t funitlin tpooitorg. Wednesday, •Ja/Y /2, 1865 TAE :Union - county Committeemetlere on Saturday last, and fixed Saturday, August sth for the Union Delegate Elec tions, ,and Tuesday, August Bth for the County Convention. T. Jefferson Esq., was chosen Representative Delegate to the State Convention, and the appoint= ment of John R. Shtder, Esq., of Perry county, concurred in. The Senatorial Delegate was conceded to Adams. The. Union men of the county should see in time that there is a full attendance at the delegate elections. so that there may be a fair expression of the preferences of the • party in the Convention, and a strong and acceptable ticket nominated. AVENGING JUSTICE. On Friday last Mrs. Mary E. Surratt, Lewis P. Howell alias Lewis Payne, Geo. A. Atzeroth and David E. Harold suffered tlui.,extleme penalty of the law by hang ing, in accordance with the verdict of the military court convicting them of partici pation in the assassination of the Presi dent and the attempted murder of Secre tary Seward, and Michael O'Laighlin, Samuel Arnold, Dr. Samuel A. Mudd and Edward Spangler have been consigned to hard labor in the Albany penitentiary— thethree former for life and the Latter foi the term of six years. Thus in less than ninety days alter the conspiracy culmina ted in the murder of our Chief Ruler, all ho actively participated in it have been ,brought to fearful justice, sere JOhn H. &mutt who_is still a fugitive ; and he must soon learn that his fiendish :Mother has atoned for her revolting crime on the,gib bet. Carefully and profoundly as the great conspiracy was conceived and .planned in all its details, the government was ad vised of the names, whereabouts and par ticipation of all the leading actors therein a very few days after the Nation was ap palled and shrouded in gloom by the un timely and Violentdeath of Mr. Lincoln ; And but one has escaped the just penalty for the horrible deed. The aet for which they in their madness hoped to be blessed by millions of people, made them shunned and abhorred of all mankind—of friend and foe of the Republic, and they were wanderers until justice brought them within its terrible grasp. Booth, the chief conspirator and murderer was turned from almost every door without sympathy.— Even in the land of treason he had to dis own his name and crime to procure shel ter, and finally he died unwept by any save the few who were dishonored by his name and blood. and' none but the chief of the secret police and one trusted as sistant can mark his grave. Now four others who shared his perfidy to their common country andjoined in the crown ing crime of the nineteenth century, have been hurried, ly the avenging arm of jus tice, to the bar of Him who shall judge all the living, and their names will live hence _ forth in histor G y only as typical of the deepest infamy with which the annals of crime in the Western World axe blotted. We would that they had been tried by the civil authmitie's---not because any injus- tice has been done, but because the im partial historian must record the consti tution of a military tribunal for such a trial when the function& of the civil tri- bnnals were frilly and freely exercised, as a grave error and a dangerous precedent ; -but the verdict and its fearless execution will stand approved wherever' justice is revered. —Thus swiftly and terribly has the strong' arm of justice fallen upon those -who were the immediate conspirators to deprive the nation of: its constitutional and beloved ruler by violence; but we in- sist that the - - work of justice is yet unfin-, ished. These columns.have never coun seled or sanctioned vengeance on the part of the government. In its great triumph over treason it will best serve its great purpose and vindicate its invincible pow er and blameless majesty by the magna- niniity that:ever characterizes the noble victor; but treason has given birth to . crimes hitherto unfinowri in the history of civilized nations, and if would be neither just to the 'martyred dead nor Merciful to 'the living to demand no atonement there for. Jefferson Davis was the chief exec - ntive of the so-called confederacy. He it was who wielded despotic power for fora• years in the revolted States. He dictated and enforced the policy, of the insurgents, and he it was who, as a part of his system of warfare, deliberately and remorselessly doomed thousands upon thousands of Union prispers to the most horrible death by starvadon and wasting disease.. This monstrous crime stands out as the colos sal crime of the war ; the master-piece' of treason's savagery. ground Anderson ville alone sonic seventeen thousand have welcomed the grave as 'a refuge from. re bel brutality and starvation, and other thousands still linger in hopeless disease, waiting for the fulness of treason's work. ,This revolting chapter was no accident, and *as not dictated by necessity. It was deliberately planned by the rebel au-' thorities and enforced with relentless cru elty by Jefferson Davis, now a prisoner in Fortress .Monroe. Sonic, of his officers have protested, and his Congress was com pelled to take formal cognizance of the barbarities into which treason had drag ged them ; but Mr. Davis, who was su preme in power and had j but to command or suggest and the starvation of prisoners would have ended, persisted in the dia bolical murder until the last shadow of his power had If Mrs. Sturatt and Payne and their co conspirators. were justlyo executed, as is confessed on every hand, what should be the action Of the government in disposing of its-arch-criminal now in Fortress 'ion roel They murdered one man—though a chosen and revered rifler he had but one life to give to the demons who destroyed him. Davis has tilled thousands of- un timely graves with the victims of the most cruel murders in our history. It was wan ton, causeless and without the shadow of excuse or palliation. He did it in insolent violation of the a9cepted rules of war- If he had shot down a prisoner brought be- fore him in Richmond, who could gainiay that he should be tried by a - military tri bunal for. violating the laws of war, and condemned to die ?—and when he, by the mere exercise of despotic power, deliber ately dooms thousands of prisoners to the most shocking cruelties and death, what should be the penalty ? We insist that he should be tried in conformity with the laws of. war, by a commission composed of the ablest officers of the army, and when shown to be guilty of the' horrible charge, he should die as did the•murderers of less note and less guilt on Friday last. MICAWBER DIE2IIOCRACT. Hon. Philip Johnson, M. C. from Eas ton, has had the singular fortune to be reared in the Tenth Legion where De mocracy, draft riots,, bounty jumpers, and coppery serpents generally do most vege tate. Had he been a resident of a more enlightened and patriotic section, with his moderate tittainOtents and immoder ate semi-rebel proclivitives, he would have been an outcast and a repobale ; but with a people in harmony with his views, he has managed to worry his way into Congress, and has been thrice elected be cause his constituents have - never been able to decide which of the many better men offering should be taken. Being in Congress. be well appreciates his own im- portance, and is a fit leader for the Mi cawber branch of the late Democracy. He is weary of standing out in the cold, hungry for_ the flesh-pots, and like the sanguine MicaWber himself, he cq siders_the eventful hour at hand wlatit something is certain to turn up. He tried to pursuadc the people of the Nation that the war was a failure—voted I steadily against men and means to prose cute the war, denounced every qfit of the govettiment for the suppression of the re bellion—had draft riots and the murder of government officials as common occur rences in his district; but in spite of all these persistent efforts of his in behalf of treason and slaN'ery, - both have collapsed, and with them - the prospects of the whole Micawber school. Something else must be done—sOmething must tern up : and in the fertility' of his invention he proposes to fling his slimy, treasonable arms around President:Johnson and compass his des truction by his proffered support: He says, in an effervescing 4th of July letter, that President Johnson "has proven his devothin to the South and the Union by holding - on to both and making more and greater sacrifices for both than any other man north or south. Let blue but 'be well adrised 4woclaims this sanguine politi cal MicaWber. -- and all will be well. Let him but throw himself into the hands of the men who pursued him and his CillF.t) with tireless antagonism—let him 'dis pense to his own and his country's delq ly foes the honors and emoluments in his gift, and Micawber Johnson will hail President Johnson as "the restorer of his country," and sottlid his praises while his patronage lasts. But the negotiations seem to work badly. Since the letter was written, President Johnson has so far for gotten himself as, to hang four of Micaw ber Johnson's friendS in Washington, sim ply because they were treasonable mur derers; and probably the futsome,praises of Micawber will cease. If President Johnson- shall be r so rude as - to reject Micawber_ Johnson's tender proposals, let Micawber turn to some more con genial and appreciative friends. There is one Robert E. Lee in Virginia ; one Da vis at Fortress Monroe; obe Breckinridge any where outside the confines of the United • States, and various others of the same sort, all of whom areeminently de voted to the Micawber theory, and t will join hands to praise or condemn the Pres ident as circumstances may warrant. AVe beg Micawber Johnson to 'be patient— somebody will take.him although Presi dent Johnson will not; and if he can't get terms tesuct,himself and his seedy fol lowers, he mu‘t suit himself and his crew to such terms as he can get. Patience is a virtue and we beg MicawberJohnsoti to study it. Jibe can't get President John sons old clothes, he can denounce hint and wait tor the good time coming for Micaw bers. It may come in the next forty years, 'and if the old Micawbers can't wait for it, they c,au console - themselves by assuring the little lficawbers that the far future has something in store for them, How- ever little or long ahead. it will be some thing to break the cruel surges of despair In the meantime Alicawber Johnson ca go in freely---he can try all around. If the front door won't open, let him try the back door, the window, the kitchen, the cellar, or any other point with a savor of plunder about the White House, and When lie. has exhausted all his efforts, an finds just nothing for his labors and eu logies, he can return to the old camp of the Democracy no worse than when he started, and keep waiting, ever waiting. for the luckless day when something will 'turn up" for the Micawber Democracy. WE arc gratified to notice that the prom inent busiiness men of the 4th Senatorial district, Philadelphia, have requested Geo. Connell to consent to a re-election to the Senate. Mr. Connell entered the Senate in 1860, and has served two terms with much more. than ordinary efficiency and fidelity to his constituents, his State and his country, and the ,unanimity with which be is called upon again to a can didate is but a just tribute to his great political and personal worth. Soon . after his first election he became paralyzed so that he has not been - able to stand for some five rears past; but his efileiency has not qt - M impaired, nor 'has his ardor in behalf Of right in any degree abated. lle will doubtless be re-elected by an in creased majority. _ GEN. HARTRANFT, the hero of Fort Steadman, is warmly urged by Eastern Union papep for the nomination for Sur veyor General. It would be a proper tri bute to a most gallant soldier, and the people would gladly ratify such a nomin ation at the polls. TUE 'Harrisburg Telegraph his shown its dis regard of a, bathing out by enlarging its dime]] thong four columns and giving every evidence o in e yeased-vigor and prorperity. QII)e franktin nepositg:rn, iliambersbutg, Pa. WE 'give in to-day's paper the proceed' ings of the inauguration of the Soldierk National Monument on the 4th inst.' The oration delivered by Gen. Howard, the poem by Miles OTiley and a letter from President Johnson will appear in oursnext. MR. EFCRANAN BEARD FROM. The nation will be glad to hear that James Bu chanan still lives, no matter for or on what sub ject, he demonstrates it; and they will not be disappointed to find him, in his second childhood, hastened and intensified by his wrongs to a peo ple who lavished their highest honors upon him, adhere to the delusion that Democracy may ye win the respect and sanction of the nation. He admits however that he is not likely to live to see the day, showing that he still has some lucid streaks. We copy his letter written to the De mocracy of Harrisburg, declining attendance of the celebration of the 4th of July : WHEATLAND, July t, 1865.!: - GENTLENrgx—I have received your kind invi tation to unite with "the Democracy of Harris burg and vicinity" in celebrating the approaching anniversary of our National Independence, and regret to say that I shall not be able to enjoy this pnvilege. On this hallowed anniversary let us rejoice that, through the intervention of Divine= Provi dence, peace has once More returned to bless our land. Our joy, however, will be tinged with a cloud of sorrow for the loss of our kind-hearted mid distingn§hed President by a diabolical crime, and this, too, at the very moment when, by wise clemency, he was about to convince the world that peace has its triumphs as well as war. I am gratified to observe that everywhere throughout the State the old Democratic party is renewing the energies of former years. It can never diel while the Constitutim and Union shall live. It will be a bright and glorious day for the people of the,country—and this will surely come, though at my advanced age I may not live to see it—when the well-tried and time-honored princi ples of Democracy, as expounded by Jefferson and Jackson, shall regain the ascendency in the administration of the Federal Government. Yours, very respectfully, JAMES BUCHANAN. WE are glad to notice that a new edition of McPherson's Political History of the Rebellion is about to be issued. It will make a complete compendium of leading political events from the 6th of November. 1860, to the 15th of April, - 1865, from the first election of President Lincoln to his tragic death, and Nvill give besides'a copious chap ter on - the church and the rebellion. It will be a magazine of facts, arranged in logical order or grouped in natural harmony, and will contain an exhaustive index making_reference to both names and subjects ready and easy. Most of our read ers need not be told that Hon. E. McPherson, the author of this valuable work,. is unsurpassed as a,carefill student of political history, and he is eminently fitted to compress the momentous events of the war intelligently. We know of no work either published or contemplated that approaches this one in value hip' the politician and indeed every intelligent student of our thrilling history. It can be supplied by Shryock. Price $5 per copy. - WE have received from J: B. Lippincott & Co., Philadelphia a little book of 150 pages devoted to Petroleum and Petroleum Wells, by J. A. Bone. It gives the author's theory of the forma tion of Petroleum, t tells where it - is found, what it is used for, where to sink wells, how to sink them, and gives besides some interesting and in structive chapters on oil investments generally. It will well repay 'any one interested in the oil shares to read the book. It can be had at Shr3- Ocks. WE have received from Horace. Waters, No. 481 Broadway, New York, the following pieces of Music, by Mrs. E. A. Parkhurst, who is one of our most popular composers. " Funeral March" to the memory of Abraham Lincoln, the matt) r President; " Oh! Send * me one Flower from his Grave." Price 30 cents each. The March, with vignette of the President,so cents. Mailed free. The New York press speak in the most flattering terms of these pieces. Titti Philadelphia Press appeared in a new and beautiful suit on the 4th inst. It stands con fessedly in the very front of the Union Ritrnals of the country, turd its success, we are glad to know, in commensurate with its merits WE are indebted to Hon. J. K. Moorhead for valuable public documents. CHE FOURTH IN GREENCASTLE TO the Editors of the Franklin Repository In pursuance of public notice, a meeting of the citizens of Antrim township was held in Green castle on the sth of June, 1865, when it was una nimously agreed to celebrate the approaching An. mversary of the Declaration of Independence. Several committees were appointed to make the proper arrangements for the occasion, and when the day arrived, Greencastle was not behind her ' sister towns of the county in celebrating the na tion's birth-day. The day was commemorated, more especially, with expressions of gratitude'in behalf of those who " died on the field of hOnor," and in giving a,heartfelt welcome to those whom God in His mercy has spared to return again to their loving homes. Although - the Fourth brought with it the busy time of harvest, when many persons were en gaged with sickle and scythe, while others had gone to witness the laying of the corner-eh4ff of the National Monument at Gettysburg, still our neighbors were here from the four quarters of the county and from Maryland, to participate in a celebration which far exceeded the eipectatioq of all in attendance. It has been long since Green castle saw such a day. Every person felt a deep interest in doing honor to the day which gave our country a place in the family of nations. At 9 o'clock A. M. a procession was formed in front of the Presbyterian Church, under the di rection of the Chief Marshal, Gen. David Detrich, assisted by Copts. C. F. Bouner and J. B. Strick ler, consisting ofacompany of Cavalry from the 2.'2d Pu. Vols., Capt. T. D. French commanding. A wagon neatly decorated with many wreaths and flags, conveying thirty-six little girls all dress ed iu snowy white, accompanied by the Antrim Brass Band. Next in order Were the soldiers of 1812; then the retyrned soldiers of the war just ended, and the citizens from the town, township and' vicinity. After them followed a long train of wagons filled with heaped up baskets of viands which had been gathered from the four quarters of the township the day previous. 1O o'clock A. M. the procession arrived in Mr. Snively's woods, where all in attendance gathered round the "altar of our country," to commemorate the proudest day of a fortunate people. The exercises commenced with the stir ring strains of "Hail Columbia" by the Brads Band: The Rev. W.' Eyster, Pastor of the Lu theran Church of this place, then offered up a fervent prayer, after which the Declaration of independence wits read by George W. Zeigler, Esq. Then followed the oration by Colonel D. Watson Rowe, which was delivered with- much feeling and eloquence, and was listened to by the large audience in the most profound and uninter rupted manner. After the oration the audience repaired a little, ways doWn the woods, where* ladies had re lieved the baskets of their bu ahem, and had trans ferred them to the long tables prepared for the occasion. Dinner Was •uovl served. This was an important feature in the programme. After dinner the. ydung ladies and young gentlemen promenaded along the silvery stream which winds its way through the woods, describing a sinusoid An its course. The members of the choir made the welkin ring, with their voices swelling up on the air the tune of "The Star Spangled &Mier," "The Prisoner's Hope," "The Heroes &Gettys burg," and other patriotic, songs, while the boys described a semi-circle upon a _rope oscillating from a centre twenty feet from, the earth. All seemed to be happy with the day's entertainment. At lh o'clock P. 31.-the audience was again called together with music by the Brass Band, when eleven toasts, appropriate to the occasion. priihred by G. W. Zeigler, - , Esq.; were read, when three hearty cheers were given tiir the ITnion, and the members of the choir again filled the woods with patriotic airs. • The rest of the afternoon Was taken up with addresses by Rev. J. W, 'Wightman; Rev. W. tyster, and Dr. A. H. Strickler, These addres ses were bstmed to with the profoundest atten tion. The approbation and delight of the audi ence were manifests They were intended to be short, that variety might enliven the occasion. Dr. Strickler's almost iinpromptu speech IA as ex ceedingly creditable. and was especially well re ceived. A benediction by RA , . J. W. Wightman closed thO exercises,lai the shades of evening were beginning to fall`. The old Antrim Band. which had been in a dis organized condition since the war, we have the pleasure of informing the public, is again re:or ganized, and is in a flourishing cMid aim]. Although they had but No weeks practice, they met ad mirably the exig,encies of the occasion. The audience expressed themselves highly gratified and delighted with the music both by the Band and by the Choir. In the close of the evening, when the day's en tertainment had ended, the participants r Iturned . to their homes, to remember as long as they live the memorable day - when the sun of peace rose to thrice beautify the starry flag of libertyl, and to shA bright rays of cheer upon a nation born anew. The day was observed with profound respect. and the good . order kept throughout the day b) all in attendance, made everything pass off pleasantly and agreeably to all concerned. THE REST AND WEEVIL IN WHEAT To the Editors of the FrooLlio ErPo'l:.r!/ I was gratified with your admirable article in a late number of your paper on the above subject, and as you desired an expression o 1 opinion on the part of those who had cultivated the Tappa ; }mono& or (white smooth eared) Boughton wheat, I•take the liberty...of contributing my observation and experience in regard to its cultivation for three years past. So far it has snore than realized My expeeta: lions, although the severe winter of 1863-4 da maged the cro?j in every instance in this vicinity: so far as I know, except my lot of 21 acres, which was ripe for the Cradle on the 25th of June (1861), and yielded 66 bushels of as fine a specimen of plump, white wheat as I ever saw. The flour from it was ex4ra good. The reason wby mine was not frozen' out is to be attributed, I suppose, to the fact, that I top-dressed it in the fall. My red Mediterranean wheat in an adjoining lot, sowed on the same day as the white (19th Sep tember), was greatly damaged by the fly. It yielded only 16 bushels to the acre. This year I had but 21 acres of Boughton wheat, and none of the red. It was ready to cut on the 23d of June, although .the threatening,aspect of the weather prevented me from having it-reapt until the 271),. Nbither weevil or rust effected it—not at all. It stood heavier on the ground than any white NI heat I ever had. It stood up well, although the growth - was rank and unusually tall. Owing to this last, I attribute the fact, - that the grains are not quite as plump as they were last year, although they are of fair size and I think will hold out in weight, (Last year the weight was 64 lbs. per bushel). I gave a slight top-dres sing to a portion of it last_ fall also, and even the stubble now show bow grateful the Ind is for a little extra favor bestowed in this way. I think you are perfectly richt when 3on pal, that the Boughton wheat should have a little extra culture. Give it a Rood soil and it will give a good yield. I have 64 dozen of wheat from the above 2# acres. if it should yield only 50 bushels, it will be better than a great many of our best fields of rod wheat will 3 field this 3 ear. lint lam inclin ed to think it gill yield nearer 641 than 50 bushels. Of one thing I am fully convinced—we must discard such wheats as are late 6 ripening, at least until the weesil, fly and rust pass away. Whatever preferences we may have in other re spects, we should see twit that we obtain wheat which ripcna early, W hatever kind of w heut ithat may be. So far the Boughton wheat has answer ed my purpose well, and hence I shall hold on to it. I may perhaps try the Amber wheat also, as it, is said to be au early kind. B. S. SriviErk. Cm3aniViSDURG, ,Tuis R. POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. —The Unionixtff of Venarmo county hoe non Mated W. L. Whann for Assembly. —W. W. Barr, Esq.. has been nominated by the Democracy of Clarion county fbrAssembly, —The Union men of Craciford county hat:e re, nominated C. Sturtevant and GPO. H. BeMos for Assembly. —The new constitution of Missouri ..has been adopted by a majority of one thousand eight hun dred and sixty-two. —Gen. Schenck is said to be in the field as a competitor is ith lion. John Sherman for the next Ohio 11. 8. Senatorship. —The Union nien of ArnistrOng have nonaina ted Lieut.-Frank Meritling for Assembly, an( reeomtnimded Cot. Saninel 31..laelvon for Sena tor. —The Union men of Lawrence county have nominated Robert Andley for Senator and Swill eiChiney (present member) and Alexander P. :due for Assembly. . —The National Democratic. Coiiinlittee at Washington has issued an addres4 to titu Demo cents of the country, asking them to give their Fiipport to the Administration of President .N111)- 6011. —Gm. Fletcher. of Missouri. has issued a proclamation announcing the adoption of, the. new Constitution for that State. The .majority for the Constitution was 1, , • 4 6 . 2. 'lt went into ope ration on the 4th inst. —The Union men of Indiana county have )m. minuted Colonel Harry White, of Libby Prison fame, for Senator by a vote of 1,213 to 1,114 for Dr. Thomas St. Clair, present Senator. ;mil re nominated George E. Smith Mr Assembly- —The Limon Convention of Bedford county have nominated D. B. Armstrong fur the Legis lature: John T. Kelm) for District Attorney; Captain Adam Weaverling for Associate Judge, and Captain Simon Dick i erhoot fur Treasurer. —Hon. C. L. Pershing has !won re-nominated for Assembly by the Democrats of Cambria. He has served four consecutive I.e,mnis, and with gnat credit to himself and to the House. Since Cambria is pretty certain to prefer a Democrat for member, we are glad to see Mr. Pershing the man. —Col. Mundy, candidate for Congress in the Louisville district of Kentucky, made a telling oration On the Fourth, in %NW!' -lie took decided ground in favor of the constitutional amendment abolishing slavery. He also affirmed the remark- able doctrine for a Border State politician, that " emancipation must be accorded as a natural right, and with it, the attendant prcCilegeA of a state of freedom." —The Pittsburg Daily Commercial warmly ur ges the nomination of Wm. flurry Markle, Esq., of Westmoreland county for Auditor General. It says that Rs the West is entitled to one of he positions the name of Wm. Harry Markle, Esq.. of Greensburg, • is-atrongiy urged as the candidate of the - -:West. Mr. Markleis a long tried 'Union man, and a gentleman of aFIC, qualified for • this important post. His • numerous friends, we understand, present his claims and qualifications with strong eqnfidence that they will be recognized by the Onion party and the people of the ;Stale. PERSONAL. . —The reported pardon of Cbarleg James Faulk net is contradicted. banquet' was given to Gen. Sherman at Louisville on Monday week. —Mr. Johnson, the Provisional Governor of Georgia, has arrived at Savannah. —James Daubs; a prominent and wealthy citizen of Philatlelphia, died on the 4th inst. —David Gregory and William Hopkins, mur derers, are to he hanged in Philadelphia on the 11th of August. —Pretident Johnson has appointed Benjamin P. Perry, of South Carolina, Provisional Gover-, nor of that State. —Dr. Geo. A. Eckert M. C. from Schuylkill and subsequently Director of the Mint died in Philadelphia last week. —Hon. Thomas 11(s, formerly a member of Congress from this State,_died at his residence in Doylestowni on Saturdai-weeh. —Hon Ma Packer, of Mauch Chunk, has do nated $500,000 and fifty-seven acres of land for the establishment of a College near Bethlehem. Application for the bodies of Mrs. Surratt, At zeroth and Harold was made on Friday last by friends of the deceased. Their request was not granted. Leteher, of Virginia, and Co , lonel Northrop, ex-rebel Commissary .General, lime been reduced to poverty by the failure of the Confederney. —Major Eckert on Saturday Week entered on his duties as Assistant Secretary of War, in place of Mr. Dana, who is going to Chicago to edit the Republican there. J: B. Fry,..well known for his connec tion with music criticism and the literature of the operatic stag's, died at his residence in Phila delphia, on the Iskinst. —Hon. James Paul, State Senator from Montt gomery county, from 18.35 to 1839, died at his home, in Moreland, township, a few dais since, at the ripe age of 86 years, • —Mr. Frederick Seward has so far recovered from his injuries as to be able to ride ont;each day, weather permitting, and he expe As shortly to he able to visit his home in 'The State of New York. 7 -Winitwit Orton, of New York, entered upon the duties of Commissioner of Intern . al Revenue, at Washington. on Saturday week. He succeeds Joseph J. Lewis, whose. services while in that position were equally valuable with those of the first Commissioner, Governor Boato.-ell. —lt is duthoritatirely denied that Secretary Seward Seward has tendered his resignation to President Johnson; or that a changet in the Department of State is contemplated. Mr. Seward, after great peril and suffering, has reappeared at his post, and it is not too .much to say that the people of this country recognize in him its ripest statesman. He has fairly won this distinction. 3IILITA RV INTELLIGENCE. —The rebel Commissioner Ould has been un conditionally released. —Gen. Logan has issued an order for the mus tering out of his entire army. —Gen. Granger, in Texas, has issued an order proclaiming the abolition of slavery iu th . at State- —Geneiol Logan has issued au order reducing the Army of the Tennessee to fifteen thousand men .--fteneral Hnlleck will soon. leave Washington to take command of the Department of the Pa cific. —Au order from the War Department directs all volunteer officers on detached serried to join their proper commando. • —lt if officially announced that the ram Stone wall is to be delivered up by the Spanish authori ties to the United States. —Gen. 3feade has assumed command of the Military Division of the Atlantic, with his head quarters at Philadelphia.. —Brevet Major-Genival ti. Wylie Crawford, lately in command of the Third Division, Fifth Corps. will shortly be assigned to a new com mand. —Richmond paper,' nE Friday my that the rail roads throughout the South are being rapidly re paired, and that cornmunieMion With New Or leans by rail will soon be open; —The Provisional Corps, under General Wright. will encamp for the summer on the tipper ,Poto mac. The headquarters of the Army of the Poto mac has been lhoken up, General Meade having gone to-Philadelphia. General Hunt, Chief of Artillery, _goes to Kansas. General Hulleck leaves for' California soon. General Ord is ex pected to assume command of the Department of Ohio. —A veritable black flag, raised by .the rebels over the college building at Russellville. Kentucky it has been deposited in the Indiana State Libra!". by Col. Wells, of the Fiftieth Indiana regiment. The flag is about seven feet in length byteur feet in width, and is made of black alpaca. In the center is a large White skull, with a ghast ly grin, and beneath it the cross-bones, done in white paint. It is a striking illustration Of the chivalrous character of the fiends we have been li Ming. MRS. SERRITT Jane U. isAehn visited Washington dur ing the trial of the convirators, and spent a mor ning itnessmg the trial. She thus describes the murderers and the beetles attending the trial in a letter to the Pittsburg Commercial: Long before this reaches you Mrs. Surratt will have suffered.the;eitreme penalty of the law, and my pity Wr her fate cannot add one drop to that octian of el mpathy which threatens to wash av‘ ay the land-marks between vice and virtue in inakiffg them equally sate; hut when justice is satisfied, we may profitably consider the extent of complicity in that crime for which Mrs. Surratt suffered. Unit only knows how she suffered ! It is customary to represent her as a monster with an unlimited amount of cunning and cruelty in her face: but she is simply a representative Southern woman, no better or worse than the majority of Southern women. I know those who have known her as the belle and beauty of her county, the petted, spoiled tiworite of tier friends, the idol of parents, husband and children. Her face, and indeed her whole figure, while on trial, was soft, rounded, tender and motherly. Her large gray eyes alone gave indication of reserved strength. Iler behavior, during that long and terrible ordeal, was full of delicacy and dignity. She made no scenes, as a weak or vain woman would have done. When her daughter came into court, and, with quivering lip and streaming eye, appeared on the point of breaking down, with a gestve of command and entreaty she res trained her.i. All the long, hot days, she sat with her heavy mourning veil down; and a large paint leaf hW held between her face and the crowds who gathered, and crushed, and struggled to gaze at tier, as if she had been an alligator—kundreds of persons in these crowds making the Most in sulting reniarlts in her hearing. Tour reader§ are no doubt familiar, with the form of the Caireroom, and know that her posi tion was in the southwest corner facing the east, and that a door leads in from an anti-room on the south, about tour feet from the railing behind which she sat. On my one visit I had a chair close to the wall behind this door and the railing, so that I was within lefartharrtwo feet of the rail; ith orders to keep that apace clearbut the press at the door forentrance was so greatthat I grad ually Imoved; my - chair until it was close to the rail, and eat there an hour before being discover ed. During all- that time she leaned her head wearly, againstthe wall, and by changing hands steadily before herface, and every few minutes a low, stifled moan escaped her. Man and wo man stood a tip-toe, and stretched and strained, or having gained entrdnce, stood cooly and made such remarks as " Where's Mrs. Surratt?" " I want to fee her " Oh, goodness,just look if she isn't pretending to be modest !" "I wish I could see her face better!" "Isn't she a devil r " She looks like a devil !" " Hasn't she a horrid face?" " I hope they'll - hang her—tee, bee, bee"' All these remarks, and more such,someof them again and again, -and often accompanied by coarse laughter, I heard during the two hours and a half I sit near her, and she must have heard them as distinctly - to I did. They were evidently meant for her. • It appeared to me so cruel and cowardly thus to insult a prisoner, in chains that I' could not refrain from answering, and several times said: "She has not a bad face. She has a good face, and if she had not, it is cowardly to insult her!" She dropped her fan and looked at me with such an expression of gratitude as I shall never forret. I looked full into her eyes; mine were not-dry. while hers filled with heavy tears: Sev eral asked me if I was a friend ofMrs. Surratt," so strange did any pity for her appear. THE ASSASSINS! CAPITAL CONVICTION OF FOUR! THEIR EXECUTION ON FRIDAY LAST! Mrs. Surratt, Pay - ne, Atzeroth and Harold Hang ! • HOD, ARNOLD AND O'LAUGHLIN IMPRISONED FOR.LIEE! SPANUER 13IPRISONED FOR SIX TEARS! The President's Approyal of the Sentence! DETAILS OF THE EXECUTION On Wednesday last the President approved and promulgated the sentences in the cases of the assassins of President Lincoln, and FA/ay—two days thereafter was fixed;for the execution; and Gen. Hancock charged with the fulfillment of the order. The sentence of the court in the cases of David E. Harold, Lens is Payne (Hociell) Mary E. Surratt and Geo. A..Atzeroth was that they "be' hanged by the neck until-be Or she) be dead, at such time and place as the President of the United States shall direct." Michael O'Laugh lin, Samuel Arnold and Dr. Samuel A. Mudd were sentenced to be imprisoned at hard labor for life, and Edward Spangler was sentenced to hard labor and imprisonment for six years. THE PRESIDENT'S APPROVAL. The following is the President's approval of the sentence and his order to Maj. Gen. Hancock to execute it: EXECUTIVE MANSION, July 5, 1565.—The foregoing ~ententes in the cases of David E. Har .old, CI: A. Atzeroth, Lewis Payne and Mary E. Surratt, are hereby approved; and it is ordered that the sentences in the cases of David E. Har old, G. ATitzeroth, Lewis Payne and Mary E. Sarnia be carried into execution by, the proper military authority, under the direction of the Sec retary of War, on the 7th day of July, 1865, be, tween the hours of 10 o'clock A. 31., and 2 o'clock P. 3L ofthat day. (Signed) ANAHEW JOHNSON, President. Therefore you are hereby commanded to cause the foregoing-sentences in the cases of David E. Harold, Gt,:t. Atzeroth, Lewis Payne and Mary E. t.iurrnttito be - duly executed, )n aeepridance with the President's order. • By command id the President of the United States. E. D. T016.7.1END, Assistant Adjutant-General THE SENTENCES REAL ) TO THE' PRISONERS About noon on Thursday Gen. Hancock, who is charged with the execution of the sentences, pro ceeded to the Penitentiary, and in company with Major-General Hartranit visited the cell of each prisoner and informed each what, verdict had been rendered. No one was present at this in terview but the two Generals and the turnkey. Mrs. Surratt, on learning her tate, was ex tremely depressed, and wept bitterly. She was alone, her daughter having left her a short time before,not knowing the sentence was to be an nounced to her mother that day. Payne, seemed to regard it as a foregone con clusion, and manifested little or no emotion. He had evidAntly nerved himself to meet his - death with firm resolution. Atzeroth was violently Agitated and almost paralyzed with fear. He evidently hoped Fier a different result, but it is, difficult to see how he could have.expected it to have been otherwise. Harold listened to the reading of the order in his case with boyish indifference, but soon after became impressed with thosolemnity of his situ ation and appeared more serious, asking that his sisters might be allowed to visit him. Payne asked that . Dr. Strecker, a Baptist clergyman of Baltilubre, be sent for, which was done, and that gentleman arrived here this even ing, and is in attendance upon the prisoner. Mrs:Surratt asked that Fathers Walter and -Wiget, Catholic priests of Baltimore, be sent tor. Her wish was immediately complied with, and both the clergymen arrived this evening, and were admitted to her cell. Atzeioth could name no 'clergyman he wished to attend lain; but upon Gen. liartrailft naming Rev. Mr. Butler, a Lutheran clergy - man of Wash ington city, the prisoner desired he might be sent for, and he was in attendance upon the prisoner early this afternoon. TIEE ASSASSINS-LEWIS PAYNE. A great mystery envelopes this man, a mystery which seems impenetrable. As the assassin who attempted the life f Secretary Seward, more than Ordinary interest was attached to the testimony affecting his case. Who he is no one appeared to know on the trial. The nearest approach to any thing satisfactory is, that he is the son of a Rev. Dr. Powell, a Baptist Minister, residing in Flori da; but even this is nut positively. ascertained. Miss Brandon, 'a witness produced in his behalf, remembered him as a nurse in one of the hospit als after the hattic of Gettysburg. Ile then went bv the name of Powell; but early in 1865, while boarding with Miss Brandon's mothe'r, in Balti more, lie assonant the name of Payne. The testimony against him during the trial brought out the fact•that he was employed by the Rebel plotters Who had taken refuge in Canada to.assassinate Secretary Seward.' He was a fit tool for these persons, Bev. Tucker, G eo . N. San ders, C. C. Clay Jacob Thompson; W, N. Cleary, et. al. Booth sitcceeded, but thanks to kind Prov idence. Payne failed. If Abraham Lincoln was to be the martyr, Win. H. Seward, his t rusty coun sellor and friend, was to live and behold the tri umph of our cause. Payne went on to play his part in the work on the 4th of March, bat as the scheme was postpon ed. he found his 'wdy to the house of Mrs Surratt: At her house he Pased under the nameof Wood. The part which he enacted in the assassination plot is explained ;hi the testimony givertduring the trial. Payne is a bad looking mam.tall and of huge proportions, neck bare, lace smoothly shaven, a shock of black .air over a low forehead, and fierce eyes with small corner, around- which -the white is always ;disagreeably visible., He leans his head straight back against the. wall and when looked at blares the looker out of collate -ounce. GET). A. ATZEROTIt. Atzeroth. who , was to murder' Me. Johnson, is a vulgar looking creature, but not apparently fe rocious ; combativeness is large, but in the re eon of firmness his bend is lacking where Payne's is immense. He( has a protruding jaw and mous tache turned up pa the cud, and a short, insignifi eaut looking fact. lie isjust the man to-prom ise to commit a murder, and then fail on coming ,to the point. Mes. Surratt calls him a " stick," and she is probably right. Atzeroth was captured during the week which succeeded the crime, and was taken to Wa s hi ng _ tbn. He had a room almost directly over Mr. Johnson's. He had all the materials-to do mur der, but larked spirit or opportunity. lie ran away so hastily that all his arms and-baggage were - discovered; . a tremendous bowie-knits and a Colt's cavalry fevolver were found between the mattresses of his bed. Booth's coat was also found there, showing conspired flight in company, July 12, 1865. and in it three boxes of cartridg a map of Maryland, gatintlets for riding, sem and a hand kerchief marked with the name of 13ooth's.moth er-f-a mother's souvenir for a murderer's pocket Atzerotb fled alone, and was- found. at the house oats uncle in Montgomery county. DAVID C. HAROLD. Harold, the accomplice of Borah in the alassai nation of'President Lincoln, is not der twenty. • three years of age. He was born in I flaffhtnd, and received his education at Chartottee Ball, in St. Mary's county. His father, a most estimabl e man, resided for many years in Washington, and held the position of prmcipal clerk in -the naval store. Young Harold was perfectly acquainted with the topography, of thel o wsp or ti on o f the State,lying between the Chesapeake Bay andthe Potomac River, au& made a most excellent guide for Booth, with whom he was on most intimate terms for several &maths previous to the assassi nation. Harold led a very dissipated life and was notoriously indolent, while it was a matter of general surprise how he obtaided means to live. It is probable now that money was furnished him from the secret service fund of the Rebel Government, as to Booth, Payne and the other conspirators. Harold is an inveterate talker, and a great coward as his anxiety to surrender when in Gar -rett's barn sufficiently prove. Since' his capture he has been talkative and reticent by turns, and although wearing generally au indifferent air while m Court, when in his cell he frequently gives way to fits of weeping. MRS. MARY E. SURRATT Mrs. Mary E. Snrratt is the mother of John H. Surratt, and the evidence adduced dining the trial, proves her to have been one of the most active and energetic - of the conspirators. _There is no doubt but that she aided them in every man ner in her power. She had the carbines prepared and the bottles of whisky ready for Booth and Harold when they arrived at her old tavern in their flight. She is a woman of great nerve and energy, and an out and out Rebel at heart. Mrs. Surratt is a Marylander, about forty five or forty eight years of age. Mrs.- Surratt shut up her house after the murder, and waited with her daughters till the officers came. She was_ im perturbable and rebuked her girls for-weeping, and wpuld have gone to jail like a statue, but that in his extremity Paynoknocked at her door. He had come, he said, to dig a ditch for Mrs Sundt whom he very well knew. But Mrs. Surratt pro tested that she had never seen the man at all, mid had no ditch to clean. " How fortunate, girls," she said, " that these officers are here; this man might have murdered us all !" Her effrontery damps her nsworty oteompan ionghip with Booth WASIILNGTON July 7. On the petition of Mary E. Barrett, through her counsel, Messrs. Aiken and Ciampi% Judge Wylie ' of the Supreihe Court of this districtissued a writ of Habeas Corpus to Gen. Hancock, coin nianding him to produce in court, at 10 o'clock this !morning, the body of Mrs. Sumitt, with the cause and day of her detention. A WRIT SERVED UPON GEN. HANcocti The writ was served on Gen Hancock at the Meth opolition Hotel, at eight o'clock this morning, who made a return, of which the following was a part PRESIDENT'S ENDORSEMENT. EXECUTIVE 0 F F IC E, July 7, 1865—ee o'- clock:A. M.—To Major General W. S. liadeock , commander. &c.: I, - Andrew Johnson, Presiden t of the - United States, do hereby declare that the writ ,of habeas corpus has been heretofore gospel} , ded in such cases as this, and I do hereby especi ally suspend this writ, and direct that you pro— ceed to execute the order heretofore 4iven upon the judgment of - the military commission, and you. will give this order iirreturn to this writ. ANDREW JOELISON, President. PREPARATIONS AT TILE GALLOWS. At an early hour to-day,guards were placed an around the arsenal grounds, to prevent the intru sion of persons to the scene of execution, none be ing admitted excepting those previously supplied with tickets by Major General RSII - COCk. THE PRISONERS VISITED BY THEIR FRIETVDS, The relatives of Mrs. Barrett and Harold spent several hours with them during the forenoon, and they were also attended by their spiritual advisers, as were also Payne and Atzeroth. THE CONDEMNED PROCEED TO THE SCAFFOLD A few minutes after one o'clock the outer pris on door was opened and Mrs. • Snrratt "was sup ported on her way to the gallows by two military officers. Next followed Atzeroth, Harold and Payne ac companied by a guard and•their respective minis ters_of the gospel. Front seats were provided for them on the platform, in the following order: Mrs. Surratt, Payne, Harold and Atzeroth. The officers entrusted with the execution and the ministers, occupied intermediate paiitions. SCENE AT THE GALLO**. - Major General Hartranft, who has -been from the commencement in charge of the prisoners, came forward and read the order of the War Department already published, approving the sentences and ordering the penalty of death to be inflicted. A heavy guard was stationed on the walls sur rounding the ground, while below soldiers were formed on two sides of a square. Perhaps sev eral hundred civilians were present, anxious spec tators of the solemn scene. One of the priests attendant on Mrs. Surratt repeated a short pray er, to which Payne, who was seated next to her. attentively listened.. The minister who had been adtuinilitering to Payne, expressed, in the name of the latter, his sincere thanks to Gen. Hartranft iind the officers and soldiers who bad charge of him, for their personal kindness. They had not uttered an unkind word nor given an unpleasant look or gesture, but seemed to compassionate his misfortune. • PRATER OFFERED FOR THE CULPRITS The minister then uttered a brief prayer asking for Payne the forgiveness of all his sins and a passage out of this world into the joys of Heaven. The - ministers wbo attended Harold ,also re turned thanks for the kind treatment of the pris oners, end offered a prayer that God - would re ceive his soul. Harold was affected to tears. The minister who attended Atzeroth, also re turned for-him thanks to Gen. Ilartranft and oth er officers Tor kind attention,, and then inyoked the mercy of God upon the prisoner. . THE FLVAL PREPARATION The condemned were then required to rise from their seats, when the chairs were removed. They were noW all on the drops ; their hands were fastened behind them, and their legs banda ged both below and above the knees, and white caps placed over their heads. Atzeroth, while being prepared for the execu tion, exclaimed : "Gentlemen, farewell! Take good care Goodbye. Gentlemen now before me !" One of the clergymen standing near, e.x.- claimed : ""May we all meet in the other world !" THE EXECUTION. As soon as the noose was placed around each neck; Mrs. Surratt being the last one adjusted; the section of the platform on which they had been standing suddenly fell, and the culprits were hanging several feet from the ground. Mrs. Surratt and Payne scarcely moved° mus cle; Atzeroth exhibited some twitchings ; Harold showed more nervous sensibility than any of the others. The bodies hung until life was extinct, and were afterwards given over for burial the rough coffins being already at hand for that pur pose. The arrangements for the execution were perfect. • INFORALkTiON FREE.— To Nervous Sufferers. —A G en tleman, cured of l ervousDeblity, in COthPetee.Y"" Premature Decay, and Youthful - Error, actuated iry a de sire to benefit others, will be happy to furnish to all Who need it, (FREE OF OIiABGE.,) the recipe and illreetdMs for making the simple remedy used In his case. Sufferers wishing to profit by the advertiser's sad experience, and possess a sure and valuableremedy, can do so by address. ing hint at his place of business. The Recipe, and full in. formation--of vital importance—still be cheerfully sent by return mall Address JOHN' B. OGDEN, CO Nassau street, New York. P. 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