NEWS FROM ALL NATIONS. —Booth is said to have been seen in front of the theatre just previons to the assassination with a companion by a Union soldier. They were wait ing for the President to come out to his carriage at the end of the second act. As he did not come, Booth reentered the theatre, and the deed was speedily consummated. —Dispatches from Richmond and Peters burg of last Monday, state that both those cities were draped in mourning, and that Gen. Lee has said he regretted President Lincoln's death as much as any man in the North, and that he believed him to be the epitome of magnanimity and good faith. —A terrible accident occurred at the Charleston Navy-Yard Saturday. A workman was engaged in drilling out the fuse of an old shell, when it exploded, instantly killing four and wound ing all the men in the yard, some of them fatally. —The steamer Lady Jane, for St. Louis, on Wednesday night, struck the center pier, of the bridge across the Mississippi, at Rock Island, and broke in pieces. All the passengers were saved except James Shultz. • —The workmen at the Brooklyn Navy- Yard, who were on a strike, have gone to work again on being assured b} r Secretary Welles that their grievances would be promptly attended to. —The 22,000 Rebel prisoners, at Point Lookout, through their sergeants of divisions, have expressed their abhorrence at the assassina tion, and their sympathy with the bereaved fam ily. —A freshet in the St. Lawrence last week resulted in the loss of more than twenty lives, and an enormous amount of property, including much live stock. —The new British Minister, Sir Frederick Bruce, was presented to the President Saturday. He made some remarks, to which the President re sponded. —lt is reported that Captain French, of the sloop-of-war William Tell, of Boston, was mur dered by his crew a month since at Pemumbuco. —Gov. Gurtin has issued a proclamat on ottering a reward of SIO,OOO for Booth if arrested within the limits of Pennsylvania. —The shock of a severe earthquake was felt in several of the Southern Counties of Califor nia on Wednesday. —The Tennessee legislature has ratified the amendment to the National Constitution ab olishing Slavery by a unanimous vote in both branches. —The Legislature of Ohio has removed the last restriction upon black suffrage in that State. Henceforth the negro of Ohio will go to the polls on the same terms as the white men, We noticed a few days since, the similar action taken by the Legislature of Minnesota. —One of the first official acts of Hon. D. S. Dickinson, as U. S. District Attorney, just appointed by the lamented Lincoln, was the mov ing of the adjournment of the U. S. Circuit Court on the great mournful event which is now casting the profoundest gloom throughout the country. —On the occasion of celebrating the fall of Richmond in Boston, Robert C. Wintlirop and Fred. Douglas spoke from the same platform in Faneuil Hall. The world moves. —The captain and mates of the ship Great Republic have beeu sentenced by the United States District Court at San Francisco to various terms of imprisonment, for extreme cruelty to sea men on their late voyage to that port. —lt is strange indeed that those who have daily and hourly familiarity with fire arms, should so often he victims to mistakes or careless ness. On Tuesday Lieut. Cantwell. of the Engi neer Corps, stationed at Fort Richmond, Staten Island, was accidentally shot and killed in the careless use of a gun by himself and a friend. He was a tine young officer, a native of Utica, N. Y. Graduated last year from West Point, and his death has added deeper gloom to that caused by our great national calamity. —A Baptist clergyman from Bellingham, Mass., preached by exchange in Milford last Sab bath morning. Neither in prayer nor sermon did he recognise the great woe that was oppressing the heart of every hearer. The omission was so clearly intentional, that at the close of the first service a committee of the church waited upon the unfaithful preacher, and ordered him to leave town immediately, which he did. —George Stone was tarred and feathered at Swampscott, on Saturday, for cheering at the death of the President; and Major Otis Wright, of Lowell, Superintendent of the Middesex Horse Railroad, narrowly escaped hanging for expressing joy at Mr. Lincoln's death. Fifteen minutes were finally given him in which to leave the city, never to return. —A copperhead blacksmith at Brook field expressed joy at the death of President Lin coln, and ou Monday morning li£ was given his choice of a coat of tar and feathers or immediately depart from the town, never to return again. He chose the latter. —A short time since a gang of guerrillas undermined the Little Rock and Memphis Rail road. The break was observed by the engineer, hut not in time to save the train from running into it, when it was surrounded by thirty men, who de manded its surrender, but a volley from the guard drove them away. A few passengers who rail in the woods were robbed. The train was soon re paired and arrived at Little Roek. —There are now, 2,600 men employed at the Portsmouth Favy-yard, and quite a fleet is get ting ready for sea. The Agamenticus, double tur reted monitor, is nearly ready for her trial trip,and it is expected she will be soon ordered to Europe. —Homer \V. Gilbert, of Adams, N. Y., telegraph operator at Colliersville, near Memphis, Tenn.. was, with five or six other men, captured by guerrillas on the 10th inst. They were paroled the next day and returned safely bach to Mem phis. —lt is said that Ex-President Millard Fillmore's house in Buffalo displayed no mourning on Monday, in striking contrast with other houses in that vicinity. The people gathered a crowd and covered the front of the house with ink. —On Sunday morning, the Congrega tional Church of South Dartmouth, being found destitute of mourning, the ladies.quickly removed their black vails, and with them made festoons for the pulpit, having previously covered it with a Union flag. —At New Haven, on Saturday, a party of soldiers marched over to Fairhaven. where a j treason-talker lived, called him out, and made him I give a formal bond ot $3,00(1 to appear when wan ted. and then returned to camp. —llarvey Ford, an old man in New Ha ven, was very much effected at the news of Presi- j dent Lincoln's decease, and after feeling much depressed all day, he dropped dead in the evening. —A passenger train on the Boston and Worchester Railroad was fired into in Worehester on Wednesday, the bullet passing directly under a gentleman's chin, taking off some of his whis kers. —Charles Gil vert, who has been on trial at Harttord, for the murder of Henry Calwell, in New Britina, a year ago hist winter, has been found guilty of murder in the second degree. —The french government has already spent $25,500,000 in the improvement of the French sea-ports, and it will require §17,400,000 more to complete the work. Reporter. Towanda, Thursday, April 27, 1865, THE NATION'S SORROW. A week of National mourning ; a week of National sorrow, of humiliation, of heart felt anguish ! As the lifeless remains of the wis \ the good, the gentle LINCOLN are borne towards their final resting place in the West, the people Hock to testify their respect, to manifest theirgrief, and to show how deep a hold he had upon the heart of the Nation. Business is at a stand-still ; for once the greed of gain loses its power ; the sombre emblems of mourning darken the streets, and the universal expressions of sorrow attest the public appreciation of the worth of the man, and of the great loss the nation has sustained Eulogies of the illustrious dead, are well enough ; panegyrics upon his sagacity, his statesmanship, his kind heart, overflowing with good will towards his fellow-men, de served ; but he who does not see in this awful and mysterious dispensation the hand of Divine Providence, fails to read aright the lesson of the hour. For four years ABRAHAM LINCOLN had borne burdens such as seldom fall to the lot of those in power; four long years of blood and carnage ; years of trial and gloom, armed traitors at the South assaulting the integrity of the Union, and partisan prejudice, and covert treason, endeavoring to undermine the Government, at the North. With a wisdom which seemed almost inspired ; with a pa tience unexampled, he had guided the Ship of State through the dangers which threat ened, until he saw a safe deliverance, and the dawn of peace which is, we fondly trust, to be the full fruition of our Coun try's trials and her prosperity. The same infatuation which brought up on the Country the troubles of the past four years, has struck LINCOLN down when he was preparing to astonish the world with an exhibition of magnanimity such as was never before witnessed ; as if in the Providence of God it was willed that Sla very should become so blackened by crime, so bated by the American people, so abhor rent to the world, that its extinction should be certain and swift. The cowardly hand which struck down the President, has struck a deadlier blow at the accursed in stitution, whose barbaric teachings are bloodshed and assassination, and the effect will be to exterminate,root and branch, the curse which has produced so much misery. Years of prayers and and preaching, of honest effort, had seemingly failed to break the power of Slavery-propagandists, up to the day when the first gun was fired at Fort Sumpter. It appeared as if the polit ical and social power of the Slave aristoc racy, was increasing with each hour From that position of power, they have been hurled by the madness of the men who had ruled the government for so many years. What agitation had failed to do, what it might not have accomplished in centuries, the infatuation of the South has done in four years. Slavery is dead to-day in the United States, never to be recusita ted. If it had any vitality, the murder of ABRAHAM LINCOLN has crushed out the last sign of it. Henceforth there is to be no place for it where waves the " flag of the free," and throughout this broad republic there is to be universal liberty. PRESIDENT JOHNSON. Gun has placed the destinies of the nation in ANDREW JOHNSON'S hands at a perilous time for himself and the country. We do not wonder chat he accepted the trust with trembling hands, for the stern task before him might well appal even hix stout heart; but lie did not shrink from it; and as he ac cepted it with an humble expression of his ; firm trust in God, we may look forward with j confidence to the future, assured that lie i will take no step backwards, and do noth ing that will imperil the high interestscorn ! mitted to him. We have all faith in ANDREW JOHNSON. He has been tried in the hour that most fiercely tried men's souls, and has not been found wanting. When every Senator from the South turned traitor, he, only, proved true. He stood like ABDJKI,, " faithful among the faithless." In the session of the Senate of 1800-1, treason was epidemic among the Southern members. One after another dropped away from the cause of the Union, until none were left but ANDREW JOHNSON. But he was not content to stand firm, merely, in that trying hour, when FOOTE, and BELI., and N ICHOLSON, and nearly every otfier leading Tennessean fell away, for we find that he hurled indignant denun ciations at the traitors, invoked the curses of heaven upon their guilty heads, and threatened them with what they as richly deserve now as then, and what we hope he will give them, the halter. The firmness, the unfaltering moral cour- age, the sublime devotion to the cause of the country which lie then manifested, have characterized his life since. He has been the staunch friend of the President since his first inauguration, has favored through out the most vigorous prosecution of the war, has given his nights and days to the task of driving the rebels from Tennessee, was among the first to see that slavery must perish with the rebellion, and among the strongest in urging radical measures for its extinction. He has been a personal sufferer 1 by the rebellion, and brings to his new po- i sition, not oidy a living faith in radical measures for the restoration of a lasting peace, but an intense sympathy with his fellow-sufferers, the never-flinching Union men ot the South, and a secret conviction that the men who have brought and have kept up this war, deserve and ought to re ceive the heartiest punishment that can be inflicted upon them. He believes not only in emancipation but in confiscation, and, above all, in hanging. I hose who have known ANDREW JOHNSON longest love him most. He has won for himself, from these who have been asso-1 dated with him, the most ardent attach. ment. lie will win, in like manner upon the country. There need be no fears enter tained of him. He is the man we need in this new emergency. The demands of jus tice will not be sacrificed by him to the sen timental claims of mercy that have been set up in behalf of the greatest criminals this country ever saw. Let us teave the cause of the nation in his hands, in the con fident assurance that he will execute his duties faithfully and meet, without shrink ing, the heavy responsibilities of his posi tion. ASTOINIMNG NEWS FROM SHERMAN. The latest intelligence from Gen. SHER MAN is calculated to astonish the country, and strip that brave and hitherto popular General of the laurels he has so nobly earned The War Department publishes the terms of surrender agreed upon be tween General SHERMAN and Gen. JOHNSTON, as follows : MEMORANDUM. Memorandum of bases of agreement made this 18th day of April. A. D. 18(55, near Durham's station, and in the State of North Carolina, by and be tween General Joseph E. Johnson, commanding Confederate Army, and Major General William T. Sherman, commanding the army of the Uni ted States, in North Carolina, both present : First. —The contending armies now in the field to maintain their statu quo until notice is given by the commanding general of either one so its oppo nent, and reasonable time—say forty-eight hours— allowed. Second. —The Confederate armies now in exis tence to be disbanded and conducted to their seve ral State eapitols ; there to deposit their arms luid public property in the State Arsenal, and each offi cer anil man to execute and file an agreement to cease from acts of war and abide the action of both State and federal authorities. The number of urms and munitions of war to be reported to the Chief ot Ordinance at Washington city,subject to the fu ture action of the Congress of "the United States, and in the meantime to be used solely to maintain peace and order within the borders of the States respectively. Hard. —The recognition by the Executive of the United States of the. several State governments, on their officers and Legislatures taking the oath pre scribed by the constitution of the United States : and where confiding State governments have re sulted from the war the legitimacy of all shall be submitted to the Supreme Court of the United States. Fourth. —The re-establishment of all federal courts in the several States, with powers as defined by the constitution and laws of Congress. Fifth,- —The people and inhabitants of all States to be guaranteed, so far as the Executive can, their political rights and franchise,as well as their rights of persons and property, as defined by the consti tution of the United States and of States respect fully. Sixth —The executive authority of the govern ment of the United States not to disturbe any of the people by reason of the late war so long as they live in peace and quiet, abstain from acts of aimed hostility, and obey laws in existence at any place of their residence. Seventh —ln general terms war to cease ; a gen eral amnesty, so far as the executive power of the United States can command, or on condition of disba dmeut of the Confederate armies, and the distribution of arms and resumption of peaceful pursuits by officers and men hitherto composing the said armies. Not being fully empowered by our respective principals to fulfill' these terms we individually and officially pledge ourselves to promptly obtain necessary authority to carry out the above programme. It is hardly necessary to say, that this agreement was promtly rejected by the i'resident, and Gen. Grant immediately dispatched to Gen. SHERMAN'S army with instructions to commence offensive opera tions. It appears also, in aggravation of this fatal blunder that Gen SHERMAN had ordered Gen. Stoneman to withdraw from Salisbury and join him, thus probably open ing the way for Davis to escape to Mexico or Europe. For from the reports, it ap pears that Jeff Davis and his Cabinet at the time of the negotiations must have been under the protection of Johnston's army. CONDITION OF THF. SK WARDS. A despatch from Surgeon-General BARNES, dated Sunday, 9 o'clock, p. in., says that Secretary SEWARD is doing quite as well as could be expected. FREHERICK SEWARD is somewhat stronger, more conscious and less restless than he has been. FROM HARRISBURG. HARRISBURG, April 17, 18C5. Our brave armies, led by skillful generals, con quer the enemies of the republic, capture the eap itol of the Southern Confederacy, drive out the Congress and the President, dash on in pursuit of the retreating generalissimo and his broken and dispirited columns, eut off their retreat, surround thern with a wall of thundering cannons and fixed bayonets, and finally force them to surrender.— Swift as lightning the news of these successes are carried from city to town, and village, and hamlet, and the people are wild with joy. Night or day, whenever the news arrives that Petersburg and Richmond are captured, and Lee with his army has surrendered, the people give vent to their feel ings of joy and gratitude. Flags are thrown out, cannons boom, and shouts rend the air. The Pres ident, ere these movements, which resulted so glo riously commenced, leaves the capitol of the na tion to visit the army. He is greeted with shouts and hurrahs wherever he is seen by the soldiers. While the battles are going on he remains tit the front to encourage the army and counsel with the generals. He visits Richmond and holds a levee in the palace of the pretended President. He meets those who have for four years fought to de stroy the nation of which he is the head, he advises measures for peace upon honorable terms, he be comes more than ever the idol of the people. All think that longed-for peace is just at hand, and he, the President, is the very man of all others to hasten the time, when on the night of April 14, a dastardly villain, a cowardly ruffian, a black hear j ted murderer, rushes into the theatre, quick as thought sends a bullet through the head of ABBA- j I HAM LINCOLN, rushes upon the stage, brandishes a ! dagger and disappears ; at the same time another i I demon by deception gains access to the sick chain- j ! her of WM. H. SEWABU, Secretary of State, cuts ! his throat, breaks the skull and otherwise wounds i j his private secretary and son, and escapes unhurt, j Mr. LiNcoLN lingers till morning and expires; dies ! when the affections of a whole nation are entwin ing around him, when the people love him as a chief magistrate was never loved before, loved for 1 his honesty, his unselfish patriotism, his benevo- j lence, loved for his unostentatious goodness of heart, his pureness of motive, his kindness of dis position, and his simple christian integrity. : Again lightning sends out from the national cap- : itol the mournful tidings through all the land. At ' first the cities hear the dreadful tale of sorrow and ' contradictory reports run along the telegraphic wires, people are alarmed, anxiety is depicted in every face; but at last the confirmation of the re- j port comes with terrible crushing weight, and men mourn as for a brother dead, women weep bitter j scalding tears, and strong brave men who have j stood unblanched before the death dealing batter ies of rebellion, turn aside in order that their sobs ! be not heard ; mourning is in every house. Surely a just Clod hath a controversey with this nation. ; May we not hope that he has reserved this great est affliction, this direst calamity, this most dread- ! ful judgment till the last, or must we believe that this is but the beginning of still more terrible judgment in store for us because we have not yet i repented of our national sins. The good people of Harrisburg had made exten- | sive arrangements for celebruting our recent vie- j Tories on the 15th. The celebration was to be in deed n great affair. Adjutant-General Russell was to have charge of the whole proceedings. The citizens of the county had been invited, arrange ments made to have out all the military of the county, a baud had been sent on from the front, an oration prepared and all the preliminaries ar ranged for a grand illumination in the evening, but alas' how different was the feeling on the morning of Saturday, and li JW differently did the city ap pear. The thousands of flags were dressed in mourning, the buildings were draped in black, sad ness and gloom were on every countenance. Men and women were in such a state that they did not know what to do, and were prepared for anything, either to sink down in sorrow, or in the anguish of their souls to cry out for revenge. With that feverish restlessness it was unsafe for any one who rejoiced at the death of Mr. Lincoln, if such a wretch could be found, to give expres sion to his feelings. One miscreant intimated that he was glad that the act was done, aud declared that it should have been done two years ago. If the officers and some of the more prudent and con siderate of the citizens had not Interfered he would have been hung up in the streets. The ladies of of the city were determined that such a man should not live, he was finally rescued and sent to camp Cnrtin for safe keeping. Every one must rejoice that the threat of the excited populace was not carried into execution, had they been, the result no one can foresee. No man with right feelings will justify " Lynch Law," still a man who will he so imprudent as to use such expressions when men are so much excited, should sutler some for his imprudence if not for his recklessness. The citizens met at the Court House at nine. Several addresses were made l>y men of the two political parties, hut all breathing the same spirit of grief and mourning. At four there was a Union prayer meeting held. X. BSL. Rev. G. \Y. GATES, of Elmira, N. Y., will preach at the Baptist Church in this place, next Sabbath morning, April 90th, at 10 o'clock. Also at Moliroeton, at 2 o'clock p. m. We hope to see a good attendance. It is now certain that the scoundrel who attempted the life of Secretary SEW ARD, lots been arrested." The police had ta ken possession of the house of Mr. SVRRATT, after having arrested the inmates and sent them to head-qua tors. The}* were search ing the house, late at night, when a pecu liar knock was heard at the basement front door. A detective opened it and a man disguised as a laborer entered. The officer turned the key and put it in his pocket, when the laborer wanted to retire but was not allowed On cross examination his muddy rlothing was found to be of finer texture than laboring men. Secretary SEWARD'S colored door-waiter was sent for and the man fully identified as the assas sin Maj. SEWARD and Miss SEWARD, who were present at the time of the attack, al so fully identified the man. He is now a prisoner on board a Monitor. BffL. A Letter from J. Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Licoln, written in No vember last, is published. It consists prin cipally of a rigmarole of stale piattitudes, expressed in a mock heroic style, about the wickedness and injustice of the government in maintaining its authority over tin; whole country and the righteousness of the rebel cause ; but there is one point in it of some consequence. It discloses a plot which Booth had then formed to make a prisoner of President Lincoln. No intimation is giv en in the letter that at the time it was writ ten he contemplated taking the life of the President. It is now reported that General Dos ser, one of the rebel chiefs of the Shenan doah valley, has also asked to be allowed to surrender, on the same terms as those granted to Mosby, though a few days ago the rumor was current that, he having pos tively refused to give up the contest, his men had deserted him en maxse, and he had gone to North Carolina to join Johnston's army. The statement that BOOTH had been seen in Pennsylvania, turned out to be false. As yet there has been no clue found as to his whereabouts—at least no public announcement made of any. That he can long evade the vigilance of those search ing for him, seems incredible. It is thought by many at Washington, that lie is still hiding in that city. It is said that the authorities have infor mation which render it nearly certain that Booth's horse fell ith him on Friday night (14th inst.,) and it is believed, caused a fracture of one of his legs. It is also re ported that he has divested himself of his mustache. B*!L. The guerilla Mosby, we are inform ed from Winchester, surrendered his entire command to General Hancock at Berry ville, V a., on I uesday of this week. The terms of the surrender are similiar to those accor ded to General Lee by Gen. Grant. The number of Mosby's men is thought to be about seven hundred. 'lhe \\ ashington National Inteliigen j er of Thursday, says the facts developed by the official investigation show that there I was an organized conspiracy, the object of which was the destruction of all the lead ing officers of the Government. Prominent j officials, who have access to a mass of evi dence which cannot be published, make | similar assertions. On Monday last, at the headquar ters of the Sixth Corps, A riny of the Poto mac, the eighteen battle-flags taken by that corps in the late campaign, were formally : turned over to the government by the brave boys who captured them. Gen. MEADE per sonally thanked each man, and highly prais ed the courage and devo'tion of the entire army. ien. Hal leek succeeds Gen. Ord is command at Richmond. Gen. Ord relieves Gen. Gilmore in command of the Depart ment of the South. I®" Col. Dent, late of Gen. Grant's stall', succeeds Gen. Shepley as Military Gover- i nor of Richmond. A Southern girl at school at Sarato ga was expelled last Saturday for saying that was the happiest day in her life. THE ILLUSTRIOUS DEAD. FUNERAL CEREMONIES. The Remains on the way to Springfield. THE FUNERAL. WASHINGTON, Wednesday, April 19, lKt>s. The great and solemn pageant of remov ing the remains of the nation's revered and beloved Chief from the White House to the Capitol is closed. Never was such a scene witnessed where each and every one of the vast throng moved in silent sadness, as if bearing the burden of a personal bereavement. It has been the writer's fortune to witness the funerals here of John C. Calhoun, Henry Clay, and President Taylor. These were solemn and imposing, yet the event of to day was as the loss of an ardently loved parent to the death of a stranger. • At the White House the body lay un coffined in the center of the East room, as heretofore described, the head resting to the north. From the entrance door at the north-west end of the room were placed the pall-bearers, next the representatives of the army, then the judiciary. At the corner the Assistant Secretaries of the De partments. First on the eastern line the Senators of the States ; next the Diplomat ic Corps, who were out in very large num bers and in full court suits. Then the la dies of the Cabinet Ministers ; next the Judges of the Supreme Court. Next, in the center and in front of the catafalque, stood the new President, and behind him the Cabinet Ministers. The members of the Senate joined their left, the House came next ; at the corner turning southward stood the Kentucky delegation divided on the left by the delegation from Illinois ; on the" south end were first the clergy, then the municipal delegations, the Smithsonian Institute, New-York ("hamber of Commerce, Common Councils of New-York and Phila delphia, Union League delegations, and around beside the southwest door of the Green Room were stationed the citizens' delegations from various quarters. The ; space surrounding the body to within ! about 10 feet was filled by a raised plat form, upon which the several bodies des cribed above stood. Throughout the ceremonies, within this leserved space on the north corner were seated the officiating clergy, on the south corner the mourners, consisting of the late President's two sons, his two private sec ; retaries, and members of his personal i household. Mrs. Lincoln was so severely indisposed as to be compelled to keep her j room. The recess of the double center J doors leading to tin* large vestibule was | assigned to the representatives of the press. The coffin was surrounded by an extend ' ed wreath of evergreen and white (lowers, and upon its head lay a beautifully wrought cross of Japonicas and sweet, elysium, at the center a large wreath or shield of simi lar flowers ; but by far the most delicate j and beautiful design was the anchor of white buds and evergreen seqt by Mr Stetson of the Astor House, and placed up | on the foot of the coffin by the lion. X. 1). i Sperry of Xew-llaven. Its flukes were made by an ingenious insertion of a calla j lily, its ring and shaft a bar of choice white buds, Lily of the Valley, and the like. The ! east room was heavily and plainly shroud i ed in black cloth and crape. I The services were peculiarly impressive, and the quotation concluding I>r. Gurly's ! sermon was most aptly appropriate and significant. The sermon over, the body was removed to the funeral-car for trans portation to the Capitol, the pall-bearers, mourners, Diplomatic Corps and Supreme | Court riding in carriages, all others walk ing- The exercises had commenced at pre cisely 12J o'clock, and it was 2 o'clock as the cortege from within began to move out I at the north-western gate. Nothing could have exceeded the entire | decorum and good management through j out, and to Assistant Secretary Harrington i is the credit due of arranging details so minutely that nothing was omitted, iioth | ing went wrong, and that everything was i done just at the proper time. Outside the great gateway leading from J the White House grounds and extending far back upon all the radiating streets were the thousands of delegations from nearly every loyal State who marched into line at i proper moment and moved on with the im i mense mass following the hearse. 1 DEPARTI RE FROM WASHINGTON. WASHINOTON, I). C., April 21—11:30 P. M, The remains of ABRAHAM LINCOLN have departed from Washington. All of the moral part that is left on earth is now on its way to its final testing place beneath [ the sod of his cnoscn State. The last trib ute of honor that could he paid by the peo ple of Washington, was tendered this mor ! ning in escorting the body from the capitol ; to the cars. All day yesterday, despite the rain, until 0 o'clock, thousands wended their way up the Capitol steps, into the grand rotunda, I by the bier and coffin of the President, and I then out at the eastern entrance. The poo i pie clung to their friend with tenacity, and ! their silent homage was deep and fearful. At 7 o'clock this morning the Congres j sionul escort, the Illinois Committee, Gov. j Ogelcsby and Staff, Gen. Townsend, of the | War Department, and all others who, by invitation or appointment, were selected to j accompany the remains to Illinois, assem bled at the Capitol, where a guard of two ! hundred men oi the Veteran Reserve Corps were assembled to escort the remains to | the cars. A large number of distinguished persons were also present to pay their last | tribute of respect to their ruler and chief— President Johnson, Lieut.-Gen. Grant, Bre vet Major-Gen. Meigs, Brevet Major-Gen. Pucker, Brig.-Gen. Howe, and others. Rev. Dr. Gurley at 7:15 o'clock offered up a fervent prayer, and at 7:40 o'clock the , body was placed in a hearse by twelve or : derly sergeants of the Reserve Corps, and was escorted to the depot by Lieut.-Gen. Grant and staff and President Johnson, who j were followed by the Cabinet in carriages, consisting of Secretaries Stanton, Welles, ['slier, Postmaster-Gen. Dennison, Attorney, Gen. Speed, Commissioner of Indian Af fairs, Hon. W . P. Dole, Commissioner o . Patents and Pensions. A large number of officers followed on foot, and then a great concourse of citizens. On arriving at the depot the coffin was I placed in the car assigned for the convey- j ance of the remains, and at 7:45 Rev. Dr. Gurley made a final and touching prayer. At ten minutes before 8 a pilot engine, handsomely draped, started in advance ; and at exactly 8 o'clock the engine bell j slowly tolled ; other bells tolled in unison, and the train slowly moved off, the Cabinet Ministers and others standing uncovered till the train passed out of the depot. ARRIVAL AT BALTIMORE. The funeral cortege arrived from Wash ington at the Cowden Station of the Balti more and Ohio Railroad Company, about 10 o'clock, the train bearing the body and escort being in charge of Gen. McCallum and Joshua W. Garrett, President of the road. On the platform were assembled Oov. Bradford, Lieut.-Gov. C'ox, Oen. Ber ry and Staff" the Hon. W. B. Hill, Secre tary of State, the Hon. Robert Fowler, State Treasurer, with other officers of the State Government, Mayor Chapman, and the City Council of Baltimore, Major-Gen. Lew Wallace, Brig.-Gen. Tyler, Gen. Mor ris, Brig'.-Gen. Kealey, Commodore Dorin, Capt. J. Howard Welles, Capt. Rods Kent, and other officers of the At my and Navy. Amid the tolling of the city bells and firing of minute guns from the forts, a pro cession composed of military and civic so cicties, under command of Brigadier-Gen. Lockwood, was soon formed, Provost-Mar shal Col. Woolley acted as Grand Marshal, and march taken to the Exchange, where the remains were laid in state in the ro tunda. The noble columns of the rounda place were draped with black cloth, and the walls covered with the same material. The gal leries were likewise draped in black. From the base of the dome four large national flags, starting from each cardinal point of the compass and meeting in the centre, hung in graceful folds over the catafaque which was erected, immediately beneath the dome. The catafalque was richly draped, the floor and sides of the dais being covered with black cloth. The canopy was formed of the same material—rich folds drooping from the four corners, and bordered with silver fringe. The cornice was adorned with silver stars, the sides and ends of the dais being similarly orncmented. The in terior of the canopy was of black cloth, gathered in fluted folds to a central point, where was a large star of black velvet, studded with thirty-six stars, one for each •State of the Union. The floor of the dias, on which the body of the dead President rested, was bordered with evergreens, calla lilies, and other choice flowers. Upward of 10,000 persons succeeded in obtaining a view of the body, but double that number were denied the coveted priv ilege, as when the hour of 2 o'clock p. in arrived the coffin was closed and the re mains escorted by the military to the de pot of the Northern Central Railroad. At a few minutes past 3 o'clock the funeral train was wending its way towards Har risburg, Pa. LEAVING BALTIMORE. 1 The funeral train started from Baltimore at a lew minutes past three o'clock p. in. by the Northern Central Railway, Mr. Du Barry, the General Superintendent, having' charge of the working of the road. \\ il liain B. Wlison, the Superintendent of the telegraph attached to the line, was also on the train, provided with a pocket telegraph instrument, to be used to communicate in formation in ease of necessity. Every pos sible pains had been taken by Mr. Du Bar ry and his associates to render the situa j tion of the passengers comfortable. Upon reaching the State line at 5:30 it was found that Gov. Curtin had arrived I from Harrisburg in a special train, accom panied by his staff, consisting of Adjt-Gen. | Russell, Quartermaster-Gen. Renolds, In | spector-Gen. Lemuel Todd, Surgeon-Gen. | James A. Philips, and Cols. R. B. Roberts, I S. B. Thomas, Frank Jordan, and John A. I Wright Gov. Curtin joined Gov. Bradford, i who was in the front car with his staff, ! sonsisting of Adjt.-Gen. Berry, Gen. Ed ! ward Shriver, and Lieut.-Cols. Thomas J. | Morris, Henry Tyson, and A. J. Ridgeley. j Gen. Cadwallader, commanding the De j partment of Pennsylvania, accompanied ; Gov. Curtin. The General's staff consisted | of Major VV. McMichael, A. I). (.'., andCapt. L. Howard. The greeting of the Governors of Penn | sylvania and Maryland, adjoining States, was exceedingly cordial. The remains of the President left lfar risburg on Saturday, reached Philadelphia I the same night, and were placed in Inde j peudence Hall, where they were viewed by ! thousands of mourners. The programme I from Philadelphia is as follows : Leave Philadelphia at 4 a. m. of Monday, the | 24th. and arrive at New York at 10 a. ni. Leave New York at 4 p. iu. of the 25th, and ar- I rive at Albany at 11 p. m. Leave Albany at 4 p. m. of Wednesday, the 26th, ; and arrive at Buffalo at 7 a. m. of the 27th. j Leave Buffalo at 10:10 a. in. same day, and ur ! rive at Cleveland at 7 a. nt. of the 28th. Leave Cleveland at midnight the same day, and j arrive at Columbus at 7:30 a. m. of the 20th." I Leave Columbus at Bp. m. same day, via Colum ; bus and Indianapolis Central Railroad, and arrive ! at Indianapolis at 7 a. m. on the 30th. Leave Indianapolis at midnight of the same day, ' via Lafayette and Michigan City Railroad, and ar rive at Chicago 11 a. m. of May 1. Leave Chicago nt 9:30 p. m. of May 2, and ar rive at Springfield at 8 a. m. of May 3.' Andrew Jackson, Jr., adopted sou j of the late President Jackson, accidentally | shot himself while hunting near the Her mitage, Tennessee, on Monday week, and I died on the Sunday following of lockjaw, j He was a son of Mrs. Jackson's brother, j Samuel Donelson, and a cousin of A. J. j Donelson. He took his adopted parent's | name, and inherited, at his death, the Her mitage, and a large cotton plantation in I Mississippi, both of which, however, passed | out of liis hands. lie was fifty-six years I of ago, and leaves a wife, daughter and two sons. The sons cast their lot with the rebels, both entering the army. Samuel, I the younger, was an officer in the rebel ! service, and was killed beyond Chattanooga. | The eldest brother, Andrew Jackson, is a i Brigadier-General in the rebel army. He j terminated.his military career in the sur render of Fort Morgan, in Mobile harbor, ! to the United States forces, at which time ; lie was taken prisoner, and is now in our hands. Senator L. S. Foster, the new Vice j President, was born in Franklin, New-Lon don County, Conn., November 22, 1805, and is a direct descendant of Miles Standish. He has been a member of the General As sembly of Connecticut, Speaker of the House, Mayor of the city of Norwich, and I nited States Senator to which position he was elected in 1855, and re-elected in 1860. At Roxbury, Mass., on Tuesday, a party of men, including some of the most prominent citizens of that city, numbering; oue hundred, called on Mr. John M. Way, Mr. Franklin W oodside, Mr. Charles Davis, Mr. Win.S. Shattuck, Deputy-Sheriff Brad ford S. Farrington, and Mr. Haskins, and compelled them to display and cheer the : flag, and in some cases to promise that they ; would never agan utter a disloyal word. flea? The following is the official account; of the number of men and arms surrender-! Ed by Lee: Paroled prisoners, 26,115; small arms, 15,018 ; cannon, 159 ; colors, 7L _ Sigr The greater part of the army of the Potomac was still near Burkesville on mon day, hut it was thought they would soon be ordered to move toward Richmond and I Petersburg. The Assassination of President Lincolr, and the Attack on Secretary Seward We publish the following statementx r give a reliable and accurate account of tl assination of the President, and the rim, derous attempt upon the life of Secret SEWARD : AFFIDAVIT OF MAJOR RATH BONE. Dixtrii t of Columbia, City of WaxhiiiyUm ** Henry R. Rathboric, brevet major in tl„ army of the United States, being j above the stage, including the railiij.r ' about ten or twelve feet. When the party entered the box, a cus i ioned arm chair was standing at the end i the box furtherest from the stage and n,-„ . jest the audience. This was also the ii<- ;tr . | est point to the door by which the buy . I entered. The President seated bin, self > this chair, and except that lie once l-ft the j chair for the purpose of putting ~nli. ! overcoat, remained so seated until lie w ;i , I shot. Mrs. Lincoln was seated in a cha : between the President and the pillar in • centre, above described. At the opp,,sit,. I end of the box—that nearest the end f; ■ stage —were two chairs. In one i f the : standing in the corner, Miss Harris seated. At her left hand, and along ? | wall running from that end of the box: the rear, stood a small sofa. At the end • this sofa, next to Miss Harris,this dep. was seated. The distance between t! .- I pouent and the President, as they w, n • j ting, was about seven or eight feet,and t! distance between this deponent and • door was about the same. The distan, - | between the President, as be sat, and t, door, was about four or five feet. The ,1 according to the recollection of this l x • Deponent then returned to the t>"X. found the surgeons examining the l*r, - j dent's person. They had not yet discuv Jed the wound. As soon as it was disenvt cd it was determined to remove him fr the theatre. He was carried out, ami ti deponent then proceeded to assist Mr- Lincoln, who was intensely excited,ti li the theatre. On reaching the head of' stairs, deponent requested Major Potter: j aid him in assisting Mrs. Lincoln aer - I the street to the house to which the In - dent was being conveyed. The won:; which deponent had received had l> bleeding very profusely, and on read-: - i the house, feeling very faint from the 1 - 1 of blood, he seated himself in the hall.a --| soon after fainted away, and was laid up the floor. Upon the return of consent j ness, deponent was taken in a carriage t i his residence. In the review of the transaction, it is th I confident belief of this deponent that t time which elapsed between the disclnu-' of the pistol and the time when the assas sin leaped from the box, did not exo' l *' thirty* seconds. Neither Mrs. Lincoln n Miss Harris had left their seats. H. R. RATH BONK Subscribed and sworn before me 17th day of April, 18A5. A. B. OUN, Justice Supreme Court, D 1 GEO. F. ROBINSON, a soldier and nurs< who was in attendance on Secretary Srwf on Friday night, has related circumstantial ! the proceedings in the chamber, front wlia , it appears that it was through his hr ;,Tt and determined endeavors that the com"''' mation of the murderous designs ot fiend were frustrated. According to ROBINSON'S narrative, FßE ,: RICK YV. SEWARD, Maj. SEWARD and Mr. " lV ZELL were all wounded on the stairway. heretofore mentioned in this correspondent As ROBINSON opened the door to learn t |il cause of the disturbance without, a " | l struck at his breast. In his hand he be long knife, the blade of which appeared t-