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The hew national era, rCSUSSED KVKRV TQUHSDAY MORNING At W««f»lnsrt K) OHy* *> c. NEW NAT TON At K1U KTHiWWB. 418 11TU HTREET. I HED'K DOUGLASS, Editor. J. H. H ANVES,Bualnpgi Manager. or Sub* Rirmirs: S!c~l» copies, |i.50 p*r yf»*r five r«|»i«* f.»r $10. payable in a^ruuca. >!>prem: riBLlSHEIlS SEW SATIOXAL KHA, Lack Boa 31. IXTTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. l.tttrr from Worren.burg, Mo. WAr.r.ENfLUCG, Mo., Nov. C. 1ST0. Jo the Ku.ilor of the Xetc Xafional Kra : We nre rejoiced that God in Lis providence has so ordered it that the colored people, so lore oppressed end down trodden, can come up on tl>o scalo of intelligence and show that the) have the nme God-given powers of mind with the Anglo Savon race. The enormity of the orimo of slavery stands forth moro and more visibly ns we eee thein, as a race, stepping forward morally and intellectually, and. at uo distant day. showing unmistakably that underlying ., the dark line of the skin is a mind capable of accomplishing what the oppressor claimed never 1 > be possible. The exhibition of my husband's colored pupils, "The Howard School," so named because of Gen. Howard's appropriation of $850 for a scLool-house, did credit to themselves, being calm, self possessed, and perfectly at home in their pieces and dialogues for rehearsal. They gratmed and satified the wishes and expectations of their friends, and surprised that of ttair opposers, or rather non-friends, to their educational interests. Five hundred white and five hundred colored persons were present, id Empire Hall. 1 had selected all their pieces and dialogues, and they had rehearsed them with o much care before my husband and myself. Not a failure occurred in a single instance. The pieces wore of a high-toned character, combining the gr.ive. the witty, the humorous, the satirical, and the moral. Wallace Kuight, ouo of our pupils, abcut twenty years of age, who lias been but six months tosrbool to Mr.Smith, (all the instruction he hns had,) reads in the Fourth Header. 1 had given hira a hard piece to learn, upon Flanders, a good essay, from the pen of one of our best public educators. He h:;«J it well committed, and was rehearsing it in Empire IIall, on the evening of the exhibition, when somebody whispered out, " Where tit 1 you get your thick lips ?" (he is a full type of the African in lips.) Wallace paid no heed*, but pr veeded perfectly composed. Alter fin ishing, mv husband stepped forward and said : *41 am surprised that anyone should so fur forgot himself as to try to break down or insult the boy by sneh whispering/' repeating aloud the whisper as he heard it. Two or three white men spoke up : ''Let the boys leave the hull if they do not wish to hear in silence.." i forced myself at the same momont, by aD impulse 1 could not resist, forward upon the stage, saying : " Hoys, remember this, that Wallace has had but six months of school; remember, too, that the same God gave Wallace thick lips who gave y< u and 1 thin cues ; and that the same .Saviour redeemed the colored pupil who redeemed the white; and that the same Heaven open to them as to others who love that Saviour who has died for them." The effect was great; cheers from the audience and clapping of hands showed that an approval was made of my re. pro f. I was moved by an unseeu influence 1 coulu cot resist, for I felt strong in the strength given me to defend the young colored man whom I had assisted, after his day's toil was over, to rehearse his piece at our home, when, perhaps, the boys who were sneering at Lis ^ thick lips were engaged in play or idleness. "Wallace works for $! > per months iu the summer, and pays his board when he goes to school in the winter. One of Mr. Smith's pupils, F.llu ILldrcge, sixteen years of age, is touching some of those '* i»« had charge of last winter.fifty one yf tho young* r; upil*.and is a very successful teacher, nud receives $30 per month. She is very ainbit'.ccs. My husband visit9 her school-room Uu minutes each morning and afternoon to encourage and assist her, he having his recess at a different time. We are very glad that Ella is succeeding so well. It is a great stimulus to the other pupils. Rut I am protracting ray letter too long perhaps. Tuesday ol this week the colored man gooa to the polls fur the first time. The Republican ticket will l»e their ticket with but very few exceptions. It is an exciting time for tliem. My husband has endeavored to keep them posted on matters pertaining to their interests and to the interests of the State of Missouri. They are an intelligent set of colored men nud wow n .the most so, perhaps, taken as whole, in the State. Some of the cob-red men here, who have all the elements of a noble manhood, and the little boys of some, with shining black faces and bright black eyes, in which intellect shines out clearly, will, some time in the future, if I mistake not. tit! important positions among the educated and honorable of the land. Our Sabbath school opened five yeara ago with twenty pupils ; now we have one hundred and twenty. There is wry little intemperance among the colored inT.nln here IJ.-<4iilt<4 nf InK/ir wTiinmr them, by >d's blessing, cheers and comforts our hearts. The Saviour own* and blesses our woiks, and thin is what cheer* 08 and incites to greater faithfuiucy*. VMim, re?].ectfully, Sophia L. Smith. ktioutl t oiigrcwslonul Dhtrict of r Virginia. Norfolk, Va., November 12, 1870. To the Editor of the Sew National Era : The eventful day has passed, and victory perched ou the Republican banners. The Democracy was totally routed in thin district. Norfolk bus redeemed herself by giving 241 majority for Jain«-a II. Piatt. Jr. The district lias given him a largely increased majority, thus testifying to its appreciation of Col. Piatt and his efforts in behalf of Republican princiiilps.nrin«*irihvs identical with the rights of i i 1 n . man. Republicans in this district huve done their whole duty; they were not to be flattered by the fukoine speeches of Col. Robert R. Bob Lug, nor deluded by the subtcrfugo of the bolters who supported W. It. Jones.but this part of the play is hardly worth speaking of. Less than fifty men in the whole district have been found pimple enough tp throw away their vote» in this way. A few were honest enough to come out boldly and vote for Col. Boiling, the Democratic nominee, which was the practical effect of every voste cast for Jones. The result is gratifying to all honest Republicans. This undivided front presented to the enemy augurs well for future battles, proving, as it does, that if we are true to ourselves tne eaemv cannot stand before as. Let the organization be kept up, let every recruit be obtained that it is possible to obtain, and the Republican principles eht.ll prevail, securing the welfare of the Republic. On the evening ef Xovember 1st we had the jltat-re of listening teaepeefk frra NE\ ( VOL. 1..NO. 45.} Secretary Robeson, a speech replete with eloquent passages aud elaborate in well timed arguments, a speech kind and conciliatory to all. Alas, I am ashamed to say that he was grossly insulted, and one meeting broken up by conservative roughs, and three Republicans killed and several wounded by the pistol shots | from the city police. The unprovoked outrage has as yet received no notice from the city officials whose duty it was to investigate it, and in ull likelihood will be allowed to go unnotu od. It served to show Republicans the necessity ol united efforts to redeem Norfolk, and if i am not greatly mistaken next spring will tin J her under Republican rule. We have received Urge additions of white men into the Republican ranks and expect more, The utter disregard ol law displayed by the Conservatives in power in this oity for the past six months lias disgusted some even of their own number, as is shown by the largely increased white \ote cast for Colonel i'latt. The laboring classed are con vinced that they have nothing to hope for from | the Conservatives, and are coming over to our side. We welcome them with outstretched hands, and are thus recruiting strength fur j new conquests. The Democratic party is no party for the poor man. He belongs among those who believe in progress and equal rights for all. Let the poor men then tlock to the | standard of the Republican party; it ha9 always been their best friend.it will be in future time. Rally round its thig, and in 1STDemocracy shall again bite the dust. John I. Dezknookc. National I.ahot I nion. To the Colored Worl.nojhitn of tin t\ Trades, Labor, and Industrial I'iu'ohs: in accordance with Article X, section 1, Constitution of the Colored National Labor L'uion, adopted in Convention, December y.h, 18f>y, in the City of Washington, D. the second uni nual meeting will bo held at the I nion League | Hall, Washington, D. C., commeneing at Id o'clock M., January lUh, 1871. Your Bttentiim i* »»«.J » - I # " 'J v""v 14 lw 1 licle II of the Constitution, section I : " The National Labor Union shall he composed of I such organizations as may now or hereafter exist, having for their object the amelioration and advancement of the condition of those who labor for a living.'' I Section 2. Each organization shall be entitled to one representative, and each State Labor j Union to three for the State at large, in the the National Labor Union, provided that rcpi resentatives derive their election direct from j the organization they claim to represent. Your attention is further invited to Article I # I&, Section 1. Each local Organization shall pay a tax of ten cents per member ; each State or National Organization, ten dollars. The ] tax of an Organization shall be paid on the j presentation of the credentials of the delegate, ! and no delegate shall be allowed to take part in the deliberations of the I niou until the tax j js paid. Delegates will be required to furnish certified copies of the number of members of the Associations they represent. Delegates to, j the meetings of the Union ure admitted withi oat regard to race, color, or sex. | In addition to the regular report of each Or- gani cation, delegates are requested to inform I themselves upon the following general questions : First, What are the occupations in which 1 colored men are more generally employed in your city, county, or State ; the rate of wages; the average time made annually. Second, The number of schools ; their grade, j average attendance of scholars; how many supported by the State; by charitable ins itu tion ; also, private schools, j Third, The number of land, building, and co-operative associations ; their value in real estate and cash. Fourth. What menus or rpnu»<K- in i-nnr judgment, can best be applied to advance the ! I material interest of the workingmo.i in your j locality and in the United State.-*, The great importance and necessity of the j organization of labor, for its own benefit and the development of the industries of the coun| try, should prompt the workingwen of all occupations in the several States to send dole gates to this annual meeting ol tho National Labor Union. Newspapers throughout the country will ploA86 copy* ISAAC MVER3, President. j Lewis II. Dofclab8, Secretary. Sentence of flie Colored Cadet, J. W. Smith. General court-martial orders No. 52 have just been issued from the War Pepartinent, publishing the proceedings, findings, and sentence in the case of James W. Smith, the col! ored cadet at West Point. The first charge was "conduct prejudicial to good order and military discipline,'* and the specification alleges that he created a disturb- i ance in camp by assaulting Cadet John W. Wilson with a dipper and his fists. The second charge was conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman, and tbe specification stated that "having been reported for replying to a tile-closer in a highly disrespectful manner at drill, after having been spoken to in the line of duty, he did submit to the commandant of j cadets a written explanation, in whieh he said : "i spoke to no file-closer during the drill, nor did Cadet Corporal Bacon speak to me during ! the drill at any timej" which statement was' false. To these specifications and churges the prisoner pleaded "not guilty." The court found Cadet Smith guilty of the first cha ge and its specification, and not gnilty of the second charge and its specification, and sentenced him "To walk p >st, under charge of a cadet sentinel, from 2 o'clock P. M. uutil re treat for six consecutive Saturdays." The Secretary of War adds the following order: The proceedings in the case of James W. Smith, and the finding upon the first | charge ure approved. Ttie opinion of the Judge Advocate General, expressed in bis review of the case, that "it is better that this sentence should be disapproved than that the J i sanction of the Government should be given to a punishment so utterly insufficient as that pro 1 j posed to ho inflicted," is concurred in. Tho sentence is disapproved. i to the second charge, although the doubt arising from the evidence as to the mteut of the accused, in his denial to the commandant of cad«ts, might appear to be so slight as hardly to amount to that reasonable one which in law wonld justify au acquittal, yet, as the court, upon personal hearing of the case, has, in the exercise of its discretion, given him the beoefit of that doubt, the finding is approved. C'Qdet James W. Smith is hereby released [ from arrest. The Geueral Court Martial, of which Brigadier General O. O. Howard, United States army, is president, is hereby dissolved. Gen. Ton Moltke is a native of Parchuner, Mecklenburg Schwerin. On the front of the house wherein the great strategist was born . there is a white marble memorial tablet placed I bearing in gold latter* th* inscription : " Hers we* born tba Prussian General of Infanirj, Mslmuth Karl Bernbard vun M dike, oa tho 99 th of October, 1800." i VT N A WASHING i't i * j The President and Mr. Co*.Why Mr. ( ox I.eft the Cabinet, The following correspondence, which is olii-' cial, gives the reason why Mr. Cox left the cabinet: long branou, X. JM Aug. *2-, 1ST j. [fun. J. />. Cox, Secretary of tlx*' Interior : Dkar Sir : I understand that you have appointed one day this week to hear argument^ in the McGarrahan cose. That is well enough, . because if Congress should fail to settle that case, we may have it to do, and the sooner we know all the points of it the better. However, as the matter luid boen taken in hand by Congress before the incoming of this admin intraj tion, and as so much fraud is charged and believed to exist on both sides, 1 am not willing that my name should be signed to u p.. tent for either party until Congress has either decided j ! or declared their inability to do so. 1 wish you would say to Mr. White, secretary for signing patents, not to put my name to that one, except ou special orders from ine through you. He must not take orders from Mr. Wilson in the matter. I have grown sus- I picioua of Mr. Wilson, and will tell ynu why ! when I go to Washington next. Yours truly, l\ 8. Grant. I)kpartvent of the l.vtkrior. Washington, Aug. 23,1870. 1 Mr Dear Sir : Yours of yesterday is this morning received, and 1 have given your direc- I tiotis in regard to signing a patent to the New Idria Company to Mr.White by letter, he being routined to his bed by sickness, as I am informed. On the subject of the McOarrnhan business, itself, t think you must have been misinformed as to its status in Congress. According to the ; formal opinion given hv the Attorney General last year, the ease is in no such sense before Congress as to interrupt or impede the action of the Department under the laws, but parties have the same right to insist upon a hearing and decision here that they hav* in any other case where they claim a decision upon their right m ier explicit provisions of the statutes. Congress has assumed uo peculiar jurisdiction of the subject. MeUarrahau petitioned th»- last Congress, as he had the preceding Congress, to make him a grant of land in California iucluded within the boundaries named in a pretended grant to one Corner., which the Supreme Court of the United States decided void in 180."). lie I has appealed to Congress in vain. At the late session it was airain before the Judiciary Coin- } mittee of the House of Representatives, r«nd the parties consented to suspend the contest in this Department till that committee should puss upon the matter of the petition. The committee dul pass upon if, and by u vote of seven to three , determined to report a gain at granting the1 prayer of his petition, and directed Mr. Deters, ( of tLat committee, to draw up their report. Mr. Deters' statement of these facts is filed with the papers in this Department. The New Idria Mining Company now claim that their business should be taken up and dis- posea 01. aicuarran&n claims, on the otber hand, that the fact that the committee did not find the opportunity to make their report to the ' House should hold the other parties to still further delay until the next session of Congress. To this the other side reply that it was the action of the committee that they consented to await, and quote the printed statements of Me- j Garrahan's counsel before the committee to the effect that if the committeo decided against them they would make no further content. j The Department as tho Attorney General decided, was not authorized to delay its per-! formance of duty under the law at nil except by common consent of the parties in interest, [ and has only taken the responsibility of delay in cases when manifest equity required it and where action by Congress is probable. After careful inquiry and investigation I think itcleai that neither of these conditions exist in the present case. McGarrahan's original claim has been, now for five years, decided by the Su- preme Court to have been utterly fraudulent and void. He immediately made his effort to obtain relief from Congress, and five years nf w / J "*j most industrious and, as I believe unscrupulous effort, has been futile. Pending these petition to Congress be attempted to obtain a patent < from the Department on the ground that thu ! lands were only agricultural lands, and did not contain gold, silver or quicksilver mines, a...l might therefore be bought at &1.2.J per acre This was refused by Mr. browning, my prede- CGssor, on the ground that tbe lauds were nun- | tug lands, and tbe New Idriaquicksilver mines ] was notoriously the bone of contention. McGttrrahnn then sought to force the Department j to issue him a patent by a writ of mandamus ! froiu the court of the District; and after the , unprecedented action of that court iu allowing : the writ against mo, after Mr. browning's retirement, the Supreme Court of the L'nited States reversed and annulled the proceedings j ^ iw the court below, in a judgment which re- < . tlocted with great severity upon all concerned . in procuring such action. I McGarrahan stands before the Department, < therefore, as a fraudulent claimant, who has \ twice been foiled and condemned in his fraud | i by the highest court of the nation, and whose . efforts to procure favor from Congress havealsc . failed. II is claim for still further delay, in or- , der that he may try whether ho cannot yet ob- . tain legislative action in his favor, which may , give him that which the courts have determined , mat ne has uoright to under the law, seems to ! me worse than baseless, and I should feel as if 1 wero party to a wrong upon Congress were 1 * willingty to do anythiug to subject them to i further annoyance from such a source. t Under the opinion of tbe legal adviser of the Government, therefore, and in full accordance 1 with ray own sense of right and duty, 1 have said that the Department will no longer delay ] in proceeding with its business according to law. At this atago I And myself met by another j effort at obstruction. Mdiarrahau brings suit in s the same court of tho District for an injunction against tbe Now Idria Mining Company, to for | * bid thorn from applying for u patent for the t lands they claim under the statute, and that, too, although tho company is in California, j] wholly out of the jurisdiction of the court; i nor is it pretended that lawful service of the t writ can be made on them. Their attorneys j, here are made defendants, and the court is ask- j , ed to forbid them from prosecuting their cli- c ent's case before tho Department which has t jurisdiction of it; and this, too, when in the mandamus case last winter the Supreme Court ( decided that the jurisdiction of the Depart- f raent was exclusive and absolute, with which r no court could lawfully interfere. 8 The Department is not a party to this suit; i yet 1 have hud to day a notice served upon me i to appear before the court on the '50th instant, s and show cause why an attachment should not t issue against n»e for directing the same officer to go forward with its business. If the Federal Executive is to be at the mercy of such proceed- $ ings as these, we shall justly become the con c tempt of the nation and of the world. To fthow you still further the unblushing knavery of McGarrahau's conduct, a gentle- 1 man allowed me to read a letter directed to hyn t by one of McGurrahan's attorneys, in whicn the attorney offered for McG. stock in his Call- | fornia claim to the ainonnt of bounty thousand t dollars for the us* of his influence with vu to procure a favorable action to hiiu in this De- j partineut. As to appearing before the court, a I am at a loss to know what to do. The Attor- u ney General has gone to Georgia, and leaves [ no assistant who is an experienced advocate, t his Department, as you know, not being fully n organized. The District Attorney, who would be the one to whom I should naturally go next, is Judge Fisher, who was one of the two judges v who signed the writ of mandamus last >ear, \ and, of eourse, ke could not defend the Depart- l merit without condemning himself; and Oon- t gress last winter, in the act organizing the !>« c partment of Justice, took away from other l>e « partuicnts the right to employ special coun el. c My belief is that the Question more gravely « affecting the diguity of the Executive and its c independence will be likely to arise during your administration; and I think the situation fully warrants your telegraphiug the Attorney i General, if not all the cabinet, to meet you here j * before the 50th instant. For myself, as 1 am d conscious of haviug only fought fraud with such s vigor as I corcld, I can inaxe no compromise j i fc - * - . . .. . TIO]S ON, D. C.. THTTBSDAY, XOYEMI and if I fail to secure to the fullest extent your approval of my cause, I must be<r you to relieve me at once frost duties which, without VOiir support, 1 sb dl utterly fail in. liege in 2 to be remembered with great respect to Mrs. Grant, I am, very truly, yours. J. P. Cox. The President. NuihkI Views I poii 1'olitienl Piindplei ait«l laueM Clearly i;*presse»l. M'e give some extracts from a recent l. tter of ' "Warrington," the Boston correspondent cf tho Springfield K'"publican : and though these extracts havo a local application, an 1 were intended to influence the voters in Massachusetts that they might discharge properly their duties at the recent election, still they contain doctrines and principles which tiro sound everywhere, find in all times, and may well apply iu every State of this Union. 41 Warrington*' speaks thus ef Wknokil! Phillips : The advent of Mr. Phillips in politics at least gives the people, as well as tho correspondents and critics, something to talk about, it is all I very well to say, " Happy the people whoso annals are tiresome," hut the occasional appearance of such people as Jim Fisk iu finance, P. T. Ihirunm in business, and Wendell Phillips in politics, docs after all tend to mukothc world livelier, though by no means better. * * * * * *' i This is what ' Warrington " says of the Bepuhlican party: j It is not necessary to go into excessive ruptures over the Republican party. State or national, in order to take the ground that it ought to be sustained this autumn. If it is timid, it is no more timid than all great parties are. If it is corrupt, its corruption is the fault of the time and tho people. At any rate, it posses es, not only here, but in all the other States, a large share of the bold men and the honest < men. If such men are not in this party, it is because guch men do not exist iu this country, i Talk about reforming the politics of the coun- ] try by a prohibition party ! There is no inch i party nut ol Massachusetts. It orgunized iu Maine iu 1809, and disbanded the next spring, < alter casting ten or twelve thousand votes, it ] has tried its hand in Ohio, and has cast 2,800 \ votes out of inn <inn in Mam ^ «ii a im u no |fiu° t portion of the whole vote will he probably less. There in nothing in the issue which it will ever bo possible to make national. The Liberty party made a gradual increase until it hecumo j merged in the Free Soil party, and then in the Republican party, its ideas finally getting control of the country. Rut the prohibitory principle has been constantly running down for the last half-dozen years. It is contrary to the spirit of the time, which leads to individual freedom, and the men who have heretofore been so closely welded to it will have to abandon it, and take the advice which Theodore Parker gave them in 18oo and John A. Andrew in 18f>5.i. r , try some other means of stopping the drinking habits of the people. The quack medicine which these great men exposed and denounced live and fifteen years ago is not any the less a quack medicine that it bears the recommendation of Wendell Phillips. Rut whether it is or not, it is clear enough that the question has got to go to the people for settlement, and that 110 law on the subject of the sale of liquor, w hether it bo a prohibitory or a license law, can stand long after being enacted by intimidation, trick or snap judgment. The J*. L. L. found this out in LSb,\ as well as the State Alliance iu I SOS. None of the great victories for anti-slavery leg- isiatioa in Massachusetts, the personal liberty; } b;!l, the removal of Judge Loring, the abolition , of colored schools, were won by sending up h \ lobbyist like Mr. Phillips's "friend" Cuiumings . to buy and sell and log-roll, "in the usual leg- c islative traffic, vote for vote." If they bad been so won, they would not have stood a great j while. * * * * Again : WHAT TUB KKPUULICAX TARTY HAS DONE. H This party has not gone far enough for Mr. c I'hnlips in the labor reform. It passed a ten- * hour law through one branch last winter, which i * is more than any other party.ever did. It gave ^ the Crispins an act of incorporation, just such j1 i one as they wanted, and w ithout being bribed X) do it. It established the labor bureau, and I las kept it going and made it useful. It has r kept the State constabulary alive, and has stood 1 tp against the entire repeal of the prohibitory law, al a good deal of risk of popular disfavor. . l'hat it exempted cider from its operation, with ' Ihe consent of the prohibitionists themselves, f in the year lHGD, and followed this up by ex- '' impting lager beer in IbTO, by the advice of Tien who have worked more months in the cause than Mr. Phillips has worked days, and spent j ^ nore dollars than he has spent cents, is most 1 H rue. It remains to be soon whether the great 11 jody of the friends of the old statute aie not r latislied that they did wisely in this. Whatever p the public judgment may be, it cannot be n*cer- H tained by the vote for Mr. Phillips, one-third c )f which is to be made up from the Prohibi- j * .ionists, one third from Labor Reformers, and 0 Tne-third from men who desire to sec the lie- * oublican party stung into or out of its propriety, 11 uid are curious to know, perhaps, what our h ;reat orator will do with a party at his back. « Thus, it will be seen, in every State, as in " Massachusetts, if real temperance can be pro- Q noted by a political party, it must and will be r ihe Republican party that does it. The Denocracy 19 the dram-shop party. ^ lion Jiulgv llerriek wan Elecled. It is the boast of some of the Maryland cop- jerhead papers that they carried that State iu ipite of the colored vote, and without any aid herefrom. We wish it wore so, but the Anlapolis Gazette says: All the tricks and appliances long known to, ind practiced by, the Loc >focos were brought nto requisition. Its forces were thoroughly Irilled ; its speakers (and their name was Lotion) went everywhere spouting forth all sorts ! 1 i. > v . ..... >i cmp-uup Hnu urmaing nau vvnisKy wmi tneir p olored brethren; their committeemen, with a sockets full of "rocks," were constantly on the »« dert and assiduous in their polite consideration t >f Sambo; their hired negro orators made > Yantie appeals in behalf of their late yoke- h nasters; their headquarters in this city were iblaze at night with gas lights, uproarous be- t ow with oratory, applause, and defiance, whilst j a ip stairs secret committees held nightly ses- ^ lions [dotting and rehearsing their schemes and f< ricks. 1 n Jos 111*a Leavitt..On the occasiou of the [olden wedding of Joshua Leavitt and wife, the ither day, one of the reporters interviewed the n reteran Liberty party advocate, and gathered b his wise expression from him regarding the ^ emperanee reform : j jj 1 have never hold that there was any analogy u letweeu intemperance and slavery, nor advoca* tl ed the making of the former a political issue, ilavery was, from every consideration of hu- s; uanity, statesmanship and political economy, tl national crime. Intemperance is an Individ- p lal vice.a terrible destructive one, it is true. ti told Mr. Sumner only yesterday that I g bought the Prohibitionists were making a great h uistake in Massachusetts. o A gentleman, who, at the beginning of the j tl irar, was in Paris, visited tDe American Fin- b >ussy one day, and there found the Gorman, vv he English, the French, the Italian, the Turk, u he iSjutuiard, Mexican, Malay, Kanaka, Afri- o an, Chinese.men from all the islands of the i p( ea and all the far quarters of the globe, whom 1 tl hancc had thrown together in that focus of 0 iv.lizatiou, come to claim citizenship ami sue* b or from the great Republic. hi Susan Cooper, daughter of the celebrated h American novelist, Fenimore Cooper, resides | tj t the old homestead in Cooperstowu, X.Y., uud u evoles much of her time to a hospital for the 8, ick and infirm, which w«# founded chiefly by $ icr effort*. i g\ z__ 5ER 17, 1870. From the 1>--ton C<mimonwoatth. (-eor^o UillfaiM C urtis on I'hai U ^ l>ifkcii»." i»ARKEP. rRATBRNITV I.ECTVRF. Mr. Curtis, iu beginning, spoke of the won derful nnd inexplicable power of the imagination in charming the soul. The storv teller is as inevitable a figure in history as IVter the Hermit or Peter tlie Crest. The instinctive love of the world answers the objections to storytelling as completely ui the bobolink's song answers the Quaker's objections tos ngii g. Its power embraces every age and every race, from the school-boy, to whose intellectual palate the story comes as the raspberry-tart to bis sense of taste, with a kneenness of pleasure never again to be realized, to tlie old niaa. in whom almost any other desire is extingui lied. At this moment in kings' palaces, in Mpialid cabins, in camps where armies are gathered, in i ll . 41. 1 .. .an 11vt*r uii' w rill. t..« ?», w. tin and children are listening. Ian ghing and weep ingas the story-teller plica his urr. If is lie who revenges us for the moan details of evervday life ; or. rather, who invests them ali with a new and unwonted beauty. His fancy is feet to the lame, eyes to the blind, faith to the despondent. Coming directly t<» the man of whom ho was to speak, who was one of the greatest of these comforters of men, Mr. Curtis recalled the experience of three years ago. when w e were assembled to see and hear the successor of Walter Scott; and the speaker paused to draw a beautiful-graphic picture t f the great Wizard of the North, of the hearing, face and dress of the man who wan personally ro >re loved than any of his contemporaries. Thence returning to the scene of which he began to speak, and partly to enforce the diTerence iu the jposonnelle of the two men. Mr. Curtis described the scene at one of Dicken's readings, when, punctually at the hour of beginning, a door suddenly opened, a man entered, briskly ran up the steps, passed quickly across the platform, and before the audience had fairly time to notice his personal traits, arid to discover that he was dressed in accordance with the strictest rigor of fashion, he; an his little introductory announce- merit to tin* audience, and was presently embarked upon the pages of the "Christinas Carol." It was 1 Joiner uttering once more the Siege I >f Troy; Defoe rehearsing the narrative of s Uobinsou Crusoe; ( ervautes repeating the 1 itory ot 1'on t^uixoto; once more we were 1 children f itting at the feet of the story-teller. : ' That man is either insane or reading Hon 1 Quixote," sa d a king, who saw from his win- * iow a person rolling and tumbling upon the 1 ground ; in like manner it might be said, "That j 4 ludienro is distracted, or Dickens is reading J he trial scene in l'iokwickto them.'' The difference betwee# the persons of Sir ( W alter and Dickens was no greater than the 1 lifferenoe between their .V»*r<wo n*a 91 * * . * " 1 . ...... V«;i - . I 11 :is I li list rated by a comparison of their relations to ' oyalty. "M lien that absurd king, George the ' r'ourtli, upon whom satire exhausted itself 5 vhon it ( ailed him the "Urst gentleman in lui- ' ope," visited Edinburgh, and feasted there. 1 sir Walter was anxious to keep the glass that } he royal lips lmd pressed; but when Queen > Victoria, who certainly meant no rudeness, re 1 jueeted Mr. Dickens to take part in an enter- * ainment at her palace, he declined to come 1 is an actor where he was not welcome us n x tuest. Mr. Curtis drew out nt considerable ength the parallel between tlie two great nov- ' 'lists, sketching Sir Walter, in a charming x iicture, as a guest of Sir lloger de Coverly. lelighticg the old knight with his stoi es, in ' vhieh no dangerous doctrines were hidden.and n lending his host to bed to dream of an English- N nan's heaven, in which the lower classes knew s heir place, his lust waking thought a vague 1 mprcssion that everybody in England dined x ipon roast beef. As the latter part of epitaphs s the best and strongest, so Scott's stories, in 1 pircd by feudalism, were its last and its noblest lefensc. orwvn mug mo oati scenes :n the l iter ifo of Scott, when he was lonely, aged, de>rived of his family, au impoverished, an em- ' >arrassed man, and touching upon the peace . md heauty of bin death, Mr. Curtis went on to [escribe the sort ol paralysis which thereupon el! upon the tic*ion of Kngland. The throne 8 v'as vacant, hut no one said, ' Long live the j dng," for there was no king to succeed. l>yr-n t nd Shelley were dead ; Keats, the nightingale, f iad pressed the thorn to his heart and had >asscd away ; Wordsworth, whose ode to "1m- 11 uortality ' hud made him immortal, was writ- e iig sonnets to capital punishment; Tummy | loo to was tinkling his guitar under the win- t lows of duchesses; and Campbell was tehearsrig his sonorous songs at public dinners. Mean 11 vhile llulwer was busy diluting ltyron ; Mi. ames, friend of our youth, was getting his two ij lOrsemen comfortably seated in tlo-ir saddles j nd ready to start upon their long journey; Lisa Kdgeworth was painting her portraits ol young lady ; Ainsworth was making his offer ngs at the shrine of St, Turpin ; Captain Mar 1' yat was making everybody hcm sick with his h ea novels ; and Carl vie had made his appear- v ncC- rmnntr ni> «»<«! . 1 , ««.v. .../mi, miii «nuri!ng IJls 1 ontenipt tor "sliams".-when the notes of P lood's ".Song of the Shirt" and "The Bridge " f Sighs" made themselves heard, rising up to a he ears of delicate ladies, and audible even v midst the clink of glasses ; the tlrst echo that a lad been hoard in Kuglandof Hums'* "A Man's 1 Man for a Ihat. This was the beginning V f anew era. Now the scene was changed; > he servants and not the masters were talked v f; the hovel took its turu with the drawing- 1 ooni, and the fiction of the country was born, i1 lu this particular our time to«k the first rank, t )urs is the age of English fiction, as the age ol IJ 'hxabeth is that of English poetry and flu* t Cnglish drama. And, unlike the drama, lit; o ion is with us a great moral force. We see it d n every story-teller of the times ; iu Wilkie * 'ollins exposing the iniquity of the Scotch mar h iage laws, and of the English statutes which d utiordinAte the wife to the husband ; in Disaeli produeing the most stinging satire upon urYisni and deprecating the political influence v f Koituanism ; in Charles Heade dealing with 1 he problems of labor and its relations to cupi 11 ul. Demosthenes now has yielded to Dickens, h 'ursuiug this train of thought, Mr. Curtis said d utense moral purpose was the great charac ti eristic of Dickens as a novelist, lie did uot tl reach sermons, but none the less was his mor- »> 1 purpose depicted in every volume. Even c Pickwick" has tor one of its principal objects » he improving of debtors' prisons ; ''Nicholas t< n'icklehy" deals with cruel schoolmasters and n ard schools; "Oliver Twist" with poorhouses; David Copperfiold" with model prisons; "Lit- e le Dorrit" with t;.e " ircumlocution office" ^ nd "Bleak House'5 with the long winter of it 'huncery. Before Dickens, poverty and suf- tl sring had not been heard. Charles Dickens ti tade wretchedness eloquent; he compelled, 1 lie refined to look and listen ; and so we think f him as a man and a reformer rather than as U r. n^f ial i.m.I .ni/liAr II/l unl a.Ia.1 ....II"-- At <111101 I111U auviiv/l i AAV nil I lit j'WIMIU * lind, and made it soft and fruitful for seed to I e sown by the hand of others as well as hiin- ' ci elf. He was as genuine as Englishman as n >efoe, but he compelled his countrymen to ti steu to him, not through his caustic" gravity ^ nd bitterness, but by his winning grace and O! le magic of his marvellous humor. b We do not diminish the praise of Dickens in ci lying that he was less a great ariist and author li lan a great reformer. A ai>rt of great street- tl readier he was, preaching the fatherhood 01 rod and the brotherhood of man ; but not lootay, rather leading the chorus of the world's ^ ealthy laughter. In all this his means were ei f the simplest, his philosophy of the plainest, tl is philanthropy a rather homely British nhilan- di 'iropy, which concerned itself first witfi feed- r-' ig the hungry and warming the cold. lie had P hat is common with great geniuses.though ti len with little genius do not find if out.plenty f common sense. He was not deluded by l* arodies. IJeuce his many satirical pictures of 01 tie mock virtues. But for them all good men I' light to be greatfnl. Simple honesty is so rare oi i this world that any honest man will tolerate rt tlire upon hypocrisy to the last degree. Ap- ' b; lying this principle to his many sketches of ypocritical clergymen, Mr. Curtis said that tie clergy themselves ought to take most pleas- 1,1 re in tnsm, for thesame reason that-none are ) much opposed to quacks as good doctors. , 11 [or did Mr. Diekens m any way satirize roli- 11 Ion; It was only "tcelegiaiticism/' the spirit I ^ :ii A . ' ?'J,r»0 yf»f*r* in advnnrp * Copies l>»r ?*10« of ignorance, cruelty, and intolerance mRskinf itself in tbe guise and under the name of txu* religion. It may be said tlmt the processes ol satire may 1m? carried too far ; so far as to con fuse the ridicule of falsely-assumed religion with the ridicule ot religion itself. And tins is true ; but, the speaker said, satire always presupposes intelligence; and no true reformer or worthy and sensible clergyman will ever be disturbed by pictures of Chadbard* the Stigcinses and Sirs. Jellahys. In discuss ing Mr. lMckens's many satires ut on hnmhttp, Mr. Curtis contrasted the sharp, strong worldline?* and self seeking of Mr. Pecksniff. Mr. Chadband, and their tribe, with tLe modern type, whic h is smooth, deprecatory, subservient and sly. and which is illustrated by the portrait if the i>ean itt "Kdwin lirruwt " tlum urhn.i. vi« Curtis said there was no more keen and relent 1- ss txpnse of the modern type of truckling selfishness. (Mr. Curtis read the passage from the n< vel in which the Pean shows himself most plainly, with great dramatic skill and expression ( Mr. Pickens's order of genius was peculiar, and his character drawing savored wf caricature. It was with him as if natural objects were seen through a colored glass, or slightly distorted. His drawings were like / unch'a portraits, woudcrful in their resemblance, and yet uot exact reproductions. And as in Punch a single prominent feature, like the nose, is made to represent and typify as it were the wljnle man, so Mr. Pickens would make a whole character but a sort of variation upon a single trick or habit of language or expression, it is so with dingle, with Mantalini, with Toots, with Major Bagsteok, with Micawber. with Dick Swiveller, ar d with n host of others. When it came to delineating beautiful women, Pickens, like other nov« lists, found himself upon delicate ground. The women in books are almost always too good or too bad. We are told that they are charming, but we do not find that they harm us. They always talk too well or too ill. When they are immaculate, even if they marry the hero, they seem, like Agnes in l'Pavid Copperfield," to be really hisaunt, and not his sweet-heart. Mr. Curtis expressly ex t'opted Little Nell, who, he said, is not so much a figure in a book us a darling in the heart. And lately very many persons had doubtless Telt, when they heard of the death of Mr. Pickens, that he was to he united in heaven to his Little Nell and his Tiny Tim. A genius so Liable and good is its own defense. No author ?\cent Shakesneare tins -o mm>K ». t J ..V...V V* WW I uv. 11 ll» HIC I; now led ge of human nature; none, with the same exception, has enriched literature witli so nanv characters. Ami it may be said of him, is Walter Scott said of Goldsmith, that "he reconciles us to human nuturo." We need nut lespair of human nature when the most hutnau story teller is also the most popular. In speaking of the grievances which Ameri\ms. us Americana, hud cherished against the loyalist, Mr. Curtis defended Dickens, and nude u special point of our infference to his ir>t claims for an international copyright law. . lie found that we were more anxious for his lutogmph, and, those of us who were young adies, for a lock of his hair, than we were to lo him justice. Uesides, we needed, and have ilyvays needed, some one to tell us plain, unveleorae truths; and it is impossible to deny hat Mr. Dickens did this, and in a way which las proved to he salutary. Hut all of these measy feelings were removed by his last visit, vhen, for the first time, the nation and Mr. l>ickens first came to a fair understanding, tnd ie acknowledged in the most open and manly vay that tie had done us injustice. In conclusion, Mr.Curtis depicted with great lelicacy and much pathetic beauty the scene it Mr. Dickon's last reading in this .country, vhen he hade farewell to his audience as it ;he hadow of the great parting had already falleu ipon his spirit. \S hen he disappeared from he platform on that occasion the feeling which illed tho breasts of all was that which fills them iow : "God bless our friend and the world's riend.Charles Dickens !" VI i*<» Lessons. t The recent elections in the South have iinlarted some wise lessons which we trust will be ceded, seriously pondered upon, and the intructions they contain, adopted and given a >radical exemplification. The white men of he South, there styling themselves "conservaives" ami "Reformers,'' have learned that it mpos>ible to lead any conaiderabje number of, olored men away from the Republican party, 'lie white natives therefore must see that, if hev would bo a power in the land, they must Uoeooie to the Republican party. The Orangeburg .Yeu« and Southern Celt, oth edited hy Southern men give expression o rlie following views. The Xeins says: "Why not now do away forever with your ietty objection to a name, to the word Kepubiean, ami array yourselves with the party riiich, from the very nature of things, is dea- 1 ined to be always triumphant, join in the j rand and onward inarch towards making your State a better and freer country ? Is not the ssurance that if you tome thus your voice nil be heard aloud, and your wishes and ours II carried out together, enough, fellow citizens, o cause a 'change to come over the spirit of our dream V Surely you are done now with; our vain opposition to settle facts ! As for us, re would to tiod that every man a interest iu his broad land could be made so identical and inseparable that one man could not work to he injury of his neighbor's rights, witiiout exicriencing a like detriment to his own. This, ...! 1 r .to ... ut-u, wouiu seme rorever tne mar which many f the colored race entertain as to the jeopar y their rights would he thrown into should hey not keep the reins of government in the ands of those in whose fidelity they have no on his." The iiouthern Cmt poiutedJy says : "The men who are in power now, u<> matter rho they may I e. will never w illingly ltt go. t is not human nature. They hold their place s long a* they hold the colored vote, and they old this vote because they write themselves own us Republicans, and show their faith by tieir works. The colored vote came at first to he white native element for guidance, and ow, we say it, the white vote will have to beoiue Republican to win. The 'Reform' nioveicut proves conclusively that it is not enough o adopt every principle; you must adopt the aine. " You cannot roach the colored vote without' nteriug the Republican party as it is in this late, and you cannot reach the State without Another matter : both the poor white and he colored vote will not touch, in this genera on, the bare shadow of the aristocratic spirit, t is dead, and must be buried. You have tried jcial ostracism and political terrorism, you ave tried discharge from employment and very other influence, and what is the result? he country is not yet prepared tor another ivil war, and the Federal (Government would ot hesitate to cover South Carolina with oops, ashes, and graves. The surrender ol .ppoinattox has not lost its virtue by the death f our hero, Lee. Is there any sane man v. ho eJieves that the 'Reform' party of this State in tight the United States, or that martial iw will have any other effect than to strengthen le Republican party ?" The New York Times, which has had a deeded leaning to the movement miscalled, "Reviuc Reform," says that, as a speoifi *d issue in le campaign, it cannot be said to have been gnally successful, even iu quarters where it ight have been supposed to be strongest. It eople were prepared to discard party obligaons to promote it, John Weutworth would ave been elected iu the Chicago District, wuere anywhere, opposition to high protective duties ught to be popular. The defeat of Ignatius OIIIIhIU 111 the Second (lanorwxiaiAnal J f v,VMg4VOVIVUi%l A ' WA I v I t Minnesota, teaches the name lesoon. Ho in the free trade candidate aud was defeated y the Republican nominee. A youth of fifteen wan, ia.-it week, inveigled ito marriage at Nashua, &. II., with u woman forty, iie claims that he was frightened into , and legal rnoas ires are being tansa to annul is ceremony and punish the justice who tied i* uuequal hunt. i i - ^ .- RATES OF ADVERTISING. TEAis3I£i;i ADVEBTI3IKG KATEOf<e io*«*rtioo, p#r «quarA fl Co Sufcjtqiwffit lurtloa tu P.ATS3 *>* YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS, Tbrr* month*. Six month*. Oie'jrar. «tli <vt"nn , i- 4:'y i>no-h«l iiJanin *<> 76 126 On<> culuma 76 I2j yuo TI.«« *pno» (f t-nlli.-* Itr» \u ( type coti*: tut in vef tiring «.pit»r»> hi this yupor. r Any f(Mi» I t!i t lu% ti t< ii t!n<« in charged the rata of a fall square ' All a>'rert;*eTu. nf>. upring less Minn a quarter of a colf nu>u «i *'ipme<1 l.j fi i ir< Adverti^- uieut* ii ^-r t «i fur * lees time timu tiirec ra i::I % are < h irgej r [ iin«ic:it Tfir Union CongnssitNial Hopublimn t'oiitiiiiucc. The wonderful precision, the able manage* ment, ui:d the almost unlimited iutiuence which has char icterired the workings of the Union Congressional Republican Committe it Wash ington, has long since challenged and received the admiration of the messes of the Nation.il Republican party of the Union, whose t»: interests and political welfare, to a great extent, is entrusted to the sagacity and prudent states manship of the managers of this committee. Fueling the necessity for promp* and united action in the presort remarkably vigorous anil | important political campaign, the State and Congressional Committees of the various States have responded with alacrity to the published calls of this committee, and ta this perfect system of reciprocal action, and to the administrative qualities so eminently displayed by the chairman of the com»n»ito<» ii, n»». u';l ...w, i#ii. iirm * »» II- | son, of Massachusetts, ami its d-stinguished secretary, Hon. iaM H. Piatt, .Jr.. much of the glory of the recent grand Republican ana I eeanea in Peeneyhrania, Ohio. Nebraska, ' other States is due. Senator WiMh'a brilliant record in the leg- j I Islative annals of onr country : his unflinching , i fidelity to National Republican principles ; his I eloquent debating the great questions of the j age, and his untiring zeal in the cause of hi* party, have long ago made him one of the brightest l.iioir sries in the constellation of our I living statesmen, and. as Chairman of the Kv ecutive Republican Committee, he has labored 1 with the most gratifying success lor the dissemination and permanency of ti e principles he endorses, and to the shaping of the large results which have recently characterized the j operations of the National Republican party. gj Mr. James H. Piatt. Jr., has deserved the f unqualified plaudits which he has so lavishly 4 received tor the zeal, diligence, energy and farsighted diplomacy with which be lias treated * every TMttioai question that KrMM in tbe din- 4 charge of his multifarious duties, and for the skill with which lie has devoted his fine talent > J 1 to insure the success of the cause he espouses. ! He has, indeed, done yeoman service for the w National Republicans of the Union, ami his % singleness of devotion to his work gains additional merit froru the fact that, though Mr. . Piatt is a candidate for re-election, in Virginia to Congress.he has not for one moment, allow ed his personal interest to interfere with tie* higher interests of his party, hut with patriotic instincts, seldom found now a days, has placed the unity and success of National Republicanism high above any motive of a mere selfish nature. Yoil11of, fine-looking, with a noble address, to good habits, and talents of a high order, we have no hesitancy in predicting tor Mr. Piatt a brilliant career of usefulness to his country, and that he will record his name permanently among the future statesmen the country. The balance of the committee have ably and diligently seconded the efforts of these leading spirits, an l there is no doubt that much of our * successes iu future, as u party, will be due to the untiring zeal and unexceptionable executive management of this committee at the capital ut ; the nation. The National Kepublic&u party should he, nj and is, proud of the centralized political power which the 1 nion Congressional Republican Committee wields with such energetic hands, j| and which is productive of so much good to tself as a party, ami, as a consequence, to the Union, and will, in our opinion, hud it a matter of no little trouble adequately to reward its popular and gifted management. In such handNational Republicanism and its great responsibilities are indeed safe.. True NEWS^lHlilUEF. m . One of the oldest pieces of artillery in the world is in .Met/.. 11 is called the *' Vogel Crief." The Archbishop of Rogota has removed an image of John the Baptist from his Cathedral because the sculptor had dressed John in a stovepipe hut. Sjj The first step to success in politics among 4 M the democracy is saloon keeping. The apple crop of New Knglaud is the largest for many years. Several large bears have recently been killed iu Craig county, Va. There has not been a death iu the family of Joseph Kuslis, of Boston, for fifty years. Chicago seems to have the "hotel fever ' badly. The local elections in Connecticut shows large Republican gains. Helena. Montana, is to have a Chinese news- ij> 1 paper. jl Candidates for the Methodist ministry iu Ohio cannot use tobacco. feflj Vitriol throwing has come again into fa-hion in Detroit. New Chicago, Kan., is only fifteen weeks old, and has *200 houses and two newspapers. A Chinaman, in Uipon. M is., cooks all day with twenty two pounds of wood. F-' Four hundred and fifty eels were lately caught ttin a fish basket iu Juniata Co., Fa. The English wheat crop is estimated t<» have J fallen six million bushels short of last year. It is said that $90,000,000 have been sunk in journalistic enterprises in Aew lorkcitv. A general council of the Indian tribea has been adjourned to the fith of December. ^ Agassiz, during the year, has di>< o\er»*d ten thousand different varieties of the tly. |gij!l The total assets of the banks of Canada aie I J $106,047,293 82, liability ill 9. Jt Excursion trains have boon run over the Mobile and Chattunooga railroad. Providence is to have its srreet lamps lighted HQ and extinguished by electricity. pM A Norwegian giant seven feet and ten inch, s in hight is in Cincinnati. The coast of Florida is strewn with wrecks. Hot Springs, Arkansas, has a population of 1,000. The coast cities of Texas art* in the enjoyment of good health. A Cincinnati manufacturer ships 24,000,(M)o bungs a year. North Collins, Erie county, has $009,288 personal property. The small po\ is racing among the Indians it; ^ me i>oriuweai. Huntington, L. 1., has 348 inhabitants above 7U years of age. The Lorillard e-tate at Fordham has been sold in lots for $17,680. The value of church property in Massachusetts is estimated at $24,487,285. ^ d Fifteeu leading Western railroads earned Kover $50,000,000 the last six mouths. The cattle plague is raging in some of the occupied districts of France J*> The corn crop of the United States for l8l'» ^ is estimated ait 230,000,000 bushels. Maine has in her public-schools 230,167 pupils.a gain of 2,024 siuce 1800. Forpaugh, the circus proprietor, is worth half a million dollars. Doston has twenty driuking fountains, but needs many more. j Wk often hear that a matt "does not know \ what he may ouiue to." 11 is equally true thai he is ignoraut oi what may come to hiiu. N t than ll.iil. of Durham, New Hampshire, in ^ 1833, thanked God that he in a hilly country where it was impossible to build radroads." To-day 11*»' ears >>i the Air Liae Railload run through the door-vard of his placo. betweeu Ins house a..d baru, aud withiu four feet oi Ins aide door. A correspondent oi a country paper in luud, says ho heard u minister de*t»antin<£ on the present war from the pulpit tin other .Sun- i f lav, and in the course of his remarks the divine exclaimed: "Mow horn Me it is to hear 'the sti flii I Ued groans ol tun djm^, together wnli the ahriaka oi the dtadl

Library of Congress · Thehewnationalera, rCSUSSED KVKRVTQUHSDAY MORNING At W««f»lnsrtK) OHy**> c. NEW NATTONAt K1U KTHiWWB.418 11TU HTREET. I HED'KDOUGLASS,Editor. J. H.HANVES,BualnpgiManager

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Page 1: Library of Congress · Thehewnationalera, rCSUSSED KVKRVTQUHSDAY MORNING At W««f»lnsrtK) OHy**> c. NEW NATTONAt K1U KTHiWWB.418 11TU HTREET. I HED'KDOUGLASS,Editor. J. H.HANVES,BualnpgiManager

The hew national era,rCSUSSED

KVKRV TQUHSDAY MORNINGAt W««f»lnsrt K) OHy* *> c.

NEW NAT TON At K1U KTHiWWB. 418 11TU HTREET.

I HED'K DOUGLASS, Editor.J. H. HANVES,Bualnpgi Manager.

or Sub* Rirmirs: S!c~l» copies, |i.50 p*r yf»*rfive r«|»i«* f.»r $10. payable in a^ruuca.>!>prem:riBLlSHEIlS SEW SATIOXAL KHA,

Lack Boa 31.

IXTTERS FROM THE PEOPLE.

l.tttrr from Worren.burg, Mo.

WAr.r.ENfLUCG, Mo., Nov. C. 1ST0.Jo the Ku.ilor of the Xetc Xafional Kra :

We nre rejoiced that God in Lis providencehas so ordered it that the colored people, so

lore oppressed end down trodden, can come upon tl>o scalo of intelligence and show that the)have the nme God-given powers of mind withthe Anglo Savon race. The enormity of theorimo of slavery stands forth moro and more

visibly ns we eee thein, as a race, stepping forwardmorally and intellectually, and. at uo distantday. showing unmistakably that underlying., the dark line of the skin is a mind capable of

accomplishing what the oppressor claimed never

1 > be possible.The exhibition of my husband's colored pupils,"The Howard School," so named because

of Gen. Howard's appropriation of $850 for a

scLool-house, did credit to themselves, beingcalm, self possessed, and perfectly at home intheir pieces and dialogues for rehearsal. Theygratmed and satified the wishes and expectationsof their friends, and surprised that of ttairopposers, or rather non-friends, to their educationalinterests. Five hundred white and fivehundred colored persons were present, id EmpireHall. 1 had selected all their pieces anddialogues, and they had rehearsed them with

o

much care before my husband and myself. Nota failure occurred in a single instance. Thepieces wore of a high-toned character, combiningthe gr.ive. the witty, the humorous, thesatirical, and the moral. Wallace Kuight, ouo

of our pupils, abcut twenty years of age, wholias been but six months tosrbool to Mr.Smith,(all the instruction he hns had,) reads in theFourth Header. 1 had given hira a hard pieceto learn, upon Flanders, a good essay, from thepen of one of our best public educators. Heh:;«J it well committed, and was rehearsing itin Empire IIall, on the evening of the exhibition,when somebody whispered out, " Wheretit 1 you get your thick lips ?" (he is a full typeof the African in lips.) Wallace paid no heed*,but pr veeded perfectly composed. Alter finishing, mv husband stepped forward and said :

*41 am surprised that anyone should so fur forgothimself as to try to break down or insultthe boy by sneh whispering/' repeating aloudthe whisper as he heard it. Two or three whitemen spoke up : ''Let the boys leave the hull ifthey do not wish to hear in silence.." i forcedmyself at the same momont, by aD impulse 1could not resist, forward upon the stage, saying :" Hoys, remember this, that Wallace has hadbut six months of school; remember, too, thatthe same God gave Wallace thick lips who gavey< u and 1 thin cues ; and that the same .Saviourredeemed the colored pupil who redeemed thewhite; and that the same Heaven i» open tothem as to others who love that Saviour whohas died for them." The effect was great;cheers from the audience and clapping of handsshowed that an approval was made of my re.

pro f. I was moved by an unseeu influence 1coulu cot resist, for I felt strong in the strengthgiven me to defend the young colored man

whom I had assisted, after his day's toil was

over, to rehearse his piece at our home, when,perhaps, the boys who were sneering at Lis

^ thick lips were engaged in play or idleness."Wallace works for $! > per months iu the summer,and pays his board when he goes to schoolin the winter.One of Mr. Smith's pupils, F.llu ILldrcge,

sixteen years of age, is touching some of those'* i»« had charge of last winter.fifty one yf tho

young* r; upil*.and is a very successful teacher,nud receives $30 per month. She is very ainbit'.ccs.My husband visit9 her school-roomUu minutes each morning and afternoon to encourageand assist her, he having his recess ata different time. We are very glad that Ellais succeeding so well. It is a great stimulus tothe other pupils. Rut I am protracting rayletter too long perhaps.Tuesday ol this week the colored man gooa

to the polls fur the first time. The Republicanticket will l»e their ticket with but very few exceptions.It is an exciting time for tliem. Myhusband has endeavored to keep them postedon matters pertaining to their interests and tothe interests of the State of Missouri. Theyare an intelligent set of colored men nud wown .the most so, perhaps, taken as whole, inthe State. Some of the cob-red men here, whohave all the elements of a noble manhood, andthe little boys of some, with shining black facesand bright black eyes, in which intellect shinesout clearly, will, some time in the future, if Imistake not. tit! important positions among theeducated and honorable of the land.Our Sabbath school opened five yeara ago

with twenty pupils ; now we have one hundredand twenty.There is wry little intemperance among the

colored inT.nln here IJ.-<4iilt<4 nf InK/ir wTiinmr

them, by >d's blessing, cheers and comfortsour hearts. The Saviour own* and blesses ourwoiks, and thin is what cheer* 08 and incites togreater faithfuiucy*.

VMim, re?].ectfully,Sophia L. Smith.

ktioutl t oiigrcwslonul Dhtrict ofr Virginia.

Norfolk, Va., November 12, 1870.To the Editor of the Sew National Era :

The eventful day has passed, and victoryperched ou the Republican banners. The Democracywas totally routed in thin district.Norfolk bus redeemed herself by giving 241majority for Jain«-a II. Piatt. Jr. The districtlias given him a largely increased majority,thus testifying to its appreciation of Col. Piattand his efforts in behalf of Republican princiiilps.nrin«*irihvsidentical with the rights ofi i 1 n .

man. Republicans in this district huve donetheir whole duty; they were not to be flatteredby the fukoine speeches of Col. Robert R. BobLug, nor deluded by the subtcrfugo of the bolterswho supported W. It. Jones.but this partof the play is hardly worth speaking of. Lessthan fifty men in the whole district have beenfound pimple enough tp throw away their vote»

in this way. A few were honest enough tocome out boldly and vote for Col. Boiling, theDemocratic nominee, which was the practicaleffect of every voste cast for Jones. The resultis gratifying to all honest Republicans. Thisundivided front presented to the enemy augurswell for future battles, proving, as it does, thatif we are true to ourselves tne eaemv cannotstand before as. Let the organization be keptup, let every recruit be obtained that it is possibleto obtain, and the Republican principleseht.ll prevail, securing the welfare of the Republic.On the evening ef Xovember 1st we had the

jltat-re of listening teaepeefk frra

NE\(

VOL. 1..NO. 45.}Secretary Robeson, a speech replete with eloquentpassages aud elaborate in well timedarguments, a speech kind and conciliatory toall. Alas, I am ashamed to say that he was

grossly insulted, and one meeting broken up byconservative roughs, and three Republicanskilled and several wounded by the pistol shots

| from the city police. The unprovoked outragehas as yet received no notice from the city officialswhose duty it was to investigate it, andin ull likelihood will be allowed to go unnotu od.It served to show Republicans the necessity olunited efforts to redeem Norfolk, and if i am

not greatly mistaken next spring will tinJ herunder Republican rule. We have received Urgeadditions of white men into the Republicanranks and expect more,The utter disregard ol law displayed by

the Conservatives in power in this oity forthe past six months lias disgusted someeven of their own number, as is shownby the largely increased white \ote cast forColonel i'latt. The laboring classed are convinced that they have nothing to hope for from

| the Conservatives, and are coming over to ourside. We welcome them with outstretchedhands, and are thus recruiting strength fur

j new conquests. The Democratic party is no

party for the poor man. He belongs amongthose who believe in progress and equal rightsfor all. Let the poor men then tlock to the

| standard of the Republican party; it ha9 alwaysbeen their best friend.it will be infuture time. Rally round its thig, and in 1STDemocracyshall again bite the dust.

John I. Dezknookc.

National I.ahot I nion.

To the Colored Worl.nojhitn of tin t\Trades, Labor, and Industrial I'iu'ohs:

in accordance with Article X, section 1, Constitutionof the Colored National Labor L'uion,adopted in Convention, December y.h, 18f>y, inthe City of Washington, D. the second uninual meeting will bo held at the I nion League| Hall, Washington, D. C., commeneing at Ido'clock M., January lUh, 1871.Your Bttentiim i* »»«.J » -

I#

" 'J v""v 14 lw 1

licle II of the Constitution, section I : " TheNational Labor Union shall he composed of

I such organizations as may now or hereafterexist, having for their object the ameliorationand advancement of the condition of those wholabor for a living.''

I Section 2. Each organization shall be entitledto one representative, and each State Labor

j Union to three for the State at large, in thethe National Labor Union, provided that rcpiresentatives derive their election direct from jthe organization they claim to represent.Your attention is further invited to ArticleI

#I&, Section 1. Each local Organization shallpay a tax of ten cents per member ; each Stateor National Organization, ten dollars. The ]tax of an Organization shall be paid on the jpresentation of the credentials of the delegate,

! and no delegate shall be allowed to take partin the deliberations of the I niou until the tax

j js paid. Delegates will be required to furnishcertified copies of the number of members ofthe Associations they represent. Delegates to,

j the meetings of the Union ure admitted withioat regard to race, color, or sex.

| In addition to the regular report of each Or-gani cation, delegates are requested to inform

I themselves upon the following general questions:

First, What are the occupations in which1 colored men are more generally employed inyour city, county, or State ; the rate of wages;the average time made annually.

Second, The number of schools ; their grade, javerage attendance of scholars; how manysupported by the State; by charitable ins itution ; also, private schools,

j Third, The number of land, building, andco-operative associations ; their value in realestate and cash.

Fourth. What menus or rpnu»<K- in i-nnr

judgment, can best be applied to advance the !I material interest of the workingmo.i in yourj locality and in the United State.-*,

The great importance and necessity of thej organization of labor, for its own benefit andthe development of the industries of the coun|

try, should prompt the workingwen of alloccupations in the several States to send dolegates to this annual meeting ol tho NationalLabor Union.Newspapers throughout the country will

ploA86 copy*ISAAC MVER3, President. j

Lewis II. Dofclab8, Secretary.Sentence of flie Colored Cadet, J.

W. Smith.

General court-martial orders No. 52 havejust been issued from the War Pepartinent,publishing the proceedings, findings, and sentencein the case of James W. Smith, the col!ored cadet at West Point.The first charge was "conduct prejudicial to

good order and military discipline,'* and thespecification alleges that he created a disturb- i

ance in camp by assaulting Cadet John W.Wilson with a dipper and his fists.The second charge was conduct unbecoming

an officer and a gentleman, and tbe specificationstated that "having been reported for replyingto a tile-closer in a highly disrespectful mannerat drill, after having been spoken to in the lineof duty, he did submit to the commandant of

j cadets a written explanation, in whieh he said :"i spoke to no file-closer during the drill, nordid Cadet Corporal Bacon speak to me during !the drill at any timej" which statement was'false.To these specifications and churges the prisonerpleaded "not guilty."The court found Cadet Smith guilty of the

first cha ge and its specification, and not gniltyof the second charge and its specification, andsentenced him "To walk p >st, under charge ofa cadet sentinel, from 2 o'clock P. M. uutil retreat for six consecutive Saturdays."The Secretary of War adds the following order:The proceedings in the case of James

W. Smith, and the finding upon the first| charge ure approved. Ttie opinion of theJudge Advocate General, expressed in bis reviewof the case, that "it is better that thissentence should be disapproved than that the J

i sanction of the Government should be given toa punishment so utterly insufficient as that pro 1j posed to ho inflicted," is concurred in. Thosentence is disapproved.

i to the second charge, although the doubtarising from the evidence as to the mteut ofthe accused, in his denial to the commandant ofcad«ts, might appear to be so slight as hardlyto amount to that reasonable one which in lawwonld justify au acquittal, yet, as the court,upon personal hearing of the case, has, in theexercise of its discretion, given him the beoefitof that doubt, the finding is approved.

C'Qdet James W. Smith is hereby released [from arrest.The Geueral Court Martial, of which BrigadierGeneral O. O. Howard, United States

army, is president, is hereby dissolved.

Gen. Ton Moltke is a native of Parchuner,Mecklenburg Schwerin. On the front of thehouse wherein the great strategist was born .

there is a white marble memorial tablet placed Ibearing in gold latter* th* inscription : " Herswe* born tba Prussian General of Infanirj,Mslmuth Karl Bernbard vun M dike, oa tho99 th of October, 1800." i

VT NAWASHING i't

i *

jThe President and Mr. Co*.WhyMr. ( ox I.eft the Cabinet,

The following correspondence, which is olii-'cial, gives the reason why Mr. Cox left thecabinet:

long branou, X. JM Aug. *2-, 1ST j.[fun. J. />. Cox, Secretary of tlx*' Interior :

Dkar Sir : I understand that you have appointedone day this week to hear argument^in the McGarrahan cose. That is well enough,

. because if Congress should fail to settle thatcase, we may have it to do, and the sooner weknow all the points of it the better. However,as the matter luid boen taken in hand by Congressbefore the incoming of this adminintrajtion, and as so much fraud is charged and believedto exist on both sides, 1 am not willingthat my name should be signed to u p..tent foreither party until Congress has either decided j! or declared their inability to do so.

1 wish you would say to Mr. White, secretaryfor signing patents, not to put my name tothat one, except ou special orders from inethrough you. He must not take orders fromMr. Wilson in the matter. I have grown sus- Ipicioua of Mr. Wilson, and will tell ynu why !when I go to Washington next.

Yours truly, l\ 8. Grant.

I)kpartvent of the l.vtkrior.Washington, Aug. 23,1870.

1Mr Dear Sir : Yours of yesterday is thismorning received, and 1 have given your direc- Itiotis in regard to signing a patent to the NewIdria Company to Mr.White by letter, he beingroutined to his bed by sickness, as I am informed.On the subject of the McOarrnhan business,

itself, t think you must have been misinformedas to its status in Congress. According to the

; formal opinion given hv the Attorney Generallast year, the ease is in no such sense beforeCongress as to interrupt or impede the action ofthe Department under the laws, but parties havethe same right to insist upon a hearing and decisionhere that they hav* in any other casewhere they claim a decision upon their rightm ier explicit provisions of the statutes.Congress has assumed uo peculiar jurisdictionof the subject. MeUarrahau petitioned th»- last

Congress, as he had the preceding Congress, tomake him a grant of land in California iucludedwithin the boundaries named in a pretendedgrant to one Corner., which the Supreme Courtof the United States decided void in 180."). lie Ihas appealed to Congress in vain. At the latesession it was airain before the Judiciary Coin- }mittee of the House of Representatives, r«ndthe parties consented to suspend the contest inthis Department till that committee should pussupon the matter of the petition. The committeedul pass upon if, and by u vote of seven to three ,

determined to report againat granting the1prayer of his petition, and directed Mr. Deters, (of tLat committee, to draw up their report. Mr.Deters' statement of these facts is filed with thepapers in this Department.The New Idria Mining Company now claim

that their business should be taken up and dis-posea 01. aicuarran&n claims, on the otberhand, that the fact that the committee did notfind the opportunity to make their report to the '

House should hold the other parties to still furtherdelay until the next session of Congress.To this the other side reply that it was the actionof the committee that they consented toawait, and quote the printed statements of Me- jGarrahan's counsel before the committee to theeffect that if the committeo decided againstthem they would make no further content. jThe Department as tho Attorney Generaldecided, was not authorized to delay its per-!formance of duty under the law at nil exceptby common consent of the parties in interest, [and has only taken the responsibility of delayin cases when manifest equity required it andwhere action by Congress is probable. Aftercareful inquiry and investigation I think itcleaithat neither of these conditions exist in thepresent case. McGarrahan's original claim hasbeen, now for five years, decided by the Su-preme Court to have been utterly fraudulentand void. He immediately made his effort toobtain relief from Congress, and five years nf

w / J "*jmost industrious and, as I believe unscrupulouseffort, has been futile. Pending these petitionto Congress be attempted to obtain a patent <

from the Department on the ground that thu !lands were only agricultural lands, and did notcontain gold, silver or quicksilver mines, a...lmight therefore be bought at &1.2.J per acreThis was refused by Mr. browning, my prede-CGssor, on the ground that tbe lauds were nun- |tug lands, and tbe New Idriaquicksilver mines ]was notoriously the bone of contention. McGttrrahnnthen sought to force the Department jto issue him a patent by a writ of mandamus !

froiuthe court of the District; and after the ,unprecedented action of that court iu allowing :the writ against mo, after Mr. browning's retirement,the Supreme Court of the L'nitedStates reversed and annulled the proceedings j ^iw the court below, in a judgment which re- < .

tlocted with great severity upon all concerned .

in procuring such action. IMcGarrahan stands before the Department, <therefore, as a fraudulent claimant, who has \twice been foiled and condemned in his fraud | i

by the highest court of the nation, and whose .

efforts to procure favor from Congress havealsc .

failed. II is claim for still further delay, in or- ,der that he may try whether ho cannot yet ob- .

tain legislative action in his favor, which may ,give him that which the courts have determined ,mat ne has uoright to under the law, seems to !

me worse than baseless, and I should feel as if1 wero party to a wrong upon Congress were 1 *

willingty to do anythiug to subject them to ifurther annoyance from such a source. tUnder the opinion of tbe legal adviser of theGovernment, therefore, and in full accordance 1

with ray own sense of right and duty, 1 havesaid that the Department will no longer delay ]in proceeding with its business according tolaw.At this atago I And myself met by another jeffort at obstruction. Mdiarrahau brings suit in

sthe same court of tho District for an injunctionagainst tbe Now Idria Mining Company, to for | *bid thorn from applying for u patent for the tlands they claim under the statute, and that,too, although tho company is in California, j]wholly out of the jurisdiction of the court; inor is it pretended that lawful service of the twrit can be made on them. Their attorneys j,here are made defendants, and the court is ask- j ,

ed to forbid them from prosecuting their cli- cent's case before tho Department which has t

jurisdiction of it; and this, too, when in themandamuscase last winter the Supreme Court (

decided that the jurisdiction of the Depart- fraent was exclusive and absolute, with which rno court could lawfully interfere. 8The Department is not a party to this suit; i

yet 1 have hud to day a notice served upon me ito appear before the court on the '50th instant, sand show cause why an attachment should not tissue against n»e for directing the same officerto go forward with its business. If the FederalExecutive is to be at the mercy of such proceed- $ings as these, we shall justly become the con ctempt of the nation and of the world.To fthow you still further the unblushingknavery of McGarrahau's conduct, a gentle- 1

man allowed me to read a letter directed to hyn tby one of McGurrahan's attorneys, in whicnthe attorney offered for McG. stock in his Call- |fornia claim to the ainonnt of bounty thousand tdollars for the us* of his influence with vu toprocure a favorable action to hiiu in this De- jpartineut. As to appearing before the court, aI am at a loss to know what to do. The Attor- uney General has gone to Georgia, and leaves [no assistant who is an experienced advocate, this Department, as you know, not being fully norganized. The District Attorney, who wouldbe the one to whom I should naturally go next,is Judge Fisher, who was one of the two judges vwho signed the writ of mandamus last >ear, \and, of eourse, ke could not defend the Depart- lmerit without condemning himself; and Oon- tgress last winter, in the act organizing the !>« cpartment of Justice, took away from other l>e «partuicnts the right to employ special coun el. cMy belief is that the Question more gravely «

affecting the diguity of the Executive and its cindependence will be likely to arise during youradministration; and I think the situationfully warrants your telegraphiug the Attorney iGeneral, if not all the cabinet, to meet you here j *before the 50th instant. For myself, as 1 am dconscious of haviug only fought fraud with such s

vigor as I corcld, I can inaxe no compromise j i fc

- * - . . .. .

TIO]SON, D. C.. THTTBSDAY, XOYEMIand if I fail to secure to the fullest extent yourapproval of my cause, I must be<r you to relieveme at once frost duties which, withoutVOiir support, 1 sb dl utterly fail in. liege in 2to be remembered with great respect to Mrs.Grant, I am, very truly, yours.

J. P. Cox.The President.

NuihkI Views I poii 1'olitienl Piindpleiait«l laueM Clearlyi;*presse»l.

M'e give some extracts from a recent l. tterof ' "Warrington," the Boston correspondentcf tho Springfield K'"publican : and thoughthese extracts havo a local application, an 1were intended to influence the voters in Massachusettsthat they might discharge properlytheir duties at the recent election, still theycontain doctrines and principles which tirosound everywhere, find in all times, and maywell apply iu every State of this Union.

41 Warrington*' speaks thus ef Wknokil!Phillips :

The advent of Mr. Phillips in politics at leastgives the people, as well as tho correspondentsand critics, something to talk about, it is all Ivery well to say, " Happy the people whoso annalsare tiresome," hut the occasional appearanceof such people as Jim Fisk iu finance, P.T. Ihirunm in business, and Wendell Phillipsin politics, docs after all tend to mukothc worldlivelier, though by no means better.

* * * * * *' iThis is what ' Warrington "

says of the Bepuhlicanparty: jIt is not necessary to go into excessive rupturesover the Republican party. State or national,in order to take the ground that it oughtto be sustained this autumn. If it is timid, itis no more timid than all great parties are. Ifit is corrupt, its corruption is the fault of thetime and tho people. At any rate, it posses es,not only here, but in all the other States, alarge share of the bold men and the honest <

men. If such men are not in this party, it isbecause guch men do not exist iu this country, iTalk about reforming the politics of the coun- ]try by a prohibition party ! There is no inch i

party nut ol Massachusetts. It orgunized iuMaine iu 1809, and disbanded the next spring, <alter casting ten or twelve thousand votes, it ]has tried its hand in Ohio, and has cast 2,800 \votes out of inn <inn in Mam

^ «ii *» a im u no |fiu° t

portion of the whole vote will he probably less.There in nothing in the issue which it will everbo possible to make national. The Libertyparty made a gradual increase until it hecumo jmerged in the Free Soil party, and then in theRepublican party, its ideas finally getting controlof the country.

Rut the prohibitory principle has been constantlyrunning down for the last half-dozenyears. It is contrary to the spirit of the time,which leads to individual freedom, and the menwho have heretofore been so closely welded toit will have to abandon it, and take the advicewhich Theodore Parker gave them in 18oo andJohn A. Andrew in 18f>5.i. r , try some othermeans of stopping the drinking habits of thepeople. The quack medicine which these greatmen exposed and denounced live and fifteenyears ago is not any the less a quack medicinethat it bears the recommendation of WendellPhillips. Rut whether it is or not, it is clearenough that the question has got to go to thepeople for settlement, and that 110 law on thesubject of the sale of liquor, w hether it bo a

prohibitory or a license law, can stand longafter being enacted by intimidation, trick orsnap judgment. The J*. L. L. found this outin LSb,\ as well as the State Alliance iu I SOS.None of the great victories for anti-slavery leg-isiatioa in Massachusetts, the personal liberty; }b;!l, the removal of Judge Loring, the abolition ,of colored schools, were won by sending up h \lobbyist like Mr. Phillips's "friend" Cuiumings .to buy and sell and log-roll, "in the usual leg- cislative traffic, vote for vote." If they badbeen so won, they would not have stood a great jwhile. * * **

Again :

WHAT TUB KKPUULICAX TARTY HAS DONE. H

This party has not gone far enough for Mr. c

I'hnlips in the labor reform. It passed a ten- *hour law through one branch last winter, which i *

is more than any other party.ever did. It gave ^the Crispins an act of incorporation, just such j1i one as they wanted, and w ithout being bribedX) do it. It established the labor bureau, and Ilas kept it going and made it useful. It has r

kept the State constabulary alive, and has stood 1

tp against the entire repeal of the prohibitorylaw, al a good deal of risk of popular disfavor..l'hat it exempted cider from its operation, with '

Ihe consent of the prohibitionists themselves, f

in the year lHGD, and followed this up by ex- ''impting lager beer in IbTO, by the advice ofTien who have worked more months in the causethan Mr. Phillips has worked days, and spent j ^nore dollars than he has spent cents, is most 1 H

rue. It remains to be soon whether the great 11

jody of the friends of the old statute aie not r

latislied that they did wisely in this. Whatever pthe public judgment may be, it cannot be n*cer- H

tained by the vote for Mr. Phillips, one-third c)f which is to be made up from the Prohibi- j *

.ionists, one third from Labor Reformers, and 0Tne-third from men who desire to sec the lie- *oublican party stung into or out of its propriety, 11

uid are curious to know, perhaps, what our h;reat orator will do with a party at his back. «

Thus, it will be seen, in every State, as in "

Massachusetts, if real temperance can be pro- Qnoted by a political party, it must and will be rihe Republican party that does it. The Denocracy19 the dram-shop party. ^lion Jiulgv llerriek wan Elecled.

It is the boast of some of the Maryland cop-jerhead papers that they carried that State iuipite of the colored vote, and without any aidherefrom. We wish it wore so, but the AnlapolisGazette says:All the tricks and appliances long known to,

ind practiced by, the Loc >focos were broughtnto requisition. Its forces were thoroughlyIrilled ; its speakers (and their name was Lotion)went everywhere spouting forth all sorts! 1 i. > v . .....

>i cmp-uup Hnu urmaing nau vvnisKy wmi tneir polored brethren; their committeemen, with asockets full of "rocks," were constantly on the »«

dert and assiduous in their polite consideration t>f Sambo; their hired negro orators made >Yantie appeals in behalf of their late yoke- hnasters; their headquarters in this city wereiblaze at night with gas lights, uproarous be- tow with oratory, applause, and defiance, whilst j aip stairs secret committees held nightly ses- ^lions [dotting and rehearsing their schemes and f<ricks. 1 n

Jos 111*a Leavitt..On the occasiou of the[olden wedding of Joshua Leavitt and wife, theither day, one of the reporters interviewed the n

reteran Liberty party advocate, and gathered bhis wise expression from him regarding the ^emperanee reform : j jj

1 have never hold that there was any analogy uletweeu intemperance and slavery, nor advoca* tled the making of the former a political issue,ilavery was, from every consideration of hu- s;

uanity, statesmanship and political economy, tlnational crime. Intemperance is an Individ- plal vice.a terrible destructive one, it is true. titold Mr. Sumner only yesterday that I gbought the Prohibitionists were making a great h

uistake in Massachusetts. o

A gentleman, who, at the beginning of the j tlirar, was in Paris, visited tDe American Fin- b>ussy one day, and there found the Gorman, vvhe English, the French, the Italian, the Turk, uhe iSjutuiard, Mexican, Malay, Kanaka, Afri- oan, Chinese.men from all the islands of the i p(ea and all the far quarters of the globe, whom 1 tlhancc had thrown together in that focus of 0iv.lizatiou, come to claim citizenship ami sue* bor from the great Republic. hi

Susan Cooper, daughter of the celebrated hAmerican novelist, Fenimore Cooper, resides | tjt the old homestead in Cooperstowu, X.Y., uud uevoles much of her time to a hospital for the 8,ick and infirm, which w«# founded chiefly by $icr effort*. i g\

z__

5ER 17, 1870.From the 1>--ton C<mimonwoatth.

(-eor^o UillfaiM C urtis on I'hai U ^l>ifkcii»."

i»ARKEP. rRATBRNITV I.ECTVRF.

Mr. Curtis, iu beginning, spoke of the wonderful nnd inexplicable power of the imaginationin charming the soul. The storv teller isas inevitable a figure in history as IVter theHermit or Peter tlie Crest. The instinctivelove of the world answers the objections tostorytelling as completely ui the bobolink'ssong answers the Quaker's objections tos ngii g.Its power embraces every age and every race,from the school-boy, to whose intellectual palatethe story comes as the raspberry-tart to bissense of taste, with a kneenness of pleasurenever again to be realized, to tlie old niaa. inwhom almost any other desire is extingui lied.At this moment in kings' palaces, in Mpialidcabins, in camps where armies are gathered, in

i ll . 41. 1.. .an 11vt*r uii' w rill. t..« ?», w. tin l»and children are listening. Ian ghing and weepingas the story-teller plica his urr. If is liewho revenges us for the moan details of evervdaylife ; or. rather, who invests them ali with

a new and unwonted beauty. His fancy is feetto the lame, eyes to the blind, faith to the despondent.Coming directly t<» the man of whom ho wasto speak, who was one of the greatest of thesecomforters of men, Mr. Curtis recalled the experienceof three years ago. when w e were assembledto see and hear the successor of WalterScott; and the speaker paused to draw abeautiful-graphic picture t f the great Wizardof the North, of the hearing, face and dress ofthe man who wan personally ro >re loved than

any of his contemporaries. Thence returningto the scene of which he began to speak, andpartly to enforce the diTerence iu the jposonnelleof the two men. Mr. Curtis described thescene at one of Dicken's readings, when, punctuallyat the hour of beginning, a door suddenlyopened, a man entered, briskly ran up thesteps, passed quickly across the platform, andbefore the audience had fairly time to noticehis personal traits, arid to discover that he wasdressed in accordance with the strictest rigor offashion, he; an his little introductory announce-merit to tin* audience, and was presently embarkedupon the pages of the "ChristinasCarol."

It was 1Joiner uttering once more the Siege I>f Troy; Defoe rehearsing the narrative of sUobinsou Crusoe; ( ervautes repeating the 1itory ot 1'on t^uixoto; once more we were 1children f itting at the feet of the story-teller. :' That man is either insane or reading Hon 1Quixote," sa d a king, who saw from his win- *iow a person rolling and tumbling upon the 1ground ; in like manner it might be said, "That j 4ludienro is distracted, or Dickens is reading Jhe trial scene in l'iokwickto them.''The difference betwee# the persons of Sir (W alter and Dickens was no greater than the 1lifferenoe between their .V»*r<won*a 91 * *« *

. * " 1. ...... V«;i -

. I 11 :is Ili listrated by a comparison of their relations to 'oyalty. "M lien that absurd king, George the 'r'ourtli, upon whom satire exhausted itself 5vhon it ( ailed him the "Urst gentleman in lui- 'ope," visited Edinburgh, and feasted there. 1sir Walter was anxious to keep the glass that }he royal lips lmd pressed; but when Queen >Victoria, who certainly meant no rudeness, re 1jueeted Mr. Dickens to take part in an enter- *ainment at her palace, he declined to come 1is an actor where he was not welcome us n xtuest. Mr. Curtis drew out nt considerableength the parallel between tlie two great nov- ''lists, sketching Sir Walter, in a charming xiicture, as a guest of Sir lloger de Coverly.lelighticg the old knight with his stoi es, in '

vhieh no dangerous doctrines were hidden.and nlending his host to bed to dream of an English- Nnan's heaven, in which the lower classes knew sheir place, his lust waking thought a vague 1

mprcssion that everybody in England dined x

ipon roast beef. As the latter part of epitaphss the best and strongest, so Scott's stories, in 1

pircd by feudalism, were its last and its noblestlefensc.orwvn mug mo oati scenes :n the l iterifo of Scott, when he was lonely, aged, de>rivedof his family, au impoverished, an em- '

>arrassed man, and touching upon the peace .md heauty of bin death, Mr. Curtis went on to[escribe the sort ol paralysis which thereuponel! upon the tic*ion of Kngland. The throne 8v'as vacant, hut no one said, ' Long live the jdng," for there was no king to succeed. l>yr-n tnd Shelley were dead ; Keats, the nightingale, fiad pressed the thorn to his heart and had>asscd away ; Wordsworth, whose ode to "1m- 11uortality ' hud made him immortal, was writ- eiig sonnets to capital punishment; Tummy |looto was tinkling his guitar under the win- tlows of duchesses; and Campbell was tehearsrighis sonorous songs at public dinners. Mean 11vhile llulwer was busy diluting ltyron ; Mi.ames, friend of our youth, was getting his two ijlOrsemen comfortably seated in tlo-ir saddles jnd ready to start upon their long journey;Lisa Kdgeworth was painting her portraits olyoung lady ; Ainsworth was making his offerngs at the shrine of St, Turpin ; Captain Mar 1'yat was making everybody hcm sick with his hea novels ; and Carl vie had made his appear- vncC- rmnntr ni> «»<«! . 1

,««.v. .../mi, miii «nuri!ng IJls 1

ontenipt tor "sliams".-when the notes of Plood's ".Song of the Shirt" and "The Bridge "

f Sighs" made themselves heard, rising up to ahe ears of delicate ladies, and audible even vmidst the clink of glasses ; the tlrst echo that alad been hoard in Kuglandof Hums'* "A Man's 1Man for a Ihat. This was the beginning Vf anew era. Now the scene was changed; >he servants and not the masters were talked v

f; the hovel took its turu with the drawing- 1ooni, and the fiction of the country was born, i1lu this particular our time to«k the first rank, t

)urs is the age of English fiction, as the age ol IJ'hxabeth is that of English poetry and flu* tCnglish drama. And, unlike the drama, lit; oion is with us a great moral force. We see it dn every story-teller of the times ; iu Wilkie *'ollins exposing the iniquity of the Scotch mar hiage laws, and of the English statutes which dutiordinAte the wife to the husband ; in Disaeliprodueing the most stinging satire uponurYisni and deprecating the political influence vf Koituanism ; in Charles Heade dealing with 1he problems of labor and its relations to cupi 11ul. Demosthenes now has yielded to Dickens, h'ursuiug this train of thought, Mr. Curtis said dutense moral purpose was the great charac tieristic of Dickens as a novelist, lie did uot tlreach sermons, but none the less was his mor- »>1 purpose depicted in every volume. Even cPickwick" has tor one of its principal objects »he improving of debtors' prisons ; ''Nicholas t<n'icklehy" deals with cruel schoolmasters and nard schools; "Oliver Twist" with poorhouses;David Copperfiold" with model prisons; "Lit- ele Dorrit" with t;.e " ircumlocution office" ^nd "Bleak House'5 with the long winter of it'huncery. Before Dickens, poverty and suf- tlsring had not been heard. Charles Dickens titade wretchedness eloquent; he compelled, 1lie refined to look and listen ; and so we thinkf him as a man and a reformer rather than as Ur. n^f ial i.m.I .ni/liAr II/l unl a.Ia.1 ....II"--At <111101 I111U auviiv/l i AAV nil I lit j'WIMIU *

lind, and made it soft and fruitful for seed to Ie sown by the hand of others as well as hiin- ' cielf. He was as genuine as Englishman as n

>efoe, but he compelled his countrymen to tisteu to him, not through his caustic" gravity ^nd bitterness, but by his winning grace and O!le magic of his marvellous humor. bWe do not diminish the praise of Dickens in ci

lying that he was less a great ariist and author lilan a great reformer. A ai>rt of great street- tlreadier he was, preaching the fatherhood 01rod and the brotherhood of man ; but notlootay, rather leading the chorus of the world's ^ealthy laughter. In all this his means were ei

f the simplest, his philosophy of the plainest, tlis philanthropy a rather homely British nhilan- di

'iropy, which concerned itself first witfi feed- r-'

ig the hungry and warming the cold. lie had Phat is common with great geniuses.though tilen with little genius do not find if out.plenty h«f common sense. He was not deluded by l*arodies. IJeuce his many satirical pictures of 01

tie mock virtues. But for them all good men I'light to be greatfnl. Simple honesty is so rare oii this world that any honest man will tolerate rt

tlire upon hypocrisy to the last degree. Ap- ' b;lying this principle to his many sketches ofypocritical clergymen, Mr. Curtis said thattie clergy themselves ought to take most pleas- 1,1

re in tnsm, for thesame reason that-none are) much opposed to quacks as good doctors. ,

11

[or did Mr. Diekens m any way satirize roli- 11

Ion; It was only "tcelegiaiticism/' the spirit I ^

:iiA .

' ?'J,r»0 ?» yf»f*r* in advnnrp* r» Copies l>»r ?*10«

of ignorance, cruelty, and intolerance mRskinfitself in tbe guise and under the name of txu*religion. It may be said tlmt the processes olsatire may 1m? carried too far ; so far as to confuse the ridicule of falsely-assumed religionwith the ridicule ot religion itself. And tins istrue ; but, the speaker said, satire always presupposesintelligence; and no true reformer orworthy and sensible clergyman will everbe disturbed by pictures of Chadbard* theStigcinses and Sirs. Jellahys. In discussing Mr. lMckens's many satires ut on hnmhttp,Mr. Curtis contrasted the sharp, strong worldline?*and self seeking of Mr. Pecksniff. Mr.Chadband, and their tribe, with tLe moderntype, whic h is smooth, deprecatory, subservientand sly. and which is illustrated by the portraitif the i>ean itt "Kdwin lirruwt " tlum urhn.i. vi«Curtis said there was no more keen and relent1- ss txpnse of the modern type of trucklingselfishness. (Mr. Curtis read the passage fromthe n< vel in which the Pean shows himself mostplainly, with great dramatic skill and expression(

Mr. Pickens's order of genius was peculiar,and his character drawing savored wfcaricature.It was with him as if natural objects were seenthrough a colored glass, or slightly distorted.His drawings were like / unch'a portraits, woudcrfulin their resemblance, and yet uot exactreproductions. And as in Punch a single prominentfeature, like the nose, is made to representand typify as it were the wljnle man,so Mr. Pickens would make a whole characterbut a sort of variation upon a single trick orhabit of language or expression, it is so withdingle, with Mantalini, with Toots, with MajorBagsteok, with Micawber. with Dick Swiveller,ar d with n host of others. When it came todelineating beautiful women, Pickens, likeother nov« lists, found himself upon delicateground. The women in books are almost alwaystoo good or too bad. We are told thatthey are charming, but we do not find that theyharm us. They always talk too well or tooill. When they are immaculate, even if theymarry the hero, they seem, like Agnes inl'Pavid Copperfield," to be really hisaunt, andnot his sweet-heart. Mr. Curtis expressly ext'opted Little Nell, who, he said, is not so mucha figure in a book us a darling in the heart.And lately very many persons had doubtlessTelt, when they heard of the death of Mr.Pickens, that he was to he united in heaven tohis Little Nell and his Tiny Tim. A genius soLiable and good is its own defense. No author?\cent Shakesneare tins -o mm>K .» ».

tJ ..V...V V* WW I uv. 11 ll» HICI; now ledge of human nature; none, with thesame exception, has enriched literature witli sonanv characters. Ami it may be said of him,is Walter Scott said of Goldsmith, that "hereconciles us to human nuturo." We need nutlespair of human nature when the most hutnaustory teller is also the most popular.In speaking of the grievances which Ameri\ms.us Americana, hud cherished against theloyalist, Mr. Curtis defended Dickens, andnude u special point of our infference to hisir>t claims for an international copyright law. .

lie found that we were more anxious for hislutogmph, and, those of us who were youngadies, for a lock of his hair, than we were tolo him justice. Uesides, we needed, and haveilyvays needed, some one to tell us plain, unveleoraetruths; and it is impossible to denyhat Mr. Dickens did this, and in a way whichlas proved to he salutary. Hut all of thesemeasy feelings were removed by his last visit,vhen, for the first time, the nation and Mr.l>ickens first came to a fair understanding, tndie acknowledged in the most open and manlyvay that tie had done us injustice.In conclusion, Mr.Curtis depicted with greatlelicacy and much pathetic beauty the sceneit Mr. Dickon's last reading in this .country,vhen he hade farewell to his audience as it ;hehadow of the great parting had already falleuipon his spirit. \S hen he disappeared fromhe platform on that occasion the feeling whichilled tho breasts of all was that which fills themiow : "God bless our friend and the world'sriend.Charles Dickens !"

VI i*<» Lessons.t

The recent elections in the South have iinlartedsome wise lessons which we trust will beceded, seriously pondered upon, and the intructionsthey contain, adopted and given a>radical exemplification. The white men ofhe South, there styling themselves "conservaives"ami "Reformers,'' have learned that itmpos>ible to lead any conaiderabje number of,olored men away from the Republican party,'lie white natives therefore must see that, ifhev would bo a power in the land, they mustUoeooie to the Republican party.The Orangeburg .Yeu« and Southern Celt,oth edited hy Southern men give expressiono rlie following views.The Xeins says:"Why not now do away forever with your

ietty objection to a name, to the word Kepubiean,ami array yourselves with the partyriiich, from the very nature of things, is dea- 1ined to be always triumphant, join in the jrand and onward inarch towards making yourState a better and freer country ? Is not thessurance that if you tome thus your voicenil be heard aloud, and your wishes and oursII carried out together, enough, fellow citizens,o cause a 'change to come over the spirit ofour dream V Surely you are done now with;our vain opposition to settle facts ! As for us,re would to tiod that every man a interest iuhis broad land could be made so identical andinseparable that one man could not work tohe injury of his neighbor's rights, witiiout exicriencinga like detriment to his own. This,...! 1 r .to ...

ut-u, wouiu seme rorever tne mar which manyf the colored race entertain as to the jeopary their rights would he thrown into shouldhey not keep the reins of government in theands of those in whose fidelity they have noonhis."The iiouthern Cmt poiutedJy says :"The men who are in power now, u<> matter

rho they may I e. will never w illingly ltt go.t is not human nature. They hold their places long a* they hold the colored vote, and theyold this vote because they write themselvesown us Republicans, and show their faith bytieir works. The colored vote came at first tohe white native element for guidance, andow, we say it, the white vote will have to beoiueRepublican to win. The 'Reform' nioveicutproves conclusively that it is not enougho adopt every principle; you must adopt theaine." You cannot roach the colored vote without'

nteriug the Republican party as it is in thislate, and you cannot reach the State without

Another matter : both the poor white andhe colored vote will not touch, in this generaon, the bare shadow of the aristocratic spirit,t is dead, and must be buried. You have triedjcial ostracism and political terrorism, youave tried discharge from employment andvery other influence, and what is the result?he country is not yet prepared tor anotherivil war, and the Federal (Government wouldot hesitate to cover South Carolina withoops, ashes, and graves. The surrender ol.ppoinattox has not lost its virtue by the deathf our hero, Lee. Is there any sane man v. hoeJieves that the 'Reform' party of this Statein tight the United States, or that martialiw will have any other effect than to strengthenle Republican party ?"

The New York Times, which has had a deededleaning to the movement miscalled, "ReviucReform," says that, as a speoifi *d issue inle campaign, it cannot be said to have beengnally successful, even iu quarters where itight have been supposed to be strongest. Iteople were prepared to discard party obligaonsto promote it, John Weutworth wouldave been elected iu the Chicago District, wuereanywhere, opposition to high protective dutiesught to be popular. The defeat of IgnatiusOIIIIhIU 111 the Second (lanorwxiaiAnal

J f v,VMg4VOVIVUi%l A ' r» WA I v I

t Minnesota, teaches the name lesoon. Hoin u« the free trade candidate aud was defeatedy the Republican nominee.

A youth of fifteen wan, ia.-it week, inveigledito marriage at Nashua, &. II., with u womanforty, iie claims that he was frightened into

, and legal rnoas ires are being tansa to annulis ceremony and punish the justice who tiedi* uuequal hunt. i i

- ^ .-

RATES OF ADVERTISING.TEAis3I£i;i ADVEBTI3IKG KATEOf<eio*«*rtioo, p#r «quarA fl CoSufcjtqiwffit lurtloa tu

P.ATS3 *>* YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS,Tbrr* month*. Six month*. Oie'jrar.«tli <vt"nn , i- 4:'yi>no-h«l iiJanin *<> 76126On<> culuma 76 I2jyuoTI.«« *pno» (f t-nlli.-* Itr» \u ( type coti*: tut in veftiring «.pit»r»> hi this yupor.

r Any f(Mi» I t!i t lu% ti t< ii t!n<« in charged the rata of a fallsquare' All a>'rert;*eTu. nf>. r» upring less Minn a quarter of a colfnu>u «i *'ipme<1 l.j fi i ir<Adverti^- uieut* ii ^-r t «i fur * lees time timu tiirec ra i::I %are < h irgej r [ iin«ic:it

Tfir Union CongnssitNial Hopublimnt'oiitiiiiucc.The wonderful precision, the able manage*ment, ui:d the almost unlimited iutiuence whichhas char icterired the workings of the UnionCongressional Republican Committe it Washington, has long since challenged and receivedthe admiration of the messes of the Nation.ilRepublican party of the Union, whose t»: interestsand political welfare, to a great extent,is entrusted to the sagacity and prudent states

manship of the managers of this committee.Fueling the necessity for promp* and unitedaction in the presort remarkably vigorous anil| important political campaign, the State andCongressional Committees of the various Stateshave responded with alacrity to the publishedcalls of this committee, and ta this perfect systemof reciprocal action, and to the administrativequalities so eminently displayed by thechairman of the com»n»ito<» ii, n»». u';l...w, i#ii. iirm * »» II- |son, of Massachusetts, ami its d-stinguishedsecretary, Hon. iaM H. Piatt, .Jr.. much ofthe glory of the recent grand Republican ana Ieeanea in Peeneyhrania, Ohio. Nebraska,' other States is due.

Senator WiMh'a brilliant record in the leg- jI Islative annals of onr country : his unflinching ,i fidelity to National Republican principles ; his Ieloquent debating the great questions of the jage, and his untiring zeal in the cause of hi*party, have long ago made him one of thebrightest l.iioir sries in the constellation of ourI living statesmen, and. as Chairman of the Kvecutive Republican Committee, he has labored

1 with the most gratifying success lor the disseminationand permanency of ti e principleshe endorses, and to the shaping of the largeresults which have recently characterized thej operations of the National Republican party. gjMr. James H. Piatt. Jr., has deserved the funqualified plaudits which he has so lavishly 4received tor the zeal, diligence, energy and farsighteddiplomacy with which be lias treated *every TMttioai question that KrMM in tbe din- 4charge of his multifarious duties, and for theskill with which lie has devoted his fine talent > J1 to insure the success of the cause he espouses.! He has, indeed, done yeoman service for the wNational Republicans of the Union, ami his %singleness of devotion to his work gains additionalmerit froru the fact that, though Mr.

.Piatt is a candidate for re-election, in Virginiato Congress.he has not for one moment, allowed his personal interest to interfere with tie*higher interests of his party, hut with patrioticinstincts, seldom found now a days, has placedthe unity and success of National Republicanismhigh above any motive of a mere selfishnature.

Yoil11of, fine-looking, with a noble address, togood habits, and talents of a high order, wehave no hesitancy in predicting tor Mr. Piatta brilliant career of usefulness to his country,and that he will record his name permanentlyamong the future statesmen o£ the country.The balance of the committee have ably anddiligently seconded the efforts of these leadingspirits, an l there is no doubt that much of our *

successes iu future, as u party, will be due tothe untiring zeal and unexceptionable executivemanagement of this committee at the capital ut ;the nation.The National Kepublic&u party should he, njand is, proud of the centralized political powerwhich the 1 nion Congressional RepublicanCommittee wields with such energetic hands, j|and which is productive of so much good to

tself as a party, ami, as a consequence, to theUnion, and will, in our opinion, hud it a matterof no little trouble adequately to reward itspopular and gifted management. In such handNationalRepublicanism and its great responsibilitiesare indeed safe.. True

NEWS^lHlilUEF.m .

One of the oldest pieces of artillery in theworld is in .Met/.. 11 is called the *' Vogel Crief."The Archbishop of Rogota has removed an

image of John the Baptist from his Cathedralbecause the sculptor had dressed John in astovepipe hut. SjjThe first step to success in politics among 4 Mthe democracy is saloon keeping.The apple crop of New Knglaud is the largestfor many years.Several large bears have recently been killed

iu Craig county, Va.There has not been a death iu the family of

Joseph Kuslis, of Boston, for fifty years.Chicago seems to have the "hotel fever '

badly.The local elections in Connecticut shows

large Republican gains.Helena. Montana, is to have a Chinese news- ij> 1

paper. jlCandidates for the Methodist ministry iuOhio cannot use tobacco. fefljVitriol throwing has come again into fa-hionin Detroit.New Chicago, Kan., is only fifteen weeks

old, and has *200 houses and two newspapers.A Chinaman, in Uipon. M is., cooks all daywith twenty two pounds of wood. F-'Four hundred and fifty eels were lately caught ttina fish basket iu Juniata Co., Fa.The English wheat crop is estimated t<» have Jfallen six million bushels short of last year.It is said that $90,000,000 have been sunk in

journalistic enterprises in Aew lorkcitv.A general council of the Indian tribea has

been adjourned to the fith of December. ^Agassiz, during the year, has di>< o\er»*d tenthousand different varieties of the tly. |gij!lThe total assets of the banks of Canada aie I J$106,047,293 82, liability ill 9.Jt

Excursion trains have boon run over theMobile and Chattunooga railroad.Providence is to have its srreet lamps lighted HQand extinguished by electricity. pMA Norwegian giant seven feet and ten inch, s

in hight is in Cincinnati.The coast of Florida is strewn with wrecks.Hot Springs, Arkansas, has a population of

1,000.The coast cities of Texas art* in the enjoymentof good health.A Cincinnati manufacturer ships 24,000,(M)obungs a year.North Collins, Erie county, has $009,288

personal property.The small po\ is racing among the Indians it; ^

me i>oriuweai.

Huntington, L. 1., has 348 inhabitants above7U years of age.The Lorillard e-tate at Fordham has beensold in lots for $17,680.The value of church property in Massachusettsis estimated at $24,487,285.

^ dFifteeu leading Western railroads earned Kover$50,000,000 the last six mouths.The cattle plague is raging in some of the

occupied districts of France J*>The corn crop of the United States for l8l'» ^is estimated ait 230,000,000 bushels.Maine has in her public-schools 230,167pupils.a gain of 2,024 siuce 1800.Forpaugh, the circus proprietor, is worthhalf a million dollars.Doston has twenty driuking fountains, butneeds many more. jWk often hear that a matt "does not know \what he may ouiue to." 11 is equally true thaihe is ignoraut oi what may come to hiiu. N tthan ll.iil. of Durham, New Hampshire, in ^1833, thanked God that he in a hillycountry where it was impossible to build radroads."To-day 11*»' ears >>i the Air Liae Railloadrun through the door-vard of his placo.betweeu Ins house a..d baru, aud withiu fourfeet oi Ins aide door.A correspondent oi a country paper in

luud, says ho heard u minister de*t»antin<£ onthe present war from the pulpit tin other .Sun- i flav, and in the course of his remarks the divineexclaimed: "Mow hornMe it is to hear 'the sti flii IUed groans ol tun djm^, together wnli theahriaka oi the dtadl