Idtzbut nusiturmty.ls, 1 connumnrnimaiattioarr 7nYte the =stud /14113 rt. luttPli • WL,Of.the Wadded:and-Directors to th . stockholden ofthe ikttaburtth and Co . - nellenlle %alined ComPany, we learn that thAigmultiailinii tbr the pout pet& van; frompamengreingl74.BB o tlreightf , sBl9,9Bl;melt,'.PASO; Xrdbeeneneoll I 88,9130t0ta1, a 498,180. The expenses wereknothiciing thomportation, $7l - 849; Beindre of motive . power," $39,241; maintenance of C 611: .a 28,975; authoten. once of med. - a 1 04 8 58; mo=ar erPers see, 117A8—totafv.M,2 0 13. Leaving net Wang; 11172.878: equaling 84 7 "' 100 per cent. stitleit is 1 84 100 per Ceti bettmthan the previous .ycam-A,.year ago the floating debt-was 8 ,59 14 10 " 4 ;88;905.. ~_ . 4, -.f. '. Expenses ltsri been InCeleseed to pro vide and impose tie Company's prop erty, in Pittsimrgh for parties engaged the retail trade in coal andeoke. Pa - ,"meet of forty tiumaand dollars in bond , doe in 1860; on purr-hose of this prope r! , tau been extended until the Conn y shall be in condition to : meet iti Su a have also been "expended In lifting tie -.ruins trestles. At Send Patti: twin I . venous was used:' , - - —Yr is wade reowar Out the Baer Canal Compeny it desirous of cnlar. ging the cabairlty of their line . of Commie nhatiort eo as to- admit the passage Id ships between Lake $ll3 and , the Ohio River. To this end the sid.of the State p i , to invoked in therm= of a loan, eat er of cash or Medic, to be secured by nto gaga. arm Lower has this . proj t much at heart , and may prom It n n the anuddemtion of the Legislature. Ozazau, Camilinr, with that ,f - sightedness Whieb is One of Ids leatg peculiarities, has; stir along period, d.- vacated making a , stack-water naviga tion on the Ohio, from the head at this city . _to the Falls . at 'Loninille.. If this lac: Bun - ever bo -realliii, - or If . it should be ermsummated so flr as fr m thiepobrtto the ,nritutli of the Besysr, this enlargement project would ammo rational importance. t know •irhat , •ct of rI We do not know what prospect of go. lag through Ma. Lownr•a-scheme boa, but if he should succeed he would add vaitly to the prospeiity not only of Pats tough and Erie, but to the advancement doll the country intervening betwCen the two Cititi. r . _ TEL raurosarr'll akrenssura to e Grant is given in oar columns this mirn isg. contains nbthing new; but only reiterates WI fonder statements. IHo thought to make den. Grant a toot for the sorompliffunint. of some of his pur poses against Congress end the laws; and faded. That be is 'mortified at his jack of success Is naticral ' enough; but a semis of decent shame should have re strained him tram accusing the General of deceiving him arid betraying his con . fidenee. The Pretidek is himself most conspicuous and perfidious betray er this age his jirodueed.l IBe calving .vast pativinage and authority from the liepullicaM, he hat used it all to defeat thew pbuils and frustrate their principles. tindmi such drcarestairces • what right has he to complain that the General "slanged his mind?" Bat it so happens Mit ths officer thus &aerated stands Smt . enougli in his integrity and In the confidence 4 ail citizens wiColipar trim allegiance bolo country, to put all his accusers to complete discomfiture. Tnain STATE Huccrions occur in the spring. In New Hampshire on the sec. oud Tneaday of March ; In Connecticut on-the Hist Monday of ; aid ; 41 Rhode Island on the first Nedne3dity. of April The Denim:rats have • hall ao chance of muteness lin the latter State for a number Hof lean. Connecticut they have carried, and! in New Hampshire have waged =tears indicative of hopes. In thew Lilt two Staten, the preseM sea son, the eitarass is unusually animated, and the look now In that the Dentin:rats slll belandsomeli routed in both. Buz kw been, introduced into the Senate to authorize the arnetruction of aboom and demon the Allegheny river, in carydon towneilp, 'Warren county. This great is 'conditioned by the bill on scalatainug the descending navigation of the stream, and , not raking the car rent alma low water mark without the comma of ownerUltrit had and obtain ed. Th is boom and - dam are M .loca red at or sear the month of Willow 1 Tbis is not the enterprise to whlehire recline some dsytk ago. Orbootaing the Alleghemyst Freetort. Ti indlulu of three auentsdra crops in lisiderit Praeef has caused great suf fering among thn people. The typhus fever has broken out, and, owing, to the admerible conditio'n of the famine Strick en people, has spread with rapidity. The PrumsienVcrrerautemt and local author ities !Wilt imp:mettle to Wier° all the suffirturrand appeals for aid lisle beeri mnde to Ibis and other countrien In New York_ committee to solicit Mub maiptelairt relief fund ham been form d, and doubtless our German feline cit izens will be callcd urea to contribute Tuna is on foOt a strong movement to Meld= Mr. 6ward fronahis Odd= u Secretary of State. His principal en emies are the Blain whose indnence With President Johnson continttes po tent,* Poor Sclera! His drasml of the persideacy together with his brilliant name and ameba's° gone, and he studs a tottering urn* of what once he was, without the shelterin g wing of either party, or the remnant of any, to COTer Main his hour of Political despdr. So muirriministakeri and selfish ambition. Own regniarEfirrisbnrg correspondent gives s farther scoot of the fraud' by which nal democrats defeated Mr. H. W. Williams last FAME thO Legis• proowidingi, it appears that one of the witnesses a:alp:eased befog; the In. venfgating Ccatudttee, - Troca Clouted county, was wailed upon la return and so beaten thin he died. The frauds open the ballot hoz, and the brutality towards the witnese, are of one piece, sad Illustrate Ilia depravity and reek - lesaussof the de l :Octane leader s . Tax new Compilation of Alabama has k been rejected, it failing to TOMATO One. half is many victim is there were voters nitsterail. Mien the people down .• there hear of the li:tedium of the Supreme Chart is to Out !towers of Congress in -the matter of Pamorustraction they will <- - comprehend the 6ituation, and hasten to utopian orgud4 law that can pats ter as republlah in form end I . l , :tancei es the federal CiMultation LOW ~:d C and am hotritizsm ow serontloos I slant the menthenrof the rennSylvanist Benito were a few days ago, their coa -1 duct yesterday imams tn. They seta ally acenud one another of being "set tip;" that 111, of isting tinder pertmiary or other mercenary intheatea If the pestilent netroptipers had breathed that , imputation, to what a towering hied . would the unite: Indignation of the hob ' °table gentleman have risen! It ,- , .., ~. &---- ' 11.1. • u.T0 rehetted friar. t ninny kiiid i Minds copies o tha missing weekly 1 pers tor which we advertised.. IWe to, . tarn our curia 'thanks to thee who have so Aencavrisly responded th oor sil t • ~, vertisereent. I - L . t of • the Democrats tho annoinunntent that .I:mt. Is ussaiosousto of it has no inthOrity for Sta gantionn. Tea astord ismoosed by the Supreme •, the opinion • i4llli4Dau -- '''• . -1.::L ..- H' . .:"• . .,:.. - PItTSBURGH .W.V4I . I . 'AK.Y, O.AZ.ETTE-...:..1. - RAnno.to ituareas. I NEWS FROM ABROAD. The Union Pacilc Railroad CoMVarty,,. (main line), offer substantial aid -to- —Napoleon h i s deprived that aged 'lnner, the Martinis d'Orrault, of hie : wards contracting the proposed ail-line between Omaha and St. Louisa By this Pezaion. I ,line St. Louis will be, one htmdred- artig —Owen Meredith has written a new twenty miles nearer Omaha than MG: volume of poem's, called "Chronicles go is by rail._gr.' 9 and Character 1 Characters." . , An exploration has teen co ~.. ..`. t . —Most of, Queen Isabella's children' of the line of the proposed road ,`'t.. ' ire very illiterate The Queen herself Cleveland to Zanesville. No seriouel.. is not a marvel of erudition: stades to the conatruction of aNO — Switzerland still etteke to the old with lo w.grades and with Male cterWes., custom orbeheading with a sword all tore are anticipated, with the excepti4 criminals conde ut to death. _ of hoe spot of a mile or two, and it is ;-.-The Marquis ID'Azsglia, the Italian believed that there they Mtn be avoided If inio,r at the Court of St. . James, has or co modified as to lie of little moment. resigned and asked to be recalled. The indications are highly favorable for —l;esseps,Tthe man of the Suez Canal, the early commencement and au6ceadnl hadelleid more than emu hundred thou prosecution of this work. ' ear dollars to the press of Puts for The Pittsburzh, Columba' and Chi- einnati, and Baltimore and o_io Rail- '''' be Chinese 1 rebels have an army road companies are to build a joint round,. poly thirty thousand men, but are house in Colomlinu, . Ohio, next spring. successad in their battles with the lei- It is to be large enough to accommodate portal troops. , . ' twenty.flve locomotives, and Is %be sit- —The Duchess* Genoa, the affianced anted on the lot owned by these cam; bride of Prince Humbert, is older than parks in Ltzelle's addition to the city. the Prince, 'very 'pretty, and much too In connection with this improvement, good for him. each of the above ea:4;mila propose to —Geunod to touch chagrined at the crest extensive shops on the same land. The Hon. E. Billingfelt, of Lei:Laster; presented to the Senate of Penneylvanta hill to incorporate tho Lancaster and Delaware Railroad • Chmrapy. with .s capital Mock of $1,600,000, tad the right to construct a railroad from some point on tloDelaware River near Point Plea sant, in Bucks county, by way of Phce— nixville, Morgantown, and Chnrchtovrn, to Lancaster, with the right to bridge the Delaware. The arraaremeata in elude a road from the'Delaware to 4111 , .sey City; thus opening a new line west ward, and putting the garden of Penn sylvania in direct communication with New York. • _ . railroad has been projected from Toledo, ♦ia Easailon and New Philadel• phla, to Wheeling. It is contemplated to make a connection at Wheeling with the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The route would certainly be the moot direct one bettieen Toledo - and Baltimore. It as said that the road will lie.finietteddur leg this year from the former city to Mention, about sixty mulct of the dis tance being already graded. • Tit. Harrisburg Tisegraph always professes to be greatly abocked when bad motives are attributed to members of the Legislature, but it does not mind tang a bind at abusing the City Coun cils. Hear it: "The building of new Water Works and giving Councils power to sell the present Works, on which the city has expended from twenty thousand to fifty thousand dams within the last few years, at private tale, is intended, no doubt, to give Mile favorite an elegant opportunity for spesukstion." Nor &nett Stop with thin. It goes on to declare that "The Councils ere unable to account for some TWILSTT THOOL/IND DOLIJAII tithe present indebtedness of the city." Even this is not enough to satisfy it, -for it farther says : "We have the positive assurance from persons in position to know, that the authorities of this city have issued more bonds than they have authority by law to do." - Thu is nestling on somebody's corns, to be sure.- _% We shell expect members of the Commile, at the next meetings of those bodies to tell the public what they think of the amenities of the Harrisburg press. If their stock of situperatire ora tory is not court' to the occasion, they may be able to hirTow 14 supply from the State Capitol. We might snip ourselves or the oam. den to tell our contemporary, in Term mentlangusge, (copying its recent 'ea emple.,) how mean such imputaticaut upon public men are; but a decant self respect restrains us from imitating It in on particular. TN. firm of August Belmont &. Co., In b.. If et the Rothschilds, seat a lot 'of Pennsylvania State stocks to the State Treasurer for redemption, and asked payment In gold. Kr. -Kemble, the Tressurer, replied, declining to pay in gold, and concluded his letter u fol lows: - I have no doubt Messrs. August Bel mont Se - Co., had many liabilities out when the Legal Tender Act was passed, which became due after gold had risen to a premium of eighty. I have not yet heard of their conscience compelling them to — Pay in gold instead of the Legal Tender. We are willing to give you the pound of Scab, but not one drop of Christian blood. Whereupon lifr Belmont responds, and after rerring to the connection of - the Rep. fe -midi with the Pennsylvania indebtedniT,he says: August • 1 moat & Co. have never de clined to meet any demand for the pay ment in coin of any liability contracted by them in coin, before or since the Le 'gel Tender Act. -And then be adds for the especial ben d! t of the State Treuttres I take this opportunity to express my regret that the State of Pennsylvania should have for its. Treasurer a person who could so far disgrace the State he assumes to represent, and forget the dignity of the office he holds, as tore- ply to a civil business communication in a manner which must raise the blush of shame on the cheek of every citirm .of that great and honored State. —The Young Ilen's Christian Associ ation of Philadelphia seem to have taken on themxlvcs part of the work there which several benevolent citizens are doing ban In Philadelphia the Asso ciation distribate tickets among the dif ferent station-houses and those homeless wanderers who refuge for the night in those places receive these, and they represent meals, which will be given -to the persons presenting them. Fifty persons partook of the test meal. Oar philanthropists also prOvide lodgings for the destitute. It would be, perhaps, a good idea to limit the time which each wanderer can stay, es it is dene in the various hospices of the Alps. In Bt. Bernard every traveller is allowed to re main three days, no matter what his sta tion or clan may be. Then be must de part %gess he is ill, when the hospital will receive him and tend him as longs it is necessary. The Grinned has adopt ed the same rale, allowing four days however; and an 101 with the others. The ride proltitnts lszineu trim quarter. tag on charity, and a similar one would be good for Mr. Rabe's 161 e-and corn , mendable enterprise. —The funny man of the Boston (bat merciat Bulletin gives eevemi valuable hints to persona whe are about to give 1 preeents: For your washerwoman or bootblack,buy some elegant trifle of Brie- I Islirac. It is their affair If they haven't . got a marble bracket or what-not to put them on, and no - yours. If you have any strong Calvinistic friends, a peck of playing cards or an opera glace will be a very lively surprise for them; and a gift of a good heavy volume of dry ser mons to your fashionable young friend, who delignte In the theatre and bal masque, will very likely manse you to be reMeraberCti Witb srung expressions of aornoklud, if not of t gratitude. In buy- ing books for children, - patronize those gloomy cavns in Carpi:lll, from which • the literary we wet blankets of childhast are issued, tiret..select a good dismal story of an unnatural child, who pinatas spending money In the missionary box, talks like a moral handkerchief; and is finally rewarded by being shipped off to Boorieboolah ba as a roirolonary. —TheLondon Star iswitty: "The land In England is said to be owned by some thirty thousand men. We bare heard of a person who was OWIIIII/tinessy in his mind lest these thirty thousand, out of patience with strikes, disgusted With re form, worried by railroads, shocked at the increase of population, shonid one dey combine and give the whole British nation notice to quit." To. all who would be rsolog mem, Judy offers word of &Melee. }acking horses is adausarous game It wssonly the other day that a young man backed a home—lnto a shopfront, and it east him fle erad-of mosey. decidedly cold reMmtion which his opera of Romeo and Joliet hu met with in all parts of Europe. —At bat accounts 0611ZINA bad just obtamed possession" of She presidential chair in Peru; Next week's President has not been named yet. —Prince lispoleod v211;1 the nose of the Nanols de Cane, Patti's Intended, at the Wile:Jai.= 1863, at the time of the Attalla Math seandaL —The Baroness Bbexgwiyi Lae at length confessed that at the instigation of Count Chorinsky, who promised to marry her, she mardered his wife.' • —Mr. Crawshay, the great Welsh iron merchant, who recently died, left some seven millions of pounds of per sona property tohis youngest son. —The British Society of Foreign Mu - clone distributed twelve, millions of tracts at the great exhibition in Paris. How many of them were read is an entirely different question. —The Manus, a caste in India, numbering some 539,000 members, hate deietted Bndmdnisro and started a new religion, with a high priest and priest-. hood of their own. The power of Janes la strengthened in Mexico, and it would not be,trn, lag to see him lift to his own A - •••• crown which rolled from the carper of the murdered Maybeilive —Captain Juakins, the great bear of a Commodore of the Canard fleet, has commanded the Scotia for six years, and during that time has conveyed 25,570 passengers across the Atlantic without a single accident— —Louis Blanc accident.!, been nominated to the French Parliament, by the Liberals' _of Marseilles. We think there will be another Louis, blank in looks, it least, at the Tuilleries,'lf , this one should be elected. - .-Illchneider the president of the corps Leglshtar, the greatest iron producer in France, and the most extravagant ex. ?Abhor at the recent exhibition, is bank. rapt, with liabilities of at least twenty :millions of francs. _ —The President a of Venezuela has made anothernew cabinet, as etas more most of the members of the old have been killed. It ii not an altogether pleas ant position, that of Cabinet Minister in South AmericUs Republic. —Freiligrath, the great German poet !these wonderful oriental poems are among the threat specimens of word painting smear; is at his old holm is Rhenish, Prussia, fat, and In the coin. foitable enjoyment of a sufficient . in come. =-Von 84114, who not excepting Eis. march, is probably, the moot •versatile, if not the greatest statesman of Europe, has advised Frinz Joseph to cut down the expenses of the Court of Vienna to one-fourth-of their present amount, and, the Kaiser has promised to do so. —General Closeret, who Is now In Paris, was most virulently assailed by the government papenthere, because he stigmatized duelling as a cruel, tumid and cowardly custom. Gen. Closeret is now going to sue these papers for dam ages, an action Which does not add much to his dignity. —The so-called . transfusion process haa been revived in Vienna, by a physi c:lbn who useslt with great success in cholera cases.) The blood of healthy young persoaslis Wined into the veins of the patients to the extent of about twenty ounces; and often the erect is instantaneous rollsf. - -The Pritah Medical Journal is con cerned about English workmen; it says that they wear out too soon and die too early, often of preventable diseases; and it is now publishing a series of essays on this subject, which will probably be read with intoreet.lms a large class is -vitally I interested in the question. —Count Vil l a Thum, the representative of a Wally' which is probably one of the oldest in Europe, and from which the old Eason fierily, the Fits Thum' of England sprang:has been engaged by Prince Meters:dela to can the memoirs of his father Prince Clement Xettereich Count Vita Thum is a member of the Saxon cabinet: —The Russian government has found ed a new military school at Orenburg on the borders of Turkistan. One hundred and twenty of the pupils are to be the sons of Tartar or %hires chiefs and the remainder arts to be Russians, in which arrangement' the desire of the govern ment that the various nationalities should fraterXdse. is clearly shown. —Since thoincrease in the pay of the Prussian army, it lieutenant gets twenty. five Rulers month and a small allow= mice for board. On a salary of this amount It Is a -wonder the officers ere sought after; for husbendi, and It is not strange that the paternal government of Prussia forbids all officers below the grade of 3fajor marrying without u nrest permission. —England Us a new religious sect whose Milef_bellef is, "cursed is the man that trasteth In man." They call them selves "peculiar people." and never call in the aid of s physician, praying over their sick and having faith. Several ar rests of members of this sect have re cently bece made In - London, for me. sleet of children who died for want of medical aid. • —Partly owing to the injury to the harbor by the recent earthquake, pertly to the anticipated transfer of the Island to the United States ; British steamers from Liverpool no longer stop at St . Thomas tol change passengers for As pinwall to another steamer. Port Roy. al, Jamaica, Is to be the future gcheral depot for :exchange of passengers and freight. —A young woman was recently 1 1 1 stabbed thirteen times by her lover, le London, and then forfeited her ball as a witness, and refused to appear against him at trirth Nevertheless, the brutal lover was sentenced to twenty years penal eerVitude. The girl Was after. wards arrested for the recovery of t h e bond, some 6200. Contributions were made for her by various philanthropists, among 'whom was John Durkin, end the requisite sum was raised, so that site could go free. —The Comps at Berlin are somewhat exercised [about the rumor that the le mons °white lady," the' apparition which ial said to announce important erebta in the Ilatiensollern (smith, hai again made her eppunince at the royal palacie. THE SOUTH, —A cotton factory la to be erected at Delki, in Franklin Parish, Llnia —Hannibal, Missouri, has bnt one steam fire engine, and that is broken down. —General Leslie Coombe le trying bard to become United Stales *arebal In Kentucky. —The Richmond Branch Railroad wilt soon be in running order to Lancaster{ Kentucky. —The New Orleans Normal School ie doing remarkably well. There are at present one hundred and twenty-five pupils in attendance. —An immense number of negro y 0... tem are leaving Mississippi for Alabama and Tennessee. Some four hundred have gone from Monroe. —Tee North Carolina Convention has voted down a resolution making negroes and persons unable to read or write ineli gible for the office of Goveinor. —A. Texas carreapondent tape that that State la full of idle men waiting for something to turn up, and says all this -the effect of training youth to live without labor. —California, a town in MOutesn coun ty, Missouri, has a new weekly called the Picks:it/don, which is a cchnic illus trated and rather a foreign looking ani mal for the back woods of Missouri: —Two brothers-hi-law named Smith and Cotton quarreled a few days since at Franklin, Tennessee, and shot each other. Cotton received a slight wound, hut Smith. was shot in the abdomen and cannot recover. —ln some parts of Alabama snow felt during the last week of January to the depth of six Inches, an occurrence so rare that some of the oldest inhabltants have found It remarkable. —Lain land holders in Greene Conn. ty (Ma.) are offering to give the use of their plantations Tor the year to any per- sons who will pay the taxes on them; hoping thou to escape the necessity bf selling. • —The Franklin (KY.) &maw; says that the farmers In that region complain that the series of sudden freezing. and thaws this winter have killed oft all of the wheat and materially Mjared the barley.' —Thirty.live thousand more white votez thin colored onea were :nut in North Carolina at the recent election, -and - tiara o rity for a convention was almost - eqard to the whole number of colored voters. —TM Fort Smith Herald Says that &Amnia s situated in the midst of one of the richest, and moot ostensive 'cos: fields in the country, reuniting only Is• bur and capttal., and not very mach of either to make it pay. ' • • —The editor of the Batesville (irk.) Times Informs kis readers that he got s whole hog from one of his subscribers for a single year's subscription to las paper, and he wishes all the others would go the whole hog too. —The returns from Alabama still leave the ratification of the new Consti tution of that State in doubt. The Idontgomery Mad contains what it calls a blacklist, being the name of all whites who voted fur the rathicellou.. —The Receiver of the First National Bank of New Orleans announces that he arida it difficult to collect debts due the bank, but that if he succeeds he will be able 'to pay the stockholders a dividend of filly-six cents mitts dollar. —Some rash, bold buglers broke Into the Suite prison at Baton Rouge and ,tole the clothes of the convict& The I New York Comesercial Advertiser says they are a disgrace to the profession, I and we think that It ought to know. —Lut Monday the scaffolding on the ; new school building in Gethsemane (6v.) fell. Two men were on it at the time, one of whom ins severely and the other fatally injured. The latter lived Ltd a few momenta after the accident. —On,the last day of 'January all the gutters were frozen over In New rit. teens. and there was some skating on i shallow ponds. The Picersairsays that far the first time in years people found r 3114 ice in their pitcher' in the mom tog. —A. negro girl at a Methodist Chnrch, in Mehra* Tenn., beetsane w . excited and nerions, under the Injudicious sp peals which were being mule, that abe swooned and fell onto a red hot stove, burning linnet( no badly that she cannot recover. —Before the .wir Jacob Thompson wu worth more than a milhon of dol lars, he being the riehest man in Ills, sluippl. • anis now an exile, living In Europe, whue he recently received tBO,OOO, being the entire proceeds el the sale of all his property. —Castor beans, broom corn and sot gilt= bare been planted In place of cot- ton in. De Witt county, Tessa. Seven thouland acres or castor beans alone bare been planted, and s letter from there says that an ell press could do' a fine badness there in the coming fall. —Oa Monday, February third, an ex tensive and destructive fire occurred In Galveston, rests, resulting in the loss prproperty veined at some fifty or sixty thousand dollars worth of property. There was some seventy thousand dol len of insurance oa the property, princi pally in Northern companies. —The news from Louisiana is more encouraging. The precautions token by the military and civic authorities have removed the apprehensions of at• tack from the bandit of white and black ',Marauders,. and the peaceable portion of the pmulatiort is at work, so that the fears of a lack of food aro also disap pearing. ' —Daring the Let two weeks 'same eighty Germans passed through Len :lngton (Sy. . ) en rotas for Woodford county, where they have engaged to work for the farmers. if this valuable . element of our population_ were en grafted into all the counties of all the Southern States, reconstruction would loso many of its dialcultlea —An array occurred on the ad last., In the dining room of the American Hotel, Atlanta, (Oa.) between C. C. Richardson, a manilla/ of the Conran. lion, and Captain Timony, formerly of the United States Army. The Utptain was at supper when Richardson mite in with a friend and addressed 'him, a few words only puied between them when the Captain shot Richardson, wounding him fatally. Captain Timony immedi ately delivered Maisell up to the Rather ides. —The young men of middle Tennes• sea hue many of them orgsnized•lnto a society for political purposes, a sort of Rebel guerrilla band called the Kukla: Klan. The main object of this secret es• sociation is to so threaten and intimidate the negroes as to' prevent them from voting at the next eleCtion. The organ- Miami is extremely popular -with the disaffected portion of the Mate, and the 'fashrille Press fears that it will hue a bed effect on the coming election. --Thomas Data; has recently, been found guilty of murder and sentenced to be hanged in Raleigh, It C. lie was engaged to Miss Laura Foster.' bat his erections were weaned off bra young and pretty widow, named Anna Melton. Them two plotted together the , death of Miu Poster, who, one day rode out on horse mick, and Wu found, afterwards mardered, In the woods. Simpleton fell on the ratty couple, with the above re sult. Mrs. Melton- la in jail awaiting ker trial. The prominence, respeetabli. Ity and wealth of the parties have cano ed the stfalr to be of the profoundest in terest in Weigh. ESIDENT IND GRANT., Additional Correspondence, Letters from the President and Five Cabinet Members. Grant Accused of lusubordlaatiwi, Another Letter from Grant. fey T troops to tbeettobarsa mixotts.l Wostilepros, February 11, Ifda, The President this afternoon sent the following lettere to the Hems of Repre . sentativen, in accordance with the resolu tion adopted yesterday: • 1 Exuctrrive Maatstos, Fob. 10, 1008. Onstrmat., The extraordinary charac ter of your letter of the ad inst. would seem to preclude any reply on my part, but the manner its which publicity hes. been given to the correepondenee, of whirls that letter forins a part, and the grave questions which are involved, in duce me to Lake this mode of giving, as it proper sequel to the communications which have 141,4041 between us, the etat•• manta of the five members of tho' Cabi net who wens present on the tension of ! our conversation on the 14th ult. Copies of the letters which they hive addressed to me aphis the subject are . accordingly herewith enclosed. You spent - of my letter of tho Int talk, . a reiteration of the many soil gross misrepresent:aloes eontained in .certain newspaper articles,.and reassert the cor rectnessof the etatements contained In yonr communication of the 28th ult., aci• ding tend here I give your own word:lj tt Anything in yours' in rep ly to it to the - contrary notwithstanding. " When it controversy upon matters of foot reaches the pain' to which this !tube:in brought. further umertion or denial between the immediate partici should roux', especial• lv when upon either nide It 'loosw the the character of the respectful iliscussioe required by the parties standing to each other and degenerates in tone and teniper. In such n rose, if them Is noth ing to rely upon but the opposing state ments, concluelene nnt.t. be drawn from them statement , ' alone and from whatev er intrinsic probabtlities they afford in favor of or againet either of the parties. I should not shrub from the controver erhut fortunately it is not loft to' this test alone. There wore nee Cabinet mire present at tho con remotion, the die tails ofwhieb In My letter of the :oth ult., you Allow yourself to any contain' many and grow misrepresentations. 1 These gentlemen heard that writer...lion end have read my statement. Thee - speak for thernwirm, nod I leove the proof without a word kihmrnent. I deem it proper, blame coneluding this cemmunicatieu, to 11o:ice some of the eLttetatettts eontained in your letter. i Ycti nor that a performance of the 1 'premises R 114 0 ,410 have been made by you to the Presiden d would have in- 1 volved "a rmistanee to the law and an ! ineonsietency with the whole history of tut connection with the ettepenelon of 1 Mr. Stanton." You then elate that you had fear, the Presideut would on the re-; moral of Mr.niontia appoint some one in his tame who would embarrass the army In carrying out the recomarection sets, and add "it wan to prevent seek en appointment that I cecepted the ore. of ; Secretary bf War nit interim, and not for' the purpose of enabling you to get rid of Mr. Stanton by my withholding it from him in opposition to the haw, or not dome so rayml surrendertng_it to one who. 11.11 the statements andorteutuptiOns in your rem c on icattion plainly indicate, ; w. sought". First of all, you horsed- i that from the very bogitittioir, of what you term the whr.le Theory of your ,nnection with Mr.- 9thtltolll . ll 11111A1MIO4 stun; 1111 intended to etrautnesnt the ' . President. It was to carry eta that le tent that yen accepted the appointmenh This oru to your mind at the Tim• of - your aceepianee. It woo not, then, la , obedience to tee order , of your interior. as heretofore had ati - pprowel, Mat , colt assumed the duties of the MM..' You knew It W. the Presitlear• par posse to potent :Mr. Stanton from resuming the Milos of Seiretary of War, and volt intended !to defeat that ! purpose. You wounded the office, not in 1 the tattooed of tho President, but of Mr. Stanton. If this purpose 00 entertained by: you had. heett ,nfixed to reireolf. II when acieptin,g the nelce. you hut done ! .0 With a ntrotol reservist:. , n frustrete the'Preeidt-rat, it would hare been a de.- , 4•11:1•11 111 the Chit', Or v. , tn• venous. fsd. course is el:Doable, but yen ranted .land oven upon that questionable ground, The hastore tit your connection with skis tritnlak,ll,l, SOtle tten - hielmur • pisee• you in a dtderent, medico bored unit shows that you not only Orttl illui.”.l year design from the President., but instared totes to kuptv4 that •on would carry. out his purpose to ! keep Mr. Stanton out of cat.. by retrodang it your. slier no attempted : restor. lon ley the vs cc to require Mr. - Stanton to entabltsh Maned by Judietal decision. I now gtve, that riet of this history as written by Thocuelf in your letter of the' tla Uit t.' . • 'home time after I 11. , o111tonti ti. duties of Secretary of Wltr red interim shiPros tient asked . my viewsso to this comae Mr. Stanton would bare to pursue, to • rase the Senile shOuld net cocain in his suspension, Ito obl a te 1,004 , 11.1111 l of the : "Mae. My reply .In trutotanre that' Mr. Stanton weald have to appeal t. the t',torts to reinstate him; tratodretlng my te,altion be riling the ground I had taken m the rase of the holtimore Police Coo missmsers." Now at that Lime,. youtadmlt to your loiter of theca lest., you 13:11 the otnee for the very object :7f defeating ma Op. teal to the Comte. in that letter you! Pay that in accepting the si des' one rno, live was to prevent the President from ! eppointing alone other perena who would ' retain 11,146 , 4•4102,1111 , 1 OM, III•he )11 , 41. vial proceedings neverougy. You knew' . ton President who unwilling to trust the °thee with any one who could not, by holding it, etetip. , l Mr. ,taskt.ut to ruort to the COllll4. N' , .5 14 , 6,11 y und•r etood ihe Itt this Inter...lOW. 55050 timeotter mosl a:repte•l the of. ; nee. that the President, not non- ' tout wall your_ Intend an expr.sion of your views and you AM ewered him that SI r.stanton would have ; - to appeal to the co .14-1, Tf the Presides( had reposed contote,,,, before ho knew - ! your -view, en.' that confidence had iteenviolated, 111.0 been said he !, made a 11114t1h1., 11113 VlOllll.lOll of con. : ildettoe repooel after that con•ersa• • tine, was 110 mbdnke ~r his nor yours. It 1 is the factonly hit needs stated, that at the dad- of this outiva , rl , 4l.lolll you did not intend t tic eines/ with, the; purpose of torring Mr. Stanton into Court, but did leht - a then and weceptiel it to prevent t hat emirs., trusts . being carnet out. In other words, ! you snhd too the ! Po-orient that le theproper coo r-I`, and you " said to yourself I have accepted this °nice and now hold it to ! defeat that ! ,',arse. The roewe pat mat id. , In a nub- owient.paintarnpli td ,' that letter of the 'I 7 .t7th alt., that it;lerwArtis you changed your vlewei. to what would be • proper course, bee hothlllir its do with the point I now under considerAt lost. The point is, that before you cliantoTl your view. yet bad secretly determined to do the very thing which at last yen did, !surrender MO onion to. Mr. Statann. You may have I changed your v iews as to the law, but I yen certainly did not veneer , your views ae to the course you had 'narked out for I yonrself from the igitltming. , will only notomoun more statement Imyour letier of the ad that the kr torment-, of the prouthrts, which It is al leged Were, made by you, would bass in volved you in the r4,intattleo of law. I know of no statute that IVollid have been ylolatecl.hadyou carried out your prom ises in good faith, and tendered your res ignation when you concluded not to be made a party to any legal proceedings. You add: 'f ant Ina meaeura eon- - finned In this cenclualon by your recent orders directing me to disobey the orders from the Secretary of War, my. enporior and your nuloritinato, without having countermanded his sanitarily to home or ders I ant to disobey." , On the 2,lth ult. jots raltindwed a note to the Prewident, requesting In writing, SD order, given to you verbally five day. before, to disregard orders from Is as tieeretary of War, mail you know front the President himself that they wen. his or den. On the Va., in Compliance with your remold, I slid give you instructions in writing nut to obey any order from the IS'ar Depart tneut, neatuned to bu lesued by direc tion of the Prettident, utiles!. c ommand-de wan known tly the General cnd ing tho of the United btat. to have teen authoricael by the I.:emotive. There aro mime orders which a Secretary of War may hotne without the authority of theProoldent. 'fliers are others which he Immo simply as the agent of the Preeddera, and which purport to be by direction of the PrmidenL Fur each or der. the President is responsible, and he ahould therefore know and understaad what they ere before giving such direct- I lion. Mr. titantoo, in bin letter of the 4th' inetent, which aceompanics the publish- ed oarrespmdenee, wars he haft had no , communication With the 'President einca the nth of Align. last, end lie further eels that since he nemmed the dull. of the Mhoe he line continued' to discharge them without any personal or weitten communication with the President, nett ho adds "no orders breve been homed from this Department In the name of the Preoldent -with my knowl edge, and I have received no enters from Mtn." It thin seems that Ale. Stanton now discharges the duties of the War Department without any reference loth* President and without Using MS name. Oily order to you had '.only reference Is orders) stomme edd to be Issu by the Pres ident. It would appear from Stan ton's letter that you have!e, remayed no such onlensfrent hint. In yeti: note to • tended to do if, the Senate anould 'under, take to reinstate Mr. Stanton. In reply to Which the General referred to their former conversation upon the same enjejego ono e si i e e eoeu "anderatoal my pomertln rind! thy conduct Mill iiii: : cone formable to that utlerstanditie;" that 116 (Ili General) then expressed_ a Mug. nanco to being made a party to a judicial prticeeffingi eating that he would expose 'himself to Lite and imprieentrient by doing no, as hie anatintriog to diseharge the duties efSecretary of TY r ad interim If ter the. Senate, shall": het ' refttsed to' concur in the enetiension of tr. Stanton, w Office r n ould la , a Al9llll° ha 1:I ' of ~sae. Tenure of t to this the'Preeth; that informed Central' , Grant be hid not suspeoded Mr. Stanton under the-Tenor. of Offtesebill but by virtue of power conretred en him hy the , Constitution, and as to the fine and lel prisonment the President would pay whatever lino wee impound and submit to whatever, impriemmtent reight bead judged against Mm (the General;) that , they continued the con*ereation for smile time, discussion the Dive at length, and finally remerated without Latino ' reached a definite cone' nelcieh• end with the understanding . DIM the Georral ' would see the Preoldent ug in on Mon day. In reply, Gen. Grants admitted tho conversations had oe,urred, 'and Bald [bet at • the drat eetWernatiop he had given It as his.ohlnion Ito the Petal dentthat in the outfit of noti-contertence by the Senate in the action l of the Petal dent in respect to the Seeeetary of War the elevation weold Kaye tobe decided by the Court, that Mr. Stearin , would have to appeal to the Court to reinitiate him to office, that the to. would retrain in until they could he dlepliteed anti the outs put la by legal promodinemmid that he then thought to and had egret,' the% If he should change hie mind lid would notify the Prmident in time to 'enable him to make! another, appointment; but at-the time of, the drat conversation he had not looked very den") , Into the law; that It had recently. - been! discussed by tho nowepapers and Chet this had indu ced Wen to examine itMore carefully, and that he bad come to the cdnelnsion that if the Senate- ettotildLrefusiit• con cur in the auspenalomellr.StantOLL would thereby berth:fended and !that ho (Gen. Gexiat) could ant' methane thereafter to acts Secretary of War ad interim with-, out subjectiug .hlmmlf top fine and nu prisonmeal; that he cone over on Satur day to Inform the Pralidene rie thin change in his views ' ! and did to Inform I him;: that' the President replied that ** had not !responded Mr. Stanton undenthe Tenure of Office .bill, but under the CI-institution, and hail ap point.' him (General Grant) by virtue of the authority derived from the Comeau lion, fine that they continual to discus the matter some time, slnally he left without ;tiny Onnelusiort having been I rearhede expel:ling to am the President *gale on Monday. Ile - thou proceeded to eiplain .whti ho had net called on the I President on 'Monday, saying he, had • ' long interrime with General Sharman. drat vat ous Iletie madam had occupied his time, until lido, and be did not think I the. Sedate wituld net so soon, and &eked, •111h1 not Gemini' Sherman mill , no you en Monday," .1 do not know what peeved between the' President and I General' Great on tiaturdeo, except no I I learned et fromt the conreireation botweei thorn at the Cabinet meetleg! on Tura , day, and the foregoing !et solestantlillY . l what then occurred. The prociee words j owl onl the occasion am, not of course' given .tartly in the older id whlcti.they ! was spoken, but the Ideas expression I aid facts Mattel are falthtully preserved and, promoted. i 1 I I have the honor to Ira, air, . 'With great mama, ! •• Your obedient servant, TAILUIDIT DITAZTXINT. 1 , . 1 rt. It. DISOITNINO, WASItIXOTeN, Feb. e, her. ( iTo the Preeldent. I _.. , Sue -I have received your eels of the ' ! ; ---- ' — ee • I lilt lost, calling my attention to tie rot- . I Dar i I,nTSIENT, or STATE, respeadence betwesa yourself and Geo- ! Masai:iota:a Feb. 11, lea: i ! ' , eel Green," published in "h• CAT*".r ie Sta-=Themeeting to jwhien yon refer or Yottitertio7. eoPeteelsll.7 to that or it in 'your letter I w as a !reviler Cabinet I which relates to whet onenreed In the lanai. sen o e e th e I mee ,t,,,, te were 1 Cabirat meeting eraTinsley the 14th nit, assembling, end Were the President had I end niquoitttolit 'too to cots whet ."n entered the Oilmen Chamber, General I Mid In _ the wetherestleu referred to. I Oral:aeon coming in, raid to me that lie i canneiundirtake to state tee reels* mee not in altopilenee as a member of bfiSP‘.4e sad,, but/ hare no n e ".l ion the Cabinet, bid peon invitation, and 1.. in =tying year amount of that