Booth In the parlor, with Suratt, but Booth has taken Sniatt to a room up stairs, and engaged In private conversation up there ; ho would say, “John, can you spare a word I—come upstairs;” they won!.-; go and Begone tu private conversation, which would last tw<> or three hours. Q. Did the same thing ever oocur with Mrs. Su jatt? _A. Yes, sir. •a Have you ever seen the prisoner, Atzarott ? A. I have, sir. ■Q. Do you recognize him here! A. Yes, sir, that la he q. state whether, on the following Friday, that -is the day of the assassination, von drove Mrs. Su ratt Into the country 1 A. Yes, sir. Q. 'Where did you drive to 1 A. To Surattsvllle. We arrived there about half past four. Q. Did She stop at the honae of Mr. Dloydsl A. Yes, sir; she went Into the p *rlor, d&7t Q. You say you recognized that spur as having been seen by you on the bed of Payne at tbe house of Mrs. Suratt; what makes you recognize it, and what marks are these that distinguish it Itom spurs In general 1 A. I bad them In my hand. ... Q. Was ft tbe same with the knife; I understand you to swear you saw that knife there 1 A. No, not that knife. ■ Q. On the 4th of April-do you know whare Payne was stopping 1 Do you know anything about Payne on that uay 1 A. Yes, sir; I remember tbat Atzerott and I met, and I asked him where be was going, anil belaid be was going to get a horse for Payne. Cl- But where was Payne! A. I don’t know; I only saw blm on those two oc casions. Q. Where, then, was Atzerott stopping! A. I don’t know. Q. Did not be speak of the place where Payne was stopping! A. No. sir. Q. Do ycu know of his having stopped at the Herndon House. A. I know it, because Atzoroth told me. I met him one day on Seventh street; he said he was go lr g to see Payne, and I asked him If it was Payne tbat wss at tbe Herndon House, and be said yes, Q,. You Bald Payne 'paid a visit- to Mrs. Suratt, and stepped only one night 1 A. Yts, sir. Q. With whom did be appear to have business t A. He appeared to have business with Mrs. Su “ql Did he have any other dress going to show tbat bo wanted to oonceal himself that you saw 1 A. No, sir. Q. Have you seen Payne since the assassination unilLto-dav 1 A. No, Fir; I believe not. Q. Was he received by Mrs. Suratt as an inti mate friend l ... , . • A He was; by Mrs. Snratt he was treated as an did acquaintance on me first visit. _ Cl. Now yon IM-y be represented hlfllSCif to bo a Baptist minister. Did they regard bunas a man in disguise or as a minister ! ' Alone of the young ladles remarked that he was a queer-looking Baptist preaoher, that ho wouldn’t convert many sonls. _ . .. q. dm you ever see Payne and Atzerott in com pany • A. Atzerott was at the house on the ooeaslon of Payne’s last visit. q. were you or were not at Mrs. Suratt’s when Payne was arrested ! ■ A. No, sir. Q. Were you in the house at three o’olook on So tuiday morning when the officers took possession 1 A» Yfeß sir. Q.. Was Payne not there then! A. No, Ur, Q. i would Ilka te know what professional em ploy ment you are in 1 A. Clerk in the office of the commissary general THE PRESS.—PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, MAY 15, 1865. (if prisoners, unci bay? been eluoe tho 9ill day of Jat uary, tens. ft. Colonel Hoffman's office! A. Yes, sir. It was here moved that the court adjourn; bat, alter some discussion, the adjournment was post poned. Robert R. .Tones sworn: ft. Ytu are a clerk at the Kirkwood House! A. Yes. sir. ft. Rook at that paper and say if It is a pzge taken front the register of that hotel 1 A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you read upon It tho name of Atzerott! A. Yes, sir. J. G. Atzcroa f, I believe. ft. From that register, does It appear that he took a room thero! A. Yes; on the 4th of April; I should think la the morning, before 8 o’clock. Q. What Is the number of the room 1 A. No. 128. ft. Have you any recollection of the man being soon by you that day 1 A. I saw him that day, sir. Q- Ho you recognize him amongst those prisoners! A. That looks llko the man. Major General Hanter to Atzerott. Stand up. Witness said: I think that Is him, sir. ft. Do you know what became of him after he took the room 1 A. I do not know ; It was between 12 and 1 o’clock when I sarr him that day. ft. Do you know anything or Booth having called that day to inquire the number of Vioe President Johnson’s room! A. I don’t know that he Inquired; I gave a oard of Booth’s to 001. Browning, Yloe President John son’s secretary. Q. You did not receive it from him yoursein A. I did not, I think, although I may have done so, ft. You have not seen the prisoner till now» A. No, sir. ft. Were you present when the room was opened 1 A. I wus not there when it was opened; I went up with Mr. Dee after It was opened. ft. Did you see anybody there during the da; that Atzerott was at the hotel 1 A. There was a young man spoke to him when I saw him at the office counter. Cl. Did you see any one go to the room with him! A. No, sir. * Q. Would yon know Booth 1 A. I don’t think I would; he has been at the house, but I don’t think 1 recollect him. Cl. Were you present when that bowie knife was taken from the bed 1 A. Yes, sir; It was underthe sheet, ft. On what day was that! A. The day after tho murder of.the President, or on lhe evening after, ft, Had tho bed been oocupled! A. No,sir; the chambermaid had not bean In there. Q. Was Atzerott out the night of the assassina tion! A. Not that I know of; It was between 1? and 1 o’clock ’.list I saw him; he asked If any Ode had In quired for hlob ■ ft. This was on the I4th day of April 1 A. Yes, sir. Q, He paid for one day In advance for his room! A. Yes, sir; it appears on the book. ft. He bad never been to the hotel before to your knowledge! A. I hud never seen him there before, CROSS KXAMINED. Q. Were you clerking at the desk tho day when he registered! A. 1 went off duty at K o’eloek that day, 4. Did you seehim register! A. No, sir. Cl. What reason have yen for supposing that the person who wrote this name was the person you have Identified ?• A. He called to the counter, pointed to his name on the register, and asked If any one bad called. Q. What day was that ! A. On Friday, between 12 and 1 o’clock, ft. Did you see him after that again In person 1 A. No, not after he lea the counter. Cl. Did you see him when his baggage came in t A. No, sir. ' ft. Had he an; baggage when he arrived 1 A. I was not there when he arrived. ft. Did he go to his room while he was there 1 A. I didn’t go there till next evening, between 6 and 1 o’clook. Q. Do you kn ow whether he slept there 1 A, No, Mr; the chambermaid could not get In; she could not find the key. ft. Did yon ever find tbe key t A. We sever have seen it slnoe. Q. Did you have any conversation with a detec tive In the course of the evening of the 15th in re ference to a suspicions person at the Kirkwood House! A. On the 15th, the day after the murder, I think probabiy I had, but I don’t recollect of any particu lar conversation with regard to It. ft. Do you remember going with the detective to the room! A. I went with Mr. Dee to tbe room. ft. Do you know whether the prisoner, Atzerott, had expressed any choice of the room, or for the particular number, No. 128! A. I was net there when he was roomed. Cl. Did yon Inspect the different articles which were found In the pockets of that coat 1 A. Yes, I saw them as Mr. Dee took them out. Cl- Could you identify the pistol you saw on that occasion 1 A. I don’t think I could the particular one it was a large pistol; such as cavalry soldiers wear. Q. Was it loaded or act 1 ■ A. It was. ft. How were the barrels t round ? A. I think It was a round, single-barrel, with Chambers. d- Could you recognize the books! A. I think I could, the one that had J. Wilkes Booth on the outside; the kulfe was a sheath knife, the same as that one on the table, but I oould not swear to the identity of It. The assistant counsel for Mrs. Suratt then said: Mr. president, I have to ask that the examination ol Mr, Floyd may be postponed until Monday, as bis testimony afieots Mrs. Suratt, and is of great importance. and I feel desirous that his examina tion may take place when her senior eonnsel, Mr. Reverdy Johnson, Is present. The court refused the application to defer the examination of Mr. Floyd, on the gronnd that It oould not wait on the whims or conveniences of eonnsel,. and that Mr. Johnson might have re mained in court, had he so chosen. Mr. Floyd sworn— ft. Where doyonreßlde! A. At Surattvllle. " d. Are yon acquainted with John H. Suratt! A. Yes; since the Ist of December, 1884; not much previous to that. Q. Do yon know theprUoner Harold! A. Yc?j slf ft. Do you know the prisoner, Atzerott! A> Ycb sirs Q. Will you state whether or not some fire or six weeks before the assassination of the President any nr all of these men came to your boose 1 A. They were there, sir. , Q. All three! a _ S ]r * d- What did they bring to your house! A. Atzerott came first; went on to T. B.; was gone about half an hour, atfd the three of them re turned— Suratt, Atzerott, and Harold; I noticed no thing with them until all three came, when John Suratt oalled me Into the front parlor, and then on the sofa I saw two carbines and some ammunition. Q. Anything else! A. A rope. - - d. How long 1 . . A. About sixteen or twenty feet! d- Were these articles lets at your house! A- Yes ; Suratt asked me to take care of them, and I told him I did not like to have those things in the house; he then carried me Into a room I had never been into before, and showed me wheral could place them under a joist, d- Were they concealed there! A. Yes, sir; I put them there myself. Q,. How much ammunition was there 1 A. Just one cartridge-box. d. What kind of a carbine was It! A. Dld’nt examine them; they hod covers over them. ft. state whether on the Monday preoeedlng Mrs. Suratt came to your house ? A. I met Mrs. Suratt on the Monday previous to the assassination, when she jast broaohed the sub ject to me; I did not undeistand her; she asked me about the shooting-irons, or something of that kind, to draw my attention to those things: I had almost forgotten they were there, and I told her they were hidden away she said they would be wanting soon; I don’t recollect the first question Ishe put tome; she only referred to it In a manner, but finally name ont and said they would be wanted soon.. ft. Now will you state whether, on the evening or day on which tho President was assassinated, Mrs. Suratt didn’t come to your house 1 A. Yob; i was out attending a trial, and found her there when I oame back; I judge it was about 6 o’clock; I met her at the wood-pile, and she told me to have them shooting Irons ready that night, and said there would be some parties call for them that night; she gave mo something In a piece of paper to keep for her, and I found It was a field glass; she asked me also to have two bottles or whisky ready, saying they would be oalled for at night. ft. And were they called for by Booth and Harold that night! A. They both oame, Booth and Harold, and took their whisky ent of the bottles; Booth didn’t come in, but Harcid did; it was not over a quarter after 12 o’olook; Booth was a stranger to me; Harold came in and took the whisky, but I don’t think he aßked for It; he said to me get me those things., ft. Did not he say to yon what those things were ? A. No; but he was apprised that already I knew they were coming for him; I mode no reply, but went and got them; I gave him all the artlolss, with tbe field, gloss and a monkey-wrenok, ft. She told ;6U to give them the whisky, the ear bines, andthe field-glass ? A. Yes, sir. Q. How long did they remain at your house 1 A. Not over five minutes, ft. Did they take both the oarbines, or only one? A. Only one; Booth said he oould not take his, because his leg was broken, ft. Did ho drink also ? A. Yes, while sitting on the poroh; Harold car ried the bottle out to him. ft. Did they say anything about the assassination! A. As they werejaboutleavlug, Booth said “ I will toll you tome news, I am pretty certain we have as sassinated the President ana Secretary Seward .” ft. Was that In Harold’s presenoe ? A. lam not certain; I became so exMted that I am not certain. ft. At what hour was the news of the President’s assassination afterwards received by yon I A. I suppose it was about 9 o’clock, ft. As the news spread, was It spoken of that Booth was the assassin? A. I think it was, on several occasions, ft. DldyonEce the prisoner, Dr. Mudd, before 1 A. I never saw him before; lam not aoqualnted with him at all. Q. What was the exact language used when Ha rold asked yon for those things? a. For God’s sake make haste and get those things. 4. At what time did you rent the house 1 A. About the Ist of December last. Q. At tho time yon commenced the occupation of tlie premises did you find any arms In tbs bouse 1 A: No, sir. 4- No guns or pistols 1 A. There was a broken gun—a double barrelled gnn. Q. l)o you keep a bar therel A. 1 do, sir. 4- Detail the first conversation yon had with Mrs. Suratt on the two last times you saw her. A- It was out of TJnlontown ; we had passed eaoh other ; I stopped and saw ft was her and got out and went to her buggy, slid she spoke to me in a manner trying to draw my attention to those things, the carbines, but she finally came out plainer, though I am h«t quite positive, but I think she said shoot ing irons. _ -. 4. Can you swear, Mr. Floyd, on your oath, that she mentioned shooting Irons to yon at all 1 A. I am pretty positive she did on both oooaslons, and I know she did on the last. Q. At what time on Friday did yon meet Mrs. Suratt. , A. I didn’t meet her on Friday at all; I was ont, and when I anived home I found hor there. 4. How long did she remain after you returned 1 A. Not overten minutes. . Q. Now state the conversation between you and her during those ten mlnntes 1 A. The first thing she said was, “Talk about the devil and some of his Imps will appearthen she Bald, 11 Mr. Floyd, I want you to have the shooting irons ready; some parties will call for them to night." She gave me a bundle, but I didn’t open It until I got up stairs, and I found ft was a field glass. 4. At what time of day had yon this conversation with Mis. Suratt 1 ; A. I judge It was about 5 o’clock, but It might have been later; she told me to have those shooting. irons ready, and 1 carried them and the other things Into the house i that Is all the conversation I had with her in refeienoe to that; I went Into the barn and she reddOEtOUtSe to tlx her boggy, the spring of which had become detached from the anle. • 4- Was any other person piesont during this ln fWs. Offett was there. 4. Was she within hearing distance 1 A. Idon’t know; I suppose she was. U. Inis we Bln the yard 1 ! a. Yes, sir. ; Q, is Mrs. Offett a neighbor of yoursl A. Sbelsmy BlßteMn-law. I 4, When did yen first have oooaslon be reooueol those conversations 1 i A. When I gave .all the particular* to Colonel Burnett, the Saturday week following. , 4. Was that tho first time youdetaited thase oon- Ivenatlons 1 i A. Yes. 4 Did you relate UJ Of the olroumstanoes teeny other perm 1 OHOS.S-BXAKIHATIOH. A. Only to Dlent. Dovett and Uapt. Cuming bom ; I tola them it was through the suratts.tbat I got myself Into difficulty, and If they' hvin’t brought those arms to the house I would net have been In any difficulty at all. Q. Were Dovett and Cunningham together when you told them 1 A. Yes. ft. Did you talk to Mrs. Offett about It! A. 1 don’t think I did; lam not sc positive about that. Q. How soon after Booth and Harold left you did you learn positively the assassination of the Presi dent! A. I got it from them. d- How soon after -did yon get It from other par tiea! A. About 8 or 9 o’clook the next morning, d. Did you have any conversation with tto sol diers In regard to it! A- No, sir. d- Hid yen tell tbem about Booth and Harold being at your place! A. I did not, and I am only sorry that I did not. Q. Did Mrs. Sufatt have any conversation with you In reference to any conspiracy 1 A. Never, sir. d. Did Mrs. Suratt hand anything to you when she spoke about those shooting Irons 1 A. Yes, sir, the field glass, d. Have you any family 1 A. I have a wife. Q. Have you a son! A. No, sir. d- Docs any person work for you! A. Ycb, sir; a couple ol colored men. d> Were any or them present at the conversation between Mrs. Suratt and yon! A. No, sin ft. Was the package handed to you by Mrs. Su ratt’s own hand 1 A, Yes, by herself. ft. Where were you standing when She handed It to you f A. Near the woodpile. ' Here a different counsel entered upon the task of continuing the cross examination, a cross-examina tion rendered exceedingly tedious by the Insufficient voice ol the witness, whom the court and' counsol oould scarcely hear. ft. Mr. Floyd, can you recollect who it was, after Booth and Harold left the house, that first told you It was Booth who killed the President 1 A. 1 cannot; It was spoken of in the bar-room tho next morning and throughont the day. ft. Were the circumstances told, and the manne In which he did it 1 . A. 1 don’t remember any circumstances being told. ft. Do you know whether the soldiers who just esme to tue house know it WAS Booth! A. I do not; I suppose they knew It, as they brought tho from the city. 4- Mr, riuyd, how !OPB before »» assassination v™ B -t that the three gentlemen you referred to Came to your house 1 A. About six weeks; they had two buggies; Small and Have Harold were In the buggies; Suratt cettd on horseback 1 ft. They all oame together 1 A-e Yes* ft'. Weil, who went down*lo this plaoe called T. JB.-t A Suratt and Atzerott. ft. Did Harold go with them then 1 A. No; Harold was there the night before; he had gone down the country, and told me he had come from T. 8., when they all three oame back, ft. How long were they gone! A. Not over half an hour. ft. Who handed tbe carbines to yon 1 A. John Suratt, when they all oame into the bar; Suratt told me he wanted to see me, and took me to the front parlor, and there,,on the sofa, wore the carbines. ’ ' ft. Do you know which buggy they were taken Horn! A. I did not see anything of any arms at all until they were on tho sofa. ft. What became of the rope that was not taken away 1 A. It was put In the store-room with the monkey wrench ; I told the colonel about It at the Old Ca pitol, and’l suppose he sent for It. Q. Did at any time any conversation pass be tween you and Herold about tbe arms. A. The night of the assassination, when he got the carbines. ft. Which road did they take! A. Towards T. B. ft. Hid Booth and H. start off together! - A. They did. Q. Can you say whether It was in Harold’s pro- Bence that Booth told yon he had killed the Presi dent. .... A. I am not sure, because Harold rede across the yard like. ft. You were arrested on the Tuesday following! A. Yes. Q. Where! a. About 1600 yards from T. B. on my way home, ft. Did Harold take a drink at the bar! A. He did and carried a bottle to Booth, ft. Did he take the bottle baok 1 A. He did. ft. Did he pay for the drink! A. He said): "I owe you a couple of dollars,” and he gave me one dollar. ft. Was it light enough for you to observe the kind of horses they had 1 A. One was almost a white horse, and the other was a bay; the bay,was a large horse; Harold was riding on the-bay. Here another counsel took up the oross-examl ration, beginning with the oft-repeated injunction to the witness to speak louder. ft. Mr. Floyd, you say yon met Atzerott In com pany with Suratt ami Harold! A. He came there fire or six weeks before in com pany with Suratt. ft. Dldyau ever see him before that time 1 A. Yea; he had been to my house before, ft. Did he ever deliver to you anything! A. Never. . „ „ _ ft. Have yon seen him since the assassination! Q A. Never till now. ft. Have you ever known Atzerott by nick names! A. I used to call him stranger, often; I didn’t know his name. ft. Did you ever see the prisoner, Arnold 1 (the one in the corner.) A. I don’t know him. ft. Did Booth take a rifle with him 1 A. No, sir, but Harold did. ft Whore wore tho arms then! A. They were In my bed chamber, ft. When did you bring them there t A. Alter Mrs. Suratt left, in consequence of her order. ft Did you give them the carbines before they said anything about shooting the President! A. No, sir, afterward, ft. What time was it! A. A little alter 12; I WOkO up just before 12 o’clock; I had gone to bed about 9 o’clock. ft. When thesoldlors searched, did you give them aid! . A. I told them I did not know anything about It; I should have been perfectly free if I had given them the Information they asked for. ft. Did you have any conversation with Mrs. Oftett after Mrs. Suratt went away t A. lam net certain; I think I told her. ft. How far do yon enppose it Is from the gate to the house? A. About as far as from here to tho partition, (about fifteen feet.) ft. Where were you standing when you had the conversation with her last ? ' A. Near the wood-pile. The court adjourned till Monday morning, at o’olook. ®|}* f! MS. MONDAY, MAY 15, 1885. The Great Criminal Taken* Jefferson Davis, a prisoner in the hands of Andrew Johnson, constitutes an antithesis better than a bloody triumph over a desperate opposition, and more ex pressive than the strongest argument. The aristocrat is the captive of the, democrat— the head of a crushed rebellion is at the mercy of the head of a vindicated Republic. There has been a wondrous Providence in the last scenes of this war, and the man ner of the taking of Davis is as strange as any of the events that have followed so rapidly the fall bf Richmond. There is nothing of grandeur in it. He fled from the stubborn rebel capital after he had ordered it to be given to the flames. Laden with spoils himself, he left a starv ing and plundered people to he clothed and fed by the conqueror. And even as he saw ruin before and around him, and flying to save his own life, he attempted to force bis armies into new conflicts, and to shed BlOie bipod in a lost and desperate cause. Caught at last, in the midst of the victims of his ingratitude and tyranny, after a reward had been offered for his arrest as an accomplice in the great assassination, his fate is the beginning of the end of a life never stained with dishonor until he broke the oath he 'swore to defend his country, and led the hosts who had doomed it to destruction. Hor was the catastrophe wanting in the ludicrous. The proudest spirit of the South— the most sensitive of the slave aristocracy—the “ Admirable Crichton” Of society, whose pride it was to excel in every manly grace and every scholastic acquirement—the Martinet of the army—the pretentious Cato of the Senate—assumed the garments of his wife to escape the search of the soldiers of the Union. We have often beard that the ma dame of the rebel monarch was the Catha rine of the Court; but this is the first time that Davis has ever voluntarily as sumed the petticoat. Oh, what a pic ture for the satirist! What a theme for Punch / We will not anticipate his punishment. But if his own cruelty to others is to be applied to himself, it will be one long and inconceivable torture. As we study this man’s character, with the aid of the proved miseries of the Southern people, it assumes a most revolting aspect. At any hour he cpuld have saved -thou sands from death, by an honorable sub mission ; but, in the face of defeat, he forced them to remain in the army, and to refuse the terms of the Government of their fathers. It seems to have been or dained, however, that he should only fall into the hands of justice after his armies bad been crushed and his agents had impli cated him in the blackest crime in human history. As the web of this vast conspira cy is being unravelled, and while a mourn ing world contemplates the murder of the mighty dead, Jefferson Davis is on his way to a Retribution which Bhould be as marked andmemorable as his own offences have been numerous and appalling. “ But now, from thy reluctant band, TbS thunderbolt la wrong; TOOlate tbou leaveac tbs Ugh e&mmaml To which thy wtahnesß clung. As Evil Spirit, as tbou art, > It la enough to grieve tke heart, To see thine own unstrung; TV tblnk that God’s fair world hath boon The footstool of a thing so mean." The National Finances. The firm confidence of the people in the < strength and security of the Government, j as shown in the recent unprecedented in ! vestments in the Hfttional Loan, may well cause every patriotic bosnm to swell with emotions of pleasure and satisfaction. Never in the history Of tho world his a government loan of such proportions been taken up with such eagerness and rapidity. On Saturday, seven-thirty bonds to the immense amount of_nearly thirty and a half millions of dollars were sub scribed to by the-people in various sections of the Union, and during last week the total sales reached almost one hundred millions. We know the effect which was produced in Europe by the news of the complete downfall of the rebellion, but when these amazing financial statements are announced, the inhabitants of the Old World will see that from the storm of war our Government has emerged doubly strengthened at all points. The New York World newspaper has made the repeated statement that Mr. Osbon, the gentleman now being tried in New York for furnishing improper infor mation, was the “special” correspondent of The Press. This is unjust to Mr. Osbon and this newspaper. Mr. Osbon was tbe naval correspondent of a dozen journals, among which was the World. He furnished his information to all of them, and they all printed it. We did it ourselves as a matter of enterprise, and the circum stances of the publication on our part were made fully satisfactory to the Government. This persistent effort to make The Press the organ of contraband news is one of the most disingenuous acts of the dig ingenuous career, " .Isaac B. Gaba, for eighteen years iden tified with the Erie Oasetle , of which, during nearly all-that period, he was the principal editor, has sold out his interest and retired to private life on account of ill health. The original proprietor of the establish ment, Mr. Stkrbett, for forty, six years connected with it, goes out with his friend and associate. Wp have been acquainted with Mr. Gaba since- boyhood and have never known a more faithful, courageous, and industrious journalist. The great ma jorities in all the Pennsylvania lake coun ties are, in a considerable part, attributable to his sagacity and skill. LETTER FROM “ OCCASIONAL." Washington, May 13, 1805. On the motion, this morning, of Judge Advocate General Holt, the sessions of the Military Commission will hereafter be con ducted with open doors, unless for the pur poses of consultation.. This action was in accordance with the known wishes and intentions of that officer, who never con cealed his desire that the trial should be as public as the weighty questions in issue would allow. What has been elicited in this, awful secret “Star-chamber” will, of course, he laid before the people. The accused and their counsel know it; it has not been hidden from them, and they do not com plain. The work of calumnious censure, commenced by the New York papers, and echoed by all the organs in sympathy with the rebellion, haß been successful only in giving the President a new chance to show that, in all his proceedings to maintain the Government, he has not resorted to a single unjust or despotic expedient. Indeed, so far as the case. Of the conspirators has pro gressed, not a word of complaint has been made by them or their lawyers. Only those conceive themselves injured who could not gratify an unreasoning curiosity by being allowed to fill their newspapers with the evidence. If the Commission had re fused to grant all the proper facilities to the accused, had deprived them of counsel, or had declined to call their witnesses, there. would have been some reason for the bitter and inflammatory reproaches of the New York papers and their Cop perhead echoes. But these are only general reasons for what was demanded by specific dangers. When the case is made up you will realize that if any Other course had. been pursued the whole object of the inquiry would have been defeated. To none will this revela tion be so full of costly admonition as to the partisans who have.made the trial the pretext for. a concerted assault upon Pre sident Johnson's Administration. It is vain to attempt to make Mr. Stanton the scapegoat. No one has'taken so much interest in the formation of the com mission as President. Johnson. He deli berated calmly, and for days, before he decided;-and when he finally issued the proclamation offering the reward for Davis and others, and ordered the military Court to be formed for the .trial of the assassins and their accomplices, he did so without fear, and with no purpose of re gretting or recalling his decrees. The TESTIMONY, FAIRLY ELICITED, IN THE FBE -BENCE OF THE ACCUSED, WILL SHOW THAT HE WOULD HAVE COMMITTED A' CRIMI NAL ACT IF HE HAD NOT TAKEN PRE CISELY THE COURSE SO STRONOLV 'OB JECTED TO by his enemies. What if, in this testimony, it appears that the assassina tion of the President and his Cabinet, and others, was plotted in the rebellion, paid for with rebel money, and known to the rebel chiefs ? What if the raids into Ver mont, the hotel burning, the throwing of crowded trains from railroads, &c., were arranged under the same influences and. paid for out of the same funds ? What if George N. Sanders, who swears he does not know, or had never seen Booth, is proved to have been his close companion ? And yet such facts as these are believed to have been established, ajid yet are imma terial compared to much more which came out with the doors of the commission closed. But’what will surprise the coun try is the suspicious eagerness of certain newspapers to rush into this crusade upon the manner of trying the assassins before the nation had recovered from the first effects of the dreadful shock of Mr. Lin coln's murder, and before President Johnson had himself comprehended the mighty duties suddenly cast upon him. What ‘a comment upon the noisy and ostentatious grief over the assassina tion, and the profuse proffers of con fidence to the new Administration 1 The sense of the loss of our" illustrious Chief Magistrate did not persuade them to entrust the manner of punishing his slayers to President Johnson, nor did the know ledge of his new and overwhelming oh. ligations save him from the insult of being charged as the instrument and tool of bad men intent alone upon revenge and blood shed. The experiences a valuable one, and will not be forgotten. Occasional. The New York Papers and the Conspira- [From the Washington Chronielo, May 13 ] Two of tho editorial columns of tho Philadelphia Ledger of yesterday are .filled with solid extracts from three New York papers—the Evening Pool, the Times, and the Tribune —of the day before, taking Issue with the Government booaußa the oonsplra tors are being tried by a military commission,whose first sessions have been, for sufficient reasons, held with closed doors. Although the articles oopled Into the Ledger do not offensive ly single out any particular individual as especially responsible for this grave proceeding, the in close 1 natation or the New York World— the most noterlett* assailant of the lfU and the Government—selects Mr. Stanton as the great offender, andlarralgns him in the following terms Secret Military Tribunals —The attempt of Mr. Stanton to set aside the oourtß of law for the trial of offences and to substitute seoret military tribunals are not receiving that quletdeferenoe that he possibly hoped for ITom the pubUo. * » * * Mr. Stanton greatly mUtakes the temper or the - American people when ho undertakes this oos Innovation upon the established . which every man has learned to respoot, and which he himself Is bonnd to recognize and defer to by Ms oath Of offloe. There Is no functionary In this ooon try above the Jaws, and the strsngtti of power to the heads of the Government Is In -adhering to thorn In their integrity and as the people have oreated them. The World, also of yesterday, strikes the same ; key thus: And what guarantee hare we that torture has not been practised by the tools and underlings of Stanton 1 Every other method known to despots has bees practised and Improved upon by him; why Bhould he stlek at this 1 Torture was never prac ticed m pubUo, and we apprehend that anybody nh» eonld unfold the secrets or Stanton’s prison houses Might a tUennroM whlehwvhlft'mu* the hair of humane men stand oirend with horror. Without stopplng(to askfctha Evening Post, Tri bune, and Times how they relish the usas to which their censures of an Administration they profess to support are devoted by Its most proscriptive assail ant, It la easy to discover that the Ledger and the World have not nearly so muoh horror of “seoret military tribunals” as they have hate or Stanton. The Times and Post object on what seems to them to be good public grounds. Tho Ledger and World, affecting the same argument, are simply Instigated by personal animosity. What wo have nuclei u oonolnslve as to that. Mr. Stanton used) no defence against suoh enemies. Ho Is accustomed to calumny, especially from disappointed and dißftffeoiM newspapers* Suffice It to Bay, there Is no IMcg man who is more endeared to the frunds of the Union, and none who has Berred the oountry with a pnrer or amore undaunted patrlotlßm. With the manner of trying these conspirators, he has had no more to do than any other member of the Oabl* net. The President consulted him and all his ooa 'stltutlonal advisers before issuing the proclamation. He toot tho advice of the Attorney General, that the confplrators, their alders and abettors, were “ snbject to the jurisdiction of, and legally triable before, a military commission.” And the President then directed the Assistant Adjutant General to detail nine military officers to servo as the Commis sion • the trial or trials to ba conducted by the Judge Advocato General, who was to prefer the oharges, Sts. and that “ the said Commissiomstabltsh such, order or rules of proceeding as may avoid unnecessary delay and conduce to the ends of justice," Thlß order was Issued on the Ist of May, and read to the Military Commission on the 9th of the same month, and was signed 11 Andrew Johnson.” This to any friend of the General Administration should bB sufficient to show that the President does not seek to escape the full responsibility of his share in the proclama tion and trial. And they intentionally Insult him who attempt to create the Impression that his dell-, berate and'oonsolenttous action was the deolslon.of others,"and In oppositlon(to his real feelings. Suoh Is the effeot, If not the object, of the course of the Ledger and World. II wa desired to oonrer a new honor, upon the Secretary of War, we should advise him to accept what 1s now offensively thrust upon him, In the hope that It may bring him Into disrepute—vis, tho credit or having originated the manner of trying the conspirators. Under the roles of the distinguished officers composing tho Commission, no act of Injustice has bean com plained of by any of the parlies concerned In the trial. The accused have not only had permission to send for counsel, but the Government has employed, its own messengers to convoy their wishes in this respect. Their oounsel and their wit nessf f Jisye been In regular attendance. The only step that has been taken by the court, not In ao cordance with ordinary trials, Is that thus far It has sat with closed doors. How long It may be n Oat M (Jt ..,, 26% SCO Mich Can 109 200 Canton 98 100 Mat UiaOObSO 18. 106 CnmbCopf........ 40% 100 ao-„...M« ,M 1?K 60 «ukk»lWor Mk 600 MS4 If I ■.— •• ■ 63% 410 d 0.............. 64% 100 do b3O 64g 800 _ d 0..„„ bSOMS 100 do .... 68% 6CO Boadlnf... 94% 200 d 0...... 810 63% ICO MXCsn 91% 150 111OonB-.« 116% ■ THB evbhikq stock board. At Gallagher’s Stook Exchange this evening, Gold closed at 130%; New York Central, 90%; Erie, 76%; Hudson Elver, 181% 5 Reading, 82%; Michigan Southern, 63; Illinois Central, 114% ; Pittsburg, 64; Book island, 06 ; Canton Co., 85%; Cumberland Coal, 89%. , _■ „ The stook market was very doll but steady; Gold sold after the oall at lao. ssw iui : Extbnbivb Fobitivh Sals of Tbbwob, Ita liaw, Bbitibh, akd Gbbkaw Dov Goons, &C-, This Hat.—The early and partlcnlar attention o the trade Is requested to the very choice assortment of French and other dry geode &o„ oomprislng about 960 lots of staple and fancy artisles, including ajopleoes silks, 300 pieces mouse de laines, 160 pieces grenadines, taffeta de Paris, c*0.;176 pleoeaa* black and white skirtings, 326 pleee&whttegeods andUnens, 600 Spring Shawlf, 469 plash. and silk mantles, he.. 876 cartons Choice ribbons, nowors, and trimmings, 46 oases straw hats and hoods, 60 oartons sun urn" brellas; also domestic ’goods, veils, gloves, hosiery* patent thread, Ac., to. be peremptorily sold, by cata logue, on four months’ credit, and part for cash, commencing this (Monday) morning, at 10 o'olook, ty John B. Myers & Co., auctioneers, N 232 and 234 Market stwet.. • ; Stocks akd Bbal Ebtats To-kobbow,—See Thomas k Sou' advertisement page, auction hud Press, and pamphlet catalogues. $30,451,950. Immense. Subscriptions to tj, 7-30 s on Saturday, ! THE SHISCBIPTIOIVS IS 4HIR WKkK HllNUfiEll MILLIONS! IJ, I An Unprecedented Success in H-,,; Finances. 11 The Second Series of the 740 s Entirely in,,, The Secretary of tho Treasury has dec; l«i j,. the balance ortho loan that was.authorlf.oil t-. 11 of March, 1866, and whleh amounts to *330 «,,j seven and three-tenths notes, precisely 81n!;,,’! 11 tenor, form, and privileges to the so ret thi'.,,* 8 already sold, payable three,years from the i stk w next July, exoept that the Government will rti , * to Iteeir the option of paying Interest in ; ,r| at the rate of 6 per cent., Instead of 7 S-latLs In, 1 renoy. Subscribers will deduct the Inte-eetT currency up to July 15th, when they sub-crib, T i delivery of the notes of this third series of the thirties will commence on the Ist of Ju nt!) Mi) , be made promptly and continuously after that ,w? Subscriptions, however, will ba rsestred at ' end interest at 7 3-10 per cony. allowed tC so 5 berß up to the 16th of J My, (a the same it waß allowed for the Interval between the g..,-! series and tho first series. Ary oicess of subs-;,! tlons to the present seilesywili be one!) with tho ae. issue as Bpeedlly as the notes cm, be prepared u. q, treasury. " ' The slight change made In the conditions or tau third series sffects only the matter or Interest t, * payments In gold, If made, will hs equivalent |! the currency Interest of the higher rate. The portant privilege of converting the notes Jtto trs long and five-twenty gold-bearing t 4i l. or Of demanding payment at maturity, at tie er’s option, is l|ot Interfered With. The put,/ takers of the seven-thirty loan will rejoice if the by crotary, sooner or later, avails fclmsoir of tho o, - to pay them six per cent, in gold, In lie-- “ larger rate of Interest In currency. The ntmy specie payments, In the event of w£!ii bii!«K7 this option be available, weald so reduce and e<; Ire prices as that purchases made with six j () ' C6nt, In gold would be fully equal to those aa ' ( With seven and three-tenths per cent. In ourrez j, The machinery need In popularising the ..p.j two series of tho seven.thirties will be .employed ij the Secretary of the Treasury In the saio or til, third series. It will be under the supervlsl n DavlP, whlle attempting to make his escape la hu wife’s clothes, have been received from Major dm, Wilson. E. M. Stanton. Macon, Ga,, 11 A. M., May 12, IMS. Bon. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of War: The following despatoh, announcing the oaptars of Jeff Davis, has just been handed me by Gol. Minty, commandlug the 2d Division: BBAnqvABTBns 4th Mich. Cavalbv, Cn«rßßfttA«»viniK ; Ga, May 11, JB?S, To Captain T. W. Scott, A, G, 2d Division ; Sib : 1 have the honor to report that at daylight yesterday, at Xrwlnsvllle, I, surprised and capturel Jeff. Davlß and family, together with his wife, slb tors, and brother, his Postmaster General Hea?u>, his private secretory, Colonel Harris; Ooluiel Johnston, A. D. O. on Davis’ staff; Colonel Mor ris Lubblek and Lieutenant Hathaway; also severs) important names, and a train of five wagons and three ambulances—making a perfeot suocess, hid not a most painful mistake occurred by which tie 4th Michigan and Ist Wisconsin collided, which oott us two killed, and Lieutenant Boutelle wounded through the arm, In the 4th Mlohtgan ; and lour men wounded In the Ist Wisconsin. This occurred just at dayllght r alter we had captured the camp, by the advanoe of the Ist WJsoonsln. They won mistaken for the enemy. 1 returned to tils point last night and shall move right on tC Mason without Waiting Orders from yea as directed, feeling that the whole object Of the ex pedition Is accomplished, ft will take me at lease three days to reach Macon, as we are seventy dve miles out and our Btook Is much exhausted. 1 hops - to reach Hawklnsvllle to-night. I have the honor, etm, D. B. Pibitchabd, Lieut. 001. 4th Michigan Cavalry. The Ist Wisconsin belongs to Lagrango’s brigade, MoGook’s division, and'bad been sent due east by General Croxton, via Dublin, Colonel Mint; bed distributed his command all along the south bask of the Ookmulgep and’<amaba This accounts tot the collision between parts of the Ist and sd Dirt, stems, end shows the seal of the oommand lu the pursuit. I have directed Increased vigilance on the part of the oommand- In tho hope of catching the other MsasslßP, Our. dispositions are good, and 50 far none of the »bcl chiefs hath beta Rble to get through. Breckinridge's son was captured night before lost eleven miles south from here. I will send further details as boob as received. J. H. Wilson, Brevet Major General. Macon, Ga., 9.80 A, M„ May 1». Hon, E. M. Stanton, Secretary of Wari Lieutenant Colonel Harden, commanding Ist WIB oonsin, bas just arrived from Irwlnsvllle, He struck Davis’ trail at Dublin, Laurens eounty, on the evening of the 7th, and followed him closely, night and day, through the pine wilderness of Alli gator Creek and Green Swamp, via Oumbeilaad vllle to Xrwlnsvllle. At OumberlandriUe Colonel Harden met Colonel Prltohard, with 150 p'Ohed men and horses of the 4th JVHohigan. Hard Ml fM' lowed the trail