THE: PJELES, PUBLISITED DAILY (SITPTI34V7 MOErr.EV: IIST JOllll W. FORNEY. 011101 Mo. 1111. 8011111 Francini OEM. TIU Drati,lt PSESS, to OW linbserthers. tTEN DOl.'OE4 'MP. kiiNOo 04, I. IIdLYRRIPS: RI TWENTY OF.NT, PEE Wass. ; W Mlll ORni4o ilnlina in Sergeribiiin ont of ths city. J INN DOLLARS PIM AnFuni D0L14.89 AND FIFTY 01014 ros 81Z worys; TWO DOLLARS AND IVserT- erre awes 10 Tuns )oaTas. inaartabl7is ariesass for We dins 640 64 Advirstsemants inserted si the usual rates, 1113 M TIt ,WELLY 1011,31i15. Woe to dobssrieers. Yrs% lioraana PER *iUWX. in 10.visn‘n glp Pt ss. FRIDAY, JUNE. 23, 1865 TEE NEWS. We given) another column a condensation of the annual message of Governor Peirpont, of Virginia, I,eelslature last Tuesday. Toe G - 3•• lest to and vernor begins with a reference to the wt alrileSs or aty or tho state, through the chances and de vastation or the war that hen swept to and fro over It for the last fang years. lie then gives a mod history of the manner In which the State Wan taken out of the Union by it disloyal citizens, and the action of the loyal people . after they efound themselvesoverelaughed by he tral elfolP element. In We oonneetioll he t adduces legal &slalom+ and clauses in defence of the action v i ten. The internal policy of the State Is °meld re and the "oath of loyalty" deolared "too -e.nee It d Wray ohires nineteen.terentiolle oftte POOP'. Ps repeal IS there) re advocated. The WWI ge C ' 4 AO with matters concerning the State oily Th OM e Rh -mond papers mit endorse the mosses°• speasmf of sa in terms of high pleasure. A competent officer nes been sent South by Peat- Master Dennison to survey the railroads there pre paratory to restoring the mail facilities to the pen. pie, Sceretara McCulloch bas recommended the sp. pointrbeet erg, Van Dyke as assistant troasuror of Nee York. The applicants for pardon are Inerealing every der. Beth branches of City Council were in session yesterday. In the Select branch Mr. %smarty apologized for his conduct last week. A bill pro wins. for the payment of the interest of the city debt falling due July 1,1806, was passed ; also a bill appropriating 0100,000 for the rellet of fatalttes of TannUneril. In the Common branch nothing of mo went transpired. Governor Childs. of 1.4111819318, has had his action, iO removing the State end city oillotaLs, endorsed by the people of New Orleans. Iserices from California to the 19Eh, wive nothing, particularly new beyond news of conelderable tires and finaveial news, including a negotiation for a lon for the goriest republic. The Ituaabra tote graph is progressing well, and gold LW bum dis covered In Upper Columbia. Another delegation from Virginia had an audi ence with the President yesterday, for the parpose of urging the restoration of the elective franchise to those who had been in rebellion. Gen. Willos, ?roost marshal of the defences south of the Po tomac, laid before the President his observations in that section of the country. lie says prominent rebels there have been endeavoring to gain by di' ploreacy what they failed to get by war, and that they freely took the oath to accomplish that im ps*. Who snit of the Mayor and Aldermen of Balti more re. the Connellaville and Seathsrn Pennsyl vania, Railroad Corn psnyle being argued before the tolted States Utter& Mart. at Williamsport, Pa. The Petroleum mad Venango cOnntst blahs of this State, have become national bala and have destroyed their entire old issue atilinting to Mi,ooo. The - people or Louisiana who were formerly rebel?, nominee that :hey will hereafter live pews, ropy, end reveal all sots of guerillas, and other lawless - proceedlass. Forty one meow, who were arrested in California for rejoleieg over the death or President Lincoln, have been released, The billiard match for the Championship of Massa chusetts has milted In a viotory for Tobin by sixty three points. Another eldof of the rebellion is in onr hands, Eleatiregard is sofa to have recently been arrested in Nov Orleans and rent to Washington. The anbecript3ene Zo 7-30 loan,lestorday, amount ad to $2,9A6.300. Gov. (Perk, of Mississippi, has passed through - mobile, ea route for Washington. Gal. Herron tae Issued orders returning freed.- leen to their tor. tors- until. the growing crop are gathered. 1./triune contracts for pay are required for Ms balance of the season. New Orleans despatch says that the N^-Sloan empire Is wa , ..ing fast, and that the Empress 10 lean; the reigning rifler, The Mexican troupe of tie Imyorial army are in a disorganized costar:ion. The French troops look to their commander for orders. PIOGIIIIODI rebsie are in Aerie*, and they BLLOUV.OO their determination to Support the em pire. General dotitution jart now prevails in those parts of the Southern Stakes which have no commu nication with the eataide world, either by w.at,r or ran. The stock market continues emphatically lifeless, the warm weather and the general da,a9 of trade lnenp&citating tri,l - ,ers and outsiders Iffin entering On stock tpecniatirns. Government loans rule very cvmp, though there was 'yesterday a slight advance 16 40s. The demand for rallroad seenrlttee le and price,s are declining. Gehl clued last night in New York at 141;7,1.. Lincoln Monuments. The vtaious plans proposed for erecting tzsivi institutions as monuments to the memory of Mr. Lmcour, possess a rare appropriateness to the character of him 'whom they arc intended to honor. His career, both public and private, was viparalleled for simple integrity and honesty of purpose, and his individual character was especially remarkable for the love of the necessary and the useful above the ornamental. For the memory of Such a man institutfians of public useful ne.qe would be the most suitable memorial, and the most appropriate method of em bodying that immortality of fame which. he to nobly achieved. On earth he worked steadily and utt ,m:rvirgly in the way of duty, careless of siirw or of that ephemeral reputation gained by Ribrerviog the popular opinion of the rei,ment. Such was his life with us; and will not his sp!rit be still operative in the rblic benciSt . E that are to bear his name Ihere is a i,lccles of poetic fitness in the int to tuake his monument a bridge a - er ihe Potomac. Did not his steacititst irliaeel, bridge that river, and . 1% not his simple, earnest integrity One of the cbiGf means, under fled, that the Ptto did n , 3 become a boundary between att:gonistic pvoples ? His statue might v. - t".l adorn a firm and solid structure span thcse waves which might still be `',, , bird by 'CLL. , foul, red tide of blood, shed iz fratricidal war, but for his viisely-bkmded F - LileneEt: cud Arengtb. ae colored people have proposed to es la'ltch an institution for the educativn of fl r race, as their monument to their bane cy al,tl 1;1i - rid. Can we not imadu e to 2'oy sad bow fondly the spirit Of the rno-;)1-..d President would lionr er such a fulfinurst of his aims and acts 9. 3 lere marbk: monuments belong tf the When hundreds of serfs, at a m ster's hi1.N . 121g., built a palace in which he might li7e, fi-aiple in which he might e' xrship, r". pyramid. where he might .be buried, 70 .in)y hoping that the walls -of stone w(Aild bestow.upon his inemory'imporish. al,le fame. But the great-structures of our- own comi ty are our , colleges for Math, r the mind, sad asylums - for the protection of the weak i±:d the outcast:, and our grt iudest works are the •vast meeting places where long limps of travel radiate far IV id wide, link ;:-tant lands, and torah Mating the old v.o•Ad-burdens of time an d sp ac e. E ven tht , se spacious -city-marts where the coca Lan daily food is displa' yed are great tri urol,hs of modern arch' itecture, and sym bols of modern civilize! don. Such ;.re the pyrare Ids of America, her g3.and monuments of brick and stone; and well ma; it Ir.; her b oast that the genius of lux trchitecture is 7 of devoted to adorning grltViztl of clear i kings, but beautifying the piano where living laborers congre gate, and Tawas' ing the burdens that have hug long and 1 .-cavily upon the heads and 'starts and ban ds of humanity. ADBAEAIS its(X)L'S was a truly repre sentative taw n ; he was the best exponent of nur corattrY and our times and his life and its fm'e. 'as well as his noble deeds, are 0111 '1)01d' an. It would be a tribute most — I'll; to his memory, if there should 15 Prlil3 up through all parts of the land lont'-ff Lctions for the disabled soldiers who tbVg) t his battles, abodes for the orphans o ie r whom his kind heart sorrowed, o ( Jte v ,l eges for the enslaved race for -,vbor n ifrought, or for that other race, the igno tant and oppressed whites of the South. . 1 -tt sitch be tho pyramids to immortalin I ' l / 4 hatle, and the mausoleums to adorn Phnetify his memory. TIIE LARGE I , IIJALBER Of applications for op.Pcial Darden received from the moat pro 14tdabers of the classes excepted by the ! ' n th` -sty Proclamation indicates that all thought s of further resistance are being It. balidotud, and that the most active and Wu 51401 18 rebels are anxious and willing . . „ ".. ....-,.." . 44' 0 .4- °Ai • - , , 4 .,... \{,4‘tl/l' NI i , 1 : :.• , -.[..; e.;4'. .- . - „.., •tfe ; •-A •%‘ 11 , , , , ....-""....." .<sl.' - .. ~".A..'• ~,. - ) . 0?- - . - T .Z. --i i - ' :.- .7 r . \‘.. •.- ' 4 , ,160 , . ' . '_„,/ ii/jll . •' - ' - 7.: -. . '''''. - ;.•';"P.- . ; C . '4 , . , ir *VZ * .r......, -, - .''''''''' • . . '''''; - .*- -;"' ommiiir-Lf.Los -, 4• - • 01" -,-.--..,,--=/,..,...---_,.._....... --_,-_,,- ,----,;--- 6,\ - • ..: ;." ' • '": - _ ::,. - -' , "01 ..1 . ..i i - ••., ....•-•"*-- ... .•.ns. -- . ~.i ._ , _______.. - • ...:• ,, ,g . t 5, "( . . , ~., , ~,...74. 1 44;•,.f..t ,-,..4' .. ... ; 'el - - T . Ili i- - ..,--..': -* *,;?..1. : - „ , t, , '. - ,:r.- , ,.... , :Witt-.4. , ,,_ ~ --- ,-.---- T r, - '''''---- • - . 1 - -- __ ...ins.,.- ___ . .-,,,, -- 1 -01 • -” . iiii, -- - - Pr - - - ,.. - .-- 1 7.,,-f".: _ - gauk.4,ahr, , --.;,-:• , ‘ =_-•-, ._ ......0 = "-..--- . - - - --'- • .., iiii3.l - - -, - ,,ove - -- . - - - ........ '-''''„_:-'.a...; --, - - ,,.: , _ ...--,..c.,..,...„. 44 „-- ~.....!--, • -..--. ',..._.-- --------- a . • t.. VOL. 8.-NO. 280 .4"2*B"ffilmmir"*"imw4L4l,2o444ol'2""z-rWI to enact the rode of the Pro,ligal Son. The President is, however, not only tempering justice with mercy, but tempering mercy with justice. It appears that many of these applications are referred to the Governors of the respective States in which their authors reside, and the final decision will often depend upon the minute details of their past and present conduct. We sup pose there are few cases in which a pardon will be permanently withheld from appli cants who have not been guilty of specially infamous conduct; but caution and vigi lance are required to avoid an improper exercise of Executive clemency. Rancxnanmon, who but a few short years ago was honored with the second office in the gift of the American people, and who was the favorite Presidential can didate of many of his countrymen, has steatbily stolen away from our shores "like a thief in the night." A. Senator from patriotic Kentucky, he had not even the poor excuse for rebellion which State Rights - doctrines gave to his colleagues. Re was guilty of a blunder as well as a double crime; and, overwhelmed by self-reproach for his folly, he hurries away from the land that once loved him, which he, in re turn, vainly endeavored to rend and. de stroy. Self-doomed to exile, though he may wander far from the country he be trayed, he can never abandon the accusing conscience that will henceforth upbraid him. IT emus to be well understood that in some of the Southern States, especially in Virginia, near Richmond, a rankling feeling of hostility is finding expression in a deter mination to persistently discourage emigra tion from the Northern States, and to en courage the aliens who land upon our soil to migrate hereafter to the South instead of the West. To carry out this scheme, Nor thern capitalists are asked extortionate and unreasonable prices for town lots and lands, while the inducements of cheap farms and easy terms are held out to Euro puma. This policy is probably recom mended, for sinister purposes, by the ticians who have so long misled the Eolith; but it is scarcely possible that the body of the people will continue to injure their true interests for the purpose of gratifying old prejudices, and forming favorable constitu encies for the false guides who have lured them on to a disastrous and destructive war. Condition of Virginia. A society has been formed in Baltimore "for the purpose of supplying such per sons in the South, in that portion of it which has heretofore been commercially connected with this city, and within easy reach of it, who, from the ravages of war, have been deprived of the necessary agri cultural and farming implements, tools, seed, and stock, to enable them to culti vate their land, and are without the means ofpurehasin a. them. It proposes to supply such as may he in that condition, and on inquiry may be deemed worthy of assist ance, with such necessary articles at or .near the cost thereof, taking the obligations of the parties to be repaid out of the pro cads of the first crop, or as soon there after as possible." The sum of $ll,OOO had been sttbsclibed when the first met ing of the society was held, on this day wetk, and it would doubtless be, largely increased. On that occasion, Mr. W. PICSECOTT SMITEr, master of transportation of the Baltimore and Oldo railway, obsyed a resolution that he should address the meeting in relation to the real condition of people in the counties of Virginia bordering on the Itappabannock, Potomac, and James rivers, and those residing in the valley. Mr. PRESCOTT SMITH said : s. Very few of our eeeple. he was Tare, have any lust idea of toe extent to glitch the war has railroad 'their Leigheorli, friends and customers througaottt the greater part of the old State of Virginia. Toe ceenties on the Lower Potomac. Ito Rapp eteetnoek ard the James, have suffered deeadfutiy, elite the SbeZfilladall Tal:ftr has teen epeoltelly etiejected to the deepest dismess. ss This great valley extends from the Potomac on the north for nearly two hundred and flee , mites toward the southwestern border of the State, and verges from twenty to fifty miles in 'width. Jr is not surpaseed in the abundance and variety of its figrieultmal products by any district hf the same omelet in the Atlantic St tee. it Wag Settiad we le hardy, influstriees emherantefrOMSeelland,frel;,..ed eee. Germany, and at the openloe el the war was In a high state of Cultivation, well populated with a peosperous and ccnteeted people. "Nearly every mile of this extensive region, with fn Writing distance of Its main tberongaeare eept daily. has beet the scene of Moody b.Attlei WWI the tames 01 Reapers Ferry, Berryville, buektr' Hal, Winchester, Kesrnstown, Front Revel, and Strasburg., and of other places much Wetter up tee valley ! as NEW Itelaltet, Stati2tlql , , and lia.r.rn,neerg, sit? DOW ' , teetered hlsterl.3 In the rseeZda 0' the are strum, le firma truce we have jest emerged. Win. cheater and vicinity has espacielly been the neat of alternate strife aad quiet, slid has been forcibly oc- - copied at least twelve olfterent times by the armies. en the one aide or the other. Throagheut the whole of this beseatifulregion dernatatlon has, prevails), fine timber destroyed, feneee vernal or throtvu Gown repeatedly, to make way for tee charge of cavalry, the movements of artillery, or the orefue,ry advance of armies, All-theperseits of egrlealeamt ate civil MO genemily have bean ropeetedly . Inter— rupted, and the products provided by the rehate tents this rich and fertile region, appreprrateri he either . cite or the otter or the .1 , 01108 2 reduelaz the people irequentiv tc act - ael want, whieh catid he - "huptdied in scanty proportion only, and w:th great C'ldcuity. .‘ Orden seem given to burn end lay waste neatly tees lenelo treat of aountree Is exeeetlek which the berme the steolt, the farm-3 Lird.a,tha math, hod ht , triy wettings worn pillaged or har.oed. I.lee stook was ivea oft; end almost every peasible mature of hard atip late hum endured. It wee ofacielly pubileeed, etly last fail, you may remember, that ever tee thoiesend.berus said mills-were hurried within ;aegis date its cone portion 01 the hexer valley aloda. s'Thte Wilolatals iisomatatlon haecaused the ',Meat est possible eletreee, and bad it not been Pi -than fe t ergee. of tine GM-Oral:heat at *'tiles in Retie eg, re ti*ns trona. the array eel:Tile tee suffering would, have ecen still more appalling. I have heard of tuery meet of extrema hare/sale and real want, aad ey - n not alone among the ordinarily poor. ..Ore protelueee gentleman_ who was in I,puldie easilverien at WineLeiter. declares that. he bas had Uwe appeals fen help by small leans ee eareaae, from neurone et the highest iaspeatabillrlind for mer wealth than could: poseibly be eupekled, even witle the amplest Senurity. The almost aster IraniiSS of Scathetn enrreney has at ,hc aims time comaebuted largely tee tee Impoverishment of these ' . oeaylm wren the ;:4 - otaht-ark eomutleeteriat came shag and ewer bit Confederate Maahy it afforded no relive, while cue statioual forces we-aid Utris:ll Vlcs what they waateu without pay, under via rule, el war to tutelet neon an eneniVe oduatry. These, e.mplicatheze and diffeenillea Were iztuon inereveM by the close eoraterlntion at the males able tomer; spreading great isteshite and dletranin their antes" +acted Leuseholes left behind. "The people of Virehint gems:ally, and G&W). clany those of the Potczcso counties and tne Shenandoah valley, are not simuniseturera or merchants. Their rosonroes are almost exchthVely erioultursl. Their only wean./ being la inepro ducts of the sell. its products ate practlrally an. available for the past four 5We, because they are sweat away, 'and they Lave not now tae means so necessary to renew them. Hence it is that your movement to supply them with stook and Imola. W. 61118, to Teal new Italic:AO. !s so iittiog IneIISIIIO, properly and promptly Carried out, cr.rtainly, in my judgment, do a vast deal towards relieving a State Of prostration and did tress unparalleled, I am sure, no the history of our comb,. The people of the valley and of Northern Vir ginia ger:or/11;y were not among those most respon bible for the origin of oar rsoeot wan They are a 7 ye:motel, lanai:fending people, and wore mainly ardent friends of the. Tinton, as long as toes. derer to be so. They all now Lave wisdom enough to ae• etIA tit situation, and honor and virtue ervangt to do their part in gOO/1 faith tower.`- sustaining the Clovereaten. lam sure they man be relied uCOi in 'ow. They want peace, and they hare tec mtant character to prove unfaithful to their pledges. They do not ask any charity of us. Very few of thorn wnula accept any. Het es it is that the provision cf your scolety is for a loan instead of a gift, IMMO the reeciti prefer to rellove taomselras of any such obligation. "Ac an Illuctratlon of the high, generous chant, ter of them Virginians, I may Mention an anecdote that was related to um by the major or one of our Latina regiments. Darin g B arks , fi .„ l ,„. B um, of the : ln February, MS, roma Inr liana soldiers were about committing depre,lations noon a farm-house near Winchester, wnan the officers of the regiment, Wincing th uss.j'r, ammo forward and obliged their men to desist, effectually proteoting the ladles and children of iihe A few weeks afterward. the fortunes of war plaoad the major and Molt Of his fellow-•cfncers ha the c an federate hands as prisoners. Stonewall Jacluon bud advanced upon Winchester and recaptured it. Colonel Ashby, the Bayard-Murat of the rebellion, airccied the notice 01 his chief to the fact the; among their prisoners were these officers who had 20 promptly protected the family Of Ore of their Mart which bad been made known to them. Toe renal Cromwell sent for the Indiallatl, and prolupthy releaead theta Without parole or oandt dm and giving them a pass through. Ws linen to rejoin our array, also insh3ted on their taking one hundred dollen in good money to pay their en. Wee,. Come to their relief. Come proUtptly and Ms. rally. Any help extended to them will be amply returned to you. not only in a pecuniary Way, nut with the same gratitude and generous aohnowleig- Wtr.t. shown by Ashby and Jackson. "Baltimore is the great market for Northern Virainia, and especially for the Valley of the She r t.doeh. It is partioulariy appropriate, tnerefore. !hat we yhOnid be the first to enjoy the honer and ve help kaitnege of bolding out the hands Of landlielli and on-native help this suffering people." A Murderer Sentenced. BcPPAL O , June 22.—Oarringtom who was eon vtoted of killing Policeman Dlii, a few months nines, was today sentenced to be hung on the ilth of august. Damage so the Erie Canal. ALIIII.Nr, Suns 22 —.Look N 0.7 on the Erio oettnii near Cohors, has siven out. It will noire WOO days to repair tae damage. WASHINGTON. WASHINGTON, Jane 3. APPOrNTMENTB, RTC The following appolntmente of Collectors of Cus toms have been made for the State of North Caro. Rea : Wm. C. Loth% at Newtown ' • John S. Tayloe, at °mock° ; Elijah IL Mills, atPlymouth ; John F. Crotidy, at Camden; Win. Oneny, at Washing ton, rod Daniel L. Russell, Jr., at Wilmington. Parker Quince has been appointed Surveyor for the laftnazood port. Angtsins Foot has been reappointed Collector at Wistasset, Maine; Victor F. Wilson, at ViAsburir, Miss, and J. Nugent Cummings, at Apalacllloola 2 FRrida. Secretary McCaw:eels has recommended to the Prestoent the appointment or IL U. Vandyke, New York, as United Rata Assistant Treasurer at that city. James-Q. Smith has been oommissionedas District Attorney tor Northern Alabama, and Wm. EL Gale and Chalks F. Holly, as Associate Justices of the Supreme Donn of Colorado. and Job Houghton az Associate Justice of the Supreme Court Of New Mexico. PRF.RDMEN'S LANDS It has been officially deolded that the Commis- Sinter of Freedman's Affairs Is orly bound to take control of such portion of the abandoned Southern lands as he may set apart for the use of 133 , 4 refu ge/5B and freedmen, and not the entire portion of the abandoned lends In that motion. TRADE ON TEE NISSISSIPPI— IMPORTANT RESTRICTION REMOVED. The recreation of twenty-five per cent. On 00%011 OD the watt side of the numnimppt rarer has just been removed. 'rhea all cotton 18 Tree, with the exception of the Internal Revenne tax rf•taro Cent& RE-ReTABLISHMENT OF SOUTHERN POSTAL ROUTES. The Postmaster General has, after oonsultation with Lieut. Gen. GRANT, concluded to seal a gen tleman of known competency to the NMI' to ix sniine into the condition of the railroads in that sscticn with a view to the resumption of the postal service. • APPLICATIONS POll SPECIAL PARDON. Many persona have come hither to proms spe. eial pardons, while others are represented by coun sel. A throng of them were at the Executive Man aton.to•day for the purpose of obtaining an inter view with the President. Hon. HesTIN F• OON• WAY WIN among them as the representative of 66• Haab ECHOLS and ST. Joule, and also of twenty. five Mordants of Richmond, who are each worth more than 820 , 000, which excludes them from the immediate benefit of the pardon proclamation. They represent that their present exclusion para. lt us their energies and prevents the application of their capital to business, and the improvement of Richmond, which 18 new So deeirable, owing to the late destruction by fire. TER BRAZIL SQUADRON. The fleet for the Brazil station, under command of Admiral Gordon, left Hampton Beads, yester day.. PERSONAL. LewisE. Parana has been appointed by the President Provisional Govercor of Texas, in another reconatruetion proclamation. The reeulallous pro vided ate the same as those for North Carolina, Mteeissippl, and Georgia. —We suppose that, by this time, the attains of hand-organs on our streets are agala familiar to our citizens. One does not need to travel far on our principal streets where large crowds can be gathered, and much Looney too, without seeing an Industrious Italian and hie petient, duiky faced, bright-eyed wife, entertaining citi zens with the airs/ of long ago. This sadden ap peararce of the wandering minstrels, following so closely-as it does on the close of the war, has ex cited some comment, and the generaljudgment is that the musicians have just returned from safe re treats in others lands—ln Oanada, perhaps—where they have been sojourning In order to avoid the draft. This opinion may not be true In all oases, but is undoubtedly !iota the majority of them. Tho remains of the late Mrs. Seward, wife of Secretary Seward, leis Washington yesterdws morn leg, at Fix o'clock, in a epoctal tram foe Auburn, N. Y., accompanied by the Secretary, Miss Fannie Seward, Maier Seward, Dr. Norris, General Han cede, General Ricketts, Mr. Guttman, trans later of the State Department, and others. Mr. Dederick Seward was very anions to ma cempaey the inmates of his mother to their last resting place, but his attending Mai clans advised Mat not to do so. Nearly ail of the heads cr the various departments, and a number of remanent Winery officers, followed the re mains tO the depot. The coffin in which the remains repose was of clack walnut, covered with black cloth, the exterior very plainly trimmed, having plain sliver handles. A plate of gelid silver upon the top of the mliin bore the simple ineeription : n Trances Adelaide Seward. Aged fiftrmine years.* Der. Virilliam Hunter, chief clerk of the State Department, is tuning Searetary of State during Ito absence of Secretary Seward. TUE DISABILITIES OF REBELS, INTENITISW OP LOY 6L VLEOINIASS WITH THE FRP SIDENT TEEDAT-TDRIE ISSIOIf THE EEi+TC.E6•IION II? INSURGENTS 'fl Trt4re. OLD ST,.TUB-If 017 " PEOSITIZEICT BURMA " H•fiVG RE OALDBD PRP 6.4NOTI'PT OP -AN 0 &TR...AN BRED. TION CAR RIEDJIT TACIT PERJURY. V r .I.ERINGTUY, June 22.—1 n view of thew:than of ta,,ver nor plerpone, In Calling the Legielatore art. gethe=, for the par...ass of removing the disability irom there who bane been engigett In the reholliere end allowing them to vote and hold Ofileo; delegation of the loyal men of the State - to-day, visited she .F!.osidont, and laid Varloits matters - of importance before him. During the interview ter letter wee submitted to the Pees - Mott, from-General Wells, who perfotrachi emit efficient sarvless• ire the . arrest or the as Meal re of President . Lincoln. Gerell,l swreits.whole Provost Marshal Grenorsitof the detenOetetintli of the roue:mei says the "-Very BCC7i attar the Tall eV'tiehmond became- aware that Many of the letatlag Secorelonests, despairing: of restating by force entrms the power of the.-431-o -vorhuient,-or the iblgkty.logie of oventS which wa.t soon to make Virgin% truly free, had detect-Ailed to attempt- by whey what, force. coati not. do. 'rhorehre it was that) soon after that even,...thise venous in coutidora3le numbota r and with: snob cchcert se to indicate- a.commongearpose, appeared ar.d took the oath of allegiance. An oleo-don of members-of the Legislature wee-Soon to beheld, awl otacra , those lithe announced themselves as can didates, were bOl/1.0 who t pet untrorady refuse!] to v.L . a mid preferred to lose their property axed be separated from their Yu:linos ratter than echttorvledge he supremacy of the Government of tho United States. Two years 3f duty 3t...1 texaie 'iris, and sues go :.e . 2.11 acquaintance. as It brought, mo titter an. oath of allcgisr.co Wilanot con nlueiva evidence at loyalty, buhthat it was merely wet tbie=a, unless aecaup;anied, by.comtr.ent con duct and byei S.M.; and no Sinprise WaS Mt wawa, in oloutmg the ve,e, it was found that thews gentle mere were elected by large majorities to represent tee:poople in a State Govert,ment, ivhoso. legal OZ• letar oe they had nersietently denied, Rudder ~Thoter t.yar throw some' of them Sad, within. one year, plotted and complied. Mitefid.G:4 08.0098P4N011 rißttlElT WASCINGTor., 'tune 22.-;-Goaernor Plerpont, Ste menage to the Virglate. Legialatuve, says : The most important eneetlon, which demands Imn.edlate nbeideratioh, is that of the restoratlon rf panticat -J*Lte to those who have heretofore ell japed tam. If the test of loyaltl Prellefibede by the *Mended State Constitution, is-enforced Is the election and qualitioatlon of Macon, it would mauler organizatlon impracticable in most of the °mattes of the State. it Is telly, he wile, to 'suppose that a State can be governed under a republics* form of ovaramout, r bon a large portion of the State-- nineteen 'twentieths of the people—are dh3ltattobleed, and mannot hold otnee.,, FORTRESS MONROE, Deaths in Imipttal Oaring the Pa‘t Fifty DAVE—Blevements Of Steamers and Re* to Prisoners FORTE/ASS MONBOR, June 21.--Deaths in the For.. tress Monroe General Hospital, from May 1 to Jose 21 : J. E. Coleman, 45th Va.; J. D. Hadley, citizen ; EOM /Imam), 127th U. S. C.; Victor Adkins, 18th Va.; Peter Dorsey, 234 U. S. I; A. Daniels, unknown ; George Tompkins, 114th U. S. C.; N. C. Woodson, 25th Ye, Bat.; W. H. Wheeler, Setb. U. S. C.; James Ward, Ist New 'York Eng.; J. H. Crawford, 4th N. C.; E. Hensel, 1221 U. S. ; 0. Wheally, :104th. do.; J. Webster, do. do.; E. Rob blnB, 184th N. Y.; Nathan Logan, citizen ; J. H., Atkins, Geo,; Wm. Bigby, 41st U. S. C.; M. H. Weliker, 14th Va ; John Lome asth U. S. O.; Henry Grant, bytth do.; A. Ample., Bth (M.; R. H. Hitch. cock, 12t1 Va.; Chas. Johnson, 27th U. S. 0.; J. Robe:two, 45th IC C.; J. Wallatle, 41st U. S. I.; OWPIIP. Downer, 7th do.; S. S. Alper, 188th Penna. ; M. Garman, rebel art.; Wm. Meadows, 6th N. C G. W. Fentress, 28th U. S. 04 W. Scrathtlabl, 115th do ; Wm. Baker, 24th Va.; N. quill, 20th U. S. C ; H. W. Rice, citizen ; R. A. McDonald, 31 N. C.; George Parker, 1224 U. S. O. R. wituams, 23,1 do ; F. N. S. Marsh, unassigned; Isaac Collins, 22d. U. S. C.; Wm. J. Breason, uoth do.; Jacob 413 d do ; Jack Greggs, 42d do.; E. T. Boyce, 11th West Va.; George Parker. 43d U. S. C.; R. Hatton, 80th U. S. C.; Thos. Clantbn, Bth do.; 11 Sherldoe, Mt do.; Wm. Dunlap, Stu do.; N. Willed 41st do.; F. Williams, 9th do.; R. A. Floyd, 29th 'xis.' T. K. Culver, 203 d Pa. Vol ; Wm. Use, :18th • U. S. 0. ; R. J. Thompson, 7th do.; L. Vfizoon, 41st do ; J. W. ;Fabian, 38th do.; Geo. Steele, 115th CM; EL Lame, 40th do'; John Pigno, 127th dl.; R. Armstrone , 109 oh do; Geo. Brown, 4tst dO.; C. Simplot:. Her do.; T. 1154519, 41st do ; J. Brady, 4141 do ; W. iiieinthe, rival N. V.; J. White, 116th U. S ; Wm. Broerlek, 109th Pa.; Wm. E. Anti's'', 1211 k Ga. Hatt.; F. Bars, citizen; Lewis Worms% do.; W. l`t omen, do.; B. Bowiln, 118th U. S. GA S. Win. d,r, 9th U. S. C.; W. W. Ward, Mat N. Y. V ol .; Chas. Thacker, 43d U.S. 0.; David Abby, sth Mass. Gay.; S. Az &aeon, 19th Wis.; Thee. Donahue, 11th Me. Vol.; J. D. Haler, Bth Me. Vol.; L. Ahrame, 158th N. T. Vol.; George Gipson, witb. Fa. CAT ; 11t917 Wicily, lot WI!. Hatt.; Roble. son, eltizen ; (3. - : W. Spelter,l4th Va. ave.; L Jona, Ist D. 0. Cm; Joshua 'Smith. nth W. Va.; Geo. Pereoho, 199th Pa:; L. Perry, 115th U. S. (..1,;, Henry Lee, 39th do.; T. Hamilton, 45th do. Strainer Norfolk, from Morehead Qity,, arrived trsday with paseengers Ina mans; also ; steamer ATaryland, from Baltinoore, and Wand for RUM , mend, with 400 rebel prisoner& United States frigate Suequehantia, and steamers Caroline Whitney, Motto, Owl Varian, osttod thlo - A, X. fig TOW, PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JUNE 23, iSli. RECONSTRUCTION IN VIRGINIA. MESSAGE OF GOY. PEIRPONT I Retrospect of the Past Course of the State, and a Horoscope of its Future. HIS OPINION OF TIEN OATS OF LOYALTY BIPBAL ADVOCADID. The 'feat "Too Much? Because it Disfranchises too Many reoples Recommendations for Future Action— Argumnts and Opinions. The Virginia Legislature reassembled at the Capitol, in Richmond, on Tuesday morning, at 10 o'clock, Lieutenant Governor Caoper noting as Preetc!ent of the Senate. N. R. F. Walker was eleoted Clerk of the Senate Without oppontton, N. P. L. Fulton Sergeant-at.armS. The following message was read irona the Governor : Girllonsn of the Senate and House of Delegates of Vit plata: Nothing bat a pressing oxlgrricy, is my opinion, could induce me to call you t:getherin Bautista nary session at the present time, when only ten day remain of the term ior Weida you were elected. I regret that I cannot preface my message with tit's set pbreate of my predeeessoth during the halcyon doss of the RepUblid, Congratulating You epos the eijoyment, by the people of our Commonwealth, or "peace and prosperity? , Our State has been made the Seat of dsmestle violence. In .he conduit a large portion of our public works have been destroyed or tendered melon Our baths are worthless to toe State; out literary tend Ye , gone. rhe business part of our beautiful capital city is in rates. Other cities and Mitres& once nourishing, have been stripped of their ornaments. Whole agricultural districts, where once were the oomiortable homes of Virgtni ens, now present a waste of desolation. Tee laud is billowed with the graves of American citizens. Tens of thonSalidil Of our own people have found an untimely end, and we everywhere beheld the habit!. merits of mourning. The forms of the violence In the nettle-field Is now exhausted. .Thanks to a merciful God, peace, blessed peace, has come agate to our beloved old Commonwealth. Doubtless It would be a blessing to the potpie of the State could each one blot from his memory every not of the past four ears; but this is impossible ; the laws of mind re. man unchanged; and it Is our duty to adapt our selves to the circumstances which surround us, and turn to advantage all that is left In our power for future happiness and prosperity. While peace and prosperity reigned, I arn Mir ded that the great MSS of 1.1.6 people Were ardently attached to the old Union and the fl tg of our fathers. Tide Lpinton Is abrindantiT proven by tee sentiment espreartd in the presidehtiel Canna of 1800, and the popular vote for member* of the State tionvention m 1801. In April, 1861, the State Uoriventlen passed what was trailed an urdinanoe of 880651011, pretend. Ma to absolve the people oh the St4te from the duties az d obliKatims of citizens of the Uoited Sinter, and thereby ttsdestroy one Dittirmality. ACTIVE PP THE LOYAL PEOPLE The executive olteera cf the Slate having joined the Insurrectionist, the loyal. people of the state were thrown upon their original rights as °Mons of the State aLO of the United States. They Called a Clenvention, composed of the members elected to the General Assembey, on the Dwell Coursaay DI May. 1851; and, in addition therein, deabled the number of delegates that each cDunty was eutitlad to in the popular branch of the Legislature The capital of the State being to the hands of the In surgents, the Convention assembled, at Wheeling, to the 11th day of June, 1861, to take 19t0 actiSidera, lion what WbS best to be done for Virginia. Among the first ordinances which they passed was one. to declare the cffices of governor, Lieutenant go• venter. and Attothey General vacant, on account Di the IneuMbente of said ',dices having tann an oath to support what they deemed a foestotn govern. meat; and the Uonvebtlen proceeded to elect offi cars to fill theft places for the term of six months. and until the loyal people of the State, by ardor of the amoral Ateembly, ehmild elect their suoceseore. The governor, thus elected, immediately no:iiied the President of the United States at the domestic violence existing in the State. To this call the Frt indent of the United States, through hie Secre tary of War. responded, both by preocistug and sending Military aid; also, expressing hfi kno lenge of the bete and purposes of the tloniedxratiOU. The Executive of the State, thus recognized, hums. diately, called together the (rebore' ItsseteDly of the State, Memo. Hunter and Macon, the Cril.ed States Sonatas from Virginia, having also Pitied in the rebellion, the Legislature thus called pro ceeded to elect two Untied States Senators talid (Leh' places. Tie Senators thus elected were ad. mitten to seats in the United States Senate. Tile Wheeling Convention made but a slogte alteration in the Genstitutlon er the State, white Was to re. e. me the number of members in each Metre or the General Assembly necessary to.oonstitute a. quorum to do buslhose. They directed' that the seat of gov , eminent should be, for the time beteg, at Wheeling. Before the State was divided, tesieegislatare passed an aCt directing the , Executive, :span the organize, lion of the new State of West Virginia, to establish the seat of government within LOO State, at such place as he might deem fit. I chose Alexandria. • [The Governor here cites the indubitable_ au thorities, legal and oenstitutioea,l, for this pro. needing.] WAS TRE NEW T.IATE GOVERNMENT PRorasLr GSN6NITIFTUD The only queatime which remaime Mr diseussion is, wee - the esmollsbment of We restored Govern ment in accortiantee With ;Mo. and the opera of CM re:publican inetientione I I reaietatethat it was. The t ataral.conilltlen of civilized man is in twee, nine government. Allegiance and prateetion are trscperably connecteo ;: and, as long as the citizen is true to his Government, the Government is bound to protect him ;. the obligation and the duty are eecipeoeal. When• the citizen &wiles or no. elects hoe obligation to support the Govererient, or the Geverement its duty to protect the citizen, the le.sdellty leaches the very fettadatiOn of 80. ciety. Met:ding* to the C'oestitatiou of oar Go vernment in its broadest snare, the citizenry right Cali Only lerisely protect:4i by the exercise of the agencies created by the Federal anti State Cleverer meats ler that purpose. Deprive a citizen. of his e, E , les to the eg emote. CrOaiekl al the State tiOracte taco t for his benefit. and /13 13 oui hail protected; pertepe all Me power Oct assert Ids rignts and re. cress tie , wrongs may be that;. The people of a State tray be divided hairier°• elfeeSoa during a re hellion, the ove ciao level. the other disloyal: The loyal are the true and faitheal-tt. tae Government; the dtsloeel - are the unfaittfel e and these fy oppo sition to tee aovernment. The legal are ertiltled to • the protection.ef the Cioverzmons; the disloyal are not entitled - to the proteet:on, bat are eutgeeta of . the puniehmenit demanded by the laws against thee° who disobey. Now. Re befbre slated, Governor Letoher was in• noeurated the drat de y of .Tatitisry, 1860;. in May,. 13e1, with rdidem eieters irnewn tm tee crensteemelen and laws of the State who could succeed hide and a rally air the of the State, civil mod milt enteged in a rebellious War agalnet the , legal ' people of the Sate and or the Retted States. • the third section or the sixth artiste- of tee °east'. tuna/ of the United States. it lepmvided that e all cantle* and judicial ofneers, both of the United States ar d of the several Statee, shall be mined by oath. or allir3l,britel to support tote Ooristitatrlon." Whrre rnioorr were &eaten aid flealititid !leder the ihmseltutrore of the 'United States and the cleastitii• Von anti laws of intaipia, reeogbizing the thmell tatien of the Welted States as the eepreate low of the land. it tea legitimate Condemn thet whoa tdeBo flpeO7B, thus °Dieted and qualified, natt.their elleglauee and eought So use the power teenage owed to entelect the loyal people. with their pro ',peaty In the State, to allegiance to, and the nen of, a foreign Government, their offixes became 'meant. In cur De clet alien of Independence, It is stated, in ' relation to George the- rhird 'gilt b.= tendloated government bore by declaring 129 out of hie prattle liee and vagina war ayeitiat its." John Letcher declared the loyal people of the State out of his protection. and waged war against them, Tao • erection et the e Stata of West Virginia within the bounds of the old State was an act growing oat of the domestic violence inaugurated is that State. It passed through the forms of legislation prescribed . in the Conetitution of the United Stater for the formation Of a new State, and is now one of the States ref this Union. THE INSTITUTION OP SLAVERY. At the ocrumencement of the war, neither the Go" vernmebt nor the people of the United States con. tropiatod any interferenCe with the institution of slavery ; but in the progress of events the senti ments Of the people underwent a change, and the President notilled the people of the Southern States that mires they returned to their allegiance within sloe hundred days he would (Me a proclamation matelpating their slaver. Yen know the result. The proi3lamatton was Is m.td. Negro troops were put let,, the fi eld by the Federal Government. By bravery In battle they vindicated their manhood, and dissipated the proj oCices against them on both. aides. This was fully mant(ested by acts of repro. tentative bodies at 'Washiligtdh and Richmond. These ante settle the statue 'of the African race in the United States for alt time. The whole- nation was represented by two 6 , llllmi—one representing freedom, the other the idea that slavery was a divine institution ; each contending for national existence; etch. In the darkest hour of its peril, called upon the slave to bare hit arm and expose his breast to the ihaits of death; each offered freedom as the greatest Inducement to heroic action. Thus Slavery Opined Of by the logical events of war. OrniDUCT OS THR SLAVIN The menet 01 the American slave within the Confederate lines dining the putiod through whieh we have juat packed to one of the remarkable fee ttu‘s of story. Not on Innate° of insurrection agatra their masters occurred during the Strife, though fully Informed of the proalatuation of free dom, and areently deelying it ; they were subordi nate and obedient to their masters- Their faith was GOd : Matt at the tied h t ..e, they e t ee d e tut end sow the ealvatlon or the LAtit. THE 41,33orxrrorr OB aLwrignie After the listing of the emancipation proclama tion by the President of the United States, the army tinder his command was charged to sec that It was obeyed. it was the ears 04 the eillaers of the restored government of Virginia, under its constitution and laws, to enforce the slave laws of the State. This brought them in conflict with the United States an truants& It was acknowledged by all that if the Government of the illnited States succeeded in sate pressing the rebellion the institution or slavery was destroyed. 't he validity of the restored government and its success depended upon the shame of the United States. As the sots of the rebellion and the division or the State rendered necessary a revision of the constitution of the State, it was deemed right that slavery be abolished by comititutionol . pier/. MM. The Legislature which assembled at Alexan dtle, on the first toloncay of LeComber. 1863 , called a convention, which assembled there 'on the 13th day of February, 1864, to revise the State constitu tion. That convention made some alterations in the organic laws of the State. The eunititution, as thus emended, abolished slavery and involuntary servi tude in the State forever, coniept for crime. It prO• Tibia( the Legislature from Fussing- any act contra vening this In-:vision HISEVITO OF TlLit STATE 1D117031.011r In consideration of the division Of the State, the number of judges of the Supreme Court is reduced to three. Tile j,urirciary of the State remains un changed, except In the appointment of the judges tees are now nominated by the Executive and ooze firmed by tie Legislature. Tee time of residence fer voters Is roomed to one year ; persons who held seats to the Confoderfite Congress, or trader. the Confederate Government, members of the rani,/ 'egislature, aad persons holding office, civil or military. ender what ie known as the rebel.govern lIIOEIt of Vtegmla, except county officers, are dis. franchtSed. AlBO, persona uttering to, vote are re. aut , ei i Da to tom as oath to suptoopt the tionatita. ten Of the United States, and the laws made. in pursuance thereof, as the supremo law of the land; alto, to uphold and support the restored .goeeris Meat of Virgieta, estatiiished, by the convention which assembled at Wheelbg on the 11th day of June, 1801, and that the person oderlog to vote has not willingly aired the imbibition isteee the bit of January, lEest. The Legislature has* autaerity to restore persuise disfranehlsed by these provisions, from time to time, as it may deem best. Ett the last eschea t tt remoind dleablinT 4QIA ed Mom who were called out by the rebel State anthority in eel, and who had not gone into the rebe t attar after they were cisbanded. Thns. State sovereignty the status of the African race—the armed refilit. ,anee to the Government of the United States—are disposed of; and we have arrived at the Important point of the restoration of our State to all Its termer relations In the Union, Tate is a delicate task:, and ore that demands great wisdom and prudence. Slice the the restoration of the se‘t of Govern. Merit to this city, I have conversed with intelligent gentleinen of every abade of political opinion, and floin every portion of the Commonwealth. Oar in tomtits', ties been of the moat frank and unreserved character, and I have been moat favorablyimpressed with the earrescness and sineerity of their toed Ire tentitna ; end I am ConVinoed that, if the test of loyalty prescribed by our tionadtatlon is enforced in the election and qualification of officers. It would render organization luipraotioable In most of the counties of the State. It is folly to °appose that a - State can be governed under a republican form of geremlinent wherein a large portion of the State, nineteen-twentieth,. of the people, are disfranchised and Minot hold Office But, lOrtunately, by the terms of the Constitution, the General Assetablr lips control of this subject. The restricting clauses t , f the Constitution were devised in time of war. But we have passed through this great and terrific cot ikot, waged on both sides with a skill and yard. Dimity seldom equalled. Men accept the facts die veloped by the logic of the past four years, declare tt at they have taken the oath of allegiance to the Government of 'the United States without mental teservation, and Intend to be, and remain, loyal to *the Government of their fathers. It would not be In accordance with the spirit of that noble Anglo -Seem. race from which we boast our common origin, ~ to ninth a fallen brother, or impose upon hire Mg terms alter a fair surrender. Tuerefore, At it were even practicable to organize the oonnties ,ender the disqualifling clauses of the ConstitattOn, should still earnestly recommend their repeal We must not lose sight of the great fact. that whlist man is a stolal and religlonsbelng,ho w is, if a e t t w the e 'same time, a lighting animal; hates, h CfIDD end and encourage the milder anti better pro. vensities of his nature, we Must not deal too harshly with the other, lest we defeat the objects of wise legislation, and degrade where we would elevate and ennoble. RIZOOOMEDSZATIONS. All admit that a person disloyal to the Govern. Vent which gives him protection should not be at lea eft to vote or Mid office under that Govern - merit ; hence the suggestion of an oath of loyalty. I would recommend tbe amnesty oath presorfoscl by the Pre Wept of the United States, or one of a similar ens teeter, as that to be substituted for the one required by the Cotstnutlon as it now stands. It is of the utmost Importance that the county officers shall be elected without delay ; the public welfare demands, aid the peopleyesire, that law, and order shall be restored as Speedily as possible, teat they may coa !WM to the new State of affairs and address them. selves to the grateful task of repairing their broken tortunes, restoring the watts places, and developing the great rest Woes of our Commonwealth; eels Id to be accomplished nyder a new system of labor created by the war. We have been taught br hard experience that our old system contained a fatal ale. meet of weakness ; the new system contains tme element/I of strength which proved so potential in the late conflict. The result will be a homogeneous nation inseparably bound together by commercial. social. and political ties all venerating the name of Washington, and maintaining the flag that is known -Red respected in every land and on every sea, . The subject of negro suffrage is exciting great in. West at present all over the country ; but as neither Sou nor I have control over that subjoot, it Will, Of course, not be subject of your dettbortie MD& Weald recommend the passage of an apt to legalize the marriage of persons of color ; and, for my views on the subject , I refer you to my last mea sage. The tax assessed by the last Ltalsiature Was ten cents on the hundred dollars' worth of el-slide property. I do not think twat will be soffloient to Betray the mutant expenses of the Government, am) I would therefore recommend that it be in creased to fifteen canto. In the present destitute cobilitlen of the State, I do not think the people are at le to pay the texts necessary to matt any portion of the Inroroot Ono on the public debt. I ben leave to renew tile suggestions of my last message in re gard to the necesSity and propriety o[ Inorrootog the legal rate of interest. I would advise seven and three-tenths par cent. as the best rate of legal interact en contracts hereafter made. I would alto advise that you fix a day for holding elections for members of the General Asset:oo, in counties In which elections have not oeen held, at (Vior members of Coogress. A doubt has arisen, whether, under the °Destitution, the throat and swim Courts can be organized without ad.ll. thane' lesistatice. Yon will take thili subject into ccunevritthin. I hops i that harmony will pervade your ousels, and that the bletelLg tf a morainal Clod may as curcpany your worn and red upon our State and country. F. H. PRIIIPONT. 'ln the afternoon session, Mr. Powell, of•Aceoznan, reported the following - bill net preseribing meows by which persons who titte b.3en disfranchised by the third article of the ConstitatiOn inay be re stored to the rights of voters. In the Honey, Mr. Johnson, of Alexandria, offered pint resolutions in relation to the restoration to the rights of voters of persons disfranchised by the third Article Of the Vonstitution. EXPLOSION OF A TUG AT CHICAGO. mr, ENGINEER 'KILLED. The molt terrific steam-tug explosion ever known in Chicago, cocorred on Monday. A tug, called the lif. Fannie Spofford, Claptain Ogden. having in tow the schooner fdaroppit, while eolhing t rwn the Vldeago and when nearly eppoel the luisiber vi. , rket, on the wtit ale Of .11..elio.atrect .111 - lile.ileinud. off_ ateana_aaskaiacked _ her course for the purpose of shortening tee flues by whielithe schooner was being towed. The cap• twin and three of the hands (fireman and two wheelr.usen) were standing en the stern of she tug busily engaged in shortening and making fast the line, and the engineer wee near the engine. 'Pals was pr...cirely at SeVen Initiates pasti2PMonday, anal at this hour were heard the terrible sounds and le.it, the fearful shooks ennead by the explosion of the htpafford. The Captain was lifted up into the air as 4 thrown on board the schooner In tow of the tug. a Andante of thirty Suet. The wheaten:ion and firemen were likewise thrown toward the galloon. er an* were caught. net alio, in her hew , gear. Strange to relate, neither of them was Injured, with the exeeption of the fireman, who received a flesh wound below the knee. The enginse; Alex. once, reoEfron, was last seen by the fireman, at a great height is the air, dirootts over the tug, slaws when, nothing has been seen or heard of him. It is believed be was instatitla killed. . . The Sisdhirri is a completes wreak ; she is literally torn in *heeds. A mate of her boiler, to Vfneh is attached the firtelloX, fitftleteentle t eina other ap paratus, anogether Weighing three tuna, wag throws en., the air n distance of at least one hundred feet, then desmieleg a semicircle. it passed over a five. story brick belleing, anti landed in thereof of atom. story brick building, through which. It ervihed, log to the dist door. where it loomed. Although the InaeS of troll fell directly over the rooms to weal% families were living. and shattered the !ben and walls completely, snapping large beams as if they were straws, not one of rite Inmates were hurt. !lair esoape wee zuar7ell:oe. The bolter door, weighing 814 , y eight pounds, was threat! a dinar:toe of tines hundred Met into a. feed store. The Wod broke through the :oaf, and, falling, on the ground floor, *washed the tWo.isch planking and broke a teenoy.ten joist, then buried Itself In the cellar, A man, nsuied Farrell Keegan, was weighing oats within a few finebea of where the door fell, and had a very narrow escape. An iron wrench, seven feet leog, weighing twat:tit-three pounds, mesed over the brick bloeks fronting the river, continuing in its flight across South Water mreet, the Meek of buildings betwom the let. ler and Lake street, across Lake street, until its progress was .errested by striking the upper story, near the roof of Ofu. 035 Lake street, after whirl, It kneaded, striking On the Wooden sidewalk, where it left its traces. Another portion of tee wreck went still farther, and It landed to the alley In the rear oi Lake street, between Nos. 230 and 200. The ground adjacent to the scene of the exploalee was strewn with pieces of the wreck, and the river was covered with the debris. The window penes in the vicinity suffered severely, ems of the streets and SidevtalkS being raved with the broken glass. The M Fanny Spafferti was built in Buffalo, two Sears ago. She was awned by Spatford tr teeaudler, Of Ultimo, and was vetoed at 115,000. No insu rance. she was named after the dauguter of one of the crenate, John F. Spalford,Elq. Her boiler was five fett in intimater, and twelve feat long. It was considered OM of the strongest and safest in use. TM wreck, all that is remain. leg, was to have been raised on Tuesday. Immediately after the explosion a young man named William Menden stripped off his clothing anti plunged into the water, swain vigorously to to the amok, dove down, and did not reappear for a remarkably long time. The crowd on the dock waned his reappearance with mock anxiety. lie nnaily came up, breathed, and again dived beneath the waters. Reappearing, he swam ashore. lie said that his brother, Alexander Mention, was the Un fortunate engineer, and that he must find his body. lie reported that eveni the cloths In the °Shia were gene—that no nett Of the tug remained torte*!. It was soon ascertaified,herrever,that nix relative was the me inter of another tug, and was then nate, gating the Mirage river, sieve and well. The cause of the explosion is accounted for as fa . lows : Ii is well known that When in motion the water in the boiler's of steam craft rises and falls correspondingly when they stop. In this case the water had probably fallen low In the boiler during tt a temporary atop for the purpose of tanking steam middens to draw the Mumps. off the bar. The tug starting off suddenly, the water rose In the boiler very rapidly, coming in contact with the heated pipes that had been out of water. Censer timely steam was generated very rapidly—not pure steam, but gases arising from the greasy water of the filthy river. Tee boiler of the tug was thus filled instantly with an mesterei volume of prate sort', and the Mistretta explosion we have deseribed was the result. Navigators of steam Orate Oa the Oblate° river have long felt afraid to use the filthy water thrortgli which they are obliged to Steam their voeseiS, knowing that it contains too mneh reed unfree' matter to be fit for use in tee genera. Sion Msteem. At the moment of the explosion the, Board of Trude of ooloago,was in session. Teenelse sounded like the falling of the building, anti the merchants luttitti into the streets be ascertain the cause. The ereatest excitement prevailed everywhere through out the nelghberltood ef the accident. -- Antos ow El. Texan PAPNE...;ffe.Went into se. defBMll and the formation of the Confederacy from sn honest Conviction of duty. Wo stood by the Om. f.:Ceraey as .11.eg as It existed, and...sustained it with aII the vial and ability we wore possessed of. It is cruawd, and with it are unshed.. our lenteadhered• to political views, 'We have now no p antics, save alone the safety and Seenrlw of thesoolety In whtoh we live. To that safety and security we are willing to give all our 011613Z105, Sate rights, State sovereignty, and all that theory of 'United States Government are now eXt"lea• The auestiOn of the Yeservoil rigida of Staies has 'lan settled by the eternerbitrament of arm/. That arbitrament Is, whether right, or wrong. decisive. II ends the cat' ovor9y, We, who are defeated, trtu , t laid to the decision, because weenie do nothing else. We must entertain rio private enmities against the Federal Government, because they will lead us Into treason. W o believe it the part of true manliness to yield when hope is gone, as much as to struggle on while there Is a chance of stioceet We confess to no wrong ooir.g in the poet, and only yield when to prolong the sti uggie would necessitate wrong doing, present ma. tuture.--Houaton. TeFews.,,vh,, M a y 27. EltlTl7o3Eill'inblre Tax/oyes Onsys.t.woodA..--- Greet numbers of refugeee are daily passiog through this city on the road to their homes in central and tower Georgia. Arstving at Cartersville, ninety one ratios from Cale city, and the present termieure of the road, they are still nearly fifty miles frOlZ, Atlanta 812 a 110 =eau, of getting there. Very few, of them have any provisions wilts them, and as tiroa is nothing to be obtained at that point, they are either compelled to starve or forced to call up's& the Government for melons. The rack and OTONSA at re turning refugees has become so troublesome that a States officer at Certeris stile has sent us the following telegram, to try tend have It stopped: • "ClAwrar.evimun, Jiwunle, 1365. I, Editor Vfieflannova Gosntie: "NOVA notify refues who are unable to lama private conveyances, that there are mi faollitiwi at this place for carrying them through to Atlanta, and will not be for two weeks ; neither can they ob• min shelter, or anything but tril twieruMent rations at this piece. They will save themselves much suffer ing by remaining where tha.,me until the railroad is Completed, - W. Commas, tn 4 4. 14e 1 1 1 , " ..chaitonolga Gazeffs. MEXICO. CAPTURE OF CAMARGO BY TSB IMPERIAL TROOPS. Prominent Rebels kid to be Determined to "Physically Support" the Empire. THAT INSTITUTION, NEVERTHELESS, RE- PLIISENTED AS WANING. Ifaw OBLUAIcu4 June 19:—The latest information from Mexico sass that the Empire Is waning fait. The Emperor Maximilian is a mere puppet in the hands of Marshal !butane. The Empress displace more firmness and decision of character than her husband, and exerts great control over him. She Is the real ruler of Mexico. The foreign and Mexi can troops•are bordering on disorganiz Won. The French are the only-reliable troops, and they look to Basalne for orders. The Mexican troops will rebel on the first opportunity. NHW ORTAnetosi Mane 20. - -Adrioes from Northern Ms xioo furnish the following fasts!. °emerge, Rer a brief resistance, was taken by Gen. Laprey. The Imperialists also captured' the notorious (lap tain Bedell. formerly of the rebel service: He is to be tried as a spy. Prominent influential rebels, as they call themselves, and whe are denominated by the Mexicans "American-Mexican resident , ," who hays sought that country as an asylum for prase. tion from Yankee rule, declare they will give phy. ilcal Support to the Empire, and that they are de termined to live under the flag from which they tied. Their object In making their homes la Mexico Is peace and Stahl/Sly: They will be to Mexico what they were to the Oonfederaoy. The whole tenor of the news places the " Mathatt-Mnitlall." Witte position of the Wandering Sew—without home or abiding place. JUT ORTRD VICTORY OP - THE IMPRRTALIBTB —lnformation hag lenw Tnitir, June 22.—The Herald has. received th u e n to o l w ler v g it e l pzi T a c i x d a e s a , p s at a a:: ls. been received at the headquarters of General Mop", at platemoras, that an engagement lately took place between the Imperialists and General Ne grete, commanding the Liberals; in which the latter Was totally defeated, losing 700- killed and 2,000 pri goners, together with arms and manitlone. Geoeral Negrete is reported to have been taken a prlsoner. Canvatia Blanco is reported to have been cap tured and shot. Genera/ Jackson's command of colored troops had reached Texas safely, and been disembarked. THE • SOUTHWEST, Reported Arrest of Beauregard and Go- vernor Clark, of Mississippi. SENTIMENT OF THE PEOPLE OF LOIJISIETA.--- TEEIR PARISH MEETINGS. TEN INDIAN PINT. AT NEW ORLIIANS-IMPORTANT ORDERS CONCNENING NSIV OELVANS, June 12.—1 t Is reported that Gen• eral Beauregard has been arrested and taken to •Vi ashinaton. • A very large and enthusiastic meeting wee held ' on Saturday night, for the purpose of welcoming home and endorsing Governor Childs' action In ro moving State and pity officials. All branches of trade are active elan the restrio• tiots on products have been removed. Groat destitution prevails in the Interior of the Southern States, where there are no Oomosuutos- Bora by water or Tall. Naw OaLatta% June 21.—The different parish organizations of Louisiana express about the fol 10Wir g sentiments: The strife has closed; revolu tien has failed, and there mutt be no attempt at renewal of opposition to the United States, and that all must accept the era in good faith and Stand by the Government. They reprobate guerilla war- fare, and say that acts against individuals holding political opinions different from themselves must cease ; that geed-feeling should be Immediately ree stored, and that they must stand by and support the CenstitutiOn and laws of the United States and Louisiana, and in favor of punishing any infraction thereof ---GantValo--aeretlling Cotton, Sao. Mom eartaaa* large, end amount offering small. Governor Clark, of lilleclealppl, passed through Mobile, on the Rh, on his way to Washington. The rebel General Albert Pike has arrived here. Judge Kellegg, the newly-appointed oolizetor of this port, has arrived. Gemmel Herron, commanding at Shreveport, has issued important orders. returning freedmen to their rorraer mestere, until the growing crops ere gathered, which will prevent destitution and suffering With both classes. Deaeits contracts for pay and support are required for the balance of the season. No private steamers have yet left for Texas. The transports am crowded with rettuiiing prisoners. CALIFORNIA. Release Of Pricenera—Pireln San Fut.=moo, June 10.—Forty-one prlBoo9ll who were turned over to the United Stites District Court by General McDowell, have been released on taking the oath or alleglanee. They were charged with treasonable utterances, generally with re jcioing in the aseaesination of the late Prerident Iducoln. A Ire at Placorrille, to-day, consumed about 111D,GOO worth of property , . A. Loam' FOS THU MEXICAN HEPIIIILIO—MANY .PIEBS—DISCoperriNe Op GOLD IN COLUMBIA— ELECTION IN WASHINGTON TERRITORY—INDIAN OIITHAGES IN ARIZONA—TRIG RUSSIAN 'MLR GUATIL. SAN FRANCISCO, June 11.—A fire at Sonora to day destroyed property valued at $9,000. The agents of the Itlextcan Republic, have put a loan upon the market for ten millions of dollars. The week ellisca quietly in commercial circles. Va trade In general merchandise has been In am produce market the tendency 18 for a lower range. The prospeets of an early supply or new wheat is Creating a desire among holders to roans. Capital is abundant, and the rates of intereat_have a lower tendency. The steamer COnstitation sailed to-day for Pane ma with no passengers and $1 : 520,000 in troa,sare, of which $70,000 pas consigned to Mew York. San FISAI4OIBCO, June 19.—A. fire In this city lest evening, at the front of Market street, between California and Sacramento streets, destroyed t wen td,..§ee buildings, causing a loss or sloopo. Many families were rendered homeless. The town of Brown's Valley, in Yuba county, has been almost entirely destroyed by the. The steamer Sierra Nevada, from Portland and Victoria, brings $228,400 in gold, and favorable nows from the mines. New gold discoveries in Upper 00Nimble am re ported. The people of Victoria have been deceived by bogus telegrams from New Westminster, desorib fog the execution of Jefferson Davis and Breekin rtsge for treaSOn, and the papers comment on it at length. The election in Wallington Territory resulted in the mecca of Denny, the Union candidate for Con gressional aelegate. The last election was curried by the Democracy. Later advises from Arizona report more outrages by the Apaches. The troops from California would soon be on their track. A. despatch from New Westminister, British Co* Jumble, states that poles for three hundred! miles of the Russian telegraph Due were in the ground. Arrived on the 17th, ship Revere, from ALonalma. Cleared 19th, ship Favorite, fur Boston. THE RED RIVER DISASTER. The 'Particulars of the Drowsing of TWO klundred Confederate Noldiere. From the Chicago. Tribune, of the 20th, we copy the following particulars of the disaster, already announced brietly ?ty.telegraph "Accounts by the Btavivora of the late Steamboat disaster 01l Red Myer agree 1n their sensations on the officers Of tlitiltist transport: foe their criminal ir.difforence.. ^ Be aoeonnto say that the Kea tacky, will& appears to have been an old been craft had, shortly after leaving Shreveport , been rua into the river bank with greanforoe, but nothing se. rime was apprehended from,* and all retired to sleep. The passengers on indent, chiefly tionlederate soldiers Ucri",Missonri, wawa lying about the boat and In the forward cabin on the floor soundly asleep, when, about 930 P. M. t was disoovored that the, boat had two and whalf reel of water in hisr hold, No alarm was given at first, and attempts ware made to run Lk; tonere, eat...aa the boat proved unan,w. sgrable, this failed. E. stern line Was then got oat and fast:alba to the stps, but not In tine to do any good, for the boat strung out into mid river, where the current WaB Strong and the water deep, and the bow was Ranted under.. The boat careened otter on Its 81d9, and slowly at first, and then suddenly, went dcw3, and only a,/out twenty, feet of the ladled' cabin. left' oat of water. " This, too,, stand ing, at an IRO - elation so nearly pospendma lar.. that it asps with treat, dlfficelts that aminno could climb out. It, is likely tent the boat broke in the middle. as this texas and hurricane deck, forward, rentain out of water, as well instils, bell, which was kept ?liming alterbba vessel saak until the Aoasnor, Ohar,l2 came to their resod. For tame /season, yet to be explained, the eoldiers were perziltied to remain asleep, In fancied wowrity, rity, whila the boat rated with water and waseink ing, ant Elms nearly 101,of thorn wereearried under. Soma who were onlaide, or owed easily eattloate tbenossives, rose to the surface:lnd sivamoat. Some ciambsred up the sides and dear of the boat, and tin* csoapedi bat about Iv 6 hundred Of thorn were undoubtedly lost. As the boat careened, a groat nth took place to the hurricane 426 E. Many of the passengers were tn their berths, and were saved almost wholly destitute 01 clothing. A large number were Caught between desks and crowned. Ana ladles generally sacoaadol in gain lag toe barrioane deck, and were all mod, amps Obildros were lOW Some of the passengers gained the nearest bank, and others retained the opposite in sway. To render the (Neuter more appall tag, the texas took are after the Mather had lauded. 'it was suppoted that the coal oil lamps were upset by the shook, and that their inflammable contents wore spilled upon the beds. This flee was forts betel, stasmahed, otherwith a vefy large number woad have beep to lOWA N* UM Qi kV& FOUR CENTS. STATE ITEMS. Some two tactics ago, Mr. Saoob Holblerair Dea sy township, Westmoreland, received smuts Stough maga at the hands or his father•in law and huller in•law. It appears he lives in the raw) house vitt& his lather. bslaw. While at dinner his brothetdb law insulted him. Mr. cautioned him, but the brother•in•law perafeted; M. H. repaired to the yard to administer a reprimand to him, when, the father-in-law assisted the 11619 i CM) then took up a IrWitgletlee and struck Kr. H. over the head, smash• log in his Skull. It was believed Mr. H, cannot Survive. The Safe In tho Berkshire Savings' Bank, at. Pittsfield, was blown open on Sunday niernino: by two burglare. Two watchmen heard the molester', but before assistance was procured the' rogues fled. Ono of diem was captured, atter a sharp fight, by the valorous conductor of the night express twain) and tne money taken, whisk was only a small amount, was recovered. The burgars put In more powder than they intended, and not only blew - toe safe to fragments and brake the windows of the building, but startled half the village from slumber. —The snryeyots of the proposed route of the Southern Pennsylvania Railroad are now in Felton county, and at last accounts had reached a point just beyond liartigenville. The work has been taken bold of In good earnest, and there Is every reason to believe that the road will be speedily put under contract. -- From the May number Of the Pennsylvania School Jouroolvteloant that the' entire number of soldiere , orphans admitted to the various schools Of Ills State, is 623. So far fourteen academies and high schools, in different parts of the State, have been selected by the State Superintendent for their reception, By a mtst Sensible amendment to the school law of Stale, passed last winter, the mintmtort age for children to be adioltted to the common schools was ohanged from five t 4 4,,V years. Gemara( Alexazder VOA Safil3ll66l l l3lll3ig, who, with his troops, was the first to enter Mar/oaten, as at present on a visit to Pittsburg. -The Adams County Agricultural Society has resolved to hold a. fair at Bendersvlite the coming autumn. -- The National Ammotalon of Teaohera will hold krceetlng In Harrisburg on tho Bth, 9th, and 10511 of rho owning August. Cherrlet to Erintingdon are now salting at ten cents a quart. -The A.merleat. Hotel, la Luzern°, Is being renovated and enlarged. Tomatoes are selling at Harrisburg for seventy. five cents a dozen. HOME ITEMS. —The "Wooden Spoon Presentation" at Yale College took place on Tuesday evening, and ter• minuted, as usual, with the lieremony of plant+ log the memorial ivy. The ivy of IEO4 had a peen• liar history. The original shoot, taken from Nei. rote Abbey, was presented by Sir-Walter Soon to Washington Irving ; Mr. Irving gave a clip to the BOD. Gideon Welles, and MS eon Edgar, a member '64, presented it to the class; thus The vine that nisiAles Melrose.' perpetuates Itself In America about the 'library walla of Yale, A character of some note died in Castilla, Maine, recently, in the person of .Tohn...Taaksoa, a native of Africa, supposed to be a hundred years eld. He was the son of a chief, and the insignia of his lineage was indellibly tattooed upon his body. He was kidnapped when a boy, served in slavery many )ears in Brazil, and at last, half a century ego, escaped to the United states. He has lived many years In QOM°, and was considered an esti. mable citizen. Rarely, if over, have we, Ina single bane, seen Such a multitude of local horrors as is Comprised in the columns of the Boston Jouretal of Tuesday. The one most terrible is the usurd6r or the two children in Roxbury. The other events are a probable aui• clde of a prominent citizen, the accidental shooting of a little girl in Kneeland place, a fatal sedident on the Broadway horbe.rallroad in Fadorat street, and the sudden death or a painter on Washington street. • . A large and oleganthotel late be erected in the Central Park, New York, in planet the little stone restaurant known as the Casino, whlelt is bade. quate to accommodate the countless thousands that throng the Palk every day. The new hotol will be without sleeping rooms, and used exclusively as a hoofs or rarresiument. It will be kept under the stringent rules of the Park. The Richmond Whig states that white servants and porters are rapidly taking the placoil of Weeks in that pity. The same is the ease with the drivers of hacks and other vehicles, while at balls and par ties German musioleas have entirely superseded the colere d men. This is sometulog new in Richmond, but it shows there has been a social as well as politi- cal revolution in the South. A.Snome the ierenty.one cadeta constituting the ei.ez yiatei.ess. now ttndufgailig the final CX3OIIIIII - at West Point, are noon of poi. "Ale, of the re gular army ; a son of Gen. Mitohell, the deceased astronomer; a grandson of Lewis gain ; a grandson of Geo. Totten, and a brother of Major , R4libous, who yes in President Lincoln's box on the night of the murder. -- The entwine of Clay county, Illinois, have made formal dimplatut to the Governor that the county Is overrun with rebel soldiers and aieloyai citizens, who insult and even assault the Union people ; wear butternut nnifinms, and display flaunting rebel badges. The Governor Mares them the laws shall be enforced, and any preen making himself in any way liable will be punlshed to the letter. A. writer says that the chief pleasure dsrlved by the Bostonians at a musical entertainment is ori• Minn, and he ventures the statement that "whoa they go to heaven they will declare-that same of the hares are out of tune -; that one of the angels taloa libeitieß with the cod/poen text, and that another singe flat. They will aISO deplore the nbeenoeot the great organ.o —lt IS reported that the Wht Deportment hal designated Rack Island lathe grand department at which shalt be collected and stored all artillery, arms, ordnance, and other trophies-captured during the war by Northwestern troops. The prison, bar- Oohs, storehouses, eta• are to be vacated he 000 n es possible, and at once made arade - oie for new uses.. —:The Speaker of the Connecticut Rouse of Re. presentatives now uses a gavel which wee formerly used by Hunter, while president of the rebel Senate at Richmond. It was sent to Governer Stroking- • ham from the adjutant of one of the Gonneerlant regiments, who scoured it at the time the city was taken. . The editor of the Chattanooga Gazette visited the ruins where the fire occurred in that place a few days ego, and saw boys trying to knook. the Idngs out of the shells lying near the late flee, and clitt Mind the powder out on the hot bricks. He did not stop to remonstrate with them. • Memorial windows of stained gl6ft9 are to he placed in the chapel of Harvard Unirersity, having the names of those of the Alumni and utthergrade, eta who have fallen In the struggle. An obelisk is to be erected at Williams College, to the memory of its dead heroes. In Trov they are Inaugurating a new style of pavement, with alternate lines of flagstone, two ieet wide and six Inettee thiCk, divided from each otter by three feet of cobblestones. The wheels run on the former—the horses travel on the latter. -- It has been decided by the Masonic authorities that the division of Virginia is oonstitutional, and that the lodges in Western Virginia aro absolved from the Jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of old Virginia. -- The house now owned and °coupled by the poet Longfellow; at Cambridge, formerly belonged to the ettate of a tory, and was ecniiscated by the Legis /ature of Pleasaohusotts during the ReVolo.thilibry War. —Mr. Sherretall, of New York, the Manager or. the fund collecting for Mts. Lincoln, iiiiitOUEes that about $lO,OOO has already been subserlbod, and imp the plan will not be abandoned until $lOO,OOl has been secured, Good aulhorWsaye that General Grant will make quite a tour In July, and that for the first time. In his life he willyisit the New _England States. A novel racci,.of a horse matched against a steam carriage,, woe. announced to take plaint at New Haven, on 'Tuesday, for a purse of $l,OOO. —ln Hincinnatiu negro named George Steven- son disposed of ,a rival In the affections of a colored woman by ohoppina off his head with a hatoltet. Tbirty'perseng are now confined at the provost prison at San Vranoleco for using expressing or joy at the autagspuitton of President Lincoln. The Chicago Sanitary Fair formally Wased on Tuesday. The reOelpte tip to Saturday aJst were $235,010.., -- A Marionette Theatre PP has been. opened in New York. Th,e stage is only a hundroth limbos by seventy•five. -- The Petersburg Express appearcl. on Monday in an enlarged form, and an entirely new dress. A new P2Pgr, called the Daily Caii.stia, has heSA started in Augusta, Georgia, -- A liebrom free sChool haa been opened in New Cield . 44l been discovered nett& Rutland, "Ve.?.. 1 ,.., ,mont. FOREIGN ITEMS. CARA occasion of the last.trip to this onset,' -of theldeamer Gambia from ,Ckuaenstown, it 1.0 re. pOrted,th at a young lady a othlgh family ands Great respeotability" was oaptuved On the , her father's land•agent. She vas eloping wltt4r., man named Fleming. The lady, whose name Swam to be Moore, went home quietly with the amd, and the loving swain Se c A lie4y, GOMM on th..oeuoiry. —Rumors from Were are menticVd in the London papers that east Lai' pent, on Ma night of his arrival, perambulated the streets, In disguise. As a counteraction La hie Majoatytivigilange the loud authoritive Ilea seven hundred , beggea'S Ftt , into prieOth so that t tho Emperor simnil not Witapa the state of menasolty so genarailY Prcenientv It has been Mild that the. armlllaa GtvVere. Meet tette& to make the Prll.X> de Joinvilie, who is the brotherin-law of the Roiporor of Bra4ll, Em peror of the State of La Plbi44. As he is, also the uncle of this Emperor of Dipsloo, this would mak() the third American empire whose Moms is occu pied by a member of the Orleatm A Dr. Chapman, a Londop, has made a new discovery In the treatment or paralysis and ape. pleat'. Th e txcatiaent brieily described as the a ppnosusn, of heat to one part of the spine, and of cold to another part. The Medical nava and Gasdes narrates Several Cases of partial Metered LO retreat health by his treatment. life generally bolter:A at the Clout of Vienna that the Emperor Maximilian Will abdicate and re. tiff W 4fletries Win tit /VOW by FtellOill THE WA:it PRE:IUL (PUBLISHED WIEKLT. Tits Wait Timm will be soot to tbAsoribets mot (per eon= iil odvanco) —llllll WO coPlee.4., •••••• • ••• •-• •••••• • ••••• •••••• • »14 DO CUPtes••••••,•••••••• • ..... .44 /Airier Club, Weak Teo will 1e aiiargad at %M UM rate. Iva aid wr The +moon) lone alumo aeoOOI96WW M ( " U r' " 4 finotahee odes deoi terms be deviated 1 from. of Ma afford very WO shore the tb oust or Pot" Mir Postmsetera us requited to Mt M SOPA hi 'his Was PRESS. .4- To the jotter:lLP of Blab of: Om or imam al outia ion of rho yam Aloft to the rights 'Moh to'who obriKed to re. /MUM on anoopttom#o woe. Marshal Mognan's pnbile funeral, in Parts, the horses of a private carriage. buck !sighs at the noire of the bands; and rushed ttfrOugh thoWrusra, knocking down several pareonff r stOd seriously in. jurbg four. -- Baron Llobfg Is, atiriOusly Slough, efigiaf4 with the Lbrd Mayor of LOndon crontroversy Liao to the question whether grass will grow upon .seturand, ir mitthstust be ruppiled frt solution. -- rd. Gnizat, at hls oountry-seat near Lisieux,. Ptmlng, ' , sauna a lfght, 'from one thowto sotistor struck against a piece of furziture attd causing a sevens dontusiore on bighead. -- As Padua tolverotty vas the echoed' In whiek the Anatelai tnaperoe Angled, he liar lounged there a Dante ocholaroldp of 'five hundred glnisUl value!. Sir Arthur Ohldhester i baronet. and I n Me William lately had a foobratie in England.' Ten Goren or er Won the race. Dresses *nein Merin are the . style in rtntsr aid almost without bodies too, The Parisione wat next dispense with skirts. Mr. Lundy is a p.weevrei on board the Aida en route for Newfoundland:to get all ready for the landing of the cable. The guarantee fund for the great Patio UZI , versa' Exhibition of 1887 already exceade< the amount that was required. Prinbe Arthur will represent Queen Victoria , at the teaugurntion of the Wolsli mimariel to this Prince Cloneort. at Tenby. An exciting trial takes place at Elioburgh, thfe month, of Dr. Pritchard, wined Of poisoning hie vim and niothenladlaw: -- King George of Greece, ant Mr whole opt" lately made a tour In the northeastern part of kW klogdem. The Inenneotlen of the Hhborel,ln algerla, Is completely at an end; and therlbeo hare made their submission. The Italian beet Miff arrived 1a Aigiera, Ad wirelVaetta and staff 'Were Teemed tip the Envoi ror. Ohrlstopher Columbus has juot been canonized by the Pope. What for, does net appear. —Thompson, the Buell& poet, wrote hie pine. gyrle on early rlitlng In bed at midday. A Utltehblan was lately asphyalated while a Weir g the 'crater of 'Prettying There are no less than nay tunnels to be passed On the railway between EOlOOO, and riotolh. Qualliihootioir 18 jut :war tato most pepedel , amusement of the Ppbrtamen of Naplei THE FIGHT ON $ EATEN ISM). Citizens, Soldiers, and r oll icesnelit who are :di Crank; 'nix in a Genera! Yinllet —Every Sort or Weapon llsso—Tweaty to %hirty. Persons 'Oared—The Dis- grocer& k ightr Stopped by Sailors. In our telegrams yesterday was a ken notice of a &graceful fight on Staten Island,son Wednesday afternoon, which furitnily Continued for an hour, and resulted In severe, and in some eases, mortal lejurice to Mane persons. Frwn the aecounts, we gather the eetailed facts. it appears that three soldiers belonging to 'the 06tli and lead New York regiments, which were guarding the' government Cotton inside the quarantine enclosure, came upon the green at Tompkinsville much intoxicated, and becoming engaged in a fight with citizens, were driven away. They retrested leslde thO gates of the quarantine grounds, procured muskets, and ad vaneed on their assailants wits axed bayonets. Their muskets were immediately taken from theta end they were ferriblY beaten. When the drunken soidiers were driven away from tbe peen, near the Medina hotel, they were joined by same of their comrades, and resumed the attack, but they , were forced to retire swain Inutile the er closure. The mob had by that time lucre mod to about a thousand pets, 4ts, aceerding to the esti mate of en 03 e witness. The Lighting was fiercest Or poilte the enclosure' which the detaidunent of soloists was set to guard. Many alto:tsar intssiliet Were used by the' mob. Some of the leaders altt arms; and they drove this gnarl Of goldteri rrate their poste, and forcing their way into the enclosure, seized come of the seicieral muskets, and " stebeedtw them.' meanwhile the Soldiers were fighting not only the Mob, but each other: They loaded' and • fired their pieces as often as they could, usually into the but not peeve. The mob dragged some 01 the soldtero oat of the' eI2OIOIIITO ; but the soldiera , comrades charged out and rescued the Woe who had been overpowered. The excitement Inoreseed with the numbers of tte mob, the eoldiers Were nearly overpowered, and the crowd began to olantor for its thing of the Govo!tment butleings and the destine. MD of the rebel cotton attired On Staten' Island. Shortly after the fight became heaviest, word was corm. yed to Captain M. eV. Wflion) In comm wid or the little Iron , clad Naugatuck; and he itemettiately ordered eighteen of fits men from his yodel that watt hire at the dock, and proceeded to ToMpkinaville. The raiders were well armed, weihdereled, and sober, and by atimtrobla meargement'on the part of their reortrotoa-r, oLLI WILL %LTA ,ew. ‘4l dims who were not drunk, they enceeedeer 'hoisting themselves between the inturiated (weird ono the beaten and routed soldtetS, and In stoppingthe rern'oreement was sent from Yon Klautond, on the request of Captain Wilson, andlthe Newt talteo. Two or IMO, policemen, -.lto were, ft la said, partly intoxichted t met CePtelti WhB al, and cxeltedly pat themselves 1, trbder arrest,” es they Feld, and m his custody and bruteetion. Staten island trenetablee, who brio?. g to the eland of welch. UPI re.hous ' disor d erly, and drunken mob was core poeed, inede•no etfert whatever be preserve the peace, 00t It IS raid, by a rceddentrot Statea I qsati. tart BLUM of them wore &motor the mob. Daring the tight, to the Wee when Ca-term Wilson ar rived, no person on either side, emtept the officer who waethot, attempted to weenies ady . authority. ulTh Murder In NoW "Murk. Between eight and nine o , dlOok Wednesday evening, NM, Josephine Cohen, homing been thrust from the threshold of the Betel 3wtss, •at No. 19 Jay Street, New York city. foil, head foseumAt, on the dooretepa leading to tile livid and was instant. ly killed. Simon Cotten, hue rand or the deceased, bays that himself and wire arrived in ion: on Wednesday, on the Notional Steamship 031i1,3 kter , ll steamer Iselon. and on leaslltsg.. filet vert.,l wont directly to the Xlotel S wire and eogitirod 'Hard et the customary tarttf ef the house; 10. Ws day each. nal lug>ca}la had coma up trots, aka s..tmaa!P the Emu unplug; they bad ordeletle-perter to tittl It 1i their recto bat the landietl, Werner Werner, ob • paled, saying that there was too maah to be tenon upstarts, Cohen Ibtisteilupen lut;ling ari inAgoge in Ida own room, and Werner Wtruer twisting teat It should netbe taken • up. Dollen went nod and engaged board at the Worotng..h.otel. livottning and prefab-ring to deport trntis Ilse hotel SNP% he had words with Werner concerning his hid, the landlortl , having denten/ma Cleriotwitast sr:ling. ad. eNrelels to tleetos'a xtnry, he had•had nothing. ;qrs. (Johan entered Into the dispute with spirit, and, it fa alleged, Werner struck bite herself and her 'lns tant!, and "Alen she was about going' out of hie deors. gave her a push or kick, throwing her ore, bead forerarst, to the foot of the stone Starr' lefisillif to the house. When taken up, Mrs. (lotion was COI pee. Mrs. Cohen, aho was 84 year® of age, was a tatlw of Brussels. A. rlewriwG OR UIR'IZ 1 Idl Ereffarntlo ---la nooorAertee with the blotto:Ion glyoq by Pit N. A. fifartio, of New Jorvey, In Me toorah4( Pq.ove thht7.sva elthena o r El iebtanna aYsecabled fa ta State SehOf 0 Ohotaber het eveatex wt six &no% Ar mau these procanC we o,:ilou,1 MAWS. in inert., 14 ,, h.rt %WWII. H. W. Ify) W Ire. P. w, ctrubtm, E. D. Sperm'', Apperaeli, Tabb, and T. P. Tones. Thoobjeet of the mesting,was stated at mettslelo. ruble length by Mr. Martin, whiett to deilie a Men to rebuild the burnt portion of the city. Mr. Mar tin staard thet he first tarot) to. the city during the administration ut Governor 11C. , Do4cli, to whom he wan introduced by the Rev. Dr. Platemr.r. De terming to make Richmond his psi amnia home, ho brought 11a family here, but WaS ImM:tan...tele* burst out, Maim; Ills all. Hs could therefore sym pathize With the sufforurnfrope the iw.e cattalos. Von. In Ins opinion, 'oho boukseurdnoot in the re. building of the city is. mititali attributable to the enurbitant rents owl pious Alleged by personS own• Dig bneleess property. This prevonL 'oapitaliStal rushing invortmento. Already, In oonaettenuois OP the high rents here, persons are hnyittg lots at Dirty Point for the purpose of estabil.hing stores, thereby divertiost trado.filom the capital. Hs pro. pored to go to Philadelphis,'Nen York and Easton. end raise from flvetto.ten milllene of dollare upon mortgages upon mat estate. Remarks %ere then made by Moen. J. P Jonah P. M. Tabb, P. W. Grubbs, 3. £. pelvic, and. Mr. Grubbe game ail the reittelt why the city was Wit being 121011 i rapfOly Mean% that there call an uncertainty houitiats , eve: ittiao., gedwittir 6116 (IMO prat/dont Pt the- achutiooatien act. Let this be oftl tied, and puroltadino of real Witte Will be MOM All. morons. In roopcnee to• an Interrogatory from PG.r. Tomtit, Mr. Martin sore he could Woe $10,t00,000 upon recd. CRAM, eeouetig, al moven per cent,. tie, Of oonnia i ee peering to ZeniTO Ida ttozal fee of two do ad a Wl' per oent. After otl4r reworks, the meeting wcs,deolared adjourned,ftichinond ibleatgio, 21d. NEW TOUR . 41TY. Nay T0rr1,,J222 22 001 C 11.XCH.443g 6 10AkD • AA' IMS AT TEM .: BEORM iceo u aft '91.. • I C nO I [, do No St I Yd 6000 174490 620......0.14931/113.0 ‘.l ti 114 /VS go ~,,, —...14.44 100 00ntaL00......... /37 1125011.3 el. 16.40.....0 O' SOI ) MarRIlleoo.r; r. BtOLI • r o tletammt R... Di MVO. 'tioao 14188, 456 1i,111,U, 93 '1:3.10, 24 garble..., DIX 260 111 03 it 'Da xxte 1011E11a min! 133.1 d 0..... . ....... 79;41 StO • 83.40 TEE SYSIIIDIO STOUT{ :3t)l RD. 10 P. M,r00141 firm at 3.41 A; t Now York antra, oax ;Erie ' 1514 Budoon rim 1;3.1t;.Rooillog, aig; /Michigan !Southern, 62;94 ; C a,at,r, 4 2 , ig !,l 4 ! PlllBbUrg and Olevalantl, 6771 ; , 4 , liortliwoMoia protyrre4 l bB¢6;, mrr. " 'Y' 10, 'Yv ' Canton Co., krl,l; Oumborto#4, Al; Qualkollvarr 51; liiarlposa s 12g. M===l 0111011111LTI A -- ,Tans 01. T here It 0, fair trado de. sand for the better brankor Flour, at $15@0,26 for fair to good extra. Whoet. dull, at 2140 for prime red. Omit sells at oset:se fur tar, and the demand le good. Oats are in rel 7, demand at 67q080 ; the aopply is right. Wtisky ration at $2, Provlstona are null. Bulk aLtagi„ aro 011tled at 101,1 , 4110 rather freely, bat tam, la not Much &lam MO York can be bengb.tats26, and Lard at 18,60. gam lianas aro wanted. at. no, bat aro hold at MOM prlnos ; plata Next (oar:waged) have ad rutted to !mgelo '• augameml ace Atm at 21: 2 60, Gold ix tlric at 140. iLtantmorce, Jose 22 —Mar 411 and heavy. Wheat dull,. and se. lower, Corn arm. Provisions Arm, Moto shvolders, 16, 2 40. Whllliy dull at 32 Os, BatutalOtel?AtJAVia P4ARltiv4 also 211-47attle.. Rooliii2 of 4;00 baard, end taloa of NO sea. 410011aa of lc, the price being 25 COGS N.? 1$ 100 Poi. et no CA ante 23,-Cho k tonr markot is quiet. Wheat dull at as anvanum at 1(2130. Salta sla, $1 Thif fer No. 1 and 21 02 fOr No. 2, Onrit ertn $8 6:35 - ifsoo for No. 1, fil@COp e fer No 2. and 42@170 for Ter uttsd Oats are stele rat 47X for Ido. 1. Mat Wines are dull at 2188, Prevlt4ona lieerlots. 'non - ,050 Obit. 12 000 Wheat , 66 000 bal. 16,000 bush. Corn 110,000 bash. 171,000 bush. Data 110 000 bueh. 76,000 bob. sum ov wst ride or tobitoo JINGO the ocom wareh o us e. h eity was hid yeaterdaY lb.t leneia s .l4re liodsheadu Das! priors ranging from $2 to IS pa hundre, 14 ; UrAe hogshead at $2, one at OA. one at * t26 olio at 44.20, and one at $5. The lot was of an inferior quality, coming under Ens general class known aa E9ollll3.94laciOary aepitbilcani ,Irma lOths
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers