GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXL-NO. 90. EITANING BULLETIN' I . UIILISJIED' EVERY EVENING • . • (Sundayx excepted), AT TILE NEW BULLETIN BUILDING, 007 Chestnut Street, Philade lphia, T/IE EVENING BULLETIN ASSOCIATION . , . P 1:0PRIETO IN. • ' 411)/SON ?EA CNA:. ERNEST OWALLACII, F. L. FETEIERSON, THOS. J. WILLIAMSON, CASPER SOUDER, Js., FRANC:IS WELLS. The 1313.r.):118 IsServed to subscribers In the city at 19 cents per week, payable to the carriers, or $8 per annum. IFIRVSCIIOM ACKER & CO.'S CELEBRATED Elanon.—Acknowledged superior in all rempecta to any made in thin country, and eold on moot liberal terms. NEW AND SECONIMIAND PIANOS constantly on hand for rent. Tuning, moving and packing promptly attended to. I,Vareroome.llo3Chentnut street. jelft3mo MARRIED. LOPEZ—WOLFE.—Monday July oo at St. John's luirch, Clifton, Staten feland:by the Rev. B. S. Hunting ton, Manuel de .1, Loprz. Lima , Yens, to Florence Wolfe, daughter mN. H. Wolfe, of tlde city. PARICISH—Ii A ItDCASTLE.—On the Btli inat., at Long - 14,indAyitielteV; Miglr MliginiTWlTlk INT - Parriali, of Pliilada., to 311 , 8 Belle L. Hardea.tle. of New York. • DIED. ufternoon of the 9..10t ito.trint, after 'hurt allue,r,lart in Thoolam,mon of Elijah And Elizabeth (70oo.tuu. I. lateral on Wednegdny morning, et 9 o'clock, front the t, , itio-nce of his fatip:r, liedla, th-lawar,, county, i'n. I...RWIAN. At hir residence In Coopereherg, on Sater. dov evening htet, 11 , ,n. John Erdman, one of the AFrociftte u - dgem of Lehigh ounty• - - 111(,Kii.--On the -.31e. '3lr,, Rebecca, wife of NVin. II irk,. Her reintiveit and friends are reapeetfully invited to attend her funeral, front her htolhand'e residence, 807 North Eleventh etreet, on Thuntday, 251.11 instant, at 10 ~ , c lock. 'Jo proceed to Laurel Cemetery. •• JEStil'l'.—At Newport. It. 1, on the lttth met., Tillie N., wife of Alfred D....lerlAn, In the 43..1 year.of her age. Due notice will he elven of the funeral, which will take Place from the ieddence , of 'her husband Ititi Walnut street. If: • .liJlllll.—ln (Theater, Delanware county, on the morning •1 the r Smith, relict of tip! late Samuel net-deli yean , . he reletivee and fri , uie of the family are invited to at-tend the funeral, from her late xeridence, without Tar. titer notice, on Virth.ela,.....sth tone.. nt tl,o'cleek. LOY RE & LANDELL ILAVE'TIIE III:ST ARTICLE OF KJ Black Irou Ila; ego. to o yard,' ss ide; alto, the ordinary trek:itie. dr. LAN I>Ell. /II }}ace recluc, the 6 :inrn , r riilu,u4 Spring rin,p4 4 0 -nod.# . • ATLEE d< CONN.% Itf). .Ll_ `ll:nufacturen., 44 N. Fifth trect, Manufacture to ...rd,f th tinukt. grad/'p of Bunk; second quality 11..4 and NwiA opal,re, at rhort uo flee. SPECIAL x%O lll CUES. Iti: AN tic/N . ItAi 1 1 : N D, Cy4l?F: . ! AND A - ra n. .1:u71 , Ilt 1.1 1 lON CUM. On and after Aara.t P.4i7, at their , dnr, in "o-i, y 6, k were win be. payable to tiw:itark , •iderr of the ahoy, c,,,npaniet. on the bo K,. July Ist. 1.6% A Dividend of Fly.. Per Cent. on the fail etvelt, and in proportion on tic hart paid at , wl4, cirsr ~t" United States ta,:l, ItiCHARD rcroCKTON, . o ptat,i ; st i r • NORTH PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND GREEN LANE f ATION.—The midi:reigned II ay.., • full supply of the hatdeet and pur , ,t.l.vhi7h Coal at tho above ;dace. No Schuylkill coal krpt. Parties in Ger. mantowlior vicinity WIP) &Arc a tc tperior article for pre 'mut use, or the winter, can have It promptly supplied and delivered. by addr,,ing to Ilox G , -rniantow - n Poet Office, or leaving orders at the Whe,.. street, roan. )r37-lwtryB seir DIVIDEND NoTDT.--OCEAN OIL COMPANY. —A monthly dividend of One.and.a-half l'er Cent.. and an extra diyolund of Five CeAti, being twenty cent, nce r abate. has been declared , pavabl, on and after A frt. clear of take. Itooke ceoee ;July' .03" *th, at 3 P.M.:O - pen t -414.ual 2d. . _ 1 . /111...A7/1.1.1 . 111 J;Ily 1. 5 367. DAVII) BOYD, J Trealurer. .151.a.15 97 2figlanl 1110WAIT.D HOSPITAL, NOS. 1519 AND MO Lombard tltrt.::.lii•penaary Departnvmt—Medie..l treatment and meSticinee furnished gratuitunely to Ow The Great St. Louis Bridge. t. Louis Is to have lion which Clients.) has not, wd which will have the great merit of costing a cat deal inure moncx than the great •'Lake This is the new - bridge across the Missis -ippi, for which planshave been accepted, and winch is to be begun at once. Having admitted somewhat reluctantly that there are longer bridges: in the world,but denied that there are any so wonderful, the St. Louis bernoccat goes on to : - But it is the great feature of our bridge, which will cost nearly live millions, that it will acciitn mod:Ate two double tracks of rails—one broad gauge, the other narrow—foot passengers and -met railway ears and will not interfere One whit with navigation; for of the three arches' -which will span together the shores of St. Louis And Illinois. the central one is live hundred and fifteen and the two side ones four hundred and ninety-seven feet. The two piers which will sup port these glorious arches' will be such tremen dous masses 01 masonry as to take back the mind involuntarily to Cheops and Cephrenes and their pyramids amongst the yellow sands of Egypt. and within sight of the tranquil, winding 'Nile. Soundings made recently in the river have indicated - a remarkable -'change its bed. The high water being compelled to flow through. the narrow channel trained by outiwharf and the revelled shore of Bloody Island, has cut out the sandy bottom eighteen feet lower than when the same soundings were made last April. Yet this location is perhaps the narrowest place in`the river within 1500 mites of its mouth. From this cause it has been absolutely necessary to place the foundations of the piers upon the rock itself. which. is from 59 to 70 feet from the sandy bed. Taking this into consideration, the pier at the deepest part of the. river will- be a mass of ma sonry 200 feet in height. 110 feet in width, and with a breadth tapering from 55 to 40 feet. The .ether will -probably- be 170 feet in height, as the rock is met with sonic 30 feet nearer to the river `iottom. It will be allowed by all that this will be a stupendous undertaking." Foolhitrdy Tricltrlayed 4y Boys.. The Terrible Result. ' Three brothers, the eldest of whom is not over twelve years old, living near Harmon's Station, on the Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railroad, have been in the habit of lying between the ties -if the road and Incurring the terrible risk of having a train pass over them at full speed. They repeated this recently, at a sad cost, with the . passenger train run by Conductor George :Drain. This train, out from Cincinnati, was running liking at the usual speed, when the engineer happened to disco v :it. three little human forms curled up in holes between the ties, just as the engine.was within a few yards of them. There was no chance to stop the train until it had passe'd' over them, and then proceeded some distance further. The officers of the train then returned to the spot and found the three children terribly bruised. All had broken limbs, and one of them had his :head mashed in such a terrible manner as to make his recovery a matter of doubt. It seems that In *electing their nests they had not calculated cor rectly us to depth, and that the brake-box had :aught them. They are children of Mr. John Rouse. General, Grant at Long Branch. Luau BIUNCIT, N. J., July 2:l—General Grant .and family arrived here at five o'clock this after noon. The General is accompanied by Major- General Butterfield, General H. Porter and Lieu tenant Wallen, sou of General Wallen, the com •thandant at Fort Columbus, Governor's Island. The party started ,, from Governor's Island at two-and-a-half o'clock, on the steamer Henry -Smith—specially ordered for the: occasion by -General--Ingallsi- -commanding the Bureau - , or Transportation in New fork.. The Governor's Island band accompanied the party to Port Mon .mouth, Where the General and kis party disem barked and took a spedial train in waiting to ac companyrthem to this point. A suite of rooms had already been provided for him t the,Stetson House, and these henow occupies. The whole transit has been effected without any attempt at display, such being the General's desire, and even at this, time it is not generally known here that the Commander-in-Chief of the armies of America is enjoying a siesta in this place. A grand hop is to be given here in honor of Gen.o rant on Thursday evening next. —lierq/4, ; 1 4t8 Liars PoTo , r, June 28, JB67,When. - iit - 0 o'clock on the morning of the flith of June, the parties sentenced Were taken out of the COuvent of Capuchinas, the Emperor. leaning for a mo ment against the door, looking at the heavens, said to Licentiate Ortega, one of his defenders, "What beautiful heavens! It is such as I de- Sired for the hour of my death"—when they all got into a carriage with a priest. All of them, 011144011;in. Miramon and Mejlaj were dressed in the most elegant style, as if going to a party. They started for the Cerro de la Campuna hi a square of 4,000 men under arms, to a point dis tan t about 100 paces from the place where Maxi iniliatiTurrendered-on-lbe-lbth-of—Mayrthe-plact. for the execution having been selected before hand. The Emperor got down from the carriage, and marching, with head erect, with great firmness. and shaking the dust off his clothes with his hands , in a very natural manner, inquired who were the soldiers that were to fire upon him, and to each of them he gave- one, ounce of gold, beg ging them to aim well at his heart. the little onleer that was to command the execution said to the Empertir that he regretted thinking that he might die with resentment toward 'limas com manding the execution, but that he had to com ply with his orders, and furtheradded that if it depended upon Mtn, with all his heart he disap proved of all that was going to be done. The Emperor, with admirable frankness, said. "Child, a soldier must always comply with his orders. I thank you with all mr heart for your go . od senti7 meats. but ,j exact that you comply with the or ders that have bean given to von." He then approached (lens. Miramon and Mejia. and embracers them cordially three time,. saying ' to them. "In 'a few moments we will meet in the other Miramon , and Mejix did as Maxi milian. At that moment Maximilian occupied tier, centre: turning to Miramon be said, "General, a brave man is admired by monarchs; I ivant to give :von-the post (if honor.•' and placed him in the centre. Then (turning, to Mejia he said. "General, what is not rewarded on this earth will be in heaven. - Mejia was very low-spirited. be :cause a kw minutes before, his wife, who had just been delivered. raj' crazy through the (streets oh Queretaro with hi:r . new-born child in her arms seen( ,hat w ould have brought tears to a tiger's eye. Advancing a few ships, the Emperor, with ex traordinary coolness and a loud, clear voice, spoke as follows: ".Mexicans, men of my class and my origin, who ayn animated with my anti went, are di:stint(' by Providence to make the happiness of people or be their martyrs. When I came among you, I did not bring the ills it!- mate IdeaS. its I einte called by the Mexicans, who in good faith desired the welfare of their country, and who to-day succumb with me. Be -toto-stepping-in-the-grievt, I N: In-add - that — l take with me the consolation of having done al the good in my power, and the satisfaction of not having been abandoned by my true and beloved Generals. Mexicans; may ni;.' blood be the las.t spilt, and may it regenerate Mexico, my unfortu nate, adopted country." lie then stepped to one side, and, with one foot advanced. his hands crossed on his chest, with his eyes raised toward ' 'heaven, he Ouletly awaited death... Miramon, then clearing his voice, took from hi- pocket a little yiaper, and, as if addressing a bi - ielv of troops while passing a review, moving his eves upon that square of 4,00 men as coolly as if he were on parade, said : "Soldiers of Mexico, my countrymen, I find myself here . sentemied to die as a traitor. When my life does not belong to me, when, in a few brief moments, will he no more, I proclaim before you and the whole world that I have never been a traitor to my country. I have fought for her, and to-day With honor. I have children, but they can never blame their father for this infamous cal umny that Lam to-day charged with. Mexicans. long live Mexico, and long live the Emperor!" Those tiicsp , he shouted with all the might of his voice.EVervbody was consternated, a few tears ran, and they all three embraced for the lust time. and fell like - heroes. Not a <6ul from Queretaro was present at the execution, the street S were deserted and all the le.uses closed. The three corpses were em balmed: that of Maximilian measures 2,' rams. Ili; heart was of an unusual site. It is stated that Maximilian left to each of Afiramon's children a , .',0,01:0, and in his will he recommends to his brother, Francis .Joseph, to have them' educated as his own children, and not forget that they are the two sons of his most loyal and devoted friend. who accompanied him unt4 death. 3fejia left his son to Escobedo. What remorse for that executioner. Who fell into Mejla's hand's several times, and who always pardoned him leis misera ble life BLNES & SITEAFF. . merchant of Brownsville also furnishes the Roadiern with several intere-ting itenjs in rela tion to the execution. ' The compiler of these says Ornthe l'lth a handkerchief was presented to Maximilian to cover his eyes with, which he re ceived smiling, and answering that he WaS accus tomed to look into the muzzles (Alines. Ile made a present of it to his confessor. "It had been granted to the three victims to be shot in the breast, for the purpoiC of embalming the • bodies, and it was prohibited on pain of death to the executioners, to hit the head of one. of them. —The coolness and bravery with which these three unfortunate men have met death, is not to be described. Maximilian, instead of being in want of consolation, has quieted those who tried to console him. "Shortly before the execution took place,proba bly with a view of tormenting him more. Maxi milian received the false news that Carlotta had died. He immediately answered relieved: 'Now I am quite calmed and easy; I have nothing more to lose in this world.' "There had been a German doctor required to embalm the body of Maximilian, but the Libe rals have themselves taken charge of this duty, stating that now,"when he is dead. they would attend him with hOnors belonging to an Austrian Prince." Another letter from San Luis, of the 28th, says: "The body of Maximilian is yet in a church in Queretaro, and will not be delivered to the Ham burg Consul, as was first reported. All the ar rangements had been made, when the Govern ment refused to give it up. They say that the proper time has not yet arrived, and when it does, that it must become the subject of a treaty. "Americans are particularly obnoxious among the Liberals here since the request of the United States Government that Maximilian be not shot, and of all American papers that are named, none is so much abused as the Ranchero. "The El Fantasma, of Qubretaro, was, one of the most clamorous papers for the execution of the prisoners." Ill!iposition of the "holies of Illittxt. intlian and His Generals. The Rio Grande Courier, of the 9th inst., fur nishes the following news from Mexico: The stage_of_the-General-Line-arrived-alfut l .: moras, from the interior, on Saturday night last. e received (idea of Monterey lc - Salt/HO 1, San Luis 26, Durango 26, and Guadalajara the 20th ult. We learn from the. Soinbra de, Arteaga that the first battalion of Nuevo Leon executed the sen r tence pronounced against Maximilian, Miramon ' and Mejia. After the execution, the corpses were examined by . Drs. Calvillo and Becerra. Maxi- Jnilian's body was delivered to Col. Miguel Palacios, and removed to Captichinas, there to be embalmed by the Medical Inspector of the army. The bodies of Mejia and Miramon, in actor dance with their own 'request, were delivered to their friends.* The Fan!rrona of fb.n. Luis 'says: "Maximilian. FROPI PIENdCO. The Scene at Maximilian's Execution. LAST SPEPCIIES OF MAXIMILIAN, ;sIIICAMON AND We take from the Jtaricliero:lM follow!nglettO, giving interestaig particulars of the last MO meats of this unfortunate monarch : PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1867. received .the news of the death of his wife on the 1,1`411 Wt." The• Monterey PeriodicoQfficial of the td says that the news of the shooting of Marquez, (Ma rlin, Vidaurri and Quiroga not having been con firmed officially. nor in the private correspon dence of the Governor.. he has - reasou to believe. the Natement as • uncertain. :It was on published by the Ciheo,de Mayo of San Luis. The sword which Maximilian wore at the time of the surrender, arid .which was delivered to Gen. Escobedo, was given by the latter to the President of the Republic on the 24th ult. The President, on receiving it, said he would deliver the same to the Congress to be nominated by the nation. Gen. Eseobetio left San Luis for Queretaro on the 25th ult. Gen. Joaquin Martinez has opened the cam paign In the mountain. ,The Monterey Periodiro Ogloial says : "From his activity and patriotism we may expect that the mountain will soon be pacified and cleared of all bands of robbers lurk-. ing_there,_threatenhag_the_peacc__of ihe_States. of, San Luis, Queretaro and Guanajuato. A soldier who distinguished 'himself at the siege of Queretaro was crowned on the 20th on the square "15 de Mayo" in that city. The act was solemn and enthusiastic, and wit nessed by all the forces of the State and a.. multi tude of people. , General Juan A. - Mendez Governor of Puebla, has issued' a decree imposing the following con tributions_ upon the clergy: BishOps, $1,000; priests, $800; monks, $500; -.and secretaries, The reason given for the decree Is, that all classes of society - have shown themselves in the defence of all national institutions except the clergy:. The funds thus raised will be appropriated to the Army of the East and the military hospital. Ft :has of Guadalajara says that the people of If uasteca have revolted in favor of Gonzalez t atega. and adds that if so, they are losing their time, as President Juarez said that he would set General Ortega at liberty as soon as the election Law would be publisbed—ctinsequently the peo ple could then elect hint if they desired. JEFF. DAVIS IN ITIONTICEAL. An Ovation to Xi ini at the Theatre. (Correrrondence of the New York Herald.] MOM REAL, July Et p9.;7.—For SOUK; clays past the city has again been filled with strangers coin ing from all parts of the country in ptirsuit of pleasure. -The south West seems to be well repre set :ed by the more wealthy ex-Confederates, ho :ire a little less arrogant them when the re beflion was at its helght. Last evening it was announced, that "eX-PreSi d4.it Dark would be at the Theatre Royal to WitheSE the performancit,..kar the benefit. of his suifering country." I refeited to the bills and found that the _Rivals and His Last Legs were to Le i.laytd for the benefit of the Southern Relief don. ^and, considering that poor Jeff. was ot his last legs, I thought the occasion sun's. eit ntly appropriate and perhaps interesting enough to warrant an attendance. ' pea n W aml.• eOlll7 .menced with Sheridan's comedy Of the Rivals, and at the close of the first :.CT. Jeff., accompanied by his young son and Once female members of his family, quietly emend and took seats in the dress circle. The theatre was densely clouded with the /if of the city, and no sooner were the Davis phrty seen th:m the entire audience, from the pit to the private box, rose and cheered at the top of their voices for "Jeffers:on Davis." Then came calls for the — Bonny Blue Flag," "Dixie," and other standard rebel songs. The orchestra gave them "Dixie" amid cheers. One of' the more excitable. Jelin Bulls shouted so as to be heard above the tumult, •'We'shall live to see the Smith a nation yet." at which there was a fervent "Amen." Mr. Davis finally rose to his 'feet, and bowed ; his acknowlednments, and then sat down. This was the signal for another outburst, and the ex : -eitt.-ment continued. It was nearly half an hour before the audience was sufficiently calmed down so that the play could proCeed. I was fortunate enough to have a seat within a .few feet of the American arch-traitor, from Which I could notice his movements. He wore a suit of plain black, and- during the evening dangled a broad-brimmed White felt hat on a Slender yellow cane. His hair and beard are fast turning white. Ills thee was haggard. and care-worn, while his entire looks and -- demeanor showed an old and broken-down man. Not even the wild cheering of the crowd moved , him to smiles, and it was,not until the play drew towards its close that his face showed a plensura-' Ile emotion. He held no conversation, and only ban ly answered questions that were asked him, or took some friend by the hand who chanced_to., oeseut himself. As,' looked upon him I was forcibly struck with the resemblance of the general outline of his 4 ) feaintes to thote of the lamented L coin; but the ftelith'of - soul which gave to Mr. Li oln that ltnally bearing and humane loo,k,iv ; ,wautiug. Davis's demeanor is that of a defeat :ulbtter and a crushed out public villain. Baum:Se of con science, more terrible than death itself, seems de picted upon every lineament. The really most exciting scene was not, hoW ever, enacted at the theatre. At the close of the lost piece Mr. Davis and his fatally left the dress circle and 'passed out at the main entrance and entered the carriage in Waiting. A large crowd had gathered at the door and gave him three deafening cheers. Just as the carriage was letiv- Mg an unknown person, observed only by a few; stepped tip and handed Mr. Davis a note, which he carried to his home. ' Coining to the light it was opened and found to contain the single word, written in a bold hand, "Andersouville. This, it is said, went like a dagger tO his heart, and for same time his home. as the .scene of. the greatest - consternation. The ladies screamed and Mr. Davis himself came near fainting. Thus ended the first appearance of the late so called Confederate President at any place of amusement in Montreal, slum his release from prison. The Canadians are unmistakably in as full sympathy with Davis and his followers as they were before the close of the rebellion. They all speak of him as the President, and mourn with the South at its failure to establish a despotism. One had only to witness the scene at the theatre to understand the full meaning. It was not a mere compliment that they paid Davis, but a free and full expression of sympathy with the leader anti his deluded followers. The friends of Davis . finve purchased a house for him in one of the most aristQcratle streets in the city, near Montreal Mount:Lid; and he contem plates making this his future home. Mrs. Davis instill in the south. A Curious Will. In Cincinnati, last week, the will of the late Abraham Moss was admitted to probate. It was dated June lid, 1867. After disposing of va rious keepsakes, rings and jewelry, and provid ing a few small legacies to favorites and relatives, the testator bequeaths $5OO to the Jewish Ho's pital Association. He then provides that the remainder of his property shall pass to his four brothers—Lewis Moss, of Cincinnati; John Moss, of St. Louis; Joseph Moss of Forties, _England; and Phineas Moss, of A_delaide,..Australla—These brothers Art hold It in equal'shares during their life, and as one dies the remainder take it. When the last brother dies, if 'neither - Xolin, l'hineas nor I.ewis have children living, then, after giving $l,OOO to District Grand Lodge No. 2 of the Independent order of Benc Berlth, for the use of the Orphan Asylum Fund of that District the whole estate goes to the Hebrew Relief Society of... Cincinnati, in trust, for the benefit of the poor of the Israel • itish faith. Thu capital is to remain invested and intact, the proceeds only are to be distributed to the poor of the jewish faith; in semi-annual in stallments, just before the Feast of tin Pass Over„ and the Holy days of the New Year. In case the Relief Society does not choose to accept the trust, then a bequest of $l,OOO is left inliteatt. . • The cbaneeS of the property falling 'bite the tn roca . to Pi artiol Am hi ,t 4 4 Mr. Netsbylvisistsi that the Democracy hold a National Convention at once, to Define the Potation of the Party u_pon an important Question. POST OFFIS, CONE/WRIT X Ronos (Which is in the Stait uv Kentucky), July 12, I 867. --*- In castin my eye carelessly over the 'politikle field, wick Seward• and me do every sixty days; I think I kin spy into the horizon a bud wick is swellin into a most hopeful flower. It is spredin itself into a hurricane, wick threatens to sweep away the fabric uv Ablishnisni and purify the politikle at mosphere. The Radiklepaqty hey bin at last forced to adoptlhelegitinait endin uv their sooicidle principles, nigger snffrage,and from that the Dimokrisy, of they are wise, will snatch a triumph litrally from the jaws uv death.: .WE .lIEV EM NOW. In Ohio that question is to bp voted onto, this fall—in Noo York and Michigan its raising a breeze in Baer C'onvenshuns; and in Pennsylvania, Illinoy and Indiana it cant be long put oft It's our best holt. The proud Caueashina wick votes the Dimecratic tikkit hes no objeckshun to bein joseled by the Nigger in the rush to pay ...taxes, but his hawty soul recoils at the idea uv bein elbowd by him at the polls. Besides the Dimecratic voters don't want the ballot given •to any other lower class. Jt wood make undoo conmetishen. Ez I remarked, wu'vE otri EM. Wat the Demokrisy want now is to so handle this delikit subjick ez to -make the inost.uv it. - The great trouble with the party is that there is no uniform style uv meetin this question. On the main question we are all agreed. We all oppose Nigger Suffrage., its a part and parcel say a Dimokrat's nacher to oppose nigger suffrage. The leaders ilv the party opposed it at the beginnin g for seem how the ballot avuz abused by ther folloWers they trembled for the Republic of it wuz en trusted: to the bands uv any more uv ekal capassity, and the masses uv the organiza tion opposed givin it to the nigger, becoz that One privile,-;e, and color, wuz all that distin guished em. Its a pecoolyarity uv unregen- Lrated human nacher that it must alluz 'bear down on somebody. The poet sez : Even.the fleas hey smaller ones to bite em, And they still smaller oneci, ad infinitum." Fortunately, the Dimokracy hey the nig ger for their smaller fleas.. The .. sturdy yeomanry feltit to be a soothin thing to find,_,„ - wurast each veer, that m wun thing at least he wuz sooperior to sumboddy, and so it will be so long ez there is a Dimokracy. The troo Dinaokrat promotes hisself, not by inn his Self above the levelonto winch he finds his self, but by shovin some wun down to- a loWer level, and ez ther wuzn 't anybody, else ~Qn this. Continent wich they cood githold uv, tbe nigger wuz, long ago, selected for that purpoSe. The great trouble is we oppose nigger suf frage now from two many stand-pints. Some oppose it on the skore uv the inferiority uv the Afrikin, butthat never wuz. a poplar idea, with_ our people. They may have assented to it outwardly, - but in ther own minds they ob jected. "Ef," sez a reliable Dimokrat to his self, "ef that's the cool, VAT IN THUNDER IS TO, BECOME HA' ME ?" Likewise the idea uv onfitness, wich others uv our apossels advance. "They cant read nor rite !" shreeks a injoodishus cuss, speekin to a audience two-thirds uv wich go to him reglerly to reed ther ballots to em, and who, when they sign promissory notes, .put an Y. atween ther first and last names. - Anuther speekpr quotes Noah to em, and boldly asserts that the nigger is the descendant uv Dam, and that he is the identikle indi-• vijjle wick wuz cost by Noah; but he runs agin the fact that the rest uv em, wick is in Afrika yet, hey managed to dodge the cuss, ez they aint seryia ther white brethren, and them wick wuz brot here to be chrischinized hey busted ther bOnds. and are jest about ez free, so fur ez sere itood goes, ez anybody: There is, ez I v Showed, all these con- Ilictin ideas that A:irk agin us. Therefore, •I want a Nashnell 'onvenshun. I want a con vocashen uv the lights uv the party to set forth authoritive y why we oppose nigger b , suffrage— to giv yeeson for it, that all our people may act . (tether, ez do other well yegulated mac es. Let us cum together and ishoo our m nifesto, that we may know pereisely the per ikler. line uv argument to pursoo, I shel be at hat convenshup, and .I hey made up my min - wot platform . to lay down. I shel go back o Ham, Hager and Oneshnus —I she! turn fro the inferiority idea and take the broad g 1 and that THE NIGGER IS A BEAST-THAT lIE AIN'T A MAN AT ALL, and consekently he ez no more rites than any other animal. I I put my foot onto him by authority of thel decree that unto man wuz given dominion o er the beasts—that we are men and they re beasts. El they admit the first proposis en, tiley will the last. I shel assert bol ly- aiarbrodly. his onfitnis to mingle with us becoz his fizzikle structure, his muscles, nery s, fibres, bein different, go 1 to show that he w.l z uv a differefit origin and uv a lower origin. I shel plant myself on the stoopenjus yet simple proposishen that the Almity made him, probably, but at a different time and for a dine ent purpose, wich I shall show by citing t e color uv his skin, the length uv his foot, e shape uv his head, and . sich other matters as I kin git together in time"for the conVen hen. ' • 1:v course this do trine will meet with ob jectortz: We hey a few thin-skinned perfes sera uv religion, wh se 'piety service in our ranks hezn'tquite o literated, who will say. that these dogmas u dermines the Christian religion, ez it destr ys the doctrin uv the unity uv the races onto wich orthodoxy is built. To this I shel answer that sposin it does, wot then ? Ify wot comparison is any religion a Orthodox Dimocrat hez, to a tri.- . mph uv the party ? Wot hez Dimocrisy to i.v" - *gion_anyglOw ? It hez - never . per= milled it to mix in its \pollytix. Dimocrisy bleeves in keepin , Church and State ez far , lipiatez - possible. - \ • • -, -_ ....,„ • Shood the Ablishnists pint to niggers wieh. reed and write, I shoo say to,•-wunst that. there- is different degrees v mstink—that ez • • one dorg hez more mstin than another, that • So one nigger hez more than -another, 'and, ' then I shood wind this answer up' by .askin him, "Sir, y'vOcid..3roo, force •yoor.!.dawter to marry ', a nigger, even .ef 1, he tood reed and Write?' Tins_ hez:- olluz done. good service, pertikelerly of you walk lmrridly away before there'll time PO ap,anawet. . : Thu is dintooa rich is a stumper,but only. .3/4 hands of this Society may be computed vherr iGis stated that one of the three brothers is marrled, but has no children, though seventy-three years. old. The other two are unmarried; and are aged , respectively sixty-four and sixty-seven years. The property is valued at a $50,000. - - [lron] the Toledo Inade.l PUSHY. one. , One man to whom I unfolded this theory asked me merinry wat I wuz a goin to do with a mulatler who wuz half white and half black—half man , and half beast—half instink wich dies witillim.and half sole with wnz to be saved and fitted for the skies, or lost. When a ruulatter dies wat then? Does the half sole uv the half man' dr ag the instink uv the beast behind it in a , limpin, lop-sided fashion into heaven, or does the instink drag the sole into the limbo , for animals? "Er -this latter idea be correct," sod' he', "in that' ,limho how much Southern , sore- is float in bout, held in 'solooshen. . in stink !" An old friend uv mine in Kentucky become indignant wen I propounded the beast theory to him, and he threatened me with. corporeal Punishment of I didn't quit his presence, with I did to wunst. • Alas for• the• impru dence-of- zealous - ment — Befoi c e - speekitr - to him on the stibltck I didn't notis• the• skores uv brite yeller children all about the• place. rangin from the infant uv six months to the boy uv sixteen, and all uv em! with his note! But, notWithstandin these drawbacks ) it's the most healthy doctrine we've got,.and the only ground upon which we kin stand se koorly. It kivers the ground, and besides it don't interfere With anybody else's idea. The orators wich implore the people et' they want to marry niggers, kin make the appeal with more force after assertin that the niggerls a beast, and the anshent virgins, who will this fall bear the banners onto which will be proudly inscribed "We want no niggers for husbands," will bear em still more defiantly, for, if they reely bleeve the doctrine; they will be in can:lest:in it. . At all evence let the Conveptun be called, that this question may be settled. Let Us all stand on one platform, that we may make the most uv this god-send. Let us inscribe Ont 9 our banner the mskription,- "Arneriky fur white men:" "Eternel hostillity to Animle Suffrage!" and go in to win. Et the Anaerikin peoplgdpiV.t,phy at Nigger Suf frage now they never will. PRTI:OI.EUM V. NASBY, P. M. (%'ich is Postmaster.) Railways and Telegranlis in India. Before the Sepoy mutiny in India, the gross expenditure on public works in that country by the British Government averaged P2,- 000,000 annually. But the financial years 185-9 were seriously affected by the revolt of the native troops. The disbursement for the former year was only ::'4,45,500,000, and for the latter *2,000,000. _ln MO, the imperial Government, on the_nbTOL'atinn ft....powers o f th e East India Company, had the entire administration of the oriental dominion in its hands, and the "authorized expenditure" of that year for public works was :$16,110,000, Fourteen years ago the first railway was opened in India; it ran from Bombay to Tan nab. In 1854, in the presidency of Bonibay 35 miles were in use, and in the following year 121 miles were opened in Bengal; in 1857 Madras had g miles in opeMtion. This, With additional mileage which had in the mean while been opened - in the other presidencies, brought the total up to 274 miles. By the end of 1858 India possessed 004 working miles of permanent way. In seven years this mileage had increased more than eight-fold. At mid summer, 186.1, it had stretched out to 2,747 miles, divided among the different presidencies and provinces as follows: • Mileage open - at Afid- Pr , eidenciee N ame of Companiee. etnnmer, 1865. Bengal and North- % . .rats[ Indian....' "... I NI cetera Provinces, ( . 1264 Eastern Bengal, Cal. I Bengal -( catta&Sonthearderti i ' mnd no.. ....... ... ... .11.1tdraed:lireat South , ~,, , ern of 1ndia........l • • v.'' ‘ areat Indian Pettit', Bombay , dula A: Butabay,Ba. 59d • / coda and -Central' . ' Sell] de............ ...... Seinde & Indit, , Flotilla, 114 Punjab Ptinjab............. ...... 113 Total 2,747 . Indian railway companies derive a much• larger portion of their revenue from goods than from passengers. The aggregate yield from both sources timing the three years ended With June, 1865, was $35,000,0g0; of this amount $20,000,000 was deriVed from inerchandize trailic t . while :the- passenger traffic produced F , :15,000,000. - • The Indian telegraphic service has also groWn rapidly. In 1852 the Peninsula had but 82 miles of wire in work; three years ago —in the spring of 1864—there were 11,736 miles in operation. Services at St. Albans. On• Sunday, July 14, the services of the Free Church of St. Albans were attended by a large, well-dressed, and well-behaved con gretration,who witnessed the - cereinonies with interest and curiosity. Three priests. officiated. The rector's magnificent vestments of green and gold contrasted strongly with the simple white surplices of the assistants, who donned a green stole only in preaching or while read ing portions of-the service, and the costume of the acolytes in white .and rose-colored robes, served to complete the series of pretty, though rather bewildering tableauN about the altar, not at all suggestive of the simplicity of the disciples of our Lord. It has been said, "that we all have a natural tendency to get angry with those who don't see as we do," and we Confess to bein . gineensed at the impo sitionwe received in presuming that St.- Al bans was an orthodox Protestant Church; we say nothing of the forms and ceremonies with which the chureir chooses to plume and-dis tinguish itself, though it does seem like "Wrappin g nonsense round, With pomp and darkness till` it seems profound." In the eye of Heaven the color or shape of a gown makes little difference ' tall candles whose perpetual burning .May be beyond the, reach of snuffing, prostrations, low as the de votees of a Hindoo idol, intonations of the ser-. vice by very unmusical or nasal voices, cross : ing, bowing awkward genuflexions, and apos tolic church groupngs, may all be the mere chaff attendant of the real wheat, the spirit may be in all this, as welt us the letter, but when the words of the preacher, from the pulpit announced in bold, unequivocal lan guage the doctrine of transubstantiation, m direct contradiction of the twenty : ooAL 40.1 - 0 - 6 - aihe Protestant Episcopal Church and the faith that Protestant children from early childhood are taught to believe and cherish, - we askin - amazement-i is this a- -Protestant 'ehurph? . The martyrs were put to death tbr insist ing, among other things, "that bread was bread; and no spells which were uttered over it could make it anything else." The plain, bold avowal of • Romish doctrine, any. Ro manist might have listened to with rejoicing; but it might well fill the hearts of those de nominated by the speaker as "ultra Pro testants" with dismay and amazement, as they ask the question: Is St. Albans a Pro testant chtirch ?—N. Y Gazette. F. L FE'BIE3IBION. PRIM THREEiCENTS, FACTS AND "AMORE% —The Emperor Alexander gave fliby thousand franca to the, lampßghters of Paris. —A lady was befare a New York ju2tfee fortltb seventy-slxth - time fist drunkenness, recently. --The District of Columbia has beethafillgted with one hundred newspapers vince it bcume seat of government. —Two Chicago pyrotechnist.% are to have' a match game of fire-work - A for $,561). Pr etty poor fire-works that only amount to a single.rpatCh: —Thaddeus .Btevens's. health it' hatter than usual at thib season/ He is going` er•Bedfbrd'.' 8a also is anotherfainous Laneasterianpd. Blichenss. —The army worm is devastating the cotfon fields in Mississippi. It adopts Shermtin'tt divice of living on this-country. —General :Merman's opfraion of Walrussis is said to be: "Gtve 'cm seven millions - more :to take it beak, and be thankful to get onsocheap.7 setshire with thirty children.. He has-had 'three wives, —Morrissey is taking refuge from. Oongres sional cdres at Saratoga. He is altio taking the odds.. - • —Waer his quarrele witli h is ral patron, King Lud gn wig, and has left d Munith and toy he "music of the future" to take care of itself. —Mrs. Greeley has petitioned for female suf frage. Oh, Horace!. whe're is your family. dis cipline? —The Emperor of Austria would not go to Paris until Napoleon promised hiin that Bazaine should keep out of sight.. '—The ivory billiard ball now in use is to be set perceded by a hollow steel Nall, which is said to ' be an improvement. . —Miss Hetty H. Robinson, the New Bedford heiress to a cool million, was married On Thurs. day, to Mr. E. }L Green; of New York. • G. declares that nothing Would induce him to go to Austria, at present. What a pity that he had not time to say so before the 'Senate laid hini on the shelf! —lf Mr. Field should recover damages from. Mr. Jones,•for the late assault upon him, Mr. Jones will discover Vi anniment to be—what? —dear knows! —Mr. James Pearce, the accomplishadorganist of St Mark's Church.in this city, commences a series of Organ Concerts at the Boston Music Hall next Saturday. —Copies of Stunner's Russian America oration being placed on the desks of the Representatives, theyimmediately adjourned in the utmost con fusion. —A London paper says the revenue from the Atlantic cable this year promises to • touch .£450,000, or within 4.1.0,000 of the cost- of the last laid cable. —Chicago eats yearly 100,000 pair of frog's legs; in other words,' 100,000 frogs die annually for its ffood. They enter life as.tadp,ole.s, and de r part jAn:Litied_in_crtitubs. —Work has been commenced on the great bridge to be built across the Mississippi river,. at. St. Louis. The cost is estimated at: 0,000;000, and the work is to betcompleted in three • years. —Exeursionists can go from Londcrn.tii• Paris anti return, staying a week In the latter ;City, Ara paying for lodging and two meals a: day s for forty-five shilling,A and sixpence. --The irrepressible statistician who • occasion ally makes Ids apPearace, now asserts the inter-- eating fact that all the gold in the world would just about gild the State of Vermont; —Ronconi, the celebrated bill:TO-singer of • the Italian Opera, is summering on Staten- Mind, where he bathes every morning, and sleeps every afternoon. • —The New York papers are discussing , the relative claims of two young ladies to the• chum pionship of beauty in Philadelphia society:. The discussion is In just a trifle of bad taste. —We regret to see that a number of, gentlemen - of the press have just started on a railroad,excnr sion, "accompanied by their ladles."' It would have looked betterif they had taken their wives, if they have any. • —The Democratic Address just published con tains a chunk of wisdom which savors strongly, of the O'Vanx. It says, "To begin at the begin ning is of vital importance." Bunsby will please "go down tail." —NeWport is represented as being Mt dull this year as the other fashionable watering-places. The hotels look forlorn, there is an absence of gay equipages on the avenues, and few bathers gambol in the surf. —ln "The Man With a Broken Ear," Edmond. About says: "There are two things In this world a man does not -often. find away from home: the first is a good soup; the second, disinterested 4„ —lt is said that Dion won the recent mate ame at billiards in Montreal, by getting the red ballsfirmly wedged in the jaws of one of the pockets, which would have enabled him, like Tennyson's book, "to run on forever." —lvan Turgeneff, the Russian novelist, author of "Fathers and Sons," a work lately issued- in this country, has written a.story called 'Smoke," for a Russian journal, for which he receives. six thousand roubles, or *4,500. :2-At the quarry in Monson, Mass., last week. e slab of granite was split out, by wedges ) the end. of which measured eight feet square and the length of which, .by actual measurement, Iv a a over six hundred feet. —The architectural canopy of granite now erecting over the rock at Plymouth, on which the. Pilgrims landed, will he finished certainly by the first of November. Its corner stone.. was - laid August 2d. 1839. —A new regulation in the English navy corn, mands the sacrifice of the officers' moustaches, on the ground that they have too great a resem- . blanee to a beard; whereupon the Paris Figetio remarks: "If there is anything in the World that a beard may be said to resemble, it is "a mons-. tache." —'•One Woman" grumbles in the Hartford, Press because at' a trip on a street car being made. "disagreeable by the smell of tobacco; smoked by a man on the front platform, the wind waftine: it back. If the people choose to smoke till their faces look like leather, it is nob my affair; butt I: don't want tobacco puffed in my face, unless at: my own request." —The Quaker City, with the excursion party on board, arrived' at Marsernes on the 4th of..fulY, having visited, since her departure from New' York, the Western Islands and Gibraltar. They passengers were everywhere treated with much_ civility, and the authoritiespassed the vessel) free of all port charges. The Quaker City left for; Genoa on the 12th of July. —A happy bridegroom, the Rev. B. 3. Pinker-- ton, who was married last week in Cincinnati to, Miss Sallie Walker, calls on Shakespeare to help him rejoice, and appends 'to his marriage notice. the quotation : Now she's mine own; • • . And I as rich In haring such a jewel, ,—.As_twenty seas, if all _their sands-were-peart„- -- The water nectar, and the rocks pure gold. —lt. is said that Balza_e" the celebrated French! novelist, used to lie excssively. One day 114, .was walking along the_ Boulevard Montinarno4_ with a servant girl on each arm, when he came. across two of his friends, Hatzal and Laurent-; He quitted the women precipitately, and, rm.. inng to his friends, said to them in a low tone: "Don't recognize me. - I am with two arch- . duchesses who have come. to Paris in dieguise,.: and whom Afetternich asked me to show, the. capital to. • Hush!" And with a mysterolui he disappeared. • • "What a liar," said Ilatzel. "What the - dr#: did he leave his women for V' • • ? •* "Simply," replied the other. "to tell Voila we are two pr inces of the blood, ids moot ilitl + . mate friends.' -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers