GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXL-NO. 106. ITI-I.E EVENING BULLETIN Kat Wpm" Evy,lty EVE.NING (Sunday! , ekeept4ld), eiT TIRE NEW ItiII,LETIN UhJII.fING, 007 •Cheetatut Street, Philadelphia, BY Tilt EVENING nuiLLET I N ASSOCIATION. VROPI:11:101:8. • c)jflS ) N I'LACOCK. EitS . V,ST C. .WALLACE. ITVIIERSTON, TllOB. J. WILLI 4,5180 N, CASIT.I - t BO UDEIt, Jn, Fl :ANC'S WEIA,S. The But.trrin it nerved to subecribera in the city at 18 cent? er week. vayablo to the currier. or *8 per annum. EICHOMACkER . & CO.'S CELEBRATED Platios.—Acknowledged superior in all romecta litliMMadf, In thim country, and void on most 'liberal terms. NEW AND SECOND-lIAND PIANOS constantly on hand for rent. Tuning, moving and packing promptly Attended to.- Warerooms , IlW,i Chestnut ntrect. jcl9-3m. DIED • FI(LTI". -TWA morning. at twenty minutia paid etc - etiocl'•• George Piety, in tlicead yeMll* of tae ago. lilt , filen& tire rempectf idly invitod to attend 1111/ funeral, • Of whit It doe notice n iii be given. LEA. -4)ri the 7th {natant, Edward Tatllllll Lea. flap Of 'William and Jane H. Lea. in the 16th year of hia age. relativea and nude hien& are rettpectfully invited attend the funeral. tvithout further notitie, train the Todd. urea( hi, parente, Brandywine village, on Bala (Sat tit day) afternoon, the 10th hilt at 4 o'clnek.. 1t0141: , int)14.-hu Chicago, 111., Auguat 4th, Joshua K. tioldn , (4l. late of Philadelphia. aged 2t yettre. ton of ‘Vm. ii. Itottlotonof IN Deßware. I.4.IIbETZ , - dtt the morning of A uguat Mit, at tit. reel & ore id I& mother, Ilarr3• A. Seltectr.. The friend, of the fetidly ATV invit.oi to attend Ilia hitter:it, at tit. Peter'it Church, Third and Pine ctreev, on t ii•• , attirdtti 1 afternoon, ttt 5 , precisely. TA (.I(tA Iti.--011 the•Mit {natant. John W. Taggart, aged %Two. 111, u,tle friendr e invited to attend rile funeral. from CIF !WV traddeme. 147 North Tenth ,treet, on Monday Si:01111W) neat. 12111 Batt:lnt, at 10 o'clock. ' `I"EAI-11...--(te. ti-e 11th inrtcnt, of cholera infanttito. It:.r: lei Emily. infant daughter of Witt. M. and Harriet attn. d 6 months.... The 'Oath ee and friends of flit Tiimily are reqtectfolly . invin ,1 ti• attend the funeral. from the resitiellCe of her tarente, 41;;;' . .; Clinton tureet. (iermantois n, on Monday' aft,•nir,t.ti. the 12th hot., at 2 o'clock. • - VY HE 14 LANDW, HAVE THE BEST ARTICLE Or r`l Blank iron Bnuge, tvl,o yarde wide; ulna, the ordinary unvklthos • i. (RE LA,;I I F.I.L Its nava vier.< ed all the Summer Silks and Spring Urea/ .ClJodal - _ 41TLEL is QUNN Alt!), Paper Mattefacte7 , 74, 44 N. Fifth etreet, ta k terae•tint to order the fi next grade* of P:erAt; "ab.o. .teec.e.cl ontaiitY Book and Newspaper.. at ehort no- Arh•e. mytl-Im*; ItL.LIGUH'S 10'1'i( ES. THE SEXI,ND PRESBYTERIAN CID' RC ' 144- witt Ito-ea:ter Ivnr-hit , llortieultard Unit ~ n In , otreet. hetween I.c.ctud rid Spruce. Preaching tu. ~.ato A- at 104 A. M. and 81'. M. E O, E t• se. RV. R E.WISWLL. D. D 7, WILL PRE , W. V. at th.: I; teen Dill Pr. ohyterian (1,11,--ch tsr at,,,t T tan:ping st o ' clock.lt . • PREACIIING MAY BE 12.:PECTED Cbtorch, Eighteenth at ri Filbert to.mor. ruts at lay., A. It. by the ',alto!". It. REV. A. A. WILLITS. D. D., PASTOR WILL preach In the Wert Arch Strel t Pre.bytertnn .Chur,b. corner of Eilditeenth and-Arch otreeta to.rnorto at. ION; A. AL and t P. 31. St ranr.ens cordially Invited It' P ItESIS YT ER I A Chlac)), I\llpadmcken and Green rtrertr. Preaching ..tr.nialrov. at HO3 A. M. and 'Pi P. M.. by Rcv. Dr. .7. 17 . It • (.F3iTICAL PliEbltY TERUO: (111 . 10;11. C 911.. col of Eighth and t hurry rtmete, will be open Bablattlimornlng doting the month of Atptet. atter soder Revd. (l'oator), will preach to-ino TOW Quer/slog at to3ti o'clock. ' It. TENTII I'RESBYTERIAS; eiII:RCH, (REV. Dr. Itonecifuntes.% corner of Walnut find Twelfth setrr , .:.te. Rev. Dr. Duffield. of Princeton, %rill preach In AM, church on Sunday. 11th insL. (To itiorrow,L. nt laX, A. M.. and 4 P M. The chorcis will be closed after this until •r:eptetribeirl. . • It. _4lOr THE .CLINTON STREET CtiI.7IICII WILL eoiditlifelimsrdurtng the.niontli .of. AUXIDI for-the une of the Firet Prerbytettav I lierch. whin'''. place of woe ?hip ',udergadagrelcairr. Services. to-tuorrow. at 1.0.4 ti M. All others cordially invited. autO 21-3trl; N4iRTH BROAD STREET PRESBYTEItTAN Ch rreh, corner of brand and Green etre v t,.. Iles. j. W. IVt-ltuisti, of bfameehusetts, wilt preach to inr.rrow at IB,tti A. M., and S P. M. Seat. free. Strutotere fireited. ft' WFWI' SPRUCE STREET PRESBYTERIAN Church, B. W. cum -r Spruce and Sevente-nith ireetr.— tierrlcta In this church tomorrow - mornior. at Ilatt pact ten o'clock. Preaching by the Rev. Jana,. U. Moil t. P. p., of YOcceton, It • SPECIAL NOTICES. air P.S.RDEE SCIENTIFIC COURSE IN LICFAYETI E COLLEGE Ma test tarts commences THURSDAY. September t 7.414.1. Candidates for admlcellin.' be examined the day (Seriternter 11th), or on V LI:SD AY July :Zth, the , jay beton, to Annual Corouvamettlent Exerci,es. For circt:lara, apply to Pre,ldent cATTI:I.I., or to • 11.e.irrolt, Penna.. July, 1867 y- 51e 1',1,1101'.8 PHILADELPHIA crni ll; tory for lSrii.—'rhe Eubilohend intorm their friend,. aped the public that the aboi e wr,vk will lie eq311(.11 ut the tonal time. The ..ennvran will CO;$11111VOC , :ma,. by a careful t.tleetion of cr:pCrienced v:.nvaeers. and a FIT ict atteution by the conipilrrp. we ark. d,.ter.nitted !mike Ow I breetor, for 1t 4 t9!1 a rellgbte and full ....ord of (111'118/11CP and /001b...11,10f nil bit ineoo tuen I.a I private Crateful for past oueourapinent, (quo - pat• !image is reapectfully.eolicited , • A. 31v1:1.1:01' & I:Zr7 ~trio, 24 floor. ttV, jar NOTICE,-THE MEDI( ;AL AND St:ltitiGAl. Wards of the St. Mary's Hospital. cor. Fraukterd .road and Palmer street, are now open tor the receptioo of : patients. All cases of accident reCeiredT 2,4 rafult..n4y if •reaeuted within limn, i n, after the reception of the n. Jury. The Staters of Bt. Francis glee their personal at endituro to the sick. Acply for admission either at the Hospital. or Mother Agnese. Convent of bt. Francis. itved .vtroct, above Ei:tb. ntallt rp air HOWARD HOSPITAL, NOS. 1619 AND• 1550 Lombard Street ,Dlopensar; Department—Medical treatment and medicines farniehed gratuitously to the iwor. NICAIRAG V 4. lEugland to Deliver the Mosquito Ter. :Awry to Nicaragua—The Mission of EZ.President - Martinez to England. (From El Porwmir, ltivao, N., July 15, 1887.1 Ex-President Martinez, now Minister. to Eng -1 land, left by hist steamer for England to arr.lage the Mud delivery to Nicaragua of the Mosquito territory. This done, the idevelopmefit of that important portion of the republic will vastly con . tribute to the resources of the country in general. • The prestige of a President who has been able to .sustain himself in a Spanish-American country for ten years, will no doubt facilitate this im portant event. He is tiocompanied by Emile Benard. Esq., a gentleman born in this country of French pa rents, and who was educated in Paris and Lon . don, and has held, although quite young, im portant positions, such as Chief Justice in San Juan del Norte. We do not doubt that the mission . will fully obtain what is right and useful to the country. We cannot fairly call it a question ; the world linows the English policy of obtaining hold of 'certain important geographical positions, such as -Gibraltar ' Malta, Holgoland, St. Helena, Born holm andGreytown. We all know that little or uo generosity was shown to Nicaragua when she reclaimed her rights; and, had it not been for the • United States insisting on the restitution of the Mosquito coast and the abandonment of the pro tectorate of Englanti,oursmal Republic could not I have obtained her rights. Nicaragua consented to pay the paltry sum of five thousand dollars to the so-called Mosquito King. She paid it always punctually; but when the individual died a hocus-pocus king was got up -•by sonic English speculators, and through their • influence or representation the English ~,,overnc utout appears to deny the sovereign right of Nienragua over the Mosquito territory. To • explain matters with the treaty in hand is the mission of General Martinez. We know that if the English Government should, which we very much doubt, go on in its pretensions, they Could not be carried into effect, because the United States Government have had too much trouble on this score to allow itself to be troubled anain about it. We have no doubt that the Eulish •Government, once well posted up on the affair, will cheerfully agree to what was from the begin tining their 'intention to .do. M -II CI ) nt i 1 4:4 , • ' • Prof. IL li. I'OCNCNIAN, Clerk of the Faculty: iY2u.tff CRIME. Execution of Jerry 0 9 111rIen. [From the New York Tribane.] As curly as eight o'clock yesterday morning large crowds of people—mostly of the lower classeF—bloeked up the corner of Franklin and j Centre streets, the turning-point to the prison entrance of the Tombs. The crowd was of the most. motley character. It included thieves, pickpockets, apple-women, laborers, bdisi ness Men, and others attracted on their way down town, and quite a number of the blue bloused, Panama-hatted gentlemen who are everywhere aleature in Metropolitan spectacles. • It was Black Friday, and the occasion was the hanging of Jeremiah O'Brien, the murderer of Kate Smith, in Prince street, over fourteen months ago. The steps of the prison door were crowded with those who had the document necessary to admit them, and, as the gates were not opened until about twenty minutes before eight o'clock. they soon became clamorous for admittance. These gentlemen were by no means of the "rabble." They were better dressed, better looking in every respect, and each bore-in his hand, or pocket a filled-out certificate which made him, for the time being, a deputy sheriff, to assist In "preserving order at the execution." As there were from 200 to 300 of these temporary officials present, and no others in any number, it is to be presumed that there was no great obstruc tion to the preservation of order. Perhaps the j. presence of an unusual number of policemen greatly facilitated the dignity of the assemblage; hilt there was certainly no disturbance worthy of mention. The gate was finally opened at about 10 minutes before 9, and then there was a general rush, much crowding, and considerable foul language.. The gallows was erected in the southwestern corner of the krison-yard. It is the same struc ture which destroyed Capt. Beale on 'Governor's Island three years ago, Kennedy at Fort La- favette a short time later, Bernard Friery, and Wagner, the wife murderer, still more recently. A description of its loathsome operations is al-' most unnecessary. • Yesterday, us iii the case of Wagner, the scaf fold was covered with all awning, as the appear :mei• of the weather gave indications of rain, Within a few feet of the rope were ranged a number of benches, with rough deal desks in ront, for the convenienee of the press. About a dozen bona-fide reporters occupied one of these benches. The rest were filled with gentlemen, who. intent on being as near as possible to the tragedy, filled the other seats, with make believe note-bOoks before them, and fictitious pencils over their ears, in order to elude the vigilance of the police. The yard was thickly crowded, there being about 300 present in alt ' including the police. There seemed to be a more than ordinary • interest in the hanging of this young man O'Brien, People stood on tip-toe and climbed the projeetions of the prison casements to see the affair: and the house-topson Franklin and Leonard streets, overlooking the tragedy, were crowded , with male and female spectators. ttecom panied by quite a number of officers to keep,: them in order. The victim was advertised to be disposed of at 9 o'cleck promptly. After waiting ten or twelve minutes after this time, there was a • good deal of grumbling among the crowd, many of whom bad "business" to attend to. and to whom time was precious. At last Mr. Kelly, the Sheriff, made his appearance, accompanies by his Chief Deputy and Mr. Isaacs, the executioner, The Sheriff is a fine-looking mall, and ;RIMS,. to 7h:tie-the-banging-portion of his office Ve Said. afttr the banging of Capt. Beale: I. "He was the Bravest man I ever. saw stretched; did my nest with him: 'if he had kicked three times more than he did, I would have called myself a journeyman and cut my throat !" Both before and since that time he has frequently shown his loving hand and admirable skill. He had probably taken good :are with his gallows be fore—in other words,tie knew his ropes—for upon the present occasion he contended himself with feeling the suspended rope and going behind the inclosure to test the efficiency of the weights. The killing-tools must have been found in good older, for presouly all returned to the prison gate and reentered the cell of the doomed man. The police immediately pushed back the crowd, and formed a long lane, through which the fatal procession should pass cm its way to the scaffold. • Some still continued to press against the instru ment of death. and a number thronged around the prison gate, in order to view the prisoner upon Lis first entrance into the yard. While waiting here there were a "Teat many comments pas«l tijmn the cventand"there *as some brutal impatienee expressed as to the non-appearance of the prisoner. In the month of Jrale, 1860, Jerry O'Brien was standing on Prince street in an attitude of doubt. He did not dream of it :it that time; but he was in reality, trembling on. the verge of au abyss from m lich.there. was no retreat, save in ins puri -tleation of orA'entire being. In:a house of infamy close by there lived a woman who had been his mistress. .Her name, or the name she went by, , was Kate Smith, and she was young and beauti- Iful, though utterly'. lost. Jerry O'Brien loved her madly and passionately. It was the old ; story, which has been rhymed by Owen )iereditia "She seas a harlat, andi way a thiet. Bet e loved each other beyond belief." Jerry's reputation was bad. He was supposed to lice in an illegitimate bay. When he became poor, this girl sup" orted him. She kept him in clothes, food and drink by "the wages of her shame But at last she grew needy herself, and her hivors came few and tar between. The scale of wicked fortune was before her, with money on one side and hunger on the other. With the reckless desperation of her class she flung herself in the balance, and drew in the proceeds. Jerry wits jealous of the girl. It was not a question of affection or passion with him, but of subsistence as well_ He was at this time a representa tive of one of the meanest classes in the world—a "man," so-called, who was willing -to subsist on the pro ceeds of a poor woman's infamy. Be that as it may, here he stood ou Prince street, with a mil lion thoughts drifting through his mind. He had been a soldier of the Union. and, It is said, had fought bravely,and he had also figured extensively as a Fenian In the raid of a year ago. He also bad a motherland sisters at the home he might still call his own. Perchance a vision of these—the camp, the field, and the gentle home—was wafted across his mind at the fatal time, but his thoughts were intent pm darker scenes. Infuriated by a long use of bad whisky, and stung . with the frenzy of jealousy, his thoughts dwelt only upon the unfortunate ob ject of his passion. He secreted a fish-knife on his person, and proceeded to the house where his mistress lived. .He found her in an upper story, and pursued her to a corner of the room. The landlady and others entered her room, and be sought him to be.merciful. At last the girl fled down stairs in terror, O'Brien pursuing titer with the drawn knife. The shadow of her death was h overing over her wretched head, and she felt it. She half turned upon him,and exclaimed in words to this substance: "Jerry, for the love of God, do not kill me! For the love you bear your mother, let me live! lam not fit to die!" He heeded not her suppAcation' but drove the weapon through her body, and she rolled down stairs, weltering in her blcuid; and died in a few seconds. Jerry O'Brien was tried, the crime was proved against him, and lie was to be executed. At a few - minutes past 9 o'clock in the morning, there was a sudden swayibg in front of the door, with the suppressed exclamaticin of "Herehe comes!" and theprisoner appeared on his way to the gal lows.' The Sheriff led the way; the culprit fol lowed, with the baiter round his neck, and a friend walking by his side. They were also ac- COD ipaoled by George Isaacs (the executioner), a Depuly Sheriff, Fathers Duranquet and St. Francis, and , Surgeons Hodgman, Anderson, Nealls, 'Atwood, and --Hallam , With the .excep tion of the" prisoner, every one was as pale as. deakh,_. They . , soon arrived under the rope, Ind the preparations , for the execution Immediately tbek PAK*. PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 187. The prisoner was attired in white linen , trowsers and vest, dress-coat and light-colored kid gloves. Ili Wall short of stature, and looked almost like iv boy. He' was beardless; and his' features were Inflamed and swollen, as-though by much weep ing. Ile gave the general appearance °ate reg ular New York "rotig,h"--the man wlcOns most at home in scenes of violence and disorder; but certainly, as he stood there with his rich, curly hair, and his trembling lips, and his downcast eyes, he looked too young and too beautiful to destroy. Some criminals die "game;" some die winclngly; and some, again, pass off stupidly. Jerry O'Brien died stupidly;be had, weeks before, re signed all hope of a reprieve; he was in that pe culiarly, stupid state of mind where utter despair comes in a mechanical way, which is =mauled resignation. Only once did a gleam of anima tion, perhaps of hope, dart across his boyish face; but It quickly died away, and gave way to the old blank despair. The sky had been overcast all the morning,and Just as the culprit arrived under the gallows a s l ow, drizzling rain commenced, which did 'not c ease until the close of the tragedy. He took a chair directly under the dangling' rope. and listened tranquilly to the administration of the ordinances of the itoman Catholic Church, which consisted of the prayers , commencing "Our Father" and "Hail Mary," and reading of the Creed, the recital of the Confession, and the Acts of Contrition. Prayer was also offered for the dead, O'Brien many times repeating the words: " Lord, halt mercy on my soul !" "Lord, have mercy on my soul !" The prisoner, through his spiritual adviser. announceffthat he was ready at about twenty minutes before 10 o'clock. Mr. Isaacs placed him under the drop, and adjusted the knot. There was a slight "click" heard, and every one knew that the criminal had only a few seconds to live. "Have you anything to say?" asked Isaacs. "Tell them to pray for ,me-my mother, my sisters, my friends—tell them to pray for me— pray for ine—pray for me!" 'i he black cap was drawn over the face of the youthful criminal. Ile was hesitating on the bridge of time, ere be was hurled from this side to the other. Only a few - seconds of life inter vened. It was now raining heavily. Um brellas were hoisted, and the crowd of spectators were' impatient and dripping, and wanting to be gone. The influence of capital punishment as a. prevention of crime had' n illustratiOn in an in cident at this time. Just as this poor wretch was jumbling on the verge of dissolution—with the 'Clack cap over his eyes, and his brain -swooning or agonizing for the fatal jerk—a well dressed but villainous-looking man reached over through the dripping crowd, and, in a suppressed, wicked whisper. exclaimed to the man before him: "Look here! I've told von to take that un brella from before.me three times. If you don't do it this time, kill you on the spot!" • There was ails; time for comment; for at that moment the rope was cut, and, with a sudden jerk, Jerry O'Brien was castinto the other world. The rain suddenly ceased to full, a single gleam of sunshine splintered over the scaffold before the skies.were overclouded anew, and the white pigeons in the overhanging cornice above startled away, and fluttered about strangely before they resnmed their perch. There .was a slight mus cular contraction, and .that was all. In the short space .01 twelve minutes the criminal was pronounced dead. The neck was not broken, according to the physicians,. but rapid strangulation had been caused by a distension of the ligaments. No matter, the end was achieved; the criminal was dead. The remains were placed in' a walnut coffin, bearing the inscription "Jere miah O'Brien, died August 9th, 186'7, aged 45 yeses and . 1 day;" and conveyed to the - residence of the unhappy mother, No. 59 Christopher street, whence the funeral will take place to-day. After the execution a large crowd still haunted the vicinity of the prison, anxious to know if the hanging had really come off. TtionetS Cave, Esq., M. P. whose, arrival' in this city we recently noticed. passed on the next clay - in . a special train with Dr. Durant for the purpose of Inspecting the work, and the extraor dinarily rapid and complete track-laying of this eighth wonder of the world—the Pacific Railroad, This railway, as most of our readers well know, is to complete the railroad connection between the seaboards of the 'Atllintic and Pacific oceans. Owing to the liberal subsidies granted by the United States Gre vernment. and the energy of the contractors and Dr. Durant, the road is being completed at the unprecedented rate of from one and one-half to five miles per day. Mr. Cave, English member of Parliament, represents large interests in the Atlantic and Great Western Rail way Company In our country. He has been engaged for several 'weeks in investigatingthe. past, and present history of that company, and personally visited and inspected the whole of that road. Ile states that the main object in visiting the Union Pacific Railroad at this time is in order to enable him to make a comparison between this road and the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad. The wisdom of this will appear when it is remembered that the Union Pacific Railroad is to be built as one of the first class of American railways, and under the imme diate certificate of commissions appointed by the government, who are required to inspect and re port upon every mile of this road; We itearn from an entirely reliable source the details a an incident of Mr. Cave's • visit to the end of the road, which might have had a more serious ter mination, and the result of which is a source of gratification to the friends of. that.gentleman. It appears that on Thursday cveinetg the sp6cial train containing the excursionists stopped for the night in the vicinity of Julesburg—which has sprung up as if by magic within the last month, and which is located about one hundred and fifty-six miles east of the base of the Rocky Mountains. Colonel Carling, of the Regular Army, has a large and fine camp under his command near this city, preparing for the construction of a fort, to accommodate 1,400 men, near the base of the Mountains. Colonel Carling extended the hospitalities of his camp to the Hon. Mr. Cave, and invited him to ,hunt an antelope at 5 o'clock the next morning. True to the sportsman-like instincts of a' British gentles man, Mr. Cave cordially accepted this opportu nity for sport, although he had been informed that hostile binds of Sioux Indians Infested the vicinity, and were constantly committing depre dations. The hunting party consisted of Col onel Carling, Mr. Cave, the Colonel's orderly, - and two Scouts-of experience, to be used as well for heading the'setnie as to look out for Indians. At starting, a-northeasterly direction was taken over the Prairie, one scout moving about a mile distant on either flank; with orders to ride to the centre in case of alarm. Antelope were soon sighted In large numbers and exciting sport obtained. About 8- A. M., and im mediately after an exciting chase,— the orderly having Mr. Cave's rifle, to reload, two fine wolves were sighted at about one fourth of a mile distant. The Englishman, being anxious to obtain a nearer view. suggested a chase. Colonel Carling assured Inn that it would be impossible to come up with them, but expressed his willingness, to allow Mr. Cave to try the experiment. Without waiting for his rifle, Mr. Cave rose in .his stirrups and put his horse to tlie'top of his Speed in pursuit, begging the orderly to follow 'with his piece.. Alter a ticaumflotte - run - of - about two -miles, -Mr. - `retie was 'hlong side the nearest wolf„but on looking around found the orderly had not come up. lie accordingly rode at the near side of the wolf, and shouted from time to time in his ear, with a view of turning him within the range of Colonel Carling's rifle. About fifteen minutes cf . skillful.management bad brought the wolf within Escape of Counterfeiters from the i about 100 yards, when he drew back to allow the King's County Penitentiary. colonel to fire, and he shouted to the orderly for [From torday'n N. Y. Timet , .) his weapon. The Englishman, intent upon the The United' States authorities- in . this city exciting chase, had - noticed neither , the were informed yesterday morning that tw,o men, shouts nor signs , from Colonel Carling named Charles F. Ulrich and Adrian Harcq, con- . that a 'party of hostile Indians were approach- • fined in the penitentiary on indictments charging lug. He now, however, saw at a glance his them with manufacturing fractional United States danger, and the critical situation of affairs; I currency, Mostly of the denonaination of fifty and and although the wolf was completely ex twen ty-tive cents, had made their escape the night haunted and would have been captured an easy previous. The accused, it appears, were connected prey, be thrust spurs to his horse and rode for with a gang of counterfeiters on Staten Islandsind the orderly for his weapons, being wholly un opus ted on an extensive scale. They veers at length armed. Colonel Curling had for etime time °h elot:Ott] with oilier's, and a number of places I served the approach of the band of Indians. well from which the bills were printed and other ap- mounted, and dressed in fill de blankets and leg paratus were discovered and seized. Both are - . Mgr, as custornary-iu t r tribe, and saw that experts at counterfeiting, - tone of them (Ulrich) they were evidently ru witvring to cut off Mr. havims carried ou the business near Maspeth, I Cave from his party. Seeing that their pre (Zee( it's county, some three years since. Tile ADM was unknonu. to the- Englishman, establishment was seized and two or three ar- regardless of the danger, Colonel Carling rested, but the principal succeeded in eluding the resoir ed not to leave him to his Sin vie-Hance of the officers. It was reported at the pending fate, but gallantly, and at imminent time that he conducted several ostablisliinents in risk to himself, followed Mr. Cave, thus prevent . different places in this State andew Jersey. ing recurrence a tragedy to , those mel Ha is also au able hand at theffainess. Some which we have recently been called upon to re ten the since lie was arrested on the complaint cord. At this juncture the right scout had dis of the agent of the Republic of Hayti, for coup- covered another party of - Indians similarly ter - felling the currency of that country, and sell- mounted, approaching from an opposite direc lug to ShiP:untsters and sailors - trading - . betweetr --- tion„while - the scout from the left- eatne-in with-- New York and Port-au-Prince. A pre'ss, plates, the report that he had struck' fresh Indian tracks ink, paper, k.c., were taken possession of by the . on the extreme left. Thus reinforced, the Police. The defendant was subsequently con- party -drew rein for a short council of vieted in one of the Kings County Courts, and war, and dismounting as agreed, showed face to sentenced to State Prison. Since his release he the foe and determined to make fight. This appears to have resumed his old occupation. demonstration was effective. The wily Indian The manner of the escape of the prisoners is never makes a fair stand-up light if there is a stated to have been as follows: They were con- formidable opposition, and they . well knew the lined on the third tier in neighboring cells. They power of the Henry rifle in such hands as had in sonic way procured very small, flue saws, these. In the sad tragedies of Mr. Hill, and capable of cutting iron, which they kept secreted of Mr. Brown, and other sad occurrences of re until ready for their Work. The sockets in which I cent date, the Indians have watched 'until they the bolts of their cells fit were filled with raw po- found a man separated from his comrades ' and then tutors, blackened, so as not to attract attention. unexpectedly swooped down upon and cut him „although the cells are all holted simultaneously down. We are glad we have no such termination to with one movement, there is a spring to each t record of the ease in point. Mr. Cave is loud in bolt, and any obstacle placed in the socket will I ,his praises of the coolness and gallantry . of Col. prevent the bolt from entering. The Carling, whom he pronounces as his ideal of a cell (100is:Were thus left in such a condition that gentleman and a soldier, to whom, after their they could be opened at leisure. After gutting return from the hunt, he made cordial aeknow outside they succeeded in climbing to the third ledgment, as well as to his orderly, for their tier, and thence proceeded to the tower facing - prompt rescue, and resumed his journey. We the county road. Here they commenced work give this illustration of the danger of sporting on with their saws, and cut off several bars, thus Ithe prairies until the troops have cleared them opening a space of sufficient dimensions to ena- I from hostile Indians, at least without an ample ble them to crawl out. A rope furnished, as sup- escort. posed, by one of the other prisoners, was secured to the remaining bars, by means of which they let themselves down to the ground in safety. The keeper who secured the cells the evening previous observed nothing ,unusual. At ten o'clock an inspection was made _to see if every thing was right. and as the cells appeared secure, the keeper returned to his (pruners. At five o'clock next morning it was discovered that the prisoners • had taken their departure. There is confined on the same tier an alleged accomplice of the escaped parties, named John B. Abotte, who, it,. seems, heard them converse together during the night. Lieut. J. C. Braille, C. S. N., Who is awaiting trial on charges of piracy and murder on the high seas, likewise occupies a cell on that floor. His cell, as well as all the others, was effectually closed. Every effort is being made to Secure the alleged counterfeiters. but up to last evening no clue to their whereabouts had been obtained. It was re- ported, however, that two men answering the description of the parties were seen at an early hour yesterday morning rowing off from the west end of Concy Island. How they obtained the implements used in mailbag their escape is as yet unknown. Murder in Glendale, Hy. Loursvn.rx, Ky., Aug. 9.—On Thursday after noon, at Glendale, Dr. William Hughes had a controversy with one George Smith, concerning a security debt.. Smith made use of violent words, whereupon Hughes took Smith by the collar, telling him that be must not use such language. This morningthree sons of Smith came into Glendale, met'hughes on horseback, and all fired upon him without warning. Six bullets entered Hughes's body, the wounds proving fatal. OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. Exciting Wolf . English Member of rarliamcnt in a Tight Place. [From the Otnet[a Thttly Herald. Atigiwt 4.] 0111TITARY. Marie Sophie Arnelie, Far-Queen of Naples. Despatches have been received at London, from Rome we presume, which announce the death of this lady the wife of Marie Le old Francis, sur named "Little Bomba," ex-Kilk. of Naples. The deceased was the third daughter and Rath child of Maximilian Joseph, Duke of Bavaria, and was born at Possenholen on the 9th of October, 1811. Her early years were barren of historic incident, her education and that of - her sisters being ob tained from the private tutors of her father. In 1851, her sister Elizabeth Amelia Eugtiuie was married to Francis Joseph, the present Emperor of Austria, and four years subsequently another sister, the Princess Caroline Therese Helene, was united to Maximilian, Prince of Marin and Taxis. On the Bth of January, 1859, the deceased ex-Queen was married by proxy,aud on the 3d of February following, in person, to the then Prince Royal of Naples. On the 22d of May of the same year she ascended the throne with her husband, and during the brief and shaineful reign of Francis proved herself a de voted and affectionate wife. She accompanied the King in his flight from Naples to Gaeta, and during the short but memorable. siege of the last named city, endeared herself - to the Neapolitan soldiers, which composed the garrison, by her course of conduct. Upon the fall of 'Gaeta, Feb- ruary 14, 1861, and the retirement of the ex-King to the Palace of 'the at Rome, she ac companied kirk: and resided - there'over after wards, sharing , the many vicistatudesof fortune which have 440 ,atteaded,her royal spasm. . MAT Folsom. By a telegram from Concord, New Hampshire, yesterday, we are informed: of the death, of Mrs. Abby Folsom, at her residence id Rochester, in the same State, on the Bth inst. The deceased was, we believe, a native of England., her maiden name being Kelley.. Between the years 1830 and 1838, she emigrated to this country; and took up her residence in Boston. There she soon became famous for her denunciations of slavery. With a coterfe of kindred spirits she mounted the ros trum and denounced the late "peculiar institu tions' of the South,' declaring that the negro was; in every respect, the equal' of the white man, and even going so far as to declare in favor of amalgamation between the races. At the time when these doctrines were expounded the "moral ideas" of the country had not yet reached their 11111 height, and . even VI Boston the preacher of anti-slavery dogmas was subject to such inter ruptions as could be caused by hootings; groan ings, hissings, rotten eggs, and other and more forcible expressions of dissent. Notwithstanding these unfavorable aspects. the deceased lady per severed in her efforts, and was ever foremost iu attending all of the anti-slavery meetings held in New Englund and New York. As a speaker, Mrs. Folsom was hold. vigorous and tearless. She never hesitated to express her opinion in the midst of the most creer whelming antagonism, and on more than one occasion gained her point by sheer personal courage and determination. The natural ability displayed by the deensed gained for her nu merous admirers and friends, while her courage made even her opponents in political questions respect her. §he was to the public at one time what Anna Dickiuson and Lucy Stone are at the present hour. The deceased was married quite a number of years ago to a Mr. Folsom, a scholar and philanthropist, of New Hampshire: ,Soon after this event she retired to private life, from which she seldom ever afterwards emerged. Her life before her marriage. taken altogether, was a most extraordinary'and successfuLone. She lived to see tier dearly cherished anti-slavery doctrines engrafted - upon the constitution of the country, and hi the"eertainty of this knowledge died. no doubt perfectly contented and happy. - ' The Stan ton Quarrel. (1' SECICETA2Y STANTON—COUItsE 01' TIM PRESIDENT. ' [From the National IntelliOencer, Aug. 9.] The statement which has found its way intb some of the public prints, to the effect that the. .I't‘e,sl - has ordered that:no further communication shall be held with Mr. Stanton, is, we are sat isfied, inaccurate. So long as' he is permitted to remain in office, official relations must necessarily subsist. It does not follow, however, that he will attend Cabinet consultatiors. These are not held in virtde of law. They are purely discretionary with the President, who is neither obliged' to confer with his Secretaries In formal meetings, nor Is he re stricted to the Heads of Departments In seeking advice upon public affairs. The President, we believe, will deal with his refractory War Secretary' in another, and more direct way. IL is understood from' some of Mr. Stanton's' friends that that gentleman is not entirely beyond the fear of popnlar scorn, and may yet recon sider his refusal to resign, however repugnant such a step may be to his inveterate love of offi- Rini position... We learn from a usually well informed source that. it is the purpose of Mr. Johnson to allow this whole ,matter to remain In abeyance for a few days, giving time for reflec tion on the part of Mr. Stanton, and - the friends 'who advise him as to the course he should pur sue. 11,-in two or three days, he - shall--still _per sist in the refusal to resign,. the President will suspend him, by giving him notice, substan tially, that he is thereby susapnded him from the further execution of the funellonB of the office of Secretary of War, and that the reasons of this sus pension will be submitted to the Senate at the next session of Congress. USE OF 111 . 1 CS SUGGESTED . _ The National Inidllgencer, which Is said to be one of the organs of. Mr. Johnson, continues its abuse"of Mr. Stanton. In its issue of Thursday it makes the important adinisSion, however, that he is sustained hi hiS position by the army and the people, stating that "he is perfectly sensible that he has the revolutionary element, which is powerful, including Nrtain General officers of the army, arid millions of deluded people at his back." The Intellifiencer then suggests in the following paragraph that Mr. fitanton be ousted, by force from his office:• - Let this loitering detective (Setretary Stanton). be apprehended, in the building where his power has so often shaken the hearts of tenderer and' nobler people, who had the misfortune to take • • orders, by the police, and carried out of tho , • door by any stout officer of common resolution,. and dismissed in the open air, to appear ouec more in public without a guard with loaded muskets and bayonets to defend A brutal op .pressor. against the • apparitions of a conscience mad witli guilt, and of a mind distracted , by, cowardice.. THE DOMINION OF CANADA.. Jeff. Davis 7 s 'lone ofinind—rffir. 10)Ircy - Mee. e • s__Eeniato—illevelations—The lionorable Gentleman in a.. Biiit Place—Tumult Expected. Moyrimm., August 9.—Paul Bagley - finds Jeff. Davis obdurate. To-day Mr. McGee received a letter threatening him with assassination if he disclosed any lacisToneermug the Fenian organi zation in Canada, which might, also implicate prominent American Fenians. A letter from Buflalo was also received by Mr. McGee,inclosing a sketch of a gallows and coffin having the in scription: "You arch traitor, if you opp_ose Dev lin by G-- such will be your tate." The letter was accompanied by a copy of the Buffalo robot tree, a Fenian newspaper s containing a speech made by General Spear, winding - up thus: That vile and wretched traitor. that veritable Judas, McGee, will be the first example." On Monday the disclosures promised by Me - Gee are to com mence. Mi. McGee has all the government papers cdunected with the late Fenian raids in his pos session, and his disclosures will, It is said, impli cate many prominent Irish citizens in Canada. The popular feeling runs veiy high and vio lence is looked for every hour. The Golf Cable.--Progress of the Work of Pay log OM—. alie Marva, Begin using Operations at Havana. HAVANA, August fj, by way of New Orleans, August 9.—The steamer Narva, engaged in lay ing the cable, has arrived. She started from Key Nest S•iturday morning, and laid two and a half tildes of three sizes, buoyed at the ends. The average rate of paving out the cable was four miles per hour. The United States man-of-war Tahoma and Fountains, and Spanish.men-of-war Francisco de Asiz, accompanied, but no assist ance was required. The Nerve begins operations here at five o'clock P. M., and starts to-Morrow for Key West. 4I• ) • The Pi at rrattts. The Washington. correspondent of the N. Y. Time 4 has the lollowieg: TIM CASE OF aIRS. suititArr. It is reported on good authority that President Johnson, after having signed the death sentence of Mrs. Surratt, remarked to the officer of the Military Commission who had presented the findings to him, that "We must be protected against female assassins as well as male assas sins." This/ remark, according to my author ity, was elicited by the consideration of the . recommendation for mercy to Mrs. Surrstt. SUERNIT IN ));'ASIIINGTON ON APR 11.1.4,1865. Among the doenmenbron file in the War De-, partrnent,relative to the assassination conspiracy, is the confession of Atzerodt,'.who was. executed, in which ho states that Booth told him•on the day of 'the assassination that "Johnny," meaning Sum tt, was in town,-and:occupied room'''. at the Herndon Muse. --Tmas Cave, member Parha -1 meet, while bunting antelope inof_the Nebr ßritish aska, was surprist,dby &hand of hostile Indians and beat a peaty rotzeat. ' • F. L. FRThERSTON. Publibirr. PRICE THREE OENTh. FACT, AND FAMINES: —Derby has the gout in his elbow -Jubal Early•la at a watering Ohm ltreatradit. —A BoSton boot-black has a bank :mount of -$lO,OOO. —The Southern novelist, W. Gilmore' Simms., is in Boston. —Jeou Ingdow is twenty-eight, unmarried and' homely. —The New York Tribune is to have a nelrbitildL log of magnificent proportlhns. —Grace Greenwood, irra Cliirtago paper,. calls 'Gall Hamilton a "waywardqdater.' —blackberries in West Wrgraia sell fell' ten cents a gallon. West Virginians will Make money if they con. —Shoddy is accused of having 'node his money through "inflation." He affirms, on 'the CM:I -imy, that it was through contract-len. —Ten years ago there were' 25,000 Cherokees. To-day there are about 14,000,. War, ruin aad disease have been too. much for the nation. —Rev. &E. Earle, a Massachusetts- , revivalist, has been presented by his Nevada admirers a fifty pound silver brick, wc•rth it8(10... - —The. Michigan Constitutional. Convention have adoPted a resolution allowing. Indians .to - vote. Indians take naturally to pcolls.. —There is a mau on Blackwelrs Island who takes himFelr to he the United States. Every time a boat passes hs runs down to• the shore . to "collect customs." as he call.; it. —Austrian journals asseyt that. the Ritaperor Francis Joseph,on learning of the execution ofhis brother Maximilian, declared that he would never again sign a death warrant. —Lord Lyttleton proposed an amendment to the Reform bill that no one should vote "who could .not write a legible hand." Horace 'Greeley will object to the principle. —tii?olsoni c the owner of the patent for the wooden ?dock pavement, line obtained judgment against Chicago for $,10,000, for the unautherized use of his pavement. - -A washerwoman at South Shields, England, bought a matrass in which was hidden a hat fall of gold. She determined to ignore soapsuds and smoothing;-loons in the future.' —Clara Louisa Kellogg, the opera-singer, pur chased her old homestead at New Hartford, Conn., last week, and after her return from Europe, this falli will retire from the stage to private life there. —Another barbaric pearl has arrived at Paris in the person of Her Mt.jesty Hnikon-juikou; Queen of the society Isles: Her Majesty must be de seeuded from the fitmous "Hoke,y-Pokey Fun, the King of t i 4e Cannibal Islands." —The Cincinnati Conime2'cidl says of a forth coming prize-light: " The managers of the affair intend to so conduct it that it shall not reflect any disgrace upon our city. No rudianista will be, tolerated." That must be a modellight. —A company has been formed in \Frande to supply the towns in the south and 'centre of France with ice from the sides of . the Savoy Alps. The ice, transparent as crystal, may be loadeciat the foot of the glacier upon vehicles drawn. by oxen, and so conveyed to the Geneva railway a Cation. —The Sultan and Prince of Wales were riding past Hyde Park, when the latter explained 'that the railings were destroyed by the rioters. The Sultan innocently inquired -"How many hernia fell?" and was dumbfounded at the reply," Nose." That's not the way he was used to treating, ots streprous Turks gallant Cretans. —lt is stated. that .the Archduchess Sophia, mother of the Emperor - of - Austria - and - the agape ror has become insane in etmee (pence of thelfrath of her son. The &repress Charlotte is so resolutely opposed to removal from Miramar that the attempt to take her to her native city, Brussels, has been abandoned, and thus the lust hope of restoring her is destroyed. —A lady in respectable circumstances drowned herself at Cannes recently from some cause un known, and it was •nimored in the town that she had been buried with all her jewels on. A few days after her corpse was fouud in a little thicket near the cemetery, the coffin having . been breiters open. It appeared, however, on inquiry, that the lady had no object of value about her person. —The Madrid papers publish a challenge to single combat, which has been sent to President Juarez by Senor de Castillo, lately Minister of Maximilian in Mexico, but at present residing.in Spain. He pledges his faith as a gentleman to start immediately for Mexico to fight the duel if Juarez will give him a guarantee against assassi nation while on Mexican soil. &tar z couldn't if he would, and wouldn't if he could. - A gentleman who knows Charles Reade says he has a habit of clipping from newspapers all sorts of paragraphs—hair-breadth escapes,strange recounts of crime, bits of wit, bits of wisdom— and pasting them in a scrap-book. When hr gets ready to, write a new story, he goes to his scrap-book in search of "good things," furbishEi • up the crimes and accidents, redresses, the wit and wisdbm, and weaves all into his narrative. —A few-evenings ago, when the rain was fall ing fast, the Empress Eugenie had occasion to r eross the road from_the principal entrance of the I Exposition to the Bridge of Jena. She had to pass through .a double rank, of men, who were almost all provided with umbrellas, whilst her Majesty had nothing to protect her• from the in clement weather but a small pa rasoL No gallant Frenchman offered her his umbrella! Is polite ness leaving La belle France, too? • —A daughter of Mr. L. Ellis, of Troy, about a week ago, swallowed a nickel penny. A physi cian was immediately called, and all the known remedies applied without effect. Very tame she commenced to vomit, and it was found impossi ble to keep anything on her stomach. The symptoms were all those of virulent poison, not tmlike those which indicate the presence 'of ar senic and strychnine. The little sufferer died of convulsions on Tuesday. —ln rebuilding a house In the village of Gmc wilier, says the Courier du Bas-Rhin, the work men discovered under one of the Inner door stepi. an earthen vessel containing fifty-two gold coins and eighty-four silver ones. They date back three centuries; the former are thinner than our presentgold pieces, and the latter are about the size of the old six-franc piece. A thousand fraiiies has been offered for this treasure-trove, but the owner of the house seems not inclined to part with it. - -The Liverpool AMion is respon ible folothe following story: A rather amusing circumstance was connected with the supper to the Belgian officers in the Prince of Wales's room. The value of the plate on the table was 1:25,000, and it had been lent by Hancock, and other eminent silver smiths. The question was how to preserve it. The matter was effected by having the company waited on by detectives dressed up as waiters. Nearly every attendant was a police officer ilk disguise. —Blondin has been compelled to break his=s gagetnent at Asnieres from causes not very credi table to his rivals. On closely inspecting his rope the other day, he discovered that it had been sawn asunder, so that one fibre only remained, which his weight would have broken. But for the timely discovery this diabolical attempt would have succeeded, and the visitors to the Paris ere morne would have been horrified by a repetition of the frightful disaster at the English Cremorne arid at the Hippodrome. • —There are three magnificent tombs nearly completed at Mount Auburn, Boston. Tha that of these is that, f John L. Gardner of Boston. of granite, and costing not less than $20,000. The second tothb is sone of equal magnificence suit costliness. This belongs to Mrs. Lodge. To 'this tomb the remains of President Kirkland have re cently been reMoved. The third and cuediest is the Bourne tomb. It is of harealered,granue fn the *man: style, The bare granite.,. cut and delivered, cost 4123,000, and when :tidy ewe pletedithn 40Inh will cost between 4t0,000 art 4 SAM ' ,