THE P.Ellllf4f4, r otASHED DAIT.Y OTTNDANS EXOEPTEnj AT JOHN W. keRNIKT. AMU No. 111 BOUTS FMK= eiTRIM lUE I A[s.Y POEM, tot:Xtl tabeerthera is TBX DOLLa6B PRIX UPON, is 111=11111t M TitrENTT Pita 'Wenn, Datable to the Genier. Mailed to anosoribero ont a the GUY. SINS DOLLA-Ith AUFWVII: re.e rtni,LetiB AND PIPIT COM* iOi littx Morrie; TWO DomeßB AND TWHOTI.IMI Gans roe Tease moo-rao. Inveliabli in Weems for the time ordered. Air ihdtreltieelnents inverted at the maul rates. THE TM- We , Eli LT PRoPSS. Mailed tp Ilabsettbers , lrios DOLLAEta PBS &MOM. in . , CERTAIN 000010". E WA-Lat..A.V •MASONIC riALL4 119 COESTN ITT STREET, IS NOW OPENING ANOTHER LARGE LOT OF .LA-CE .CUYSLIVAINS, 'ELL-GA.-NT STYLES, ,AT • PRICES. FROM S DOLLARS TO 150 DOLLARS PER PAIR. WYNDOW OROIOE -PATTERNS. -AT 111.1111MeN-0 -rmatite. • lay 26 MILITARY GOODS. FLAGS t FLAW I I HANS & HASSALL, MILITARY FURNISHERS, 418 ARCH STREET. BAN N LC*, ilk, Bunting, Muslin, , and De Laine FLAGS, Or •LL San SWORDS, BASEES, BELTS, PASSANTS, Ztc. Dlll,rr.A.filt GOODS, OF EVERY DISCRIPTIO, FIR lEWOREI S. FOURTH OF .' JULY VIREWORICS, IN GREAT VARIETY BOOKETS, DANDLES, UNION AND HOMAN CANDLES, MINES, TRIANGLES, SHIP LIGHTS, BLUE Lianrs, PIN W HEELS, COLORED 'FIRES, SNARES, 'PLOWER POTS, GRASSHOPPERS, ALSO. A Large Assortment of Wbools, for ode by A. 11. FRA.NCISCUS 8:, CO., 'll9-Xt - st 3 MARKET STUNT biursTo OIL•CLOTUS E3PR1240, 1865. OFLasffir Mi 7.130 8EEL.41.03, ONSMANTO VfX, P.& svcazoLum AD CO., ..I.6.XIIFAIIITUBMS ANT) nappuTEss CAILF%.ITJI:M4GI-S• OIL MOTEL. MATTINGS. ito. I,IIOIJIIIIIALIS DEP&STBILUNT, SO9 OHNSTIIIIIT STIZET RETAIL DEPAILTMENT. A 11.4 amtwrin:Pr sirassr. MERCHANT TAILORS. EDWARD P. KELLY, JOHN WELLY. TAILORS, 49111 OHBSTNIIT STEM, RAY 3 No, =x BTOIN 6. 00NPLBTIC ASSORTMIINT OF SPRII4O GOODS. 10541 HUTI9E-F['i.NISRING GOODS, REFRIO:KRAToRts, 600 ntoßrafadrex : r i f i. TEß COOLERS. VrEP.LIDONES. WALKUPS RE.I.CFCBM, In MINA 'LEM'', • •2541 ca , Fvms h PADS.. SIXTH snft" tRCR. STATIONER% A . MINING COAL, AND OTUVR nm, N-• Jaw cour.isilla. We gin prepared to !dreier. law GorpOrattetia MtL all the Seeks t h at nantre. It short nom" and /or glom or am quality. all etylip eS Kadin & OTRIIL PLATS CEETLFICATIO OF STOOL LPFHooRLFRILD TKANSFES BOOK. ORDRES OF TItaaSFYLIC MOH LattGEß. IFFOCS LIDOS". BALANCES, REGISTaIt OP CAPITAL STOOL BROKER'S pirrn hzbami. • MODEST OF SALES. DIVIDEND ROOK. Fi CCP SLAIIIIIIOOEXARDPACTt7zsuBANDsT*T IO IiIIIS. mal-tf X 34 milwrurfrrftwo. ALND ClEtt FinANIO AND BOLROTIO DRUGS. ROBF,RT A.. a AMOR., TA9 MARKET STEER?, PHILADELPHIA. *mild sell the attenti.n of Dnigninte, Country Mar. emits, and others. to ble Ptock of HOOTS. BREDA, .AND BARKS. In mitosis sized Daelinges. or our own priming, at PRICES BELOW DO KURR RATS& ADM line of BOTAPIOA.. YEEPARATIONS,IT B. ***BELL & CO.'S COE CIIIT RABID ISEDDDIED.&e.. IM Itwoonos to tlaft Cotaloirnee ferni.bed nn ninWinnip GENTS' irVin4;!4lllll 4 iG GOODS,. FINN SHIRT . MANUFACTORY. _ irks s tiven ray ivrita attention to War Oalir the Rake a enselalic iiretratooso. woo, Gonotantly resolving NOITUTIBEI YOH GENTLINIII'S WEAL J. W. SCOTT & CO. OIiNTLINNII'S FURNISHING STORE, Potitorrelaoarierm=tal. GOLDTPATENTIMPROVEDSTEADI WATER. ILE.LTING APPARATUS WM WARMING sad VENTILATING PUBLIO BUILD UM And PRIVATE RE&DERONE. IF.ABIIIPACTOSID BY ntil =MN roar oft WATER-MUTING column Or PENNSYLVANIA. -ciANMS P. woOLO CO 41 South 1017}1TII Strod. Jam thir, . B. NL FELTWELL, sup% EL/NDF3 AND SHADES 13_ .7. WILLIAMS. No. 16 North Sixth Street, Illairsaorrass OP :VBNITLLN BLINDS AND WINDOW SHADES. "Po lama aid lava sesonamit thit Oh , th 4 &mei sulk Prises. 11 , 021 SHAM JUDE AID LITTABIP. Cheap lot soiled Wads and Shades. RERMETIOALLY SEALED TdEATE LID BOUM MOO dos. iloThleedi. arA" Zooid 4 . do V. " do Matto*. loxo do ?orkil. L r ta " do. Satiably. " dooortod So EIOD uPs. VI. 42Klb. aims. loos by RS & roil4l 107 Bomb WATT attest el VOL. 269. Et't Vrtss. SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1865 National Taxation. Not long ago, when we animadverted on the absurd manner, showing a thorough ignorance of all recognized principles of p o litical economy, in which our national system of Internal Taxation had been Mistily and inefficiently built up, we said that our legislators were beginning pre cisely where England had left off—levying vexatious duties upon a great variety of articles, and expending an enormous per centage in collecting the money. We com plained that the tax-people overspread the land, like locusts, anti that the cost of sup porting this vast army of fiscal civilians was much more than it ought to he. We suggested, what we still hope, that when the Rebellion was broken up Congress would entirely remodel the system which it bad hastily. and ignorantly adopted. Many persona wrote to us, with cordial thanks, for having had the boldness to declare what was true, but several correspondents, who candidly admitted that they were personally interested, as office-holders, in the continuance of the present system (or want of sys tem) of our National Taxation, declared that we were quite mistaken in what we argued as to its comparative unproductive- Bess, and wholly in error in complaining that the cost of collection was twice, if not thrice as great as that in England. These ingenious letter-writers, when put to it rather closely, declared that in "the cost of collecting the revenue," they did not in clude the expense of assessibg it , which, we are free to confess, does make a considera ble difference. We still think that out of every dollar of taxation finally lodged in the Public Treasury, ten cents, at the very least, are expended in putting it there, Harper's Weekly, a journal alike distin guished for ability and loyilty, besides having a character for close and dispassion ate reasoning, gives our opinions on Inter nal Taxation, only with more terseness and force than we possess. In the number last issued, we find the following, which we commend for its close adherence to fact : The late Mr. Cobden, one of the best friends this corr. tr 3: ever had, defairibed our tiongresstenei finatciers as Bourbore who had learned nothing fr.,m experience. Atd certainly the !eternal rove nue law Is worthy of legislators who had never beard of such a thing as a system of taxation. It seems to combine every possiola defect. It is not productive: last fiscal year it only yielded $102,000,.. NO. and we doubt, Mier all that has been said, whether it will yield e2c0.000.000 net this vear. It Is monstrously oppressive upon some tonalities an.i s me branctes of trade and Industry, walle °triers eecata altogether. And It Is so cumbrous anti own. plioated that, while it operas the Gout to can fraud.% the More or colleotion will pronably mead 1.2 h" per met. These statements will, of clam, be de, bled by (facials. But let us wait till we get the re torts. It will be urged that the law Is to bo act moieli, and that a comodeelen has been appointed for the purpose of euggesting improvements. No conbt. It the system lasts so long we may rely on the Sew being altered at every session or tiongeses JOT the next twenty year.. It Way he huproveu to). But that a revenue law will be passed Cash shall act re unfairly oppressive on tids or that obies, and shall at the Same time be productive, and can be ad. ministered honestly and for a reosobable ooit, Is what no man can believe who realizes the vast de vomit y of Interests existing among a people spread from the Bin Grande to the great Lekee, and from the Pacitio to the Atlantic, and was possesses the least knowledge of the past admlcistration of the msreuebouse and post-:. Mee syetem in this country. 'there will be constant efforts made by one seecloa er one industry to shift its proper share of the com mon burden upon other ehouEMS, and Cameras. Metal combinations will frequently secure aay.sse to. Such efforts. An army of tax.gatherers wen overlie rt.., that the countriroterrsears Ultinarldea veterans , plunaering friend and foe alike. The some oxtorted from the people will be pr.qintletta; the revenue re. calved by Government disor.portionate. Honest men wilt find it hard work to pay their taxes and earn a thing. Rogues will laugh at assessors, The resources and vitality of the oouotry are so great that It le beyond the power of legislation, however bad, to Ego the eseienat progress altogether. But it will Untinestioneblq be retarded, and this will be the ease, In spite or all the iMprOvementil which dun be made In the law." 1865. We had rated the cost of collecting (and assessing) the Internal Revenue at ten per cent. The editor of Harper's Weekly goes ahead of us and sets it down as probably exceeding twelve and a half tier cent. The truth of this estimate can readily be tested, when Congrese next meets, by the publica tion of Returns-which will show what the cost of collection and assessment really has been. If twelve per cent., then it is three, if not even four times more than Ragland pays for the collection of her Public Reve nue. Our fellow-citizens, who have suf fered so much from the unequal and often unjust operation of our Internal Revenue law, (for where the tax is one per cent. the retailers had added on three per cent, to their selling prices,) have a direct interest in having that law properly amended. Let them remember that the right of pe tidoning Congress to do this belongs to them, without doubt, and let them exer ciee that right, and thereby tell the Na tional Legislature what they complain of and the 'tutees they desire. How Clemency is Estimated. The dashing and popular London news paper, the Daily Teleyruph, in which, Mr. GEORGE AUGUSTUS SALA told as many falsehoods about America and her inha bitants as if, like the stoat person in GEORGE CormWs amusing poem, he were "Three single gentlemen (of the Munchau ten species) rolled into one," indulges, in its publication of the 23d of May, upon va rious amusing speculations on the future policy of the United States. We need not notice all of them, and shall, therefore, only say that the Inglish scribe, not having then heard of the capture of JEFFERSON Davis, in his wife's crinoline and his own boots, seriously asserts that President Jonnsou'e threats will act as a public and not unfriendly warning, and " will pro bably induce the Confederate President to have the country instead of surrendering, and 1011 thus save the Federal authorities a. painful embarrassment." Certes, there is an embarrassment, but it affects not the Federal authorities, but the Jupiter Scapio, Davis, who is in safe custody in Fortress Altairoe. The English writer is in high spirits be cause, as it seems to him, President Jonn sots is disposed to pardon all the leaders of the late rebellion. "He has had in his power," the London Daily Telegraph says, " General LEE, Governor Atnart of South Carolina, Judge C•srarßram, and other dis tinguished men of the South, but some have been paroled and others have 'been unconditionally released." Of course, this is nothing, but what tollows is worthy of consideration. It runs thus 4 , The recent news suppites a more striking fact. Captain Semmes, late of the Alabama, 18 a man against whom Federal feeling has naturally been cached. He was en unpleasant enemy in every Ease of the word ; issuing from a neutral port, with a minimum of naval strength, he necessarily avoid• td earned Northera vessels, and preyed an peace ful merchant ships, doing enormous damage to- Federal commerce, and driving th'4r iarga share of the carrying trade of the world from under their flog. Papers which spoke respectfully of the m i n of Lee and the prowess of Stonewall Jackson could fled no terms strong enough to denounce Semmes —be was universally called a pirate p England s as heartily abated because she bed allowed him to escape, and the Madan Government was asked to Wake good the damage he aecompllalzed. Yet this very man is paroled as a prisoner of war, and the parole Is confirmed by the higher authorities. This, we think, eettles two questions; it shows how rlrr new President is disposed to treat the leaders of the South, and it effectually disposes of Ike claim on our cvzotty, to hold Imlay' responsible for the act,/ of the z.nce datg.rdtg6 Cd2LiSef. The non whom tote Anseri eons Crud cs a belligerml Cannot be, at the came time, • au Errylisit pirate.'" This is very suggestive, and the argu mentton ad kominem in the case of &mins, (who, anxious CO remain ins whole skin, was the very firstman to take the oath of al- I:lianee when he.saw the game played out), is particularly so. When the London edi tor, whom we may safely assume to be Mr. Tflostrprox Hula, finds who and what are , , , . . . , . . , . .1.•: , .. ~ :...... --. ; r •,_ _ -. . , . , , , , , ,- ....._ . ' . ..m. z..- • ' . - .. . .\ \ ~ k.i . 1 1 ii),l i ... ~.,,, , ~, ...,m7 Qr 1 ,, 1 f! -l l: erit ti. Ir. .....,_____..../ .. 4..,..:.:. , 7:::,...,.,,./............:__,.......,:.,:i.11......„.„0„.,,,;„,....„.„......„....„...::.;:: _......,... f,' ' ' ' i.t., ~, '''' :" ‘ '''' ' S ". IMI 11.1 11011 . 1 '-'44 01 1 :=-- --- •.;....,A5i,. '-'.(- - '- - ~-_:= ,- • .... -- ~, - -Alin, •• ---*----.lfilif ----it i .-.,--.-.-- -,. 63 - -_-- ..--,...__.------ - _:.--e- . A.- , , -,,--- .• - -ik...' , " kkit . •„t'. , , , 14.y„- ,- v --, t-N.. - i„,f,:;,,--_ 66 7'1.,-- ' - _ - .7•--:*__..s.„ - ! -- :, , t. , _ .. __-..-......_ ----, -- . -......----% • „ s ott l e s ,„ , —.,.1*....,............._-. J 1..,_--__,...--- _ _...___„..„, ; ,..... 7 .....,_ ._ . .„....„ ~ - . . • _. .."'. 7, -...1:.:74.0- . 1, ' ' ..„,......7 6 .7. ''''',..t. - - , •- '- ' l ll -----' .. ..... ••••r.......;.., ,, ..2,.. . -At • " ',..., .7""jit's... • -- --rm..- - = - . -,...------ ~.- 1 _ I N ..........t . irtis . L . : , the exceptions to President jounson's lib eral clemency, perhaps he may change his note. Admiral 1..-lroitmas Is not likely to go unpunished for his piracy and treason. ViCWS of ttecoostruction. In a late number of this journal we give come description and a few quqtations from the last book published in Richmond, the stitching of which was only finished the day before the entrance of the Union troops. We understand that Mr. Potaauto, the author, is at present the editor of a news paper in that great " untakable" metropo lis. It is to be presumed that his opinions upon various subjects have been altered by recent events. One paragraph in his pam phlet reads thus: "It is poshlble that there may be some roof who Imagine that in Rlottmond, under Yankee rule, they mfght to on In the Old establlched routine of their lives, Novice' polities alone. Never was delusive more false or fatal. It Is perfeotly agreed among the Yankees that If Richmond should ever fall an der theft nomination, a. test must be applied to 14 far mere severe than has ever yet been enforced upon any portion of the Southern people; for it Is this city which Is regarded as the headquarters of the rebellion ) and It le here where the North ern grip is to strangle "treason:' It is certain that no one could breathe In the atmosphere of Richmond unless he swallowed the oath of allegiance in its vilest form. It he saved his propertyfor ofilo days by that step, he would yet he given Goer to ultimate ruin. He would find Rich mond Inundated with men who would be his mss• tars in everything ; Yankees would keep the hotels, publish the sietespapers, sell the dry goody and 'no. flan.' Re would be turned out of all employment unless be relent get that of clerk or uodenstrapper to self go aimed POW Enklauder artto Vitiate] cheap help. He Would be kept under constant 81.1 - VeililthCe s ard at the mercy of every enemy who °debt, choose to tell a lie about him to the Yankee provt:st marshal. Life would become Intolerable CO We suppose even this audacious rebel perceives now the marked contrast between his preconceived notion of our plans of re organization and the generous system that has been adopted. WASHINGTON. Ceneetel Despatch to The Yrese WABECIF6TON, 311Ile 0. PRESIDENT JOHNSON AND THE RETlEflitellsla STATES Delegation after delegation from the lio.ealled seceded States call upon the President, askine his protection and ventilating their views. He re• deices them kindly and treats them frankly. In no elegle instance Las he withheld his decided policy trom them. It Is Interesting to note that them eelepationa contain men with whom he sat in Con gress, and several of tnem were Lie Intimate% and eleoied as much of the confidence that 50 silent A thlll ever bestows urea' others. His words to one may be taken as a model for aIL He asps tttm if they do not think his policy is Night, and they almost all reply that they concur in that which cannot be avoided, however it may be de pealed. He says that if there are any of them, tither the people or the politicians, who have a belie that there may be a gradual abolition bi slivery. or a servitude in the shape of the appren , dee system, ;that ne no contingency can slavery ever be revived. They must dismiss test Idea fc.rever slavery is gone, never to be built up agate. He teat them that If there is any ekleCtation of assumption of the rebel debt It ablerd ; that not a dollar will ever be recognized by the Government. To Ude they reply that they do rot expect nor (Metre to pass It themselves, or to ask others to pars it for them, On the question of negro suffrage be refers them to his recently an reutced seiklllvdid. I hear of no case In which the same deplorable Story is not told by these men. In Sella Carolina, at the beginning of the war, there were four hundred mildona In elavea and pre. petty ; now, not et dense is loft. The former. 14 rich men are either poor or dependant, a.m., Month BIIk.TT, ORR, and Claswirr, are still ler. Mg, but they are in very destitute oirentasetaces. Helaldldcp refused to take any part in the reoedlon. He says he believed at the fleet it would be a mere serenade war," and he never expected any t tying else rut that it would collapse at lest. What Is true of South Carolina is equally true of Creme ia. TU0.1133.3 has lost immensely, having tonnneed to save his land, but nes lost all it Cl 4, 01; cur UnielTDVlrednulauv .1 Gen tra Him., probably our of the beet of the Georgians, is now in Washington, and has been re commended to the President for Governor. Hew. was a member of Congress when Georgia seceded, end resigned with the rest, under protest. He hag been a coneistent - Union man ever since, and is here at tee request of many of the leading men of the Mate. Coen, Ganreterne, Claeweean, and others unhesitatingly Submit to unalterable destiny, cud ate ready to 0:4110 back to the Union on our own terms. Joffe( FORSYTH writes from Mobile in the same vein. The Alabama delega tion, beaded by Geoucee S. HOTrwrON, Sois BRAD. Lay, and others, have had several interviews WWI the President, and Mere met with the same kind but candid reception. In Kentsolcy thereto a regtt tar but unfriendly Government, and the diflioutties there are increased by the persistent opposition of the Copperheads, headed by Powara. and Senator. DAvie, to the amendment ol the national Gonetitu tion abollsbing slavery. Great trouble enfilleff i too, from the effort of the elaveholders to prevent the prattle:ll operation of the emancipation policy of the Government ; but all this will work tight. Gen. PELDIRS, who has command of the district, Is now in Washington, and will be clothed with full power to ,cnforee that which these people, contrary to their own interests, stubbornly antagonise. Go vernor Henn, of Louisiana, Is here, and will probably confer with the President to-day. It is clear, however much it may be deplored, that General BArill.ts' New Orleans programme le a failure, and that 11l luck has attended upon nearly all the civil operations under the improved CotstitutiOt of tag, State. It la believed that the President wilt recognize the Government repr3. rented by &Matta' HAHN and his solleartss, ar,J it Is to be hoped that such an organize:Aon will be effected in the State as will induce Congress to ad ll..it HAHN and his colleagues to seats ; but before this Is effected there may have to be a coneidor. able chaege of men and policy in the State it. Felt. Since the pompons " JACIC. AISGAITOnit" Las come down the expedition to Texas may be countermanded, and that reorganizatten lest to the people Manistee/es ; bat a considerable num ber et troops wel be thrown along the frontiers for the purple: , of keeping our peace with the rival fee tiCAe le Mexico. nue, one after the other, the eta ceded Stases are coming back. Never Were In history has so formidable a rebellion been crushed SO completely ; and never have Intolerant and threatening demagogues - s 0 rapidly euccurnoed. Ley asiociated Press. CHANGE Or RESIDENCE. To-day President Jouicaox and his Seerotarles, General DITJEtIaY and Colonel BROWAING, removed their resionnee r trom the corner of Fifteenth and J aueetfi to the Executive Alanelon, of Which they have taken full po4ovemion. THE PRESIDENTS POLICY ON BECOI3STR.HO- Prominent citizens of Alabama, Georgia, and Mississippi, now here, atter audiences with the President, express the opinion that the policy with. regard to reorganization in North °aroUna Milne applied to the other Southern States. PRISONERS OF WAR The order for the discharge of certain prisonoreof war, published yesterday, renders personal applica tion to the President for the robase of prisoners lancer the rank of major unneoessary, and there is authority for Stating' that the President Is issuing To orders at present for the release of any primers of war of or above that rajah. THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY ACcording to accounts from the Shenandoah Val ley, the people thare have gladly settled down to the changed condition of affairs. THE TRIAL DRAWING TO AN END It le beileved that may one or two islore witnesses remain to be exen;ined in the Conspiracy trial. • RECOGNITION OF A CONSUL. The President bas roovgnizad H, .JLASSINII7a ati Consul at Chicago, for the Ciliary ofiftnhalt. TDB DEDIJETED DEAD The Government de.patched three boat(' to Belle Plain yesterday, with embalm:teem intrenOhlnu cc Irks, and five hundred men, who have been instructed to proceed to the Wilderness battlefield, and decently inter the remains uf all soldiers, both feted and Union, there exposed to view. BALE 01 1 ' GOVERIMENT VESWALEI The Navy Department has advertised for sale at public auction, on tLe 2.lth. of June, Mean vessels heretofore belonging to the Potomac flotilla. They arc elde-wheel steamers and propellers, several of them of Iron, and one steel plated. The sate of these 908A018 is the initiatory step for ridding the navy of Some hundroauot vessrle pur. nhased for the CageneleB of war, Out which are not now required for the public service. BR-OPENING OF LIQUOR STORM The restrictions placed upon restaurants and other places where Honor was said, have Leen removed by the military authorities. The closidg up of all bars in this city wee considered necessary to the preser• ration of order during the late presence of the xcesies. MISCELLANEOUS Secretary SAWARD is rapidly improving. lie sonverses freely, and gives several hours a day to :he pnbite business. Sir. E. W sewara Is growing stronger daily, and his physicians are in excellent spirits that be will soon be restored to health. The Sceretary saw his son, for the drat time 014433 the casualty, Thursday evening. The Alabama delegation called at the State De- Parttneot this morning, for the purpose of pa dog their re,pects to Secretary SnwAnn, and were cor dially received by him. The 149th New York regiment, Clot. Blut.ranz, wag ronstersd nut 01ef/T . 910e this Morning, and left for their h.,m,e. The homeward movement of troopsto.dayiolarge. Octo entire 00Me, the lath, broke oamp thle morn ing, bound fur the West. Several parties, ImptiSoncd on sneploloa :of oom. PHILADELPHIA, SATTIIID AY, JUNE 10, 1866. petty with the eoreplreey, were released titAlty irate the Ohl Capitol, Ogetturr with tlee*witneideeil irr the ease, alfo ennfined there. The petaagmccr anneuebee the early reatoratton of the wri; of hahats anpue. The PrtsWalt &anises to receive rirStmal applh Catkin, at present, for the relearns • Of prls.oners of war above the rank or Major. It will be recollected that, a year sO r litenistilat 01:Ietel 3AMNS in. 8.1 elnaltetret, 'of Crew York, wa.1.1 summarily dismßsed the service for alleged dtaela ewe to the rebel anthoritiee of the plan of wows devised by his lellow•prieonere at ' Rbiriunood - Yesterday a general order was 'tented by the Wax Ih.partrnent, stating that a military commWstarf has reported that the colonel's conduct while a prironer at Richmond deserves MISS rather than eeI:ACM . B. Hence, by direction of the President, the order dismieeina him from 'he service is revoked and annolltd, to take effect on the 27th of May last. THE WAR IN TEXAS; Surrender of the Rebel Fortifications at Sabine Pass. OCCUPATION OF BROWNSVILLE BY Olta TROOPS ON TEE Slat ULT. Weeisiturron, June 0.—.11. letter refegved hers te-day, dated United states steamer Penguin, od Gslvet too, May 27th, stays: ' , The forts at Sabine Paso, Tears, earrehdered to the United States steamer °mime yesterday, The American 9:4 was hoisted over the works at four o'clock P. M. We eXptOt Galveston to surrender in & fear dart" C NEW ORLEANS, Jane 'J.—Governor Wells has art pointed Burke Ai:H . lbl( Mayor of New (glens until the return of It ennedy. A dergerna crevasse broke out below Konner and threatened the overflow of tt e caused Kreia, liffdl WHAM of proporry bonne it au stopped. .501ddllom oottoo, 39. Gold, 135. New Ormaants, June B,—Brow4eville, T8X941 5 Veit entered by the United States form under Brigadier General Brown, on May 31st. The na federates boron leaving Bold their artillery to the Doperiallete. The Confederate soldiers are active !a eubduing euerillse in the Southern States. No mercy is shown to them. The report that Kirby Smith ii going to Mexico in oohilrhaed. He has a large amount of money. Chief Justice ukase has we with a cordial re eeption here from the military and jud profes. stone and prominent citizens generally. Col. Cbristeneen, Adjutant General on General Usiibr , s arta has sent in his resignation. Nailer General Grierson has been assigned to the corn- Maud of the ealialry forces of the Department or the Gulf. Charles Moore has been appointed Chief ttlears ph operator at New Orleans. J. W. Sherman has been recently appointed bra. vet major gtneral for gallantry at Port Hudson. NAITS,I I / 4 NA HI Nay Tong, Jane 9.—Tbe steamer Materiels has arrived froth Savannah with advioes Of June 6th. 'rte. etc.mer North Star a; rived there On the titti with 1,400 troops from Alum/ova. Business at Savannah is also at a eland El till. The health of the troops In tLe city 18 good. CENTRAL AMERICA. The Rebellion IDS 6an StillVeillOr....lber• alai taw Declared by ibe President. A rebellion against the Government of 4an Sal vador having broken out in the Department of San Miguel, President Duennas has Issued a decree declaring the eloire Republic to he in a state or siege, and estabdsting martial law. Traitord, mal centerts, and their accomplices are to be judged and selitermediby mtliiaty trivmmalit as in time of war, Soldiers and citizens who may have counte nanced the rebellion, but have not taken up arms In its ilefen co, Will be pardoned on reporting them selves to the commanding general of the city of San :_sal vat or. PreSldi nE Duennas has also Mimed a preeleana, tion to the people, In MlMti he declares that the re bellion is redly unimportant in ltseli, out se as ox en pie may be pritjunicial. Ho,adds that it receives no support or sympathy from any quarter of the R.Futlio. He has also Issued an address to the army, which had left to quell the revolt. The rebels are ted bl General Gamtuas. who proylow4 this &friar was high in the favor of the DamoaS "Governh.ent. rtph rebellion brake out at pan 011- tuel on the 15th or Mat, the rebels tAklag EetelMa of the oivli and military palilo3 Dad ;rub. artouest_reeiaa.n , ..:te , f‘ Wye! oltizVoa of the lit:public voluutnered to ataW. the, General Goverment An army of bore thousand men was raised In turas days. Pas nut. niclpatlitl of the city of Sae Salvador nave resolved, aereml with their lives and honor" toe ieteg. 1 Ity of the General Governmeht ; and, If toe reor through the loyal papers may be believed, there is a iseheral Manifestation or oonfultuao to tad Uaeo- Das Administration. The news of the ama3Adation of Prebioebt Lincoln had attracted muou attuntiJa In San Salvador. The tutot bates from Guatemala announce the electirm to tie YreFidency oi that Republic of donor Blcriscal Coma. He is described as an solo and popular men, end a hereto Calendar of the glory and independence of Guatemala. The /Frau. , of Treason. Verily South Carolina has paid the penalty Of its treason. The following picture of Columbia, drawn by a newspaper correspondent, gives - a fair idea of the sceees presented in other portions of tee State. fie says : "Columbia will have bitter eause to remember ore vizir. of Sherman)a army. Even If peace awl prosperity MA return to tee land, not. In this nor the hem geharatson—no, not for :.a oentery can this coy or the State 7000ver from the deadly blow which has taken her life. It Is not atone in the property that bee been destroyed—the badges, hihs, loll:G.3.k! material of envy deihr,ption, and the huildinge, nor the loss of the r, shaves, who within the last few days have pined us by huta.reds and thousands—although this deprive-. tion of the means by which they lived is of incalcu lable Importance—but the most blasting vvitncring MOW 01 ail 18 the crushing dewhal of their inordinate vanity, their arrogant pride. Their ;awned unapproachable Invinciole security has been. inthlessly overthroven. Frady bouncrs, dveateningS Slid dellwaolattene have been mirth fully pass. d by as the idle wind. The feet at cue hunored thousand A boiltioniate, hated and derpieed, have prebled heavily up in their sacred and their spirit is broken. l well knovetnat tit,Ulißliad Of. South Carolina's sons are in the army: of reheilion, but slue has already lust het best blood there. Those who remain have no homes. Tue. llawptone, Barnwells, Siminses, Mem, Stogie. Lat, Pteotots, sari theirs;, have LO homed. t'lie ancient hottesteads where were matherot saerdsl as. shh.tions., the heritages of many generations, are swept away, When tint they became traitors, they test. honor ; twday, they hove no local tuteltations ; in tne glorious future of this country they wiilhame DO nano." , The emcee writer subsequently confirmed his re; Piwts ill; another account or the lateiieotam nue moral decarlan 65 Of the clue prow -authors of the raellion, Re wrote: 'Last evening I bad oeoaftiOn to visit several families who had formerly resided at Charleston, and fled to this plane to escape the - danger of the berehardment. In the years gone by they were the leaders of the aristocracy of the State. First in the crime of treason, their 8001 and brothers had either been killed or were now in tue renal armies; tne :young -ladies were full of what they called pArlot iElll and enthusiasm for the cause of liberty which their lovers and Mends were fighting' for, atttiongli, when pressed to expialn how their liberties had ever been endangered, they were unable to give any eastmaccory answer. "The older Mon and women In every butane° , leprecattd the war ; Wan asked for peace upon fifty terms of reconstruction, Duey did not ask for terms of peace—peace was all they demanded. They acknowledged the attempt at revolution to be without cause or reason, and that they Were Subaued and beaten;' without hope of recovery. MIS hopeful state of subjection was not a new ant_ perieuce to me, for we have meftritli little of born. bast and rebellious pirtnness from the more Indus's.- tfal and wiser portion of the "pie we nave seen in this State; butt wthatittrikestmel most painfully to my intercourse with theta old-families, is the evl neve of intellectual decay. They are not only pa.s en rapporic with the age, but are so wonting In vi tality and energy as to approach Senility In tee contrast with tht soul-stirring spirit of our Northern soldiers and civlll2.:tlon, thee appeer to uttl.mg to a: part day end. a defunct nationality. with only a teetemos of gentility Tanainlng to show th.t• tnev dace had roads dialed to be tee ,leaders of society and fashion- The unceremonious usages of war shake rudely even that vestige of what ones passed for refined hospitality.,, Geiger& Grunt In Buffalo BUFFALO, June 9.--Lleut. G.n. • Grant passed through Ole city today for the West. A :large crowd ossumbled at the depot, and the general:l4(n difficulty made hts way from the oars to the dlolng saloon and back'. • Arrival 01 the Airlea. BOBTOrc, Saha 9,—The Africa arrived from HAII. fan 11.,et night. Her walla will be dediveron In Pinta- Aletialln on Saturday morning. Nousw. crAT. 1133=13 Arrived—Ship W. F. Stover, Liverpool. nuke ;wi l t mina, Barbsdoee ; Mary E Tbey, Cardenas ; Priheecon, Demerara; St James, AngostUts. Brigs Virginia, New Culeans ; Cacique. Rio Braude ; "ileyclette, Remedies. Sohr Silver Ster; Para; Throe Sletars, Port as Prince.. Arrive°, Brig N Slovene. Phtladelphle; Bark P. C. Varwluk, Riu ; AiblaQ, New Orlearie. THE sToox. ILXONANGS bECONDAILD, p o p 10 c 0...... ndr.d. 61.0 krle $.6)1.W87.....-• • 753 i ..110011 806 Ti 20 0-109% , 09 do .• 74% "7900 11 80. 6.20. e n 1,.1(11%; 100 do .10. 70 o` , Col2'r & 7 8-10 2d ea. 09N,110 Hni Illy 8....000 102 I+oo do ....... 100 do eco •302 d( .100 do.. .. . Ist te. 99X. 2.'09 Be ad ...... 9;l' ASO Ai elStlit. Gold ..•.134 3CO do 810. 9. .11 . 0 Quick Do eo 01.134 209 do el 6. 9(Q(o 373'0 0 081,8 Cert e10.109N 1.r.0 Ven 9 , 6 . 91,4 10.. blle6 K& N 1...10 6% 'lOO 610.. 20361 100 8934 110 de ....«........ : TEM 80&P IS6 NTOOLC BOARD, 1 P. M oloved at 137,V ; N'ew York ()antral 913.4 ; Etta 76,.4 ; River ReadlngB23 ; Alleht;;013 :..4(:.utht.rrt el ; Ifflohluttn Central 11U ; Pittsburg 61%; Bork Bland 07%; Nortimestem ; ditto preferred 5734. 'Baltimore ',garnets, Jane 9. Flour dull ; Western.. $7 75. Wheat advanoed 20 ; South.) n rad, 3.1.96@2. Corn steady. Provisions W.Lielcy OIL PAirmiwoo.—The balance of the tine cellep- Wm of oil paintings from the Antarleau A.rt MTh New York, will be continued this evening at Scott's Art Gallery, 1020 Obestnut street, com mehOitig at 2 °Week prealitely. Among the collect tioll will be found epaulettes by 0. 11. Seamen, S. P. Dyke, Paul Ritter, Bneee, and Mom The errata' medallions are. very betuttlful, and worthy especial atalltiOik More Attacks on . tite Teraelly of Wit- Counter=testimony aboht lift Good eh:niter of Important Mitnesses on the some side, The Dead President's Treatment of Letters that Should have Warned him. further Evidence Coweernhaix the Er.- preetdoes or Dr. Mudd after the Illarder. WASHINGTON, June 9,—The reading of the pre. Mous d a y's record occupied until about 121cYclocit. Tensissioiny of Judge A lir sham B. helln. 1 By Dir. Boater,: I have resided In Tray, New Noill,, about twenty years; I know Maraus• P. Nov Ltn, a lawyer, who resides them.; .1 know his repd.ta es fOr Veriteity to be bad ; if his prejudicaeov p.a. Acne were exciter), I. would not believe him °death. liross.extaumed by Judge Ron : I never had any Eimate letatlOns with Mr. Norton; la stating . an oinion of his ohareoter for veracity I am also WI/. mg , expression to the opinion or the people of 'Croy ; I have known him to be engaged In controversies poncernlng patents ; I have known Instances in Web much reeling has been ellown In such contra. ,vetries ; I know Henry Burden, a eVlzen of Roy ; Vt. Burden has had several sutra and controversies irb resvet to tnvenriops, In which suite Me. al-or. tl, was interest ed as counsel ; the eouversattons of reat. or Mr. Burdebts Milustace and positiMa, with ilme or his triet.da. COWthel3o , l ðer were through eerier OS years. ender the excitement Or legal non. .Toverstee, may to some extent afford en eaplatia on of the repute in which Mr. Norton is held reerg those who know him, though his repattabe s quettionable before, so far as the witness was axe t Testimony of liars. Vary alineld. By Mr. Ewing ; I am a sii'er of the prisoner, :. must A. Muth: ; dna - 10110month of March. last, 'l'ater Btu on the 20, 3d, 4th, sth, 6th and 7th; I re nkmber the fact because on the let I was taken 4k, ar d on each of those days be was at the house whore I resided ; about this time a colored woman is the nety,bb rimed was taken sick, and he at. Orland her up to the 23d of March; he fro. quently called at our house to inquire after my ii o ,o t r her l lo ci n am th e e t„.. 3d b,s o 3 f fi NLaro t h he h , e as e t a t at h e at tit , : e first t .e. Le came he had no inedielne with Mot, and e tit to get it ; my father le very feeble, and not a le to travel ;,he is Con fi ned to his bed ; on the 23 , 1 11 1 of kiarrh the prh..onor, my brother, came to Wawa. itn ton In company with Mr. Llewellyn Gardner ; (tilting January to want to an everday party at Sir. Bitey l4arcner's ; he did not own a boggy of any ectoriptt n ; I never knew Vim to wear a black hat ; beusuatty a-ore a drab oolorec slouch hat; I have act known of Andrew Gwynn being about my brother's house since 1861; 1 have beard silica alit be was in the ilionfecerate sorvice ; I know inthlng If Confederate ofFeters or soldiers having ever stopped at my brother's haws ; I saw Booth at the church In that neighborhood on ono occasion, at which time he puroMised a horse lion, Mr. Gardner; Booth was in [Jr. queen's paw at church Wien I B&W DM ; I never saw hi.o but once ;in 1849, 19[0, and In 1551, my brother was at Oeliese ; ho was DOt at homes on holidays; I knoW nettling of Booth's having ever lodged at my Ma thel's house. By. Mr. Ewing: I live in the lower part of Prince Gore county ; I ant acquainted with Da- Mel J. Thomas ; hie general repute:Ann in tae nom, itoulty in which be lives is not as good as It ought to be. The "people do not think Mtn a truthful man ; I do not Wet' leanly believe him on bath ; the re• potation of lit. Mudd as to loyalty has seen vary good during the whole war; I have always been ii yal to the Government ; 1 voted for Mr. tan at the lai.t election because he said he was as gtoo a Union man as Mr. Lincoln; otherwise cave nivies supported the Administration ; I naive been acquainted with the prisoner Mudd glade he was a boy I always oonstoered him a loyal man. ate I never knew or beard of his doing anything in sum:Orroi the rebellion. Ifeetliebouy of Pals Default's. By Mr. lE:st log: I live in Gasties county, Nary. Dino ; nave known Daniel J. 'ramose, a witne6a for the prosecution, as 10 , ._.g cc I Oat remember; his rn ruta,ton in the come/unity le very bad; from ray libowivitto 01 his reputation for Voracity, I would not nolitve hiot under oath if to had any Induce. nent to swear faieely ; be 1861. I think it w;1, tie told Mc be was going over to Virginia, and aosaed nie to go. Crater:am - MEd by At/Relent Jodue Advooste Binsbran I was persuaded to go to Virginia, Oat did nongo. ;Several otter witnesses were called whose testi e‘tioa 'bon:owed with that already taken Initapomn ing fac.b.ers, witnesses also testified to the loyalty of Dr. Orr rico Mum,. T.er.eual recess of an hour was then taken, after widen the following witneesee were called : "ie./Examination Of Wise Nortek Fitz patrick. By Mr. Aiken: I was preeent when Payne was erre:dad at Mrs. Snrattts house, bat did not reoog. Dire him at the time, nor until the shirr. sleeve w rtineved from his bead at General A.i.clit'd cam ; when Palos: came to Mrs. Swett% ottera the as sassination, be passed by the name of W..id often thieeded a needle in the dity.:ime for :Ars. uraft ; I have known her eyesight to be pow'. By Mr. Ewing: I .knose Judson Jarmo ,• I never see him at Mrs. Saran's, nor heard of him tieing there; never knew of the prieoter Dr. Mudd being aere. By Judge Advocate Burnett ; Mrs. Saratt, her datiubter, and myself were Ia the man with. P&p ne at General AtWer's mica; Mrs. Surat, in apeaking of Payne, said that that was not John Same. bat I r ever heard hor say that she had never seen Payne; I did not hear what passed when Mrs. Saratt was celled rut Into the hall of her house to sue Payne on the 'Light or her arrest ; I only heard Mrs. Saratt say that be was not John Serratt, and that whoever called that ugly man her brother was no gentleman. 'testimony of Mrs. Nelson. I am the Sister of the prisoner Harold I never heard him speak of the accused. Lr. 'Samuel Redd ; I : never heard the name cd Mudd mentioned In the lamiiy Testimony of William J. Watson. By Mr. Ewing: I live in Prince George county; I an Lot vary intimately acquainted wish Daniel S. 'fbotaas ; I saw him on the Ist of Jane, when lie t Rid that If Dr. Mudd was convicted on his test!• Irony it woold be 00ruslusive oviduct's that he, booms, had given Information which led to the ar. rest of one of the conspirators; he sated me to give tom a certificate that be was entitled to the reward of ten thousand dollars. . . By Assistant Judge Advocate Bingham I tOld Thomas I would not give him the onrtlhoste, aad asked him whether In his consctonoe he believed himself entitled to the reward; I wvuld believe ~ homas on oath, though hie reputation is not as good as that of others; his general reputation for truth is not good, but I think he lies more la soli. prsue than in any other manner. By Dir. Ewlog : Kr. Thomas was represented not to be a loyal n,an in the beg/hiring of the war ; at the last Yreeldential electron he eloordoneered for George B. Moulellan. 13y Mr. Ewing : I have known the aceused, Lawaed spmeler. nearly four years; his character for peace and kiligheSS was wort known, tho Agh ho was dispofed to °rink at times, which world not magi Oils Mcas, nut would unfit him for .vork; I never knew him to be Involved in more then one quarrel while he 'wall In my employ, and that was through drink ; he was not a man who was likely to be entrusted with the confidence of others, not toay. lug much seltreF pent ; I never heard him express a political sentiment. A number of witnesses were then called on the part of the prosecution, In regard to the character for veracity and integrity of Mr Dates. a witness for the Government, who had testified that on the loth oc April lest Jefferson Davis stopped at Lis house, In Charlotte ' N. C.; that be there made a speech, during which he received a telegram from John C. igeOkimidge, announcing the death or preela.nt Lincoln, when he made the remark, If It were to be done, 'twig°. better it were *ell e0).0." &c. AD or the witnesses testified that they had known Mr. &ilea for 'years, end never knew or heard of WS ebbracter being questioned. TetailmoDY of William Wheeler. By Judge Advoeete Holt : I have been latiolal& ly acquatnteo with Marcus P. Norton frog, tkelve to fifteen yea;s ; I knew him first seschorhan Ver meer, Eubsegnemtly at Troy, New York, vnlere he cow reslciee Nreeide, when at home, at Lancing .2‘org, three Prop, of wide* piste)) !'vbbe forestry o, restderkt from my p,/sonal knowledge reputattofl for truth and integrity, it i 4 good ; Would nave no healtatleri in believing Mr. Norton ter oath. • OrOBS-eXandued by Me. poster : I have . been Washington sinCe the IStit of Apra lass / have heard of cotes of attempted impeachment of Mr. ninon, but know nothing about them, except by general remark that they were failure; ; one or two such oases, I have understood, have esseqtlally faired; when at school, which was from 1850 to 1868, Mr. Norton was mu active. persevering scooter; relations with him have never been of a oerdou !ally friendly diameter ; he is engaged by first. olas houses in Troy ; 1 have not lived in Troy for fifteen or twenty tears. By Judge A,lvocate Burnett: Mr. Norton has fre quently visited the county in which I live ; I have .siso frequently suet him in Troy ; I am wait an onalnied with the people there; about tvo years ‘.Fe I wee called on to give testimony in a ,Ti„lch Mr. Norton was employed as counsel bye. very reputable and wealthy firm Testimony of sans H. Hodges. I reside at present in Washington; hold the poll. !lon of Examiner In thief of the Patent Office; I have resided in Rutland, Vermont, for over twenty ;sure; base been intimately acquatnted with Mar one P. Norm, for eleven years ; he is well known in the vicinity of Rutland ; I never heard anything sale 9Fitinst his reputation until within the last two or three Yesre t anything that I have ever heard . .‘gelest hie reputation has grown out of previous i s tigation in which be was connected ; outside of ,tme cases, in which much angry feeling was ex. nitfted, I never heard Mr. 'Norton's reputation (retrieved ; I never heard of any attempt to im- A .,tabn him before that litigation. • • Kr. Hair g stated to the court, as a means of saving time, that the following eroposttlon had besh agreed to by the Judge Advocate. The three xithestes named had been sent for but bad not at-- 7Wd, and the Counsel had not seen them. The yr( °within was as 10,110W8: It 18 admitted by the pr.igiecution that John F. Watson, John Richard. Rai, nhd Thomas . R Smith, loyal citizens, wilt teak ati that they are acquainted with tee reputation of De - tiel J. Thomas where he lives and that it Is bad, on that from their knowledge of it they would not rel eve him on oath; and further, that John A. lithardszds, above named, will testify that Daniel .1 'homes, a witness for tre prosecution, made the eraernent on the Ist of June last, se sworn to by w Main Watson before the court this day, all the prosecution 'agree that this state: mett be put on record, and received and weighed by V doom', as though said - witness had aetnally tee. tiff d before it. After some time spent in consul. tat on with the counsel for the prisoner,Dr. udd, i i J tie Advocate Holt stated - that being M disposed to at w the secured at rho bar the benefit of all the evidence that could be adduced In their favor, he ,a! ochterted that the declarations of Mudd con. ce# Mg tee presence of two auspielous men at his kmtst., previously ruled out by the court, should be Wan for what they were worth. iltrjatoln Gardner and Dr. George A. Mudd, beg then tenoned for the defence, testified that D Mudd stated . on the-Sunday morning after the 118 toltatlon that 4 ‘ we one ht lintoentste i i, iy to raise Ft tt 12,0 guard, and hunt np all etteplcdous pers:.ns poking through our section or. Country, mid arrest thin unless they can snow that they aro travelling Zitcw Yonx, Juie 9 THE TRIAL. nesses for the Prosecution, Testimony of John L. Turner. Re•Exon.inntion of John T. Ford. . Under propel' anihority,. for ,ther were tWO But. 00 01 0, pe m- hones yesterday Morning." Dr. George theprtanuer,R9lil on Mandel , Mtn Link that he •Prearetto4 the 11;448.91netiM r rie It. was a most damnslile act. •" ho area n treated the . particulate of the visit ot two suspiefous tootling men to his house on the morning of the praeletti nay. stating that they eneniad to he lahcriag under some degree of excitement, More Se than would ne supposed to accompany the mere trailing of the leo: of one ot, the men s. that they ?tilted they had come from Bryantowp, and Inquired the way t) Parson Wilmer's ; titet, wiMe there one of them called for a razor and shaved off either his whiskers 07 re. , estache ; that he In company with ...he apostler of the two wenn.Oown the road towards liltantoWe In sterol+ of a vehicle to take them away from his house, and that they finally left his house ett het?x back, going* In the direction of Parson Wilmer's ; when ab , ..ut parting with each other, the toHoner requested' the witness, Dr. Cfeorge A. Redd,, to coom.unteste the font of the presortee of Mete sus melons men to the military anthoritles at Br. ; an• Town, and that If called upon hr week, give every Informatkti in his power relative tirthe matter, but he did not desire it to he publicly Ilnown that he had divide rd the visit of these men, for fear of being assassinated ISy guerillas. The lion. 0.. A. Dana was then recalled ror the prosecution, and Identified eartato letters as hawing' been reeetvrd.by him when Assistant' 400r.tary of War. from Major general Dix. I Ina of these let tere, benttqt (+ate M 17.17,1804, was slimed! by G..- neral Dix. and 'Wag explanatory of the "mar, equal,. DOS already ben published, being the the found In a Third A.vei.uo railway CST. of New itosibdity. and commevoing as follows: o St. Louie, Out, 21. Lait. —Dearest Husband Why do you not °erne' hotpot You left me Et tee date only, and you have now been away Woto home for more than two weeke, sod in that lotg time only wrote me one Short note—s. frw w orde, with a meek for money, which I did not reeMirt,” etc., The lOU_ roe stated' farther, that upon receiving the letters in question, he toot them to President Lincoln, who /or.ked'at theme without any partleo• her remark, as this was only one Instance among many in ' , Melt such or mintutioatiOnS had been re. calved. The President, however, %wow? d 10101,3 importance to these communications than to others; r.s the witness subsequently tonna them in an en tektite whieb was Marked in the President's hand , writirg t.Assassinatiln lWr. Ewing then stated , to the Court that the Judas Advocate General' bad agreed to admit that , D. E. Mortice, a witness fir the defence, who was still absent, would trattty that he heard at the' chura which Dr. Mudd, the prlmetter, attended, on t mole y. A oril 16. from Kra Moore,who MO jot ore from Bryantoten, that It was Edwin Booth who wee imnlicated in the assassination. A dlSCtullOn arose FIMOnv The mocatorg of the Ornrt solo the propigety of entering' 'aped the M 001 rd StAstbilng WMOI3 wog rot sworn to as evidence. After tome ttwe spent in thla discussion, the Vont (Mooted Geo. tiartranft, the provost mar- Pbal, to eon.' for and enamel the attendance of D. E. adenine. the absent witness. The Court then adjourned. The Atlantic Cable. PREPAICATIONs ON BOARD . 1.11% GRNAT BLBTBRN— The London Telegraph of lliitsy 23 has the follow ing interesting account of the preparations on board the Oreat Eastern for laying the ocean tele graph emle : DIPPEREPQSE lISTWNBN UN AND 1865 A visit was paid to the Great Eastern a lair days since by a large patty of the filreetoref Enemas; end It way be said that all woo understood the preparations which they saw came away with a greatly strengthened confidence in the future of f.he new Cable. Slime 1858, when the Snet Atlatt tie line was laid, the ad calico that has been made by the sotentthe world towards comprehending eleetrical phenomena is very great. It has been said, by a loan well qualified to spoilt on the flute jrat, that electric science hex passed, since that time, from its Childhood to its maturity. So far as the pbeeereeea connected with lengeleetrle oircults were coreerned, We had In 1858 no knowledge what ever. The Insfrumenis In common use were unsuited to receivir g signals through agreat letal/ Meanie; the De cernty of provlevret torrhe conductor an 111Elllae MOD to perfect as to approach an absolute c9nettton weE bpadmh atoll. appreciated. The beet preliminary test for a long cable bad not been devised, and the old AtlerVe telegraph was laid without having been subjected to any marching teat on shore. Every body had advice to give coucernbag the Manage ment of the wire, but no one recommended the preeautlens which stitnevent experience has shown to be IIeeCEESTy. When the signals began to fall, the battery power was augmented, and eleotro magnetic indoction coils, which rapidly helped on the destruedierf Of the eeeduetor, were put in circuit. No one thought of "nursing" the cable—of humor- , Ing HE feeble attempts at articulate utterance, and cf onding out what it said rather by listening acutely than by ConStently saltine- en it, in the labenage et the Victoria gallery, to Spoilt up" The old cable, however, la dead and gone part or it LSE I,ern poked up and applied to Ignoble USN, as a racehorse past his work may be put late the shalte of a hansom • part of it has been abandoned, and lies where It m ay rest till the end of time, in the "dark. unfathomed caves" of the deap 1183 a. Lot us turn to the practical present. KIWIS ON BOARD THE GREAT EASTERN. Ms Great Esigern looks just now more like an engineet'S WOikthop than a sea-gAng ship rile Vila calmness of 'her desk are CO vefed With WO Men slices and pills of timber. There are smiths , forgr-s below,.. and, between the aeon you might 'fancy youreelf in 11, machinist's factory. The great (nettles et the sap, it Is true, / have lost tte bright look cif 4 raohloory which Is be Constant use; and the En dull masses of iron Seem asleep, or M. a trance. f you descend the ladders which tt , pd to the „holleis and turatteek—an erpeditim which is nosh _nice acing . down. a mine than any - sirne — neklat oraargtorsn - whieionArich-coorl but In those regions of the vessel where the cattle is neing shinned and watched there is every sign of keen, vigilant* intelligence. When you understand tvh ais being cone, you see something more than this- that ssientitie foresight of the highest order Wrests evety step ; and that the tut tarry rope, soave tat d rough to appearance, whim: lies coiled away under water in tee tonits of the ship. is mann. otured, scanned, and tested with vs as much care as the nicest curical instrument in an astronomer's onservatory, or the most delicate apparatus of tra. glass ever applied. to the careful experiments of chemistry. THE ACIBETITIO TESTS It seems impossible that there can be any fault In the Atlantic gable when the Great Eastern goes to sea To say nothing of the tests applied to It at the marulactory, it is tested not alone after it has been taken Onboard, but during its delivery Into the stip. As soon as a length ls brOuget along side, one end IB Connected with the mils al• ready on board, and the other end with the instruments In the testing room. The circuit is taus Made through the whole. extent of the coil, the portion on board and the portion alongside. The process of hauling in then commences, and the insulation is coatinaoaaly observed The instruments in the tasting room record the Smalleet deviation from absolutely portrait Insulation. It be uneerstood that an Insulation whack shall be quite petite% Sts, an elec trician understands the word, Is not attsanaete. A. piece of metal separated by means of tile purest glass, and enclosed in the clrieSt atmosphere that can be obtained, will, if charged with, electricity, lose that electricity after a time. In speaking of insulation we must therefore be understood to Wean. an approXlinSi4COndttion ;• bat the approximation. in the case of the new Atlantic cable comes so near to perteetlon that this rough tarry rope 14 a Wend t* wonder. The last dying pulsation of the old &Matto cable was forced through it by means of a galvanic batte ry ceesieting of two hundred and forty oella. Toe Entatarthe telegraph from London to Amsterdam is habitually worked with a battery Of 114 cells, and ouch a battery is contumely used for the other sue marine lines of Eate.pe. Signals have been re posited* sent through more than thirteen hundred mites of the cable now on board the Great E4sturn by means or one cell. Galvanic currents so feeble that they math) tot have been felt by the hand, and might have been passed harmlessly tbroughtteircult oomi•leted by the operator's tongue, can be used to convey messages along a length of cable that would very nearly stretch from London to St. Yetersburg Over needle instruments, such as those in ordinary nee for lend telegraphy, a Current from one cell would be powerless. To record such faint pulsations of eleotricity, it is necessary to use Professor Tbompson'e mires gal vauotneter. This baalittfal InatruMent consists of a mirror about Dm size or a four penny plaint MAO Of microscope glass, and Bo thin that it weighs only a grain. On the bask Of this mirror a minute magnet is fixed, and, thus supplemented, It Is sus pended by a silken bore in tue heart of a coil of wire, so that any current passing through the Boil deflects the magnet and the mirror along with it. A ray of light reflected by the mirror falls on a scale, distant about eighteen or twenty inches, and revepts Re. fainted movements. Different coMbinatioeS of &tee movements represent the different letters of the aphabet, and .. thee the apparently entitle wanderings of a ray of light are, made tO convey intelligence. An instrument of this hind is constantly used to test the cable, as it IS hauled on board; and if any fault had existed It Could not have passed withent amnion. Up *,) this time, when there are on beard the ship aed alongside 1,970 miles of cable, MO Milt has betel discovered. =l3l The machinery for paying out la not yet on board. but Is being put together at tee Greenwich works. The process of itonieraion Will take about a fort nig bt. The beginning of the shore end will be laid by a small vessel, which will meettbe Great Eastern V ir about twenty miles f the Irish Oran The cable. wdl then be passed , Connected with thatin the great tanks, and big shit will begin her vas ae. TO the uninitiated, e b ated, tide process of cutting andjoining the cable appears,. very mysterious, but the engineers wile are Used to .the work face it without any hesitation. The joints do not really -endanger either the insulation or the strength Of the gable, as +wherever they ace made the external and conducting wires are spliced along a considerable length—Sometimes not less than thirty yards—and the antis perch* carefully put on in separate layers, firmly pressed together by means of warm Irons. The cordplete Tess of the joint is tested by laying it in an insu• fated metaillo vessel containing water, and asaar teining, by means or tesre applied :o this vessel, whether any eltostriony escapes from the joint as a current Is passed along the cable. ITSAVY DIBIGHT THAlN.—Prehably the heaviest freight train ever brought Into Chicago by a stogie eviine came In on the Calera Division of the Ohlea. go ard North Western Railway yesterday morning. The train numbered eighty one care, all loaded and principally with grain, from the Felton line of that renway. Estimating the, freight of each ear load at ten tons, the total weight of the freight drawn was over eight hundred ton& The total length of the train, allowing thirty feet to a Oar and looludingthe engihe.waß nearly twenty-tive hundred teeter about one half mile. The train was drawn from Junc tion to libleego, a distance of thirty miles, by a eingle locomotive, the "Vest/viol," a ten-wheeled, coal burning engine, built by M. W. Baldwin & Co.. of Philadelphia; Win. Btlee, engineer; noses 1 ackwan, conductor., This immense train, we might acid, is but an instance of the extensive freight bust nets row deing,on that line, some two hundred ears being received daily.— Chicago Republican, June 5:1/. HONORARY EVIOIDIA—HeOentIy, (say Some of the Perla papers), the Emperor of Japan had reason to he hilenly distatiefied with one Of Sis Mears, and sent lam the c , renowned " Sabre. /0 le a sort of honorary mord, very beautifully oarved and finished. As this °Moor held high rang and had hitherto given his prince every reason to be oathr tied, the latter sout him. la order to alleviate the t iieot of the message as as possible, one Of hie own swords set with diamonds, and selected his prime mit:deter as bearer. The Maser received the reverentlyd was well aware what itsignitied. After regarding the instrument of hie punish. meat be quietly left hie house, want to the port. got en hoard a French ship bound for Havre, and safely reached PAM where be said the sabre for 100,0001. MILITARY TOLHORATHEI.--011e of the novel fear tures of the war just brought to a close has been the use of the magnetic telegraph for military purposes. Ett the commencement of the present &eel year, in July, lies, there were in operation 8.600 'miles of military telearepb, of which 78 miles ware sub ma. tine—of Mk 8 000 miles, Including 88 miles of sub • marine telegraph . had been oonstruated since the war broke out. During the year commeneing July 1,1803, the expenses of - the military telegraph were ab( ut +600,000, of which $4OO 000 were absorbed by she wages of operators and 'incidental expenses— the remaining +206 000 were expended In the par chase of material. 3,800,000 telefaxplito megesses were. transmitted taming the year; at ,an average coat or kbOrit thirty telito. • FOUR CENTS: 61t . A .E ).f',o.3rts. Navigation on the tipper Allegheny and Oil Oreek, le almost entirely suspended, owing to tte extreme Stalloviness of the water, The river V. Itred fOr nearly a mile with tow boats, and every rook aid coiner In Off Oreek, within hur,dreris 0) , yenta of the mouth, is completely envered with , row boats, barges, ate, awaiting loading or att, loadfig. —it he elated On good authority that fan, tooo,ooe.roo worth of property In this grate to as taxed, net beteg upon the rosestrors , books, Tne re• elated pelannal prOVerty 1n Ohirt .P 7,009,090, end fa lianas'? :vette. bat 477,000,M The meeeeere buff& of New York Rate show an amount of tena ble property three times greater than that of Penn eylyania. A terrible accident occurred on Tuesday at the oil well ID Waterford, Erie county. The workmen were ravaged la raking rile toots, w:den the , t wheel"—a largedrtun by which the ostie Is railed broke Mose, one of Its arrow striking slims named James anent, tittthog him lothe bowels and ripping him up instantly, It Is bald that Tallandlgtion tied written a let ter to theTonog Men's Dentoeratlo assoolatlon t", Lancaster, to aerials he aokaowledges his errors as to the rebellion, and' deitiiltell Mat,. With treatin. the South will betiOnee more ponnlonS, proSportdie, and nowerful than any , other section. in Harrisburg landlords tam • soldlerat families out of dears r end the citizens ettllnly contemplate the speotseie of teeing them seek shelter front sari and rain in an unsheltered yard. Andersonsilis ever again. The order in Harrle'Ourg prohibaing the sale or liquors in that arty mutt% the time any part of to 4 army Sr quartered theta Dee been reminded, amp:: so ?Leonid to soldiers. A mass netting of the Republican voters at Unions county, for the purpose of electing dabs gates to the State o ,, ,eavention, will be held In tie% borough of Incians, on Monday evening. —A soldier's widow fn Malloy, Erie county, be• mine ro depreered In oonsegnetOe of the retuning borne of tie soldiers, that elm committed antolde by drowning herself In a well. A correspondent of the Shippensburg Neitu proposes the nurchase of a home In the Cumberland Valley for (tautest Slieridatt. Bloomsburg, tiolumbia county, le befog greatly improved by the erection of a number of new build logs. Keogh,the clerk who absoonded from Eriewitli two thousand five 'moored and twenty-two dollars, Ilea been captured and breught back. The Pottsville Journal denies the reports o Huta In the mining, -- The city of Pittsburg >s lbeOoming filled with low gambling hells. -- The U. S. Expren Company Is building an °Moe in Meadville. The Reading Gas Works consume In one year about 1 400 tons of bituminous coal. The DOA r.flioe at Now /Villitown, Lanoaster o< sr, hap been °banged to Buyerstown. It h prOpOstid to eroet gao works in Blairs ville. Female shoplifters mill trouble Erie. .11101111 L A lady who was walking In Springfield, Pass., the other day, experienced a vary posilive sews ;, lion," when an active black snake, three and a hAr feet long, fell from mtd.air and dropped upon the ,Itiewalk directly in front of, her. The Snake whiob thus distinguished itself sr a eandid ate for a Inefee . eaeg Pickling, bad been placed to sun In a hot in fourth story Window where she prefesa.nr keeps his museum, and fell to the ground in an ad. venturesome exploration outside of the preserined The fall didn't seam to hurt it much, but at least one lady hopes it won't repeat the feat when she is in that vicinity. A man named Joshua Hale, living eight miles northeast of Rushville, Illinois, was killed lately h- his wife and stepson, a boy about sixteen years old. It seems the man and wife got into a quarrel, in which be seized her by the hair, and was drag. ging her towards a brush pile, when she called to her Son for help, The boy seised s club, and, ran. nit gto her awdstance, struck his step father to the ground. They then sent for the neighbors, and told their story. Oa examination, Hale's neck anti skull were found broken, and the parties were ar rested and silPillitted to jail In default of ball. A correspondent writes : .Of all the cities I have ever seen, North or South, In peace or war, vaailtine is the dirtiest. Louisville may have POMO' filthier. /scannas ; Pittsburg may exhiilt sootier.houses ; New York may occasionally get up a more extensive carnival of mud ; but take it all In all, make proper allowances for circumstances and size, and I think Nashville will fairly carry off the palm?' A new thieving dodge has been invented in Ntw York. A gentleman was accosted In the icad io;ai:d white ~iendiyg over the Corm of the pretended sick man his pockets were rifled of a gold watch and chain, with which the thieves deeamped The victim pursued, crying " watch," causing the arrest of One of the thieves and his committal for trial. It wail currently reported at Augusta, CM, a few days since, that Robert Toombs had oommitted gulch:le. The story gins that a force Was sent to Wallington, Ga., to arrest Toombs, and upon their approseh to his residence he made his escape through the back door, and succeeded In getting away. Intelligence wall reeelved on the following day by his pursuers that the unhappy man had com mitted suicide by calk g his throat. A Richmond lady and gentleman wiebinir to be marrko, and there being no courts to bane a license, the gentlemen h polled to l ov. norpotth who replied as follows "Rev. SIR : You will join In the holy bonds of matrimony Mr. -- and Miss —, The great com mend, Genesis I. 22, cannot be disobeyed for want of proper local °Moors to grant the tide Pee. " R. PLRAPONT." —The Century Club of New York havepreeented geld medals to the five !soldiers ot the Y t th New York Arl Ilk ry who brought car the demd body of thole commander, Col. Porter, front the' field after the battle of Cold Harbor, lathe riek of their hives, being exposed to the terrible fire of the enemy. The med• ale boom been delivered to the soldiers by GBll. Ham Dock. Col. Porter was a member of the Club. The Sanitary COMMIREIOII are making arrange• melds to establish agencies in all parte of the North, at which soldiers entitled to bounty money, back pay, ponslone, &o , may collect and receive the same without hamming the mamma that are now unavoidable. —J. McCann,. a very disorderly character, of Brooklyn, N. Y.. has been arrested on a Charge of arson. In it rooni in the rear of Lk store, furniture was found smashed np generally and strewn about the fluor. The room was wet with oampliene, which had been distributed about and set on lire. ErAiovernor Aiken says that not till after the Union forces bad occupied Charleston did he see a copy of President Lincoln's first inaugural. A spa• Sous paper was published, pretending to be a copy, but it was In no respects like the original. The Yost Office Department Is sending speolal agents to open the poi t ulkees In the principal cities and tOWLS at tile South, and afterward appoints citizens of those places, whose loyalty , is asoer. tamed, as postmasters. A Democratic lawyer of Saratoga has sent to Washington for a copy of the indictment against Jeff Davie, saying that the friends of the latter have chosen him to aid In the rebel ox-President's defence. A panorama entitled the g' Martyr President? end including mines from President Lincoln's second inauguration to his burial at Springfield, is txhibiting at Providence. The Lincoln Monument Association at Spring. &Id, 111., vent the Sabbath schools in the loyal States to take up contributions for the monument next Sunday. A young man, while engaged at a Card table ln Frankfort, Kentucky, on Thursday night, received a tatalytie stroke, and expired with the deal in his hands. The Baltimore ()By 'Donnell has voted $lO,OOO to mist In the "elevation and Improvement , ' of the negroee no that otty. The daughter of Charles Ootesworth Pinokney, aged seventy, is reoelving gOvernment rations at Ohe.rleeton. A wild panther has lately been prowling around the outskirts of Providence, R. L, to the annoyance of the people. -The local columns of the New Orbiting jOurilaill do not show any improvement in the morality of she city. The 19th Maisie has for a pet a beautiful little snow-white lamb, which strayed into the quarters Of the regiment about the time of Lee's surrender. A thousand dollars In confederate bills 1994 eoneldered dear at fifty ciente the lot In Savannah re. °tinily. It le reported that a new evening papor le to be started In (Mileage. A new typo foundry hag been eStabllshed In Richmond, Va. Two loyal newspapers aro now published in rrederickeborg, Va., the Ledger and New Era, The smali•pox hag appeared among the laborers at the fleoßao Tunnel, Maas. —Matilda Heron, the aotrees, has fallen hell. to 47b,cce, by the death of a brother. There are now seventy.four prisoners confined in Castle Thunder, fifteen of whom are nogroeff. —The Messaohneette veterans are forming WSW elation In various parte of the State. A good Idea. Elopements In Troy are becoming quite ;Ire. (meat. —Lotteries in Winona are getting troublesome. The papers advise all to give them a wide berth. —The Vuoudourg Herald wee one year old on the Ist inst. new daily paper will shortly make 118 AP pearanae in Sin Francisco, Oollfornlo, 8 well-exeauted counterfeit one hundred•dollar greenback tuts made Its appearance. Murdoch, the tragedian, le out of danger.. FOB3LIBII rirEmm. The bronze spur of the lron•platedramTauresu, now building at Teuton, has been oast in that port with complete modem This bilge weapon weiKhe 11,132 kilogrammes. It has been oonroyed to the dook•yard at the Mourillon, where ft Is to be fixed. The deck of the TallteStt is plated with iron. The iron plating Is not to be fixed on the sided Of the ship until. she Is launched. The Taurean Is• not to carry any guns. It Is expected that she will sink any reesel she can noosed In striking with her spur. —ln the Dublin International Exhibition up. wards of twenty eolohlell are morn Or len extensive ty represented, : llanada, Nova Scotia, ant Vancouver, Of the A'vstl: American i the Bab.amas "SUN WAIL P"ttatupprats. wRRIK /.Ir. Sim WAR Pans will b• sent it wittedhort mail (per annum In adv/wot) aL ««1111... --...1111 riTt toolts.• ••—• • 1.414 ••••••• In SO ...... v... • ...... 94 11 1 n 4 Urger Clubs than Tan Win birth/WOW at thiswat NW. 1101.00 Par dopy. The ftL nnPli muse a heave comm.:mos, ahs orflorr and ift sto tftutoneo 'AA theta term be &slated °4l .' 4 ff°f'd *en , &WU ot.re thus the cost 4, palm'. sa- PiMt m Mier* are requested to sot to Offeota TIM WAR PRIM. fair To the eetter•np Of the Club of ton or twee,. ea ma r , lop, of the pepar Win be oven. EerefriMa, Janieton, and Trtnid•ad, of the Wert in , m o o group Ceylon, filentltlns. and In the of the Eastern; all the live ittlXtrallan 'Notes i Nadal, St, Helot's, Sierra Leone, the Gold IT)** and Lpeon, of the African group; and the Falkland tdar, de. The experiments made In cultlvatlng colon In Venetia have extended to Venice Itself. Trte pro• rioter tl' a bathing establishment on the seashore planted the gaudy downs of the Lido with (lotto* and succeeded. He sent speolmens of hie produe to the a Marian (Number of (lommeros at Trieste, which have been declared b) dealers In the article u senor in firmness! and In length to American sot ton. the eonsumptl,ll of SnitHS (rocargoia) hat be. cone as great that hi is said a, spatial matte; is is IltiOttt to 1,16 opered ter them, tektites!' WIN thiti ad:. ft not woiderful, au they were highly esteemed by tberrionians, Frew% eulcufaaYntLe EllZtAMlnth eentary kept stores of shells to enolosed warrens , and Duplhet, who wrote at that period, says anal there were et. ereat Oloners wilimit'shailS, It ap• rears that the ►mete bee mow revived... Interestleg aroLay 4 VoallsoT)very Main' been wade as a private proparty on tiaeafrie of VA 1:111 of Fourvierea, tear Lrena. I 3 la the lowat floor of a 11, , ,tnatt tionae perfeatly preierved In Foorohlotf ono of the Waite, te Cede was found, deooa rated with frovocao on a rod graild, I 6 Is4apposoa to bare flayed ae * Efate' Map for 6ho hunavb,Oß ortda. —A clerical , evealter, at the Ithib Educational Seotety In Loodon4 hfishow the Important:ere hav trqt temehere ov thirooripturec In on plan Inngna,n, sale the DOmr , ml) Vi Lea persona Iteseeeral conritteil eno epoke the trial Jena Uwe only, Taese awe iA Wetertnnt, ]9;487; these. 7 128 18,784 Kerry, 94 ,971 ; D,AurgBl, ; Maya, 22,228 t end Cirrs•wy, 41-512. ' —The Dues de Perantni, in hie petlP i tlot °Platy pi:wattled, baye there le anon anorointe coat , wand, ycf Intrreste between France and ir4ly s . ba 11 to•mmrnw the Empomr and Fr 41105 wets me hoes°, all Italy wonlo /too tor the defenoe of ooth. More tt an two thotievnd m 1181.4 the oabla have been shipped on boom! tale Great Easter*, audio the ww leave the Medwal {ti and prr ceed on her eourae uoro., Gtio cable. Atredoola, the Montle of Patrol', who , - goo thy heart et that Wahabee nonepirsey whiott c ►n+ed the war In the fintlrer le Mils, and opetisoi , l to be bung. title had bigger teooo 00'10 Matted y 0 tread. portation for lire to tbe Andaman lolanda. In France the sithworms bred trod Sepaneee Reed MVO great hopes, bat thaae produced from other foreign seed give great uneasiness to the ottk. pr. ducers. The Government of ladle proposes to construct a double line of telegraph to Korraohee, and also to complete a laud line to the head of the Persian Gull. Stanislans Barreau, who committed thetionbitt murder at I.:Trial*, °amide, a short time since, has been arrested at Ringston, disguised as a preacher. n. A parts fashion-writer tells of a droll of organ. dies hating a desiire or peacock:tam! pheasants! kw tilers, line and delicate, like the shin:M(llog rays of moonlight. ln the Onus Legislatlf, at Paris, a bill had been introduced, authorizing the rouslohmtlity of Pails to contract a Wen of two hundred and fifty ' ‘.ftranort for local expenses. The Government of India has just prevented tow Et gitsh civil and military nth me at Lahore fron , going into ()antral Asia to examine the troth of the rories about annexations teem. In spealtirg or telegraphic communication an IptMu paper Bala that accurate and spetidy Infer. nation le of each value lu Indli t even to native merchants, that they will pay aby price for IS, —The toa larDiVittlaTV Of the entbodi neat Of the Phinish provinces with PrtllsBla was /Steil kept at Cologr e and Ala•la.Obai,elle. It is rumored that Lerd Marone. Paget will succeed Str lichen Smart in commend of tee Br 1• tkik Mediterranean etai 2,200 piteeS Of rifled artillery are reqntrod for arming the Pram'lan fortresaes, on the prleolplea of modern warfare. The Empeior. Napoleon continues to be re. csived in the reeet,enthasiestio summer through.otit Alders. Several of the FronOti Minliters speak Of re signing if the French troops are not launedlately rttelltd from Neale°. —_The health ot M. Yietor Omiln, the calm Frei oh philosophical writer, Is so poor ea to give the greatest eohcerh to his aes6rest friends. -d heavy Orin's ht. at the last mounts, had awed WWI anxiety for the °reps In the bland of Jaaelea. —The Freaoh Govercm ant b‘td despatehed a steam flit ate to take on hoard the amhaseadOra of tO. rocco and convey them to Algiers. Two English travellers had beea captured by brigands, near Salerno, and a ransom of' £B.OOO It is reported that a patty in San Domingo was enoeevoring to get up a counter revolution in favor of the Spaniares. The inhabitants of Rouen have petitioned the French Emperor, demanding the Suppression of the Ociroi, or town auttm Trade In Purls Ii Mil entforhlg greatly from the strikes among several classes ot woritaen. The credit Unauoter of Paris is raising a loan of four zuflbonb atergiuu for algeria, O'UR COW fIiTAY. gs Welcome Bunke to the Brave:, EV SIAS. GUSTAVUS RENAL rer The Press What heart does not nil with a deoleglowing thrill Of ppm ler our fair country now. In her power and might, in the tatung rip;, With jtweis of In on her brow I Behold the bright phalanx of valor arrayed The heroes who bled In her canes ; Who, to crush out rebellion, have fought nnall. mailed For Men country, her flag, and her laws. As the deeds of Foil Siiiiipter awakened the lend To the truth.-there were loos in Ow lipid, What s pstriot baud rose, their might to withstands And our flag from dishonor to shield. How love for tbst flag then Inspired the brave To deeds that will vie. ith the. beet On hietcrVe page—let earth warrior's grave, ALAI the DR/10413 of out heroes attest. How love rot our country revived the pure flame Of patriot valor and zeal, Let the courage and fame of each soldier proclaim, And eaoh hattic.flold proudly reveal, Woe, woe to the traitors, to heart or irt deed, Who their flag and their wont!, betray ; The wrath or high Heaven Its vengeance Mal speed To &or whelm them In death and dismay. All honor to those who respond to the call Of their country, on land or on main; With pride did they pull toll' lives and their all Her honor and rights to maintain. And now, whop the carnage of warfare Is o'er, And Peace Abe brlght Redden appears ro gariAnd VW Lowers with Ineohnteemlng Bowes% To charm away SOnow end tears ; We net to the tread of the brave—as they come Marching homeward in triumph again,. With garment; Mil worn, and With nettledlage torn, Or red with the blood of the slain. They are coming from mountain, and valley, and sea, From the siege and the prison's dread cell, To the goal they have run, and the victory won— Hots nobly let History tell. An at mt, of heron/ God blew them I we prays The nation their prehen shad sing; The old and the young, with one heart, and MN tongue, Pure gine of thankrglvlng shall bring. Welcome home, then—thrice Welcomet beloved and brave; Wray Home prove a haven of red Where Love with a onille all your °area shall' beguile, And your hearts with contentment be blot. A wreath of the laurel and oppress will twine For the brave ones, who gallantly died; I he heart ui the hetton their deeds wilt enshrine, And each name ahall be cherished with pride. We yield t ot one star from our glorloul Not one strips from its folds wit/ we sever • Tinsullied, , telll wave, o'er the laud of th e bra,o l 9 And may God bless our country waver I THEY ABE COMING FRAN THE WAX& They are coming from the Wars, They are bringing home their soars They are bringing back the old flu, too, In glory; They have battled long and well, And let after ages tell ?Lew they won the Proudest name in song or story They have broken tiP thell CamPo i They art laughing o'er their imPlps They are joking with: the girls, who dock artnindi them ; They have left the scanty fare ; They have left the fetid air ; They have darted to earth the prison walls that bound Worn. And they're coming from the ware, They aro bringing home their soars, They are bringing book the old nag, too, in glen' y • They have battled long and well, Andlet after ages tell low they won the proudest name In song or story t We ate eager with our ;hooka, , We are priming on their ranks, • We are grasping hands that hold the Rate, die. broken, Yet we sadly think of these Who are sleeping with their foes, A v e eur trembling tongues give welcome sadly spoken. lint the long delay is past, They have brought us peace at last, And hOW proudly through our voles the blood is bounding, As we WWI Our honored dead, While the steady Martial tread Of returning veterans In our oars is sounding Yes, therm owning front the wars, They are bringing home their seam They are bringing beak the old deg, too, in glory They have bottled long and wail, And let after ages Mil How they yea the prondeat name in Song or story S Zuentiu 8. MtrrdDAYo . .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers