The daily Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1863-1866, June 08, 1865, Image 1

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L-NOLUME, LXICTIII---NO. 149.
alOshrgly igasefte.
LA,'I'EST NEWS
BY TEWZGRAPH.
LATn EUROPEAN ADVICE.
,;#; „Of . : TWign*L',AICA-
. . .
The"..Alabama'srl)evredatigns
Distittese
MIES
DEIUNII KLUB tea Logan slating%
IitCONDITIONAL REFUSAL. PREDICTED
111V78 OP %TEM DI9IEO
Franc and Our Meilen Emigrants.
TRINCE NAPOLEON CENSURED BY THE EMPEROR.
; . :
SALES OP AsiEtticAi SECURITIES
ffMMEMIMI
„;, IletaireX, Join T.—The steamer 'lien fmm
,Liverpool, - May 37th; 'MC QllOraitOwt, May
MO; Wendt beta with two dayr later: news '
In the House of 'Commons; on the 26th alt.,
,
. Mr J. Walsh sited Lord Palmerston w hether
I,r -1 4 Government had received from the l:hilted
4 kthei ail fermal - oMebildenithd fOr coinPalso•
_
time to American subjects tor losses sustained
. .
- by the,Alabunacir soya/ow Confederate cruiser
anieia ttilaii:tiiiibedieliiitridth parts.. _
Lord Pilmerstan sable correepandenes ha d .
.
be golog on faV some time between tMtialli
410IMUMMIlle Oa. the prises ttheit ll l die Ali-
bast and other wines of the seine tind. Titers
~: Matte& received within the last thw,flays fro
. thee coneepandence on the subject t hro ugh Mr.
Adana bas th ere Mid not yet been time to reply
to It. • lie might: add' that •In that eirrosoond
- ens each Goierateent had . stated its views of
the case.. The question had been' &Mosso” in
the moat friendly and amicable terms. .. .
~ .
Mr, Baxter asked Lori Paleteston whether In
. '';• lodTig M. thei thawed aspect of America; Dec
- i 'Lllfitlertri - "Genrument, either separately; or In .
convention or In conjunction with that of the
• , United Steen, would consider tie propriety:Of
sending a squadron to the coast of Cube to ef- •
~., ,feclually terminate the elan trade., -
, . . Lord Palmerston said that twelve months ag o
t eL , ike Government Invited the Government of the
Uelted•Mates Id participate - In Its 'measures on
the west . coast. of Africa ; but difficulties arose
. • • offmitesest Of- neutral .belligerent rights-which
, fxreanotbe tuaremie, and in the present alterol
• . state of thins Her „Majesteis Government had
r ., •., -. Wheat- the 'application' to' the United Blake,
•• .stettng that their cruisers employed' that ser
i tfition_irtiskf hi ren s'
ited huh ertery privriego and
t . courtesy which belonged to a friendly nation,
;,, .1 - ' and that former dlfficolties no longer existed.` .
, No representation hart been made as to eodpera.
11 2 Gan on the Cohan coast, lint If they assented to
ex blonde on the Allican coast he had odonlit
• , 4 •-•-. - , •
the would also cordially codpettate on th e toast
", •. - 'of Cuba. • . • ~• . :
- - The Madan Timer, In ad editorial, trusts that
,t-i, • ~. there la nothing ill the Alabama ' Affair. which
.:.
,- '"
, ,'" nindiauseatty apprehension of rupture eitheir
..i...
,- now or at a futhrotime.The American 'cam%
.1 .:: mem at. ahn his Indeed suffizedt. but each a
'calamity move beeripeetedwhen a maritime and
;,,,
, leading State enters Into a contelt With an ent
:,, -2".... ergetie and active enemy. It is wi th a clear
..,- . , conscience that the Government which declined
:, • ' ~- ' 'end .itrltation -to interfere In mar, even by
offers, now stands on its : legal ilffhta, and re.
. fuses to make' any compensation when It has
‘;: - . ._ - , ,
'• The Lofiffon Dak- Nora hopes that if Presil
dent Johnson does 'sot intend to give up the
.': ...,; elalte. he will boon permit, so Munn way or
';'... •,. 'heather the matter may be brined t 0 a settle-
I
;.t, ' • meat.. ilt :adia that::Lord Palmerston's reply
... • .-- , ...34stedght was-very unsatisfactory. It would
have bens wry may to say that formal and oil
dal demand hall 'been made by the Celled
Stan Government, or. that it had not. ..
: . The Ano trusts that some member of Palle
- . 'nett will WSW on knowing whether a definite
' . ' demand lia* been made, and whether any new
- demands hays been made slam Johnson's as
j . c- , -,• • power, and it adds: "We have not
. , the slightest doubt es to the Inevitable reply."
'• • . • The oonnYandenCe of the London .iforwily
red siya that the 'correlpendence can lead to
' - •
only one 1 1E 3 4 namely.; an. unconditioned re.-
final on our part to Indemnify the Americana
• far the losses comnianed by the chances of war.
.The rota, in another editorial on these claims,
says: Not a Moen precedent can be produced,
.2.. - we belles fo r the allowance of a elm claim
. under similar clicantstances. - ...,
." - r The , Dents questions - whether the American
. •' • fkrreenulest did their. duty with 'edemas vigor
.' ',against these privateers, and sayiq'ltwas doubt
lees' our put to prevent • the Alabama, and her
.. .
reasons from., putting • to . . sea, If . evidence of
• equipment could bn obtaluedi• but whose part
-•- to impure slier they had' given us the dip"
• - As It wall. the Vatted States Oovernmeat prefer
, .•' sea to employ ell their avallable fleet int:docks.
Ong the enemy's coast, leaving in .to„ guard
' 7 ' every outlet of our awn as .best we could.
- . ' - thirely tt would be somewhat , unreasonable, as
well as untenable In law, to bold us Ilatde for
every case In which the Confederates were too
quick for us. For those subjects who did all In
. . their power to thwart the honorable Intentions of
the Govesnment we bare not s word to say; Ma
~ . Abele IlMeartee not the ins Of the nation. w
Mr by
has suffend far num than individuals
the untoward escape of the Alabama.
The sews of Jeff. Davis' captive created sun:
cation and anxiety, and the hope was generally
' =premed that he would be treated in no via
._
. h .T ni h v e e L emen Tbhe ro . o e n r f t e dl a a te y a T h k Sae n s :
news calmed considerable anxiety; politically it
' -'- 3,, Wa "B s - eensidered
pide'with = favorable. . The possibMty of
s Mexicey
ioB or bu bo,
..,' ; on. a. demand Tar extraditn; „In ogland
tin event of
Jeff. ' Davis lining , made -hla euipe,.: has
:. ' beur"dellnltly extinguished, and the Fatale
• will *welt with extreme interest the news, as
thelsydrit In whlch he is likely tribe dealt with,
' - not merely from its
life
on the• few rondo-
Ing years of the of •an - Andividnal, . hat be
. Mine of the effect It mnst haveyrn the national
, . ~repittetioataifateregmenalons: , Those, how
* -..--;- cur; who know the American character beat,
and -who an aware that ; excepC.,under a sadden
excitemether are amongst the moat peuable
people In the world, have little fear of the moult.
••": •-•. Before ths-neweinsereeleved of the capture
: . ' ' `of Mr: Ditto it 'rointlittol to uphold . the ;re
'Bari:age Cheesier says : Business in 5-93
beads bee been active, siting from purchasers
' tbr Americans and sales for the Germans.
The bank of reightud on the 25th reduced
I - ,. its mite of discount Item 434 to 4 per cent. Funds
have been firmer since this MOTemcat, and
. -the.. depend for discount tolerable: • .
,• • c.'' '''''. Iriaircm—The - Parts - eorreidaiident of the
L Tines says that the .PG6* my narrowly escaped
' . punishment for hung plibllsh.ealarmbut news
about recruiting In the United States, and Says
i•
t• - . that the emly comet fact In. its previous:ante
: • •.-,.. -VMS la that!Andra I:urea is going oat to re
relieve Ad miral ; Bosse , and will not be charged
wlth any excepdonalmlssion.whaterer and have
~,, •,.. '' :no other powers titan those /Aid by his prootem
' ... _ •tifite Farts Coruffarttonart of the 24th Says: We
, , learn that the
,Gleyernment of the United State:
', - has taken measures' to repress 'any attempts to
~ . • a ff ect Illegal isdhament,. and pot a stop to any
•ims undertaken with the objeccof prey
,, , - = d en ' expeditions sedan Meade:: in violation
', . ' of the Federarlswa. Instructions to this effect
r.'
..base been forwarded from Washington to the
United States Attorney at New York; who at
once book the necessary measures for the prompt.
execution cribs same.
i , ...,. The weekly, return! of the bank .OFF.rance
t . ` abow on Increase of twenty millions of francs in
.. ' y. . the amount al money on hand.
A •- - , The Tycoon of Japan has innovatori that ho
. „ prefers paying the Indemnity stipulated (Cr by
, I the convent/on, to opening the 'Maud - Sea of
't -, '' " ' Silienessaka. _ .
... The Liverpool Hreadstufts market Is doll and
' ' 'tomb's'. .- It 'chanson, 13pen ea & Co., Signed f t:
V CO., and others report Flour dull and nominal.
Wheat inactive with a downward tendency.
. . ' Coltman with a decline of 3 per cent. Titers
l'.. ''
' • - la mete et the decline. . The profillon market is
quiet and stead..
, Gordon, Bra& M Co.; Wakened, Nash M Co.,
Mon Beef quiet and steady. Pork has a down.
1 '.
.'
•- ' wad "rodonoY. Bacon' quoted al an advance of
• : • . . 443 5 1. DUX (Mel sari steady. Coffee steady.
;.; • ' _ltice - Onlet and firm. Pettoleuso-TBoult,Beelsh
t, , ... z afthireportinalledista.; - - ••.•
/ „,Xlinid. &hal*. -, •.•.. •
~ lack for'
'two day s 8080 ewe s, ,
leCOlalea to
speetages:ui close s -•
quiet'
Lando", May r . .taftre lated 'aloof Anerican
'.';... ; ;IlloW 1101 . 161 'Il iir% o73 Paft iutoOul coo
ti.„00.
0 .
iSSX;.7 ,
Arts, ' 33.--Licruse heavy; rotates Misc.
R
-- : tabsteig c .--ILdenOMMlsy ri; ma.
- . Ing ~Tllie SUPtecillepoloso tut wrlttetta let
,. --'' '' - - Maid Fenn Tfandemi• - ;slrougii. censuring Ade
YANA" la Ponies. - lie says the Mat Napoleon.
i . • "4 W7akibel discilunit li the array sad then In
albs twt. TIM Ol'oo 1131sho loin jiff /skew
jii• : * tropiztokriet. from thou= coaft. • : •
~in g la 1:;p:MI'. AbO se.
/: ,'• AhlemiP spOecet lee toi_sa htir , peel if ..
(;,
, '- , - . ..iinolia r um , roirraes...:,...: -- ;J
, ~., - -lbsoli slim: Mie Flocs Is :Feeieer . .ee IF,
Li .... ...4::;=.111www;r41.7. ' .-
ti , ta . l l, "
- ' ' ' ' • • : •
x . • - i;- •
-- ~~ -~r
UMMi
THE
JPIY. 41141111 VI APHID.
DISAGREEMENT BETWEEN USHER AND. MILAN.
• ' ,
'THE PRIBIDENTVDEFINITIVE POLICY.
Situations foi Wounded Soldiaa.
DEMME% 17PON THE IMEASITRY,,
4 5 33 Le crraerlS 7.aeolis4
THE OISPUTED FRENCH TOBACCO,
New YOU', June T.—The Iffereli's Fortress
Monroe special says : Jeff. Davis' health Is very
much impaired. Smelt:al attendant waits on
him deny. The palest vigilance is observed
respecting visitors inside the, feet-
The:Hei•ardis Washington special tors The
rumors of a dimgreement between : Secretaries
Usher Ind Harlan: have been snugly exaggera
ted. There Is unfriendly feeling between them,
lirc4rthi out`-of cesium appOlitments and
contracts. .A difficulty has also arisen relative
to the Nano Railroad Comm y. claim tO
have completed forty miles of the road, as re..
quiredThly law. and to be entitled to a certain'
amount of government bonds stipulated to be
issued to them when that portion of the road
was completed. Commissionerewinning:Anted
to examine the road, whose - report Mr. Harlan
has receded, and other commissioners hive been
.F .N l : ed. u m ir B special 'says: It Is not yet Silly de
termlned where tokvirSeffenton Davie. • It may
be in Baltimore, or even In Phllidelphin.
Ex•Govemor Brows, of Qeorgls, goes borne
on parole; to Olio Orman andhrini back the
Bute to its first love.
Mr. Boyce, of South Carolina. is said to be on
tood.l.eropmtibibiartiddent:'; • '
The Prettdent% definitive policy wall bs re'
nivel till atter the trials are OTer.
. _ .
- Tiara are dow about sixty thousand sick and
wounded soldiers In the hospitals throughout the
country. TLL number is being rapidly reduced
.by discharges of contralescents:. .
The rule has beef adopted - that In all cases of
appointments, where - vacancies occur, which is
not essential should be Immedlately Ailed they
shall be kept open until sconerwouwted °Ricer or
soldier shall be found competent for the posttlow.
Ali minor places in lhe departments :ara being
filled, as they become vacant , .- with wounded or
disabled sol Ors, - Ind applications hom others
, The ••gins& !peeled 'sayer Secretary Heed
lecb. In order to- meet al- dennimds alma the
Treasury, has decided to pay 50per cent. In enr
rency, and 50 per cenL mitificides of
debtedneas, on all claims over $9,000, and all er
cept thbae of the aymy:
It. W. Gillette, San., of New Lebanon, Colum
bla may, Now- York, by letter inform the
Clerk of the Supreme Courtof this. District.. that
be is retained by-some of the friends of Jeff. Da+
via, as counsel for the latter In the trial under
the infiletmentlbund.ort llsilsSith of Illy.
spode tali: 'The Items...limn
aaaerts with great pewithemem that the Govern
ment has not only not decided to try Jeff. Dar
• els beforeihe Civil Court of Lida - Diatrlctibit it
- has not decided to try Mai before any den tribn
nal. It intimalcs yery , clearly that his trial will
Lase place. betbre a military commission.
The Mar saYs preparations are MAIM forward
to try Davis before a civil court in about ten
Thetaidgo crossing the Rappihannock is being
rebuilt, and the old short line- From Washington
toitkehmond•sall be Ineuta94.lW-• few day&
' iftEted • French. tobacco in Rich:
mend, is now in course of shipment to Franco.
The most of it, was found unharmed by MS
great flin to that city,
The Tnlowser *pedal saps: Colonel George
C. Ifrgers, of the Fifteenth l llnoia Veteran Vol
unteers, has been bratetted Brigadier General a
the instance At Generals Grant, Logan, and
Blair, j . . .
MHZ% FKO SOUTII CAHILL'S.
The Chivalry Rathfied with the Change
HILiOiDSIIOO ILIPIDLT WIPAIRE
The Testimony in the Conspiraoy Trial
DEATH OF JUDGE SMITH, OF WISCONSIN
Publleatles of Itupiivanced TesSimins7
THE LIVES Cf SEVERAL WITNESSES ENDANGERED
Bensbtary Seward at Cabinet Meetings
.i4A3I.ItII,I_II:I2):IHMU.O:•I.I.Ijfai;LA
NM! ,TOlll4 Jtme7.7-The Herald's (*mei
pondent t Colniabia, the Caplet of South Caro
lina,
represents thit the chivalry of that iltata,
are rapidly sectimmodatlng themselves to the
altered eondition of affairs under the restoration
of National authority, and'generally anpear
rather gratified at the downfall of the rebellion
since:, and'thot gfi lE has - lift there IMpoverieht4
it has elven them the long coveted peace. The
magnificent imonentek. sweep . of General Sher
lbrough 'their Stale deemed" give the
South Carolinians their first realization of the
power of tie National Government.-
The eplendld success of that march destroyed
their faith in the mushroom.finstitation of Davis,
and eairaiiii them are now _ glad to be once
ma
ay
more considered en 4se of the grisi R erpublic.
The railmadiof 'the Beata are being , rapidly
repaired, and in a few weeks the transportation
facilities will bd as complete as they were before
the.i• •It is sald'thic Trenholii;the late Beivetary Of,
the Treasury, was very recently quietly Bnng
withldsfamilyaL Abbeville; f 3: C. If ke has not
already been , he probably soon will be taken Into ,
custcarby the national authorities.
The Teem' Washington special of the 6th,
says: In the conspiracy cue It is probable that
the testinsemy will not be closed WV Friday-. as
'the defence has several witnesses to examine.
and the Primegutton has to reserve:considerable
rebutting testimony to be affaed when the de.
-feacets coachnleiL . .
= The - death of Judge'AL l D. of
sin, Tax Commissioaa for South _Carolina, is
announced. It occurred while bulge way from
Beaufort. Judgeßmlth, it will be ..recollected,
was the demaeratie-Judge who, *in' 1853, pro
nounced the Fugitive Blue Law uncoustituticta
al In the case of Garland Va. Beath, for the res
cue of Glover, an escaped slave
-
A special to the release, dated. Washington,
June .r, says: The summed testimony, snr
rePtlllonste Published by ,Ben. Pitman. has
greatly endangered the lives of the witnesses,
,none of whom a r e still in Canada. Dr: J. 'Ma
rkt. one of the wimeesee„ ,lea cultivated and
well
physicn
b g n pr tl o m ssainon o ,
f a edc ev id ently n e n n e e ly a
truthful. Indeed, after concluding hie :cattalo-.
ny before the Court, Gen. Grant being present,
rose and steed that he knew the witness, and
desired to vouch for his credibility.
Dr. lierritt.was baaaght sot to return to Ca
nedri both by his 'friends hem and his wlfathere,
but he persisted In going to settle up his bust
neer, intending to return here Immediately.' He
has not been heard from.
The Grind Sire of. the 'United States Grand
Lodge of Odd Follows has issued a circular
reasserting the Jurisdiction of that body over :
all the subordinate lodges of the Order in
the lately Inurreetlonary States and ta
tting them to send delegates to the annuli Ne:,
Donal Conventicre to take place In Baltimore On
the 18th of September next. 7 -
• A. special to the,rthiete from 'Washingtonan
the 6th says: The Alabama delegation has see
m:ailed In Impressing upon the Executive the
Idea that they have ceased to be tatter*. They
urge the appointment of Judge Parsons as NW
tary Governor, a man who like themselres was
a traitor until sutjagated, The ofilenra, of the
Alabama Ellen regiment are urging the appoint
ment of anothersaan.
. . .
&creasy tknrird attended -the Catdnet, meet
ing to-day, but was unable to 'remain through
Oencral adult has released irons the : Old Cap.
hal Pdson all the rebel woended who are will
-
tog to take the oath oralleganee. • About 6,000
prisoners who have already
. takenthe oath, ot
alkglancemilitscuirthe.raleased. ~ :
OPIRIOW,OF SOUTHERN:NEWSPAPERS
BoniMarolina Ovemut with Ron .
orrion BEING BROUGHT.TO LIGHT
CnicrimaTlA_Jose o.—ltut Comemeee4!ACTpt
lump &iota aloha Ito* stalienk
Johreals, reltedeleftftwerft fteti
elli the pieple to tie lon of their slim prereV ,
ded th at they, ant boated by the mew 1 : 4 ' 44 e of
tble.
TEliciatioAN't 0. - ;..aolotdebse they'
the Bute Ist:Frei= byre astillemie Wets*
min um* what imbelitamool Jaw ligoOrtT,
hoe Wooten to the tudettimate absent. I
rg.thr.fou., emMeee 44 o 141 0
to tight Lalloelgomety, Alabama,
a htiaktrada lateen ogemeli apt ;are
=Wag teplali tretitsa Wareage
---
DAILY
THE CONSPIRACY TRIAL.
II1111111110:1 OF WITNESSES__ BESHIBB.
• ..Weetwron,June T.—After aLebort time
'spent in secret ioliakm, eceuldernble delay
Dom the ninetittendanee of witnesses, the testi
leor4 Metaled. •
George goose, (eigored), was examined by
- defense, and ter:lifted 'that tbe dny on Whlchhe
New Dr. Mudd on a bproed near his house was
alter the asiisalnatum. • - •
. _
Richard Edward Skinner (colon:di wawa
that hated been a alive of Mrs; Thomas, mother
of Daniel J. Bolls, whom I hare 'Moira thirty
.
years his reputation as a tieth.tellee is bad, hut
wild not say I would not believe ltim *under
w o n bare hemdgentlemen say theywould not.
There being no farther witnesses pressmt Mr.
Ewing stated there remabitel to be called - in Dr.
Mudd's case thlsteek 'teritamsee, none of whom
lived over twenty.four mail from Washington.
His eubsenahadbeen talscatied,as he was in
formed last evening, that a number of there bad
stated they had not been subpoena.
Recess till two deloe.k—When John Whorton
was called, and testified that the prisoner, Ar
no% was in his employ . at Fortress Monroe,
from the 2nd to the 15th of April; he performed
his duties faithfully. I received a letter from
him the latter part of March, before he entered
my employ.
Mr. Ewing then moved that the translation
of the cipher letter, alleged to have been found
at Meothead City, be attickerom the record,
for the remit that It bore upon its face an eel , :
deuce that It was fictitious, and that upon the
.plainest roles of evidence ii was wholly Medulla
sable, Inasmuch- as the letter was to cipher.
The handwriting had not beta identified, and
had not been them to have been addressed to,
or been In the possession of anybody connected
with or charged to have been connected with the
conspiracy. •'
Judge Bingham etatod that it was alleged In
the .chargett and specilleatiobs that " this. con
spiracy was entered intoity the. ; parties named
• and by others unknown. The principle was , well
settled flint a letter written and never deity!
ered was admlseable' on a Oil of conspiracy.
It bad been shell' that Booth plotted the meas.
ideation with the agents of the rebellion in Can.
ada, who weighed him out the prise of blood,
and that it fell to the lot of one of the mantra
-tors to go to Washington to strike a murderous
blow in aid of the rebellion.
The objection of Mr. Ewing was not sustalned.
Miss Minnie Pole' testified, for , the defence, to
seeing Arnold on the "20th, 27th and 99th of
March, at Hookatown.- • •
. Judge Holt stated that baring learned that the
defence would not call any witnesses to impeach
the charades of Me, Weidman; he would call
seeersl witueues for the lIIIMCII/1011.'
John.R.yan; testified—Weiclnan's reputation
for venteity and aprightness has always been
good. dOn't believe:he would telt a falsehood;
in efinversation with me about the time of the
exupation of Bichmond he rejoiced at - the pros
pect of the reetcraticei of the Union. '
frank 81111 testified that Watchman was a
'trtith-tellintand icon] man. Jllll . lO/1 P. Haring
'testlflefito the same effeit.;
John T. lbdiehatilsitififsl that he commenced
boantingut Mrs. Surratra, in Washington, on
the-16tirof Yebraaryv that he saw Payne there
• once- intakfast, and Atterott several times at
'meals. Paine was known' "by the name of
Ward. Witness last saw John &mat with
PayriV, and notieedl3coth In the parlor frequent
ly; ntrer saw Harold at that house. Witness
lest rain John gurratt on the Stb of April, when
Le was going to New_ York, and witness gate
him sixty dollars In gold; ho exchanged with
On cross examination, tbe witness stated that
he aver knew Mudd to visit the house.
Joseph McDevitt testified that he went tours.
Burr att's torso about two o'clock on the night of
tt e assamlnatlont "Welchmanopened thedoure'
he apprised as If be had just got out of bed; be
was In his shirt, pants and stocking feet;Weich•
man went to Canada in my change; to Identify
John Siimatt; be bad 'ebtaidest 'opportunities to
escape while in Canada, and in fact I Unlike In
!Canada and returned to New York; I did not find
Berndt at Bt. Lawrence Hall:his name was regi_.
tend on the 6th of April and again on the 18th;
be left the hotel on the 20th, the day we arrived
in Canada.
J. Z. Jenkins testified that he hal always
been loyal.
Andrew Callenback testified that he met dens
kits on the night. of the 17th of Misy at Lbiyd's
Hotel, Sunattsville; he said he understood that I
• had been telling some Ike on him. and It he
found it to be true he would give me the damn
dest whipping I ever had;nfter that he said If
I teatlikd against blue or any connected with
hlte,he would - give me a damned whipping; never
'heard:hint express any disloyal sentimenta; did
'not eisiisidtr him sober on that occlusion, or very
drank.
Judson Jarboe was examined at length, but
nothing was elicited, except that on the election
day, four:years ago, a man made • .pretty
smart attack on him, and he understood the
inn wan kliled. He had been tried twice for
that already and acquitted.
- Miss Anna Burrell tesUlled that a picture con.
Mining the mottos, "Thus will it ever to with
tyrants," "Virginia the mighty," "Mc Bumper
Tyrannis," belonged to her, which was given her
by a lady about two years and a half ago. I put
It in -my portfolio and IC has been there ever
since; never taw Dr. Mudd at our house.
Adjourned.
MOIR NOR'rEI CAROLINA.
RESTRICTIONS ON TRADE REMOVED
Gov. Vance* Correspondence Captured.
New Yong, June 7.—The Tribtow's Raleigh
letter annotmees pen. &hod°id's order re
moving all reetrictiobs on trade, cotton and Na
val stores are now expected to be brought out
•Gm Cox had eaptired GOT, Vance's of etal
coffespoadeoce while he was Govenoor, The
correspondence on military affairs voltAloons
and was carried on with all, or -nearly all, the
public auto the Confederacy. from Jeff. Davis
•down, lieluding the Gem:lora of the Southern
States and all the prominent Generals.
Among there Merck; a letter to George N.
Sanders, and a reply among /Cher things, show.
Ingthe actives:ad
,nnkaie part taken in the re
lielllon
trVatee. There 1.1 a redeeming one to
the rebel• Secretary of War, urging as Wintry
lonian4l*d sufferingi of the Yankees at
ligletnuy andtheapplicallon of measure of re..
lief.
, ,
• .
Xew Y.:inn:May 4.—Tha 1911mtngton iferaki
or June :Id says: It is surpaing to those who
have not teen In the city since imoccupation by
the Union army, and who formed a very usfavor
shirr estimate bt th 6 amount of-articles of trade
here, to witness the cart and dray loads .of cot
ton, rosin, kc., 'sow being stored/A the ware.
house, for shipment. to the northern market.
Where it comas from no one AVMS. Ten days
ago all kinds of vehicles for hauling could be
found in idienemon the streets, but since the
removes of the restrictions , tin trade not ono is
tope seen. All are busy
7111'11MORS OF 87ARTO%BES14111101.
1115P111 WITH 0111.11.
States Divided into Revenue Districts.
•
• Wistintoiotr, June 7.—Some persons may bo
Interested learning that the Chronicle of to
day, In order,t4 set at real whet it calls a =lig
'nint talschoOd, Vey's on authority or. Mr. &sr,-
Am), blmaelf, that he has. not res4ned, that it Is
not irocrint that ho has determined' to leave As
Cabinet soon, and that be has had no dispute,
no difference, or no collision with the President.
Ms-relations
cordial sod fr w endly h character aPreridett andtheh Pr st
dent's relations with Mx: Stantonti are
are entirely
agreeable and confidential; ho has never bad a
difference much lees a collision with his Bocce•
tary of War; tior has he given such assurance to
any ooe, Mal-Clcieral or otherwise. u hakbeen
attributed to him, S and the Chronicle says that
the latter statement ih.stmde by tbe authority of
President Johnson,
The Secretary or the Treasury bu divided
Misalssippl, South Carolina and North Corollas
into d icts, for the collection of Internal tares.
viurs FROM NSW ORLEANS.
WIVAL OF GM, HOOD AND STAFF.
it ", e o )33/ dlitar.Ci"nt'sPrO4ulua.Lcilu
(*mugs, June 5.-6eit. goodoutd staff
mitred today.
All loyal eltlzene received the President's Proc.
lemation - with Jay.—
• Itekindeseleelint tesibted between °metals
Beaks, Canby and 131midan upon the trassdisi of
Gen. ,lierren's aethenitaiad
_rdent.
port has given general satisfaction. Mt 04*
,12111tinea - alniedmsci salveraidig
spaded.
Cottonl .- iniddilii,l2. o ilia M.
.111
i446St.,YarT,..Tai„lrgalketatealtiVber
Litittatlinc.WlMlMlV,COMintal*Otom!
,WAINCif Jugs igfiniVeltheea4ll4ll, She
Medi beefil left, s6lGr Wesethe ILL AGSM.
ees reerbatest, TalapmeNl 48 Amoy ea
theshipalhaepad boy!
: i t-s.
....,1i . 0.1: , -v.!,.r'lli .
PITTSBURGH
PITTS,BURGII._ TITERSDAY. JUNE 8,,1866.
NSW MILITARY DIVIAIO
Names of Cammatiders.
GEN:tIX)CU,NPB FAREWELL ADDRESS
Wasimerron, June I.—The following ifilliart
Divlakrna have Ind-been arranged:
Fa*-The Military Meinlon of the Atlantic:
moieties the Department - of the East, the Lie.'•
Flatulent OrPennsylvania, LMbidia Department
of Virginia, North Carolina and South Carollaa,,
to be commanded by Major Gen, Meade, Head-'
quarters .t Philadelphia..
fkeend—The Military Division i: ' ..h.cieshislOik
belades the Department of Obio, iirtment•
;Atte NOrthilest, - Department of Mlas ba sod.
the DtPartnitlit of Arkin:nat, to be commandeit
by Major Gen. Sherman; Headquarters at St. '
,
Military Division of Tennessee
comprises Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi. ,
Alabama, Georgia and Florida, to be commandedi
by Ma} Gen. la. IL Tboutevorith Headquarters
at Nashville.
Fomtb--Tbe MlMpary Division or the South=
weettomprlstiLthilstanz. Texas, Mew Meitco,!
and Arleenla, to be commended by SIN. 6en..
Sherldan,wl,th beadquarters at New Orleans.
Fifth—Thp Military Division of the Pacific, to
be , commanded. by lifeJ.- Gen. Haack, with
Headquarters at San Francisco.
These divisfoce am severally divided Into do
naitments, each with a special scot:Meander.:
These commanders have not yet been determined,
on In all cases.
WdsairtO follOwlne SAWA
address hu been promulgated by Maier General,
Slocum to the Army of Georgia
•
HELDQUARITES AIMS . QV GEOTtGlki
Wsernrsoron, D. C., Jane 8, 1865.
General Order No. 15.—With the separatlo
of the troops composing this aftriy, In comq
ince with recent orders, the organization kno
as the Army of Georgia will virtually cease tol
exist. Many of you will at once return to yowl
homes. No ono now - earaitUr 1 it volunteer,'
will probably be retained in the service againsi
his will tat a short time longer. All will soon.
be permitted to return and receive the reward,
due them as gallant defenders of their - country.:
While I cannot repress feelings of sadness at,
parting with you, I congratulate you upon ehei
grand results achieved by your valor,lldelity ankh
patriotism. No *nitration has ever done motet
for the permanent establishment of i jolt - and
liberal form °government, more fur , the honor
of thoir nation than has been done during the
past four years by, the annum Of the lihilted,,
States and the patriotic people at home, who
have poured out Mete wealth in support of thate
armlet with a liberality never before witnessed
in any country.
Do not forget the parting advice of that great
chieftain whetted yon through your recent brll
hint elinpaigne: ../ui In war you havebean good
• soldiers, so in peace be good citizens. Should'
you ever be called to resume the honorable. pro.
(melon which you are now about to leave, do
not forget that this profession is honorable, only
Whi' folloried obedience to *darn - and Loeb*
'constituted authority of your government'"
Wfth a feeling of deep gratitude to each , and .
I all of you for your strong soldierly conduct, ion
the patience and fortitude with which you have
borne ail hardships rit has hermWeCesarow to Im
pose on you, and for the - pnllutehing . ftteolution
with which you have sustained the nay cans°
in which we have been engaged, I bid you fern:,
well. [digned.] G. W. enornos,
Major General Commanding. .1
FALL OF A BUILDING IN CII{CINNAT
Several Persons Burled in the Ruins
RICHMOND BANK OFFICERS ROBBED
GUERRILLAS HANGED IN GEOII3II,
Dn. McCook Assigned an Important Command
CINCIIINT7I, Jane 7,—Aboat elpht o'clock last
,
evening a 'building on Long worth fitreet, occupl•
ed as an armory by the National Guards, sadden
ly fell, burying a number of persona beneath Its
ruins, throe of whom. were killed, .and rota
Lttally Injured: -
The Gawttr's Chattanooga despatch says t
The officers of one or the Ridtmond banks,
while on their way to that place with the 'assets
of the bank, were attacked by robbers near
Warblogton, treorgla, who robbed them of
cal:kW°.
Tm guerrillas were, hung by the. citizens ot
Can county, Ga., a ten days since.
The brawn Bera!d says: Btsjor General 4c.
Cook has teen assigned an Important positron
in New Mexi.o..
The First and Second Divisions of Wilson's
cavalry, under Colonel Slindl, start for Nash•
vine to-day.
New York Stock, 31oney, Dry Goods and
New Tome, June 4.—Tae Stock market teir
day fully sustained the largofoulest of yester.
day. There was a decidedly stronger feeling
Alum/ebbed, owing to the increased activity cl
the boll interest. Prices adrateed 834 on the
closing figures of yesterday afternoon. New
Yost Central. Erie, Reuling - and PolightoCDSlll.
were very active during the middle of the day.
There was some weakness, but It was only tern.
penny. Governments were lose active but firmer
under the news of a farther advanox In London.
Bank Stapes are very firm and prices higher la
cash. Md/way Mortgages Wady; State Bonds
quiet but prices are firm at previous rates. The
Africa's advice, reporting a farther slight ad
vance in 5020'r had adepreisicts effect — upon the
Gold market, producing a decline of I@ffic Im
mediately on the receipt of the news. It now
beconits tolerably certain, that the demand
for Gold for shipment is not to be affected by the
return of. Government Securities. Money re
mains easy. •
The mend trade of the elty is doll, and the
volume of buslnesa light.% In, the dry goods
market there is a good demand for light summer
ems fabrics,. but all other, departments are
The excitement la the pork market has meter
, lally subsided, and there Is leas activity. Prime
bare fallen off ans, per bbl. front the higher&
point and the bull conbination fled it difficult to
suataln the market.
Weltself* ExpedlUon-41.-Goi. McGrath
FOrthass Ms:oxide, 4usted.Teeterdity aftet
noon nearly . the whole leer Of' transports roe
soloing one division of -the '2sth' Corsa, core.
bandedby-Brigadier Gebenil Draper, sailed for
Mobile ray for the purpose of - .coaling and wa
tering. There are now but two steamers, the
Neptune and Detroit, loaded with brief, &r,
in aid hatter: They. will Win this evening: ,
On last Saturday aftethoonthe steamer Starlight
arrived from iltUtorrillead with Es.. Governor.
Mograth - on board under arrest. This alter
noon the officerle charge received orders from
Washington to return to Muth Head with his
prisoner. The Starlight will tall this- evening,
The steemer,Chomplon arrived this morning
liven Hilton Head with a laweCiutsfbernf paroled
rebel prisoners, mostly officers, who surrendered
themselves et Charleston, Savannah, dm.
Among these are Brig. Gen. Scut: Joies;o: Vir
ginia, and Commodore 'Hunter and Capt. Lew•
le, formerly of- our navy; bit lately in the Con
federatelgothe zevil serviee.
Cliatleiton 9rllectorship—l,gest Artirapi
` from the South. '
Wunrsommt, June I.—Mr. Frederick A. Saw
yer has been appointed Collector of internal
Revenue , for the city of' Charleston, South Carp
line. Mr. Sawyer, a native of Boston, for some
time put . as has occupied the position o f Superin
tendent of the public wheals of Charleston:
Among the latest art-tubs from.the South were'
George 8. Houston,. of ,Alabama, and !Rohn&
111.11, - of Georgia. Both are eemembera of Uto,
United States House of Representatives.
Ex•member George W. Jones, of Tennessee,
did not come to Washington, as reported, at Ma
request of the President, but was permitted to
do so on his earn personal application..
• ,
l'ou-toctimra.„ Juna.i.—The National Typo
graphical Union, to-day, decidtd upon holding
ttair but convention at Chicago.
Reports Trete real from tlui Unions through- .
out the country. Ten Midas are reported to bo'
tan flourishing condition; others report only the
prices paid. Prom some there are very bad re- .
ports. The Cincinnati. Union is Wooed OM ,
half.
,The Boston Union is demoralized. there
being only one Wilco in that ally.' The
Louis Union has tear control of the daily papers: .
The Detroit ti niot Li - spotted , to he ill amore
ficaubilingtodditkin than ever berore. ,
' Genera! Grant in New 'Yorke . ; Pate of a Fishing Party.;
'
'Now tom; Jane 7.—The piessurelo saeGenc --Operrillas In Kentucky are not. extermi nated.
Graatima Wrest :Ohl regraing that After 11 9 We learned lest night that a firkin ,
worth' on the '" balcony id front of the Astor eunulathig -of ; four Teutons , embarkedr
twllli all-trtaltlni except Who were denied. Balt Itlier on.,Thnreday, taking the Nee villa
Atter' dining tblitifteamon arltit-Pratahleat; alt" railroad to tateuurn itinction._ Prom ,t . 1 t
bus he Is *Ohara Bride through Central Park. mentioned place they - N a ar a cartage , an. wont
,This •eventer•dm . , attends: the 4111,WOUI L It the on t h e i r:w ould d. n r, ggio in g*t i oum., n .
y
Coeper -lostnota,.sottl attetMe!d, alui. I:eg l' tette had reoeeeded but slew pipet, wh t, _
.•-/d rat 7 lllll r MIw•T; •',.. .:::, ..--;.: •: , 1 were immune& Ind -Ow** by___s pug fut
." du bertog about tree. :Inn' stopped
CiiilitrS iLioWie linisitar titt lool4l . th sein e d presented their. neruiraus to 5
e d anenctionistli and sobbed the
,Itstsr ?dui Jai& . '7:110010 ,11 4 1 W aeribil° frigb 1 . 0 . of 04 ' l ,
lathe; fr om New' Qrleatti.lAst,9t- NW No of a ll a:nine , ea. „.0 .. ~
nswiteneers,the:Atrt Rom the •m's of a via elt Wandatm,. , The
alothae. itn ro d tamm eother opo tni
steamer at New enua.fnad-aresheat.altv, confedera te tro..
posy of •his hat , , oast, irest; boots, aid.
7 e r atm"' thee°nriui ibaNtotiuthwia. i thi1x W e...7..4.,h1. ...Was
ta d epth. ct 449 1 43= i4 1 9 w
stock sod 'other impart, la , The perpettstedwlthia a half rolla . or Wibilitati at.
Anbabliantraardeagnuteitnia Dr gum Web" . don which ispoirhaS by Uliztl sm— c ede. :
- ,itusietts -., -,
klitiOlitaibibOing_, 1., .e , .1 - eat I . eitla Arwood,
~
~.. , . . ,
~
~ . . ,
.. ,
~..
,:z1,4 - 1.0.,, , ,,:ft5,r'n" i^i 7 " ' '
AL , 4 -
!kii7triN :1
Proviido■ nation.
--Paroled Prhoners.
Printers' National Union
JUL DAVIS . GOING 10 won.
MAL MMUS AT CHABLINION I!AVALVIAZ
lisle'YOnr; Simi . - 7=The - Cflivaitiali lirtrral
niuglor a the arrivaiof_Mrs. Dimy and party
from Fortress Monroe, and sap, Mrs. Davis
expressed great desire to- ' go - tO - illuoTe, and
inquired for Teasels 'to Nassau .or any other
place from whiell - she - wild get'to. England
or Frazee, She - also:made et - viinark, that
she bad probskty seen Mr. - via for the last
The Claleston-mall steamer" Grenada, Capt.
Banter; from New York, 'indeed here thin morn
ing at seven o'clock.:. , . _ ..
, . .
. , ,
Admiral Danlgreen goes north in the st e a mer .
"Dozen.. Most 6/ the. naval vends of this
squadron have gone home, iioith or south. • The
north and south Atlantic 616Ckading squidrons
are 16 be coaionared . under CommOlorn Bad.
The treatrier Delaware has been wteclted off
Fort Johnston.
Collectors In Southern States—Foreign
Missions—The “Stonewall”—Our Iron
- Cladiffilseharge Of Prisoners of War—
Frederick Seward Much Better.
WAIIIIIKOTON, June 7.—Secretary • Weather . '
is engaged in restoring the machinery for the
collection' of customs - in the -- Southern States.
In tido 'connection the
_President haa - recently
made the following appointments; Collectors,
Willey Woodridge at Savannah; Albert (3.
Mackey, at Charleston; Robt. Montague, at Mo
bile; Jno. M. Dicks, at Pensacola.
" - Mr. Harrlagton, Assistant Secretary of the
Treasury, who has bozo appointed Minister to .
Switzerland. will not. leave the country before
the first of August. .
A strong application has been made to the
President in favor of .M. B. Field, the other As
aslant Secretary, for a foreign mission.
' tis the opinion of the officers of the Special
ti
I .clid Squadron, which was seat to watch .
en Capture the pirate Stonewall before she was
.8 rendered to the Cuban authorities, that she
!knot so formidable as was supposed,- and that
even the Monatinac or the Carmnicus, which .
lay of Mavens, are more than a match for her
John H. 2ficolay, the private secretary of the
late President Lincoln, was in Washington to.
.day making preparations to leave for Rome on
thaSltlllust., to enter ,upon his duties as consul
at that city.,` -.. , -
* A few only - of the "Immelada will be kept in
'',eommisslon. The. others will be probably laid
upon the Delaware river. ~
.;.The Pres i dent receiveavisitors for about live
, bours daily,- being kept nearly 1111 that_time up.
'on bill feet. Today at twon'cloelc.. there were
',id least one hundred pereons;but-fifth of whom
:were women, waiting for admission. .
Within a day or two the - President has given
- audience to prominent citizens of Alabama,
Mississippi and Georgia, in relation to the *dill
.:cia MUSS of thek respective States and looking
- to necryanizatkrar .:. - .
Agenerid:lndet fbir-lhe discharge of certain:
prisoners - of:W - 0r ligilkit been issued. •.
Mr. Frederick Smrard is 'much better to-day
. ....
'no norm -Thirty Loan,
Peicansmmits, June 7.--Jay Cooke reports
the anbscriptionste the 730 loan to-day at $l,-
-751,550. The largest- western subscriptions were
$150,000 from the Twentieth National Bank of
Chicago. $lOO,OOO from the Tenth National
Bank of Cincinnati, and 11100,000 from the Nine
teenth National Bank, .Nolll7lll*. Thelargest
eastern subscriptions were $lOO,OOO . from the
First - National Bank of New Y0rk,5263,500
Item Fisk Hatch, New York, $250,000 from
the Pint National Bank, Boston, $ 50,000 from
N. Banes& Co., Boston. and 100,000 from the
,First Nat West Bank, Philadelphia. Also
1,=.7 individual subscriptions.
Wendell Phillips , lipeeet
• Nan* Tons. Julia Anti-Slarery Mand
aut re . triorrow will contain the full report of
Wendell Minns' speech at the Now England
Anti4derery.Couvuitknt In Boston last week, in
which he was erromrously reported as haring ad•
rccated the repudiation of ,the United States
debt. What 3ir..P. really/said wan, that recon
struction on the basis of white suffrage would
be followed by the adoption by Congress of the
Confederate debt, which would be a fraud upon
the people.
•
blexlean e f b anard.
Naw june 7. e Courim Dra Etats
Unit t lainisi to have int licence that the town
of Chihuahua, which healer sometime been the
seat of the Republican' government of Mexico,
has been occupied by the- Breech General
Aeneares, and that Juarez le on the way to the
Veltrd Stater. No such news was received from
Havana ytaterday.
New, roan, Juno 7.— Th e demand for gold Is
limited end eery little wanted - ftw export, and
the Customs demand La light; the disposition of
holders to sell is Increased by an apparent down
ward tendency of the premium; the quotation
has ranged from 137!/,' opening price, to 13734
closing price.
• Gold to-night 137%.
Another Prcelantatioa Expected—The Eta.
beam tr °spur Privilege to'be Restored.
Now Took, Jane 7.—The Tribant announce
that the President will soon Jaaae.a proclama
tion restoring tbeptivilege of the habeas =Past.
and ordering a sell general clearance of
. the mil
itary prisons.
. .
VY R
ashingten ebels Home Again.
Naw Year, epechil to the N
York Comincletri Achiritlier, ftom Wasklegto
says: Nearly all the alms of the District of
Columbia wk* wont meth, and who armed
the war are home seam.
West Pant—The Crand pecisloq
The usual examination of the Mat Point
Cadets, which takes place this week, will, be at
tended with circumstances of unprecedented la
.
tercet. The oc casion , like many previous ones,
will be Mustraied by the practice of Lient-Gen.
beat, the veteran soldier of America, and not
by hie pretence only, but by that of LieuteGeit.
Grout, whom Boot& himself has rammemeed to
be the "greatest moldier In the world." Gen
Sherman also will be there, and probably Gea:
Thomas, , betide a large number af -officers of
leaser rank, bet not less heroic character. The
'pang cadets, in — Cothers who may be present, -
will bavean oppoetutity` of beholding a galaxy
of Military stars, such as have serer before lent
'lustre to stash an ogcaslon. The spsduatea who
haxe been years to the study of fitrato
gy, Grand Tootles,. Logistics and Engineering,
will undergo their examination before the ctrl
soldiers,who have given praeUcalliinstratioc
their study of tbee branches 'ln their early
years it would be-well UAW) students were
yomPelled.to Oland ou minion ion In the eaul
petal's of . I.letitabra. Grin!. These campaigis
Grata to ba .made a special branch of study la
the Academy. They furnish masterly examples
la every branch of the military art; and we.
should have greater hopei of the abllltes of - our .
future eoldlert, If;they were thoroughly familtr
with the grand campaign of the Illasiatip
which culminated -- at Vicksburg; the spies. d
Chattanooga campaign, and the final campaign,
from the Reoiden tott, the Appomattox: - The
histories anti the book* have no lessons equal to
these.
Gcn. Stonemmes Zetter to the Rebel Pret
byterlan .Knoivllllano.L
[From Brownlow's Whig.] '.
•.,A kw dap since several leading , members of
the Pint (Old School) Presbyterian Churcigf.
this city: a ddr e ssed Mai. Gen. Steneman an •
puled letter, mthev demanding,. instead: of re
dealing; that their church, now Used by pennis.
eon of the military authorities as a negr o school
house, be turned over to them lbr the "worship
of the meet blot God." In their communication.
"these notoriously disloyal men assort thtt their
church is cksenvrtal by tho we to which It la now
applied.- To the diskeval chairman of this dis
loyal conunittce,Ocrt. Stoneman sent the follow.
llRA.Dipti. Dtar. or EAST TE5117.33.11, t.
Ifsorsturs, Tenn. May 16, 1865.
Bagnee t rally rdontedlo Mr. King, Knamaie, Team
There bs pientjof room in the loyal eintrehes
of this city for all wbo wish to attend 'lle wor
ship of the Moat IMO God." :Investigation goes
to show that. It was first desecrated by being
made nee of by a disloyal congregation, led by 'a
disloyal preacher, In dluendaistlng
.treason and
treasonable dectrices.
It apvalt o or to be applied to a very good
the city. educating the colored youth Of
The attention of the Pelt; Co
BA B r oo y actominmilrotma
Major
coomeradrnandothlf:To;a:iiitan::*:llil.7
==l
•
GAAET
- Prince Witpoimilts Griert .
- The speech of Prince firapnbiti est tlie haiku
ration
ration or the Bonspart monument st Ajaeak , ; fir
which he eulogized American instituticinf,
uodf
eione universal comment. One notaVelisstiline
In the addreze was as follows: "What great
progress hes ever:beim effected without also,3m
happily, beini stained with blood! The mt . ab
llibment of the Roman world, Ks • Christi-,
anity, the fininder of Which: vduiatJuily - Shed his
blood on the crows, and, in one own times; the
establishment of reform, the emarelpatkm: of
America,, and now tbe atrolition of slavery In the
New World, are all eases in point.. How could
the French revolution, which was not only for
France but forhumanity—which was the deloite
end of the middle age and feudalitybe eg
tablithed without the mr-ilrming suedes of hu
man-blood?, Let progrr-s of wise Ideas ren
deesueb struggles bentdorth Immasible. With
all my heart, and lin common with every friend
of humanity, I ardently desire It. But in the
time of the Empire It was not ratable. The
problem . _ wet to find a principle which might
render the wars of people more rare, and by res
pecting the rights of all, establish a Just and
tree balance of power. Thence sprang the Idea
of natlanalitles," -
The Paris coirespondeat of the Times, writing
May 22d, sayer
The readers of the Monitcur have remarked '
with some t•rise that It was jot given the ad
dress delivered by Prince Napoleon at the cere.
many's!' uncovering the monument of the first
Napoleon at Muck). The 'first day the Mont
kicr omitted all notices of those fetes; the day
folloariog it cent/Sued a abort summaryof them.
It mentioned, indeed, how the Prince, with bead
bare, mounted the platform and walked round
the statue; how at that "solemn moment" as.
lutes were fired; bow the - features of his Impe
rial Highness betrayed the deepest emotion; how
be spoke a little on everything; but of the speech
Itself—which was the greatest feature of the cer
emony—not a word. The little Mon &yr. Indeed,
reproduced the. telegram announcing that an
oration bad been pronounced; but it contained'
only the first two lines, and did not notice the
following:—"The Prince gave an excellent biog
raphy of the Bonapartes. ilk described the life
and acts of Napoleon I, and traced , a complete
'programme of liberal policy."
The government journals—the C'enalliuttonnel •
and reps—rrabllshed the speech after It had been.
submitted to the censorship, from which it ta
sted mutilated. The tint passage suppressed
-related to the marriage of Napoleon with Marie
Louie*, which the Prince severely condemned;'
. concluding thus:—"An Austrian alliance shall
never, be the policy of France." The. second
passage set aside contained a ;eulogy of Ameri
can democracy and the American constitution.
After saying that "the foundation of a great re.
publican state beyond the Atlantic, encouraged
by the support of France, was a glorious legacy .
• bequeathed by the government of Louis XVI., '
Lin Imperial Highness eulogized Monroe, "the
celebrated statesman who gave his name to the
doctrine which laid down the principle that the
governments of Europe might
The'
no posses
sions in North America." The third paragraph
affacedrefeirest totheltoman question. In this the
Prince declared himself favorable to the suppres
eon of the Pope's temporal power, and based
his opinion on the authority of the fiat Napole
on, though It is probable that, had the Roman
grivernmen entered into the Imperial " syitein,"
Napoleon would have maintained its power. The
_fourth change which the aceurgurinnnei and the
Pays made in the speech was in that part which
alluded to the liberty of the press. Neither is
there any mention cif the - politleirmixim of the
Prince relative "to those rathaltern agents who
are BO eager to prelim the government. from
every speeleatf•attack„ bat: who, In their false
devotedneas add their Interested exaggeration,
only seek to hide from the sovereign their insuf..
ficlency and their fauna." This was doubtless
considered a personal reflection on the govern
ment journals, and would account for the sup
preesion.
It is certain teat the speech of his Imperial
Highness bas caused the utmost displersum to
the government. The Ministers strongly press
ed the 'Empress to authorize the insertion of a
paragraph In the Nontteur disavowing, If not
positively censuring the Prince; butaheEmprers,
though %try willing, did not venture to do so.
The Opfnieft Nationate has narrowly escaped sup.
preindon for an article speaking In high terms of
the Prince , and the speech.,
A despatch from Vienna of thc:retl states:
The Yaw Frcle Pro :it of to-day asserts that
the Duke deFriamcmt, Flinch Ambassador at the
Court of Vienna, In an Warr - raw with Count
Menedorff, said that Prince Napoleon's speech at
Aleut° had not been well considered by Ids Ito.
- pedal Highness, and did not require any offileal
denial on the part of the French government.
The ,Latest Plot
Notwith•Saedin, the collapse of the rebellion,
the retal agents In Canada are sa busy as ever
in concticting hostile pr jests against the erne•
try. Hiving lost their homes and reputation by
their treasonable And infemons conduct, thej
are Impelled by fiendish malice to indict all the
Injury they can on the people of the north.
They care.not a jot whether their blows fall upon
the strong or the Ire*, upon the Government
end those who have token In arms against them,
or on non-combatants and helpless women and
children.
One of the schemes they arc now preparing to
execute invoices the destruction of the Croton
Dam at Yorktown, Westchester county. Upon
this structure It Is well known the city is depend.
eh for water, and if destroyed it would cost
millions of dollars and months of labor to re
place It. In the ineanttme the city would be
without water, for the recoiling and distributing
reservoirs and aqueduct combined never contain
more than a supply for a few days. Therefore
the agents empersuaded that the destruction of
that noble etructuro would be one of the severest
blows that could be inflicted on the people of
this metropolis They aver that not only would
the moat prominent and Important factories and
shops be obliged, tot went Of eteaM; fCC-,
suspend operations, but thst indescribable nate
ery would fall upon the: people at largo. Fire
engines, they believe, would become ruieless,
and in a shorttime the whole city would, become
prey to a grand conflagration, without the aid of
Kennedy or other Incendiaries.
About • fortnightago,ws engineer was sentfrom
Montreal tolospeet the structure, and devise •
plan forks destruction. lie examined tho work
thoroughly. tookhotes of ' its dimensions, style
of construction, & r e. and reported that it would
be the easiest thing in - the 'world 'to , blow it to
atoms., It is to, be_cffected by mesas of small
torpedoes, - to be placed on the Inside of tlui'data
against the masonry; together with cm or two
in the gate Ibr the discharge of the surplus will
ter, and exploded simultaneously.; The dam, It
is reported, confines opward of 500,000,000 gal.
lons of water, the pressure of , which arralust' so
narrow a structure must be very , great, - so that
the engineer engaged In the etheme confident
.that otte•hlfil tho irfiretherproposes to employ,
would do the work effectually ; but It is intended
to make "sure work of it. l 2 • '
1 - TArrangementa have been made to sand the
powder or torpedees;nic packed In flour bent
yea, from Montreal tethi ay a
city,, and from here
to Sing fling, whence they are to be con
veyed Ina farmer's -wagon,' on an appointed
evening, to a point gave the dam; ready to be
couva r ed in the dead hour ofnight sad deposited
In ib
But their scheme, as drat proposed, was ie.
tended to go ranch farther. it' was designed, to .
poison each water as might be left Is the reler-
Yoke, by casting arsenic., sirYchnice end,other
yolsons into the aqueduct helm the break to bo x
made, and In the reservoirs themselves. With .
this - view the tepidly of the reservoirs was as-
Certalned, and e 'calculation was made by. an
experienced chemist ,of the amount of pouted
ons matter necessary to • affect ell the water and
render an ordinary glass full deadly.
Theinecessary gruunity was so ascertained, and
the coat of it, at wholesale price, was computed;
but the quantity and coat were found to be so
large, and the difficulty in purchasing It without
exciting ausplcira was' admitted to be so great
',that this Dart 'of the project was' abandoned.
Theplan was suggested by Dr. Blackburn, add
the computatitu a - made by him. , The death;
will be eatlefied, to tie 'their own words, with
"making a glass of water as expensive in New
York as CM a glans of whisky was In Rich-
Garibaldi on the Itelatlono of America
The following is a translation eta letter which
Garibaldi had • addressed to threditee of the -
London Palk Opinion, on the relations between
Engla.od end America : -
-• , ,
ihrt: I always ynalderedfrom the beginning
that the American question was one which con
ecrned all humanity and the whole world, and I
was grieved to see that a part of the English
public were opposed to • the restoration of the
union In the great republic, which arose, it is
welknown -from COMM of rancour which pre
existed_ between England and America; but it
was a sod thing that the good Babe or 416 pee.,
pis who Bret established the principle ot the
anancipation of the slave did. not -manilliat
self applatise to the Iforth Americana, wit°
showed - thenosivoi to be tke instrument of
Providence In carrying can that enbllons •
._... may the/1010rd' of the obsan agree, then, tbr .
theorem! of oppressed humanity; Pass of the
=unto mother, may theysekthat their noble rape
is notrzsedays the bulwark of thertigide of na
• throe, • and that despotism foments ressention
between them because ill Alma and'
cause it' knew& if 'the; were - on good terms ...
weld to impossible emit toe:mate Its designs;
midair ere Oast s 6
.esesyseome.
• Totits.ae:; Alant*lXAL!
ose Ta rotai sltai ir lol... 44 Go r iani uthi — uv it rei beir er,re maii . / 41
And.litTe• ket 444P:0W , OtAlh o 99 '7nr:t°
.tatPFPAlPll444Uiwk."'”.'
CITY MI SUNMAN.
Anirol of kapt. Battery
This Pittsburgh organization arrlied this mu- •
zing at the Central Depot at one o'clock. Ow
ing to ths lateness'of the tour, the Battery kay
, .
lig been announced to arrive at 1045, no for
nfal reception was =textile:et to them, but we
may. intleiPals that they will be propcaly
celeelit b 7 some public deministration at an early
be leaylow Harrisburg', the
DS-d :kite
train Was delsied twenty minutes behind time,
which probably bad the effect of detaining it
still longer. - It addled at- Altoona about five
&clock.
The Battery is under charge of Capt. Mot. B.
Sloan and minters two hundred and thirty,nien.
it left the city abcdt a year ago with three hun
dred niembers. On arriving it the station the
command was marched to the City Dail ,the
Booms, but many of the boys had
previously decamped for their homes In the two
cities, to gladden the hearts of watching and
waiting loved . -
Arrest of a Shoplifter.-
A woman named Mrs. tin Lagghlin was it - i
rested yesterday, charged with stealing a palr of ;
pants from itielis's clothing store on Market
street. She bad gone in the store ostensibly for;
the purpose of makingi purchase, but came out
without baying anything. Mr. Kleiti,however,' .
Missed a pair of pants, and calling a polio:Man!
arrested the woman before she bad proceeded'
far, and discovered the pants in her postesslon.
She was brought before the Mayor, and her hus
band accompanied her. She crhibited quite a
"scene" by incessantly crying and repeatedly'
protesting bee Innocence, talking fluently of her'
rtepeetability, .t.c. Mr. Melts offered to 'with
draw the snit If she would pay the value of the:
pants, Sill, but the husband would not consent,
toe coal' remise and gave $3OO ball for her ap
'pearance at cou rt. '
AtTest of a Thiefi—MreaTeauetto Meredith,
of Pori Perry, appeared' at the Mayor's office, a
few daps ago, and made Information 'plait ;
Samvel Crawford, charging him with' absk , actl
In $245 in greenbacks from a trunk - in her,
-hence on last Wednesday. The money had been!
vent to her by her husband who wee in the army.
- Officer Willison was put on the track' of the .
thief, and effected bin arrest at Fredericktown;
about ten mile a from Brownsville, where Craw
forehad been stopping with come friends.
A
itcarb?g will be had to-day.
Miss Asnie EberlieN Eenefit.—Our citi
zens should not forget the farewell benelt of the
leading lady at the theatre .to-morrow erening:,
She bus been a great faroritiamong as for many
Raton', and as this - is ber Lust appearance, let It
be the occasion of a general ovation. The been
ilful poem, so appropriate at this time, entitled
"Our Soldiers Coming Home; or 'Victory at
Last," will be recited, and we learn that a mag,
nillcent sliver tea set will be presented her by
her many frienda.—lt -Is also the last appear.
once of Mr..L o.Beiton.
Deplorable Accideut.—A. distressing &eer
dent occurred on Sunday evening, at Columbia,
.Lancaster eounty, While two young . sons : of
Captain G. EL Exisinan were playing in the yard
attaebtd to the house, another brother appeared
at the door with a gun, saying earelesedy, "lo*
out or I will shoot you," and not,Truppostog.the
gun wan loaded, pulled the trigger at the Baru
due. The discharge atruck 'one of the brothers
in the bread, and another the tilde, Wiling
thou bulb. Two Other lads were slightly Id!
Blythe Memorial Fund;--At a meeting of
citizens. heldet the 8t... Charles Hotel ou taw
day ercbing, for the purpose of taking steps for
the erection of a suitable monument to the late
Darid 0. Blythe,- the talented artist, a commit
tee was appointed, consistingafileuri Broome;
Wentworth andßerries„ to make arrangements
for a dramatic or musical performance in aid of
the work. A Finance Committee was also . ap
pointed, consisting of Messrs. Batchelor, Gilles
pie, Lane, Devitt, Adams, McClurg and. Wall.
Fire In. Allegheny.—On Wednesday after.
neon, a fire 'broke • out in the tavern of Mr.
Michela, near the heed of Federal, street, Alio.
ghcny. The fire caught from a stove pipe, and
the flames were making threatening -progrms,
but ware suddenly checked by the timely arrival
of a bone carriage. The building belongs to
Mr. Samuel Grove. The damage done was. im
material. The steamers were on the ground,
but their assistance -was not requited.
Clearfield County Draft laeslatera.Fire
of the Cleartial county conspirators wera brought
before Comadaeloutraprold yesterday.afternoon,
having been btonghtthere hi custody or tpepaty
Marehal Wm. EMMAMu, and were admitted to
to bait in the sum of . 1000 each, for their ap.
pearance at the U. 8. District Court, oa the first
Monday of tegust next. Their, names are Wm:
A. Dunlap, John 11.1hudap,Isaac Dunlap, John
Moss and John . Withereon.
Arrival of Western Troopa.—The train
which brought Ithars Battery, arriving at one
o'clock this morning, also had on board the 28th
Wisconsin, numbering sic hundred men, and de.
tacbments of the 102 d Illinois, and of the 19th,
16th, 18th, S7th and Nth Wisconsin regiments.
They were served with refreshments by the Sub
sistence Committee, after which they were ready
to take their leave en ' , r6t departing Weab•
ern train.
Disorderly. C
Jos. Rlebards,
had a hearing
charged on oath
meat of the St: t
through the wild
on Tuesday night.
lemposed'ou each o.
the tine. and tbe S!!9
ildrly days In defanli
Convention of Sti,
Asyluma.—The Conn
of Insane Asylums in t.
Canadie, will assemble
day,aud condone its seam
The 'Convention wtll hold its
nongabeht House. It Is ens.
tendaneo will be large, and the
an unnauelly intereethig etaraette
Larceny of fitaseis,;lhreeboysirere
Clapp & Co.'a shoe store on Viftlistreat yenta ,
day stemma, when:one of. them snatched
pair of shoat which were hanging out, and the
three started on the min. One of the proprld;
tots followed then( up to f3mlthlieht etreet,,and
the boy who bad the shoes; dropped them at the
corner. of Virgin alley.. A young lad named
Me/Leman was arrestediand a hearing will bb
Those of ,Our readers who attended tub
Churchu Rome Seetlial. at Lawrememille Wit
Sear, will scarcely need to be reminded that. *
than: entertainment. la again offered thle
afternoon :and errenlog by Jam, moampllalted
managers of that excellent Inattention. To
pthens we would lay, go and eeo ; •
DlaeLscoodxa
Magazine. for , May has been
meek/edam& la for sale At W.A. Olidentenni%
45 'trees. Contentm Sir Brook. rambroke;
' Life ofSterne; Cornelius O'Dowd upon Men and
Women, and other things in Inman]; /Mu Star.
joribankm Rainoflnteresi; Peocadllly; Tea Lark;
The Mate and pmsmient „of Patios..
, _ .
Home for ,the- Ertendiess,r-Tho annual
mectieg of this instiluticm will take place tuts
afternoon at three o'clock, at the Home, on
Washington 'street, near. East Common, Alla
gbeny. . The lomat marts will be presented,
and -addresses are expected from aural proml-
•aim l ,.-The storms of. tut evening, altiongb.
not of long . .durailun. - . ulna In the nature ov a
blessing.' In the country districts Op:daily,
rain ono needed, as matketg. aliening and other
growth; was becoming parched.. We learn that
outside of the city a heavy rain foil yesterday
Now Ready—The WISELY Garen; contain
• lig the Nulegy on the life and public services
of Abraham Lincoln, beißi..Thomaal,Wilgama,
and a great variety of other reading matter.
Now ready at the counter in wrappers. Price
only five tests. Send one to your friends.'
Passed Tbrongh.— , A. portion of : the 4th
lowa regiment peeped through the city yester
day, and after beintregaled with is, subatantial,
meal by the anbabstmce Committee, took the
Western train for their hornet.
Territory.-The tract or laud advertised
for all; situate on - Decker's• Creek s West. Vb.-
Vitae. will be withdrawal= the market Ina
rew days. Norm. the thine_ !s! _pueblo° at ,a
- Prince do Cots:world renowned Automatic
Oagsan,l3chool Organs and Melodeons. A ime
s t o ck Jut received by Charlotte. Blume, cola .
wholesale
wholesale and retail agent.
,
tierattere LawientevMe.-=49111 be .
sold tMs Thuridey, at 10's:. te..;*st thatlesidiaos
neer the tAtneter: oti Beth* , street, hatuelteld
furniture, carpets, elte.
,Boota,ata,galicliebns l 4 o , 4 lloPer4 , 4f3,.
.fer.lalte , , gate'..rmehe% =Lau.
*en!" war; fat ale 14 , 01/ 2 -
Housiosiuthitxtet. ,x.p ..4
scroll: „
_ _
.Spabe , a,,lfarlirdledi; rbiacwi r —A,,spbmiad
oew stock Jost "Medved ~ 41 , 4 8 e
Futbstrecroleigait; •
= Saints nroi. Mlefirated — !mew, fratIVIOM
upplieds. For ule only brciiirbitte stuta , , 43:
a 17.1't1
>~w: i .-~ j cJii'Je~.dsiC n:~S;ia"n. ~.t .- ."xv<w....',',, ~•..:.,75.v ~fr'"7n...a~ u'~su:i:~Td »+ 3C:,.e..`.
ESTOLISIIND IN 1736.
-• <:Mr.;
arellable source that yeit Lave tw fres. •
gaged upon r.the,greit; yrork"of: lllwa m .
principal event connected with the assase„... -, ..
lion and ]nest Asia of onruie beloved President s
and that said work is to Bo at '
oases to Chicago
for exhibition—we !Would respectfidly ,request. ,
that our citizens may be. favored with a few re.
Preseutatkma, while en route to Gai,Westi: , Goa.. ,
Zen Flan shall be at yozu• free disposal If you will
name such time as yell will ocenpf lifforthepur•
pose mentioned above. From your Veal known
gifted .ekentionary powers, flsodilantrwith the
taste of She -public, and emit perfect knowl
edge .of thez - Mtjon how ill question; We ,
have every reason to Millet an evening of rare
interest, and, beffllhat yon you. will , nrd MAO oar
earnest solicitations to come to as el .
James Lowry, Jr.; ' Thin: 11.
'Wffliam Philips, •
George Bingham, , Johnston, -
Henry A. Weaver , - • W..W. Bradshaw.
And others..-.--
Gsmertarairs—Your letter requesting me to fa-
Tor the citizens of Pittsburgh with a few exhi
bitions of this great work of art, representing
the steam and. incidents In the =nonfat , Eta-
Coast tragedy, is just received, and I hasten to
reply:, It war. my Intention to have proceeded
directly to Chicago, yet catmot OTOFP/Ok the
tclakes of the citizens of Pittsburgh, fbonl whom.whom. -
In years pad, I have received 80 many marks of
favor. In accepting the invitation sa teditely
laddered, I beg leave to return my thanks far
the generosity you have evinced In offering the •
free use of Concert Ball; and for 'the flattering
manner - In which you have alluded - to my loo:- bleabillties.-_' • - -
If agreeable to you, I wouki respeetfully seg.
gest Monday evening. June 1244 sit the ?peeing
night of the entertukuntmt.'-'
Very truly yours,
dozes goszezi.
To Hons. J. Lowry, Jr., Wm . iraokustoo:a.
A. Weaver and others. ' ::11r
, ,
A lira Tonere ra Moran TO ?Mk 120=71 .4 '
TION OA a Po NE GLASS Ar linairrtma.—
There Ism teen a good deal said &boat an ta- -
acrVtion, scratched with a dthmoad, on a was
of glees ln the Ifeileary Same, Meadville, Pa.,
to this effect: "Abraham Lincoln departed this '
life August 13,1861, by the *Beds or poison.* •
It was attributed to Booth, who was bl the oil,
regiort at that time. A few days ago;'bowertir.
a gentlenian, stepping at the. McHenry House.
and seeing the glue, made a Iltatamont, which.
If true, clears up all mystery regarding It: "rota
• Will remember that on the 11th or 'l4th of ;. An
nual. of lent year, a report came over the wires
that an attempt had been made to poison the
President, and a report came to Meataille thitt
the attempt bed been succeeefnL This mile
. man states that on that day he sad aArland oe- •
copied mom 80. 23, and hitifriend, after haw -
lag the report, 'scratched "the words openshe -
glen, anaposivg• them to - be trite.--qminsigt •
-
Wairainotote, Wiliam III:, And a..olerge Ls
George IL, George IN., 'George IV.„wauma
IV., and Preatdertt Lincoln, bare all died , ea a
Satled4. '
• DIARRIEDI ,
the
'nesami, hir.11324.0 AT/IRII-;lnd Win
'.TENISTITC4ATZ: :
'!.The.1.114:6110 Miramar wsk.perforsodd
s n i g i g ile '7n Rowdi. SI4 tiet, tear
e presence of Isrg! ettolst Mods
Segiisihtinees. At 'nine ofeloeh'ln tiotAyedm
Int the weddlngiarti yirtookigd • grand upping
at Litelette Bell,whteh wee followedby 4aastAs.
musk, and other sods! enjoyments. The elLible
was gotten tip In goOdstyley endyrill Idliberre.
membered by the viortlclpentii AitidOtim
eonplscloog years of prosperity mid**.
DMILTIVEMON—CI I I Tuaidajr. eveninetAl3 , 6
-welock, June Eh, Me, .112rf. JANE D.14-MCF. ,
TON, relict .9t Itenjandn Thitlington.•
Faneeld TAM nvianiioear at '27. ie. Frisidioi
the fondly, are mpectfully invited to attend thou.
Emil from her late residence, die Idoblneostetert.
JY~if" .9DY'ERTIBE.~EA'2'~.
RETURNED SOLDIERS.-ESPECIAL
arrangements Oars beet made so that Ton emi
• good, aersieeabia; neat and Mynah Boot 'or Shoe
AT NEARLY HALF PRICE.
Great Boot and Shoe Home, .-
coiczwr HALL SHOE STORE,
men named
'au Somers
•escerday,
`be base.
' • bricks
• -room
'leas
West Bide of Fifth Street,
W: MOW. YOUR DISCIUBCB
to lo,ure ths . prOer redaction. Skis Sa,sairoor
edged feet that we ieu bedor goods torte n
-than fe asked, for Bubblak b 7 60~0.t0w4_
- 6,4:e.;;14 will ilia soil a
*O, en ii not be taken IO or charged
prices for anything la the Boot sad Skbi limit
1 1°. ," Firrn sl'* r;
lIIMIE
:To - m7. 1 -:::. - .: ; :_ ‘ ,. 5 ., - .,: : ::-, i ,1
... ~, _va1t4Y,..P061112,L-A,RESL.
MErelaa - nt TElLliOrlifs
.
hard opined ou t thelr new store, NO. II PIPTINC
- STSNIVI; under Concert Hell, and alma . their
out stand, .No. la Fxrra STREET, a .moat W.
sant assortment of New Stuumer Goods tor gentlto.
rooms wear, which has recently been purehaoad
the - East, sod wtdoh they will matte to ogee aIL
greatly reduced price. - • -•
In our stock will be found all t he leading - sal
desirable styles of the season, moth ma only sad be
found at a Ant dam establlelunent,eorunatimi
, e
~part of oi rplendld assortment of French Ooa
and postmen*, and a full 'Moot blareelltes V
Ingaorldch we will make up, to order la a sweipe
.style and manner. •
Jut early call from our customer! . and an pgMie
fa
general la respectfully solicited. - •
OltaY, PUSSIYIL & 102114.
..eticoeisor to S. GHAT & SON. Old Stand No.
to Fifth Street, New Stand, No. OS Fifth Street
mycotadeod
CARPETS! CARPETS! OAEPETSI
CARPET DRY GOODS STORE 01K
BINLAP. MIER ifte.
MS 'Federal Street, Alleghetiy.
willaysjust remittal t4e 'used stook se
Cifeperiej Rugs; fps (Ni Crafty
eviciletee4 to ow' 4itr M/0 ail,
assortment of DST CittODM d. ? N m. (IPTUtnia
melon we me offsrpts at pestle slued Patna
'• •
01 0 Btea* /14 11 91.,
at tit its bra:lobes, ettetatly atteile4
l er c irto 44 3 M et
TrA l ta": #i !fr it r a i t
121 WHO A _
- .llllollraui,M%* l.
t 144
' 0 , 0114110 ;/ ,, PIO
*1• 6 1//rEMIL L . BT O ATIAlliWa r t I T
. .
~~:e `►
-=
.;
.
3
I
I
IDEMMI
ABOVE WOOD STRANT.
t ' , At
IM=EI
5 . ,...,17ftt :Z1 I'