TIU PalDegti, rlßLastara DAILY (SUND O AYS RNRY. EXCEPTED) Mr JOHN W. F 10 NO. 11l ROM( FOURTH STRUT. rgig PADA" P RESS, TO City Ilabseribers. is TN,. DoLLARs PER or ?AUNTY Mery EK PER WE. payable to the Carder. Nailed to finbacriber! ont of the city, FINE SOLLARS lea Affirm: Fora DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENT! JcOast, awns; TWO DOLLARS AND TWENTY FIVE Ban,! nog TRIMS MONTHB. invartably in advance for OA DWI ordered. Aar Advertisements Inserted at the usual rates. SUE Tiu-wszazie RUMS, Wiled b Iltbottibors, Viva DOLLAR! PSR Maa, to ADITEROO. Etto I,lrtss. iIi••••••UESD TAY, JUNE 27, 1865. THE 'NEWS. Tte steamer Damascus, with European advlces to theft . h, was intercepted off Port-au-Basque, yes term The official Correspondence between our Government and that of Great Britain, relative to Abe death of President Lincoln, Is published. Rarl Bus ell expressed the regrets of the queen. Pal' llament, and Lire people of England. The Paris jdonireur contradicts the rumor that the French Go verment intended to tend reinforcements to :Mateo. There was to be a trial at Toulon of an jr,tertal machine, by which it Is said tron•olads res. gels can be destroyed. Reports current In Spain that Saragossa, Valencia, and Catalonia were In a elate of siege, was denied. The London money Racket was steady and firm. The supply of Amery an bonds was rather short. The closing quotations of five-twenties were cBuf)6B)te. The cotton market /keg been buoyant, and the eales for the week amounted to 105,00 bales ; prices were 14 higher Tor American. The flour market is very dull and prices are drooping. Wheat is also dull. Corn and oats have sldvareed. Cotton Is in fair demand at about for. 4 lner rates. In provisions there - is less doing but vices are unchanged, Whisky continues very quiet. Beef cattle are vary dull this week and prides have fallen off laac per pound. 1,800 head 2urired and sold at tram 12(a17o per pound for corn- Ron to extra. The Crescent Regiment, the crack organization gent Into the war by the rebels of Louisiana, and which Was Composed of the sons of the most wealthy and influential citizens Of Now Orleans and the surrounding country, lately returned to that city, numbering sixty-one. When!they started Tor the field, three years ago, they were eleven hue tared strong. The Government of San Salvador has issued a ?Male= announcing the overthrow of the rebellion lyn that country. The rebel leader, In a hand-to-hand encounter with the commander of the Government forces, woo wounded, and he took refuge in tne of nu war TCP6OIO, and it is reported he subsequently President Johnson yesterday issued an important Trivial:nation removing all restrictions on trade in the country welt of the Mississippi. Articles con• Debited of war, such as arms, ammunition, gray /cloth, etc., are of course excepted. The order goes ynto effect immediately. Applications are constantly being made to the Test-Office Department by persons in the South for appointments to offices. Communication with Rich piond, by way of Belle Plain and Fredericksburg, and thence by railroad, Me reopened yesterday, It four years since this route was Closed. There was more firmness In the stook market yes terday. Government loans, however, were Ina°. tive, though the 8.20 s were a shade higher. Read ing and Pennsylvania railroad were each higher. The oil stooks are still very depressed. The United States Court of Indiana has found in dknmente against some of the leaders of the Sons of Liberty in Indiana, in dose the Supreme Court decides that the military commission whiCh tried them was unconstitutional. It is said that the individuals to whom were given the island of San Domingo by Spain have agreed to Tay to the latter country all the expenses of the war, and guarantee all property to Spaniards re gilding there. The President has pardoned Charles Walsh, one of the Chimp conspirators, and eon:Muted the 'PentenCe of Thomas B. Payne, another one, to five Tears , imprisonment. The latter had been sen tenced to be shot,. An accident occurred on the Washington branch Of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, near BlM 'more, yesterday. One man (a minister) was killed, aid four or live others were wounded. The oars came In collision with a derrick. It is peeitively asserted that there has been no Consultation with the exeoutive branch of the Go• 'cerement as to when, where, and how Jefferson ;Davis IS to be tried. The Army of the Potomac is to be further redinied to three divisions, numbering about 16,000 men. At one time this array was composed of seven oorps, numbering over 300,060 men. Charles James Faulkner, a Virginian, and former Minister to France under President Buchanan, was pardoned yesterday, in accordance with a promise lead. to. Mrs. Faulkner by President Lincoln. The private baggage of Jeff Davis has been cap tared near Gainsviiie, Florida. It contained many Important papers and letters. Assistant Secretary of State, F. W. Seward, was 'Able yesterday, for the first time, to walk from one chamber to another. The crew of the blockade runner Wren seized the Vessel and run her Into Key West, with the hope of obtaining the prize money. The Central Railroad, from Savannah to Macon, 12 being repaired. President Johnson was Indisposed yesterday, so tend BO that he did not rostra visltOrs. Gold closed in New York last evening at 142.14'. Non-Interference. A great deal may be said in a very few 'words. Some weeks ago, Lord PALinat - ETON made a speech, in the House .'f Com mons, which happily inustret' this mul •Lum in parse oratory. A .nember of Par liament, w h o h a d w .,re himself somewhat notorious durias the last terrible four years, by hip somewhat un-English and inhuman sympathy with the pro-slavery rebels, who tried, by perjury and treason, to constitute " the so-called Southern Confederacy," demanded of Lord Parzion- Prori, as head of the British Government, 'whether it was his intention, in that or any other capacity, to remonstrate with the Government at Washington against the punishment of JEFFERSON DAVIS ; and his Lordship answered in the following words -3i it is not the intention of her Majesty's Ministers to interfere in the internal affairs of any country." That was a sensible reply—" only this, and nothing more." As an exposition of judicious political prin ciple, it was at once emphatic, declarative, decided, and sensible. It has put an end, :Indeed, to all attempts to change the public policy of England. No other legislator has thought it expedient to press the sub ject upon the surprising and sagacious octogenarian who is the virtual ruler of the British empire. Whatever may be said, `written, Or spoken, outside of the walls of Ft. Stephen's, (as the new Palace of West .ll.inster is still called) it is certain that the present Government of England will avoid interference with the affairs of this country. The policy of interference, once so posi tively acted upon by British statesmen, has plunged England into financial difficulties tnder which successive generations will heavily suffer, probably while the British empire exists. In 1786—three years after the close of the war which ended in the establishment of the United States of Ame rica—the national debt of England amount ed to 2268,000,060. One hundred years earlier, while I TAMP.S STIIAIer was tottering an his throne, and his son-in-law, WILLIAM Of L'Taasau, was preparing to wrest the sceptre from his incapable haad, the Bei lith notional dcbt. was nine more than 7,00,000. On the accession of Queen ANNE, in 1702, it had swelled to £16,500,000. Anne reigned only twelve years, but at her -death the debt had been extended to £54,- L 90,000. Between 1714 and 1786, it had increased to £268,000,000. At that time the second WILLIAM PlTT—then only twenty seven years old—was Prime Minister of Ingland. The French revolution broke out in 1789, and Pm, who was the very incarnation of Toryism, weakly yielded to tlanonoE the Third's predilection in favor of " legitimacy," which has been described, with terseness and truth, as " The tight cerise of Kings to govern wrong.) , The execution of Lours XVI. and his wife, followed by the exodus of a crowd of princes and nobles from France, who found an asylum in England, provoked PITT so much, that he plunged into an expensive war, nominally against what were described as the Jacobin principles of the French republic, but the real purpose of which, as the result proved, was to dictate to the French nation that their form of govern ment muse be monarchical, and their ruler must be one of the hated Bourbon race. 'With little intermission, from the year 1793 to 1814, England was engaged in a costly 'European war, and, at its close, the next Surviving brother of Louts XVI. was forced. t, on the French people by British bayo nets. In 1815, this war was renewed by The return of NAPOLEON. At his final fall, It appeared that these twenty years had :increased the debt from 268 to 865 mil , lions sterling—an increase of £597,000,000. This was the cost of interfering with the I nternal affairs of foreign countries ; and, _mm that time, taught by such dearly lau ght experience, England's policy has been to let foreign nations regulate their Mill affairs, choose their own form of t s• k, . .. . ... - • ear . -.41 . -N. .., . ` -• • ' -.. "' ? ' : •41( 3 t - t t * - A is „ ..--: . • ..„.. vs %I I J iii ,iI I tt • . . . 7.. „..---------•- .. _. . .._l-.,--=--;,.:- .:.-......—.,. ~....... „ _....-te., i',l ln '.'a,,,,.k.....-----:-:" ---- ''s_'!'•\''-'''-I.;i„Ig- - " J-- - 1...0--,--:-...': -. :'''' .. :..... -- ,.: . ,•• ta . 4 .---- */..4:14;----' - "-•- - - . - . \ - - , .-7,-,-,---. , -r,, .` ' --r ..-.. u .--c" . • 7) - - ---' 11% er. i , ... .. k .. .......4,..), 2 " . , ~,,, ~ _lll. . ,slimr... •, •: • . s d irp 1 , -..P.A.,. ~- ....,,,,,... NM . . i r. ----, -_ 4---------...,,...,- -r- 7 -- , 17 1 .4 , -; - .. , i 4,5 • - • 1 , 1 4," ' 1 11'i1 4,— ,•=7 -. : - -- 'S.' - ...e': ; .• ' .. : 7, - ,. -: ' - ' - -_,,,,, - _,_'"r ozi,.-' - 1 - 4. _7! . o . f- 11 .%,... : . _..J; - -,,-,,, y0 ,.," ~-1 .- _ ,„..._..--._ , . --1 1 1 " lirlit 4' ------ ~ VOL. 8.--NO. 283. government, and select their own rulers. Thus, in 1830, when France deposed and exiled CHARLES X., and converted the Duke of Orleans into a citizen King, England did not interfere, Belgium was separated from Rolland and formed into an inde pendent monarchy; Greece, separated from Turkey, became a kingdom ; Lows PRILt- Lynn, after eighteen years' reign, was sent away, and a second republic was formed in France; the Empire was re-established in a few years, with LOUIS NAPOLEON on the throne ; - VICTOR EMMANBEL, from being King of Sardinia, was made King of Italy ; Orno, of Greece, was exiled, and a young prince from Denmark set up in his place ; and, latest of all, the King of Denmark was deprived of the best part of his do minions, and compelled to yield to an army of Prussian and Austrian invaders. Eng land, which had paid very dearly for her interference policy, abandoned it after NA.- rormotq's fall ; and, so far from saying that a foreign country may not choose any man to rule it, distinctly allows it to be conceded that every government de facto shall be recognized, when the ruler de jure is un• able to hold iliS own. l'AimEnsrois's non interference policy, so lately enunciated, really has been the policy on which Eng land has acted during the last half century. • Such a policy, also, is thoroughly Ame rican, and has been so ever since we became a nation. We do not want to intermeddle with other countries, wherever they may be, and we will not allow foreign rulers or statesmen to intermeddle with us. They will do it at their peril. We have mainly been a war-avoiding, peace maintaining, hard-working, highly-inventing, and great ly.enterprising people. We have avoided quarrelling with other nations. If Lord PALMERSTON will only take care that his non-interference principle be fully and fairly acted up to (for there's such a thing as keeping the -word of promise to the ear and breaking it to the hope) he will do well, not only for his country, but for all mankind. While he is in office he will do this, we believe ; but the general election, Which will take place when the present summer is over, may terminate in favor of the Tory party, his opponents. We confess that with Lord DERBY in Downing street, opposed to us as he has been and is, the prospect of continued amity with England would be much diminished. Lincoln MeMenai Temple in Wash ington. We have before ns a letter addressed to the Christian Patriots of America, by the Board of Trustees recently appointed to raise the necesary funds for the purchase of Ford's Theatre in Wash ington—to be held as a memorial of Abraham Lincoln—by the Young Mena Christian Association of the United States and British Provinces, Of the Board of Trustees Major General 0. 0. Howard is the President ; and General Fisk, of St. Louis; Messrs. G. H. Stuart, of Philadelphia; Henry D. Cooke, of Washington ; Edward S. Tarry, of Boston ; William E. Dodge, of New York ; John V, Farwell, of Chicago; A. E. Chamberlain, of Cimino Doti; G. P. Hayes, of Baltimore ; Joseph Aibree, of Pittsburg ; T. B. Roberts, of San Francisco ; and W. Ballantyne, B. H. Steinmetz, Z, Richards, and W. A. Thompson, of Washington, constitute the members assisting him. The first meeting was held at the banking house of Say Cooke & Co., in Washington, when those gentlemen were elected Treasureia, and A. E. Browne, Corresponding Secretary. The Board represents, that after fall consulta tion, they feel sure that the money can be raised; and In order to secure the property, they have obtained from Mr. Ford a contract, by which he binds himself to give a clear title to the same whenever they shall have paid to him the sum of ($lOO .010) one hundred thousand dollars. This will be closed, and possession given, if ten thousand dollars are paid by the Ist Of July. Till then, the trustees have an famine° written agreement from Itir. Ford, Abundant time Is allowed for the balance of the payments. The property consists of the theatre, with a wing containing twelve rooms ; a three-story brick building adjoining the theatre, twenty-two feet front and slaty feet de•fl ; the furniture of the theatre, the fee simple r the land on which the theatre stands, and a porPetual lases of the land OD Which the thr.o-story build. lug stands. It is ;proposed to call the building the Lincoln m e morial Temple. The objeoto of purchasing it are : 1. To consecrate It henceforth as a memorial build. 2. To make it the centre of a united Christian in fluence in the capital of the nation—a home where young men from all parts of the country, coming to Vaehlngton, may and a cordial welcome—where a large library and reading-room will continually in vite their presence. S. To secure a large and convenient hall for proper meetings, lectures, and other kindred purposeS, which will afford a source of healthy and profitable entertainment. The budding is to be under the immediate care Of the Young Men's Christian Assooiation of Wash ington, subject to the control of the board of trus tees. A secretary will be employed to devote his whole time to the development and execution of the OM and purposes of the above-mentioned associa tion. It Is intended to set apart one room as a depository for all Christian memorials of the war which may be entrusted to the custody of the association. To purchase the properly, make the necessary alterations, and have a fund to start the library and reading•room, it will be necessary to raise at least one hundred and twentyflve thousand dollars. It Is therefore that an appeal is made by the trustees to the Christian and patriotic people of the Vatted States to aid them in raising the amount. It is believed alt parts of the country will be deeply in• Wrested in the success of this movement. Will not all help to rescue from profanation and consecrate to all time, the place which the first martyr to our freedom made sacred by his death and sanctified by his blood, shed for that cause for which he had labored and that country to whose enrolee the lad years of his life had been se freely and so tithed - tatingly devoted 1 WASHINGTON. WASHINGTON, Jaffe 26. rr. - DurOsiTION OP PRESIDENT JOHNSON The Prealdent is not receiving visitors to.dav, owing to physical indisposition. THE HEALTH Or FRED - . W. SEWARD. FREDERICK W. SEWARD, for the first time since the 14th of April—the night of the murder of Presi dent Lircotv—was able yesterday to walk from hie chamber to an adjoining apartment. THE FOURTH OF JULY AT GETTYSBURG. Most Of the troop that are to take part in the Ceremonies at Gettysburg of July will move tomorrow morning, the cavalry going over- land, and the Infantry by rail. The troops will con slet of the bath Pennsylvania Reserve Corps. The battalion of the let Connecticut cavalry, a battery of eight guise, will =mummy the expedition. Two bands will enliven the occasion—the 66th Massa• (Musette band and the band of the 9th Veteran Re serve Corps. SOUTHERN APPLICANTS FOR OFFICES. Applications for the re-establishment of otßoes at different points in the EZOnth •.. cue general pOBt.Office, and many of the offices will be reopened as soon as the necessary arrangement can be made. Daily communication between Washington and Richmond, direct by boat and railroad, was resumed this morning, after more than four years' interruption. PARDON OF TUE REBEL FAULKNER. Chiantis JAMBS FAULEPECIi, of Virginia, for merly lainister to France, under BEWELLITAIVS Ad. tclr,istratlon, was to-day pardoned by President :Tourism', having qualified himself legally. ThIS act of clemency was, it is understood, gratuitously extended, in accordance with a promise made to Mrs. Favtarini by President Linnet:N. COMPENSATION OF ROUTE AGENTS. The thirtpeighth section of the postal law of 1863 authorises the Postmaster General, from time to Me, to provide by order the rates and terms upon which route agents may receive and deliver at the mall ear or steamer packages of newspapers and periodicals, delivered to them for that purpose by the publisher or any news agent thereof, and not 3 eceived from nor designed for delivery at any post i Ince. This power is now exerted for the first time, en application of the Chicago publishers, and will he extended to all others who desire to make a similar arrangement. Ten cents are charged for the MIA ten pounds or less, and five cents for each additional five poundS Or less. On newsp ers ear. lied outside the mall by route agents, an delivered at the several stations or to agents on the roads, the rates fixed are much less Mal when the news. papers are sent inside the mall. A large number of letters are Constantly being i °turned to the Dead-Letter Oboe bemuse of the use of revenue Instead of letter stamps. APPOINTMENTS TO , TELE NATAL ACADEMY. The President, on the recommendatiOn of the Secretary of the Navy, has appointed to the Naval Academy, as midshipmen, five apprentice boys from be schoolship Sabine, now enlisting apprentices at New London. They were selected, by competitive examination, from three hundred on that ship, by a beard of which Vice Admiral FASEd.OUT was chair man. This step, if followed out by Congress, will nen up the highest honors of the navy to enlisted boys. JEFF DAYM . . It is positively ascertained that there has been no consultation by the executive branch of the Govern. meat as to when, where, and how 38nrsas0R Davis is to be tried. An endeavor is to he made to have eonoertß at Central Park, New York, on Wednesday afternoonl na wetl se on Saturdays. PROCLAMATION BY THE PRESIDENT PROSPERITY TO FOLLOW PEACE, ALL OVER TEE LAND. Removal of the Restrictions on Trade West of the Mississippi. WASHINGTON, June 26, 1805. BY THE PRESIDENT OP TEB UNITED. STATES: A FROULAMATION, Whereas, It has been the desire of the Oeeeral Go vernment of the United States to restore unrestrict ed commercial intercourse between and in the se , veral States, as soon as the same could be sa•ely done in view of the resistance to the authority of the United States by combinations of armed insurgents- And Whereas, That desire has been Shown in my proclamations of the 2901 of April, one thousand eight hundred and sixty five, the 13th of June, 1865, and the 23d Of Jers, Isos. And Whereas, It now seems expedient and proper to remove restrictions upon internal, domestic, and coastwise trade, and commercial intercourse between and within the Stales and Territories west of the Mississippi river. Now, therefore, I, Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, do hereby declare that all re strlotlons upon Internal, domestic, and coastwlsein- Lemurse and trade, and upon the purchase and re moval Of products of States and parts of States and Territories heretofore declared in insurrection, lying rest of the Mississippi river, (excepting only those relating to property heretofore purchased by the agents or captured by or surrendered to the forces of the United States, and to the transportation thereto or therein, on private account, of arms, ammunition, and all articles from which ammuni tion Is made, gray uniforms and gray clothd are annulled ; and I do hereby direct that they be forthwith removed, and also that the commerce of such States and parts of States shall be conducted under the supervision of the regularly appointed officers of the customs, who shall receive any cap• tared and abandoned property that may be turned over to them under the law by the military or naval forces of the United States, and dispose of the same in accordance with instructions on the subject is sued by the Secretary of the Treasury. In testimony whereof, I have hereunto let my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at the city of Washington this, the 24th day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred sixty-five, and of the Independence of the the United States of America the eighty-ninth. (n. s.] - ANDREW JOHNSON. By the President W. 11131TBE, Acting Secretary of State. THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC. A REDUCTION OF ITS NUMBERS ORDERED TO 16,000 MEN. Forty.six Regiments to be Mustered Out-•-Their Names, Espetig Deitch to The Pau.) W6BEITIGTOZI2 June 26 The grand old Army of the Potomao le to be greatly reduced in numbers. Thu army, whieh originally consisted oi seven oorps, and at one time numbered over throe hundred thousand men, will, in obedience to instruotions from the War De partment, be reduced to three divisions of about sixteen thousand troops altogether. Muster.out rolls for forty-six regiments, most of them veteran organizations, are now being prepared, and the men, some fifteen thousand, will be discharged with as little delay as possible. The following are the regiments which go out un der the order directing the further reduction of the Army Of the Potomac 190th, 88th, 88d, 191st, 11th, Nth, 8018,b oil, 89th, 51d, 110th, 57th, 81St, 934, 108 d, 61st, 98th and 67tt. Pennsylvania Voltinteeriss 91st, 10th, 89th, 40th, 63d, 73d, 86th, osth, 88th, 59th, 52d, 4911, 77th and 43d New York Voleo,eBrB ; let, 10th and ad New Jersey Volunteers :3211, 19th and 28th Massachusetts volunteers; 1,6 Maryland Volunteers ; 7th heat Virginia Volunteers ; sth New Hampshire Volunteers; Ist Maine Volun teers ; 6th, iun and Bth Vermont Volunteers. The otuster oat will be by entire regimental or wan= organizations, including all additions, Whether recruits or otherwise, and all absentees. Naßroad Accident Near Baltimore. A CLERGYMAN KILLED-FIVE PASSENGERS WOUNDED-TWO SERIOUSLY. BALTIMORE, Tune 20.—An accident occurred on the Washington railroad today, caused by a oar on the Washington train striking a derrick used in re pairing cars on another track. me Rev. Mr. Austin, of Laurel, Maryland, had his head reclining on U. windowsill, and was Struck on the forehead, his skull being fractured in such a manner as to cause death in five minutes. H. C. Barton, of Columbia county, Pa., had his right arm resting on the windowsill. His arm was fractured at the wrist, elbow, and above, all being compound fractures. He is doing well. Illr. John C. Gibson, of New York, sustained a compound fracture of hitt right arm, at the elbow joint. There were two or three others more or less out and bruised. Their names were not ascertained. The Reported Railroad Accident on the Ohio and Risaisippi Railroad. Lorievmas, June 26.—Informstion is ob• tained from the proprietors of the New Albany Ledger, which paper drat published the report of the terrible comb/ant on the Ohio and Mississippi raft• road, that they obtained the fasts from a conductor of the Louisville, New Albany, and Cincinnati railroad, and also from passengers. The account may possibly have been exaggerated, but further details will be obtained and telegraphed. The Indiana Railroad Accident —Gross Exaggeration and as Singular Denl'l, On Saturday last the public was startled bythe Intelligence of a most terrible railroad disaster in Indiana. All who had friends travelling in that section of the country were naturally endow( for the lists of killed and wounded to be published, fear ing that these friends might be among she number of the sufferers. On Sunday they vere gratified, and the public at large was surprised to hear that the railroad authorities officially denied the occur• rem of any su ch accident. Beth the former state ment and its as singular dente]. have now been pro• fl o u nced to be equally luesirreot. It appears that there was an aceident, resulting In three deaths and the wounding of five soldiers. At the same time the accident was by no means so frightful as had been stated. Now, to the exaggeration of the first re port, we might have not unreasonably taken a strong excepti o n, I m o It not been for the singular and un justifiable denial of the disaster by the railroad an• thorities. The public has a clear right to know the exact truth In all oases of this description, and it Mils be told them. Reports ought not to be exag gerated by the mischief. making of the penny•adiner, but still less should they be absolutely denied by the officials to whom In seine sort the positive responsi bility must undoubtedly attach. FORTRESS MONROE. Movements of Troops and Steamers— Election In Norfolk. FORTIMS Niorinon, June 76.—Steamer Oonvoy From Richmond, has arrived with the 148th New York Regiment, colored, on the way for home, to be mustered out. Arrived, steamer Oriental, from Point Lookout, with rebel prisoners. ; steamer Concordia, for Texan; steamer North Point, for New York. The election for officera Tor the city of Norfolk took place to•day. The two principal eandffiateB fer Mayor ate Thomas C. Tabb and Simon Stone, and up to 3 o'clock the contest was considered very close. THE SOUTHWEST. Investigation into the Late Steamboat DißilSier—Cotton News Demo, June 26.—The steamer Ruth, from NeW Orleans, with dates to the 19th, has arrived with 200 bales of cotton for St. Louie. Ono hundred and thirty bales passed here for St. LOWS last night. A letter from Shreveport says that the investtga• flea touching the lose of the United States trans• port Kentucky has resulted in the toucans' of the (Moore in charge from all blame. The commission hold that the SiennaTOO was entirely accidental. An order has been Issued prohibiting the tram ports On the Red river from running in the night. GEORGIA. Capture of a Portion of Jett' Doris' Bag gage—Railroads of the State in Course of Repair. Naw Yoar, June 26.—The steamer Caroline brings Savannah advicea of the 21st instant. The Savannah Herald says that the Central rail road have completed a contract for rebuilding forty six miles of their road, from Savannah to Macon, four and a half miles on the Little °geodes river, and it is believed the repairs Will be completed within thirty days. Wm. B. Johnson has been elected president, by the direotora, and George W. Adams is the superintendent. The Jacksonville (Florida) Union 01 the 11th says a portion of the private baggage of Jeff. Davis has been secured near Clainevilitt, Florida. It consisted of two boxes and one trunk, containing many im portant private letters and papers. The Wagon containing the baggage seems to have been in ad vance of the flying party, and was abandoned by those having It in charge on learning of Davis' capture. 1114190iide Celebration. LotrrovitLE, June 26th.—The celebration In this oily of St. John's Day, by the Masons on Saturday, was very imposing. They partook of a splendid banquet, and had one of the fined processions ever witnessed here, the prominent feature whereof was the Louisville Commandry, No. —, Knighte Tem. plar, on black homes, commanded by Charles R, Woodruff, Deputy ()rand Commander of Xentuoky. PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1865. WESTERN CONSPIRATORS. . _ The Pardon of some and Indictment of CliforoneTr; June 26 —The President has par doped Charles Walsh, one of the Mingo oonsptra• tors, now in the penitentiary at ColumbuS. The Sentence of Thomas 13. Payne, ordered by the mili tary ecnindssion to be shot, has been commuted to five MTh' imprisonment in the Ohio penitentiary. A special despatch from Indianapolis to the Go. zrfte says It is reported that indictments have been found against Bowles, Milligan, and other leading members of the Sons of Liberty, in the United States Court, as a safeguard in the case of an ad verse decision in the United States StiPreme Court against the jurisdiction of the military ODDID3IBI3IOII. HAVANA. Agreement Between Spain and St. Do , mango-lOnmered Invasion of the lo landa by the lanytitens. Nxw YORK, June 28.—The steamship Havana Mingo Havana advices of Jane 21st. A Porto Rico paper or Jane 14th, says the indi viduals to whom the Spanish authorities delivered the Government of the 'eland of San Domingo, agreed to pet , to Spain all the expenses of the war, and to guarantee all property to Spaniards residing there. It was also rumored that the Hivtlans had already invaded the "Dominican territory. The quondam blockade-runner, Wren, which left Ha. vana on the 11th, was out only two days, when a part of the crew seized the vessel and ran her Into Ka) West, their object being, of course, to obtain the prize money. Tnere yet remain at Havana the Mary. Virginia, Zeptana, Frances, Flora, Maria, Pelican, Foam, Lark, Lavinia, and Harriet Lane. A large Italian vessel brought in 200 coolies on the 20th. There is not much sickness in Havana. VCR TEAL AMERICA. New Irons., June 26.—The Government of San Salvador has Issued an aloha bulletin, giving the details of the battle at Union, which overthrew the recent rebellion. The loyal troops surroundod the place, and entered it after severe fighting. Cabs nas, the rebel leader, when. ho saw the day lost, bravely rushed forward, and when within a few feet of the loyal General Catruch, fired his revolver of him, but missed his aim. Catruch returned thoi compliment, and Cabanas fell, wounded. In thi struggle which ensued around the two leader% Cabanas disappeared. The official bulletin ki- Mares that he sought and obtained refuge on a North amerloaver vessel in the harbor. Another account says that his body was subsequently seen on shore, and that his friends were apparently con veying it to a place of burial. It was supposed that he died on the American war vessel. The papers of the rebel chief were captured, as well as a qua thy of arms and ammunition, and several leading officials. NEW TONIC VITT. NNW WEE, June fry ARRIVAL OP THE STEADIER RIINTsviLLII. The Huntsville has arrived from Asplnwa • Among her passengers are General D. E. Slokiti and staff, and the orew of the wreaked steeper Golden Rule. TROT ON FASHION norms% / In the trot today, on Fashion Conroe, three Wee. Ml/0 heats were 2UB. Stonewe.U. Jackson Wan the first heat, and Boxier the itesond and tied Aga% and the race. Time—B.o2%, 8.06 M, 8.094% ARRIVAL OW STEAMBRP The steamer Borussia, from Souttonipton on the 14th, and the Monterey, from New Orleans, arrived at tide port this evening. Their Avioes have been anticipated. BANS STATIFIENT. . . . Loans increase o 14,600,000 Cirodatton, inCreade , 1.40,00 e Specie, deorean 170,000 Damara, inereaee , 2 400,09 e Legal-tenders • 4,090,000 ergs B y l p LNG STOCIC BOARD. At G l at ag h t eg zxohange to-night Gold closed at 14234, New yo-ix Central 93%, Erle 77, Hudson 'Nex t Rea4 l ll2g 963 4 , Michigan Southern 65, Pitts burg 69, Illbyls Central 125%, North Western 25% ) North We.ern preferred 65%, Mariposa 14, Fort Wayne 0,%. The markets closed firm. Gold, after oall, 7fIE NEGRO POPULATION OF THESOUTH. How they are Affected by the Transition from War to Peace—The Conduct of their Former Masters Toward them and their Conduet—A Resume of their Present Situation. The war, we are told twenty times a day, has crushed slavery in the South, and elevated the slave to the dignity of a freedman. The relation between him alld his master has changed, to be sure; the accounts that come to ns from the South are true, his condition, temporarily at least ; is not much bettered. A course of petty and spiteful persecu tion has been inaugurated in almost all the Southern States east of the Mississippi, which is damaging to the freedmen, and disgraceful to the humanity of his former owners. Swindled, starved, cheated, the cold• shoulder turned to him everywhere, he is forced to works of retaliation—to pillage, arson, and in some Oases (we are glad to say they are very few) to murder. With little or no pay, even where lie is employed, he must adopt forcible moans of obtain ing for those depending on hies, food, clothing, and shelter. HIE CONDITION IN VIRGINIA. Oar readers are already aware of the delegation Sent by the colored men of Richmond to the Prest• dent ; complaining of the cruelty of the. Southern whites dwelling Mire them. Their cases were properly attended to, and in a little while they will be able to be freedmen indeed. Bat still we read in the IllfilMond Bulletin, which has still some of its OW pro•slavery leaven, of "the excesses of negroes," "the thieving of negroes," and so on• to the end if the chapter. Some of the journals in the intenor of the State complain that "the nit. gross will not work i" but this state of things is owing, perhaps, in great part, to the scale of wages —malneufliolont, miserable soale—offered to him. NOIV/11 VA-1%07./11A. Numerous accounts from Ms State agree that there is an entire absence of good feeling toward the freedmen. A letter to the New York Tims says : In many cases they have been beaten and other wise more cruelly treated even than when they were slaves, and some of them are held in bondage as of old. Some of our officers are said tube cognizant of these facts, but living a lire or ease In garrtson,_and being under the Influence of the old slaveholders, who dinner them and supper them, and ride them, not a few are inclined to close their eyes to these outrages. The soldiers also aid the whites in abusing the negroes, and between the two poor °Woe is cuffed about more than ever. The influence of the aristocrats here on the military IS anything but beneficial. General Schofield and other eons menden seem to have a clear conception of the right and wrong of the matter, but their subordi nates in COmniand of posts and garrisons have in 150/310 cases been guilty of 21111110 H repretiensltdo conduct." The old and decrepit negroee Who cannot take oars of themselves, are dead weight" to theplant ere, who make no effort to better their condition. SOUTH OAHOLINA Strange to say, in this State where the secession heresy had its birth, there are more evidences of a desire to do something at least for the benefit of the freed slaves. But of course there are many excep tions, and oorresponding,hardshlps to the weaker class. Correspondence from Orangeburg, South Carolina, says "The hopeless apathy of the poor whites, which is something appalling, renders the planters die posed to do the best they can with the blacks; but there are large numbers who evidently Intend to do as the Jamaica planters did—swindle the freed slave under any and Ovary pretext. Their 00eVer• Satin AhOWS it. Unless all. South Oarollast is gar• risoned by anaelavery troops, this State will either become a desert by the desertion of the laborols or pass into other hands. No man in the North, who has not lived among these planters, Cartwiden - ma what a brutal and vicious class of persons - they are." GBOXGIA None of the published ammunti from this State, as far as we have seen, make any complaints. The Pka t egrvA n io i3l arga l atlis7 and are offering fair wages and the old homes to their labor. The negroes are tractable; those who fled during Sher man's marsh, or at other times during the war, are fag, returning to go on In the old way. The Louisville Press of the 19th thug Complains ,4 There has never been a time in Kentucky, pre vious to the year 1865, when anything like the op pression and cruelties toward the colored rase now in lull practice, were known among us. Nothing meaner, baser , more niggardly, and ornel, was ev e" lumen on this continent. Many of the °lass calls Orihere are exhibiting an amount of besotted stu pidity and brutality almost incredible. home at the cases are so utterly vile in their character that we are tempted to publish the names of the loath some rebels who are guilty of these practices. What would become of the remnant of the negro race in Kentucky, but for the protesting, just, humane, and judicious character of Major General Palmer, we are at a loss to know." ABEAM BA9 liere we find a state of things similar to that de• eef abed in Georgia, Tho State government is is uoceestul operation, and everything Li resuming the <pieta° and prosperity whion blessal. tha State before the war. Tennessee, loyal Tentei3Bee, has long ago done Notice to the poor bearers of heavy burdens; In dis loyal (West) Tennessee much trootble Is abroad. The negroes are represented as bull,' omployed In robberiea of all kinds, but the aecounh appear to be exaggerated. We have not seen nor hoard arlythingVhlch would justify any statement concerning the frooets of re- construction, as ha as it affects the nsitro in Ala bama, Mississippi, and Florida. It islair to pre come, however, from the past oharaotee of the peo ple of these States that the slave has hit traditional "hard road to travel." lbarkete by Telegrapi. BELLTImOnie, June 28.—Flour dull' and heavy. Grain dull and drooping. Yellow IDTII, 880900. Oats, 68@700. Groceries quiet: Bales RIO Coffee at 213462234 e. Whleky dull at $2.080).09. No. 1. Bark at $2B. Carona°, Juno 26.—Flour closed qdet. Wheat dull, and deolined 20 ; sales at 61.11% tr No. 1, and sic for No. 2. Corn quiet, and ; sales at 5130670 for No. 1, sind 54@ , 5150 for No. Oats doll and declined 20 ; ealeB at 48049 e fol No. 1. Fro. , visions opened motive, but dosed lowe4 lama Pork, e 24. Freights steady. Iteeelots. I Shipments. Flour. bbis.. .... . . .. ........ 9,000 1,200 Wheat, bus 48,000 ' 132,000 Corn, bus 2 0 0, 000 170,000 Oats, buy 85,900 82.000 . z_ _~ ~ ._ w . _.....,,~ EUROPE. Official Correspondence between our own and the English Government on: the Murder of the President. FRANCE NOT PREPARING TO REIN FORCE MAXIMILIAN. REPORTED REVOLUTION IN SPAIN I Tremendous Infernal Machine about to be Tested at Toulon. IPORT-AIS-BASQIIR, N. F., June 25, VIII ASPAY Aar, Jane 28,—The steamship Damascus, which lift Liverpool on the afternoon of the loth and Londonderry On the loth, passed here today, bound W• Quebec. She was intercepted by the news laeht of the Associated Press, and a summary of edvices obtained. krThe Damascus has twenty eebln and two hundred d saxty•three steerage passengers. The official Correspondence between the British ind United States Governments, on the ama& in on of President Lincoln, is published. The letters d Earl Russell convey. sincere expreilsionB of re' fret On the part of the Queen, the Parliament, and tie people. Acting Secretary of State Hunter ex phases the lively-feelings of satisfaction and grate fik appreciation with which the Government and plople of America receive a Etch emphatic and ornest manifestationsef friendship and sympathy ,kom a great and kindred nation. The London .Darneepublishes a letter from its well known eorreepondent " the harden of which ls, that Que - North has no right to treat the vaeopished as anything else but men whom they have fairly beaten in battle. Be writes strongly, and urges the palloy of mercy. Sat Wray aite , s Oiroular of the evening of the 14th reports a fair business in American securities. The fortnightly account, now in course of settlement, boa developed a short supply of United States bonds, consequent On the shipments to New York and the Continent, causing an advance or one per cent. The Closing quotations of fivotwentles were 68li@e8a4c. The prospect or a stock bonus in Au gust, in addition to the ordinary cash dividend, has brought lignumeroUll buyers of Illinois Centrals, and an advance to 78 established. Erbil were largely sold at the beginning of the week, and have reached to rather over last week's quotations. In the Douse of Commons, on the 14111, the bill providing for the abolition of the tests required of ap. placenta for the degree of M. F. at the Oxford UM vanity, Wag debated and passed to aocolid reading by. a vote Of. 200.t0 150. This is expected to be the last important decision of the present Parliament. The Bishop of Chester' died . cin . the 15th. FRAME The Moniteur of the 15th says the rumor that the Government IS preparing to send large reinforce• meats to Mexico la entirely inaccurate. The military budget is under discussion in the COM Legialatu, Gen. Allard announced that a SAYstalig eansulhot would shortly be presented to the chamber to regu late naturalization In Algeria. Preparations were being made at Teuton for the trial of a new electrloal Infernal machine, by which it is stated that lron•olad vessels can Instantly be destroyed. The Bourse closed firmer. Fantail were quoted at 07f. 87e. on the 14th. Pitussia. In the Prnfslan - Upper Uhamber, a proposition was carried, by a large majority against the Minis tens, that the Government should bring forward a bill for prohibiting the rule that members of the Diet uttering Calumnies ageing, the Imperial Go vernment, or, other actionable expressions, during debate, should be liable to punishment by the gene• ral laws of the land. SPAIN". Reportage's! current that Saragossa, Valencia and Catalonia have been placed in a gate of gage, tott they are denied. A royal decree orders General Prim to return to Madrid. Aus - rßip,. The negotiations for a commercial treaty between Austria and England have failed. CALOIITTA., Salle 12.—The markets are im proving. BotasAY, Tone 9.—The Cotton shipments, shoes the 24. th of May, amount to 70,000 bales. BOMBAY, Jtine, l3 . — The btoOlt of Cotton is small and the quality inferior. London Muxay MAYaCßT.—Console Ara stead➢ and firm. Leviok S Co,, ironmasters and meg , chants of. London, had suspended. Their liatilities amounted to about £350,000 sterling. The failure was caused by large shipments of iron rails to Acne• ries. Which were chiefly paid for in securities not readily negotiated. Commercial Notelligcnee. LThe Latest Via Green LivistiroOt, June 10.—Cotton—Tne Brokers , Cir cular reporia the sales et the week at 105,000 baleS, 11/eluding /6,000 bales to speculators, and 31,000 bales for export. The market has been buoy ant, and prices are id higher for American, and 3i@ld brother degorlptions. The following are the anti:mixed quotations: Fair. Middlings. Orleans 19 s 18 Uplands 17% The sales today (Friday) are estimated at 10,000 bales, the market closing nrm at the above rate. The steak of cotton in port is estimated at 553,000 bales, of whit% 36,000 are American. The Manchester advices are favorable, Bread. Stuffs dull; Wheat easier. LorlDou, June 16.—Consols for money 00I',A90g; Illinois Central shares, 81%@82 Erie, 61,Up 5231 ; United states 6.205, 69. The bullion in the Bank of England has increased £185,000. L/vaawoot, June 16.—Cotton very firm ; sales of 20,000 bales. Lounow, June H.—Clueing prices of consols for money, 90%090%; and for account, 9031@0030. Übe Latest via oreenosetie. L 19211 1 .0010 Juno 16.—The China, from MIMS and BoSton, and the Edinburg, from New Torii - , arrived at Queenstown on the 15th of Sane. THE LATE WRECK. TOTAL DESTRUCTION OF THE STEAM- SHIP GOLDER RULE The Escape of the Whole of the Passengers. TIN DAYS ON A DENOLATE. ISLAND. We take from one of the New York papers, and the Panama Star and Herald of Jund 16, the follow th g particulars of the wreak of the steamship Golden Buie, of width we gave a very brief notice yester day : "The steamship Golden Rule, belonging to the Central American Transit Company line of Gall• Yards steamers; via Nioctrauga, left New.YOrk May 22, with free hundred and thirty.five passengers and a mew of one hun d red, all told, for San Juan (Grey-- town). sEverything proceeded favorably until the afternoon of the 29th, when the weather became very dark and equally, with torrents of rain, which oontimied. On tne morning of May.3o, at half-past three, the ship struck on Ecuador reef, In latitude 13 degrees 33 minutes, longitude 80 . degrees 4 minutes, and in thirty minutes bilged. The ship came broadside on the reef. At the same time the et glneer reported the breaking of the main steam pipe and the water gaining very fast The boats were immediately lowered and brought under the lee aide of the ship, the masts were cut away, and the ship's company were building rafts for the safety. of the passengers. Duringahe day there was a light breeze from eastward, with very heavy rain squalls and a very heavy swell. In the afternoon, ii i .ingthleee . disoovered to the northwest, and Cap- On his returntielOni.e,s it t nnt engineer there. nd &ho l t twelve acres in extent, destitute of number of email wells on It. Before night the had constructed rafts, and embarked the women and children, and by 1 A. M. had safely landed two hundred and thirty. In the meantime the cap. ton despatched Mr. Pendleton, the tirst officer, to the nearest land —Old Providence—ninety . miles ',distant, for assistance. At daylight on the 310 t, Owe of the boats were loaded from the raft with passengers, sails, and provisions, and sent to the island six miles distant. The remaining boat was occupied in transporting passengers from the ship to the raft, made fast to the rooks inside of the reef. Before night every man, woman, and child escaped. Touts had been erected on the island to protest the paidengers from the weather. In all, they num bered dye hundred and thirty. Provisions SUM. client tor twenty days had been landed, and a plan ting supply of water could be obtained- Beyond this nothing was saved from the ship. The island MS sufficiently elevated to be dry at all times about fiften acres in extent and almost barren, the only vegetation being a sort of stinted parsley, but a cool breeze was blowing consta'stly over it at this. season. Purser Boy era left the Island at 1.3‘,P. lit on the second of June, in one of the ship's quarter. boats, 111 charge of David Reid, Second einem, and manned by three of the ereAr and two steerage pail sengers ; they arrived safely at Aspinwall In ninetyr- FtVert hours. When Mr. Rogers loft the Island the ship was full of water, and rolling 80 heavily that it was thought she could not hold together long. The passengers were as well prevision for as possible, and the steerage portion were busily engaged in building stone huts. The passengers had been die• trffinted in the ship as follows : First cabin 76 Third eaffin 389 Second cabin a .10b1 - Total 630 Males 30110MLIreis Female]] 136 Infants Total 00 Moen and orew On the Bth the first Maser returned with two small fishing vessels of twentysight tons each. Captain Dennis had partly made arrangements for the trans portation of as many of the passengers as they could carry to Aspinwall, when, on the morning of the nih, Mr. Reid, the second offier mime to the raceme with two government gunboa ts—the punts ville, Commander Devine, and the State of Georgia, Commander Preble, from Aspinwall. In less than three hours the passengers and crew were dis tributed on board the two steamers, with bedding and provisions for the passage, and reached Aspin wall in safety on the 11th. • Tho passengers were immediately landed, and left for Panama at nine A. 111., and for California at half past nine P. X., on the steamer America. They were ten days on the island. The thermometer ranged from eighty-five to eigiityeeven during the day, and then 'wag no rain altor the first night.. Captain Dennis says the only way he can amount for the lOtte of the ship Is owing to a strong northwest current. Me felt per featly confident of his position on noon or the loth of May, as he had good sets of observations on that morning, and the course steered would have given the ship a berth of twenty - Ave 411.105 from the reef. The klnd or the War The 11110Wleg article on "Submission, ,, from the Wilmington (N. 0.) Her" of the llth, is Well worth a Careful and attentivarperlisal. What a sea of blood and how many thoukaride Of Wee could have been spared if, tour years ego, the 15satthem people had thought as they do now ? Suissuestow.--IThere is no longer any rebellion against the Untied States GovernoserM There are some rebels In estiotenee o bat of these all residing within the terrifory of the United States, with a very few eiceeptionc; are In prison avratting, or ono tually nadeogoing trial for near Oritaett. more are' others In Canada—as Sanders, Twriter, Bleary, and that crowd. Mason and Slidel l with their voca tions gone, are roaming abbot Europe, Alke Poole on this continent, looking for some sequestered spot In Which to take up their abode. The posvel'and au thority of the United States Government' is re established from Maine to the Rio Grande, and from the Atlantic to the' POMO°. All grand re instance to that power and authority her been withdrawn, and ail rebellion against it crewed. The time wall when tide resistance to the GOVosios went and the rebellion against It controlled an army of half a million of men • with a full organized olyil government tb direct It; with arsenals for the mannfacturr of war material ; with unrestrfeted control over the people, and the resources of ail the country embraced within the limits of the insurgent territory. filet with all that complete organisation, that unlimited power, that formidable army, and those lotmenstriadoarees, the rebellion could not succeed. It was crashed by the greater power of the United States. People May now say if so and BO had been the Mee, or If suen and ouch things had happened— the. South would have succeeeed. Bat so and 80'48,5 net the case, and such andloach things did not happem Bat the glaring fact cannot be disputed that the rebel lion was put down and the supremacy' or the na tional authority* rseeetablished in all the land. How WAIN It is, therefore, at this time to be studying the past to find the MIMS for the %lintel With all this power and authority, and these rename, the South could 'not succeed. These elements of strength are now taken away from it, and the or oanisation so carefully Matured has been complete ly broken up anti Boattoron, ono toe leaaleg men of whom it was composed are either prisoners or fugi tives, in either cam harmless for evil. How foolish, then, it is for people now to talk of resisting the GO vernment. It they could not Succeed in the day of their power and strength, how can they hope to suc ceed in the time of their complete overtnrow and total dispersion t It will be well for those, if any there be, who yet harbor hostile sentiments to wards the Government, to consider this view of the case. We do sometimes hear the threat made that if the Government, for instance, persists In hanging political offenders, the South will resist It; or if something else is done, or left undone, the people of the South will not submit to it. However galling and distasteful It may be tone to think so, yet we have got to eubmirto whatever the General Go. verioment °bootee to do. We are utterly powerless to resist in any particular. We are completely conquered. And we only make matters the worse for ourselves by manifesting any other than a spirit of quiet, willing SUOMlselon. It is not courage to court imprisonments or banishment, or death, when Our imprisonment, or banishment, or death, can possibly do ourselves, our feliowcitizene, or our country no good. Neither is it patriotism to in dulge In a course of conductthat only tonde s to repel from ne the returning conlidenee and love of Abe supreme power of the land, and so 'prolong theah- Sence of civil law and order, with its attendants of prosperity, peace and happiness from among us. This Idea of submission is a terrible bugbear. It is galling to submit under any oircumstenoes. But we should have thought Of this before we took up arms. The finality of war is the submission of one or the other of the parties. War is the arbitrao ment of power, In welch the stronger prevails and the wertimr submits. Had we mustered more strength, and had our resources been greater than that of the North, we should probably have pre sailed, and the North would have been compelled to submit to the separation we sought. There would have been no help for them. There Is no ap peal from the decisions of battles. We referred our cause to that arbitrament. We fought the bat tle with all our might and skill. Bat the tide set against us, and we were forced to yield. It is oar Own fault, teen, that submission is oar fate, and. e Contend that it is not a hard fate. For before the war we stood on equal terms in the Union with the North. They neither controlled us, nor we them . All sections stood on an equality. Our submis. elm now, therefore, cannot be so unendurable, since it only places us in the position which we had occupied for eighty odd years before we re. belled, and In which we had been happy and pros perous. The Former Home and Family of Henry -- -- A correspondent of the Cincinnati Commercial tells a melancholy story of Ashland, the late home stead of Henry Clay, and gives the history of his descendants. The old homestead of Henry Clay, it seems, is now occupied by the family of Hon. Thos. Clay, one of his sons, and present Minister to one of the South American Governments. It is owned by the heirs of Tames B. Clay, who, It will be re membered, died In Canada about a year ago. The house in which Mr. Clay lived when at home. was torn down some years since by James, and a magni ficent structure erected on its site, and there Is no thing now about the place to remind one of We who once owned and honored It, except the family buggy In which the old man and his wire Used to drlYo about, and the oak trees in front of the house, be neath whit% he used to sit and talk with his family and friends. Mr. Clay had five Sons. Four of them survived him. One, who bore his father's name, was killed In the Mexican war. Thomas, as I have said, is now a Government minister. John Is living on one half of the old homestead, now divided into two farms. James died a fugitive in a foreign laud, and Theodore (the oldest of the family) IS, and has been for twenty lire years, an Inmate of an Mane asy lum, still avowing to every one With whom he coub• versus that he is the original George Washington, and refusing to respond to v. salt by any other nettle. Wr. Clay bad no possessions of or.v trtelLat the time of his death, with the exception of Asniano,,,L....- Was, of course worth a considerable sum; but even that was heavily mortgaged, and he thought at one time he would be compelled to abandon it to his creditors, until one day, when he entered the bank to pay-one of his notes, he was told that he did not owe a cent. rind and !onerous friend!! had taiXa ble case in hand, and lifted the pecuniary bur n from his shoulders. Masonic Burial ka. Neve York. HUNBRAL OF TUB GRAND TRBASURER OF THE GIUND LODOIt OP NNW YOGI[ EITATB The Masonic fraternity of this city paraded in great force, on Sunday last, to testify their respect to the memory of their late brother, Charles L. Church, the grand treasurer of the Grand Lodge of the State of New York. The funeral took plate at di. Ciereentss Eptheopal church, in Amity street, near McDougal, the deceased being a ooturutroica.tt of that church. The ceremonies at the church were conducted by the Rev. Mr. Cleary, the officiating clergyman. The funeral services were conducted according to the Episcopal rubric. The different Masonic lodges assembled in Washington square, and forming in column six deep, marched through McDougal street into Amity,l uncovering their heads as theypassed the hearse, in front of the church, In which the remains had been placed for interment. The procession having passed the chunk, the Co lumbian command of Knights Templar, in charge of the body, fell into line. bring.ing up the rear or the column. The members of the lodges participa ting in tile display, were dressed in citizens' clothes, with bunches of evergreen In their button-holes, wearing. white gloves, and the white apron of the Order. The demonstration was on a grand scale, there being over four thousand Masons in line, In spector Carrpenter, of the Metropolitan police force, a member of the Greenwich Lodge, acting as grand marshal for the occasion. Having arrived at the Hamilton ferry, the prooeS sign opened make to allow the hearse to pass through. Zetland Chapter, St, John's Lodge, and the Knights Templar accompanied the remains to Greenwood Cemetery, where the body was isom rented to its last resting plate with appropriate Masonic ceremonies.—New 'York paper. Tho Resolutions or the Ohio State Valois Among the resolutions paseed by the late Union Mids. Convention Of OW were the following c. That the name and fame of Abraham Lincoln stand out from the history of the epoch unrivalled and alone; and,while we deplore his untimely and cruel death, and venerate his memory, it becomes us to imitate ids wisdom, firmness, and moderation in the treatment of vexed questions, and especially to imitate his example, in waiting for the solution of difficultlea to be furnished by the progress Of time and the 'ogle of events. That the President, Andrew Johnson, by his un wavering devotion to the.. Union, through years of the severest trial, has now our highest confidence, and that we obeerfully endorse the policy of his Ad ministration, looking to the restoration of peace and civil order in the so-called seceded States, and that, as Union men of Ohio, we will itiVe him our hearty and undivided support. That four years of sanguinary war, with its fear ful sacrifice of life -and. treasure, forced upon us by the siaveholdors' rebellion, hair demonstrated to us, and to the world, that. slavery and its institutions are irreconcilably opposed to freedom and free in stitutions; and all the teachings of IfisSory, the deal. trigs of Providence, arid our own bitter experience, point unerringly to their overthrow and eradication, as OUT only safeguard against the recurrence of like evils in the future. That while we are =IOUs for an early reconstruc tion of fraternal relations with the Insurgent States, we demand that suctareconstruction shall be at snob time and upon such terms as will give unqueatlened abauranoe of the peace and security, not only of the UltiO peace mule of. the rebel States, but a th lso of the eAftba Federal. That the experience the absolute necessity, in air our political sieWair of keeping steadily In view the great prinolples :o Our GOVernreentois set forth in the Declaration of Independence. Ox INTHISMNW BETWEIrti BOOTH .B.IID DdySO.— J. B. Van Dien, who says he was a clerk in. the rebel War Department, writes to the. Chao!matt commercia/ that in February last, he wita present at an interview between Booth and . Davis. Booth was introduced .to the Confederate chief by Benja min, and two other young men were in his comp pay. Who story runs thus: Booth commenced by saying that a Itlein war formed,. by parties in the B.orthern States and Canada, friends of the Confederacy, to capture or to assassinate Mr. Lincoln ; that he had a full list of the names, and all they desired was an official recognition on the part of the Confederate authori ties, and that then the project would certainly be executed. He farther stated that. they desired no pecuniary assistance from the Government, as that was already secured ; that theywore not after gain, but Were solvated only,by a desire to render the confederacy a service - by removing the tyrant Who Was the cause */ Dinah entrernig to the country and the only, o bstacle in the way of a speedy peace. These 'are the words, as near as I can now remember. Messrs. Davis and lireokinridge both, expressed their hearty con demnation of the. plot, and advised Booth to think no more of it. That they felt that their amuse was just, and that God, in Ws own good time, would give. them the victory, without resort ing to anything but the most honorable warfare, and that they. were willing to Maim Lincoln's punishment for- his treat crime, to the Providence or a just God. and aa outraged people. Benjamin said nothing. BOOBS then retired, and the last words Muttered lathe room were :• " Ile mud die 1" After Booth and MU friends were gone, Davis Said: "Those fellows Same here merely to see the Rich mond sights, and their assassination-plot is a mere fudge." , Breckbaridge and Benjamin laughed, and the latter said, "I think so." the matter received to mare attention, and all agreed with air. Davis that the plot was Mere "fudge." I am satisfied that none. of there ever expected what has since become ea deadly a reality. In oonclusion, let me say that I em willing to be qualified to the above SlalellreMe 620 Gacuturt N. Sawnsits.—The Wilmington (N. 04 Harald, speaking of George N. Sanders, MS s; What business has this fellow to style himself fellow.oltizen' of the Southern people I and exited! Exiled by whom, and from where 3 Nobody asked him to go to Canada. Re went there of Ms own free °holes. Nobody has asked him to stay there. lie can go where he pleases. He can return to the United States if he pleases. Nobody has asked him to stay away, or sent him away; on the Contrary, the Government will give twenty. rive thousand dol lars to get him back, and has so publicly declared. Exiled felloweitizen, indeed l Was Byer PlAmdelu l° like thIS exhibited 1" Convention. FOUR CENTS. RIOT IN NORPOLK. Fieree Contest Between nolanere anal Negroes. The Norfolk ad' Dominion ot Saturday tells Of a Fortes of riots, extending from Thursday night up to Saturday night, when it ended in a pitched battle. On the first and Second nights the tights - were' seri ous neither in their - charaCter nor remits, but on Saturday the fight Was renewed near the'pavilion of a °ironer new exhibiting in that city. A party of , thirty or forty Legman- marched down iranby street in a body, and in toning the elms tent Mine in conflict with the soldiers, who were on the' spot in conctdorable numbers. The former were put to rout, and chafed up and item :he street, with cries, "Here he goes "There tie if I" "Killtitur I n every negrn seen on the street was placed in the guard-house as &precautionary measure for their personal gaiety. We asked one of the soldiers the cause cr the stir. Re re plied that "they (the negrees) hail boasted • that they would drive As . Ole white soldiers) out of the city p and a party or ,nif iio 5 name aronnA to' see if they would do It." We do not known that this is so or not. they did make a threat of the kind, it was very anise and impo litic on their part. About half-pas;olllverseolook the soldiers went around on Wide Whter street, be tween the ferry slip and Roanoke square, and com pletely gutted an establishment kept by colored persona, as a restaurant arid bail-room." Timidoor was torn open, furniture broken, windfiswariohes knocked out, crockery-ware, decant:ere, istal'sses t and everything elle of value ruthlessly destroyed. Some of tief moo war...arrested, but most of then inCkAid, airAilas vinianuit. LETT= IRON GIiNEE.Ati EAVELL-CIOLLMOr CEP THE JANEW-TBs LEGESLATIIDE. OZNEMAL BW3LL IfiND . l , .lllO RlO/11d02 . 1D V,rlV. The conneotion General Ewell had with Car jet& dleastrour lire, says the Richmond Re . puidic, +1 oar not seem to be fully understood, The followleV min a letter to' a friend, just received from He IS EMI In Fort' Warren "Refund/ix how hard I tried to organize a Jt111• stabularyforcerin Richmond: .1 knew nothing Of rv, bring of the. arsenal, or Cutting the engine -Wm. These were the work of unauthorized persons or kb , cendleries. I lied no force is stop the plundering' which was going on all night. I made couriers ard policemen of my atalf,trying to prevent disorder and violence. Several flees were kindled before we 1014 and an attempt to burn Marota bridge frustrated by 'the daring Of ihe engineer officers, Who, at great risk. removed burning canal boats from wader It. What I did was In obedience to positive orders that had been given me. Looningfwith General Kershaw, towards Richmond, we saw building after building, at a dia. tame from the river , Ignite, evidently set on hre. I feel this matter very deeply. I see myself unjustly blamed. 1 did not exceed, but fell short of my in ntruotions. "Yours, affectionately, "R. S, EWELL," A STEAMER. RUES .11ITO'A FLOTILLA' OP BASSES LOADED WITH SOLDISRIFP.-ONS OP TEMPI OUT IN ' moo AND BURK. Between four and flve'o'clook Wednesday after. noon, as the steamer City Point, Captain Talbot, was going up the Sautes to Richmond, and, When opposite Drury's Bluff, a tug was descried ahead, towing a number of barges loaded with soldiers attached to the engineer corps; employed In reo moving the obstructions from the river. The whistle of the stermer was blown as a warning for the tug to keep, to the left ; but instead of going to the left and leaving the track clear for the passage of the steamer, the tug veered around right in the steam. ex's course, exposing her convoy of barges to a smashing collision. The City Point ploughed right Into the midst of them, striking one INTO. 12) fair and square, end cutting her completely in twain. Those aboard jumped into the water, and the steamer being by this time etopped, the captain ordered the gangplank to be thrown overboard to their assistance. Boats put out from the shore, and all hands were taken up alive. The tug towing the barges was the Poulton. The City Point was not injured, and came on immediately to the city. OVSZIIITIRDENBD OITIZIENS. The Time says there Is one County In Virginia in which, under the law now amended. there was one man who would have found it necessary to hold all the offing aud elect himself Even nen he Is the only qualified Moe holder. LOUDOWII COUNTY. The wheat crop of Loudoun 10 represented as having suffered materially from the rust and joint worm. LEGIBLLTIVE PEOCKIMINOS. On Thursday the Legislature elected Mr. R. E. flesh, of Norfolk county, Land Registrar. Both Rouses have passed the bill to amend the Conetltatloa 110 RS to allow all persona to hold office, removing the disqualification ealstingagalnet those who have held poeltionS raider Rebel Govern. meats. - A bill providing for an inOrease of taxes to twenty nye cents on the hundred dollars in value 01 lands and lots was adopted by the House, P. H. Gibson, of Richmond, was elected Clerk of the House. FABRIONAHLB DISTSBee IN LONDON.--FOr the last fortnight accounts have reached us from all eldre abowing the existence, at the presenttimo, of a wide spread distress throughout tae populous dis• blots of Mayfair and Belgravia. No doubt some of them are highly Colored, but in the main we fear they ate tine. We have ourselves noticed symptoms which phew that there is a groat differestoe In the comfort of the people inhabiting those parts or the kingdom from that usually enjoyed at this season of the year. The numerous correspondents who have addressed us on the subject are of too high stand ing and Undoubted authority, for us to doubt that a vary trying sense of privation is weighing heavily on what should be a happy and contented popula- Bon. We will not give the names- of those un. fortunate persons who have made us the de positaries of their troubles, bat we• will ex [rad a, few Sentences to show that we are not ex. aggeraupg when wo state that, nnlesssome remedy, Parliamentary or social. is at elide applied, the year Me will be long remembered as one of ex. rvipt i xlF2! hi k ) and suffering. A young lady, and I, and my ;OW, ;,` Llama?. We try to bear it patiently, but it VIET Mato We have only had two balls in the last ten days, and when our present cards, very few in number, are exhausted, we do not know where to turn for more." Another, who states that she is twenty. four years Old, and therefore OEM lay claim to some experience, says ; "As for myself, Ido not so much care. I have boon so fortunate in for. mer y ears that, severe as the distress is yet I can meet it with a fair amount of resignation ; but it Jukes me miserable to see my youngest sister, a dear little thing, but just entering life, only pre. tented this year, suffering so acutely, and I cannot do anything' for her. Baring the many seasons I have been in London I have never known such a time." A wellknown dlner-out and popular talker Inlotioe us that he has frequently this season had to dine at his own expense, and says that, though be works as hard as over in his trade, and, notwlttr. standing the dull times, has a fair amount of Manu factures in hand in the shape of Mies, scandals, and other wares of that sort, yet he finds that he cannot procure the most ordinary necessities of ex- Mono* by his honest labor. From Belgrave square a most respectable married woman, with a large family, writes as follows " What le an aotive, worldly woman to do in a time like,the present one ? 1 am ready to slave for my children to any ex tent. I will sit up with them all night, or boar any amount of squeezing or crushing, If by that I San further their prospects in life, But the opportunity for showing my &math% to my fatally 10 denied me. Two or three balls, one of them gaffe scrubby, and half a dozen seedy drums, are all that we, who, as you know, have been nursed In the lap of luxury, have had to touch since we have been in London. I hide all this, as far as I oan, from my husband, who, poor man, is put out enough at the fight be has ooming off in the autumn. But I see he feels anatotta. , ' We might multiply these in etaneeS to almost any extent, but what we have said will DO doubt suffice. It Is appalling to think that round about us, aye, at our very doors, We sort Of thing Should exist ; but so it is, and it is the bounden duty of those who have it In their power to throw open their houses, and afford some allevia tion to the distressed masses. Whatever is done must be done at once, or it will be too late. Par liament, _we fear, will not interpose, bat it is all the more Incumbent on Individuals to supplement its shortcomings. As far as we are able, we will gladly help,, and any cards of Invitation entrusted to us Obeli be oaretully distrlbnted to the moat urgent easea.—The Owl, ""The Shortest Way to the Some twelve years ago, Napoleon, Ind., was oele brated for two things—One for the carousing pro pensities of. its citizens, and the other for the great number of cross-roads in its vicinity. It appears that an Eastern collector had stopped at Dayton to fpend the night, and get some information respect ing his future course. Diming the evening ho be came acquainted with an old drover, who appeared posted as to the geography of the country, and the collector thought he might as well inquire In re gard to the best route to different points to which he was destined. "1 wish to go to Greenfield," said the collector ; "now which lc the shortest way I" " Well, sir," said the drover, "you had better go to Napoleon, and take the road leading nearly north." The traveller noted it down. " Well, sir, if I wish to go to Edinburg I" " Then go to Napoleon and take the road west." "Well, it I wish to go to Vernon 1" "Go to Napoleon and take the road southwest." Or to Indianapolis?" added the collector, eyeing the drover closely, and thinking he was being posed on. " Go to Napoleon, and take the road northwest." The collector looked at his notebook-every di rection had Napoleon on it. He .began to feel his slander rise, and he turned once more to the drover with, Suppose, sir, I wanted to go to the devil'?" The drover never smiled, but scratched his head, Mill Mu.. mossent'S hedtatioa.said " Well, my dear sir, r Awes karoW of any shorter road you can take than to go to Nap01.,,,,0, . RAII.W.cro Irtme..—Ttia through Ene from Lahore to Mooltan on the Indue is to be formally opened on Monday, the 24th. The branch line from the Great Bombay and Calcutta Railway, whet; pierces the cotton country. to Negpore, is making great progress. The contraotors who have got the railway from Lahore or. Emrltsir to Meerut and Delhi are hard at work. Tha only break which re. mains to be considered is that along the desert able of the Indus from Mooltan to Motree, the terminus of the line from Rut:rashes, which will soon have to be tilled up by iron liaise, Then Calcutta will be in direct oominunioation with iturraoltee, N 2000 miles off ; with Bombay, 1.000 miles off ; and ag pore, 1,100 miles off, by rail. Whether we look at the magnitude and solidity of the works, or at the distances which they traverse, the railway RAE India will far surpass those in most European countries. They will sever 5,000 ,mlies at a Costa seventy millions sterling. PERNTN(4- A. PATIENT THROROR A DOCTOR'S Slourzt.—Thii Rev. R. A. E Dairen, of Htng's pet lege, Cambridge, England, would have us °neve It possible. Be tells of his being called to see a woman who for twelve years, had to remain in a horizontal pennon. He need to mesmerize her, and states on one °cession, when she wan. Buffering se. verely in the throat, he ate some black curran t paste, which, she said, moistened it. "Before gal/ ate," she said, "my stomach was contracted ; now the stomach is its full size, and does not look shrunk." (She was clairvoyant, and omdd see her own internal condition,) DootoT t• "Bet you could not get nourishment sot Patient: Yes, I could get all my System WARM" "111 tile evening," says Mr. Barrett, " I kept her Mem Ono near, and took tea for her. I ale dinner, and she reit mink stronger for it. I kept her asleep two hours and a quarter in the morning and one hoar in the evening, eating for her as usual." What a blessing and a saving it will be if people can really eat for one another No more destitute pauperism ; no more starvation PERSONAL. Preeldent John's= Is suffering from a Severe cold, and yesterday he wee unable to reoeive tors. Hie private secretary, Col. Browning, is also and confined to life room. Hie military secrets ry, General Mussy, left Washington yesterday morning on a brief visit to this city. Mr. Clarence Seward, Acting Assistant Setae. tory of State, Is also ill with fever. He was much nnproyoc, however, yesterday. royal deeree had been leaned in Opals, wbieh provhionsily nominates Senor Ammo's Dllniater for Foreign &flare ; In plsoo of Senor Bennytdel. Thin WAIL PIELEIPIL trerm.nonva WORMY. nu WAIL Timm will b• mad to subaerlbara by prall iNIF annum in Adria(*) Ilse aonim.. ••• • 1,.•.•• • * 4 4 4 M 4. •••••• AV vs Of Large Oloba than Tan will be Owed M the MOM tate. OIL 00 per copy. The money moat always aeeomPanti the 040 . 114411 _,. no instance can Uwe terms be deviated f rom. ^. they afford very little more than Me wet of Palm AltiF Postmasters are reonettod to stet an are ti fit TB, Wilt er To the setter-es bf the CIO of tOttor twat,. Ili extra sow of the piper will be given. TILE CITY, 451. ) 3200p.A1, GIUNT IN CHURCH.—Among the IfeleDeftird4 ineldente of the dedication of Spring Ghtdeu.viti'cot M. E. Olatirth, On Sunday last, was the visit of the Lieutenant General. Very wpm. Peatedir to the congregation, at about the hour of Service commencing, General Giant ? with two of hie ahildtl7n, accompanied hp two of hie staff and Gee, g, Cituart, Leg., entered , the church, which was very de Maly crowded. Rev. :fames Neill took the puny In charge, and furnished • them with Beate tile The General appeared mach ire preteri t ote t Le eloquence of BNILOP Simpson, and when, after the sermon, the subscriptions: were being made, to book°, mut to one of the offiders. who, after conferrrig. with him, announced that Gen. Grant desired tl eentriVilte tiOt fur himself and 6'loo for Mn. Giant; tews..pis the erection or the oauroh. At .. the close of the se.•vieett he wee formally Introduced by Rev: Pin Clobktten, the pastor, to the audionoe, oho all arose( to Noir feet as the General stood bip , Sore them. v..lery s sotal We wee completely surrounded ; by thin)g whr weA) an - Atone to gra.* hie hand, and it ally t e e ephi e e,vit at. the rear of the church, In th e eveatew; in Order to show their appro. elation of the Generalte itherality, a proposition wee made to contribute $1,03e for a pew for him.eif sad family. `ln 'a our, leer minutes the cum was raised, a nd the pew 341,• to be sec , apart on Wednesday evening next. The entire contributions of the day amounted to .116,900—certainly a very handsome sum, but well desernedhy the elemtbers of this church, who have airendy establishenrano, themselves a fine reputation tor tars liberality, A.. 01 the interior arrangements of this ektrels' are it :the Yeti beSt taste, and we look upon the StrudralVii SIM' respOOSI ee 4 44 4 f the most complete, hea lits detail, in our city, re flecting nineh credit , epetn the:mirk° have had the management of its zrakition. We must confese, however, Ilea their I:iirse le moat shockingly out or all proporttmk. Ito style ref arobiteeture Is a puzzle but. vre RTC' Ma pave o vrarltmk even its suprane ugliness alter' enjoying , a eight of the magnificent euditorinm: . . CopvErvirjo,V OF DI: ECTOR:I OF THR.FTER .D4rAmworr A y.--‘, The annual coninekidoll of Ille "vetoes of the Al a Department wan held teat even , in the rooms 4 1 the r'lre Aesoolatlun, Oradea- Saki from savant;' companies were presented. An election of ofgeepe was gone Into. The following fa .tiler result : .Thv bident. —Samoa q Stone. Dohlware Engine. T , Fide Presidents.-1 S. U. Riebardson j Southwark itosof Samuel 311 S, aids, Northern .I.llbertleo Ea . gine. l'roesurer.--Lew'fo ki. nue' PErielidehlp Engine. is WeSt Blake, Bev,. was Sseritary, hid teem hat hating expired. oommunleatiomwoof 'oeeivodflOnl the Eiretnen.l Parade ilonventiororelati 'ye to the'dispute In regard to aenlority between'the 1 Liberate,' Engles and the HandAndiand Engine 4.30), 41Pan2Ani, asking the QM veraton Ls settle the difdat The. President deetded I hat Ohe^matter, having been already decided by the Board'of Directors at a ti pre on v y m en n t si o m n e . e e t x ln oe g p , t oo: n id e awt not ' lO l/ te Vic re t n e: t e d d er hy the °ouz o l ame d papa mat a spoon: footing the decision of the chair, and Mr. A. A, freeman In op. position thereto. The deaislot 2of the chair was site. talued—yeas Oa, nays 1 The Oonventlon adjourned. It rtn reassemble On the third Monday of August next. BALTIMORE AND °Eno 1 tAILEOAD.—This road has probably suffered 1111015 a than any other in the country, by frequent raids in ads upon it, during the recent causeless rebellion. 1k much of its property was destroyed by gangs of murd stone freebooters, who lived for a time by robbery did rdurder. But the management of the road was momptly attended to, by that railroad king, Mr. W.. Prescott smith, the maater et trauspOrtAtiori, We 0 proved himself equal to every emergendy that al ye in the dark and gloomy hours of the past. Very recently the company did a „ big thing , ' In trai isporting trope. Within ten days no lees than 130 ,000 troops were taken over the road without acoiden I. Those troops had with them horses, mules, artillery, baggage, dm: This transportation was over the mita stem, and is exclusive of 50,000 troops sent to Baltimore. One hundred and sixty-two extra trains were rue Within the period of ten day s _ j one train Of sixty. tyro cars arriving at the Relay HMO, Artilf mum.. Mg this plade the train had to be doubled, in owe queues •of the sharp curves and ascending grades. This was successfully accomplished by the com. party's active agent, Mr. John W. Houser. Not withstanding this pressure the regular business of the road was not interrupted, and all this without accident.. Go:oo'Am or THE POOH.—The regular stated meeting of the Board of Guardians took place yesterday afternoon, at the Almshouse, Pre. eleeet Eretl In the °hair, The BOWAN NH/0nel! the house reeeipti to have been $1,860: ' Thy out door agent reported having oollootod for support oases $04.25; emigrant tax, $lB9. The home agent reported the following canna of the house for the week ending Saturday, Juno 24, 1865 :. Number in the house, 2,481; same time last year, 2,266; Increase, 286. Admitted within last two weeks, 204; births, 4; deaths, 84; discharged, 129; eloped, 84; indentured, 2; granted lodgings, 60; mewls, 148. The committee on new. Children's Asylum re. ported progress, and asked to be continued, which. ROl3 granted. The steward's rectufeltiors were reed and grant ed also, those of the supertateit49et• of Mahrilao tut es. . . On motion, 1t was agreed that the Board meet 011 the Bret Monday le July, at nine oielook A. Mq to reorganize. Adjourned, LINCOLN MONUMENT ASSOCIATION.—The following some have been received by James 1.. Olaghorn, Treasurer of the Lincoln Monument ABR.OiellOrl, at the office, 911 Chestnut street: Olivet Presbyterian Church, per Henry R. Ringuell DM, , 010 00 An :glo.A bray merloan Bononoisa 'oci,oty, per TThee. Mow 25 04 Frank and Haney Mowbray 2 00 Sailinakerai Department, United States Navy Yard, per James Ferguson 55 50 MILITARY ACADEMICAL The commencement of the Pennsylvania Military Academy, at West Chester, whereof Colonel Tn. Hyatt Is Principal, ex Governor Pollock being chief of the Board of Directors, will take place today, in the Met,LaLlt, Episcopa l ChtitOb, West Chester. Major General Crawford will review the eadetS, on the grounds of tho Academy, at three P ht., and all will be concluded in time to allow visitors to leave West Chester at 6.46 P, M. Those who purpose being present wilt notice that the train leaves the station, Thirty.tirst and Market Streets, at 6.45 A. M. to day. The Cadet' exercises are worth going a hundred miles to see. FrriEn.—Yesterday afternoon, John C. Grant & Co.'s eQlnposttion•roofing establishment, Sprucerstreet wharf, ;schuyikill, took firs, The fire was confined to some frame shedb, oontaining the kettles ; the main building, which. 18 Of brick Heaped with slight damage. It is supposed that the Ore originated In a leak from one of tae kettles. The ice•honse of Alexander Brown, adloining, was slightly damaged. LOU not ascertained The alarm of fire last evening was caused by the hi:antra of Wagner's carpenter•shop, Fifth street, below Coates. Damage not ascertained. . P.14 - ul2 P. E. Catritem—Sl. Paul's r. Waln B, Metall, Third, below t, WWI Dver In more flourishing oPfstilliatithooll th u an it le e al BA present time, under the able rectorship of Rev. Dr, Kingston Goddard. On Sunday last the rite of eon firmation was administered to seventeen persons is this church by Right Rev. Bishop Stevens. DROWNED. Edward, (haul, eleven years of age, was drowned at OoMeS.atreet, wharf, Sobnylklll, yesterday afternoon. OPERATIC CEIPPOIOS. Vlttrloatnel , is soon to be produced. at St. Petersburg, with Harbot and Tamberilk In the oast. It is also announced at Prague. -In oilers, Patti, who 18 deolared to be MOTO charming and attractive than ever, hat a rival In the new star at her Plajeatra Theatre, Mdlie.illtnit, de Minolta. gum& JongMgt, Wife of the famous violinist, is announced to appear as a Apgar at the next con■ cart of the Philharmonic Society In Landoll, In a biography of Schubert, recently publiShed, the following passage occurs : "From. the deepest recesses of my heart do I hate that oneosidedness which oauses so many poor wretches to believe that only the particular Room. patton in which they are engaged is the best, and that ail the rest are nothing, One beauty should accompany man through life—that is love—but the lustre of his enthusiasm for this should briettett everything else." English papers say GI:Alit:I, "-the . golden, tenor," is lost to the world !orator. Mind andhody are both rapidly decaying. A story of rare Bang (mid in a Gersten artiste hes recently been told. She had been tinging some solo during a representation at Grate, when her dress took tire at one of the footlights, The Audi• once rose and shrieked. Beating four bars te WNW for the interruption, the fair vocalist extiognished the liaise , and then quietly tatting up the air,: with,, out lose of time eY toot, sang trancistily to theiend, when torrents of applause rewarded her courage. =Mr. Santley has signed an engagement for the Opera. Rouse, Milan, where he proof:oda abort the beginning of next year. The young English Tenor, Mr. Tom Baler, has been singing with immense zuoceas at MUM. Mlle. Therese to singing with great ettoossa at the.Bouffes Parisians, in a little piece written fog the occasion, and called Clmtpour ce Sotr.) , Many persons who would not venture to ' a cafe chantant art now enabled to bear this celebrated artiste,who sings a different song eaoli evening. Peeleittn,goi :,,te, roue nerfeetly riot In respect to that Very forts. .nate Ituosum.. °se story current makes her pop& ler as a teacher and givesher lara sumg for schooling noble ladies who desire tv alvelte tier finished , style, and furthcx asserts that she Is very Imperious towards such pupils, even. to beating a , EVIIIB,II Countess who , remonstrated against her uncoil:oone language ,to nobility. • The Dlreetore ot• the Crystal Pelee.) hare en. gaged Meile. AdelLvi. Patti for the whole of the coming Handel Featteal, -Gottschalk and , party have ar,rived In San Fran, 6188 e, and gave their Brit oonoort on the tom of May Madame Xteerbetsr has presented oath of the artists who have acted 1n L'Africaine with a valua ble token of bar anpreolation,of their offorts,to do pollee to her husband's work, Mlle. /Jetta, and Madame Saxe have received a'magettleent brae.. let ; NaUdin, Faure, Ee/Vsd; Odin , Warot, David, and Ortsteizeory a medallion oontaining a ministate of MoyerbhOZ, with the initiate of each artist en &raved on the gold ease. The initla)s, or Plaudirtand Faure are traced in diamonds on their medallions. Madame Appa Bishop is returning to MOW York from her PaceiOal teat, Salvi has engaged for the coming opera MUM in Vienna, for the new opera house, Meedsmea Galettl, Lottl della Santa, V,olpini, Artot, BerattUs and 1 ahrlni ; Signers Monglel, Graslant, Guidettd, and Mule, tenors; Everardl, Pandelflni, Boise. 11:1, Aneellint, and MUGU, baritones and bassos; and Floravantl , Mak). Two new operas are to be ptecluood—k La Noma' , and ti Tatti In Mae. chem." Leotard, the accomplished performer On the trapeze, tata at length performed oboe too often. He has hid a bad Tali at Madrid and broken kb leg —At the Dante rgloyikl, lit Morena, Ittstori read a letter, Written for the ocoltdett by vietor Hugo, to the largest audience ever astattabled In the theatre there. R061311P13 MOB 0011tahl8 two fugues, SIM to be fine specimens of that difficult style of musical writing. Jules Renedlot is about oomposing an opera for a Parts theatre. The story is borrowed from SootVe " Fair Maid of Perth.). the violinist, has ;nada a Milting nooses In Pails, DA2II7ILLN ROAD...IIIOT THROUGH Tumw.—For the first time since the evacuation of Richmond a train will leave Manchester this morning, In charge of conductor William Taylor, and will proceed with• out Interruption of communioation to Danville. Passengere going to Dynehburg, however, take stages for Farnivilte at BurkvllleTunotion, between 1/111011 points the espteeee le seventeen mike. On reaching Varaivills they again thtd Owe in resat. noes to carry Omni for the remahMer jeir ney....RichinondßepuMic, Stab
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