U-riaincd that he wo 

 ;rly impossible for 

 i Son o fa without be; 

 1 of everything. It is I 

 intention of the government to establish posts 

 the frontier of Hie Apache country. 



The Statu mentions tbe reception of import] 

 private dispatches fiom Northero Mexico, stutt 

 thttl it is expected within tbe nest ninety days 



o troops will bo organized on 

 Grande, properly armed and equipped, for t 

 pose of marchiug on the pity of Mexico, am 

 mina'iog tbe whole Mi 

 Tbe President eidled a meeting of tbe Cabinet on 

 r tbe dispatches from Minis- 

 McLune, in rclution to the Treaty with tbe 

 nmentof I 

 ied tbut several months ago tbe Mir 

 vernoienl invited France and England 

 the protectorate of Mexico, but they have 

 proposition. 



Tho receipts into the Trcusury for the quarter 

 ending irith June, exclusive of tbe trust funds, 

 >2, including tU.SSl.OOQ 

 , for public lands, $S00,2O0 fror 

 issued under the act of Congress of 

 enditures during tbe same period 



Of Treasury notes, nnd $1,5( 



He debt including Treasury notes. 



Much speculation is indulged as to the action o 

 onr government on Mr. McLane's recent dispatches 

 but as these hvae been kept perfectly 

 ing is known outside of the Administration, except 

 the fact that instructions are on tbe way to our 

 Minister bj a special messenger. By adi 

 received here, it appears that Juarez declines 

 signing u treaty without the approval of tho Me: 

 nd one cannot be called until L 

 possession of the city of Mexico.— 

 is not the only difficulty, 

 covered in the Capital on tho 11 lb 



tho G< 



nor, nnd take possession of the Government. 



TJ.e construction of the Washington National 

 Monument, after a suspension of several yi 

 about to bo resumed. Systems to raise funds for 



.'.on of the work have been put 

 ration, and it is proposed to request the Post 

 Masters throughout the country to give aid to t 

 terprise by placing boxes within tbeir respecli 



toms, (iH2 



1J07. The 



offices for the reception of contribute 



warding tbe returns to Washington. 



a month from the 30,ULnt pout ■otlices, would suffice 



in a few years to raise the shaft to its intended 



height. 



Personal and Political. 



Hox. RiciuttD Rush, died in Philadelphia, lust 

 week, aged 73. Ho was the son of the celebrated 

 Benj. Rush, who was a member of the Continental 

 Congress, and who signed the Declaration of Inde- 

 England under 

 J Secretary of the Treasury 

 ; Special Agent to Bogtand 

 on; and Minister 



peodence. He 

 1'rsaident Monn 

 ue f Prcsidtnt A 

 under l're.ident Jacki 



^Brapb announced the death of the Hon. 

 s *°"' °V. h6 BfterD0011 of tho I'd inst., at 



residence, :i nd the 



scene of bia h 

 Franklin, Massach 

 at Brown Urn 



Ubors. Mr. Mann was born at 

 He graduated 



Rev, J. S. Woodside, A. M 



His Highness the Rajah Randbir Singh Al- 

 lowalia, to tho eldest daughter of tbe late Robert 

 Hodges, Esq., of Kuppurthala." 



The St. Paul Pioneer says that upwards of two 

 huudred carls arrived in a month in that city 

 from the Selkirk settlement in British North 

 America, and that the amount of trade which the 

 will realize therefrom, will not 

 $200,000. 



Mn. Bioglow writes from Paris to tbe Evening 

 Post, that it is now quite probable that a day will 

 soon be fixed for Louis Napolet 

 Pope coming to Paris to officio 



Tnu Springfield Republican 



Sir. Mason's Court Introductions at 

 Paris. It is said that on one occasion last Spring, 

 thirty of our countrymen were paraded in at Once. 

 Arrayed in Court dresses, they stood like 

 in livery, in semi-circle ; tho Emperor er 

 reception chamber; Mr. Mason bows, nourishes 

 bis band, and says, "My countrym 

 ty;" all bow; Emperor nod3 and 

 one else; country 



Mn.s.MA[ttiMtETFcLLEn, mother of the eelebruted 

 and lamented Margaret Fuller Ossoli, died in Way- 

 landj Hub,, Sunday week, aged 70. She was a 



Tin Patent Office baring obtained a 

 cork tree Irom Europe, sent several pa 

 year to California, which possesses a oil __ 

 lar to Franceand Spain, whore it nourishes. These 

 seeds were planted at Sonora, and about 87 per 

 of them have come up, and gi 



moved to Boston in lS.lil, wnero ho was el U- iT 

 tlio State Senate, chosen President ot the Massa 

 chusells Board of Education, and wim ltu elect,.,] 

 a Member of Congress, serving from 

 1 I'" itiODj nOWSTOr, ITU the special object which 



becoming stately 

 PnovioiNo rott 

 Picayune states, 

 respondents, that 

 procedure in the 

 he had in i 



e promise of 



tATJtx Day— The Now Orleans 

 tbe authority of Mexican cor- 

 singular 



irof the late con 

 iself the handsome sum of 

 I), which he was sending abroad for in vest- 

 lie feoied, that if the conducts should pass 

 through Vera Cruz, and this fact by any accident 

 become known, that the money would be seized 



i, that 

 tbo great militl 



he appointed to inquire inl 

 tional defences of England, and report 

 provemenls may bo made therein. Sidney Herbert 

 said tho government would consent to the substance 

 of the resolution, but not to the motion alone. The 

 government were about to appoint 

 the names of which would be a guo 



its endeavors to place tho great 

 country 



"inquiry for a 

 sion to consider what course was necessary for t 

 defence of the country. They would only inqu 

 what pormunent fortifications were requisite for 

 the defence of the dockyards and arsenals. Sir Di 

 Lacy Evans' resolution was negatived. 



Fsakcs. — It was vn"uely rumored in Paris oi 

 the 25th that Napoleon would visit London, 



The Daily New* believes that although the 

 scheme of nn Italian confederation may not have 

 been formally struck off the programme, it is not 

 now insisted on by its author, nnd that little moro 

 will be heard of it. 



It is said that tho Emperor will tuske his public 

 entree into Paris on Sunday, August Hth, at the 

 head of part of the army or Italy. The troops will 

 i the following day for the usual fete Napo- 

 After the 17th, the Emperor proceeds with 

 ipre^s to tbe Pyrenees. 



is reported that JOO.OOO men are to bo dis- 

 cl.^i^.d from tho army on renewable furlough, the 

 advantage being that the Government would have 



London Tiims says :— " The Great Eastern 

 has been getting on wonderfully during tbe last 

 few weeks. The three iron masts rise 122 feet 

 abovo the upper deck, and 



feet and six inches for a height of 70 feet, when 

 they decrease gradually to two feet six inches at 

 the cap. The three wooden masts, which are also 

 , are not built masts, but are single 

 "sticks," The fore and mizzen masts an 140 feet 

 in height, and they are 41 inches in diameter at the 

 deck ; the jigger-mast is 122 feet in height, and of 

 diameter. Tho trees which formed these 

 masts were New Zealand pines. 



Tjii; editor of tbe London Critic expresses his 

 belief that "if tho Americans can gain anything 

 by attacking Great Britain, they will throw chivalry 

 and brotherhood to the dogs, and chase tbe al- 

 mighty dollar through wa 



enty-s 



volui 



,e shelves of the British Museum, bu 

 w about 7,400, and all these have beer 

 o " Waverly " was begun. 

 Eton Goldsjmth, Bart., who recently 

 in London, bos left personal property in Eng 

 idiog $10,000,000, nnd real estate of a lik. 



■■;<■ I 



The 



t volu 





less than 49 codicils, most of them in the Baron' 

 n handwriting. The probate stamp duly p»j 



— The P 



evident of the Erie Railroad, Mr. Mor 





re been allowed a salary of 12,', too 





Jutibeen cut down. 



— Trlvolo 



fetter) ifni Italy say that both KoM 



and Kiopki 





surveillance 



of the French police. 



— Private 



letters from Turkey slate tbot Bulgar 





been carried oil by the Turks, and liat 



Bulgarian f 



tallies ore in r.onvtenmtlon. 



— Tbo 20 



tb anniversary of the ailselu mei 



BbpklniGi 



mmar School at ■•**J^JJ? '° "" " 



uvlum f«r t.rpliau b 



