GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor., VOLUME XXL-NO. 69. THE EVENING BULLETINi . PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING, • (Sunday& excepted). NIT THE NEW BULLETIN BUILDING, 807 Chestnadotareet, Philadelphia, Mr THE EVENING BULLETIN ASSOCIATION. I .• • :1 8 0 (Sl * 1114)" E 1 17 MT C. WALLACt g o.k. E TO , THOS. WILLIAMS° SOUDER, JR., FRANCIS WELLS. ' Bostatrous t nerved to enbocribere in the city at 18 tants per week. ayabla to the tandem or $8 per annum. ••11E 11A " 'ON BOILER," SET IN TILE VERY 3. bed atYle, cheaper and quicker than any other Etna do the city. by °AMON & HARRIS, Bricklayers, alb Wllllnts alley and 611 South Eighteenth street. Phila delphia. de29-6mrp SCHOMACKER & CO.'S CELEBRAT.RD Pianos.—Acknowledged superior in all respects m arZYAnde In this country, and sold on most liberal terms. NEW AND SECONDZA ND PIANOS constantly on hand for rent. Tuning, moving and packing promptly attended to. IVarerooinn, 1103 Chestnut street. e19.3:0 - 13B1110P—LANNING.—In Wysox, b the Rev. F. it: Burkina Rector of Christ Church, Towanda, Pa.. William T. Bishop, Jr., of Towanda (formerly of Harrisburg), to Emily T.; daughter of M. 11. Lanning, Erg, miItOOKS-CILUMP.-Th Baltimore. June 26th, at St. Faure Cltreh. by the Rector Rev. Dr, Mahan. Prof. N. C. :Brooke, LL. l't . esident of dle Baltimore Female College,. and Chrlstionn ()anvils youngest daughter of the late Dr: 'William Croton, of Virginia, formerly U. S. Minister to CABILEAR—HOWARD.—In Tamworth, N. IL, June 4. by Rev. B. IL Ithidel, Mr. John W. Carilear, artist, of I.ew York, and Miss Helen 'M. Howard.-youngest daughter of Jones Howard, Erg. CRISTIANI—WALTON.--On the 27th inst.: at Wil roington, Del., by the Her. Chas. E. Melbable, Richard S. Crirtlisni, of Philadelphin.to Lizzie Walton, daughter of the late Giro. Walton, of Harrington, Del. DOWNING—WILBON.—Iu Wilmington, Del., on the 18th lust. by the Rev. George A. Dorborrow, Capt. Wm. Downing.B. of . Wilmington, to Mire Miry C. Wibout, of Philadelphia.. MON NIER —POTTER.—On the 27th of Jono,by the Rev. Dr. Newton. Alfred Monde; to Florence Potter, all of this city. No Cards. DIED. CA It'rElt.--On tin 27th Caroline W., wife Of John T.. I'w - ter, ap,-(1 yeara. The (uncial will take place from the reoldence of her lather,, docl Cadhory. Cheltim • avenue, beyond ,Wavhe street, Germatitova, on Scvently , lay afternoon.llW -14th iart., at 4 o'clock. Interment in Friends' Ground, at Ger iiwntotam. LANDELL HAVE THE lIEST ARTICLE`( Buck Iron liarege, two yard,' wide: alto, the ordinary qualified VYRE tILA NI) ELL .V 4 USTO reduced all the Summer Silks and Spring Drees , . A TLEE L CONNARD, .. Paper 3tanufnetorer, 44 N. Fifth street, llianniseruno to order OW finest rtrudtsg of Book; also, ioneond quality Book and Newspapers, at short no- BIOS. SPECIAL NOTICES Awr. OFFICE OF THE LEHIGH COAL AND NAy!. gation Company, Philadelphia. June 21.1, !W. A meeting of the Stockholder,' of The Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company will be held at the Roard of Trade :Rooms, Chtatnat, 'dove Fifth rtreet, on TUESDAY, the ak.cond day of July next. at 10,<, o'clock A. 3.1., for the par pooh, of c.omidering An agreement for the consolidation and merger of the corporate rights, pow CIO, franchimo and pro• iperty of the Nautirok.e Railroad Company with and into The. Lehigh Coal and Navigation Couipany; and aloe an autreement for a airoilltr merger of the Lehigh and Dela ware Water Dap Railroad Company intone Lehigh Coal and Navigation.t 'ouipan;,,,' and of determining by a vote of the etockholdere, to be then and there taken, in lemon or by proxy, for the adoption or rejection of each or either' of the said agreements!. • JAMES S. COX, je2.l-1m vv-tft, Yre4deut. Bor NAl'AT01:11:.S1 AND FILYSIC,IL INSTITI.7I"E, Swinaning School and GyninaAlum for Ladies, Chil dren and Gentlemen % DRO A D tiTREET, .13EIAJW ALNET. TIIE 'NATATORIUM A\l) TILE FOURTI I OF JrLY THE SWIMMING PEPARTMENTON THE "FOURTH" will be open from 6 A. M. to 6 P. M. ' for malt artiontiere exclueively. • iio ladioe claiwea and no lemons given on that day InrOn ar.d after July sti the Ilona+ for ladlea will clone at our q'clork. I•.M. stir PIIILADELPHIA AND ItEADINU IL . IL rouirri I. JULY EXCE:R3I9N.TICgET3 Will be Fold at reduced rates between nil etationm on the Reading Raillo3d and branchel, good f rem SATURIPAY, June 21th, )e tjyBs MONDAY, July 6th, 11367. say. NORTH PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND GREEN LANE STATION.--The undereigued hav,, n full t•upply of the harden and pureot Lehigh G.tal at the above plar, No Schuylkill coal kept. Partlo,l in l:er mantown or vicinity who der.ire a euperior article for pre vent nee, or the winter, ran have it promptly vtipplied and delivered, by addreeoing to Box Germantown Poet Othet . ,• or lea . ving ordere at the Othee, -- No,lsSouth Seventh Ytniet, Phila. Je27-Imrpt & simpsr.F. A PUBLIC MEETING. IN FIAZTIIERANCE the work of the . Dioeeeau Board of Miniono in renneylvanin ,will be held iu.St. Paul'e Church, Cheetuat OH FRIDAY EVENINii. June at eight u'rlaok. Cara leave the Depot at Ninth and Green at woven I'. M., returning Boar the Hill at 1e.40 P. M. jell7,ilt.rp• Aar THE EXHIBITION (JP TILE l'hiAltoDY MINIATURE OF QUEEN VICTORLI, WIJA, BE CLOSED . On SATURDAY; July 6th. EAIJ.E'S riALLEIIE3. _.._kite. ChoAlma. htrcet -- NAT AL .E lONXC fig LIAN-LIANK,--PIIII..ADEL str o da. Jun:. :Nth, 1i437. , 'Lbe Director,. have till: , day declared at dlvidond of Four DoMAYA a rhare, payable en and at ter July bd. J. W. GILLBOU(ill, Caehiet% jc:7.7trp alar TO THE 11:131.1C.—FAMMIES ABOUT LEAV- Ing the city can get the HIGHEST CASH PRICE , ior their old 'Pamphlets, 13ooks, rapers, 'etc.. at 613 Jayne street. jolt luirpl amp fit.iWARD HOSPITAL. NOS. 1518 AND 1530 ""'"' Lombard Street, Dbmensary Department—Medical treatment and medicines fundshed gratuitously to the *OM. An Englioh PeerN Apology for Has Order. The following !Met appeared in the London. Times of June 14 Sir: May I be allowed to Make one or two ob servations On your article of this morning in .reference to the House of Lords ? The institution of a quoruin would be bene licial; but the abolition of vote by proxy Would have no effect on the daily routine of business.' 'The systein, no doubt, is vicious in principle, and should be got rid of immediately; little, however, would be gained or lost by such a step; the mode .of voting being troublesome, and seldom re sorted to. • 4The Rouse of Lords is, in ninny respects, not 'fairly. teSted. The groundless jealousy of the House of Commons, their singular adherence to anediteval securities against Kings and Barons, with the unaccountable reluctance of all adminis trations in succession, prevent the origination of ninny measures in our assembly. Bills, more over, arc not sent up from .the Coinmons with any regularity. Long intervals, in which nothing s - submitted for our consideration, are followed :almost ar the very close of the session by torrents •of legislative propositions, as many, it has hap pened,as fifty in a weekv--all of which, if properly idistributed, would, instead of being passed in haste and without examination, be duly and effi vciently considered. • • Nor may IL be overlooked that the House .of Commons has monopolized to such an Rxteut all - the power of the. State, that party gebates. and party divisions have lost much of their Import -I:ince in the House of Lords, and therefore very seldom occur. This , alone wbuld render any de libeiative assembly unattractive, and'give an ap parent tameness to Most of it.s.proceedings. Your obedient serVant, June , l2. " A PEER. Mns. litssnY WooD's NEw BOOK.—T. B. Pete?' son tt - Brothers ' the American publishers of Mrs! Wood's works, have press,-and will publish in a few days an entirely new novel from her pen, entitled " Orville College," which is said to be equal in Interest and &noun:lent to "East Lynne." Booksellers are requested to send in their orders without delay. "Orville College"has just been finished by Mrs. Wood, and is printed from the author's manuscript and advanced proof 'sheets, purchased by T. B. Peterson Sv . Brothers from Mrs. -- Ifenry Wood, and will: - be' issued - here in'advance of the publication , of the - work in Europe. .-•‘1!::'...... : ...4..t):.....,....,:•........) . 1 - •.:• . ..i' : 4*.:'.,......•....:........5*../* . • Correaponde'nce of the Philadelphia Evening ilnlietin,l Over this eloquent Italy your feet seem to stir up cries from the ground. The echoes of history dog your steps. When you feel btight and proud, .you remember tales of conquests and the flle„ht of. the CaTarian eagles. .When you are a little more sentimental, you give ear to a thousand heart stories, unapproachably tender and tragic, which linger reverberating in the hollows of this volcanic AOll. : Italy herself hi the "woman nation," and her rising and piling, bills are the bosom in which lie many of her sad daughters, whose destinies are theleirlooms ctfpoctry. Byton has sung of Pio ,wretched Parisina; Dante has made , Francesca of` Rimini immortal. - As you return from Venice to Rome, you may pass • iiiiiiii, and fin - d - thelllactr ofthe old - eastici" wherein she read with Paolo of the "long-sighed for smile" which Guinevere smiled on Lancelot; and where young Paolo "Kissed my mouth, trembling in the act all over." At Bologna you • look at the "Temptation of Joseph," a bas-relief, in which poor Properzia de' Rossi, paintress, sculptress, engraver and mini chin, wrought her own likeness in the face of the' wife of the Egyptian lord. She finished the carv ing, her master-piece,and then died of unrequited love, a Sapphic death. At Fitenza you arc told of another Francesca, a woman MAL of different stuff from her Of Rimini. She was the :-alous wife of one of the Manfreds, and when al • saviher stout husband getting the advantage e: lie four bravos she had'hired to kill hint, she Fps ng from the bed, snatched:a sword, arAiiiet out his life with her own white hand. There we have the gamut—ft'om the inspired Woman, dowered with_every talent and splendid with all art, who lies down and meekly dies fo , a fancy, to the creature of one idea, more animal and more Roman, who so broadly expresses con jugal distrust by butchering her husband. `One demonstrates the exacting art-temperament, which, finding the world ilkuljuste• it needs, revenges itself by seeking another. • the 4411146 second, revenge suggests itself as so tething quite earthy and btutish„ and the ill-fitted com rades proceed to air each other in their slime. This i,s• the spirit directly deseendak from the age of • gladiatorial shows, when; before the white rows of the vestals and the ranges of snot lesS, wives end .Children, the coarse swordsmen died in limit blood. ,It is the spirit so admirably depicted by Shakespeare in the boudoir conver sations of Cariolanus. That incredible creature, the•. Roman woman—l perhaps never quite, realized her until, leaving the church of San Pietro in Viueoli, whither I had gone to see Michel Angelo's Moses, the driver said, "SignOr, Our k wheels now pass the spot where Tullia, wife Of Tarquin, drove her car over the breast of her own father." Now the pale Roman street seemed to turn hot beneath me, ashamed to have ever sustained the d4cd. All these stories, as 1 Said, are the heirlooms of art: Plutarch picks his subjects from the arena 'itself, and Dante, who fainted at the tale of his patron Rimini's daughter, proceeds to write it down on his tenderest page.- the ,only page of Dahte that ever was wet with real tears. But' What if be had a story that swept all the gamut ? Suppose history should present Ms with a delineation in which the traits of an Italian murderess should miraeulously blend with those of the tender human flower that withers of an insult ? What tears so deep, What emotions so complicated and so tormenting, as to rnatch such a recital? With what ears shall we hear acme who, like this Tullia, assists at the murder of her fa ther; like this Manfredi, conies up to complete the work her'assassitis fail .in; like Jael of old, wields the hammer • and points the spike: and afterwards : encompassed with the pity and homage of all Italy, turns to death with'an land-• 'cent half-smile on her baby face, goes front her maiden dreams all trustingly ;old gladly to the scaffold, and there softly fades front earth like the rath primrose that, forsaken, dies! Such a character does exist, not in, fiction, but in: hard archives of law. Fiction, however, or rather_ imagination, early - took it uli To say nothing of native poets, Shelley has written Ties Cenei. And Guido Reniata.s_lefta delicate portrait of poor Beatrice.- - This interecting picture is contained in the Palacellarbarini, built by Urban VIII., with the stones of the Coliseum. Fit casket for such a relic. If m) is is right; the Coliseum must have existed More Beatrice coulil be possible. Long before, in ancestral spirits, the circus, must have sown its bloody seed, or the red flower could never have sprung up in the . gentlest breast of Rome. At any rate, the stones of the Flavian arena, first raised by Jewish slaves under the de-. sign of Gaudentlus, a Christian architect and ' martyr, and often wet with Christian tears, have reassembled in these latter - times around the touching face of Belitriee. Clambering, the other day, from pillar to pillar of the fine spiral stair way, I went to pay the gentle creature a visit. There she sits, with the air infantine face look ing at you over the shoulder, the little mouth quivering with a sigh, and the eyes red with cry ing—the pathetic Beatrice who has seen taken to the heart o l f all the world. She looks out a; yoti from her white draperies with the air of a baby, a household darling, who has been Sent chidden to bed. It is a frail heal• to have been chosen to bear all that weight of miserable destiny, and it lifts itself with a look of wonder at the tragic world into which it Is Introduced. Such a look plunges into the very heart, disturbing pity in its depths. E. ILL'N'rEFt Guido was a mere decorative painter, and the portrait is worth little in the - way of art. Such as - he was, however, the limner seems to have done his best, and to, have remembered with real sym pathy the unfortunate wto had jooked round at him so ,wistfully in her cell. Even a cheaper man than hetaight have been ennobled by such an opportunity. So he has painted faithfull • his heir, am .in le en , etter ian he knew. What do those dark eyes see, into which he has thrown that strange, escaping e'xpression? Do they see the, lonely castle, ininging over the pre elpices of the 9bruz7l, and the wicked lord Jour- . neying gayly thither for his summer. debauch? Do they see the assassins spring from the rocks, and' strike, and fail, and fly? Do they see the last scene in the awful tower, when •the • two. -• • . women, having • 'received the false husband and father with awe=stricken hypocrisy in the home they meant he should never enter morn, linnd. him the drugged cup; and lead the murderers in? 'Then, BOatrice, then the mo ment was yours! The victim is atyour mercy -hi his touching helplessness; his wife has fled, and . theitrayos_are iiravering. If you relent,he livee— lives for your dOipair. Your life was his_ gift:l and-now-his-life lis - yourKTBUL your nerves, are BASIL STEPS. PHILADELPHIA, F DA - rJUNE 28,.. 1867. strong, and a lover is whispering in your ear of future hope tnd joy when the wretch is, • dim It is a delirliftn, 'an ecstasy. Yon have draWn the assassins to his bed; you are threatening - and weeping, and taunting and commanding, and they draw courage from the tragic beauty of your faec; and the deed is over, and the villain *us 'been hammered to death in his den. - Is that what you 'are seeing, poor child, with your soft, alarmed eyes? • No likeness; is shown of the miserable Fran cesco Cenci. But his two wives are there, the first being the mother, and the other the step mother and accomplice of Beatrice... It is a ful triad, a sad sisterhood of miserables who have mounted the heights of experience', and see the whole world of wretchedness beneath them. The mother's bead, painted with all the forcible exaF geration of Caravaggio, has not, even under those -- stronglights - and — shadowsi-W--lefty-look. . round and stupid, the puppet of misfortune; what Is worse, it bears clearly the travestied likeness of the daughter, and It Is bundled up in a turban which miserably caricatures the - white drapery on that young forehead. " Poor baby 1 is it after "all possible that destiny was kinder .to kill you when it did, In your youth, In your great mo ment, in the day when your eye was lofty and your mouth tremulous 'and your beauty invin cible ? Yon died, with your hapless family and your boy-brother looking on. That was awful. But if you had, lived and grown fat; it woukt have been worse,;fbr it IVould have been funny. Over the'two hangs the face of Luerezia Cenci, the,second wife, the accomplice. It Ls long and brown, with straight black hair and narrow peep ing-eyes,-;nits capable of Murder. SANTA ANNA. P How He was Outwitted and a Guard of Honor Placed Over Hint—The Au thorities , Oppose Hint . and After wards Pronounce in His Favor... Details of His Vera Cruz Fiasco. VERA Cnirr-4, um", 11th, 1867, * * '"The confusion and contradiction as to the real 'state of affairs in the interior • had almost reached a climax when, of a stuldeiman American steamer • was descried outside, ''llying the .private signal of some distinguished personage. -No one could divine who the personage coal(' be;• until the captain of the port's boat returned from the steamer with the information that It was General .Santa Anna. Consternation now became general, and the Imperial Commissary together with the, commanding general, at the invitation of Santa Alma, went aboard the Virginia and had' a long couf, rence with him.. He. stated that he came supported by the United 'States, and with means furnished by them, and requested permis sion to land. This was refused for the time being, until a council of war could be held. While they were returning from the steamer to Vera Cruz, General Perez Gomez, commanding in 'Fort San Juan de Ulloa—Gomez is a ereatn re of Santa Anna —brought Santa Anna to the castle and there gave him quarters. This Gomez, tinder' orders frOm Taboada, has kept all the guns bearing on the city, and has three mortars and two hundred quintals of pow der, as well as provisions to last the garrison a month. These events took place on the :3d. dust, The Whole town was in alarm thafttight; and knowing that the enuncil of war was. held, and that the majority had decided against letting Santa Anna land, they feared that fie city Would be bombarded_by Gomez. On the Ith :r norther prevented 'any communication with the tort. On 'the 5111 the weather -was good, but the Imperial Commissary refused to allow any com munication with the or vessel. Two captains who came ashore from the castle were taken pri soners, and confided in the Town. Hall, while an aid from the Imperial Commissary pat out to no tify Gomez and the Major of the fort that Ta boadir wished to see them on shore t „They obeyed - the order. and while they were corning ashore, Colonel .Catuacilo, with one hundred men, ,put out for San Jnan. He had private instructions to put a guard of honor, composed of twenty-live men (!) over the avalaments occupied by Santa Anna in the castle. As soon as he should .suc ceed in doing this, he was to lutist the flag of the . fort at half-mast, as a signal to the city of his sue , 'i•ess. When the signal was noticed, the Civil j Prefect or Vera Cruz, RobledO, went to the fort I with orders to made Santa Anna re-embark on the steamer.and gave him to understand that tim Im perial Commissary .and General Taboada Would meet him there and let him know the result of the council of war. Santa Anna made no resist--, lime, for it-was-useless, aspic had been outwitted. Early on the text day the Commissary and the General-in-Chief spent over three hours aboard the. Virginia. The American and English Con suls were also there. • What transpired is not known,- but-the Commissary and the- General re- - turned completely changed, and the very men who the clay Previous had foiled Santa Anna, called another council of war, and drew up a pro nunciamiento Mills favor. All the . garrison sub seribed to it except Cuevas; Camacho, who with-: tinily to his barrackS,' anti declared he would-hold oat there against the rest, Lieutenant Colonels Fitmerro f 3lurcha and a few others. • Here ;Arose a new conflict. The garrison was divided. The preparations for Santa Anna's land- . Inc were being made r aud the revolution is pub licly spOken of. This occurred between noon and two-P. M. - At about three o'clock a boat went alongside the' Virginia. It contained the American and English naval eonnuanders. Commander Roe sent an invitation to Santa. Anna -to dine with him —aboard the Ta wny.. But the old fellow, suspecting it to be a device, returned his thanks in the most amiable miner gracious language possible, ' and stated that he would accept the compliment at another moment, as he was then awaiting a boat to go ashore. His surprise was awful when he got orders from Commodore Roe to -follow him at one as irprisoner of the United States. Roe at,, the me tune told the Captain of the Virginia to stea down next day to Tampico, and take Santa Atina from aboard the Tacony and bring hint back to New York, whence he had fled, leaving a claim still pending. • The ridictile and disgraCe which the authorities here have brought upon themselves by this whole 'transaction is of the worst kind. The Civil Pre feet, 'General Robledo, has resigned anti goes to Havana. General ,Hetran goes to Havana by this steamer also; and it' is even reported that Taboada has resigned. The general belief is that General ]lenavides will occupy this city next Sunday, June .113. . • • So winds up another episode, THE INDIAN WAR; Satanta on the iVar-Path. [From to•day'e New York Tribuno.]• FORT SEDo . wicK, June 20,1867.—The Kiowas are on the war-path under the bombastic Satanta, and have struck General Andrew Jaq'ism Smith "a hard lick"—so he telegraphs to Sherthan. IMPORTANT ORDER FROM GEN. SIIER3LtN. tirryorN Mrcar,tnr Drvisu;s ;);''Tnr , .Missount,June 21.-:To accomplish, as far as pos sible, a concert Of action and uniformity of prae ,tiee throughout this Military Division, embracing the Great Plains from the Mississippi to the• Rocky Mountains, with their tribes of nomadic Indians, tho following general rules-are adopted: 1. By the laws of Congress, the management of Indian affairs is committed to the Interior-De partment, and by it delegated to a:-Commissioner of Indian Affairs, to general superintendents, special commissioners, and agents, to reside among the separate tribes . of nations. And when the Indians actually reside on a reservation, or restrict, themselves to territory guaranteed to them by _treaty; the military, are commanded and - the'civil - authOritlifs notified - that - those treaty - , rights are the sopreme law of the laud, and must OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. be respected; but when the. Indians leave their reservations and go beyond the country com mitted to them; and there commit tverime, they fall under military control or subject themselves to - arrest:And punishment by the civil power. 11. For militaryconvenienee the Division has been divided into three military departments— that of Dakota, to the north, commanded by Gen. Terry; that of the Platte, in the . middle, com manded by Gen. Au the south, commanded by Gen. Hancock.. Each of these departments coincides, as near as can be, with the State and Territorial lines, and each commanding general has a part of the regular army; as large can be spared from other quar ters, and has ageneral supervision of the military policeof his department, and has also other spe elal duties whi ii cannot be made public. 111. All this extent of country is embraced in some State or Territory, with civil officers acting under their own special codes; and. as a great diversity of opinion and practice exists as to how far the civil anthorily can apply, especially a in cases such it_h;M:_racently_prevatl ,___whereLadians •in small' bands have infested the traveled roads and expos td settlements. it is hereby made known that 'leach State and Territory will organize a battalion of mounted men, ready to be called in to the service of the IlnitedStates, it will be called for UV the Department'Commander, and used in connection with the regular troops, if an emer gency'. should arise, in Iris judgment, to make it necessary. In that event the regiment, or a part thereof, will be mustered in, according to the laws of. Congress now existing—each man to provide his own horse, for which the allow ance 'of forty cents a day will .be stipulitted, and the same pay, clothing, food and allowances as are now or may be hereafter pro vided by laW. But it must be clearly understood that ft VII require an appropriation by Con gress to make the actual payment of everything, 'except rations, forage and supplies, needed by such volunteers, during Me time they are in the Service Of the United 'States; hut that Corigresa will so appropriate thee is little doubt, provided the necessity for the call be manifest, as evi denced bythe judgment of the Department Com mander, ratified by myself and • the General-in- Chief, Whenever such a battalion Ls organized, • the Governor of the State or Territory should notify the Department Commander of the fact, with such report of numbers, location of compa nies, tte.,.A:c., as will enable him to judge of their availability. The civil authol'ities of said States and Territories should, by their sheriffs of counties and by their deputies, have small posses armed and prepared at all times, to pursue and hunt down-the small horse-thieving bands of Indians, who. by dispersing, avoid the military fortes. Wiuin they have made captures clearly within the county, or within their official jurisdiction, the thieves should be confined in the county jail; and proceeded against according to law; but if traced to any Indian reservation, the ease should be re ported to the United States 311tralue4 bY whom the property stolen should be demanded through theßesident Agent, and a demand. made for the surrender of the thief or thieves. Should there be any doubts, the capttired Indians, should, if possible, be delivered to the commanding officer of some military post, who will receipt for them, and hold them subject to the supreme authority of the Government. Sheriffs parties, in pursuit of Indiana who have committed thefts, will be justified in using their arms, unless they promptly surrender on demand. or Esr.tyr PETCDI V. When horses, mules, or stock of any kind are stolen by Indians,quad can be traced to a re servation, a delknand should be made at once of the Agent, and if the tribe be entitled ta'annui ties, it Is understood that such annuities are chargiable with the value of the stolen property; but if the Steals committed, as is usual, by the small bands of warlike tribes, who have come from a great distance and do not belong to any reservation, it is almost impossible to recover the value: The United States is not liable for such theft any more than for a highway robbery com mitted in one of the more settled States. The Governors of States and Territories in terested in the foregoing, are requested to com municate freely with department commanders on all these subjects—and by way of appeal, diuly, to me or to higher authority. W. T. SHERMAN, Lieutenant-General Commanding. A Family found and fobbed of . 57,000 ' • • Worth of Bonds, acc. -One of the most daring outrages which has evenbeen perpetrated in the vicinity of Neviark, New Jersey, 'occurred on Tuesday evening, at Westfield, a village some twelve miles west of Newark, in Union county. About nine o'clock in the evening, four men entered the house of • Mr. Jacob Miner, an old- and — verY respeetable resident of Westfield, and demanded hia money, telling him that they would not leave the house until their demands were complied with. Ono of their then :knocked the Old gentleman down, after which - he was bound, hand and foot. - The four afterward.. _secured Mrs. Mittel:, a piling lady named Clark, who was visiting there, and a laboring man named James, who was employed upon the premi es, in the same way. Two of them then searched the upper part of the house, while the other two remained below with the lamily. The searching party soon returned with $7,000 worth of bonds and two gold watches, one belonging to Mr. Miller and the other to 14 1 % wife; and the desperadoes then ,tle parted, leaving the family helplessly bound. Previous to leaving, however, they threatened to kill the fettered inmates and fire the house if they made. an alarm. Soon after they left, Mrs. Mil ler succeeded/ in freeing herself and then released her eUmpanions; but fear of encoun tering the robbers deterred them from giving an alarm until about five Wail the next • morning. Immediate steps were ta II to secure, if possible, the arrest Of Me perpetrators of this high-handed outrage, and Ntwark and New York detectives are already at work upon the case.. A reward of $5OO has been offered for the arrest of the robbers md recovery of the bonds. The following : are the numbers of the bonds and descriptions of the watches ; Four Elizabeth City bonds of 61,900 eaok, Nos. 42, 62, 351, 352; two Rahway City bonds of .i 51,000 each, Nos. 59 and 61; and/one Union County bond, No. 44, of $l,OOO. One of the gold watches stolen had au open face, with the initials "J. M. N. J.," on the inside; the other was a lady's watch, marked on the outside "J. A. M." . , A British Officer Sim! by a United Si'. Loins, Tuesday, June 25.—A private letter from the steamer Octaroon, on her way to Fort Benton with Government stores and troops, dated near Fort Union, gives an account of the 'death of. Capt. W. D. Speer, - of the British army, a pas senger; Who was shot by a sentinel. .The facts of the case were these: Sentinels had been posted oil the roof to watch the banks at night, so as to give warning of the approach of Indians. Capt. Speer. started to go to his - room, which was in the texas, about 12 o'clock at night, and when about to en ter Was tired upon by a sentinel' stationed aft of the texas, killing him instantly. From the, testi mony taken by the committee appomted by the passengers, it appeared that the sentinel did not challenge Captain Speer, but" fired without-halt ing-him. The sentinel was arrested and turned over to the -military authorities at Fort Buford. The Captain of th.e boat states that sentinels were not at all necessary for the Safety of the boat or passengers, and were placed on the roof by the Lieutenant commanding, with express-orders not to interfervwillr the passengers. - • • - • • -7' The Cholera and Yellow Fever In New Orleans—Three Undoubted Cases of Roth Cholera and Fever Reported. NEW ORLEANS, June 27, 1867, 9 P. M.—The N. Y. Herald published a special telegram on ,Mon- day, announcing the appearance of yellow fever In this eity,ivhichitsulted.in:the following-being sent hell/ by the Associated Press: WAintraworr, June 26, ; ,1467.--Collector Kel tong, of New Orleano, telegftphe t to the Secretary, CRIME. Stated Soldier. I of the Treasury, denying the report that the yellow fever had appeared there. The falls prove the Governnviat information to be incorrect, three caseiliavingioteurred within the last two weeks. A man in the Charity Hos pital died of The black vomit first, and vvds.re ported as an undoubted case of yellow fever to the Board of Health by Dr. Lewis, the Visiting physician, who saw the patient. Notwithstand, mg the - report of Dr. Lewis, the Board repOrteti the case as one of intermittent fever. . . At the meeting of the Board on. Tuesday, the 25th, Dr. Smith, the President, reported two un doubted eases, one of the patients recovering, the-- other, lienry Getson, of New York, dying of black vomit on Sunday. The . migin of these cases is unknown. No additional cases have beery reported for the past week, but three additional eases of cholera have been reported. Two of the patients lair since reetyrered.—N. F. Herald- GRAND DIAMPNIC, 0 VA.friO . ,!4iee ilsi - iinnteisirf. Brady in *td of Elie Destitute and. Suffering Masons -of the S.olutil• [From. to-day's New York WorliLl . .A grand Masonic ovation in aid of the - destitute and suffering Masons of the South was held last evening in the Academy of Music. At an early hour not only the Masonic- brethren, with ears ready for the sweet sounds, and hearts open to noble sentiments, but the lair sisters, although they perhaps were not of the order, rapidly began to collect into a happy,. intelligent and expectant audience. It was not long before the Academy assumed a very different aspectNY from ' the normal spectacle of bare seats and empty boxes. Tier on tier was soon occupied with , the possessors of smiling faces, loves of hats and boveringlans, agreeably relieved-by the frequency of uncovered and un-• chignoned heads and bearded feces: At the, beginning of the concert there were no seats left, and quite a number of spectators were obliged to stand. The audience was as 'cultivated aitd intel ligent as it was large. _ ' The concert began at 8 o'clock, at which time ,the Academy was entirely filled, with the excep tion of reserved boxes. The rendering of the selections was greatly ap plauded, the singers:and performers being repeat edly encored. . , President Johnson was expected during the evening; a telegram having been received from New Haven announcing his intention of being present, and a box was prepared and reserved for him. The audience were disappointed, but were highly gratified with the entertainment, and more than gratified with its object. • During the intermission in the musical exer cises, Mr. James T. Brady, accompanied ly sev eral prominent members of the brotherhood, took his place on the stage. Mr. Brady was then introduced to the audience by Past Grand Master Robert D. Holmes, and greeted with loud and long applause. IVhen this had subsided, Mr. Brady opened his address with the usual salutation of 'ladies and gentle men," remarking that such was the ordinary lan guage of cotirtesy when a speaker presented himself before a public audience; buthe wished to address the gentlemen present by a designa tion more -endearing, and which in that connec tion it fell to his lot to utter for the first time in his life—Brother Masons. [Loud applause. 1 He was sorry, so far as the gratification of mere personal feeling was, concerned, that ho could not add to this .something even more graceful ,and beatktiful, •• and . say "Sis ters."' [Applause • anClatighter.] He was in formed by thegentlemen connected with this most venerable, honored and honorable institu tion that it had not forever been divested of that litrace In' ts organization. • Me then referred eulo qtleally to the women who had figured eon.- spit •uonsly in the history of MaSonry, and said that there was no order of men on earth who had established such sacred, solemn, undying obliga tions for the honor of the other sex. He re garded the womenpresent then as encouraging. him to come forward for one of 'the noblest pur poses that ever stirred his heart, or excited mo tives of benevolence. He rejoiced that he was permitted to speak a few words on the cause for which they were conferred. On the ticket sent to him, which favored him with admission to one of the boxes, he saw.printed those few elo quent, patriotic, tearfuj words, "The cry of the hungry." This is no catch of the pen, no humor of the fancy. It is a sad, stern truth. While he stood before them, there were those in the South • who had been fostered in tip arms of motherS who bent over theirs with smiles benignant as those of heal - undo whom in their childhood they looked up as we look uti t( thegreat Master of the universe—men, women and children brought up in comfort and even-litxury, who now-know the pinching . wants of the , Niemen noces saries of life.. He, like many other men in the assembly. had received frequently letters from the South, the penmanship and manner of expression of which indicated that, they came from ranks of high 'position, and wishing him to get some benevolent gentlemen to associate their menus together, that they might purchase a few bushels of corn for the support or their starving little ones. It watt peculiarly interesting . to contemplate their duty, as Masons to the South, in view of the circumstances developed duriiig the, war. When it broke out It disrupted families; it severed the ties of'friends: it assailed the structure of the government; and it ntayhave been said to strike at the foundations of religion; •but it left Masonry standing in its grand perfec tion still. (Loud applause.)'• And now, on this occasion, when it was represented there for the purpose of obtaining means to send the' support of life to famishing brothers and sisters of the South, he invoked the presence of the Deity the enter their hearts and fill the tabernacles of their souls with spiritual determination that noup of them might feel satisfied until they had contri buted in some way for the relief of those suffering people. • • , • Mr. Brady closed . with an eloquent appeal ,to Masons to contribute .to the object of ,the meeting, and an expression of hope that their starving brothers of the South would accept the gift, and, setting, aside all political questions, be united to them in charity, kindness and benevolence: `Terrible Fall from . a Church Spire. [From the Indlanapolla Journal, Juno KJ • The chapter of horrible accidents - received an addition of more than usual terror yesterday morning, in the fall of one of the' carpenters en gaged on the cupola of Zion's Church, on Ohio street. Mr. Peter Wilson was engaged in raising the frame work of the steeple, and stepping up a ladder about 115 feet from the ground, missed his , foothold, and in falling struck upon the roof about two-thirds of the.way from the comb' to the caves, breaking. through the slate tiles and sheeting, and bouncing upon the roof of the two-story frame - -house just west, and thence to the ground. The distance. from where ho fell to the roof first struck wo• should judge to be nearly sixty teat, and the .force with which he fell may be inferred from the break ing of quite a large hole in the plating and board covering. Strange to say, ho was not killed out right, but is stilt alive, although no topes are entertained of his recovery: Ills lower jaw was broken ht four places, his ankle broken badly, Tourer tiVei riba wrerielietilront the isniaeotutt ue. scalp shaved. 'clean from the skull in the spot where he struck the slitting. If the skull - was broken, no displacement was discovered. Mr. Wilson-was carried to his home in an insensible condition.. He_is a.Wolchman of about thirty . years of age, and haVing been a sailor; was entirely fearless of distance and foOhat reason had been engaged in framing the Spires of the. First and Second churches, and then at Ziou's Church. ," VAST QuANTITIEH OF IYOIIT DESTROYED.- Thousands of teeth that 'might. last. a lifetime ArelostiWory - yiinf; SimplyThttiititic • t concerned either forgot or do not appreciate the feet that Sozonolyr 'duly applied, rendera. the dental eubstacee proof egainet decay, • . F. L. NETHEigTON. PahEsher. PRICE THREE CENTS. FACTS AND FANCIES. "reversible" bonnet is , the latest novelty: —ln the last quarter century the apple trees have only twice bloSsoMed as late as this year. —Smith JP quite numerous in..&6lY. York this year, there being 1,830 . 0 f —Two mere prc-adamite frogs havebeen.founif in a coal but in Nova Scotia, 160 feet below the —A venerable Ilubbist, who saw President Johnson's entry into Boston op Saturday, saw alma _Presitlen t Washington's in 1789. —Eugenie flung herself into Louis's. arms and wept after the attempt at assassinatitrb Not at , the result, we hope. —The Chicago Judges are taking measures to make divorces less easily attainable. It is about time. • —A hungry Mason on Monday was told. to wallow his apron, but declined because it wont i.gainst his stoinach.--Bostest Peat Tate secretary., sails for Europe on Saturday, to et as Charge D'Aftitires to Austria. —lt is reported that Mr. George Gibbs, the eologist and philanthropist, is an applicant for he office of Governor of Watrussia. --A Detroit man hold a reception party the ther night to receive congratulations upon aving vialted.Chicago and returned safely. --Garibaldi has issued invitations for a Foss— masons' Gongress at Naples, to be held at the same time as the centenary of St. Peter at Rome -In Gloucester, England, there is a club or, worshippers of Mr. M. F.Tiipper, who call them. selves 'The Tupperiana." —An International Club is proposed in London, to enable distinguished foreigners to meet their equals in England. - • —Three beings of the What-is-it. race,:with._ human voices, but covered with hair, hat ebeen found in 311,ssouri. —The ladiep put paregoric into the ice-cream at a strawbthly festival in. Cincinnati, to prevent injurious effects. The effects were not injurious but ludicrous. —"Beverly Tucker is in Mexico, managing a large establishment for a wealthy Mexican," The man should be wealthy who has Beverly for a. manager: • —We learn from the N. Y. Gazette that Mr.. Bancroft's head is covered with close, thick, short white hair, and that ho wears side-whiskers in the English style, but neatly trimmed. —A Western paper says Greeley plays a hero. as a tragical wild ass• would play Mazeppa. Comparing a jackass to Greeley is cruelty to milk-- —A man of an econtomical turn of roind.shot himself in a pave-yard, at St. Louis, the other day, where he owned a lot, so as to save the ex pense of a funeral. —Mr, Ciladstone will take the chair- of the Newspaper Press Fund dinner, at Willis's-Rooms on the 29th of July. All the celebrities of litera ture are down in the list of stewards. —The Court Journal of June 15th says -4. " Ott Friday last, at St. Peter's, Maidstone, the congre gation consisting of two ladies only , . the curate, commenced With, 'Dearly beloved niters!' " —Count Wedel, who shot Prince Bernhard. Solms in a duel at Vienna some months. ago, luat been pardoned by the Emperor, and has returned to Austria. . —Here is a paragraph a to Home./biamak "The handsomest man of the city is Mr. John A:. K-nn-dy; the wittiest, Mr. Thos. C. A-ct-n: the soberest, Mr. Detective Y—g, and I the poorest, the writer."—N. Y. Gazette. —A heavy storm broke over Bruges on the %/- Several buildings and the spires of churches of Notre Dame, St.. Croix and , that the •Ite clemptorists,were.strtick with lightn g At Ghent a great ninny old:trees were torn fr m eir roots by the wind: • —A notary in Italy named M. elpanl, a'con firmed drunkiird, recently made a bet that ho would break several hundred plates with his head. He did so, and won Ills wager; but on re turning home was seized, with alourning fever. Ills head swelled to a frightful size, and hoex pired after some hours of excruciating suffering, —At the Royal Palace in Berlin forty thousand wax candles are instantaneously lighted by a single match. The wicks are previously con nected by a thread spun from gun-cetton, on lightlyg one end of which all the candles nra lighteesiniultaneously, and thus the whole . of the seven hundred apartments are illuminated at once. —The aim of driven million florins has been. appropriated by. the Austrian Government for fort Mentions at__Vierma. Of this fourtnillions only are to be ekpeuded this year, and this ex penditure will be covered by the thirty-eight mil lions payable by Italy for the war material in the Venetian fortresses.. . —A great compliment has just, b , en paid to Sir.• Edwin Landscer by a lunatic. 'A physician In. London has had to apply to -a magistrate for an order to consign a, man named John Adams to an asylum, Adams• being • for a long time under the delusion that the lions in Trafal gar square had got loose and wore nnderltis bed, • growling at him. —A large laud-slip has occurred in the Oberland Alps, near the village of Lutschen, which has' caused great damage and threatens still ihrther injury, the village of Stelnegg being in great. danger. The forest of Hard is in motion over a great extent of.ground, and an enormous number of large fir trees have been overthrown and broken. —A new question has arisen about the Beh.eldt, a stream already famous in the annals of interna tional litigation. A project for damming it hula led to a dispute between Belgium and Holland.' The question has been referred to a commission of three engineers; French, Prussian and Engiikh. By a majority of. one, this commission has de cided that the damming may proceed. • —Jeff. Davis has accepted an invitation from the proprietor of the White Sulphur Springs, in Catawba, N. C., to visit that place on his return from Canada, and he will be there with his family in July or August: Jeff has also an invitation fromthe Well;known proprietor of another cele brated sulphurous institution. HIS acceptance is not formally announced, but there can be little( doubt that he will personally report in due sea-. son.—Ex. —The hair dressers of Parse now begin work at nine o'clock in the morning and continue through out the day. These great, artistes, Indeed, giver themselves airs just now, The invited to balls have to positively linplore their aid, anti pay from 15f. to 40f. for half an hour's decorative ar- rangernent of the true and' the false. Mr. the' mighty monarch of the caillitre showed rue, with a certain tone of pride, a note he had received from a great lady who required MS services. In Wnglish It would be something like this:—"The Princess C--reposes fail TOW , tidence in Mr. promise to be at her }Toter tit 11 O'clock; n n evertheless, the carriage will be: sent for Mr. F----at IWo'clock, in whom alone the Princess C—hus confidence, and for whose taste she 'has the highest consideration." -- I The Windsor Express of June Bth, publishes, the following story of a diamond bracelet; ilaTO-- ral months ago a diamond bracelet, valued at over 1:15U, was lost at Richmond by Lady Parker, and although search was made and handsome res, waide offered, no clue could be obtained, and.. her ladyship gave it up as lost to her for certain. Last week her ladyship reeelied an aitonygious' ' letter, stating that a parcel .awaited her at a cep, tain shop, that it bore the direction given 'in OA letter, and that she must apply in, person for it. -- Lady Parker's curiosity was 'roused,, api, she visited the tradesman's shop in questiOn. wher4 the parcel as described had been for several days,. The parcel was_claimed and equal/um& Lady Pirkiii 'may be when on opening it she discovered her ieng-1911; tikamond bracelet intact, No elucidation'Mt bet: ester:. given of the Mtery. - - .