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NEW YOB v 'T"" , .??& xi-CjKALD. J A ME 8 OORDOI BB1IIITT, r&oraiiTOB and editob wrrici v. w. coiner or fclton akd xas sac sts. TRKlff, maA (? ?#!)?<?. ?mi U *tih purl of Ureal UrtUttn. m*d t& Is *nv atkrt mn I til USTAR V CuRRESPuSDESCB. contain* *un? ?*??. loll, tit J from Ui.'v quarter of the vorl ?* will b? liberally paid for. Ov* F?>iioa Comm.- j? V "i"1. it! riliTICUklKLT Ibivniu TO IKAL -*rn?D?!?T? iirrieittmiiiiTvi. ?ia. Lbttbbi HO NOTh'X taken ?/ auonymoiu timr . .. ir 4t nr* return thi <<? rejected. tunU ationt, ' JOH P Rlls Tt&U ejfi uttd with uea* , drrpnt. h. cheap neu. +?* Ain rRTlSF.MFSTS rnml rw J/./. LETTERS b, j nail, for 8*> 'K rf"V li'emmtt, to be post p tid, tr the pr ?ciipltohl, or tc, it, U: Idv* rr t)> wk , v remitted. ?>*" JidtnUd /' <M" T ?lumc TVI1 *?.*?. AHVBClUr NTS THIS 1VBN1N/G. aTRB, Bow*ry? Lola Month? Col ?c!f THBATBl. nt.KwH -1> Ma. <1oi Suit it!? Lti AMUU *" V J* ICE 1 11 I'M k Broadway? A Hu is * a k d Bal urw fON'S TP1ATRI, Ch*c ,t?!t ttreet ? Dos?**i*a T?or rmow T imitin A ? i u a l.*. 'WATinKiL THEATRI, C n.t'.in ?tr??V? Hakteit Bout? Tom CkiaoLK* CA5TLI GAK1>1N? T?at? "KquilibUVM a?d Tiomt Kuri, rmrumiANciJ. AMERICA* MCSilTB- rsKruKMA^ou l* tiii A?T??*oon a*d Kt? 0,-na. CHRISTT P OPF.RA T 4p.;-SK 472 tTHiOHAir M.MrrB U-!?T ?T CHBUl -f't illNSTUIU. WOODS MTNSTR* j*i "w-ooa-, Muhl??l Hall. 444 Broai" Way? Ethiopian Hi* ir?.v. eLST. BIOOHYK 11 Jf!p\ M? SaBiova Tamilt? Sqm?bOdt DOUTjlE SHEET. Sft?r T' 0r\ , Saturday* July ? li Mix lis for Europe. T *T TOSW YORK WEEKLY HERALD. Th* Co1 gltamship Ailant ic, Capt. TV est. will leave Por* t ?t roon. to- day. for Liverpool. The mails will eloM s, j ha/f pai<t 10 o'oloot this morning. The New York W"ttx.i.y Herald will be publL-hed at half past 9 ? ?lc jj, j* contain the lrxtest hcwp, printed in French fcn'-1 . Unj^ih. Copi<". in wi-ajiporg, sixpence each The Kcwii "By *ur special correspondent at Washington, we Irani (hat Judge Comkling's nomination as Minister to Mexico, in pJaec of Mr. Letcher, will not be very tfarr- ably reoei' ed by the Senate. It is said the ?>bj x't of appointing Mr. Conkling, who hns fewfjua Jiti ations to HeoBaeDd hhn. was for the purpose permitting Nathan Iv. Hall to step into the ^jr.dgi ship, v. i .vh would l>. thus made vacaat. We -al- > learu tin.. Mr. Lctoher does not come home by his" own rc(|ue-t, but by the desire of President Arit-ta, in ?enscjueneo of some so called insolent t'omiuuuicati'jns sent to ihe Minister of Foreign Re lations of Mexico, iii ugard to the Garuy grant. Peter A. Hergous has fib d with the government a claim for damages against Mexico, for hem fus.il to recognise the (iaray title, to the amount of forty mi 'lions of dollars. In the United States Senate, yesterdiy, the Hon. Jtnics >5 Mason, of Virginia, Chairman of the Coxi.oiltec on Foreign Relations, made a ttauiing ?I-eeeh on M 3 resolution calling upon the President for information in relation to the Newfoundland fisheries. He contended that the British govern meut had not only committed a breach of national courtesy, but had insulted the whole American people, by rendic * a fleet of armed vessels upon tb? Bonks oi Iv cwfouuulan 1. to enfouc their peculiar eon<tntct ion of the treaty of 1818. He said the President's answer to the resolution ought to be, that he Lad ordered the whole naval force of the country into the wa'.er bordering the British pro vinces, to protect the rights of American fishermen to be for war. Mr. Cass and Mr. Seward, and, in fact, nearly all the Scr.ntors present had a word to Bay in conje-mnatten of the cour-e pursued by the Ihi-ish government in relt.iion to tlie fisheries The resolution passed, unanimously. The $30,000 *m ndmcr.t to the DcScicncy bill, for the mileage and per rliim of .*? ?? enters, was cot enrolled in tho bill, and it wa9 agreed to cttadl it to the MiUtary Academy bill, which was pasred, an. I the Senate a?)j. urr.i d till Monday. The IIousc of Representative* yesterday took up tho bill granting 200,00;) acres of the public landsto Michigan, to aid in eons true ting a railroad from Pontiac to L:'Lj Michigan, and di.?vosed of it by lining it upon the table; after which the considera tion of the River end Harbor bill was rcsumod. In accoidanco with th resolution pa ;ed on Thursday, the drl ife on th b'.ll c!o cd jc-'terJay, with a little good-natured sporting bctwo'-n J'r- Stanly, ofNorth Curoliua, and Mr. Julin* >n, of Virginia. A memorial, to the President of the United States, is ir circulation in Boston, praying tliat tho Preei eei.t M.r.d a naval fore to tho British North Ameri ean . ea?, sufficient to protect the fishermen of the United State from molestation -nhilc pursuing their lawful occupation. The memorial represents that 2.100 vessels and tin, 000 teamen are now engaged in those fisheries. It was reported in Boston, yesterday, that the aloop of war Albany, now ljing in that port, had b?>? n ordered to th" Nova Scotia fishing grounds, to prottct the American fishermen. The Florida Whig S'atc Convention, after ratify ing the nomination of General Scott for the Presi- i dency, unanimously nominated the Hon. Edward C Cabell, who has publicly refused to support | Soett, for a re-election to Congress. Presidential ' electors wire also Dominated. Great preparations nre making for tho Lundy's I.aoe celebration on Tuesday next. The ground hns bee: reviewed ar.i marked out, and the different localities ?j(.d upon for the military, societies, &c. . The Senate yesterday confirmed the nomination of tie Hon. John 1' Kennedy to the Navy Depart ment, and it is said ho will enter upon tho duties of his "(Roe on Monday next. General Scott being troubled with a disease con tracted in Mexioo, of which so many of the troops have ilisd since tfceir return, has concluded to go to Old Point Comfort for the benefit of his health, and anivtd in Baltimore on Thursday, on hii way thither. His health i? said to be improving. J.ate new? from Mexico has arrived at New Or / lean?. Sucral memlcr? of the Mexican Congress bad called for the convening of an extra session, for iL< purpose tfceconsidernf the Tohuantepei afluir, i but it w.is said the gorcrvaent were opposed to it. The Indian.- were .?till ul,?! j on the frontiers, and llcxieam- were forming fur j campaign, to expel , then from Leon. We learn from St. John, N . n., that destructive gales have visited the Guli of St. Lawront'C. An Kngliih bark was wrecked off (>Mpic, by which eighteen persona lost their lives; and it wui- reported that the nrmcd schooner Alliance was lost n nr St. Paul's Jslarid, with all on board. Fifteen schooners had been lost, and twenty-two pilots drowned. A very destructive firo occurred last evening at 1 Albany, as will be sean l?f the report of our special * orresjiendent, iu the extensive drug and oil store of AlcC'lure & Co., in State street, the flumes from w hich fcur:-t forth so sudden, and with such rapidity, that two jierson-, named James McClure. a clerk in the < tnblishmcut, and Wa. baml'cr, employed in the Attorney (icneral's oOice, were frightfully tufMd before thry could make their e-capc. One ?f these aafortunate iudh iduals was reported last ij'ght to Uav I'ud. 1 he building was entirely des troyed. Fi< >? lioine, N. V., *p learn that a fire is fcireep 5 2 llnf'jh t1 e Ti'.e wood*, i fbort distance froi i that J lacs Wkfoi i* destroying * large amount of J . 1 MM timber, an* hundreds ?f cords of wood and which *jad been prepared for market. At last j aoteunta t),0 gre was 0E increase, *fid its do s*ruct? ?? coui.-e could only be cheeked by & hear/ rair Obsequies in honor of Il^nry Clay wero celebrated I in Rochester yetterduy. The utreets were crowded wiib people, And tbe process on was the largest ever witnessed in that city. Tlic extensive manufactory of the Union Compa ny of Harylaxid, at Canton, near Baltimore, was destroyed by (ire yesterday. The loss is estimated at fl OO.OOO. The remains of Bishop Chanchc arrived in Bilti more yesterday, and wore met by a grand funeral procession. To-day be will be buried in tbe Ca thedral ccmctery, by the side of his sister, which, it is said, was his lust request. Tbe government of the United States, "determined to maintain in all honor, the treaty between this country and England, have issued instructions to J. Prescott Hall, Esq., U.S. District Attorney, to co operate with Charles Edwards, Esq., as Counsel for the British government, in the ease of the extradi tion of of Thomas Koine. Prmlilrntlkl Politics Kevlrwrtl? Principles Superior to Gmipotv<ler. The idea ks- become very prevalent throughout the country that gunpowder jwpularity is absolute ly irresistible. It is a prevalent mistake, and will, sooner or later, prove to be n practical delusion. 1 mlcr the imaginary effeet of the victory of Now Orleans in establishing the impregnable popularity of General Jackson, the whig party have looked up their military chieftains, and their success, in two experiment^ for the Presidency has induced them to set aside their most practical, popular and expe rienced statesmen, for the adventitious chances of another purely military candidate. Now, we briefly propose to illustrate tho fallacy of this policy, and by a few prominent historical facts, running through the political eyclo of tho last twenty-five years, to show the uniform supremacy of principles and public measures ? political, financial and com mercial ? and the secondary influences of mere mili tary popularity. Recurring, then, to the causes? commercial, financial, political and sectional ? which contributed most prominently to the election of Generals Jack son, Harrison and Taylor, it will bo seen, at a glance, how very little, in reality, their military reputation had to do with their remarkable suc ocss. The fame of Gen. Jackson as the hero of New Orleans, was very well known in 1824; and yet, though he was ahead of his "competitors, he was carried up, with Adams and Crawford, to tho House of Representatives. The electoral vote was distributed? JacKson 99, Adams 81, Crawford 41, and Clay 37? the three highest only being admitted into the House. There, the vote being by States, one vote to each, by a concentration of tho friends of Clay upon Ad a me, ho was eleeted President ? the vote was, Adams 13 States, Jackson 7, Craw ford -1. It is unnecessary to reiterate tho effect which the charge of " bargain and corruption " between Adams and Clay, had in tho defeat of tho former at the next ensuing election. Mr. Clay, fearlefs in his conscientious integrity, accepted the post of Secre tary of State under Adams, which gave sufficient coloring to the churge, not only to defeat Adams in '28, but forever to exclude Mr. Clay himself from the President^. In the campaign of '23, a distin guished democratic politician, now deceased, is said to have declared that " if the administration of j Jobn Quincy Adams were as pure as the angels in ? heaven, it must be defeated," becausc ol' the aneguil "bargain and corruption" with which it was brought into power. The first election of Jackson, then, mainly from this cause, resulted from tho concentration upon him of the friends of Jackson, Crawford, and Calhoun, aided by the battle cry of " retrenchment ard reform." The triumphant re-election of (icn. Jackson in 1832, over Mr. Clay, was not the result of military popularity over civil and political experience. Un der J neb sot a first administration, tho country had ; been prosperous and the treasury flourishing: huf I .i iiuioie war liait been UeclareJ against him for his veto of the bill to re-charter the United States Bank. lie threw himself upon the people against the moneyed power of thai monstercorporation, and was sustained by all the State banks in his position. The result was the death warrant to the bank and j *ir. ( Jay's whole American system; for in the . second administration of Jackson, that whole sy? ? tcm was utterly demolished. In the campaign of 183G, the principles and tho policy of (.'en. Jackson were transmitted as tho principles and policy of Martin Van Burcn, tho de mocratic candidate. The State banks, with tho i aid of the government funds transferred from tho i United ' tutcs Bank, had extended their paper cir | culation to an inordinate amount, tho immediate effect of w hi h was, however, an unparalleled de- ' i gi cc of fict.t lous profpenty, and tho most unbounded extravagance in stockjobbing, shaving, and specu Iati<n The State banks were all with Van Bitron, as the inheritor of Gen. Jackson's poliey. Specu lation was raxupant ? the country was run mad with its inflation of bank rngs, and resolved headlon" to go it, neck or nothing. And what was tho result! The vhigs ran fcverul candidates? Gen. Harrison, Mr. Webster, and Hugh L. White; and yet Van Burcn was elected our all of them combined, not- j withstanding the fact that " old Tippceanoo" was ' as much tho hero of the battle of the Thames in | that as in the next succeeding election. As in the case of Gen. Juekbon in 1828, so it was with Gen. I Harrison in I83G. Hia military reputation was i overshadowed and borne down by the suporior weight of great principles and measures, an acci dental combination of parties, and from the pros pective policy of the adminstration to be clcctcd. We come now to the grand political whirlwind and tornado of 1H10. (Jen. Harrison, in that cam piign, was elected over Van Burcn by the majority cf 231 electoral votes over CO, and by nineteen States out of twenty-fix. But it was not the paltry battle of the Thames, nor the paltry Indian fight at Tij pecnuoe, that did it. They had as little to do with the overwhelming result of 1 S 10, as had tho battle of New Orleans with ths decisive election of 1832. The 1'nited State* Bank having been annihi lated, root and branch, and the government depo bitcs ha\ing been distributed nmong th" S'.ate barks, they had, as we have said, taken tho hint given them by (ieneral Jackson, and had expanded their circulation, in 1SH6 and '.17, to the explosive point. There was too much wind, and gas, and steam in the boilers. A thousand millions of paper crcdit was, prima farir, a formal notice of an impending explosion. It came. The State banks suspended specie payments ? there was a general shock, a general panic, and a general breaking up all over the country. A thousand castles built in the ail tumbled to the ground. The crash was awful. With tho banks shut up, and their circulation rapidly diminished, and there being no specie ? no Califor nia. no Australia, in those'days ? traders and specu lators, jobbers and shavers, resorted to city, town, village, and individual bills, and shinplasters swarmed like locust* in all the land. To save the government fiom t-he general ruin, the Sub-Treasury bill was passed, and the government specie was taken from the State banks? the direct cflbet of which was to break down a numbor of them, cripple all of thorn, .and further to augment the terrors of the wide ep '<ad revulsion. Superadded to all this, tho pay Lack t of all government duel was exacted iu specie, for 1a ads, ptj:?age, and duties, when there wis no specie v'o circulation. The campaign <,) I S 10 opened after all the borrors of the fina.'"'i?l and commercial sma?hing up of 1 >>7, ??, ana '?>!? bad been nalizcd, and whito tliry wuc still existin g Van Jturcn was hold responsi ble. The State ba.iks combined against him. A large segment of tile democratic party, under tho title of Conservatives, in thi* Stitc and in other S' riles, iv. (,'2'Uili" d in direct Wtllity to tho snb trvftitiry, which, though a wiic as?J wholesome J cMfurf-ij U since has proved to be? was then uude te ?fl'tar, 6y the bankf, speculators, and stock (obbcr n.i the gr&hd continuing cause of all the public distress, lu these things wo have the secret of (he overwhelming tornado which swept away tno administration of Van Burcn in 1840. Harrison's military glory was hnt a feather in the balance. Henry Clay, or any othor good whig, nominated in opposition to Van Bureo, from the same causes would have been just as easily elected. Thus much for the result of 1840. In the campaign of 1844, things had come to an equilibrium again. The two parties were restored almost to their proper level The whig*, however, with an overweening confidence in their strength, once again nominated Mr. Clay, and proceeded to sing iim into the White House, after the fashion of 1840. But the administration of Harrison, or rather of Tyler, who succeeded on the death of old Tip to the administration, recoiled against the whigs in two vetoes of a national bank. Nor did the repeal of the sub-treasury help them, nor the Bankrupt law Still, notwithstanding these things, and the Texas und Oregon questions, Mr. Clay would have been electcd butfor the new clement of abolition introduced into the Presidential arena. Of the fif teen thousand votcB cast for Biracy in this State, probably ten thousand of tbern were whigs; wheieas six thousand of them voting for Henry Clay would have electod him. In the election of 1844 we soo most strikingly illustrated the insignificance of mere men, as compared with the effect of great principles. Personally, nnd in a social sense, Henry Clay was the most popular man in the United States, while Mr. Polk was, comparatively, a cold, unpopular , and obscure man. How strikingly consistent, for all, is the drift of popular opinion from one Presi dential election to another, when wo come to con sidcr it dispassionately ! In 1848, the whig party resolved to givo Henry Clny the go-by. Ho had disappointed them, and they had disappointed bun; but they had sucoocd cd most gloriously with one military chieftain, and tliey resolved to try another. Public opinion, how ever, had already designated the man, in the plain, straightforward, simple-minded, honest old General Taj lor, fresh from his brilliant campaign in Mexico. The people were delighted with him. Even the democrats were kindly disposed to wards him; and in Pennsylvania at least, some af them, in their primary meetings, nominatod him for the Presidency as an independent candidate. Bo sides, though a "whig, he was not an ultra whig," and was run as a no party man ? a conservative, upan two platforms ? one in the North, nnd one in tho South. But still, thero stands out the force of fixed principles in tho result. The democratic parly was divided. The v?to received by Van Burcn in this State, added to that of t'as?, would have elected Cass the President, such was his strength with the Van Burcn defection, a id the inevitable certainty of the loss of New York stavir.g iho democratic par ty in tho faeo. And thus much fur the availability of a military chieftain in It 18. The chapter, through the entire political cycle from 1S24 to 1S52, is thus complete. Uniformly we find great measures and principles, questions of cur rency, finance, and administrative policy, the con trolling forces in every Presidential election, from that day to this. Compared with these influences, gunpowder, bayonets, nnd bombshells, nre mere sound and fury, signifying littlo or nothing. Wo find Gen. Jackson riding in upon the whirlwind of popular opinion, against the United States Bank and tho bad measures of tho whig party ? we fmd Van Buren carried through upon tho Stat# bank inflation of and his administration swept off like chaff, from the general financial revulsion and bankruptcy which succeeded. In 1814 wo findMr. Clay defeated by the intervention of tho abolition faction ; and in 1848, by th? interposition of this same faction, on a larger scale, G en. Cass is over thrown. In not one single case has mcro military capital effected any decisive result on either side. Principles and party combinations have been para mount, from first to last. lint, then, is the prospect for 1S52! "History i3 Futvnfi>; *v??ja>.a Vj- xicr lessons are full of wiidom. They reduce thelscienco of politics almost to the accuracy of mathematics. The past i- the oracle of the futuro. What, then, is the prospect? Unpropitious, we should say, for the third military cfleftain of Hio whigs ? the fee bit at of the three in intellect, though the greatest of the three in battles and victories. The principles, the circumstanccs, and the associa tions by which he is surrounded arc all against him. Tho head of a whig cabinet stands aloof, aiding and abetting his adherents, who are moving to organized mutiny. The llite of the whig administration, and tho office-holders, have no in ducement to aid their Baltimore nominee. Tho Union whigs of the South are in open revolt, because the election of Scott is the promotion of Sewardand his schemes of disorganization and sedition. The mass of tho whig free soilers of Massachusetts, New York, and Ohio, are moving for the Pittsburg Con vention, and a separate and third party nomina- I I 'on, because General Scott has accepted thj whig 1 platform, while his most officious organs "execrate ; and spit upon it." The native American heresies ! ol General Scott, and his vacillating opinions from ' time to time, are pnralyzing tho efforts of his best ! fiierds to harmonize his principles and pretensions; | and, to cap tho climax, tho music of tho fife and ' drum, and the fantastic buffoonery and clup-trap of j a grand military carnival, have become Like n tale thrice tola lu tlic oars of a drow. y man. < >11 the other hand, we have the leading meaaures of the democratic party estnblibhed, and in highly racceseful operation, a3 the practical polity of the government. We find that purty now united, anil ravenous for the spoils, all of which will be clear gain. There are forty thousand offices ; and fifty millions r year, now held by the whigs, for the en couragement of the democrats to work for Pierce, i\ bile neither the inside nor out3ide whig- are cer tain of anything in the election of Ge?. ?Scott. Tho Pittsbnrg Convcntion'will, most probably, cost (Jon. Scott the loss of Ohio and Mas-aaLmetts, coupled with the Webster defection ? certainly New York: and, very likely? with all the other oauses enu- , nitrated ? a most deplorable defeat in November. ; If so, the moral will be the uncertainty? yea, the emptiness of militnry glory and a purely military nomination, regardless, alike, of true consistency, good advice, good policy, bad associations, and . sound discretion. In a word, this campaign, we fear, will be the end of mere military chieftains for the Presidency. Like Oliver Twist when ho had finished hi? " hasty plate of soup,'" tho f eeplc will want -omething more. The Battle op 1. 1 spy's Lane? Geneiui. Scott OronT TO Go. ? Next Monday and Tuesday the whigs celebrate at Niagara Falls the victory of I.un dy'i Lane. Now, at this bloody battle, from tho latest information, it appears that after getting possession of the ground by fighting till mid night, the Americans retreated to their entrench ments; and that the British ro- occupied the battle field in the morning, where they found their artil lery still remaining; and that they took care of tho wounded; and, piling up in one heap the dead bodies of both armies, burnt them. The spot is scHl marked by the charcoal on the summit of the pla teau. General Hcott fought there like a lion? but wi'S that a victory or a drawn battlo? The British were driven, and the Americans retreated from tho ( ground in the night, but the British re-occupied it l in the morning. It is to be hoped that. (Jcnera fccott will go up and oxplain this victory. There aro two precedents for it ? General Jackson attend ed the Celebration of the victory of New Orleans, on that battle ground, in 1828, and General llurri son attended the celebration on tho battle field of Fort Mrip?, in fMO ? ai'l in each instance tho hero of iho iii>v wan a candidate for tho Presidency. Genoa! hi ott, after all, had better go up. Every hrdy wants him to %<). It'g right o? onto go; aim lit uuput. iv *?. . SOCIALISM AND &K1HT10N IN Ta KM ANY If ALL.? Tbe fodaJiala of the Bew&rd stripe seem not to be satitiicd with the gTeat labor of electing General Scott to the Presidency of this republic, but are ambitions of distinguishing themselves also by get tirg up a lawless, seditious meeting, in Tammany Ball, and, by exciting a certain portion of our popu lation on the subject of a law case, now before the courts, to such a degree as to create a riot, uproar, confusion, and probably to end with bloodshed in the streets more terrible and desolating than tho san guinary massacre at the Astor Place riet, which tc.ok place a few years ago. For maay days past, tbr government at Washington and the legal tribu nals in this city have been engaged in examining a ease affecting a person who ran away from Ireland, and whoso surrender was demanded by the British authoiitics, on a charge of attempted hoinhide, un der tbe conditions of a treaty agreed on between the two countries. On any occasion during the pen dency of a suit at law, either before a judge or a jury, it is considered, in all civilized countries, sedi tious and violative of the public peace to attempt, by popular meetings, or by exciting popular senti ment or indignation, to intimidato the tribunals of justice, or influence the due administration of th? laws by the rightfully censtituted authori ties- Tbe recent meeting in Tammany Hall, in re spect to Kaine ? no matter what may be the merits or demerits of the case ? was one which wad c&Uod together by demagogues, with the design and pur pose of intimidating those charged with the admin istration of tho laws, and preventing their fair and peaceablo execution, by exciting a hostility to the laws among a certain portion of our population, which may lead to disorder of the most fatal and deplorable character in tho course of a fow days. In this aspect of tho ca.-o, wiffi&ut entering into any nice and critical discussion of tho points of difference among the pettifogging lawyers on either side, it will be obvious to every friend of tho Uniou j arid the constitution, and the quiet administration of our public laws, that when socialist demagogues, 1 of the most contemptible and destructive character, are thus seen going into Tammany llall, and endeav oring to excite the populace, they are merely follow ing the ri.lt of a Robespierre, a IXmton, or a Marat, and endeavoring to familiarize tho hitherto quiet and respectable people of this city and country ? native and foreign ? with scenes of lawl'ssness, dis order, oppoiition to the laws, dofianco of the public au thorities, riot, confusion and ultimate sedition, blood shed, murder, and demoralization of the country it self. No man who is really a friend to the pcacoful and upright administration of tho laws, would over ? during the pendency of a caso in court ? think of collecting a rantiEg, roaring public meeting in such a place as Tammany Hall, und of going there aud making an inflammatory speech to a crowd of com* parativcly ignorant men, and endeavoriug to excite their passions to the point of riot and bloodshed, in order to gratify any petty ambition or paltry pur pose at an approaching election. These scenes, however, have multiplied in this city and in the State since the destructive principles of tho Hon. William H. Seward and h<s llobespicrrcnn coadjutors have attained to the position of influence and power in this city, and in this pa^t of the country, which they have recently done. General Scott him scll'?now their candidate for tho Presidency has always been hitherto a supporter of the public ; authorities, and of tho laws exercised in a I legitimnte way. It is true, his enemies have ac j cuscd him sometimes of incipient sedition, and insubordination to his superiors in power; but it was reserved for tho faction of socialists, abolitionists, nnd white-livered disturbers of the public peaco, headed by William H. Seward and his agents, who support General Scott, to make him hereafter, pro bably, the principal cause of disturbance and blood shed, and of disloyalty to tho Union nnd this fair confederation. Such must bo the conviction in tho public mind, when we witness the impudent attempt wbieh these demagogues make, in tho faco of tho rightful administration of tbo laws, to get up meet ings to ororawo tlie constitutional nntkorlt j , ?i?tl excite the populace to violate tho peaeo of the city, and provoke a collision between tho authorities and themselves, such as must end in blood, and such as wo hr.d an exhibition of at the Atstor Place Opera House, a few years ago. JrDcr. Edmonds in tiie Spirit World Aoain. ? It seems that the visit to the Land of Shades, re cently made by this learned legal functionary, and of which ho gave such a full, true, and graphic ac count, as re- published in tho IIekald some feir months back, has not been tho only one he has had I the courngc to venture on. He hasbocn there tuna and again, and still continues to drop in of an af ternoon, and while away an hour or two in social chat or sight- seeing, just as quietly and unconcern edly as an ordinary murtal might be supposed to step into one of our driLking saloons and enjoy himself in smoking an Havana and imbibing a sherry cobbler, or tako his scat in a theatre, or opera house, The Judge, it seems, does not deem these visit3 and conversations at all in tho light of strictly private matters, and not intended for the vulgar ear. Oa the contrary, he has favored the community with nnothcr chapter of his extraordinary narrative, en titled ''Personal Experience," which has been pub lished for him in the Shekittah, the special organ of that sect of delusioniats. This latter chapter does not intioduce the reader to any of tho great colcbritios of old, presented in the first, l/srd Ba:on, Bonjamin Franklin, Sir Isaac Nowton, and tho host of tho Judge's elovatcd spiritual acquaintances, no doubt agreed with the observations we on that occasion were induced to make, on tho motives and objects of their apparition, as wo are informed, through a similar sourcc, that tho New York Hi:rai.i) is now got lip nnd printed by Franklin, in tho other world, and enjoys as proportionably largo a circulation and popularity in that sphorc, as it does in this sublunary ono. IIowo-*er this may be, we bnvo no dramatis person <r in tho chapter now placed before ns; and though less interesting on that account, still it ie written in the most approved prophetical and allegorical style, and ? if not too dangerous an experiment for somo weak minds might be worth perusal, as an evidence of the depth ( of fanatici.-m and delusion to which tho victims of this superstition have allowed thoinsclvcs tb bo carried Is it not time for Judge Edmonds to think of resigning his seat on the bcnch, and of retiring j to some vacancy in a respectable asylum? Tns Mortality on BoARDTin:Pnii,.vnEt,piitA ? The particulars of tho voyage of the steamship Philadelphia, the dreadful mortality among her passengers, and the ?ircui??tanecs under which sho was driven from Havana and Key West, are very dearly, nnd, no doubt, accurately, stated in the In teresting narrative of Capt. Motlowan, which we publish in another eelumn of thin morning's paper. The energy, humanity, and indefatigable efforts of that estimable officer, and those under his command, to contiibute to tho relief of his passengers, under the trying circumstances in which he wus placed, are worthy of all praise. Everything was done by the company to meet the emergency, within the com pass of poi-sibility. The Falcon was despatched from this port to the rdief of the Philadelphia within twelve hours after intelligence of ker condition was received here, and instiuction-j sent in every direc tion to tho ships of the lino to proceed to Key West on *lie homeward and outward voyage of each. With regard to the erigin of tho cholera on board the Philadelphia, which broke out with such sud denness, and with such great fatality, Captain McGownn states the extraordinary fuel, that it seemed to come, as it were, instantnneously, from a pestilentinl atmosphere from off the Island of Cuba. This impression is corroborated by tho fact that the cbolci'H did not prevail to any extent on the Jhtbmas previous to the sailing of the Philadelphia ? tbatnot a single case was brought, on board, and that the Isthmus is stated, by a recent arrival from AspiuwaU, to be free from th? rtiscaso. a ^.ACM.?rno I'aSBIONABLI fecMMER W ATlWHb m0;t fashionable of all our Bummw watering plaeea, such at Saratoga and Newport, have for some years past presented features akin to thoM to be with in all similar retorts on the Continent, and vhich are beginning to disgust and soare away all respectable society from thete hitherto much ad mired places. These disagreeable features in the society of Newport, Saratoga, and other fashiona ble rendezvous, are the congregation in them, for several seasons back, of large numbers of gamblers, blacklegs, loafers, speculators, and other unprinci pled characters, who make a show off for a short time, and instead of contributing to tho general pleasure, or improvement, or egrtfeableness of the visiting community, only carry from tho city to the .country the unhealthy manners and demoralizing principles which prevail among corrupt circles in tho larger cities. By means of tho growth of this nuisance, our fashionable watering places have, of late years, been anything but desirable or respectable. No doubt there are a great many estimable people to be found there, and some with large fortunes and little brains, who parade about and show off, and many without fortunes, who make a great parade on crcdit; but no one who goes to Saratoga, or such places, may* | expect to enjoy any pleasure or comfort, except that which consists in routs, dancing, dissipation, gambling, drinking, intriguing, slandering, lying, and such like amusements. > In consequence of this demoralization of society, in what we are wont to call our fashionablo watering places, the respectable portion of summer visitors are beginning to abandon them altogether, and loavo them in sole possession of tho less estimable | portion. Persons of refined tastes and habits are now seleoting the less noted watering placcs, where they will be comparatively free from the tainted at mosphere which hangs round tho prcscnco of the blacklegs, gamblers and tricksters who haunt Saratoga, Newport, and those other places which used to be most admired and frequented; and here, in these comparatively secluded places, they find more quiet, moro real en joyment, and more respectable society. We are also particularly struck with the general taste now exhibited for rambling all over the moun tains of New England, which, in point of beauty and magnificence of sccncry, are equal to most of tho celebrated mountain ranges ot Europe, though not, generally speaking, of such altitude. Even in this particular, however, the Whit? Mountains can bear comparison with any in Europe, cxcept thoso of Switzerland. As for Newport, hitherto tho fashionable water ing place, ]>ar cxccllcncc, of this section of tho country, its name may, for this year at least, bo expunged from tho catalogue of summer resorts. The Maine Liquor law has completely annihilated it as either a fashionable or gambling rendezvous. Our correspondence from thence, which we pub lish in another part of to-day's paper, describes tho effccts which tho success of fanaticism has wrought upon that once gay capital of Rhode Island. Most sincerely do wo sympathize with its oppressed inhabitants and ruined hotel keepers, in this reign of intolerance. Sara toga, however, has had, through this means, a vast increase of that undesirablo class of visitors who used to hover in such crowds about Newport; and in Saratoga, and some other places, there is no suoh thing to be had as quiet, or comfort, or refine ment, from the swarms of noisy, dissipatod, gambling, and disreputable individuals who have got mixed up with respectable, decently- behaved, decorous, and well dressed people. In this unattractive condition of fashionablo watering places, wo would advise thoso desirous of spending the summer pleasantly, quietly, and healthfully, to take a trip to tho New England mountains, or go to tho Niagara Kails by the Erie Railroad, or visit the mountains in tho southern part of New York, and make a tour through part of Canada ; or, perhaps better still, go down among some of those delightfully salubrious bathing places an T-nng Island cbOTO. Tho Hamilton TTnuso Otters great attraction to rummer visiters, and is at present crowded with highly respectable people. So J is New Brighton. Coney Island presents ono i of the best, hardest, safest, and most beautiful shores for bathing in the known world. Tho smoothness of its bcach is superior to Newport, Long Branch, Cape May, or any of our other watering places, and the air is pure and invigo ratii g. There ought to bo a largo hotel, capa ble of accommodating a thousand persons, built on the eastern end of the island, as it is every day be coming better known and appreciated. C en En at, Piekce? TnE Personal SlanuIbi Against Him Naii.ed at Last. ? We have from the beginning denounced the personal attacks upon both the candidates for the Presidency, particularly the onslaught upon tho private character of General Pierce. We knew tboso imputations were without tho shadow of foundation, and that they would recoil upon tho heads of their authors. The must con?)iicuous of the dirty and disreputable sheet3 which indulged in this kind ol'warfaro was the New York Tribune. That journal inserted articles describing General Pierce as a drunken sot. What is the result? Why, that it is now demonstrated beyond all donbt ? and as it never could hivo been under other circumstances ? tint General Picrce is a pattern of sobriety and moral purity. We call attention to tho let'er of our New Ilamp Klmo correspondent, in another column, in which documents aro produced, not from democrats, but from strong whigs of tho most respcct ablo character, giving tho lio to tho in famous calumnies propagated by tho foul mouthed organs of a reckless party spirit. It will also bo seen by the facts and figures adduced by our cor respondent, that the IVusliington Republic, and other journals which asserted that General Pierco was opposed to the Fugitive Slavo law, aro placed in a very ridiculous nnd humiliating position before tho public. All these attacks havo dono General Pierco the greatest service; and so it will alvays be when tho journals of a party stoop from their high position to blackguard individuals, and to hold up their private characters to public odium, cspr ially when such attack? arc malioious, unjust, and "like tho baseless fabric of a vision." These journal* appear to have disposed of a'l thoir present stock of 't personal abuse. Can they not invent something new! 1 Koswrn's Family in New Ynnic ?Kossuth's sister, Madame Zsulawsasky, her hiuband, and chil- ( drem, anived in this city, from Europe, some Ave or six days since, and wo hear somo of tho papers com- ? plain that no provision had been made for them by Kossuth before ho left. This is all a mistake, as wo have the very best authority for stating that 1 Kossuth, before ho sailed from New York, ten days ; ago, made arrangements for having tho necessary aid extended to that portion of his family. Hcsidcs having purchased and stocked a farm of land for them in one of tho Western States, be left with tho Mayor of the city a thousand dollars, for tho pur pose of enabling tbem to travel out to it, aud com mence life in this country independently. It wonld be, therofore, unjust to the reputation of Kossuth to i p?rmit any such statements as this ? accusing him of . neglect of his own family ? to circulate unnoticed, j arid wo feel authorized to contradiet It, aud state > what tho fact is. Literary Novki.tikh in Book Makinu ? Two book* liavc recently appeared, originating in difl'<r cnt ininile, dewrilnng a Tory different order of so ciety, nnd are now in the liandii of nil tlic loftnglng, lu/y render? of light literature in the varioit" water ing plocen throughout tho conntry. Wo allude to HiMsd's book on the codflih aristocracy, and llntv (1h>tiic'? hook on the socialist0 of Brook Farm, nnd >r the nnmo of Hlithcdule, near Boston. Both t,'i >no wot kit are written with great pretensions, guino pnr t.rT. #n<? a fiw' deal of ronri-it ? po rt int tnrlj* 3ri ' tcd's pietet Ui/>K to *kctvb the fcahioualle or c>J fish society of this country at the watering place*. In Rome reiptcti, the codfish society and the social ist organisation are very similar ? chiefly so in thelc Idiosyncracies They are Ml of pretension, ton-* ccit, impudence, assumption, and contempt for the rest of the world, and generally the rest of thA world feel an equal degree of contempt for them. ? Both books are amusiug to read, as describing the fol lies of the different circles of society whieh perfect liberty in everything has developed in this original and fixigular country. City Intelligence. Alarmiixi an? Duticc titc Fiuf.. ? An alarming fir# broke out at about a quarter to three o'clock, yesterday morning, at No 42 avenue D, between Fourth and Fix ill streets. It crigli>n<?'d In the workshop of Mr. Moore, a sash and window blind manufacturer, which was situated in the rcsr and contained a large quantity of rough ma terial. manufactured artt *les and machinery. Thin was quickly destroyed. and 10 exertion could prevent the flames from ex'end ug tbt- dwelling house in front, in the lower part of which M r. Moore's family lived? then upper being occupied by Mrs Taylor aud family, by whom tliis and i he adjoining bouse were owned. The progress of the fli me wa- rap'd ard trrriflo so much no, that Mrs. Taylor and lamily hardy e-oaped with their lives, through the exertions of ('aptain Hart, of the Seventeenth ward police, and the offices Thefiienow burst ftom every win dow and portion of t be house a - al.-o from part of No. 46, a large grocery store ; aud although the engines wore work ed in gallant, style ttie two liousea were entirely destroy ed at a little nf'erfi o'clook Mrs Taylor's loss of property is roughly estimated at fiom $6 (ilMJ to $7,000, and that of Mr. Moore at about $2( 00. as be rentedthe machinery, which is also bui ned The rear of Jsouses 40, 46, 48 and f,0 are so much injured a# to render them nearly useless; aud were it not toi the firemen present they would have al -o b< m burned to the ground. The tree in front of No. 42 wus 60 c is pod that it oaugbt fire, and every leaf and bianch shot out a tongue or Hume The bakery of Mr. Killian and the botanic medicine store of Pr. Hunt, opposite ncje almost n'l en fire by tho beat, and ware only loveil fcj keeping wet awning sheets in front of IVhv. tho pint. wak melted uponthe window? and doors, however Mrs Taylor has an inriirnnco of $3 000 in va rious offices urd tie other puffisrers are insured to some extent Captains Squire*. Hart. Bradford, Russell, and' Assistant Captain of the Seventh ward, were on thw ground, tviih mi n Fibk A i. arms ? A flight Are occurred on Ttmf'Mlay eve ning. in the cedar ware -hop of Oilbert Van Houtan, 67 J'ral kfort street. It was extinguished by the men em ployed upon the premises. At eleven o'clock on same night, a fire occurred in the basement of a hi use in Twcnty.fifth street, near Sixth, avenue. It. whs cauM d by the carelessness of the inha bit an I? in allowing some shavmgs to Ignite. No damage.. Tiie Weather. ? Yesterday was not. quite se hot aa cither Wednesday or Thursday. A light breeze sprung up every now and then, which was very refreshing. The following was ihe range of the thermometer In our editorial room:? At noon. 89>??; at three P M., 112^*; at live P.M. 02?. At Roach's, the thermometer stood at H0?, 87*. and 66s. at the bours of noon, three o'clock PM., and six in the evening. At four o'clock in the morning it was cool, and threatened rain. Coi r dk SoLiri..? A man named Michael Sullivan, warf sim struck on Thurfday, at n?on. in Broadway, near Liberty stuet. He was takes to the City Hospital by officer Logan, of the Second ward police, hut he died in a few minutes after bis admission. Another Death from Sun Stroke ? An inquest was held at the New Vork Hospital, on Thursday evening, upon the body of an Irish woman, namcJ Catherine Ca bill. who was prostrated by son stroke at the pier foot of Chambers street, wbil-t 'waiting for the Albany boat on Thursday The deceased lived only till evening of the same day. She wax but one week in this country, and resided with a brother at 170 Thirty-first street. Military.?' The remains ? f ("apt. Leslie Chase, of tho> Fulled Slates Army, ?lio died at Fort Johnson. N.ortii Carolina in April i84!i. arrived iu New York a few days since. and veic r< moved, la-t evening, on board of the steamboat Isnac Newton, for Albany, and from thence tliey will be convey i d for Interment to his native town, Worcester, Otsego ecunty. Copt Chase served with dis tinction in our uimy in the war with Mexico, and.no doubt, like many ot our gallant, officers in that service, received there t be fatal seeds of the disease which termi nated his life at an early age, T mrMrri'n Visit,? The Fire Company of North Bridge water. C&mpello Village. Massachusetts, visited this city on Friday morning The company arrived in tho Fall Klver boat and put up at the Clinton hotel, where they rein, hi d themselves, aud afterwards parad ed through town, visiting the Park and Battery, and other public points, as al.-o making a circuit of the Bow ery and Bronowuy The men pre.-entcd a very Hue ap pearance; their uniform Is a i-carlct shirt, faced with blue cloth on the collar and cuffs, a blaclc belt, and black pants. They nuuilw red lit ty. Mid were accompanied by the North liiidge water bra-,- band. They left in the Fail ltivcrboat. at fiveo'cleck P.M. Dabini: Assault jmi Kobmbt. ? A most daiiu,; highway robbery was perpetrated in our streets, on Thursday night It appear* that about 10 o'clock, that night, Mr. domes Jacks' n. a gcutli r.. an from Philadelphia. wac re turnirgfrom South Brooklyn to the Jer.-ey City ferry, and on passing Trinity Chuich be Inquired the way of one of thier meu s1"uilii g then-, and they directed him to turn down Liberty rtrcet Mr .l?ok-on had not advanced more tlian a few ri d* in this direction when some per rons nttnckid him firm behind knocked him down upon bis buudr mil) knees, and threatened to shout him. if ho made any noise. '1 he wen tbn laid bold of Mr. Jackson, and robbed him ot Lis pool- el book, containing three hills (folic hundri d dollars cut h upon the Bank of Nor/h America. <> Mil ttpeu the same bank for twenty dollars, about two hitndu d dollars In ri: h chii-I!y in t'\o dollars bills upon ? hi- (ilrard 1 ank, Philadelphia. and also a gold w at eh and chain mid some unimportant pipers.* fhu police should look to this matter. AiTi-siPTrn Siicim. ? A woman named Itr.iO Anne L>n<h. wil l t in a partially deranged stale, juminsd ioto tlie dock foot of Catharine mi -i t. on Thursday even ing. She w* ri'scui d lii/iii drowning by gome dock build eri at work ne it and tuknn lo the City pri-ou. where *he was placed urder the rare of Dr. Coyel. Deaths rhOM Dbownino ? The Coroner held iwo in quests on fiiur-day. upon thn Indies of unkuowii par sons who wile di< win d ? one ?t pier Ku-t river, and the Other nt pier No b North river. DnowNrn ? Tlip body of an unknown nun was found in tho water at pier lo. North river, at half- p.. t seven o'clock on Friday moriing. Attivpt at Srictnc ? A innu r.amed Michael Kaue, made an attempt to drown him -elf at pii-r No 1. Ka-t river, on Thursday night, lit- was rescued by oiHcer We ? thercn. of the His', rtl-trict police. Stati-tk s or Jmbfcii.i: ?mi Tvrinv rriuovs.? Tt ap pears In in u lute return tlml thiris are in the Stato ol New York 1 < 1 1 deaf and dumb persons; 1272 blind; 1 .7: 0 idiotic: and 2 h\0 m-nne ? making a totaloffi.fi">'. untbrti nati s. Tht'tttilciil oiiil Alnstcnl. Bowrfv Tiue.rs- rhe miinsements provided for till* in nii g are 1 1 a highly u Iruc ive eli.iraeter. comprising the tragedy ef Cgi linn." tho extruvngau/.a of ? hole. Moiitcs.'" und the domentic drama styled "The floldcu FmIKT." nil i t ?klch IN *?U cut, * This being the last dramatic night of the season, it is presumed a very large asseniMagi will be prc.-i t?t. Mr McAllisti r. tbo Wizard of the World. Is 10 commence a series ot hie original si./rri* ;-i., 1 1 at this establh 1. incut, on Uondity oven liiKtps*. Ili? :i|- .;.-!tuH v ill bu on the sum sci.li t>T jnsndi ur .nd iffict tlmt Jl.-lhvulsb'.'d h's mints at the I voiidway theatre. Broai v at Theatiif ? This is 1 ositively the last night of the I ri nth Cennc Dpi '.a and \ lU'leville Company al. this theatre a? Prof. Anderson, the great Wlzerd of the North is to opi ti In re on Monday evening with hi-' popu~ lat sonii' . j klnith'cs The commencing featu t for to - night will be the comic vaudeville, in two neb- entitle 1 "I n Mori ieur qui Sills let i emmes," in whieh Men*. Mi m hand Mile burmont it: .d Mum. PlUot. will su/.isin the leading rhaincti rs The nhole will t?rmiii.ne with ?? l.es A ii(i I'n h en Voyage." Tiil-i pcrformnncc should 111', the Broadway to overflowing. Nibi.o'* 1. arm:*.? This evening, takes place at this fashionable ri sort of ainu-' luentit, a m ? :uiiiccnt ptrfortrnnee. for the benefit of onn of tho most, gran-fid n ml lalciitiil pricsti , < f ibn tcrp-ieliorcan art. Mile. l)ie net the beiieiici.u} . . - rem irkablo for her ityia of drncing. wlocln(ns so much appiauled at l'.itis nod I tussili. Mlii . l'oiigaud and tfu'o, tho rival dtnein/ quicns ef I'tanee and Spain, with the 1 harming and talented Mtyn- havlglie and heeler will al?u appear and add a new at 1 ruction to the performance*, g!v< n ir such a pic e irg hall which wo hope will be crowdei. ou this ocrnslor in ad it# 1I1 parllncnts. Xatiosai. TitFATnr. ? Mr Could- vk. the admir d tragc ilinn. who has attracted and dt lighted such birgc ,-i??< m blvgcs lor the pa-t two weeks Is to make his la t appcar nnce to-night Mine. iVie te's p -pular dranri. styled '?Harvest lb me." will bei played, in which Mr I'enliinpk will personate the cba'actir of Caleb Kestrels, supjmrtod by a geod btock 1 oinpany. i be nautical drama of Tom Cringle."' will ul.-o he performed Mnnag'T 1'nnly an nounces gnnt atlrnctlon for Monday evening. Don An tonio Cordova, the King of Wizards, is to appear in his rilchrated liccromatitlc cnti rialnrarnts. ffud Yankee IiOeke. the "J nnkec conn dian. in one of his most favorite characters. Cam.r. 0,?ni>r>- ? ITrrr nine. the calibrated ti/ht rope dnneer, wb?vi jM-rfornninccii l'five nl^ny* attracted rach large awmH: ?-?. is to appear agntn 'his "filing, in con nertinn wlili t lio- <? tii lent I'd ciniillt.rit* Prof?*m>r Honey nnd .<on. Tlila ui traction. in<l? pcmltnt of the enjoyment ol Hut prili pi of all luxuries n\ thin (??axonof tli'i /oar. ? cool fen bricauv cannot f?il to iivn ? u full attendance thin earning. Podttorth* Cornet Hand are to give anolhci of tin ir delightful Sunday concert* to-morrow evening. Bvhto!?> Tin *Tnr. ? I)on<dU'? conipaay of acting monkey*, dogf utiil goat?. ate advulUcd to give two on tciininmi'tn today ? afternoon and evening Tho pro lamine provided comprises perlou* and comic imn'o mimee. flack and tij?lit rope peifnmmcea. The ?? Myrio ranilc Tablcuux" are to lie exhibited. fluM ii's Mi ti m. ? Tbo performance* of While'.* liand of Kthlopinu feveDnden". and the exhibition of tin ld>M>liiiig View*. and Optical Klrcworko. together with the lhing t>erpinta, Otrlch Mud Ournng Outang. hare attw.triHuy large audlcnccn nil t bin week to the mu Moni They can nil be peen nguin this afternoon nmJ evening. *Tnm?.TV*f Qpsiu Hm *r. ? Chrl>ty'i< hand of mtrth in pplitiig dnrlde* continue to please their nudlenc* a* lunch ii" ever They announce u line election of m>ng?, dnnriK. instrumental plteeh. and burleaqnea, for thl* en nintf. WCcji' - ? Tliix popiilnr band of Ethiopian mlii' tri l; oiler M'Vimt of I heir mint. attractive tettirn for to n :ht. Tlirlr auiHrnri:- t umal. are very I arm1 ntnl much delighted wiih their j . lui miinee*. Hr< .-tot i.\ ?. 51 m m.? The dramatic company nt l.hl? popnler rerort. nnnounce another inviting iilll uf en.er tutimmt !nr tlila tvening. ri n prl?lng the intoreMinn piece Mylrd remptati'ii n ml Ihe Scutch drnma of " Roh l'.ny Tbi? will be n gr:in I dramatic tr<.it fur th<? <llljen*ot l!"il'lyn Miidaoie A:l> ni i* at tlm I'nM of Niagara where ?hi? will renin In t r f nie thin I irlni' li'T visit ?<? UVit l oiut. i he tm fil of the Military Aeailemy paht the grea* ani.it tin ri'ni|<iiui>'nt. ?>! a -j limdid wrvnadu