TOE PREss, rUBI,ISIIED DAILY (SUNDAYS EXCEYTED) r‘ll .101 IN W. roltivEir. vows, xo. ill SOUTH 'FOURTH STREET. Tale DAILY PRESS, TO GAT EllbleribeTs, lo EIGHT DOLLARS PER ANNOIS, 1.13 advisee: or FIFTEEN CENTS PER WARN. reystge to lbe Carrier. Mailed to aub perlbers out of the city, SEVEN DOLLARS PSR . ; TIMES DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS FOR A FOR ONE poLIAR AND SEVENTY-FM •ARRA FOR TURNS MONTER, Invariably in advance • r the awe ordered. - Maeftlsrme nls inserted at the usual rates. " -WEEKLY I'KESS, Ty led to Subecrl To ßere, TOUR DOLLARS PER Ea , Advance. Vrtss. SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1865 n=lli The news Which wo print from Texas and lexico this morning is interesting. The Go ernor of Sal tit lo (Liberal) had captured Kirby with and his party and train, consisting of pieces of artillery and seventy-five wagons fil m - munition and provisions. It is probable 4 , y were going to joinlfaximilifm. The officers „d wen wore prd aroled. The rebel Gen. Shelby his force had also attempted to enter ~,v i ce, but the authorities of Piedras Negras -051 d not let them enter with arms in their unuts This forced them to dispose of their It is denied that Magruder and Kirby faith had made money oil' cotton specula lens, lien. Smith had arrived at Brownsville ail from S,OOO to 10,000 United States troops. il lan had given authority to a General lonct to enlist Texans for guerilla service. Steele (of our ninny) has required Corti --who is at Brownsville, to keep the peace. An Indian force, ono thousand strong, had : 4 taelfed -Mite midge Station, Indian Terri -1,11., but, Mier:its e-days , fight, they were re 'ascii by the garrison, who only numbered we 'hundred and fifty. The Indians lost x yp . y. On cur side, one officer and one pri ,4, killed, and thirty-four men wound 1. The body of the officer (Lieutenant Col- I VIS horribly mutilated. A note picked os the battle-field said that the Indians is not in favor of peace, which can only be ,;mined by severely punishing them. The expedition, it is said, would have ::atted long :Igo, if the contractors had not f: ift e d to deliver the needed supplies. r nencral Thomas has written a letter to Go- T ailor Brownlow saying that if the language ,harged against Emerson Etheridge be - true iti is tqcarly amenable to the military autho rities. The Cirneral promisee Golterhor Brown low that the Union troops will assist him in tarrying out the State Ge&ernuient policy so :cog as they remain in the State. Governor mow - 1110w has called on General Thomas to aena troops to various counties to preserve or- Iv: and the purity of the ballot-box. hi appears' that the dams along the Stisque inina prevent the passage of shad, and other 1-h. up that river. The citizens of Harris• bjg are indignant, and consequently con oaplate to carry cut the law requiring the races of dams to construct shutes. The postal service is fast being restored to .I.lv south; of ices have been restored, and con •::iet.o given out, The ether departments of IP , Government are also engaged. in restoring ,:.everionsolliceS. The R a leigh (r. C.) Standard says that rebel 11 , ,T5, which openly advocate trsasonable are springing up in all parts of the We. Many of the new Federal appointees Mho their positionS, as they are not to take the oath. a hilst a steamer was on her way from La to St. Paul, on Thursday, an insane ,;:a fired into a party of passengers, killing nc , and wounding another. He was finally The contest, yesterday, between the boat hubs of Ilarrnrd and Yale Colleges, resulted the triumph of the latter. The 'Wheat crop in Indiana and Illinois is , gtEy damaged. In Wisconsin the reports are %lore favorable. . . The certificate' , of indebtedness are being edneed very fast, the number redeemed being ,wpik less than those issued. General Grant, witti a portion of his staff, :sE , reached Baratoga s where be met a hearty .eleorne. The yacht Clara Claretaorhich is to assist in piing . the shore end of the Atlantic cable, has trrived st Halifax en route for Aspy Bay. Tim remains of Bishop Potter left San. Fran i:tee on the 18th, by steamer. There is mueli more animation at the Stock , :nd, a smculative feeling haying deyeloped :reit" during the past day or two. It affects ;or rnment loans rather unfavorably, while :re oils and low-prieed secured securities sell 1 higher figirrus. Gold reached 147 yesterday, lierisetieingba , i , y l . upon the reports of im ?,iniing, trouble between the United States France. The flour market was firm yesterday at the airimee. Wheat is sem•cc and held higher. cets are also lather better. Cotton is firmly 1!14, but the sales arc limited. Provisions ontinue very scarce, and prices are well 14in-wined. whisk-y is without change. ;old eloped in :it, ss York last night, n-t,l4);fi MAXIMILIAIki DO? 'The intelligence from and about Mexico iatremely contradictory, as usual. One r !II (said to have been received from 'li-:1; *. via Cincinnati !) tells us that MAxi -3HILIN is about &Ling—perhaps ; adding -15,":00 French, Austrians, Algerians in ons, to be employed opposite Texas, where a Inge United States force is being -or- On the other hand, M. ELOIN, Vtlsent to Europe by MAXIMILIAN as a nit of itinerant plenipotentiary, is re pored by the Neu: York Herald as having aceanplished only a single object of his dii mastic : that he has failed 16persuade NAPOLEON 111. that it would I},nise to send more troops and money to Pk:co, but that he has succeeded in ol:t &Ili:1g from the Emperor of Austria a re , :tintion of his rights of succession as a pnrce of the House of Hapsburg, in the of his quitting Mexico. With the ption of these rights there would be 1r restoration of his liberal income (say .000,000 per annum,) out of the vast :tally funds of the said Hapsburg race. • lArald, which delivers this news very %rely, and without rhetorical " blow- Q 2 .!? "—in fact, as if it believed it—says : " Te have reason, also, for the belief - that the iisdon Of M. Eloin has been productive of a oirtner result—namely, that lie carries back , ith hint to Mexico, us the advice of. Louis Napcleon and of Xing Leopold, that, under all circumstances, and, seeing that it's now Hit that the people of Mexico do not de to luxe an Emperor to rule over them, the , t plan for 31am - ill:WI will be to abdicate tarty arnomentaspossible,andieturnto t.:mr.e. I nuit then the 'French troops, haying , : ,, t hie. farther to do there, will also retire; '''! ills whole of this disagreeable and un ,plll3;ttE Mexican business will be ended `'hut any further trouble. Napoleon and will both have paid a noble tri7 the great doctrine of satisfied nation • mid have very materially strengthened au act of wi4ioal and abnegation their id future po3itions in Europe, an .1, , r(:ztll things, will have avoided any uia the United Slates. we have reason to believe, is the ad ,(T Maximilian's Chief of Cabinet is I.;z from Europe, and Which we have 1111 further reason to believe will be speedily wais Ai? i 7 ,s, except the closing sentence, has rxisible, if not a truthful aspect, and, confess, comes to us as something .(.11,1! rational and probable. The doubt -;art, in the last three lines, is our con 11,orary'a confidential "reason to be -11,:,:c" that TilAxixtudAw will do so-and-so. itmuLtioi will scarcely decide on any ''zirsc until he has had a long talk with his TOE LIMERAL GOVERNMENT OF MEXICO shown unexpected vigor by the arrest ':: ,, !veral large bands of rebel refugees who entered that country for the purpose of lifAxammtxr's army. The forces KIRBY SMITII and General SHELBY (. fl from the status of _vrisoners of war in own country, only-to meet a similar '1(. in thei r new home. It is reported that Al Imperialists have offered many induce to rebel volunteers, and that they '`ln American Elibusterism a capital in hull", when the filibusters join their "grd Austrian, French, and Belgian orde. tTTER FROM "OCCASIONAL.” sitiNGTON,sJaly 28, 1865. The slower the Southern people are in rrying out the unniterabh# decrees of des ny, the slower the Guvernment will be in tcording to them "the rights" which too Say of their leaders show that they neither eserv, nor respect. If they can do without Eilierous assistance and protection the Executive, they may he well cured that he can do better without eir allegiance. There is a way of se erely "letting" these gentry "alone." I in not of those who attach such prime int ,rtance to the manner in which the re :accl rebel soldiers elect the most venous_ andcruel of their late officers to civil , sitions. It only shows that they arc not et ready for citizenship ; that they prefer MR:Jr; and that they do not want the eatral Government to help them out of stir ibistries. 7t shows, too, that they do 01, want to obtain new credits from the o:them merchants; that they are telling when they say they want their railroads built and equipped • and that they have no to. le; . •,.. r .. •._._.• _ 0 11 11 • I • ,•!• • _ • - - - "mak • •••• _ ( 2, ; VOL. 8.-NO. 229. hope to see Representatives from the South ern States admitted to the next Congress. The free States can and will do without the rebel leaders in Congress forever; and the war has taught the loyal sections that they can amazingly progress and prosper with out the Southein people. If these latter are pleased with the ruin wrought by the rebellion, and are resolved to try and send back their betrayers.. into the National Councils, they must even be indulged in their foolish at tempt. There are plenty of precedents es tablished by the Southern politicians them seltes, for keeping Senators and Representa tives out of Congress when they do not suit the majority. The friends of the Union cannot only fall back on these, but upon the higher ground of duty to the Republic and to the Constitution, when they pre emptorily turn away the men who seek to resume the places from which they fled, covered with perjury, into the army of the traitors. President Johnson's kindness enables these ingrates to show their hands. They are foolish enough to think it is not kindness, but timidity. A grave and fatal mistake, indeed t Let them take 'care lest—as he again realizes that the lead ers of the late rebellion are not to be trusted with any power, and are worthy only of suspicion and vigilant supervision— he does not strike such a blow as he threat ened their Chief with, in the Senate, when he said he would hang him if he ~attempted to lift his hand against We Union. The late- manifestations at Richmond, and Columbia, Tennessee, may be uncon scious preparations, on the part of the rebels, for the very doom they have so often professed to dread and de plore. I am in hopes, however,. that the perfidy of these wretched malignants will not be allowed to be a controlling ex ample in the South. The fixed resolve of the Government to - rebuke and crush it, will do much to prevent it from spreading ; but a better sentiment than fear is at work. The good men of the South are not all lost to the cause of humanity and to an impoverished people. I understand that Hon. James L. Orr, of South Carolina, is to -be here to-morrow to make application for pardon. I am not surprised to learn that he accepts his lot, and that he intends to take high ground in Ivor of the Constitutional abolition of slavery, and that he may offer a plan of colored suffrage which will show that he is not blind to the requirements of the times on that subject. Colonel Orr is not a small politician. He never was a Cal hounite. He could not do what the debased partisans alluded to are doing in return for the favor of the President. And he unhesita tingly says that there are thousands of men like him in other States. Let us hope he is not mistaken. OCCASIONAL. WASHINGTON. THE CIVIL SERVICE BEING RIPIDLY RE STORED TO THE SOUTH. THE AMOUNT OF CERTIFICATES OF INDEBTEDNESS LARGELY ROHE% Important Order of Gen. Augur in Relation to the Testimony of Colored Persons. WASHINGTON, July 28,1808. The Civil Offices Being Restored to the South. The Postmaster General is gradually resto ring postal service all over the South. This morning two mails left the Washington post office, to be conveyed directly through to Itionnond and Petersburg. Contracts have 3....-k_hpen_mnile for service by railroad few Orleans le - Canton, NIBS., and fiinn Can ton to Jackson, Tenn. Other heads of departments are engaged in restoring the civil machinery, in accordance with the proclamations of the President, ap pointing provisional governors. The Certigeates or Indebtedness Being Reduced. It is ascertained on inquiry that there is a continued reduction of the aggregate amount of certificates of indebtedness, the number redeemed being much larger thanthose newly issued. The Testimony of Colored Persons llnjor General Atiffl7ll, in his general order dated July 27, says: " The civil courts in that portion of Virginia within the limits of the Department of Washington having de clined to receive the testimony of colored persons, tiprovost court is hereby established in Alexandria, to have exclusive jurisdiction in an eases involving the rights of persons or property of colored persons resident of the district aforesaid. This court will receive the testimony of colored persons with no other lim itatiOnS than those now affecting the testimony of white persons. The Provost Marshal Gene ral of the defences south of the Potomac is charged with the execution of this order. This order will remain in force until the Virginia courts have brought their practice more into harmony with the existing state of affairs. Capt. M. P. FISHER, 2d Regiment District of Columbia Volunteers, is appointed Judge of said court." Internal Revenue Decision. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has decided that interest paid - to depositors by savings banks is considered a dividend, with in the meaning of section Ro of the law, and the tax of five per cent. should be withheld therefrom and paid to the Government. An undertaking or a claim of a third party, under the New York statute, is a joint agreement, and is subject. 1 o a stamp duty of five per cent. whelltarits for the Southwest. The following order was issued to-day "Until otherwise ordered, the mails for A tlanta, Augusta, Maeon, and West Point, Georgia; Montgomery, Ala., and for points contiguous :to these several places, and between them and: Chattanooga, may be for ward eAL to' their destination via Nashville, Tenn. Soldiers have been detailed for etnty 011 the several roads, and placed in charge of the post °dices wherever there are military posts." The Baltimore Appointments. The feud between the Maryland politicians has 'been decidedly earnest for several weeks paSt, and delegates representing the oppositi . g parties have Made repeated visits' to the Pre sident in relation to the Federal °dicers for 33althn ore. Two sets of appointments were beret ofore agreed upon, hut were afterwards partially ignored. The following, promul gated to-day, arc, however, believed to be eon elusive Collector, E. H. Webster, member elect of the United States HOuSc 01 Represen tatives ; Naval Oflicer, W. J. Reese; SurVeyor, E. Pullen: Marshal, Washington Bouffant; District Attorney, W. J. Jones: Chief Ap praiser, J. L. Meredith; Assistant Appraisers, E. F. Anderson and T. K. Carroll; Postmaster, A. H. Purnell. The. Beat in Washington. lit neon today the thermometer in the shade - marked ninety-two degrees. Consul Recognized. The President has recognized , ADOLPH Ito- R.ENTHAL Consul of the Principality of - Reuss, for the State of Wisconsin. Personal. —Mr. Sizer, of the New Raven Palladium, has retired from that paper, and given place to A. J. Train, Esq., formerly of the New Haven lifth'nimg Courier, A. If. Byington, of the Norfolk Gazelle, and W. A. Croffut, recently Of the Rochester (N. N.) Daily Advertiser. Ceneral Milroy, on Thursday, sent in his resignation to Ll± l'retiilunt. HARRISBURG. ACTION BY THE AUTHORITIES IN It ED ATM TO DAMS TIARTUF43TIM, 3111 y 28.—A call signed by May. ltomfort'mal a large number of oar prinei, pal citizens has been issued for a meeting at the Court House - to-morrow evening, to adopt, measures for the enforcement of the law passed last winter requiring the owners of darns in the Susquehanna, to construct - 4e/wtes or some other devices for the free passage of shad and other fish up said river. The law is very strin gent in its provisions, end the eiti eits resi ding along the- entire Valley of the Susque hanna evince a determine tion to see it carried out. The dams are principally owned by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and the Tide water Canal Companies. Two companies of the ISith Pennsylvania Regiment arrived here this evening from the South. - - General Grant at Saratoga. Snr; ATOGA,PeIIe. N. Y., July 2e.—T i ientenant rol Grant and staff arrived here last evening, and attended Leland's Opera House. After- AN tn , ts, he had a reception in the large Union 'Rotel, where a number of tlic elite and fashion in the piece called upon and warmly and en ihusiustically greeted 'him. Nom - illation for Coisgrefill. CINCINNATI, 28.—liorace Maynard waB nominated for CoLgiess in the Knoxville {.Ten nessee) district yesterday. JEFF DAVIS, Another Report of his Health, and Another Account of his Habits. WHY HE IS NOT DEAD YET, AND WHY HE IS LIKELY TO LIVE WHAT HE EATS AND DRINKS, AND WREN. SOME INTERESTING FACTS, MANY UNTIL NOW UNRECORDED. [Special Correspondence of The Press.] leoivruPss Mounou, July 27,1885 Your corresponocnt has read, with a geed deal of amusement, the many letters sent from this post professing to give daily bul letins of the health and habit's of Jefferson Davis. He has read them the more amusedly because most of them evidently rely for their factsmainly on the imagination of the writers. Your correspondent knows that the letters of at least two dailies—one prominent in New York, and another somewhat known in your city—are Blade up in back-offices, or stretched out froth meagre details furn!slied by some of the hangers-on around this post. Every morning for the past two weeks, a green-look ing fellow, who affects a great ability in ob taining," points," has sidled up to the guards at some of our entrances, After a few feints, in the most innocent manlier possible, he an nounces the high honor he possesses as a cor respondent., anxiously inquiring the while what Jeff Davis had for breakfast. The guard) who knows nothing at all about the matter, assumes quite as important an air as that of his interlocutor, and; with winks and nods, manufactures a string of roorbacks, I . cirich the able taker of "pOints dots down and solidi; to his journal, to be embellished with twenty four most eloquently worded display heads. THE FACTS OF TILE MATTER Imprimis, Jeff Davis is not fairly in health• Your readers all know that Hampton Village, which is not very far from here, was, for years before the war, a favorite Watering-place for the eh ivalry, who found health, and somethnes . rotundity, for aforetime lank and sallow frames. The same breezes that then blew in over the bay now bloW—the same sun shim mers on the waves. Lean Southerners grew fat, and pale South Carolinian cheeks grew ruddy four years ago ; and now the Chief of all the Southerners, lank, sallow Jefferson Davis, waxes strong. The correspondents to whom I have referred have grown eloquent over the habits of Mr. Davis—his peculiar religions leanings, his daily fare, his clothing, his walks, etc. They have guessed aright, here and there, but, in general, their conjectures fall far wide of the mark. Mr. Davis, being a prisoner, is confined in one of the casemates of the fort, from which there are no means of egress except through the door and windows. There is but one door, and this is barred by stout, determined guards, *hotted muskets, and bayonets. The windows are also barred with iron, that substance having been chosen because of Its strength, and the proof experience has given of its peculiar - fitness for the safe-keeping of critni: Dais. During the day the sunlight is allowed to filter in, and the bay breezes stray through grizzled locks,and at night the moonlight-pro- Tided, of course, the moon is shining. Part of the time the prisoner Sleeps, and the rest he remains awake, except when, through the dull routine of his position, he dozes overlie which he sometimes reads. Mr. Davis rises generally in th e morning, performing his ablu tions like the Mohammedais and the rest of mankind 5 and at about the time that everbody else does on this continent north of the equator, he eats his breakfast, which is provided from the table of his physician, who is expected to know what is good for his patient. Several times Mr. Davis has passed sleepless nights, caused, no doubt, by reason of his past mis deeds and crimes that cry to Ilenyen for vem gean ce ; and his appetite has flagged, notwith standing the care of his physician. EN still remains alive and well, although it is generally adinitteftlierc, if he had refused his rations when he was first incarcerated he would have succeeded in dodging the gallows, which, it is further held, await him. At Ono his dinner is brought without any ceremony. No waiters or bakers are employee in the fort, so that napkins, silver, and the ruby are wanting. At evening his supper is brought; all these atten tions are received cordially. Between break fast and dinner the prisoner looks out of his cell-window over the bay, amusing himself by watching the water, the passing vessels, and the blue landscape in the distance. If he (lees net leo]; on of his windows his gaze is turned either to the few articles of furniture which adorn his residence, or to the silent guards who walk to and fro before his door, to his Bible, or whatever may at that particular moment attract his attention. lie is usually silent when not talking to hiliself, to his guard.; to the person who brings him his meals, to Dr. Craven or General Miles, who visit him daily. In the afternoon he passes his time much like he does in the morninfi,breath ing always the breezes from off the water, as they form the only air furnished him. SOME OF HIS HABITS AND "PECULIARITIES Jefferson Davis is amen somewhat advanced in years, although thus far he seems to have a sound mind in a sound body. He does not look so young as be did twenty years ago, and yet this fact is made a handle by the New York Daily Neta§, and other journals of that ilk, to grind dolorous complaints about the barbarous treatment the "illustrious cap tive " receives at the hands of the Govern ment. The operation of shaving is not per formed on him just now, mainly for the reason Hint he allows his beard to grow, but - also for the reason that he might, in a moment of des peration, make an attempt to commit suicide. It is said that he has grown partially bald, but this cannot he ascribed to his prison -life, so much as to the caw.: and labor of the four years of relmllion he superintended. His nose has assumed a natural tinge because of his liba tions from the Chesapeake, which are twice as good, if not half as pleasant as the libations of bloelcade-run Cognac he used to take in the good old clays of the would-be independent Confedqracy. His eyes, from the constant use he has been compelled to make of them du ring the whole of his life, are the worse for the wear. lie seems to have used one eye, however, more than the other, as its condition is not half as good as its neighbor on the other side of the bridge of his nose. It is said to be blind, and while the neighbor-is fast becOmiug SO. Anyway, whenever he promenades, as he doe, at dusk upon the ramparts of the Fort ress, be wears a pair of great: green goggles, which hang over his nose, like the great yokes Over the necks of Chester county oxen. 110 W TIE LOONS I:PON THE ILAN-PARTS Ile looks precisely like a member of the human Mee as, With pipe at month, he walks slowly over the ramparts, Under the escort of two oh:leers, who are neither of theta major generals, but perhaps expect to be, on account of their "onerous ditties." Me bas clothes on, gray in color, rather fine in texture, and wears a hat and a pair of boots. These facts have been ehroniCled Rs extremely important, but they arc merely matters of course. In all civilized Society, on your Chestnut street, and at this post especially, people are not allowed to promenade naked, even though - under the escort of people who expect to be major gene rals. Besides, such treatment would be bar barous and offensive to the numerous per- SOPS who have occasion to lie in or to pass by the fort every day. For these wen-I - minded and generally acknowledged reasons, Mos, whenever he promenades, has his clothes on. In his cell, costume is entirely a matter of choice. When he retires to bed it is expected that he will doff his coat and boots. ItOly LOX(} /rE MAY POSSIBLY LIVE? If Mr. Daltii=i continues in his present state of nea]tb, it is likely lie will live some years at irnst ; but If lie should be attacked bye mili tary court-martial, or any other fatal malady, his shift may not be so long. Yon may depend upon this 000 fact: Ile is strong, looks well every day, and manifests no symptoms of weakness, except in his determined cifort to proVe to Duteh gnitrtls, who do not understand English well, that he is not Jefferson Day-is, and never was the President of the Confode jytey, or;In other words, that he has not com mitted treason, and cannot be tried for it. OTHER AND CONCLUDING FACTS There are many other little facts I might give you in addition to those above, but deli cacy in some eases, and want of 3,:kowlefige in others, prevent me. There is no danger of his early death, and no ditnger of escape, even though Ike dues grow stronger every day. Samson pulled down the pillars of a great temple, and: in bursting his shaekl es destroyed hiS enemies and himself. Darts is not Sam son, and even if he was, the roof of his case mate is heavier than the pillars of the temple, and cannot be handled so readily. The roof is calculated to weigh at least one hundred tons, and since Davis cannot lift or escape - by win dows or doors, his incarceration until he is escorted cot, is a thing assured. In some Suc ceeding letter I will give you all the latest de velopments, should any occur. li. W. W. Harvard College lall Club. WORCESTEn, Mass., J 1 28.—The Harvard College Ball Club played a game of base-ball to-day with the Charter Oak Club of Hartford, Conn. The guano lasted two hours, resulting in a victory for tlio Ilart'ara, the scot° ,stand ing follovkl4 ilarVata: College Club, 35 ; Charter Oak Club; 13. PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1865, NORTH' CAROLINA. REBEL PAPERS SPRINGING UP I ALL PORTIONS Armarr, July 21—Governor TloMen has re covered from his The Standard says that rebel papers are springing up in all parts of the State, Which openly denounce the Government, and pro mulgate treason. Most of the Federal appoint ments in the State are unable to qualify, not being in a,position to take the oath prescribed by Congress. Among this number is District Judge Dick. TENNESSEE. THE CASE OF EMERSON ETHERIDGE-DENERAL THOMAS PROMISES GOVERNOR BROWNLOW A HEARTY SUPPORT IN CARRYING OUT Tl{>•; LAWS -TROOPS CALLED FOR TO GARRISON DISAFFECT ED DLSTRICTS. NASTITILLY, eTnly morning'S Pres 3 Publishes' a letter from General Thoinas to Governor Brownlow. Thomas says: "I am only 'waiting a report from Colonel Devassy to determine my course in regard to Emerson Etheridge. If he has been guilty of the -lan guage charged against him, he is Clearly, amenable to the military authorities illiAbo absence of the civil, and is liable to be tried before a military commission. My attention has been called to the 'speeches of other par tics, but as get I have not seen any report that would justify the interference of the military authorities. If, however, there Should be, in the judgment of the GoVernment, many time, a necessity for such interference in consequence of inability or indisposition on the part of the civil authorities of the State to take action, an expression of snob a desire on the part of the Go venter, stating his inability or indisposition of the civil authorities to act, will be sufficient. I will cause the parties cotr,pluiveil . of to be attended to, according to the nature of the eftBo. The State of Tennessee is under martial lalv, but Military authority will not be resorted to unless the civil authority faile to act, either from hiabilitf or indisposition. " Even in the event of a failure of the eiVil au thorities to do their duty; the military should refrain from interfering in all Minor cases, because the military shotod, as far us possible, sustain the Civil government, but never mg some its functions, unless in eases in which prompt action is necessary to insure public safety. "ln conclusion, the Governor may rest as sured he will be fully sustained in carrying out the policy of the State and General Go. Velarflledlt as long as the - Union troops are on duty iu the State." Governor Brownlow has called upon General Thomas to send troops into the various coun ties to preserve order and the purity of the hallotbox. CAIRO AND mumirms. Cacao, July 28.—An arrival from New Or leans brings four hundred and seventy bales of cotton for tbe East. Three bunched and thirty bales have passed up for St. Louis. A steamer has arrived at Memphis from the Arkansas hirer, with three hundred hales. The Memphis market is unchanged. The re ceipts from wimans are very heavy, but in two weeks' time the main bulk will be in. The troops now at Memphis, estimated at 5,000 men, will be divided into Squads and posted over the country, to maintain law and order. Troops continue to arrive at Cairo, en route home, to be mustered Out. HALIFAX. H.kr.ivAx, N. S., July :B.—The steam yacht Clara Clauta, from New York for Aspy Bay, with Engineer Everett's party on board ar rived here yesterday. The yacht has proved herself an admirable sea-boat, and no better could have been found in the United States for the peculiar service in which she is to be tem porarily engaged. After perfecting some ar rano•ements of machinery, the yacht will sail for Aspy Bay, probably to-morrow. Fatal Assault by an Insane Man. numAuxag, iym, July v.—An exciting oc currenee tOOk placc on beard the steamer Anne Johnson, while on her way from La Crosse to St. Paul, yesterday afternoon. An insane man, named Stocking, approached a group of passengers on deck and tired three Silo Is, the first striping a passenger, named S. Roberts, of Syracuse, killing him instantly. Another shot struck a soldier in the arm, se verely injuring him. Stocking was finally disarmed and taken to St. Paul for exami nation. Figlutiug. en:CI:MAT', July :9.—Th . 6 stakes in the 'eon tem:OA-tea prizeAgbt bet ween Clark and kook in were drawn ycsterowy, according to the decision of the bolder, and returned to the re spective backers. • A tight took place yesterday n ear Cincinnati, heti:een Newell, of Pittsburg, and Barnes, of Cineihnati, for $ - 20° a side, resulting in. the de feat of the latter, after inurteen rounds. Waryaiti and Yale College Boat Race—Y:lle coner rn e the Winner. WoncEsTua, July 28.—The great race between the Yale and Harvard College boat clubs for the championship came off to-day, and result ed in a victory for the former. Time—Yale, 17.4:1)4 ; Harvard, ale. Distance, three miles. The Crops j. i.dis.os. and UMW'S. CHICAGO, July ?S.—Reports in regard to the effect of the recent rains in Indiana and Illi nois show that the winter wheat in Northern Indiana is badly damaged and grown in the shock. In soine parts of Illinois, particularly about McLean county, the spring wheat has been much Injured,but a week of good weather Would insuic a beavy yield. In Wigeozogn and lowa the crops are not damaged to any extent, but the barley crop is badly stained. The Cr 01194 in Wisconsin :HwyAuicr.E, July 28.—The crops throughout this State are in excel - float conaition, and the weather has beenreinarliably fine forharvest ing (tiring the . past three or forr4 , days. The wheat crop exceeds any we lia - N-e had since 1159. Naval Movementm. BELFAST, July 2 . .—The steamer TiOga sailed te•day for Bangor. The monitor Dictator is expected here - in a few days ; on her way from Boston to Halifax. NEW YORK CITY. NEW Yorm, July 23 A STEADIER DISTRESS.' „ The steamship George Washington, from. New Orleans, reports that she fell in with the transport Blackstone, also front Now Orleans, on the evening of the 2Gth'inst., - with three;of her boilers leaking. The Washington took off the children and other passengers from - the Blackstone, and the latter would try to reach Hampton Roads. The sopply-stearner. Newborn, front Perm& et,ln„te., arrived to-day with forty-six solaiora from the hospital at Pensacola. BISHOP POTTER 7 .9 RHMAliff3 A telegram from San Francisco, dated lath inst., says that the remains of :Bishop Potter left there by the steamer of the 18th, accom panied by Mrs. Potter and the Rev-. Mr. Mc- Allister. Arrived, LT. S. steamer Rhode Island, from Cape Ilaytien. Tl/13, STOCIt 7,XCIIANGE—SECOND BOARD. $10(110 IT S Gs. 'Bl c.lO - i.t,i 100 Erin R. 84 4 14000 IT ti Gs 5-20 c. 306 1800 (In 93 1 ' 20000 do 10:576 1(0 livtd ltiv It 1 13 i - ACO ti S 6.1-.20.e.tti,.1044.1 1041Re:tditig It 10 7 :4 500 TT S 5 , ( 10-40 0, 97 900 do 10: 54100 'Tr N 7 5-10. see se 9)M 15 CI( &R I It.. .... -109 IMMO S II eel! 251fi 100 do 10311 2(9100 (10 2.5 n 200 (10 10914 200 Nl' COSI )1—.1)10 05'M 90011 So & N I G 7 100 ([0 95:11 800 do 6.314 100 Ca3llol. C 0... . . ... a." 1% ,400 40 , 00)4 150 Atlantic 31 OS C-156.41 100 (10 6001 7 100 Quick .Allit C 0.... 00,44 BrENING STOCK BOA-RD At Galing:bees Exeflange this evening, gold closed nt 145 g ; Kew York Central, 0514 • Erie, OP,,c • IltulSoll itiVCT.,II3%; 'Reading, 107 ;'Ntielii ftwp. S . olg , l o ie r fl - 4 , o .e 74; el l . ' n ittsp i n e t ts t . 7 l. 2 e ll; Fort WaiNe.ero/:; Can ton Co., 40 5 Curnber , fi Viiii, 4 , 4,1; Quicksilver, 57. Markets. Fry Telegraph. BAT.TIMOnn, July :S.—Flour unsettled the higher grades hare advanced ace. Wheat is very firm ; sales of new red at $2.300;2.35. Cora dull. Provisions steady ; mess Pork $.31.@31,50, Whisky Arm Ltt.i1.19@2.20. CuirAGo. July 20R25e higher, clo sing firm The , ave - 11010 AOOI‘ is very light. s a le s at44l.7s(trifi.iio for Spring extras. Wheat active and irregUlar, ranging at $1.27 , ./,‘,"7)1.24; closing unsettled at 1it.38,L4; for No. 1, and." 61.1 8 1.4 for No. 2. Corn act tve and irregular al. 6:11T7.1e, closing at 70e.,701.1e for No. I and 70@73c for No, e. Oafs firm at Freights steady. High ix in es act iv c and unchanged. Provisions firm; Mess; Fork er,00.11 • Prime Idess $24.71t ReceiviN. ipmente. Von .24,01i0 .88,0(10 0,000 Ci a , Acu, July e.a--Evening.—Wheftt dull at 1,1.5CG1.81. Cum quiet at 69C6,70c. Oats Arm. Ship News. Dos:Tow, July 28.—Arrired—Steamer ;Terse: Bi ne, Ne w York • bark M. W. Brett, Philado plpu brig L. M. Merritt, do. RELIEF NOD LASMAI, , rEMANS _HAVE Sr/ FEEED:Dr TILE WAR.—The Lancaster .Exprel of Thursday evening has the following: A meeting wilt lie held in the basement the First Gernotzi Reformed Church, (lie Mr. lircumr , s,) at eight o'clock this evenin - for the purpose of organizing a Union CO finis iOll tO ai ii 1 tile American 'Union Co mission in the relief of those persons ti have been impoverished bythe war. The cers of the American Union Commission men of undoubted loyalty and integrity, I we commend the object which they have gaged in to the favorable consideration of such as arc disposed to assist in . the relic; the sufferers by tile late terrible war nie value of propurty-in. London in mated at £900,000,000. . . TEXAS AND MEXICO. General Steele Orders Cortinas to Keep the Peace, MAXIMILIAN RECRUITING TEXAN AND OTHER REBEL TROOPS, TEL LIBERALS VERy E. , HOP rut, OF SUCCESS. CAPTURE OF KIRBY SMITH AND HIS FORCE. He had with him Four Cannon and a Train of Ammunition. Qeur Sheidn Force not Terminal to linter Mexico with Arms In Their Hands THE UNITED STATES AND FRENCH TROOPS MY FORTY YARDS AFIRE A COLLISION BETWEEN THE TWO SAID TO • BE INEVITABLE. ItEw tpiztx, July 28,—Tho ateamship George Washingt4n brings New Orleans dates of July 22, and thevlellowlng news from Texas: The Washlagton Chronic/0 has a letter from a military gentleman, now in Texas, who says that IdaXlmilio.n 7 s and the United States. troops are Only Jetty yards apart on the Rio "C4nde, that frequent rows occur, and that a collision WaS inevitable. lie also says that one of mir Generals (Brown) had promised Juarez asaletance, and had even ordered bat• teries aerlisqm river, but that Geu. Steele had gone yo countermand the order. The Tin.es here contains the following de spateh Enowzisvums, July 13.---11.1ajor Torier, of Cor tinas' staff, has just arrived from above, bringing intelligence of the capture of Gene ral Kirby Smith and his entire party. lie was intercepted by the Governor of Saltillo, S. Viesca, on the 4th of July, at Piedras Negras, Mr xieo, about fifty miles below Eagle Pass, and compelled to surrender. The victors got four pieces of artillery, nine hundred new lilies, and a Vain of seierrty-flve. wagons, loaded with ammunition and:provisions. The officers and men were paroled. The Matamoros Commerce, of July 12, says that General Steele has required Cortinas, who is in t.rownsville, to preserve the peace, but baying access to Mexico, he continues to rob on thatside of the river, seeking refuge on the American gide. General Monot had received authority from the Emperor to raise a battalion of Texans for guerilla service. Instead of 10,000, there is between 7,000 and 8,000 Missourians and Texans on their way to Mexico. They are organized and armed. Governor Allen, Of. Louisiana, was hourly exiieeted at Monterey. Complaint is =lade that the Federal authorities do not furnish transportation to paroled rebel soldiers who wish to return to the loyal States. Many went to Texas before the war and were con scripted. Dueinces is becoming quite active in San Antonio. There was no general celebration of the Fourth of July there, though most of the peo ple ceased business, ,Some celebrated the day by hoisting the Union flag, and others by haul ing the flags down. The News, commenting on the last proceeding , says : "The authority of the United States hits notyet been extended over us, a 331 there are - no onleers or military tO enforce obedience to its laws, and practically we are without a Government. We can see, then, no good sense in the public display of a token of Dower in advance of the establish ment of the power." Generlby had reached Eagle Pass, but the anilritiee at Piedras Negras informed him till. ,klWould not be allowed to take his men int l' Xesieo Witharms in their hands. lie would, .niq. - M, be sllowed to come into the eountr;4ith hIS men aS enaigrantS t He Dimity agreed to this, and sold his armS and cannon to Int Liberino . at -PiodraS Negras, for which 1w received so,ese in specie and *5,000 in bonds issued by the Liberals. The arms were immediately shipped to Chi huahua. President Juarez is at Chilyaahria, - Which is strongly fortified, with no In Aerial troops to threaten it. The Brownsville correspondent of the New Orleans Tinier, writing on the 15th, says Cor tin ati, who is at Brownsville, is very hopeful of the success of the Liberals, and looked upon the prompt movement of the United States forces it the frontier as advantageous to his cause. lie has great numbers of Americans in his ranks, and speaks enthusiastically of their clash and daring. The correspondent is very favorably impressed with the appearsnee of Cortinas, and has a high opinion of his ca pacity. The Galveston correspondent df the Macs says there is a reign of terror in the interior of Texas, mbrders and robberies prevailing to a terrible 'extent. He denies "die report that Kirby Smithand Magruder entered into cotton speculations. They both had to borrow money to go to Mexico with. The Brown sville Republic of the 6th says Gen. G lies F. Smith had arrived there on on the 4th, with from 8,000 I to 10,600 United States troops. The Houston Telegraph rejoices over the fact that all the drays and omnibuses there are driven 1y White men, and that the city is fast filling up with industrious white mechanics and laborers. A number of freedmen have established shoemalters , shops in the city, and have gone into business on their own account. The New Orleans Delta regrets that the di rect tar Commissioners have received. instruc tions to enforce the collection at the present time in Louisiana, Florida, etc. Tt says the agricultural community have been all ruined by the war, and a majority Of them are unable to raise the funds necessary to liquidate the Government claims, and that nothiug but ruin and disaster can follow the enfordement of the order. ctosr. autextittlyr Of THE FRENCH AND UNITED STATES TROOPS. WASUINOTON, July 28.—Thely Chronicle has received a letter from New Orleans, em bodying the following extract from one writ ten by a gentleman connected with the head onartbrs of the Union foree at Clarksville, Texag. It is dated July lith, and is as follows "I Am now lying at the mouth of the Rio Grande, opposite to Bagdad. The Mexicans, under Maximilian, guard the opposite side, and Our troops tiffs side. The respective pickets are not forty yards apart. There is a 'good _deal of unfriendly feeling between the two tirMioe, and they cannot long refrailifrom blows, "On the 4th of July our officers went over and many rows occurred. I heard to-day that General Brown, the commander of Browns ville, yesterday had an interview with Juarez and proxidsed him the assistance of the United Statest troops, and had Ordered the 4th Indiana to cross the river. "Gen. Steele, the Department Commander, went up by a despatch boat to counteract the order, if possible, but even if he succeeded, things cannotlong, remain as tbeyare.,, STEED Locoucyrivits.—The Manyport and Car lisle Company have, for some tune past, cm ' ployed steel, to a great extent, in substitution of ordinary iron for the working parts of lo cothotiyes, and, as we are informed, with the most satisfactory results. The trainee, on the line is. principally coal and mineral. It has been found that, with the ordinary iron tires on the engine wheels, the distance run was not more than 90,000 miles—in many cases not more than 60,000 mites—and the wheels re . quire to be taken 'from nailer the engine for every 20,000 or 30,000 miles run, for repairs end " turning up." In the Case of the steel tires, however, the wheels will run 100,000 miles before they require " turning up" or repairing. The result of a very careful ex . animation of the effect of wear leads to the !opinion that these wheels - will run from 350,060 to ;500,000 miles, or mud to some tticlve 01' Ilfteen years' work of a daily average of about 100 miles. The differenee ?of cost as between the two metals is not great ; in the one case it ranges from £4O to .£4O per ton, while the steel is about £55, the cost of labor in placing the tires on the wheels being nearly the same in each MSC. Th e company have a number of boilers, axica, oral Ls and eccentrieS,Made Of Steel ,in constant use on the line, and they haregiven the great est satisfaction. These have not, however, been sufficiently long in operation to ena ble a comparis:on to be drawn betwehm them sod the ordinary iron portions of the locomo tives; but there is reason to believe that the saving in point of wear will be equal to that effected by the substitution of steel for ordinary iron tires. The ordi nary eccentrics are expensive to keep up, but those -which are made of hardened steel do not require any looking after for ten years, not even to the slackening of a bolt, so as regards repairs. The experience Ob. ' mined on this, and, we believe, upon some other railways points to a very important mode of saving one of the lar,,nest items of cost in the working expenses of railways. The subject will, we have have no doubt, receive carctul consideration from the managers of rail way:i.--Lortaoa "'Wawa?" News. The departure of the French Court for Fontainebleau was to have taken place on the 5111 of July. The residence of their Majesties there will not exceed two weeks, during which there will be hunting in the forest, fishing by torchlight, concerts, and theatrical remesen tations. From Fontainebleau, the - Emperor win go to the camp at Chalons, as originally in tended, and thenco to Vichy, WAIFS FROM THE SOUTH. 14ic•amozrtk Among a number of Confederates who, since the termination of the war, have left i Europe and taken up their abode n Canada, is John Y. Mason, of Virginia, formerly United States Senator, and more recently the ac credited commissioner of the late Confede rate Government in London. Mr. Mason is DOW residing with his family at St. Call* rines.—Richmond Republic. We learn that that loathsome disease, the small-pox, is _on the increase among the colored populgtion of this city. We call the attention of the city authorities to the fact, and suggest, as a precautionary measure, to prevent its spreading in the country, that for the present orders be issued forbidding negroes to come here. We further suggest that care be Wren to ascertain that none of the negroes leaving for their homes, on trans portation obtained from the Government, are infected with the disease: Both of these mea sures seem to be of the highest importance.— Moron Telegraph, lath. A correspondent, writing to the Cincinnati Commercial from Idacon, Ga., says: Two great curiosities here significant of the magnitude of the secession infatuation, are a Confederate laboratory and armory, on a scale of really admirable proportions. The armory, particu larly, it is claimed, would - have been, if com pleted according to plan, without a rival in the world. The groundsdevoted to the armory comprise forty-two and a half acres. The building, as far as finished, is a central tower, fifty-two feet eight inches front by forty feet oleep, containing wain entrance, stairs, and wilco rooms ; four stories high above sub-base went and main longitudinal front, six hun dred and twenty-five feet long, forty-four feet deep, and two stories high, Banked by towers thirty-two feet square and two stories hilt. p In addition, the machine sho or transverse - wing, forty-four by Mm_bundred and sixty-two feet, and two stories high, is complemented with a proof-house, sixty-three by ninety eight feet, one story, and a one-story store 'MOM for coal. Flank towers of main building roofed with slate, as was originally designed for the rest of the main and additional build ings. Georgia has some of the very best slate quarries. 'The laboratory, about two miles distant up the Macon and Atlanta Railroad, is upon an equally generous plan. Both strue- . tures are built of the very hest material— pressed brick--with stone foundations and granite dressings, ATLANTA. Ex-GOVERNOR JOSErri E. Ilnowx, Or GEOn (+lA.—This distinguished citizen reached our city on Thursday evening, by the train front Macon and, after spending a day or two in the ci ty, will, .we r.learn, proceed to his for merGove.residence,Governor Beioe\er n severely countylhyi his re prostratedtur n o 0f 0313 Cherokee. by lWash ington,over but is now, his many friends will be pleased to hear, rapidly convalescing. A sojourn of few seeks amid the beautiful hills and vales of Cherokee, Georgia, wili no doubt hasten his convalescence, and soon restore him to the enjoyment of usual health.—.elaanto lidelli gencer, Arty 22. On - every side, in every direction, we see the evidences of improvement. A very large number of houses are being erected; these buildings that are now being put up are neither large nor elegant, but they are such structures as will answer the purposes of our people until more prosperous days shall on us dawn. The demand for houses to live in, as well as for business purposes, seems to be on the increase ; and the con sequence is that rents arc ruling very high. The greater portion of our population, that has been in exile, have returned, and are :Preparing to resume their business at this point, and-all who left, or were foreed away, are anxious to get back. They all say they cannot find anywhere such a delightful cli mate as Atlanta possesses, and especially do they seem to have thirsted for the cool, pure refreshing water for which this section is so much noted. It is a remarkable fact that any one who has lived hero for ft. few MenthS iS never sati,dled anywhere else. We notice with great pleasUre that the work upon the streets has been ,vigorously corn men cod. Alabama street, that for months has been almost a nuisance, has been cleaned up, and presents quite a changed appearance. We hope that this good work will be con tinued until all our streets are free from rub bish and obstructions, and all the gullies that the rains of the last twelve mouths have washed out, shall be filled up. Business seems to be quite lively generally, and a go-ahead spirit seems to have taken possession of almost the entire community.— Atlanta Intelligencer. LTIceIIIIUAG The Lynchburg Republican appeared on Fri clay, July 21,in a new dress. EI=1! A comprmy has Men organized at Mints .Alabaulaq for the purpose of boring for oil in North Alabama. Operations leave been commenced in Madison county, and largo oil tracts leased in the counties of Franklin and Lawrence. The "indications" ai'e said to be all there. The New Wile Discovery. The London Athenreem says : The result of Mr. Baker's voyage Up the Nile is not (if we understand him) the discovery of anew source. What Mr. Baker has done in his adventurous journey is remarkable ; still it is only a mat ter of detail—the partial exploration of a great basin in the Nile course, far below the Victoria Nyanza,.p and which Spoke has already laid down in lliS map under its native name of Lula NZige. This lake, which Mr. Baker proposes to call in future the Albert Nyanza—a change of name for which we can see no reason—appears to be a part of the Nile, as Speko had described it, and not au independent feeder of that river. Speke marked it in his map as connected with the Nile at a lower elevation;the difference of level being caused by the haruma Falls, eqnal, perhaps, m grandeur to those of Niagara. The name of these falls i,ir. Baker proposes to change, substituting , for the native name of liarmna that of a private English gentlemen —a suggestion in 1011.0 it is impossible that any geographers wilrbe found to concur. That LUta ,Tzign has, the same sort of relation to the Victoria Nyanza as Bienne - has to Ne aloha tel. Tlrun to Brims, and Ontario to Erie. "Mr. Baker's account of his travels is interest big, and we give the principal paragraphs in his own words . . " 'After eighteen tine , march I reached the long.wished for lake, about one hundred miles of krooli, at Vacovia, in north latitude one degree fourteen minutes. In respect tor the memory of our lamented prince, I named it (subject to her Majesty's permission) the Al bert Nyanza,' as the second great source of the Nile—second, not iu iMportanen t but only in order of discovery to the Victoria Nile-head. The Victoria and the Albert lakes are the in dubitable parents of the river. " The capital of Ijnyoro (M'rooli) is situ ated at the junction of the Nile and linfoor rivers, at an altitude of three thousand two hundred and two feet above the sea level._ I followed the liafoor to latitude one degree twelve minutes north, to avoid an impassable morass that runs from north to south ; upon rounding this I Continued a direct westerly Course to the lake. The route throughout is wooded, interspersed with glades, thinly popu lated, with no game. My route lay over high ground to the north of a swampy valley run ning west ; the greatest elevation was three thousand six hundred and eighty-six feet. The rocks were all gneiss, granite, and masses' of iron ore, apparently fused into a conglomerate with rounded quartz pebbles, " The Albert Lake is a vast basin lying in an abrupt depression, the eliffs,which I cteseentled by a dinicult pass, being Onejthousand four hundred and Seventy feet above its level. The lake level is two thousand and seventy feet. being one thousand one hundred and thirty two feet lower than the Nile or Wrood ; accordingly the drainage of the country tends from cast to west. From the high ground above the lake no ground is visible to the south and southwest; but northwest and west is a large range of mountains, rising to about seven thousand feet above the lake level, forming the western shore, and running southwest, parallel to the course of the lake. Both King Kamrasi and the natives assured me that the lake is known to extend into Mumanika , s country to the west of Karag we, but from that point in about 1.30 south latitude it Writs suddenly to the west, in which direttion its extent is unknown. In north latitude 1.14. where I reached tale lake, it iseabout sixty miles wide, but the width in creases southward. The water is deep, sweet, and transparent ; the shores arc generally clean and free from reeds, forming a sandy beach. . . " Lake Albert Nyanza forms an immense basin far below the level of the adjacent coun try, and receives the entire drainage of exten sive mountain ranges on the west, ami of the Utunilli, Uganda, and Ijnyoro countries on the east. Eventually receiving the Nile itself, it adds its accumulated waters, and forms the second source of that mighty river. The voy age down the lake is extremely beautiful, the mountains frequently rising abruptly from the -water, while numerous cataracts rush down their furrowed sides. The cliffs on the east shore are granite, frequently mixed withlarge masses of quartz. " The actual length of the Albert Nyanza, from south to north, is about two hundred and and sixty geographical miles, independent of its unknown course to the west between one degree and two degrees south latitude, and of its similar Course in the north, in latitude about three degrees., c, AN ADVENTURE AT BUENOS Armes.-1 WS re turning from a ball With a friend, at an early hour in the morning; when I heard a report of, firearms close to me in a house. I endeavored to break in the door, but could not. Looking through the window I saw a man, pistol in hand, who had just tired a second barrel; at the same moment a man, bleeding, came out from another door crying for assistance. I rnshed in with several policemen after Ine, and wrenched the pistol from the first and seized him. Other police at the same time had broken in at another door (it was to corner house), and seeing me standing there, pistol in hand, holding one man, with another apparently lying dead before me, mistook inn for the murderer, and immediately out me down with two severe outs from clubbed lances on the head. I fell covered with blood. On getting up again, I was lanced in several places, and - beaten black and blue. EOM , I escaped with my life I know not. I was dragged along, more dead than alive, and thrown m to prison as the supposed murderer, and remained there for about ton hours. This. is my first day Out of bed. Thanks to God, the wounds are nearly healed, and I feel no ill effects from them. I feared that my skull was fractured, but I now conclude that it is all right. I have been on shore since, living at an hotel , hence the doctors will not let me move for some days. Every :Jody has been most kind, and it has been taken up by our minister hero. I never knew what a thrashing was before. I offered no resistance, having not even a stick to knock off is blow with. Tim pistol, I Sup pose, was knocked out of my hand by the drat blow, which was given me from behind, and on I inning round to see who had struck me, I received one. across the forehead, which felled me. I was covered with blood from head to foot, lint did not lose my senses. Ono of the wounded men is dying, the other badly wounded. I shall carry a two-inch scar on the forehead, just above the right eye. What will be the end of it between our minister and this Government I cannot yet say ; perhaps an apology—not that that will dO me much good. ---Lcmaon limes. Az; M. P., who owned extensive estates, and possessed considerable personal celebrity, was spending a few days at the residence of a noble family, There were several interesting and accomplished young ladies in the family, to whom he honorable member, as in duty bound, showed every attention. Just as he was about to take leave, the nobleman's wife proceeded to consult him in a matter which, she alleged, was causing her no little distress. "It is reported," said the Countess, " that you are to marry my daughter and what shall we,. dol what shall we say about itl" "Oh," - quietly responded the considerate N. F., !`just say she refused me THREE CENTS. THE INDIAN TERRITORY. A LARGE INDIAN FORCE ATTACK ONE OF OUR STATIONS. • THEY ARE DRIVEN OFF BY TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY OF OUR MEN, ~.ttio/laidr]y:l f~iyal~tt~aMrDtiitWiNl~ FORT LARMAIR, July 27.—One thousand 01105fr ennes Sioux, Arrapaboes, Blackfeet, and a few damanehes, attacked Platte Bridge Sta tion, on the telegraph road, on Tuesday last. The garrison numbered less thantwo hundred and fifty, and the fight lasted two days, re stating in heavy loss to the Indians. The loss on our side was. Lieutenant CollhlS anti one man - killed, and thirty•four men wounded. The Indians retreated to the west, tearing down the telegraph poles and destroying the wires. A note was picked up on the battle- field, written by a white prisoner recently captured on the South Platte, which says the Indians do not valat peace, but arc fighting for all time s that we had killed one of their chiefs in the fight, and that they expected reinforce ments. The body of Lieutenant Collins was horribly mutilated, his hands and feet being cut off, his throat cut, and his heart torn out. Ms body was pierced by more than one hundred ar rows, There seems to be not the slightest dispo sition on the part of the Indians for peace, which can only he obtained by severely punish ing them. One of the Powder-river columns is now moving to Join the force from Platte Bridge, which is following the Indians. It is stated that all the troops intended for the Indian expeditions would have been in the field long ago had not the contractors failed to deliver supplies, according to the terms of their contracts. Charles Dickens on Actors. I like to meet actors off the stage—not that I am possessed with the fend idea of the stage. struck - youth, that actors arc gods, and all actresses goddesses of Supernatural beauty (which I have long admitted to be an error,) but because it has - been my lot to be thrown a good deal into their society, and because knowing them well and intimately, I have learned to respect them. There are certain actors and actresses whose hands I am always proud to shake—not because they are eminent tragedians or comedians, but because they are honorable men and women, One Of the most simple, unaffected, generous natures I over met with, is enshrined in 'limb roast of a c town. If any Diogenes should be goirf,„ , about look ing fora specimen of a good husband and a good father, I. will give him the address of a pantaloon ; only, regretting that f shall bare to request bins to ring the top bell. If I cherish a platonic affection for any member of the Mir sex, it is for an actress whom everybody loves, because in every rela tion of life, as wife, mother, daughter and friend, she is as bright an ornament to her sex as she is to her profession. Believe me, lam not saying these things in a spirit of exagge rated charity towards a class requiring to be apologized for. I am not adopting the nil nisi Wpm maxim, as if I were speaking of the dead, Thosegood people are alive, pur suing an honorable career, and doing good deeds In the sight of many. I little thought in my young days that I should have this opi nion of play-actors. In the sphere, a very narrow one, in which I imbibed my early ideas, it was broadly inculcated that the theatre was a very wicked place, and that actors and ac tresses were very wicked people. When I first went to the theatre on the sly, I had some com punction about it; but, not being able to dis cern any wickedness in connection With the performance of a beautiful play, in which vir tue was *cwarded anti vice punished, I dis missed the feeling, and was ratherpained to think that some particular friends of mine had told me what was not precisely true. It was not until a much later period of my life that I smile the acquaintance of actors, and found how much they, too, were belied. - I expected to find them at least very knowing persons but, after spending an evening with a party Or players, I came to the conclusion that I my self, who had been religiously brought up, and warned to avoid plays and play-actors, was, in the ways of this wicked world, the most kno W ing person in the company. am not going to argue that players are by nature better than other people; but I thing their generally single-Minded natures may be accounted for rationally enough. in the first place, the ambition to become an actor's alt In tellectual one, and it will be readily admitted that only a trusting end unsophisticated dis position could hope for a high degree of sue cuss in the profession. Next comes in the ex alting influence of Shaksneare's poetry which ectors, whether they be destined to *tine as the kings of tragedy or the valets of farce, be gin by Studying. Talk to a low comedian on the subject, and ten to one if lie will not confess to you that his first aspirations were in the di rection of the 1 ragic. lie knew the lofty poeti cal speeches of Hamlet by heart—never to be forgotten—long before lie was driven to lower his attention to the waistcoats of the first grave-digger. A knowledge of Sbakspeare re deems avast amount of ignorance. An actor's eliueationmay be very defective; he mayn ot be able to spell; he may betray in his hand Writing and composition a sad want of fa miliarity' with the use of the pen—but he knowsShakspeare by heart. He has all the philosophy of life at the tip of his ton .sue in philosophy glowing words. We may be very clever and very accomplished,. but when the actor leans upon the arm of Shakspeare he is fit company for the best of us. There is another influence for good in the player's profession. It is a precarious One. :Seitrly all actors begin by meeting difficulties and know ing poverty. • It is rarely that any one suc ceeds without ft long struggle. A fellow-feel ing makes them wondrous kind. There is scarcely a successful actor living who has not known what it is to be penniless, hungry, and, what is harder to bear, to be in debt for some miserable trifle =Ong strangere. Thus it is that the Most SUCCeSsful among them eats al ways understand and feel for the Misfortunes and sorrows of their struggling brethren. If I had not found by experience of them that players are in a remarkable degree kind hearted, well-disposed people these conside rations alone might have guided me to the conclusion. That actors have faults and foibles I will not deny. They arc men and women, and they have the faults that all men and women have, hi a greater or less degree. But this I will com• fluently assert, that actors are not sinners in a greater degree than other classes of society, wli Ho in many amiable respects they can lay claim to a larger number of virtues. One of the reasons why they are so constantly tra duced is obvious. They live, more than any other class, under the public eye ; there is a Strong curiosity about them ; and, conse quently, any dubious story about their mode of life that prejudice may imagine, and the breath of scandal whisper, is rapidly spread abroad and eagerly amplified. How malty times have I been told that So-and-So is a very immoral person, when there is nothing on earth of Which - am so well assured as that that person is a model of purity and goodness? If scandal bits upon a truth now and then, does it never hit upon a Similar truth with re gard 10 other society? Really, upon nay con science, I do not know what class Is to a posi tion to throw stones at the players. ARAB AND ENGLISH 11ORSES—A BRUTAL TEST OF Eistra.n.iNez.—Halem Pasha sit Egyptian prince, who is very near in the line of succes sors to the vice regalthrone, offered the wager Of a thousand pounds sterling to ono hundred that no English horse could be produced who would do the same work that should be done by a purely Arab horse that lie would ride in a week's gazelle hunt in the desert that he was about to take. Mr. Ross, a wealthy Eng lish banker at Cairo ' accepted the bet. The conditions were that the hunt should last a week if necessary for a decision. The Prince Was to ride his own horse, Alsissi, (a pure Arab, from Syria, of the AbOu-Argoub race, white without si mark,) and Beechnut. the English mare, a sorrel; imported by Mr. Ross about nine months before, was to be ridden on his behalf by Mr. Edward Thompson. The two horses were to receive eachthc same treat ment, and do the same work. If, during the time named, one of the horses died, the owner of the survivor was to receive the stakes. If both horses died upon the same day, Mr. Ross (who was betting only one to ten) was to re ceive the staes. The party galloped out from Cairo on Sun day evening, the 14th of May (the two chain pions each on their trial horse,) about a dozen miles, to the village of Kafr-Aboicsin where they encamped for the night. The account of the next day we will translate from the anida, vit of the English rider, contained in a pPeees testa/ which was drawn up by M. de Eusseps at the request of the parties. Mr. Thompson says: "We started on Mon day at sunrise, half-past rive o'clock. The two horses went together at equal speed for live hours. My mare was vary uneasy. About eleven o'clock we fell in with a gazelle. We all set off on a gallop: After live minutes of pursuit the game was taken by the falcons and dogs. At half-past eleven there was a general start for the encampment,- at a can ter. After an hour and a half of this pace for the Arab horse, and now and then a trot for the English mare, the two gentlemen In terested being alone and lostin the desert, the snare began to falter. The prince warned me that she was about to fall. I dismounted ; the Prince stopped his horse. We saw the mare immediately slick tinder her fatigue, after having made a few steps, ill Spite of my endeavors to excite and sustain her. No ob stacles could have prevented her fall. Seeing that our efforts to relieve her were useless, we took off her saddle, which the Prince placed himself on his own horse. We then made our way on foot towards the camp, which we reached after three hours' walking." This curious deposition tells the whole story, which is confirmed by other evidence. The weight of the Prince with his saddle and equipments was 78 kilos, and that of Mr. Thompson, with his, 71 kilos, or in about the proportion or 155 and 135 pounds, The official report of the veterinary surgeon confirmed by that of the English groom, both agree in Stating that the dead mare appeared to have died of fatigue. The groom states that when he arrived the vultures had already eaten an eye and part of a cheek. It is difficult to SCU that this cruel experiment has proved any thing, and more so to discover why such ex periments are called "sport', The proprietor of the Eadische Hof, a ho tel at Heidelberg, examining, a few ,lays agor an old writing table, forinct2 , .ecret drawer, and in it a packet of letters. Vhcso turned out to be correspondence between DuThug, ticitil ler, and Inland. Herr Merl:Ter, the hotel keeper, has placed the letters in a large col lection of autographs. The Suabian paper, Which gives this information, does not say in whose collection these letters have been put. If this news be true land not, a puff ~of the Jae tel,) it is to be hoped that the correspondence `will be publisbol• —•-• —We may note that a new form of applause is becoming common in our London theatres. The teudience, when pleased with any expres sion or sentiment uttered by the actors rarely clap their hand and shout " bravo! " but adopt the parliamentary - ocpreSsion, "hohr, hear:" MEM P 113001116. (PUBLIKIED 'WEEKLY.) Trar, WAi PRIERS will be lent to eubooribers by that' (per anti= in advance,) sa ;Five eoj4eB 10 00 Ten eoPiPS 00 00 Larger (nubs than Ten Wlll be charged at the mall rate , WOO Per copy. The murney mutt a Ways ttecompanit the " 441 % ama to no 6.49twie e can these fertile 14 deVideft ;Prom, all they agora very Utile more than The cost 4/ pal m% • Peel:neaten are requested to set U genii for Tun Wes Plums. To the getter•up of the Club often or twentyi azt w aft copy of the paper will be Mau, {STATE TTEUS• The Pittsburg Post thus speaks in regard to Meting, in that city, a monument over the remains of a late officer "The idea le a good one, and no doubt will tontieend iteolf to the friends of the deceased' officer. But the truth is f that all these monument ideas are usually conceived in too, grand a style. The corner-stone of the proposed, Washington. monument, laid by General Lafayette in Phila. dolphin, in Washington Square; in 1i324, reposee as it was deposited ; it has not growm any 131110 N neither is it likely to do so. In this city it would be unpleasant and indelicate *1 refer to the proposed monuments and the sad fate they came to. The designs for all have been too costly, and fell through. A neat tablet could be erected over every Pittsburg officer or sol dier, and the fends raised much easier than by attempting to erect costly ones for eaelL The war is over; we never want to see another and many of our citizens have made money out of it. Itow would it do to erect a colossal monument of marble granite, or what would. Perhaps, be better, iron (as it is embiematies,l), in memoriam of all Allegheny county soldiers who fell in the held or died in rebel prisons en Northern liOspitals. It could be either erected in the cemetery or upon any other site that might be agreed upon: , The old wooden bridge over the Allegheny river, over which the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne, and Chicago lialiroad company have their road, will be replaced during the coming fall with an iron bridge. it will be composed. entirely of wrought iron, of the box patterns but built with iron lattice-work. The span of each bay will be about one hundred and sixty feet, and the weight of each span not far from eighty tons. •-- The Pittsburg Dispatch *peaks rty follows of the proposed new theatre la that city t 4 ! The work on this building is progressing vlgorons• ly, and by the 15th of August it is hollered the management will be ready for business. They have a first-class company engaged, and, with Gardner arid` Sefton to manage, they will, beyond peradventure, make the thing go." The itarrisburg Itlegraple makes a suggos• 'Owl that soldiers' orpiltilla be carried free sver the railroads in this State, to and from thu several orphans' schools. The suggestion Will no doubt meet with adoption by the dlreetors of the different roads in the State. The new telegraph line between Reading and Columbia, and Beading and Lancaster, will be in full operation this week. The poles are all set and most of the wire up. This will be a great help to the limning end. golnaibia. Railroad. -I , A nice little light is going on between the Daily Erie Dispatch and the Weekly Erie Ga. zette. The Gazelle says that the Dispatch es tublishment its offered for sale. This the Dis patch denies, and calls upon the Gazette to state where it got ita information. Sometters stand._ --- Colonel F. S. Stannaugh l the eriginai com• mender of the 77th Pennsylvania ltegiment, and in which arc two Pittsburg companies is urged for the Legislature from Franklin! county. The managers of the Florence (Weshing ton county) Agricultural Assoc:l4les :111V0 liCeitliAl to hold their sixth on. Thursday and Friday, October LILli anti 18th, 1865. -An extensive Methodist camp meeting will be held at Shrewsbury, on the Northern Central Railroad, commencing, on the 17th of August, The company formed for the erection Of la. comotive works in Pittsburg have already pwe chased a lot of ground, and propose to push, forward the work as quickly as possible. The Capitol grounds at Harrisburg are the poor people's park, and hundreds dailp enjoy themselves there. -- It. has been suisfactorily ascertained that the burning of tannery, at Tiogoo not the work of an incendiary, The Tioga County Agitator has been pre. stinted - with the pen used attic signing of the papers on the capitulation of General Lee. —Mr. William A. Richards, of Reading, whoa died recently, bequeathed $28,000 to various churches and ftwoign missions. Tile coamtearers employed on tile (looks at .Erie struck on Wednesday.. They have mit, yet returned to work. • The Pittsburg .Theatre has a new drop. curtain. The recent rains in Clearfield have re tarded hay-making fiery mucfi. -- A inilyiviimic:b6lieni. in Pittsburg ig bolng talked of in that city. Duribg the past fourteen years seven daily papershavc Wiled in Pittsburg. Three hundred dollars will liquidate the borough debt of Blairsville. a A horse was string to death by bees, the other day, iii Reading. HOME ITEMS. A writer in liirrper , s M , ramble gives an es cellent personal description of Sheridan, as folios s "Ills body is stout but wiry, and SO4 on short, heavy, but active legs. His broad shoulder, Short, stiff hair, and the features of his face betray the ililesian deseent; but no brogue can be buccal in his voice, Ills eyeS are gray, and being small, aro sharp and piercing and full of Ore, When maddened with excitement or passion these glare fear fully. His age is thirty-four, but long service in the held has bronzed him into the appear anee Of forty, A lump of pure gold, weighing Sig Mantle, Was picked up a few weeks since by a boY who was fishing, on a creek near New Virginia, a small village in Clark county, lowa. The finder was offered $l,llO for his treasure; which he refused, lie also refuses to point out the locality where it was found, There is coma- derable excitement iii. that region in conSti quente of the discovery. The Grand Encampment of Knights Tem. plar of the United States; the General Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Masons of the United States; the Grand Encampments of Knighta Templar of Ohio 3 the Grand. Chapter of Revel Arc); Masons of Ohio; and the Grand Council. of Royal and Select Masters, all meet in SOS. sion the lirst week in September next, at Co.• lumbus, Ohio. General Sherman has sent an autograph letter to Governor Oglesby, awarding to the soldiers of Illinois who participated in the various campaigns and battles fought by him a full share of the glory embodied in the re. tad of that army, and volunteering to Mr ticipatc in any ovation that may be tendered. to them at any time. —A company has boon organized in Now' Orleans for the purpose of manufacturing ice in large quantities, which they do by a newly Patented French process. The Ice is frozen as head as it would be with the thermometer at ten degrees below zero, .and can be famished much cheaper than that imported from Dos - ton. A Saint Peter (Minn.) paper -says the grasshoppers have been flying over that place in " eciuntless myriads." The air for a quarter of n mile high was filled with them, and their speed was four to five miles an hour, Through every town or farm they pass they luaVo strong guard, and the destruction of crops of all kind is sure to follow. A policeman in Buffalo has been tined fire dollars and costs for forcing a man in a horse ear to give his scat to a lady. The court said ladies had 110111070 privileges than men, and, moreover, when treated weee not pro. fuse in acknowledgement: Ito is hratal but truthful. A private letter from Matamoras, written by a gentleman well versed in Mexican affairs. says that Since the surrender of Dick Taylor and Kirby Smith's armice, at land ten thou. sand rebel officers and men have joined the standard of Maximilan, while very few have enlisted in the Liberal cause. An Irish orphan, who, a fow years ago, was. a poor and utterly ignorant lad in the streets of this city, has recently borne off the first, prize for composition and oratory 12), Mt, Rochester University. Ito Waked ltis'Own 'way through school and college, —, The migration to this country. frOul Sweden, especially the middle au/ nOrtliera districts of the country, is this year unusually' great. A national bank has been established at Frenelitownl New Jersev, with a capital of $113,350, to be known as the "Union National Bank." A young man, at Winthrop, Idaino, named Wood, recently died from the effects of cldoro form, which he had taken while having a tooth extracted. - The negroes At Charicova hare organize& a Loyal League, under a chap leP trout thilKa# timid League. They want to uo ter Note. The people of Camden aro Justly bee= ing alarmed at the fearful destruction of pro. pony Caused by the hand of ItteelltliafiStll. A preens:gen of ooloroa Odd renews ap— peared in the streets of Louisville last Stilt day. The city of Columbus, Ga., 18 still a me lancholy- ruin, but the people are slowly re 5111/1111g work. The Mormon "destroying angels e have in ordered. another Ikuilly /or attempting to. Zion. The artist who executed the statue of Stonewall Jackson is looking for the Con. federacy to pay him for It. ' The story of General Rooker's marriage, has been confirmed. The harvesting of rye and wheat has been commenced in Southern Minnesota. There are in Now York and .13rookly-ri eight hundred 'Awe-Weeks. A German daily newspaper is about to be started in Nashville, Tenn. The Kansas State Journal is now published. daily. Two men in Dubuque are having a grand awsuit over a pigeon, valued at one dollar, —There are one hundred and 4eyent74,wo colleges in the loyal States. Long Branch is described aaNersr gay :this season, - - 0 • —Pyrosaajaia is the genteel torus for arson.