Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 4, 1874, Page 4

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THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1874 TRRME OF SUDACRIPTION \YALLE IN ADVANOE). ally, by il S 12,00 | Bundy R SO0 ] S Tartaof myosr at tha same rato, To provent dolsy nnd mistakos, bo sure aud givo Post Offico address in full, including State and County. Rolttances may bo mado olthor by dratt, exjiross, Post Ofiica ordor, o tn roglatared lotters, at our risks TEANS 70 CITY AUBRORIDENG. Datly, doltvered, Bunday excoptoa, 3 cante per weok. Dally, golivored, Buuday includod, 30 conts yor wook, Add) PUE TRIBUNIE COMPANY, Cornor Madison and Dearbor: Uhloago, Ll TO-DAY'S AMUSEMENTS. ¥ Y TRE—Madlson atroet, botweon SAeLorn At Bitise Soptsaomant ot Bk Botworn " Our American Couils ACADEMY OF BUSIC—Halnted stroot, botwoan Mad. £ of tho 'Vokos Family. o Weons hion 1o chs A Fldgo b, ADRLPHI THRATRE-Cornor of Wabash avonuo t Varioty Vorformonce, Lo.L, i Da G rivas, Me W, isior ot HEATRE-Nos, 218-23 Wost Madison Tt AR oty Battoruminon, 1ha dackiere, to. N BUILDING- Lakoshora, faot of Adams. attenty ROy Moot At aeres foot ‘ovoning. —— e ISINESS NOTICES. WRNICS DOINGS IN WALL BTRERT. TX~ tiona o smal Gupltal sritliont. fink, o tont Teoo. TUM DG COrr o Weliatat ! 8 GIf T DIOOD, \r-producing offoots aro vi Tty st mutia s forn i HiaR 1t idny shianes. i m bjocts upon which 1 intglt writo R R R Ty A e L AL on bad blood aro curod, or Lost troated, by oo an izt e necs, OF pLIAL Sotated: by from tho aystom the noxluus elomonts, it 1s not of prio= tieal fiuportanoo that I should desoribe each. TFor In. ntauco, medical authors desoribe about Afty variotics of ‘thoy all roquiro’ for thiels guro vooy of 5o prscticnt ity to ko Jit hat 0 ly Lo a cortain form of l soase, o0 know hove Dant o ouralte. Tien again L misht oo and doseribe varlous kiuds of sorofulous sores, fover Barus, whito awellings, oniargod glands, and Hlors of va. yingd sppoarance: lglit doworibo liow virulont poison Finy how dtsolf tn formuat spuptlont, wlcars. sors ot Jony Sumo, ote.| DAt oa il tiso witioua nppcar: ing manifostations of bad blood are cured Ly o uniforin means, } deein such a course unnocosgary. Thoroughly clonpts tieblood, whloha tho eeent i of e, nad 8 TaIr Bk, Duosantapirits, i, P R M e T 5 " Plor on Modiea] Blscovery aud 0 Pellotn are pro-ominonf 8 articles uended, et e e Salt Tthoum, Soald Giat or Eryelnoins, Tiinge ous Sorea and iwolliugs, Kov \imors, O13 & Srellings, Afloctie 2'"’:{' and_ Tionos, nud loora of tho Li Kidu The Chicage Teibune, Thursday Morning, June 4, 1874. Cnpt. Eds’ plan for decponing the channel of tho Missiesippi at its mouth by moaus of jotties is epitomized in tho Washington dispatches. It providos that Erds shall Lo paid $11,- 000,000 in cnso he socures s clinnnel of twenty-oight foot. As MoCrary romarked in 4ho Houso, when the bill eame up for considora- ton, it is too much like the Banborn contract, It the work is to bo dono, it should be done by the Government, Itis rumored in Washington that Morton ia gotting up a now party whose fundamontal prin- ciplo shall bo unlimited inflation. Thero nm;d bo no groat alarm nmong tho faithtul. Morton 18 not that kind of aman, His real intention 1a to rond Prosident Grant and ovorybody elss who oppores tho papor-monoy mchemo out of -tho frolghtd woro notivo and onslor, at 43¢0 for corn by sall to Buffalo. Tlour was dull and un- changod. Whoat was loss notive and 1o highor, closing at $1.183¢ onsh, §1,183¢ solior July, and 122 for No. 2 Minnowots, Corn wan notivo and J{@Xo lower, closing firm at Gi6}ge cash, and B6){@0B630 mollor July, Oatswors in goodl do- mand, aud 3@1o highor, closing nt 45340 ongh, and 423¢0 sollor July, Ityo was quiet aud un- changed at 00o. Darloy was quiat and firmer, solling at 81,06 for No, 3, Iogs wore dull and 100 lowor. Cattlo wero weak. Bhoop Insotive. 0 auit which has boon {nsti- tuted in tho United Statos Olrouit Comrt at Madigon, by boudholders of the Northwestorn Ttailroad, tave nob boon correotly atated. Tho objact of the procosding is to onjoin tho Com- Dpany from accopting tho torms and provislons of tho Pottor law. Tho dofondauts aro tho Wis- consin Railway Commissioners, tho Attornoy- Goneral of Wisconsin, and tho Northwestern Com- pany. Thoinjunction is prayed for &t n monsuro of proteation to tho proporty-rights of bond- bolders aud stookkolders. M. L. Bykos, Jr., o Vico-Prosident of tho Compuny, supports tho nllogations of tho plaintiffs in an silidavit, from which it appenrs that tho seouritios of the Com- pany have dopreciatod in value sinco tho passage of tho Dolter law about $5,500,- 000, and this shrinkago hms occurrod al- though many non-dividend stocks Linve ad- voncod. BIr. Sykos snys that Wiscousin railway securitios are known on Wall atrect ag Grangor stooks," and aro studiously nvolded, sololy on naccount of tho recout logislation in that State.’ —— Trof. Patton's ronsons for appoaling from the docision of tho Prosbytory of Chicago are arbitrarily grouped by bim undor fivo heads: (1) Irregularition in tho procoodings. (2) Hur- rying to n-decision boforo mportant tostimony wag takon, (3) Projudico.” (4) Mistako. (5) Injuatico, or n thoologioal Profossor, and ono who protonds to minke mico distinctions, such o classifieation is not creditablo, It botrays » want of logical facully, which is Prof, Patton's strong point, it he hns any. Tho Loads of his argument should not bo moro than two, viz: (1) Irrogularitios and (2) projudico. All tho specifications onumerated fall naturally undor this grouping, or aro improper for tho caneideration of an appellato court. Aside from tho slovonly manner in which tho reasona® aro jumbled togother, tho appeal will atrike tho gonoral public as worthy of tho prosocutor's roputation for goneral abil. ity ond honest dogmatism, That pare of it Which relates to projudico on tho partof tho Presbytory can Lardly bo controvorted. But it is another quostion tvhothor tho projudico was, | %0 strong 88 to overcome tho cousciontious scruplos of Prosbyters in making up a final ver- dict, To suatain this chargo, Prof. Patton muss convict his copresbytors of dishonesty, An anti-tomperanco party is within tho possi- bilitles of tho immodiate future, This reflection should give somo welght to tho procoedings of the National Browers’ Congross in Doston, a fall xoport of which is published in anothor column, The browera lave issued an ad- JRepublican party, if by any moans he can com- pass this ond without imperiling his own precious ‘porson. ——— Party manngors who huve beon praying for- voutly that tho Independont movoment moy split on the currency question and go to pleces, will take a mournful view of the resolutions sdoptod yestordny by tho Rook Tsland Conven- tlon, In Rock Island County, at loast, Presidont Grant's voto i sustained by the farmors; and tho result will show that Rock Tsland County is by no mosans alone in proferring the honost pay- mont of debts to fraudulont bankruptey, Ledra Rollin spoke on the Electoral bill be- fore the French Assembly yosterday, Ie eaid tho plebiscitum was & parody of unlvorsal suf- frage. Tho sontimont was loudly applauded by tho Loft, and donouncod by the Bonapart iste, It is bacomine avary day wwawa apparont that o great chouge bos Iately taken placo in tho political comploxion of iho Assembly. Yesterday was n flold-duy for the Republicans; to-morrow tho Bonapartists may como off victors, The white-flag party, or 80 much of it as sticka to its color, says nothing of Honri V. it asks only for a truce, ‘Tho New York Times should bo informed that, whotlor tho Obio now Conatitution is ratified or refected on Aug. 18, tho Octobor cloction in Ohio comes off this yoar as usual. Algo, that " Rliodo Teland s atways beon in tho Lablt of olecting ita own mombor of Congress, With thoso and somo other trifling incohoronces tho Now York Times was ablo to mangle our own vory corroct *Calondar of Tolitical Evonts," published May 26, and ropublished it with tho remark: Tho following rccord has Ueen carefully yrepared and corrected to duto for the Now York Z5mes, The Judges of the Buprome Qourt of Tows linve taken tho stump in behalf of tho temper- anco question, and are urging the onforcemont of the tomporanco laws of the State, It is xathor a curious spectnolo to witnoss Suprome Judgos doclaring their viowa on tho etump upon questions which may come up boforo thom for opinions as to tholr conatitutionslity, Wo ellovo It ia the first instance whoro Buprome Court Judges have boon known to propound thelr views to tho multituda upon any subjoot liablo to hitigation in thoir courts, and it ought t0 bo the laat. Bonator Brownlow Liss come out in opposition to the Clvil-Rights bill now ponding in Congress, He doos not monn to bo misunderstood. Io saya that the bill ia on opprossiva and sbominn- blo usurpation ; that its passage would destroy freo mohools in the South; {hat the poo- pla of Tonneaseo *kuow tholr rights and daro maintain thom"; that they will not ylold obodionce to tho emnll politiclans and domeagoguos of their own political faith, Brown- low's familiar slego-guns are heavy woapons for so small game. Wo aro not golng to havo & rebellion in East Tonnessoo just yot. The trath is, howover, that tho sontimont of all roa- aonablo poople in tho Bouth, black as woll ag white, is rrrayed in opposition to 8 compulsory mized-sohool wystom, DPresident Grant and many membors of Congross bave modo a noto of this fact, and tho chanoos aro that the obnoxious bl will not pass without ossontial modlfication, ] The Chicago produco markets wore genorally firm yosterday., Meas pork was in good demand, and advancod 200 per brl, closing at 817.45@ 17,60 cash, and $17.70@17.76 seller July, Lard ‘was activo and 30@90o per 100 Ibs highor, clos- Ing at €11.00 orah, and §11,20 eallor July, Moats wero quiot aond stronger at O3({@0}go for shoulders, 8J{@Y0 for whort ribs, 9}{@0)50 for short oloar, and 11@113}fe for wweot dress to (ke public. Thoy antagoniza tho woman's movement and all indiscriminnte oneloughta upon saloon-keopra as being fopatical and calculstod to dofeat tho ends which gonuine temperunco reformers are most dosirous of advancing. Tarthor than this, tho browors kold that the salo of light wines and beor should bo encouraged, thaso boverages bo- ing eo offective and harmless eubstituto for al- coholio drinks; that tho best way to prevent drunkennesy 18 to make it odious by social and legal penalties; and that oll legislation which aims at “tho Qod-given freo will” of citizens 18 not only pornicious, but contrary to tho genius of American institutions, Wo imagine that the temporauco poople will have no Lroublo in disposiug of the * God-given-frec-will ” argu- mont, Thora is, however, much in the addross which desorves respoctful trontment, snd omo of tho facts atloged have been farly borne out in oxperionce. The snti-tomperanco porty, it 1t should ovor bo organized, will havo o bLard struggle for existence, and can novor succeed ; but anti-tomperauce eupport givon oro forma toanyorganization that hes a broador basis may form a considerable element in ell political cale culations for many yoars to como, THE RECIPROOITY TREATY, A dispateh from Washington states that cor- tain Wostern Senators aro in high dudgeon con- cerning tho Reciprocity Treaty bocauso it admita wheat, flour, potatacs, and other farm-products Irom Canada freo of duty. Theso indignant ones covidontly supposo that, it Canadian wheat i ox- cluded from this country by a tariff, it will not come in competition with American wheat at all, There wore a fow who advunced tho samo viows whilo tho old Raciprocity Treaty was I forco, though no such complaint coma from tho West, according to our rocollection. Whon the old trealy was abrogated it was found that Canadian wheat, being excluded from our market, morely took the placo of that much Amorican wheat in tho English market. Aud inasmucls as tho prico of the wholo crop is regulated by tho prico of tho surplus sold abroad, it made not the differonce of & haw to tho Amorican farmer whother the Cana~ dian favmer sold Lis crop in Buffalo or in Livor- pool. Tho idea of “protoctiug™ ourselves by a tarifl in tho production of an nrticle of export is ona of thoso idiotic cancoits which mako & busi- uess man gasp whon propounded to him. In point of fact, howovor, tho Canndians are tho largest customers wo have, noxt to Gront Brit- aln, for our wheat, flour, corn, pork, and boof. During tho yenrs 1872-8 thoy purchased from ug 10 losy thau $10,254,366 worth of these artioles, Any Wostorn Senator who votes to roject the offer mado by the Cauadians to enlarge thoir cannle aud placo thom at our sorvice (thoreby grently incronsing and chonpening tho facilitios of transportation for our products), on tho ground that tho American farmor will ba gub- Jected thoroby to the competition of the Canadion farmor, will bo rotired from publio 1ifo, g0 that hiemay havo his head duly bored for the simplos Vory likoly Ferry and Chandler, of Mighigan, ropresonting tho lumber intorest, will voto against tho troaty, ou tho ground that it will re- duce the prico of lumbor to American farmors, Wwho aro its largest consumors, but if any Sens- tor ropresonting an agricuttiral State whall voto ngainst it, clahning that Lo doos 8o in the futer- oot of the farmors, he will not long hinvo the op- portunity to gibbot Lis ignoranco iu so high n station, An axgumont may indesd bo made agninst the wholo idoa and systom of commerelal troatios, on the ncore that the House of Roprosentatives shoull bo consulted on tho queition, since overy auch troaty in in one souso & monoy bill, In fact, Mr, Kolloy bau introduced fn the Llouse n proamble and resolutions ealling for plokied hams, Highwines wore in fair domand and unchanged, cloning at 980 por gallon, Lako Information sato tho proposed action of the Tixooutive Dopartment, sud afliming the right ot tho louso to paas upon any moasuro looking to rociprocity in trado with tho Britiah Provincos. Yot tho unlform custom of the Govornment hina boon for tho Prosidont and two-thirds of the Bonato to mnko such trenttos, Tho Reciprocity Tronty of 1854 was mndo in that way, The In- dinn troaties, which gencrally involve the nppro- printion of money In the form of sunuitios, aro mado ju that way. Tho tronty for tho purchnso of Alnekn wns mado In that way, Tho Troaty of Wasbington, which provided for the admission of fish and flsh oil froa of duty, waamado iu that way. If, howover, tho proposed Raciprooity Tronty is sufficlontly scooptablo to the country to racoive n two-thirds voto in the Benato (with- out which It must fail), thero could bo no doubt of its rocolving o majority voto of the House it 1t woro submitted to that body, s THE ERIE RAILWAY AND IT§ PRESIDENT, Tho contemplatod reuignation of Prosident Watson, of tho Erlo Railway, will probably con- sign that much-abusod proporty to tho care of a bnteh of London speculators who will pick its bones a8 clonn na did Gould and Fisl In' thodaysof their jolnt proprietorship. It s not unlikoly that the aurviving mombors of tho Inttor firm will bo in at tho doath this time, and thot tho last ond of ‘that rond will bo worso than the frat, 3ir. Wataon accoptod tho offics of Presidont of thisrond at o time whon its roputation was rulued, its principal dopartmonts filled with thioves, and its working forco complotely do- mornlized by tho oxample of thelr suporiors, Ho was probably moved by a laudablo ambition tolift 80 vast a proporty out of tho slough juto which it had beon plunged, and to win whatover credit mightattachto 8o notablo an achiovement. Accepting the position at n large ‘pocuniary sac- riflee, and performing its duties at a atill greator sacrifico of hoalth and porsonal comfort, ho could havo had no other motive than the ono wo have indicated. His flrst considorablo achlove- mont consisted in weodlng out tho sub- ordinato rascals whom Gould and Kisk had foisted wupon tho road to sorve thoir own ends. His noxt was to compel Gould to pay back into tho Treasury of tho road somo ©9,000,000 whick ho had stolon therefrom, His third project was to change tho gaugo of tho road from 6 foot to 4.8, in order to roduco its opor- ating oxpenacs,—tho difforonco bolwoen the cost of operating a brond gaugo and & narrow or or- dinary ono boing oqual to o dividend on tho stock, But in ordor & effect this chango it was niecessary to rostook tho road as well as to chango tho gauge, and this involved the sacrifico of all its locomotives and cars, or such chunges in thoir conetruction a8 was aquivalent thoreto, To com- ploto tho changes and improvemonts which ho doomed necessary involved an immodinto ox- ponditure of somo $80,000,000. IIo proposod to oObtain this sum by an iesuc of bonds, and 80 groat was tho confidonco reposed in him by tho English public that the wholo amount was subscribed for after {ho panfs, when almost evory now Amurican security was ruled out of tho murket, The success of tho enterpriso and of his managomont seomed to bo assured, whon, on “sottling doy”—tho day whon tho bonds which hind boon subscribed wero to be paid for— tho lying statemont of Mr. S. H. Dunan, the Auditor of tho Erie Railway, was made public in London, Wosay the lying statoment, becauso Mr, Dunan bas sinco published a largo pam- phict (a copy of which ho, or some of his fellow- specalators, have sont to the press), on page 19 of which ho says that ho liod in proporing and signing the last annual stato- mont of tho oporations of the Company, upon which Dir. Watson’s London nogotiations wore based. Wo profer to boliove that ho lied in pro- pering the second statomont wheroby the Lon- don negotiations were brokon off. Under tho rules of tho London Stock Exchango and undor British lew, Mr. Wateon had the power to com- pol tho subseribers to take the bonds thoy had subacribed for, but he wonld not do so while 2 chargo of fraudulent roprosontations and bad faith wns ponding from the Auditor of his own Company. Mr. Dunan, of courao, rosigned. It is to bo hopod that he got his wagos. What particular form of raseality lies nt the bottom of this apparontly euccessful schemo to koop tho Erio Railway in s orippled aud hoip- less stato wo do not know. Nor do we care. Tho public bavo an intorost, howover, in seoing the Erio Railway placod and kept ii & condition to compoto with the othor groat lines from tho West totho seaboard, and also in its honest managemont, That Mr. Watson has ever ac- quired n dollar, directly or indirectly, ot of tho Erio Cowpany, othor than his salary, not oven lis encmies bolleve. That ho fa in- capablo of misropresenting tha affairs of the road, by 80 much a8 o bait's brondth, for any purpose whatover, thoso who know him will refueo to baliove, That he will best consult his privato intorests by rosigning o position which yields'to himeolt nothing but voxation, slander, ond impaired health, his frionds aro fully agreed. Tbat ho will, howover, vindicate his own courao as President of the Erio Railway asud astablish his truchfulnoss to tho sntisfaction of all parties concerned, may be safely assumed by friends and foes, — STRIKES AND THEIR CONSEQUENCES, The strikos continue. In overy jssue of our papor thore is an account of ono or more. In yestorday's wo announced the striko of tho brakemon on the Chicago & Alton Railrond, T'wo hundred mon thus withdraw from employ- ment, to livo on tho product of solf-taxation, The froight business on tho road was suspondod in part. In Now York the hod-carriors have Juet struclk, and bullding in soveral parts of tho city bag como to & stand-still. And o it goes. ‘Whon will'tho Iaboriug olasos learn that strilkoy do mo good? Not only pro thoy produc- tivo of uwo good, thoy aro most demoraliz- ing in their offocts, Thoy impovorieh tho a- borers, They uroa tax upon thom,~a tax for which thoy recaivo no benofit, Strikes aro not genorally successtul; and, whon thoy are, ste- tiatica abow that tho advance n the rate of Wigos obtainod by thio menns raraly continuo long ounough to qompoveato them for the aum lost by tholr Idlenoss during tho stelkes, DBut thig s only ono offcot, When the brakemen on the Chieago & Alton Railroad, for in- statico, struck, tho Company folt it. Its crod- itora will foel it ANl who relled on tho froight en roule reschiug thom ata cortaln timo will fool it. Tho Railway Compuny rolied ou its brakomen; a thousaud business mon, vorhaps, reliod on tho Railway Company, Oontracts aro violated ; ongogomonts aro not met; ospital fs unproduotive, Tho Ilsborors consoto bo producers sud bogomo cousumers morely. Thoy wasto thiolr time and tholr menus and havo nothing in the end to show for efthor, Nor s thisall. Whon the laboraws aro not at work thoy aro mokt commonly in miuchlof, Whon not engaged in thoir unuat uvocations, thoy ate uono tho lews eaiployed th aoshothilog, Thoy aro Jonrning idlonoss, n diutnsto for hon- ©at labor, porhapa drunkennons and other forms of immorality, Thoy dlscuss and brood ovor thelr imaginary wrongs, and what thoy con colva to bo the conapirnoy of - socloty agalnst thom,—for an idlo brain s tho dovil's workehop. It would bo curfons, indeed, to follow outa striko in sl ita consequonces, economlo, soolal, politienl, and moral, Who enn tell, for instanco, what part wan played by tho striko In which tho husband of Mre, Dovino was engagod, who Ldlled hior threo littlo ohildron In a fit of insenity on Tuesdny, Hor husband, it sooms, had boon onn striko for six or ovon wooli. The doprivation sho wae subjooted to fn consoquonco affooted hor mind, As she snid horaelfs I warned my hugband to go to work, and yot Lio poraiated, aud my brain is not quito right gometimos, and that is tho way 1t happoned.” Thia is, of courso, an ox- tromo caso, and tho woman labored undor tho fluslon that it would bo u good thing to sond her childron to honven boforo tholr timo. Btill, were it not for the fact thot bor husband was out of work,—out of work against his will, too, bocauso his *“umon” in- slstad on It,—it in posaiblo that thrvoo young innoconts would bo living to-day. Btrikos aro iho sourco of numborless ovils, It Is strango that, whilo so much is doing in France and England by tho ostablishment of arbitration courts to diminish thelr froquency, and, whon thoy huppon, to find a spoody eolution for thom, littlo or nothing is dono hers, And ot the sub- Joct 18 a0 all-important one. ER DISASTER, 1fr, Bassott, ono of tho contractors for. the building of the worthloss dam at Mill River, has ba{:u onlightoning tho world 18 to tho causo of tho dreadful dimnater which resulted in the loss of noarly 200 lives. Tho owners wantod s dam, They wanted a dam b a maximum cost of 926,000, Thoy startad out with theso figuras, and, rightly or wrongly, the dsm must Lo put up, oud hold & given volumo of wator, with o given dopth, and covering & given aroa, all for 25,000. Dassott contracted to do this; that is, ho contracted to build adem that would bo worth $25,000,—not one that would hold In checle tho vast voluma of water. There woro dams of oll kinds in his mind's oyo. Thoro was & dom worth $100,000 which would bo safe; but that ono the Com- pany would not build, It cost too much, Thon thore waga dam worth $26,000 which would not bo an absoluto protection fo buman life. Bus- gott could build that, too, His oxouso s that lio~ know the Company would Lisvo tho dam built for §25,000 anyhow, and bo might bo tho builder as woll ns any porson olso. * Ho did not know," ho said in his tostimony, * why consclence should have provented thom (himself and follow-con- tractors); if tho dam had to. bo buile, they might as well build it ns any one olso.” Of courso if the Company had wanted of Mr. Bassott o dam for $1,000 inatead of 826,000, ho would bave furnishod ono mado of bulrushes for that prico! Wo prosume Mr, Dassett foresnw that the Mill River disastor would come somo time, but why should ho trouble himself abous that? ¢ If tho dam had to b built, he might a8 well build it as any onel" It 100 poople were to bo killed, o might as well kill thom as any one. Well, bo it 80 ; but, now that they have beon killed by the culpable nogligonco and sordid avarico of Mr, Bassett, why should not Mr, Dag- sott and lus employors go to Btate's Prison ? That fs what & groat mauy peoplo would like to lLnow. PROF, PATTON'S NEW TROUBLE. Tt strikes us, upon a casual roviow of the aitu- ation, that this must bo tho summor of Prof. Patton’s diecontent, It is apparent that the Gonoral Assembly is no more dizpoued to treat him with that degrao of respectful doforenco sud tondor consideration due to his ominont ability in expounding theology, dofining damua-~ tion, and hunting herotics, than was the Chieago Presbytery ponding the Swing trisl. The nequit- tal of Prof, Bwing by tho Prosbytery, and tho zofusnl of the Goneral Assombly to impoach tho soundnoss of the theology of tho Rev. Dr. Pat- torson, at once dofeated him in thoe lowor Court aud clouds his prospects in the upper, inasmuch as Dr. Pattorson was Prof. Swing’s auchor 1n the tril. And now comos’ tho General Ase sombly and declares, by tho emphatic voto of 211 to 8 thot it will oxpress 1o opinion as to the criptural view of woman's right to spoak or pray .in a soeinl prayor- mooting, aud thorcupon commits the whole sub- Ject to tho discrotion of tho pastors and Tlders of ohurches. In tho language of tha eluldron of tho world, this is rough on Prof, Patton. It rudely snatchos his Brooklyn lnurels from his brow, und ruthlessly tramples upon thom, Drof. Patton Lus oxpressed his opinion upon this subjeet publicly, foroibly, and in dotait, e fought his first fight on this question, and won his shoulder-straps in tho theological ermy. Mo defonted the Rov. Mr. Cuyler, an old vetoran in ihe servico. The Rov. Mr. Cuyler bad sald Miss Smiloy shonid preach and pray under his raftors. Prof. Patton said sho wbould not. After o long and bitor contest, Mr. Cuyler wam worstod, and Irof. Patton at once appoared as tho chwmplon of dogmatic Presbyterianiem, and tho dofendor of Calvin's shoop-fold against herotical wolves prowling about to enateh off unwary aud innocent lambs. Tho declsion of tho Gonoral Assombly, howovor, roversos tho whdle mattor, aud Patton, like Gon, Boum, has lost his panache, which now adorus the holmot of the Rev. Alr, Cuyler. * Miss Smiley can now proach and pray ot her own pleasure in the ochuroh at Brooklyn from which sho was ojectod by Prof, Patton, and time, whioh changos all things, gives the viotory to tho Hov," Mr, Cuylor. Auy othor woman may mako lor voice heerd in the obuveh, if the ohurch ig willing, aud Prof, Patton can uo longer stop in and say “Why do you go?"” aud disporso tho fomalo exhorters, Now, Prof, Patton cannot impeach the Glenoral Assombly unloss ho i tho ultimato Court of Appegl, which we hollevo ia not tho case. Unloss, tl;oru!orn, hois goingto tamoly submit to tho loss of his laurels, ho should go back to Brooklyn, aud * board tho lon in his don, the Douglass in his hall,” According to the deoision of tho Genoral Assombly, boyoud which les no appea), Miss Bmiloy or any othor woman may sponk and pray Intho Rov., Ouylor's chureh, if the Rev. Cuylor and tho Elders aro willing ; and, aa thoy aro willing, it Is manifestly Prof. Patton's duty to go buok thero aud fight the battle ovor agaln, or eloo acknowledgo defoat. As wo have enld Defore, this s rough on Prof, Patton, It I8 rough not only booauso 1t muatehos hia flrst triwmph from him and changoa it to defoat; not ouly bocause it knocke from under him the podestal whioh hus elovated him futo publio notice ; but rough slso beoauso these now alllow of roligion which the deoleton sdmita {oto the goat army af the Oliureh wit not prench and pray on Prof. Tatton's sido. Womon are roliglonists, but nover thaologians, Wornen eponk ;from s spontancous presolonco, never from rulo or procodont, Women aro rolig- lous by naturo, not from the rosult of dogma, ‘Thoy oxhort from tho hoart, not from tho head. "Ihotr roligion o actlve, warm, snd substantial, "novor Intolloctusl or dogmatical. Tho rosult Will bo that out of 1,000 women 09 will pronch and pray as Prof, Bwing doos, and ouo will follow In tho steps of Drof. Patton, Tholr enthusiagm, and zeal, and intultions will just ne surcly lend thom Into Prof. Swing's orrors of oharily, hu- manity, and sympathy as if o Nomosls woro urg- ing thom on. Thus, by thia doclslon, Prof. Pat- ton's troublos from this dato onward commonao to multiply, and, had Lo as many Londs ag Bri- arous oreyos as Argus, hocould not bogin to look aftor tho fomalo herotics which will spring up in the Ohurch as plentifully as daisics in n moadow, It will boagood thing for roliglon, but it will bo discouraging for thoology, And yot Prof, Patton s not altogother without comfort, Thoro {s ono spot whero tho wicked must coase from troubling, The Swings, nud tho Trowbridges, snd Miss Siniloys caunot in- vado tho stately homo of tho Inferior, cornor of Clark and Washington stroots, Undor tho am- plo palladium of Mr, MeCormick thero ia rost and scourlty. Ovor tho daor it {s written: “No Now Bchool Prosbytoriaus Nood Apply.” No woman can Invado thoso precinots, whore potro- faction works its slow and herd proocessey, to disturb tho Pliocone formations of Prosbytorian- ism doposlted thoro with the light, and warmth, aud lovo of woman's prayors and oxhortations, In this enug harbor, Prof. Patton will bo as gafo 28 & annil in its sholl OTHER OHURCH TROUBLES. Bishop Leo, tho Protestant Episcopal Bishop of Tows, in'his annual addross at tho Stato Con- vention, roviows the condition of tho Church at tho prosent timo, o scos great commotion; as wo all do, in tho religious world, and hio secs, tao, that his own Church sbaros fn tho disturbanco, ‘Tho * Roformed Episcopat Church" movemont, Lo thinks, {8 ono which, lthough not formida- blo, 18 to bo depreeated and doplored. Tho ovila tho secedors complain of could have boen, ho says, much moro ensily romodied in tho Church than out of it. Ho has, bowever, no words of bittornous, no anathomas for the brethren who havo doparted. Yot all tho bnd elements have not yet loft the Church. The Romanizing clement {a in it still, Saya Bishop Loo: Tho movement now referred to1a tho result of ex- tromo viowa in ono direction; but I feel bound to say that wo aro sufforlug great ovil from other and oppo- “Blto viows, against which I have heratoforo lifted up my volco as & Blehop in tho Ohurch of God. I refer, of course, to thowe Romunizing viows which for some yeara past linve go disturbed the Church of England, aa well a8 our own in this country, I ean rospect and lionor a sincera and conslstont Romanist in bis own Ohurch; but virtual and cesential Romsniem in our Protestant Eplscopal Church is out of place, and sbould roceivo our unanimous and unqualified disap- probation, I would not withdraw, if I could, sny testimony that X have borne on this subjoct, in publia official addregics liko this, in sermons, or in private oflicial correspondenco, Iam for a full and fros tol- oration, within the Chureh, of all views ond practices Which ber Beriptural compronensivoness enables hor to embraco aud allow ; but there is 4 polnt boyond which wo must not procced, either in oxcess or doe foct, Bo fur a8 oxcoss i concorned, who can doubt that euch thinga as oucharistlo adaratfon, surle. ular confasslon, Invocation of tho Virgin Mary, prayora for tho dend, vestments which symbolizo peculiar oucharistio daclrines, a sconto and sensuous worship with crossings and genufloxions, lights and incense, and other kindred matters, ar in entiro opposition to 4he truo spirit aud history of this Churchi; ond that thoy, 1f pormittod and practiced, would cat out its vory vitals a8 a Reformed -and Primitivo Ohurch, and sapils foundations ss nn Apostolio body, and as one restored from tho errors and corruption of ages of darkucss and superstition? It would scom that somo in England’s uoblo Obureh, nnd in our own, wore roslly deslrous to undo the work of Englisl Xoformation, bolding viows for denying which somo of the most altiuguished Reformers sutfored at tho stake, gnor- ing, practieally, tho simplo doctrincs of the Gospel, aud laboring to rovive and re-cstablialia system which tho Iessous of Listory und experlenco teach uato loatho aud rojoct, as contrary to God's Word, and sub- verslvo of tho bost intorests of tho Chureh of Christ, and of tho higheat good of mankind In all ages, Attacked by Rotorm without, and by the une eonscious allies of Rome within, the Episcopal Church is in o bad way,—almost as bad as the Preebyterian with’ soteriological horetics and fo- malo proachors making breachos in its walla, *¢ THE 50CIETY OF WOR! N'S OITIES,” In 1835, the worling classes of Mulliouss, in Alsnco, wero in & doplorable condition, Wages wero low, Rents woro exorbitant. A room ton feet square, darl, dirty, and damp, cost eight or vine francs amonth, Most artisans occupied, with tholr families, a ginglo room. Immorality was naturelly rife. 8o was death; Moro than Lalf the children born diod beforo renching tho age of 2 yonrs, Thohours of Iabor wero from 5a.m, to 8 p. m., summor aud winter. Tho pit- tanco of pay was received overy fortnight, On pey-day, tho operatives tasted meat and wine. Oun ol others, thoy had but bread, po- tatoes, =nd watorod milk. Employers tried in vain to L do something for thoir mon. Cbarity, lavisbly givon, did what charity froquontly does,—it demoralized the re- cipionta, It wa folt that the ono thing noedful was to provide the workingmon with homes, At o mooting of manufacturers it was resolved to build & number of model dwellings. Bofore the somewhat cumbrous schemo could bo carriod into effaot, Mr. Dollfus, Son., one of the manu- {focturers, formed a company under tho namo of “ Ln Societe Mulhousionno dos Cites Ouvrieros," —*"Tho Muthouslan Society of Workingmon's Citlos, "—for tho purposo of fulfllling its name, that is, building olties for workingmen, Tho eapital was £12,000, divided into sixty sharos of £200 each, of which Mr. Dolifus took thirty-five. The Govornment gave tho Com- pany £13,000, This wes 8 dublous blegs- iug. Tt "has boen tho ocurse of most oxporimonts of this kind in Franco that tho Governmont has aided them 8o much that thoe projectors have not had to aid them at nll. They bavo consoquontly coltapsed a3 @oon ag the QGovornmont subsldy was oxhaustod, ‘Fhis Com- peny, howover, ‘wan moro succosafal. It bogan work in July, 1853, By tho noxt July it hnd finishod 100 houuos, which cost from 870 to 85680 aplaco, Thoy formed a “clte ouvriore " by thomsolves. With their gardons, thoy coverod a gquare plot of twonty acres. Tho main otroots woro 26 feot broad, exclusivo of the five-foos sidowalk on oaoh side. Thoy wore cut ot right auglos by sido-stroots, 16 foot broad, also with five-foot sidowalks, Tonds and sidowalks wore maoadawizod. Bowors of ma- sonry droined ovory honee, Tho housos thome selyes were built in four slzes ana shapos, Dur- ing the firat yoar, forty-nine of tho hundrod wore sold, That is, the ocoupants’ had paid $60 or 870 down, and bad agreod to pay the balance of tho cost in annunl installmonts, during fourteen or fiftoon years, Then tho inevitablo distrust that hampers all offorts mado by or for workingmen mado ita appesrance, T'ho artisauns grow sby of the sobemo, Thoy thought thoro was & swludle In ft,~that tho employors woké kylog lo god tuore than the expocted 4 per cont divldonds out of it. So only18 hougos woro sold In 1855, aud only b In 1860, I'hiy fooling, howovor, oon woro off. In 1857, 68 houses woro bought; in 1858, 100, After ihat, thoy could not bo built fast cnough, In ton yonrs, the Socloty of Worldngmon'a Citios Lhind fuvostod £100,000 in artianns’ dwollings, and in tho bnth-housos, wash-houses, bakerlos, aloros, and restaurants connoctod with thom, Noarly 700 dwallings had boon put up. Of thoso, 614 woro in tho hands of workingmen, About 176 wera fully pald for. A much largor numbor wors aimost froed from inoumbrance, "Thoy woro all #0ld on the samo plan, A doposlt of §00 or $70 wns domanded, The pay- mont of tho balauco was oxtonded over fourtoon or fiftcon yoars, I any man wished to give up his houso before it was fully pald for, his doposit was roturned with in- toreat, and he got, bosldes, the amount he had pold over and above a fair rental. Tho co-opor- ativo establishmonta connaotad with the “cltios™ bavo not all boon successtul, Tho bakorles and storea liavo rocolved littlo support, although tholr goods are purc and arc offored at whole- Balo prices, Thoy havo domandoed casb. This has hurk thelr sales. On the other hand, the bath-nousos, ot which o bath costs 8 conts; tho wash-housos, at which tho use of wash-tubs, manglo, and drying-room cun bo had for two hours for & cont ; and the restaurauts, at which a mensl of goup, vegetablos, throo or .four ounces of veal, and nonrly half-a-pint of wine can bo got for 9 conts, have all succeed- od. The BMulhousa Bocioty has morved s o modol for others in othor parts of Alsaco. Tho Patl 3all, rom whick wa take thoso facts, enya: #Tho moral offect has evorywhoro Loon most romarkoblo ; drunkennoss, brawling, idloness, and discontent have givon place to sobrioty, ordor, industry, and eolf-respoct. While wages aro considorably lowor in Alsaco than at Lisle, Lyons, or Rouen, tho condition of tho working- classes appears to bo superior in overy respoot.” A fow daya slnco wo skotched, undor the cap- tion “What Ono Man Did," tho philanthropto Iabors of Mr. Mundolls in England. Thisisa atory of what ono Alsatian hag dono. As yet, we know of no American manufscturor who can tako his place besido these two, — + DIED WITH HI8 BOOTS ON. Burgett has fought his last battlo, Ho i doad. Ho diod in » Mississippl mud-holo, rid- dled with buckshot by Gridor, Much to tho dis- gust of the late Burgott, ho died with his boots an, for tho renson that thoy couldn't got him out of the mud-holo quick enough to carry out his pathotio request for tho removal of i boots, Gridor having boon very industrious and precise {0 his muskot-practico. Tho lato lamented Bur- gott wont out for wool and got shorn, Mo be- longod to that largo class of Southern heroos whoso principal voeation is the indiscriminate uso of gunpowder in intorcourss with thelr noighbors. With & fino sonso of honor and largo chivalrous notions, thoy scorn the law's delays and tha routino of courts, and sottle all difficultios with gun, pis- tol, snd blundorbuss. Whon a mombor of ono family hos a littlo differonco with o membor of anothor, tho causo s espoused by boths familles, down to tho fourth cousina and up to tho great- grandfathors, and thus it beedmos only o mattor of timo hiow 8oon the two famity troes aro hewn down, Bo long aa theydo not projudico the safoty of tho publicor shoot outeide of thoir own family circlos, thore is no disposition to intor- foro with thoir poculiar mothod of enjoying thomgolves. Burgott wWas omo of (his kivd, ond Orider was the msn whoso romoval to amother world was s gontial to Burgott’s carcer in life. Exactly how many Griders havo boen sacrificod upon tho altars of Burgott's ambition is not known, but it la stated that threo Burgotts havo died with their boots on, and now a pair of boots in a Mis- sissippi mud-hole ia all that is left of s fourth Burgott, 1t happoned this way : One fine morning Dur- gott lenrnod that thore was a Gridor & few miles up tho river. S0 he got out his skiff and stored it with provisions, o took plonty of money with him, thinking, perhaps, that ho might travsact o littlo bueiness sftor Lo bad scttled matters with Grider. Having provided him- solt with » gun and two pistols, and ammu- nition enough to slaughter o rogiment of Gridors, tho oxpodition strtad, and ou tho way Burgott practiced on sovoral wild pigoons and turkeys. Burgett sailed loisurely on among the enage and enwyors, happy in tho thought that oach momont wag bringlng him nearer to Grider. o Lad calculated to meet Gridor ot Harkerode's Landing, on the Arkansas shoro, and was not disappointed. Grider was thero, with big shot-gun, for no Gridor or Burgettever trav- oled without weapon and ammunition. Durgett bad o ekift-lond of woapous and ammunition, and Grider, being on land, had sll ho could carry in-a carpot-bag. Whon Burgott's skiff rounded to at tho landing, Grider was on tho rivor bank, calmly survoyiug the #conery. Bur- gott stoppod briskly out, and, gathoring up his gun, o fow pistols, and what ammunition he could earry, walked up tho bank, * The conversstion was short and touching. Grlder accosted the bristling Burgett: * How are you, Honry? What do you moan by coming hero this way?" Burgott roplied: %I do uob mesn anytbing serfous. How aro you, Jomso?" Grider anmswored: “I am not vory well Thus . far the com- voraation {4 not dissimilar to that wuleh occurs ovory day botwoen Bmith and Brown when thoy moot on the streot. But Durgott gave o vory audden turn to tho conversation by romarking *Thon, damn you, take thbat,” and theroupon firod at Gridor, This was tho signal for the bat- tlo of Burgott va. Grider, and Gridor won, The shot-guns bolng oxkausted, thoe atock of pistols was brought into roquisition and was nsed in~ dustrioualy, At last Burgott's ammuuition gavo out, while Grider hed a ghot or two lott. This was eullolont for all practical purposes, Gridor was evon with Burgott with an innfug to upare, and ho im- proved lis lunlug, As Burgott sought to got into his skift, Gridor aont him his compliments in tho shapo of & chargo of buckshot, whioh woro 80 liberally distributod through his anato- my that ho hiad notbing more to uny, but quiotly 1nid down in tho mud-hole, Bnd, aftor roquenting tho crow of & steamor who had boon witnosses of theaffray to remove his boots, ko turnod his faco to thomud and died, Aithough ¢ boots Mitle to Burgett now whothor his baots aro ou or off, it {s somewhat sad to xelloct that his last roquost could not be granted owiog to tho largo numbor of Gridor's buokaliots and the rapid offects of the doe, Wo presumo that Burgott ressoucd in o nioo motaphyeical way that to dlo with his boats on indloated polnt-blank that bo had died by gun. powdor. Ho was naturally mortified and some- what disappointed to dla by Grider's gun- povwdar, and, it thoss boats of Lis conld anly be rot off {n timo, why thon it would b point in his avor thnt hio had diod s natural doath, ovon it o woro in & mud-holo, full of Qrldor's buokaliots as & pod is with poss.. This lnst cons solation was denied him, aud #o ho died with Lis boots on, llke tho Burgotts bofore him. Tt fy now incumbont upon fomo surviving Burgott ta Lill Gridor boforo ho can got his boots off, and 8o on, until all the Griders and Burgetts ara £ono, leaving bohind them only a Inrge and mia- collanoous collection of boots, whiloh by tho way will be much moro valuablo and sorvicoablo than oll tho Griders aud Burgotta that over walked In thom, ‘Tho tomporanco war has broken ont afresh in Tndiann, A Fort Wayno clergyman by tho nama of Marine wont ovor to Doflance, O., to deliver n tomporanco addross, As ho wns roportod ina Dofianco nowspapor, ho mado a gonoral attnols ontho Germans, Of course, tho Fort Wayno nawspapor roprintod thia roport, and it did nos toko tho Gormaus long to call a mags-moeting, &t which Mr, Marino waa invited to rise and ox- plain. o attoudod the meeting, and oxplaiuod thet his spooch had beon garbled, that ho hnd n bigh respoct for tho German peoplo, ofc., oto. In spito of this oxplanation, a local Judgo (who! probably had tho Gorman voto in his 6yo) turned to Mr, Marino and road him a lesson about big- otry. Our Indiana neighbors hind better givo up tho tomporance war if they cnunot conduct it on any highor ground than this, Whon o miniator of tho Goapol and a Judge of = court goatitin tho atyle reportod, both the Pulpit and tho Bench Boom to bo dograded without accomplishing any- thing oither for tho oauso of temporance or auti tomperauco, . . —_—— "Tho Into Loulslana Logislature passod a bill poatponing for two yoars tho city oloctlon in Now Orloans, whoro thore is & Domoeratio majority, and giving the Govornor the appointing power monuwhile, Gov. Kollogg hus not yet signod tho bill, a ho can hold it until the mooting of tho noxt Logisiaturo ; but he has intimated, {n tho meanwhilo, that, If suitable men aro nomi- nated,—himsolf, of couras, to bothe Judge,—it will bo all right. If not, Lo will sign tho bill and promulgato it, and thon oxorciso tho ape pointing power. With auch Exeoutivo coorcion * 28 this, with o direct thront monaoing tho poopla f Now Orlenus that thoy must cloot officers to suit Gov. Kotlogg or Lo will appoint thom him-; self, is It auy wondor that tho pooplo of that city' are troubled to know whother thoy are lving: undor a ropublican form of govornment ? SR Miss Carroll, who hus mo porsistently boe aloged Congrous siuco the War for romunoration for originating the plan of the Tonnossoo came paign, hos mot with an unoxpocted obstaclo. Ono Charles M. Scott now avors that Lo origi- natod the plan i o lettor sont to tho Secretary of Wax, through the caro of Miss Carroll, who iiad ropresonted herself to him as & socrot agout of tho Govornment, aud that shio purloined the plan and i polming it off as hors. It will striko tho roader, howover, a8 a littlo ourlous that it has taken Mr. Scott ko long to find it out, inay- much aa Misa Carroll hns postorad avery Con- gross sinco the closo of the War with hor olaita, —_— NOTES AND OPINION, Temporance (or Prohibition) tickets will this yoar be run in most of tho Northorn 8tates., Tha Ponnsylvania Probibition Convention is to ho beld nt Harrisburg, Juue 12; tho Now Yorik Con- veution nt Auburn, June 28; aud the Iiliuois Convention nt Bloomington, Juno 80, The Ohio Prohibition Blate ticket was nominated fomo wooks ago. Thoro {3 promiso of Prohibition Stato Convontions in Wiscousin, Minncsots, In- alana, Towa, and Michigan, . ~Tho Farmers of Jersey County baving voted not to sond dologates to tho 10th of June Inde- pendent Convention, in Iliinois, the Alton Zele- graph says: . Tha farmers of Jersey County aronearly al! rich, and do not desir that tho Govorument shiould s ruleh forth its band to wid them by loauing them mon.y ot n nominal intorost, liko tho furtaors of Ford Ceunty; and Lence thoy do not tako 8o much intorost in thy new party. —Of tho 10th of June Roform Convention, ir Tndisug, tho Torro Lauto Gazelte (Indepondont) says : 1f the Convention sliould not enunclate sour:d doe- trine, or whould fafl to put forward goud men, tio ritu- ation will be nono the worse than it vias bof e, 4 cardinul dactrino of ihis, a8 of w1l now movenex:ts, will Lo the wicrad privilegs of individualopinion, tnd the iulienablo rigt of bolting and seratching, —T'he Clinton Ago suys of the Anti-Monopoly movemont in Towa ¢ ‘Lhero {8 danger of the party bolug wrecked by ebroulo oftico-geckors, , , . VW nay, lot tht uppii= caut who puts himsolf forwardl for nonnotion bo left off tho ticket. Itlssnow party, sud ft wuwits now men, not old oflice-scokers. It wants men of ordinary intelligence and fair morality. 1t ought uot to ntter whzt pocullar political viows 8 man iy huva enters o i dnya gono by 11 tho purty fto_bo now, it must buvo now views, now sentiments, and, it sy be, now priuciples, —Tho Jilinois Slale Register says of the Ford County Farmors' resolution for cheap manoy to Lo lonned by the Goueral Governmont dircetly to farmers; Ttio farmern of Ford County, in passing tho resols- tion Yeferradb (0, wors bt CuFEy g Gut 1010 lefmsta conclusion the' dostrines of the Republicati party, ‘Thiat party, in its platform and public scts, hos doe clared, in'eeet, that thu nocessities of tho tries have boon such that mouey shoull bo loaned directly to rail- Tord corporatious, to steamshitp companles, nud lsud-grants should also bo givon to tiem, Wo opp of courae, nny wuch acts, and repadiato the doctring Sbich Justitienthom ; it wo ato no rogen Wy tho Geueral Government ' may not as properly losn Loty dircetly fo one set of persous as auotlior, —The Champaign (IIL,) Zimes wanta “a now doparturo in tho Democratio party,” aud snys of tho Domocratic Convontion to bo hold in 1llinoiss It it 13 to e convenod ouly for 1hio purposo of going thirough with tho usnal forms, and passing ol lrens typed resolutions, tho call ind Lettorbo dispon: od with, snd Democratle voters loft o enter o nwe_afilind tious; but, it the Convention is to bo utilized for cone demning by name rascally Democrata who havs recent- Iy brought disgraco ou tlioDemocratio namo, thoit wa shiall bail its axgombliug with delight. ' —It is very ovidont that the Administration prass of Towa aro beginuing the prop:.rafiouy and wakivg tho tackle for lettlug the party down onsy. The military dash and lmpudence, tho loud clarion of prospectivo #uccess, and tho neorn of the Opposition, have all loft them, ana thoy uro docontly washing tha corpse and vros paring for tho funeral.—Davonport (fa.) Lmo- orat. —Ho [Kasson] talks about starting out k‘o roform the Ropublican pavty within itwolf, This iu & work that has nover beon dono fo thia coun- try or sny othor. Tho ouly placo to roform n party Is to throw it out of power and compol & chaugo of loaders, which novossitatos s ra.rgun- ization, Tho time has como for that in rogard to the Itopublicnn party.—Burlinglon (la.) Qazelte. S —\Wo aro a full beliaver in tho equality of all mou pofore the luw, and, whilo wo rocogniza ihy right of overy Aworiean citizon, of Wheiover color or coudition, to onjoy tho hloualnb:;» and vivilogos which uro common under onr Crnsti- {)Ix(lcn. wo do niot beliovo that our statesmen and Tns-makers, who are placed in o position whoro their nots may toll for good or ovil to n aluns alvoady burdoned to thelr full endurauce, sl:ould ba expeotod not to woigh aud cousidor tho mnt- tor uudor considoration in ull it phasos, , . . It {8 quito an easy task for patriotio gentlomon in the North to docido what 14 best for tha col- ored peaplo of tho Bouth, with no knowladize of tho cirenmstances surrounding these nnfurtu nate poople ; but good Inws eaunot bo manttav- tured out of henrt-gush and sympathy.—ture lington (1a.) Iawk-Lye, —bunator Forry rewrots that his merious chronio atlmont compollod hin absones from iho Honato, 80 that ho could not rocord his voto with m;rgnutar, Lowis, nnd Doroman, agalnst thoe Civil Righte bill,—Slamford ( V1.) Journal, —1t is to bo l\o}wd that Richardson has boon put whero he will do the most good ; but it s not heratolore boon tho habit of Presidents to takamon frouh from tho consuro of Congross for jueapncity and _porjury, aud plaos them vn the Boneh, " A pluco 8" 1 * place " to Grant, whother It bo a Collectorship of the Tort, ar n Chiof-Tunticoship of tho Supremo Court.—ti. Laul Ploncer, —Kelloy has rolaxod somothing of tho store neas of his Protectivo principlos, ll‘n has offor- od an mmendment to the Tariff bill aduwitii daty froo elophants, leopards, tlgors, ho horaos, kangaros, und all othier animald {ntend- od for the Zoological Gardens in Fatrmonnt Parly Buoh » F'reo Trade osamplo mnéf vao Injurlous in tho Proteativo Oity. of Philadolphindlarrie urg (Pa.) Pairiol,

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