gMlOttr futtilignat. NDNESDAY, MAY 31, 1865 "The printing presses shall be free to every: person who undertakes to examin p ceedings of the legislature, or any branch of government; and no law shall ever be Made to restrain the right thereof The free ctonmu; 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 public informa tion, the truth thereof may be given in evi dence." To the Democracy of the City and County of Lancaster In pursuance of authority given the un dersigned, by a resolution of the Democratic County Committee, adopted at a meeting held on Thursday, the 18th inst., you are requested to assemble in the several wards of the city, boroughs and townships of the county, on SATURDAY, the 10th day of JUNE, to elect not less than three nor more five delegates, to represent such district in a general County Convention, to be held on. Wednesday, the 14th day of June, at 11 o'clock A. M., in the hail of the Young Men's Democratic Association, in the city of Lancaster, for the purpose of electingsix delegates to represent the Democracy of the county of Lancaster in the coming State Convention, to be held at Harrisburg on Wednesday, the 21st day of June next. By the established usages of the party, the several districts will each nominate one person to serve as a member of the County Committee for the ensuing political year, and also nominate ward, borough and town ship committees, being particular to desig nate their names on the backs of their re spective credentials to the ensuing County Convention. R. R. TSIMDY, Chairman A. J. STEINMAN, Secretary. LANCASTER, Mal , 22, 1864. The War Ended The surrender of the trans-Mississippi rebel army, commanded by Kirby Smith, ends the war, and the country is now destined, we believe, to enjoy a long period of peace and prosperity. Certainly this will be the case if the statesmen who control the destinies of the Republic have the ability and dis position to settle the difficulties grow ing out of the rebellion on great Consti tutional principles and in a spirit of conciliation. All armed hostility to the Government and the Union having ceased, wise councils are now more than ever necessary to put the Ship of State on the right course, and avoid the breakers which are looming up be fore her. We have some faith in President Johnson, from the indica tions he has already given, that he means to do his duty and grapple with the great questions which he has to meet in a statesmanlike manner; but we have not the same degree of confidence in the leading members of his cabinet, and particularly in Secre tary Stanton. This man has, by his tyrannical and dictatorial conduct, justly rendered himself obnoxious to a large majority of the American people, and the sooner the President gets rid of him, the better it will be for his own fame and for the countryat large. Let, therefore, Mr. Johnson commence the good work entrusted to his care by re modeling his cabinet and taking the Constitution as his chart and compass, and his administration will have the cordial support of every conservative citizen, both North and South. The people earnestly long for peace, per sonal liberty and union, and will sooner or later crush all who may stand in the way of their restoration. Right to Jury Trial " The trial of all crimes except in cases of impeachment shall be by jury."—Art. sec. 2, Con. U. S. "No person shall be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous crime unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia when in ac tual service, in time of war or public danger." —Art. 5, Con. U. S. amendments. We clip the above from the Constitu tion of the United States, for the pur pose of prepounding the query as to whence the rightful legal or constitu tional power of a military commission to try a private citizen, not connected with either the army or navy, for a capital or other infamous crime? Does the plea of State necessity, under which the power has heretofore been assumed, still exist? Did it ever exist in locali ties where the civil authority was un impeded, and ready to administer prompt punishment upon delinquents" These are great and absorbing ques tions which assume a paramount impor tance at the presenttime, in view of the surrender of the rebel forces to the ar mies of the Union, and the consequent closing of the war. Since then, all armed hostility, at least east of the Mis sissippi, to the authority of the General Government has ceased by the crushing out of the. rebellion, and whilst our own armies are ill process of speedy disband ment, is there the shadow of a pretence for alleging that any further necessity exists, if it ever did exist, for military trials of civilians outside the rebel States ? There is a growing repugnance among the people to these military commis sions, so called. The popular heart is beginning to yearn for the speedy re turn of the good old times when every citizen felt that he was under the pro tection of Constitutional law, and no man,whatever his offence or crime, could be convicted except after trial by a jury of his peers. Magna Charta The Great Charter of England—es tablished in the midst of civil war, and extorted from King John by the Barons at Runnymede contained, amongst other provisions, the follow ing great fundamental principle of liberty, which is still held sacred and inviolate on the soil of Great Britain: "No freeman shall be taken or im prisoned, nor will we condemn him or commit him to prison, unless by the legal judgment of his peers, or by the law of the land." The "law of the land," atige time when Magna Charta was subscribed by an unwilling King, was well understood to mean " trial by a jury of twelve men, impartially chosen from the hundred, or, at farthest, from the county where the alleged crime had been committed." The "judgment of his peers" or equals, referred to certain exemptions from the common jury trial, claimed and estab lished by feudal law, in behalf of priv ileged persons. Would It not be well for our rulers to take lessons of wisdom and justice from the example set by Englishmen more than six hundred years ago, and ex tend the same rights to American citi zens, which have always been accorded to British subjects since the beginning of the thirteenth century Yankee Fanaticism—The Next Object of Attack. No sooner is the war against the re_ bellious South over than the New Eng land journals start a new element of discord. The Abolitionists of that sec tion hammered away at slavery until that obnoxious feature has been de , stroyed suddenly and without adequate provision for the freed blacks, Now they have opened their guns ,against the Catholic Church, and judging from the vigor of their commencement, they will persevere until the whole country ;becomes embroiled in a war of scats. it ,seems to be the design of those puritanic Awakes to revive the intolerant period .of their Idetory, and to make the bal ance of itue R, w t y to conform to the standard .of ixtorulity, Egilitics and spiri tualistic " relisiou " Alley * design to at up. The Twins. For many years past a pair of twin , heresies have hadpolitical existence in 'this country. Theyhave ben 23 E! :int"' antitely allied, if not quite sii;eloaelY'Cbit-, netted as the celebrated SiataeObrothera • South Carolina has been thehome one and Massachusetts of the`. other: Each has been a Source of infinite an noyance to the nation. Either was ready, on occasion, to oppose the Gen eral GovernmeWand to announce their resolve to ,destrtthe Union. The cry of the one wa 10 Union with slave _holders," that of the other, "no Union with Abolitionists." They managed between them, after many years of dili gent effort, to involve the country in the terrible civil war through which we have passed. It would be difficult to say which is most guilty, which most deserving of the hatred of the people. Had there been no Abolition party there , would have been no cause for war ; had I there been no advocates for the doctrine ,of secession in the South the people of that section would have sought and have found peaceful redress for their grievances within the Union. No one seems better to have under stood the exact relationship of Massa chusetts and South Carolina to each other, and the evil tendencies of the pernicious doctrines of the two ex tremes, than President Johnson. In his celebrated speech, made in the Senate of the United States, on the sth of February, 1861, after the, Cotton States had seceded, he gave utterance to the following bold and truthful lan guage. We quote from the Congres sional Globe of 1861, page 748 : "I do not intend to be invidious, but I have'sometimes thought that it would be a comfort if Massachusetts and South Carolina could be chained together as the Siamese twins, separated from the continent, and taken out to some remote and secluded part of the ocean, and there fast anchored, to be washed by the waves, and to be cooled by the winds ; and after they had been kept there a sufficient length of time, the people of the United States might en tertain the proposition of taking them back. They seem to have been the source of dissatisfation pretty much eversince they were in the Confederacy; and some experiment of this sort, I think, would operate beneficially upon them." It is a great pity the proposition was not sufficiently practicable to have been acted upon. The only improvement we could have suggested would have been the crowding of all the radical Aboli tionists in the whole North within the bounds of Massachusetts, and all the secessionists per se of the South within the limits of South Carolina. Then no man of sense would ever have voted to allow them to be broughtback to trouble the country. Could this have been done it would have saved us from all the horrors of the war through which we have passed. Wanted Five or Six Shiploads of Yankee Spinsters. Our readers will remember that Gov. ernor Andrew, of Massachusetts, gave public notice, some time last winter, that the State over whose destinies he presided was somehow in danger, or, if not in danger, in serious difficulties in consequence of the alarming prepon derance of unmarried females within its borders. How it happens that this dis proportion between males and females in the Bay State has grown to such vast proportions, we know not; but, from specimens of Yankee females whom we have seen, and whose rantings many people have listened to, it is not difficult to imagine that a more timid Governor than even Andrew should be alarmed at their undue preponderance in any community. Is it possible that the young men of Massachusetts, sensible of the inferior quality of the homebred article, go elsewhere to seek wives? Or is the charge made in the pamphlet on miscegenation true, and has the Yankee race so degenerated physically, in and about the " Hub of the Universe " that Massachusetts matrons bear chiefly chil dren of the weaker sex? Whatever may be the cause of this anomalous condition of afthirs, we notice that there is a prospect of the nuisance being abated in time. By due course of mail, Gover nor Andrew has at length received an application for " five or six ship loads " of love-lorn Massachusetts maidens. Here is the document: PROVO CITY, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH TERRITORY, March 20th, 1865. Dear Sir : I noticed in the telegraph of March the 2d, that your Excellency in your message tells the Legislature of Massachusetts that there is in that State a surplus of nearly thirty-nine thousand women above the age of fifteen years ; and that you recommend that they be sent towards the Setting Sun to pleb - . up husbands ;—that is wright. " You will pleas Send me five or Six ship loads ; by the way of Panama,— up the Coast of the Pacific ; through the Gulf of California to Calio landing on the Rio Colorado :—we will meet them there with our teams and wagons; —and bring them here :—to a land of peace—a land of plenty—where the peo ple are of one mind !—and they Shall have Good husbands. " But, Sir, Remember that we want none but thehouest in hart :—those that are strictly virtueous indutrious ; pleas Send us a few Ship loads of those with their little ones and we will make them happy ; for here is Zion in the moun tains. " I have the Same Number of Sons that farther Jacob had ; ten of them want wives now and the other two will want them Soon : this from a yankee Exile from his home and the tooms of his fathers :—to wander in the wilder ness. * * =4:- 4:- " To his Excellency Gov. Andrew." It is barely possible some of the for lorn spinsters might object to the cus toms of Utah, but we have no doubt very many will be found ready to run the risk of securing the half, the fourth, the tenth, or even the fiftieth of a hus band, rather than go entirely unpro vided for. We congratulate the Gover nor, and his army of spinsters on the prospect thus opened to them. Negro Suffrage A portion of the Republican papers and leaders are zealously urging that the right of suffrage be extended to ne groes by the U. S. Government. They very naturally fear that Abolition rule must soon end if white men alone are allowed to vote—that it can be perpet uated only by a class of ignorant and idle stipendiaries who can be made to understand that in voting for the Abo litionists they vote for their own sup port in idleness and sloth. But it is said that president Johnson does not readily embrace this new dectrine. He pro fesses a regard for the Constitution, and that instrument seems to stand in the way of any and all Federal interference with the question of suffrage. Section 2, article 1, of the Constitution reads as follows : "The House of Representatives shall be composed of members chosen every second year by the people of the several States, and the electors iu each State shall have the qualifications requisite for electors of the most numerous branch of the State Legislature." "Now," says the N. Y. World, and it appears difficult to escape the argument. "Now if the Federal Government can not prescribe the qualifications for the elective franchise in the election of its own officers, it cannot, a fortiori, pre scribe the qualifications or the election of the officers of a State," —Notwithstanding Me surrender of Kirby Smith and the forces west of theZiasissippi, it is believed that the troops will be sent to Texas to protect the frontier and restore order throughout tbo Mete, Whether they will be detached from atill.Peartßier ment or forwarded under the corntda Gen. Sheridan remains to be seen, General Sherman on Stanton General Sherman's "short, sharp, and decisive" letter, says the Netv Yo*:,Tt7atid„Aouching / the treatment, he Ifts r*.iNi'atifrona Seare6lrikitantea; willicommand a large `share of pubyp ath . Mtiorf to-day. Te does not age yeti many or very, long words, bikt:he says enough to compel the Am:lei - Lean people, who; whatever their faults, have a keen sense of justice and a warm lot , e of fair play, to share in his indignation at the rank injustice done him by Stanton. All General Sherman asked, it ,seems; was that his official reportsshinild be given to the public. These reports, it must be remembered,; were made before General. Sherman knew of Stanton's outrageous misrepresentations of his conference with Johnston, and were not gotten up with a view to defend his reputation. But the plain facts in the case, as the World showed in the midst of the clamor raised by Stanton, prove Sherman, to have been as patriotic and prudent as he was disposed to be mag nanimous. Not a solitary one of the charges made against him was true; but Stanton has had the exquisite mean ness to withhold all the facts in his pos session which would have set the hero of the Carolinas right with the public. Our Washington correspondents, iu their telegraphed accounts:of the great review, state that on Tuesday when the crowd were loudly cheering iGeneral Sherman. Stanton had the amazing im pudence to acknowledge the applause by a most :condescending bow to the vast assemblage, as if he was the person whom they wished to honor. We have such confidence in the in tegrity of President Johnson that we do not believe he will long retain in his political family a man without personal or political honesty ; in his respect for law and for our civil liberties, that he will soon eject from the War Depart ment the man who never hesitates at breaking a law or trampling the dear est rights of freemen under foot ; in his courage and honor, that he will not long tolerate near him a coward and calum niator like Stanton. CAMP NEAR ALEXANDRIA, Va., 1 May 19. f DEAR BOWMAN : I am just arrived. All my army will be in to-day. I have been lost to the world in the woods for some time. Yet on arriving at the " settlements " found I have made quite a stir among the people at home, and that the most sinistermotives have been ascribed to me. I have made frequent official reports of my official action in all public mat ters, and all of them hare been carefully suppressed, whilst the most ridiculous nonsense has been industriously spread abroad through all' the newspapers. Well! you know what importance I at tach to such matters, and that I have been too long fighting with the real rebels with muskets in their hands to be scared by mere non-combatants, no matter how high their civil rank or station. It is amusing to observe how brave and firm some men become when all danger is past. I have noticed on fields of battle brave men never insult the captured or mutilate the dead ; but cow ards and laggards always do. I cannot now recall the act, but Shakspeare re cords how poor Falstaff, the prince of cowards and wits, rising from a figured death, stabbed again the dead Percy and carried the carcass aloft in triumph to prove his vapor. So now when the re bellion in our land is dead, many Falstaffs appear to brandish the evidence of their valor and seek to win applause, and to appropriate honors for deeds that never were done. As to myself, I ask no popularity, no reward; but I dare the War Department to publish my official letters and reports. I assert that my official reports have been purposely suppressed, while all the power of the press has been malig nantly turned against me. I do want peace and security, and the return to law and justice from Maine to the Rio Grande ; and if it does not exist now substantially, it is for state reasons beyond my comprehension. It may be thought strange that one who has no fame but as a soldier should have been so careful to try to restore the civil power of the government and the peace ful jurisdiction of the federal courts but it is difficult .to discover in that fact any just cause of o frense to an enlighten ed and free people! But when men choose to slander and injure others, they can easily invent the facts for the pur pose when the proposed victim is far away, engaged in public service of their own bidding. But there is consolation in knowing that, though truth lies in the bottom of a well, the Yankees have perseverance enough to get to that bot tom. Yours, truly, W. T. SHERMAN Sherman's Men When our children, reviewing the great events of this crowning season of the war for the nation's life, shall dis cuss the " giants that were in these days," there will surely be no prouder title of honor found for any American than this, that his father was "one of Sherman's men." Upon all Alie brave soldiers who have fought under differ ent commanders, and in different or ganizations, for the Union, a special task has been laid, and by all a special glory won. The Army of the Potomac, the armies of the Mississippi, all have done their work loyally and nobly. But it was the special fortune of the army of Sherman to strike at the heart of the rebellion in the most critical moment of the war; and the story of that mag nificent march which began with the fall of Atlanta to culminate in the fall of Savannah and Charleston, and the surrender of Johnston, has a dramatic splendor, and a visibly decisive bear ing upon the destinies of the war, which will insure to all who took part in it a particular hold upon the admiration, the grati tude, and the affections of their country men. This is strikingly illustrated in the feeling with which the people now regard General Sherman's straight for ward and eminently unconventional way of calling to a sharp account the jealous and unjust men who tried to abuse their official station for the pur pose of misrepresenting his conduct at the time of Johnston's surrender, and putting the hero of a hundred battles before his countrymen as an imbecile or a traitor. All men feel that this vehemence and directness of nature, which, yielding all deference to the candor and equity of a just Presi dent, insist upon bringing an un just secretary to the fruit of his own deeds, are precisely the qualities which carried their possessor, with hisarmy of heroes at his back, through the very center and core of the rebel states, down from the frowning Alleghanies to the friendly Atlantic. And as, regiment by regiment, company by company, or sol dier by soldier, " Sherman's men" pass through the loyal states and cities to their homes, they will everywhere be made to feel, in the spontaneous enthu siasm of the people, that republics are not ungrateful, but that the justice of I the popular heart can at once atone for the forwardness and folly of individuals, and anticipate the permanent, glorious rewards of history.-11 7 1 Y. World. General Sherman and the South. We quoted a day or two ago a strik ing passage as to the cessation of bad feelings between the brave men who had been fighting under Generals Lee and Grant. Rev. Dr. Fuller, of Baltimore, who recently returned from the South, sends a brief diary to a religious paper of New York, in which he mentions his interviews with Geuerai Sherman as follows : " Had several conversations with Gan. Sherman. He says that Johnston's army is entirely demoralized, but as to their sincerity in professing a willing ness to come back into the Union, he has entire confidence in it. 'ln case of a foreign war,' he remarked, should be perfectly willing to-morrow to put myself at their head. I should not have a single, doubt as to them. We ought to win such men in the only way they ought to be won—by entire confidence. They would never disappoint ukif we confided in their sincerity.' He except ed always Wade Hampton, saying he is onp pf . tbpsp bad' men who ought to bp killed. I refused t speak M It is stn!oil 't t lint - 4"oFerson pavist only article of inicury'or comp a nigosbip ix #li@ cop.fulement is a pible. Portrait of a Yankee. Many ihre the pictures which have bean drawn of the gerinhie New Eng land Yankee. The otuFacteryilcs are 86,fitrongly !narked tliatgey ly : be exaggeiated-into *icatuin. ie gaunt anatomy looking as if half starv e4thejting artaliposelthungpn them ablipedihoulclaY; theViindling shanks that terminate in ill-formed feet, which shuffle as they move; the lantern jaws, through which a candle would shine; the thin nose thatindicates unmitigated #llahness and 'etingi,nrKin - the, n3Oni• and the sharpest; tdirewisluiess in the Women the thin bloOdleas lip' that speak without being-opened of coward ice and cruelty singularly combined; the crane-like neck ; the locks of lank hair thinly scattered on' the skull—all these are physical peculiarities which unmistakably mark the genuine New England Yankee as a peculiar specimen of what would palm itself off upon an unsuspecting world for manhood. Their mental characteristic have been repeatedly described, but the latest sketch which we have seen is from the pen of one who is fully prepared to speak on the subject ex-cc/Ow:lra. Horace Greeley, alarmed, as he has a right to be very justly, for the fate of the poor negroes who may unfortunately fall into the hands of their philanthropic friends from New England, discourses as follows : We hear that many of the blacks, thoroughly distrusting their old mas ters, place all confidence in the Yankees who have recently come among them, and will work for these on almost any terms. We regret this; for, while many of these Yankees will justify that confidence, others will grossly abuse it. New England produces many of the best specimens of the human race, and, alongwith these, some of the very meanest beings that ever stood on two legs—cunning, rapacious, hypo critical, ever ready to skin a flint with a borowed knife and make (for others) a soup out of the peelings. This class soon become too well known at home— "run out," as the phrase is—when they wander all over the earth, snuffling and swindling, to the injury and shame of the land that bore them and cast them out. Now let it be generally presumed by the ignorant blacks of the South that a Yankee, became a Yankee, is necessarily their friend, and this unclean brood will overspread the South like locusts, starting schools and prayer meetings at every cross-roads, getting hold of abandoned or confiscated plan tations and hiring laborers right and left, cutting timber here, trying out tar and turpentine there, growing corn, cotton, rice and sugar, which they will have sold at the earliest day and run away with the proceeds, leaving the negroes in rags and foodless, with winter just coming on. We do not remember to have seen a better sketch of the Yankee character anywhere; and we do most sincerely pity the poor negroes who may fall into their hands. How bitterly they will curse the day that forced upon them the thankless boon of a freedom more burthensome than ever slavery was. An Interesting Case. Attempt to Extort $130,000 from A. T Stewart. the Celebrated New York 111 er One of the most audacious and deter mined plots to extort money' that has been recorded in the police annals of this or any other city was in part devel oped in an examination before Judge Dowling at the lower police court (Tombs) yesterday afternoon, - which, from the consummate skill with which the conspiracy was planned and set on foot, the position in society of the per son against whose liberty, if not life, the conspirators were plotting, and the sum of money to be extorted, excites considerable interest. The individual against whom the plot was directed was Mr. A. T. Stewart, the well-known merchant of this city, and the chief of the conspirators is Frederick Nassau, a sea captain, who claims to be a part owner of the ship Victoria Melville, now at this port. From papers on file at the court, it would appear that the conspiracy was originated for the al leged purpose of extorting the sum of 5130,000 from Mr. Stewart, and for this purpose he was to have been entic ed from his home in a carriage, and then taken to a certain place prepared in the upper part of the city, and there to be closely confined until such a time as he would be in a suitable frame of mind to sign a document granting the principal in the plot the sum of $130,9011, or give an order for that sum on his banker.— The only person who has yet been ar rested is this Nassan, and the plot was divulged by a man named James Dono hue, whom Nassau was very anxious to have to join him in the plot. Donohue listened to Nassan's overtures as though desirous of taking an actite part in the transaction, and then gave information to John S. Young, chief of the detective police of this city. Detectives Niven and Vaughn were immediately detailed to work up the case, and if possible ar rest Nassau, the chief plotter. After several days' watching the pretended captain was found in W4shington pa rade ground, and he was 'arrested and locked up at headquarters. Donohue then appeared before Justice Dowling and made the following affida vit against Nassau, which details the whole plot. James Donohue, of No. 118 Christo pher street, being duly sworn, deposes and says : That on the 19th day of May, 1865, Errick Nassau (here present) met deponentin Washingtonparadeground, and commenced talking with him ; that in course of the conversation he stated to deponent that he was the owner of the ship Victoria Melville, which had just landed with a cargo of iron, con signed to A. T. Stewart, and that he was then at law with Mr. Stewart, who had sued him (Nassan) for five tons of iron short ; he said that Stewart wanted to cheat him-out of his ship, and as Stew art was a rich man, he had formed au idea how he could get money from Mr. Stewart; that he wanted deponent to go and hand a letter to Mr. Stewart while he was going to or from his house, or the club where he resort ed, to meet him ; that he would pretend to be a foreigner, and -would wait at some distance from the place, where he would have a carriage; this was to take place on the evening of Wednesday, May 24, 1865; that he said after he would get Mr. Stewart into the carriage he would take him into his room in Thirty first or Thirty-second street, and there detain Mr. Stewart forcibly until he would sign a papergiving him (Nassau) one hundred and thirty thousand dol lars, and that he would tie Mr. Stewart in his room until he would receive the money from Mr. Stewart's cashier; that he would also compel Mr. Stewart to give him a paper to get his ship cleared, and that he would proceed to sea in ballast after shipping a crew and then go to England, where he would take deponent after giving him ten thousand dollars for his trouble in the matter; that after this foritwo or three days de ponent met him and kept going around the city with him; just before the time had arrived for the consummation of the affair deponent called upon Sergeant Young, of the detective police, who caused the arrest of said Nassau. Nassau was arraigned before Judge Dowing, who committed him for ex amination. In the meantime the detec tives engaged in the ease are in search of further evidence against the prisoner. —llr. Y. World of Saturday. That Committee The Committee on the Conduct of the War has disbanded; it was organized in 1861 to dictate to President Lincoln and persecute Gen. McClellan ; and having succeeded in both objects, theyconclud ed their labors by a puff of Gen. Ben. Butler and Secretary Stanton. But this endorsement of these two bloody fanat ics will not save them from condemna tion. Butler. is already in ,disgrace, while Sherman is after Stanton with a very sharp inatrunient, He is about to expose the darl. proceedings by which the was office suppresses truth and manufactures falsehood. The war being over this unearthing of villiany will afford Sherman a pleasant sunrier's amusement. The eyidence: and report of Gen:Sher- Man aubmiited to the CoMmittee on the dindnet of the War make over 80 pates of iiiaraiscript. It is claimed by his friends ta be a conwleteVrlication. of his Vith 4.o4neen! The Sherman• Stanton War. Regankir John Sherman 9 a Review of the Islllllcctlty—Very Cullom Fact. Drought ilil 4 filid — Stanton's Treachery and Hal .4ll4lolßhillgulty—HalleeitAis the he. , wilegtipqr(2enerais, &c., &v. • r Minn,,l;;:iiininunteatin in Wiel2lngton,Chron- I@T,ThECOtiitiioTtrnii:RTlr , 5-.-" j quarrel between two high officers Of the Vovarnment is always unfortu natkimseerrily, and usually injurious to each. This is especially so when they are werking in the same great cause— and that cause brilliantly successful, crowned with a gloriouspeace. Itis idle inaiqtinceakevidencea of passion eagerly' , pforntdgated by the telegram and press, and-it. is, .for kindly looker-on to take a dispassionate view to see if all this . heat is necessary. The writer of this knows both parties, and is certain-; ly friendly to each. The commencement of any difference was With the Sherman-Johnston con vention. This, if approved by the Presi dent; would have made peace between the Potomac and the Rio Grande. The objections made to this are included in three propositions : Ist. That Sherman had no power to make such a treaty.— The answer is obvious, that he never claimed or attempted to conclude the ar rangement. Allhedid "conclude" was a truce for a few days, and he then sub mitted, for the approval or rejection of the President, this important offer of a general peace. Even in arranging the truce he had it all on his side. Wilson was still moving and holding the outer coils of the net, while Sherman was building railroads and repairing roads and bridges, ready for the final spring if the arrangement - was disapproved. He gained every thing by the truce and lost nothing. Johnston was " corraled," and was kept so by this very truce, while Sherman was never more active in preparing for for future movements if necessary. It is said generals have no business to make truces, or deal with political questions, and that Grant was reproved for this ; but Sherman had made truces before, and for a year has been distinguished for his treatment of political questions without a word of caution or reproof from his superiors. The telegram to Grant, now published as an official order of an old date, was withheld from Sher man, and Sherman had been instructed to open communications with rebel civil authorities. The second objection is that the ar rangement recognized the rebel State governments and officials. This is the most serious objection, and amply justi fied the government in rejecting or modifying the arrangement; but the official papers show clearly that Sher man refused to grant this in any shape or form, until the order of Weitzel, is sued while Mr. Lincoln was present in Richmond, convened the rebel Legisla ture of Virginia and recognized the re bel Governor Smith. With this order before him, without a word of the con trary tenor, Sherman informed John ston of the order, and waived his previ ous obAtion to recognizing the rebel State auFhorities. Why shduld Sher man be denounced for submitting to the new President a proposition based upon this order of the revocation of which he had not the least notice? How unjust to arraign him for this, and then conceal the fact that he was acting in pursuance of the policy of the former Administra tion. The third objection is, that he recog nized slavery, and restored the old rela tions between master and slave. This is simply absurd. Sherman has repeat edly acted upon the validity of the pro clamation of emancipation and the laws of Congress abolishing slavery, and the idea of repealing or strengthening them by a military arrangement between the generals never entered his head. The official papers show that he urged John ston to announce as a "fact" the ex tinction of slavery—a " fact " that Sher man not only regarded as fixed, but as unalterable. The result wa.s, that slavery was not mentioned, but was left precise ly where it ought to be left. Time nervous fear that this question could not be left to the law and the Supreme Court did not disturb a purely military mind. This was the arrangement about which so much has been said. It disbanded the rebel armies, placed all their arms within our power, made peace universal; and it was purely conditional, having no life without the approval of the President. Now it is plain that the duty of the Government was simply to approve or reject it, and give no reasons, but issue its orders ; and this is precisely what was done by the Presi dent, and he did no more. Gen. Grant was sent to convey this order, and did his duty nobly and well, with generous consideration for his subordinate and fellow-soldier. Sherman did not hesi tate a moment, promptly terminated the truce, made a new arrangement with Johnston, and at once started for Charleston and Savannah, to send sup plies to General Wilson, then far in Georgia, and to close up the scattered links of his great command. His official report shows an amount of zeal, activity, patriotism, and wonderful ability not surpassed by any portion of his previ ous life. All this was going on while he was in utter ignorance of the wild storm of denunciation - that was sweep ing over the whole country. While he was supplying Wilson, arranging to catch Davis, detaching armies from his command, and preparin g for peace and home, time press and the telegraph, the pulpit and the rostrum, were ringing with denunciations. A letterOf a rebel to the London Times was universally quoted as the revelation of a plot to overthrow the Government. Cromwell and Arnold, and all that was desperate and violent, were suddenly brought to public notice. To defend Sherman, and even to be" people to "wait—let us hear from him,'' was to invite quarrel and insult. Timid people were pitying him and all connected with him. People who had slept sound in their beds at night, and made money every day dur ing the war, thought General Sherman had joined the " copperheads," and was no better than Jell Davis, and even hinted that he got some of Jeff. Davis's gold. General Sherman first nietthis "chil ling wind" as he was coming northward around Cape Henry to meet his army and surrender his command. He was then writing his official report. He firmly believed that all thefierce and most unreasonable calumny was organized by Mr. Stanton and General Halleck with the deliberate purpose to insult, humil iate, and ruin him. He then first saw Stanton's reasons and Halleek's insult ing order. He mixed all the falsehoods and malignity with these two official acts. No wonder that this gave tone to his official report, and under this shadow it would be read. It will soon be made public, and the writer of this ventures to predict that every fair-minded man who contributed to the clamor will, on reading it, regret his part. The rejection of the convention and the reasons of Stanton were given to the public at the same moment. They had the appearance of contemporaneous acts ; but they were entirely distinct and separate. The fact of disapproval was sent by Grant, and was entirely legitimate, and resulted well. Grant even did not know these " reasons." Not a shade of discontent could have arisen. Why, then, publish these rea sons ? The answer of Mr. Stanton is, that Gen. Sherman's order announcing the truce to his army made it necessary ; that he could not disappoint the hopes of the army, based upon this order, with out giving the reasons . ; that he got a copy of the order after Grant left and then penned !these reasons. The gloom of the public mind and his own escape from assassination, no doubt colored his statement, and suspicion, aroused by a desperate crime, lit upon the most conspicuous person, who, at the moment, seemed to thwart the na tional cry for " vengance. Sherman's arrangement breathed the spirit of the dead President; but it came one week too late, or one month too early. In either contingency Stanton's reasons would never have been issued. They were his alone, and are plainly marked with passion, but may have been pub lished without malice. But, it is said, why did Sherman issue this order to his troops? Why did he assume that peace was to exist from the Potomac to the Rio Grande? Why not wait until the arrangement was ap proved? The answer is, that it was ne cesagry to announce the truce to the army to prevent collision and loss of life. The order was to the army only, and expressly stated that the truce de pended-upon the approval of the Presi dent. Without a knowledge of the truce how could officers or men per form their new duties, and in what bet ter terms could a condltikul truce be expressed ? Sherirum talked to his achy slope, merely for their temporary action. Can any man read the order now with out approving it? Then. followed the advice of Halleck to ignore Grant; to insult Sherman, and to arrest the movements of Subordinate officers, not only without the knowl edge but in defiance of both of them.— And.this was accompanied by the mili tary offense of Haneck's disregarding a truce and actually invading another military - department to 'assault an ene my under, terms of- surrender. It Was fortunate that this order;;was counter manded. In Vine or an actual collision might have 'occurred in Violation of a truce between twciermies of oar noble heroes. For this, General Halleck alone ought to be held responsible. If he was of any service at all other than an expensive luxury, tied and labeled away where it was supposed he was harmless, he should, as a writer on military law, have been the last man to advise the brevh of a truce—the diem' " higher law." He knew that Johnston had surrendered, was await ing the action of the President upon that surrender, and that Grant, his su perior officer; was conveying that action to Sherman; and yet he advised a course that Could only be justified by the clear ly ascertained fact that both Grant and Sherman were traitors to their country. And then, why publish th . s order? What motive could possibly induce this? If some grave exigency justified the order, it should have been kept secret as the grave. If they found Sher man was playing the traitor, their pre cautions should have been concealed.— In any aspect the publication of this paper seems the grossest folly or the meanest malice. If justified by events, it was a blunder to publish their plans; but when viewed by the light of events it was a most gross public insult heaped upon a soldier while in the successful discharge of the highest duties. The writer of this does not know that either Stanton or Halleck authorized its publication, but he does know the withering effect it had upon Sher man's reputation, not for what was alleged in it, but from what was fairly implied from it. Why is not this ex plained? Who published it? Where was the public censor then Why not now announce in an equally specific order that the fears upon which it was based proved utterly groundless? If Mr. Stanton published this order, and will not now openly acknowledge that it was founded in error, he continues an insult and evinces malice. Then he must expect open defiance and insult, and neither his person nor rank can shield him. It cannot be denied that after this or der was issued, while the telegraph was under a strict military censorship, the public mind was poisoned against Gen. Sherman by telegrams since shown to be false, as that he refused to obey the summons of the Congressional Commit tee, and that facts relieving him from blame were notstated, as that theorder of Gen. Weitzel was approved by Mr. Lin coln, but afterwards withdrawn. And this; too, while General Sherman was beyond the reach of letter or telegram, actively engaged in his official duties. It is true that Mr. Stanton neither can nor ough t to control the press,and is often roughly handled by it. Yet had not an officer in Gen. Sherman's position the right to expect some effort, on the part of his department, to stay the tide of calumny, the very moment the return of Gen. Grant with the unconditional surrender of Johnston proved how groundless and foolish had been the idle fears at Washington. Now, it is plain that the true course is to publish the official report; to re spect the natural resentment of a soldier sensitive on account of a palpable wrong ; to avoid mingling personal feel ings with the general joy over great triumphs; to neither force nor oppose public judgment upon the merits of a controversy no longer important to the nation, and leave to the country and history to settle the credit due to the prominent actors in the war. The wri ter of this is not disposed to belittle either the services of General Sherman or the energy of Mr. Stanton, and would rather see both expended on the com mon enemy. The Plan to Pay Off the National Debt and Abolish Taxation A few days ago we published the de tails of a plan to pay off the national debt immediately and without taxation. The plan was to divide the debt—which is estimated at three thousand millions of dollars—into one hundred and fifty thousand shares of twenty thousand dollars each, these shares to be taken up by our wealthy men. In our edi torial referring to this scheme, we an nounced that, in order to start the sub scription, we would take two of the shares. The gratifying responses to this announcement will be found in another column. Already six hundred and forty thousand dollars of the national debt is subscribed for, as follows: Cornelius Vanderbilt 'ti SiOO,O4Xl H. A. Heiser's Sons, one share._ I 20,000 H. A. Heiser's Sons, for a friend.. 1 20,000 Robert Bonner '' 40,000 Jordan L. Mott I 20,000 James Gordon Bennett 2 40,1(X) Total to date It is of course understood that none of these subscriptions are to be paid up until the whole amount is subscribed for. It is no part of the plan to pay off a quarter or one-half of the debt, while capitalists who have withheld their subscriptions profit by the liberality of those who subscribe. There are enough rich men in this country to pay the whole debt before the Ist of January next, and it must be done. Then Con gress will at once abolish all taxation, and the Secretary of the Treasury will place the country in the financial posi tion which it occupied five years ago. After all, these subscriptions are but paying our taxes in advance. Commo dore Vanderbilt subscribes five hundred thousand dollars. In five years his taxes would reach that amount. It is better for the rich men and better for the poor men to abolish the debt and the taxation without delay, ending the present cumbersom system of collecting revenue and the espionage upon our incomes and our silver, and restoring the republic to the proud position of a nation which owes no man a dollar. It will be noticed that the six hun dred and forty thousand dollars already subscribed have been taken by half a dozen persons in half as many days.— Our Stewarts, Taylors, Coopers, Len noxes and Astors, we have yet to hear from ' • and the rich men in Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis and other cities and towns have not yet responded. The financial year ends in July, and before next January we ought to have all the Shares taken. The understanding is that no money is to he paid until they. are all taken, and that cash down is to be the rule when the subscrip tion is filled. Congress and Secretary McCulloch will arrange all the details for the receipt of the money and the dis charge of the national debt. The debt of England is only four thousand mil lions of dollars, and the English govern ment considers itself happy if, once in a while, it can reduce the debt three mil lions a year. But we want to show the world that, after raising the largest army in the world to suppress the largest rebellion the world ever saw, we can pay off the largest debt ever contracted in so short a space of time without waiting for the slow processes of taxation and gradual reduction. - We have had several offers, since the subscription was opened, for ten thou sand dollar shares. One gentleman said that he would be glad to have the Gov ernment take ten thousand dollars— one-tenth of his fortune. This state ment displayed the proper spirit; but we could not accept the offer because the price of shares had already been fixed.- It will be easy, however, for two ten thousand dollar customers to club together and take one share, and this process can be continued indefinitely, so as to embrace five, three, two and one thousand dollar subscribers. Or, when the twenty thousand dollar shares fail to be taken, we may invite smaller amounts. The former plan is, however, the more speedy and practical. There is no spectacle in his tory which can be compared to that of,„ a nation like ours paying off such a tree mendous debt without any aid from government machinery, and by a sub scription quite independent of the gov ernment. It stamps us as the greatest people on the face of the earth. It is better than giving horses and carriages to high officials, or presenting silver plate to successful politicians. It will ; be a monument which the whole world will behold with astonishment, and which future generations will wonder ingly admire. Who are the next sub scribers?—N. Y. Herald. Professor Cyrus. W. Mason dieclyester day, at his residence, in Fourteenth street, New ork, Deceased occupied ,a promi nent position in the Democratio,parly dur ing tine last Presidential c&PAp. 4 O:4: ae iSee retary,ol'tho Society for the Diffusion.'of Political Knowledge,' and as a, speaker:at pemocratic ;meetings, etc. lie Icsjqs . 0 flit literous faicaly. • ''; • The Male Population of the South Terrible Destruction by the War. Some of the facts disclosed by Lee's surrender show how frightful the male pipuiSion ofithe South havebeen waste d by'stlie wai. 'ln many localities it will be found to be nearly annihilated. A . few months: ago a general consolidation of companies and regiments took place in several of the'rebel etirpe; whole regi ments that once numbered one thous and men and more, being absorbed in single companies of less than fifty men. The following figures were taken from the rolls of Hardee's corps, including present and and absent : Ten regiments consolidated, 237 men ; three regiments, 210; twenty regiments 627 ; eleven regiments, 829 ; five regi ments, 456 ; representing 100 t 000rnen on the original rolls; one regiment, 201; eighteen regiments, 424 ; representing 10,000 Texas troops ; one regiment, 40 left out of 1,200; reserve artillery, ten batteries, 560 ; seven regiments, 419; eighteen regiments, 719. Single regi ments consolidated, and not represent ed above, showed the following num bers on their rolls: 21, 82, 16, 46, 124, 22, 50, 31, 185, 24, 41, 6.5, 180, 35, 50, 11, 42, 40, 100. Eight companies consolidated amounted to 35 men; five companies, 66; ten companies, 82; eleven compa nies, 59; ten companies, 64; fifteen companies, 54; ten companies in one case, 81; in another 69. The average in Lee's corps before consolidation was about 80 men to the regiment, and these Corps represented over half the army. General Bates' division has lost every General and field officer and three fourths of the men in battle, since the army left Dalton. It lost thirty per cent, at the battle of Bentonville alone. Other facts of the same kind might be stated, if it were possible to place the matter in a stronger light. Pardon of the Columbia County Pris The following article, cut from the Columbia Democrat of fast week, will explain itself. It has caused intense gratification in Columbia county, and deservedly so, for there never was a greater outrage perpetrated upon any people than the punishment inflicted upon these men President Johnson has pardoned Jno. Rantz, Valentine Fell, Benjamin Col ley, Joseph M. Vansickel, and John C. Lemmon, the last of the 45 men arrest ed last August, by the Abolitionists in the memorable "Cotionbia County In vasion." They passed through Blooms burg, on Wednesday of last week, from Fort Mifflin, to their homes up Fishing creek, where they will enjoy the society of friends and home unmolested, and live respected, as they ever have done, whilst their "sneaking, lying, loyal ac cusers," will find that a warm territory for them to inhabit, and may, perhaps, be compelled to flee the country. The arrest and punishment of these men, and their colleagues, was both il legal and unjust—for many of them were discharged without a hearing, and those imprisoned were convicted by perjured witnesses—and, hence, their pardon was demanded by every con sideration of justice, humanity and Christianity. We then say, so far, bully for John son. John W. Forney Forney, who allows Mr. Osbon to be tried by court-martial for a crime of which he alone is guilty, is thus esteem ed by the Springfield Republican It has disgraced respectablejourn al ism by its conduct. There is not in Paris to-day a newspaper more ready to de fend every act of Louis Napoleon than the Chronicle is to defend the Adminis tration. The day before Mr. Lincoln died it was forpeace—peace upon almost any conditions. Its proprietor hobnob bed with Pryor, one of the meanest leaders of the rebellion a few weeks ago —but then peace-and-clemency-doc trines were in the ascendant. Two days after Mr. Lincoln was dead the Chroni cle veered suddenly round to the hang ing doctrine of the new President. It saw the beauties of justice very sud denly, and ever since it has kept on this tack. I should not say this but for the brutality exhibted in its columns the other morning, in calling all persons who asked for a trial in the civil courts of the accomplices of Booth "sympthiz ers with assassins!" In other words, John W. Forney, the old and intimate associate of Jeff: Davis, accuses William Cullen Bryant, Horace Greeley and Henry J. Raymond, of being "sympa thizers with assassins." No bought defender of European government ever did a more disgraceful thing than this. Does Mr. , Forney suppose that the world does not know what he is after Let him have it, and welcome, if lie will treat honest men with courtesy.— We all know what he loves, what he has been very successful in obtaining, and we shall smile and pass on.— But it is unsafe to call the purest men in the country assassin sympathizers. They may turn and expose the hollow selfishness of his personal policy. Presidential Proclamations. President Johnson has issued a pro clamation of amnesty to all persons in the South who have taken part in the rebellion, with certain exceptions. The exceptions are, all who have held civil office under the Confederate Govern ment; all who have left judicial stations in the United States to aid the rebel lion • all who have been officers in the Confederate military service above the rank of colonel, and in the naval ser vice above the rank of lieutenant; all who have left seats in Congress to participate iu the rebellion ; all who have resigned from the United States army or navy to avoid resisting the re bellion; all who have unlawfully treated Federal prisoners of war; all military and naval officers of the Confederacy who were educated at West Point or the United States Naval Academy; all State Governors of the Confederacy ; all who left the United States to assist the re bellion; all privateers, and all those who have been engaged in frontier raids on commerce ; all who have volun tarily taken part with the rebellion, whose taxable property is over twenty thousand dollars, and all who have taken and violated the oath of amnesty prescribed in the proclamation of De cember 8, 1863. Those to whom the amnesty is granted are secured in all their rights of property, excepting slaves. The oath of allegiance must be taken by all who would obtain the amnesty. The President has also issued a pro clamation for the restoration of the Fed eral authority in North Carolina. W. W. Holden is appointed Provisional Governor, with authority to call a con vention for a return of the State to the Union. The members of the conven tion are to be chosen by loyal voters, and are to take the oath of April 2.9, 1865, to be eligible. The proclamation further provides for the collection of taxes, the establishment of post routes and post offices, and reinstatement of the U. S. Courts throughout the State. Little John Cessna This renegade Democrat has been se lected to represent the Abolitionists of Bedford county in the next State Con vention. A number of years ago when Joseph Guffey was one of the Represen tatives from this county, Cessna, on some question that arose, made a roar ing speech about Democracy an d eh arged Guffey with a want of zeal and fidelity for the party. Guffey rose and said—" Mr. Speaker, little John Cessna brags loudly about his democracy, but I have always noticed that the cow that bawls most loudly, cares the least for her calf!" Guffey was right. The little blatant beast of Bedford not only bawled like a cow, but, when pressed by the needs of his situa tion, was, like a cow, retrotuingent.— IVestmoreland Republican. The Democratic Party The New York Timex, a leading Re publican paper, with unusual justice and truth, says : " The life and strength of the old De mocratic party was its national spirit, From its earliest history this never fail ed to assert itself clearly, fervently, we may say, indeed, fiercely, on every question involving the preservation, or the enlargement, or the honor and glory of the country. In our great contro yersies with England, with France, with Mexico, it was peculiarly the war party. In every minor dispute with other nations, it was always the party most apt to plant itself on high preten sions and. 'extreme claims. In our do icteatio.Wairst it was, the party that al .ll?cep laberecl meet camas* to put down sectional discord and to etrengthen the bonds qf the Union." ;'.' • Letter froin the Rebel Oen. 'Johnston. WHY RE BIISSE➢7tiEREII RIB ARMY. The Charlotte, (N. C,) Democrat of May 1 . 5 says: „ We lay before our readers the follow ing letter . from Gun. Joseph E. Johns ton, stating the causes which induced him to make terms of surrender with Gen. Sherman. We believe General Johnston's conduct, and his refusal to continue the war after all hope of suc cess was vain, is generally approved ; but if any one has a doubt on tbispoint, the reasons set forth by Gen. Johnston will clearly show that headed correctly and wisely : CHARLOTTE, N. C., May 6, 1865. Having made a Convention with Major-General Sherman to terminate hostilities in North and South Caro lina, Georgia and Florida, it seems to me proper to put before the people of those States the condition of military affairs which rendered that measure ab solutely necessary. On the 26th of April, the day of the Convention, by the returns of three Lieutenant-Generals of the Army of Tennessee (that under my command), the number of infantry and artillery present and absent was 70,510—the total present 18,57 s—the effective total, or fighting force, 14,179. On the 7th of April, the date of the last return I can find, the effective total of the cavalry was 5,440. But between the 7th and 26th of April it, was greatly reduced by events in Virginia and apprehensions of surrender. In South Carolina we had Young's Division of Cavalry, less than 1,000, besides reserves and State troops—to gether much inferior to the Union force in that State. In Florida we were as weak. In Georgia our inadequate force had been captured at Macon. In Lieut. Gen. Taylor's department there were no means of opposing the formidable army under Gen. Canby, which had taken Mobile, nor the cavalry under Gen. Wilson, which had captured every other place of importance west of Augusta. • Tile latter had been stopped at Macon by the armistice, as we had been at Greensborough, but its distance from Augusta being less than half of ours, that place was its power. To carry on the war, therefore, we had to depend on the Army of the Tennessee alone. The United States could have brought against it twelve or fifteen times its number in the armies of Generals G rant, Sherman and Canby. With such odds against us, without the means of procuring ammunition or repairing arms, without money or credit to provide food, it was impossible to continue the war except as robbers. The consequence of prolonging the struggle would only have been the de struction or dispersion of our bravest men, and great suffering of women and children, by the desolation and ruin in evitable from the marching of two hun dred thousand men through thecountry. Having failed in an attempt to obtain terms givingsecurity to citizens as well as soldiers, I had to choose between wantonly bringing the evils of war upon those I had been chosen to defend, and averting those calamities with the confession that hopes were dead, which every thinking Southern man had already lost. I therefore stip ulated with Gen. Sherman for the se curity of the brave and true men com mitted to me on terms which also ter minated hostilities in all the country over which my command extended, and announced it to your Governors by tele graph as follows : The disaster in Virginia, the capture by the enemy of all our workshops for the preparation of ammunit,ion and re pairing of arms, the impossibility of recruiting our little army, opposed to to more than ten times its number, or o. supplying it except by robbicg our own citizens, destroyed all hope of suc cessful war. I have therefore made a Military Convention with Major-Gen. Sherman to terminate hostilities in North and South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. I made this convention to spare the blood of this gallant little army, to prevent further suffering of our people by the devastation and ruin inevitable from the marching of invad ing armies, and to avoid the crime of winging a hopeless war. J. E. JOHNSTON Return of the Soldiers-- Be Discharged The following official despatch will show what men are be immediately dis . WAR DEPARTMENT, AILICT GENERAL'S OFFICE, WASHINGTON, May 19, 1865. (W. F. Towlivrod, Albany, Nen. York: charged All volunteer organizations of white troops in (;en. Sherman's army and the Army of the Potomac whose terms of service expire prior to Oct. 1, next have been ordered mustered out. The musters out are to be made in the vicinity of this city, and therefore regi ments and companies sent to the State for payment. The troops for mustering out will be .First : The three years regiments mus tered into service under the call of July 2, 1862, and prior to Oct. 1 of that year. Sccond : Three year recruits muster ed into servive for old regiments be tween the same dates. Third: One year men for new and old organizations who entered the service prior to Oct. 1, 1864. The records of the State Adjutant- General will furnish the number of troops and particular regiments to be discharged as herein indicated. Please arrange a list thereof at once, giving therein the designation of the regiments , with places at which mustered in and organized, and furnish a copy of the same to the other superintendents. The said officers and yourself can thus be prepared to receive and care for the troops on their arrival-An the State. By order of Secretary of War. THOMAS W. VINCENT, Assistant Adjutant General Poor Stanton. (From the Chleinnattl Gazette, Rep.l A very significant little inoident oc curred (at the grand review), which,. having attracted general attention among the thousands immediately op posite the stand, and having been greet ed with an endless variety of com ments, I cannot refrain from mention ing. The animosity existing between General Sherman and Secretary Stan ton, on account of the latter's early and unqualified denunciation of General Sherman's terms of agreement, condi tionally made with Johnston, is doubt-. less well known. Occupying the stand, on General Sherman's arrival, were Generals Grant, Meade, Meigs, Han cock, and President Johnson, Secretary of the Treasury McCullough, Postmas ter-General Dennison, Attorney-Gen eral Speed, Secretary Stanton, Mrs. Sherman, Mrs. Grant, Mrs. Meade . , and a large number of other prominent Most of the gentlemen met General Sherman as lie entered the party, and grasped his hand. Secretary Stanton was seated between' General Grant and the President. General Sherman ap proached the President extending his hand. When Secretary Stanton rose and extended his, Gen. Sherman turn ed on his heel and seated himself at the further end of the platform, without even bowing a recognition. The slight was no sooner given than noticed by the multitude, who, in the enthusiasm of the moment, loudly applauded the act, and even laughed immoderately at the Secretary's discomfiture. Arrest of Robert M. Lee During the last sitting of the United States Circuit Court, Robert M. Lee, a member of the bar, was tried on the charge of fraud in the enlistment of men in the volunteer service, and was convicted. Before, however, the Jury had rendered a verdict, the accused dis appeared, and though diligent search had been made for him, stimulated by the offer of $l,OOO reward for his appre hension, he was not found until early yesterday morning, when he was ar rested at his own house, in Sixth street, near Arch. Information had been re ceived that he was at his house, and an attempt was made to enter the door, but it could not be opened, though great force was applied to it. A ladder was then obtained and planted against the back of the house, and a second-story window reached and entered. The fu gitive was discovered concealed behind a wardrobe. He was handed over.to the custody of Marshal Millward, and sent to prison to await sentence. Judge Grier was on the bench when the case was. tried, and in his charge to the jury tom meuted with a good deal of earnesliness upon the character of the offence as de veloped by the evidence.—PhOzdOhia: Ledger. Telegraphic conillklikdeatiou hunt . beau opened between Mel - At:obis and Ne o w Q.4atuna... Who Are to