Article Text
LATEST NEWS. Secretary Seward has gone to New York. Flour has advanced twenty-five cents per barrel in most of the principal cities. Several important mail contracts/have been let in the South. The President has pardoned another counterfeiter named Maffatt. It is proposed to unite the Boston and New York Tract Societies. It Is now believed that General Mann will be appointed Collector at Chicago. A number of nominations by the President to fill offices in Wisconsin were sent to the Senate on Tuesday. The United States Treasurer on Tuesday ordered the shipment of $45,000 in fractional currency to different banks, It is denied that there has been any general run made upon the National Banks at Washington. A negro charged with committing a rape on a white girl, was taken from the jail in Frankfort, Ky., and hung. Major General Howard addressed the Boston Tract Society, at their 52d anniversary, held in Irving Hall, on Tuesday. Gen. Rufus Ingalls has been ordered on an inspecting tour of military posts in the far West, reaching to California. Mrs. Jeff. Davis entertains fears that her husband will not live through the summer if kept in confinement. The death-warrant of Probst, the Deering butcher, has been transmitted to the Sheriff, at Philadelphia. The Secretary of the Treasury understands the President's proclamation as abrogating martial law in Virginia. The Military Commission, convened for the trial of Major Paulding, met on Tuesday and a few witnesses were examined, when the Court adjourned until yesterday. An order, it is said, will emanate in a few days discharging all volunteer officers in the service. Many of these belong to the regular army and will only be reduced to their regular rank. The Committee on the Provost Marshal's Bureau have resolved to keep their proceedings sΓ©cret. The affairs of that Bureau will be thoroughly examined. The fifteenth Jubilee Anniversary of the New York Sunday School Union, was held on Tuesday. Also, anniversaries were held by several other societies. A Washington correspondent ways that the President will certainly veto the bill admitting Colorado to the Union of States, on the ground of the unstable and floating character of its inhabitants, and from other reasons. The excitement occasioned in Washington, by the suspension of the Merchants' National Bank, has entirely subsided. An examination of its affairs has been going on for several days under the auspices of the Government. Secretary McCulloch returned from a short visit to Fortress Monroe, where he had a brief conversation with Jeff. Davis. The health of the arch traitor is not good. The Government has determined to hold the gold claimed by the Richmond banks, it having been clearly shown that the gold belonged to the Southern Confederacy. The Commissioner of Indian affairs is making arrangements for a grand Council of Indians to be held at Fort Laramie. E. B. Taylor, Superintendent at Omaha, telegraphsthat 20,000 Indians will attend. The Senate Committee on the present Telegraph System are considering the expediency of connecting it with the Postal System. The report of the Post Master General will be submitted to the Committee in a few days, before which time the Committee will not act. TheSenate Committee on Foreign Affairs have unanimously agreed to report in favor of Gen. Sickles as Minister to the Hague, but the General declines the appointment and desires to return to his present command. The Government of Chili has issued an official decree, declaring that neutral vessels that communicate with the Spanish fleet or furnish them with fuel, ammunition, provisions, &c., shall not be permitted totouchorlandimany portof1 the republic. We are glad to welcome among our exchanges, the Evansville (Ind.) Journal a true and able Union paper,