territory been over run? It has; but how much of it has been held? The enemy marched tri umphantly through the heart of our sister, Georgia, and is she conquered? Except for the garrison at Savannah, and the ashes of desolation on their track through the interior, Georgia has neither enemy nor the sign of enemy on her soil. So of most portions of the South which space does not permit me to enumerate. For four years their countless legions have gnawed at the vitals of Virginia, yet to day they claim not even all of her ter ritory which is swept by their cannon. The cities, the garrison, the land their armies actually stand upon, and the waters ridden by their fleets, areal' that they really hold, or even can hold ex cept by our ignoble consent. Let the balance of our cities go—:Nfobile, Char leston, Wilmington, Richmond, all ; and, if we are determined to be free, our subjugation is quite as distant as ever. For, thank God, the confederacy does not consist in brick and mortar or par ticular spots of ground, however valu able they may lie in a military point of view. Our nationality consists in our people. Liberty dwells in the hearts of her votaries, and the ragged, bare footed soldiers, standing in the depths of the forest, or in the shadow of the mon n tain , call oiler her sacrifices which will be as sweet and as acceptable as those proffered in gor geous temples in the midst of magnifi cent cities. So if „our country and its cause, like to the Kingdom of God, be enthroned in our hearts, then indeed am I persuaded that neither principali ties nor powers, nor things present nor things to come, nor height nor depth, nor life nor dea!li, nor any other crea ture shall be able to separate us from that independence and honor for which our people have suffered and our sons have died. Therefore, my countrymen, having warned you of this danger w hick is upon us, I now appeal to you, by everything held sacred among men, to bear yourselves as become your high lineage and future hopes. I implore you to lay down all party bit terness, and to be reconciled to your neighbor for the sake of your country ; to use every possible exertion to restore absentees to the army; to di vide of your abundance freely with the poor and the suffering; to strengthen the arms of your rulers, and to sustain your soldiers and their generals; and to give cheerfully your aid, physical, men tal and mbral, in whatever sphere you may lie, to prevent the degradation of your country and the ruin of its people The New Secretary of Treasury It is now pretty generally understood that Mr. Hugh McCulloch, the present Comptroller of the National Currency, is to take the place of 'Mr. Fessenden as Secretary of the Treasury. His opinions on the financial policy of the nation cannot fail to lie a matter of some in terest. In relation to the country issuing its own notes as a permanent circulating medium he says : "No more dangerous, no more cor rupting power could be lodged in the hands of the party in possession of the Oovernnient, and none more perilous to official probity and free elections." There are few, we think, who are not moved by the corrupt influences of political organizations, that will dissent from the opinion so boldly expretsed. Paper money, gener ally, Mr. McCulloch thinks should be convertible into coin, not only when there is no demand for specie, hut also at times when it is most needed. "It should not," lie says, "on the oue hand, by being overissued, encourage extrava gance and speculation, and give" las at present) "an unreliable valuation to property ; nor on the other hand, by be ing reduced below the proper standard, interrupt business and unsettle values." He reconmiends the hanks to prepare for a return to specie payments, which is an indication that he will exercise his power to place the government on the same track. He anticipates at no dis tant day an up-heaving in financial af fairS'apparalleled in the history of na tions. In reference to which he says : " Fortunate will the country be if the war s can be closed and prices reduced to former standards without a collapse, which will as greatly excel in the ex tent of its disaster that which occurred at the close of the last war with Eng land as the present war excels that in costliness and magnitude." Getting their Eyes Opened. The Abolition press occasionally give evidence of returning reason, by telling some forcible political truth which is usually found only in Democratic pa pers. The New York Times, an in tensely " loyal" sheet, was smitten in this way the other day, and while un der the influence said : "Every man, woman, and child now pays half of their monthly or yearly earnings into the cofirs of this war. If a mechanic earns Sl3lO a year, $3OO are paid away in paper currency ; if a clergyman or college professor receives $1,500 salary, he now gives $750 to sus tain the circulation of the country. It is so with the every-day laborer and poorest seamstress. It is equally so with the Government itself. Of its two millions paid out every (lay one million s lost by the depreciation of the circu lating medium. The nation doubles its debt every day, because its paper rep resentative of value has lost half its worth. Every person dependent on salaries or fixed wages is just one half poorer to-day than he should be, because of the reduced value of our currency. The dollar is worth only fifty cents.— Every one knows this. The people see that what is called " the price of gold " is to them the most important of all pe cuniary matters, and that the tax on the currency far outruns all other taxes. In deed it is wellseen now that a direct tax of fifty per cent. on every person's in come (provided it brought the currency up to par,) would be less exacting and wasteful than the present depreciation, because it would be fixed, and would not permit such excessive speculation and overcharging by the dealers in commodities. Vir The construction of the Govern ment arsenal at Rock Island, Illinois, will be commenced immediately. It will cost $1,500,000, and will be one of largest structures of the kind in the world. The Baltimore American says a sub stantial company, to be made up of New York, Washington and Baltimore capitalists, is about being formed for the purpose of establishing a camel line between the Missouri frontier and Cali fornia, the eastern terminus of the line to be at Omaha'city. Captain Beall, at the breaking out of the war, it is said, owned a large plan tation in Jefferson county, Virginia, and worked about 100 slaveS. His fortune was then estimated at 81,500;000, and he is, in addition, the heir apparent of Lord Egelby, of England. He was only thirty two years of age. Execution of Captain John T. Beall—A Bash Life ended by a Brave Death. We take from our New York ex changes the following highly interesting account of the execution of Captain John T. Beall,Who was hung on Gov erners Island, N. York, on Friday last. It is a rare thing for a Mall to die on the scaffold so bravely. SKETCH OF HIS LIFE. Captain John T. Beall, was born in Jefferson county, Va., and inherited sufficient means and social position to go travelling. He visited London and Paris ; went up the Nile, to Jereusalem and Damascus, to the Crimea and Con stantinople, and " beat" over the com mon route of European tourists, till the beginning of the war summoned him to the Confederacy, when he entered the rebel service, and fought like a devotee, passing unscathed through the bloodiest battles, deserving a commission, till au evil hour cast him far northward, de pendent to a certain extent upon the charities of the Canadian agents, Thompson, McDowell, and Clay. These put him on their list of utilitarians, and engaged him in the strange crusades which he was too enthusiastic to refuse, such as seizing and scuffing steamers on the lake, and finally in throwing trains of northern passengers off the railway track., so that the mails and express packages might be obtained. It was this last essay that shut him front our sympathies, and gave him to the scaf fold; but now that he is gone we may grant him the possibility of the doubt that, in his zeal, he forgot the terror he was planing for helpless children and women who might have been passing between Dunkirk and Buffido. At any rate, he was seized in the frontier depot, returning to Canada,and brought to New York. Here his conduct wascool with out being insolent, and full of rare dis cretion and secretiveness. Ile never treated the detectives and officers as either his equals or masters, but rather as foreign and strange people, with whom he had neither social nor politi cal sympathy. These, knowing his desperate intrepid spirit, were glad when he went into the custody of the United States, and was put without the possibility of es cape. Before leaving 11 ort Lafayette he gave his money and best clothes to the Southern prisoners, reserving his very worst suit for Governor's Island, where he spent two week's of manly reflection, reading the Bible, the Book of Common' l'rayer, a devotional work entitled "The Follower of Christ," and some lighter writings, as Goethe's "Renard, the Fox," and a French copy of "Manon Leseaut." It is fair to say that the full ness of a lite, as well spent as its close, would have made Beall a scholar, as he was a traveler and a gentleman. He was a born rebel, with the hest of south ern characteristics—calmness, reticence, a fine sense of gentlemanliness, and It pleasant dignity that both won and re bufli,sl men. The court-martial proved, but did not shake him, and as death ap proached, he grew quieter, but not less praiseworthy. He was to be hung on Saturday last, but the reprieve filled hint with no vain hope. "It is only postponed a little while," he said, "until I can see my mother." This lady came, with several of his friends. He treated them more like a father titan a son or brother, and without any pedantic demonstration, satisfied then[and others that he was both well read and well prepared. Ile could not resist the almost magnetic fami iari ty of Lieutenant Tallman, the provost-martial of the post. Both of them were masons, tool in the wonderful attachment of this order, the correspon dence between priest and sacrifice was kindly and tender. Beall was fed upon soldier's rations; his strong, close cell was furnished with a straw-Issl, made upon the brick floor, a chair, and writing table. It was a fair place for a captive —a dreary place ter an observer. Two sentries watched the strong door day and night, and six times in the round of hours, at regular intervals, Tallman looked in his cell and spoke with him. This g,en ial jailor often conversed wit It him, but never politically; their con victions were too different to admit of argument. On the night preceding his originally anticipated execution, Beall remarked: " I never slept better." PREPARATIONS Font THE EXECUTION. Although, according to the terms of the sentence, it was not carried into ef fect until between the hours of 12 and 2 o'clock p. m., the sight-seers, who were so fortunate as to procure,passes, began to arrive in large numbers at ( iovernor's Island at an early hour in the morning, and there was also a considerable throng, who, to judge by their appearance, had managed to pass the guards without cre dentials. By 12 o'clock upward of rien speetators had assembled, without in ducting soldiers, of whom there were several hundred. Between the hours of 11 and 12 o'clock, United States Mar shal Murray proceeded, with a file of soldiers, to the cell of the condemned, in order to convey him to an apartment less remote from the scaffold, prepara tory to the execution, which, it had been determined, was to take place shortly after 1 o'clock. THE; PRISONER IN HIS CELL. Maj. Cogswell and other officers testi fied to the courageous bearing of Capt. Beall ever since Ids confinement on the island. As we entered the cell of the prisoner, in company with Marshal Murray, a Deputy Sheriff and another gentleman, we were struck by his sin gularly cool and eonfident mien. He Was sitting on a chair by a little table which stood in the middle of the cell, with the black cap of death already up on his head. Seeing us enter, he imme diately arose, and said to the Marshal : "I am at your serviee. You will oblige me by making this thing as short as possible." The Marshal, who had Seen him fre quently before, did not at first recog nized hint, as the black turban-like night-cap, with its long tasseled overlap, somewhat altered his appearance. He knew Idly to be the same, however, as soon as he spoke, and promised to com ply with his request. Capt. Beall was a handsome man.— About five feet nine inches in night, a strong, compactly built form, light beard and moustache and yellowish hair, re gular features indicative of culture and intellectual firmness, and a clear, brilliant gray eye—these were the physical characteristics of the Rebel spy. There was also a singular freedom and self-possession in his manner of movement and address. Following Marshal Murray to the door of his cell, he marched between the guards, who were awaiting him, toward the designated apartment, heedless of the curious gaze of the knots of loungers who had gathered to witness the scene. We forgot to mention that he was also accompanied by the Rev. S. H. Weston, Chaplain of the Seventh Regiment, National Guard, who had been his con stant companion for several hours pre vious. lii= The gallows via.: erected on a little of ground, which sloped gently to the waters of the bay on the extremity of the island fronting the Narrows.— The structure itself was simple enough. There was no drop• but a chair was placed directly under the rope, which ran through an aperture and along a groove, or series of pullies in the beam above, the other end falling into a rude box, or shanty, where it had connection With a heavy weight, which the sever- ing of a subordinate line would bring the noose up, with a swift jerk, to the top of the gallows-tree. l'p and down, in the interior of the inclosure contain ing the weight paced the man whose business it was to cut the short line at the signal, and by the action of the fall ing weight, run up the outer cord, with its dangling burden of flesh and blood. He was in fact the hangman of the oc casion, a deserter long confined on the island, but who, we understand, was extemporized into an executioner, on the condition that thereafter his own past sins were to he forgiven. By noon there was a large crowd col lected around this spot, eyeing the structure with a morbid curiosity, and several platoons of troops were march ing and counter-marching around it, with a full band playing at their head. Nearly all of the press were represented and stood very near the scaffold, with Maj. Bumford, the commandant of the post, and several other officers belong ing on the Island. As the fatal hour drew near, the crowds of spectators be came so pressing that a guard was de tailed, which quickly drove them back, while the troops were formed in a hollow square around the gallows, to keep out siders at a distance. THE ARRIVAL OF THE PRISONER Just about one o'clock the guard, with the prisoner and Mr. - Weston in their midst, came filing down the slope, and the crowd respectfully opened to let them through. The prisoner walked swiftly, and evi dently without fear. His arms were pinioned. by the_ elbows, behind his back, which induced a slight forward stoop as he walked, but there was some thing defiant and free in his gait and betiring. There was something grace fully romantic in his attire, especially iia . the short dark cloak which he wore, falling theatrically down to his waist and concealing the hempen twist round his neck, and even his black cap added to;his dramatic effect, being rolled up, turban-like, above his brows, the baggy end falling on one side and fluttering in the fresh wind that blew in from the sea. Otherwise, the prisoner was at tired in a gray suit, somewhat tarnished from his long confinement, additional evidence of which was also perceptible in his palid and somewhat emaciated features. READING TILE SENTENCE We learn, and it is very probable, that the prisoner entertained, almost up to the hour immediately preceding his death, confident hopes that the execu tion would not be carried into effect. These hopes probably vanished before he started on his last brief journey to the gallows ; indeed, they must have thine so, for on the way, he looked up, gazed steadily at the sun, which was shining in a clear blue sky, and pouring a flood of effulgence over his pathway to tlie grave, and said to Mr. 'Weston : How beautiful the sunlight is! never knew what its splendor was till now, when t look upon it fur the' fu,,l Arriving at the gallows, the prisoner threw a quick, curious glance upward, as,though he had never seen the struct ure, before, although it lay fully exposed to his eyes durit* the several moments' march (ruin his place of confinement. Nevertheless, he seemed perfectly satis fied with it, on closer inspection, and quietly stepped forward under the rope, while the Adjutant proceeded to read the various findings of the Court, the order accompanying it, and the death sentence. While this was going on, the quiet, almost cheerful, courage of the prisoner, won the respect of all who saw hitt. His demeanor was, howeVer, any ; th' g but that of a bravo ; it evinced a p , moral courage, an intellectual eon tAN'ipt for death. His face was pale, but sorrowful, and frequent smiles played across his I il,s as he listened to the reading 0C the flitlbrent specifications of which he had been found guilty, anti for which 'he was there to meet his death. Especial ly at the reading of that specification, respecting the Lake Erie piracy, where lie had placed the innocent passengers 41 the captured steamer under dur ance by force °farms, he almost laughed as if the reading recalled some incident which had once particularly amused hint. In all of this carelessness, how ever, there wasonly contempt and hardi hood—nothing like contrition for the 7rimes which he had attempted, and nothing like a conviction of the fanati cism or spirit of revenge which had im pelled him, Immediately after the reading of the sentence, the'prisoner stood up, and the noose round his neck was fastened to the suspended cord above, leaving a slack of about two feet. lie faced the sea. On his right stood Marshal Mur ray, Maj. Cogswell, and another official. (to his left stood Mr. Weston, who pro duced a copy of the Episcopal liturgy, and read the commendatory prayer therefrom in solemn tones, the pri soner bending his head reverently, and evidently listening with profound at tention. At the eonelusion of this ceremony, the Deputy Marshal approached the prisoner, adjusted the rope, and asked him if he had anything to say. lii prisoner replied : " Yes; I protest against theexecution of this sentence! It is absolute murder —brutal murder! I die in the defense and service of my country !" Before the cap was drawn over his eyes, on being asked if he wished to say anything further, he said: \o; I beg you tomake haste !" Thesignal was then given ; the weight was heard to fall; the rope was seen to spring high up; and John V. Beall was in eternity; for his neck was iintnedi- ately broken, and Ma probably died in a second. There Waw a slight convulsion of the legs awl all motion ceased. 'Vile execution took place at fourteen min utes past one o'clock precisel y.. niseosAL E ItOl,lS The body was suffered to hang just twenty minutes. Itwas then cut down, and, upon examination, the Fiurgeon iu attendance pronounced life extinct. It was then placed in the collin awaiting it and borne away, Nvlien the crowd dis persed. We understand that the corpse was to have been brought to the city, and there delivered to some friends for interment. Two gentlemen from Baltimore, friends of the deceased, were with him in the morning, and witnessed his, exe cution. A few days before his death the prisoner wrote a sketch of-his life, and during the early morning preceding his execution, at his own iequest, had a photographic likeness taken of himself General Lee Gone South—Johnson tom- minds at Richmond The Richmond papers state that I fen. J. E. Johnston has been assigned to a command by Gen. Lee, but singularly, for them even, omit to state what it is or where he will serve. On the '2.3d they intimated that his succeeding Beaure gard in command of the army in front of Sherman was a foregone conclusion. It is now apparent from other sources of information that quite a different disposition has been made of him. An escaped Union soldier from a Rich mond prison brings the news that. Johnston is in Command of the rebel army defending Richmond, and. that Lee started South two days ago. to join the forces under Reauregard, to take the immediate direction of aflitirs if necessary, and to determine the general features of operations in. that quarter in any event. There is very little doubt of this being true. Heavy operations may certainly be ex pected within the next few weeks. Sherman to be Checked. From the Richmond Sentinel, 'kith.! There are despatches at the War I), partment from the South, which it k not proper to publish, as the enemy would thus procure information in a(1- \ranee of that received froin their own source of intelligence. But this much we may say, that the prospect is fair for a most decided check being given to Mr. Sherman. The Inauguration. " the Washington correspon dent of the Cincinnati Comm( writes as follows of the inauguration of 'ri,ident Lincoln on the 4th of March : Preparation, are being made for the Patent Office buildings, several large, , processions, and any number of individ ual sprees. The indications are that the usual throng will be here, though. from the fact that there are very few of fices to give, one would think the influx from abroad would not be great. The smallest hotel in thecity was asked, two. months ago, to provideaccommodations for six hundred persons from the Ist to the uth of March, and so of other estab lishments. I can not see in what re spect any man who doesn't expect or want an office, can get compensation for the outlay of time and money, necessa ry to witness the inaugural ceremonies. Not one in five hundred will even hear what the old man has to say on the occasion of his reinstatement. I think lie better part of valor in the premises, s to stay at home and read the "ad- . - dress" in the morning papers the day after its delivery. Yankee Boots on a Blockade Runner. One of our Exchanges says Among the cargo of an English block ade-runner, recently captured off Wil mington, were a large lot of heavy cavalry boots that were evidently made for the Southern market. These boots were brought to Philadelphia and retail ed here to persons who thought in buy ing them they were procuring for loyal feet good, strong English made boots that were intened for a very different service. A good many -of these boots have fallen under the notice of experts in the shoe trade, and the fact of their Yankee origin has been clearly de monstrated. The boots were made in a New England workshop, shipped, pro bably, to Nassau, and thence on their blockade-running mission to Wilming ton. We do not say that their m anu facturer or manufacturers knew what their ultimate destination was to be ; but the hint is worth following up. It does not look well to find New England made cavalry boots (evidently gotten up for rebel feet) on board anKuglish block ade-runner. The English Viceroy in central Asia has received the homage of six hundred princes, assembled to do honor to Queen Victoria. The ceremony took place at. Lahore.