The New York Herald Newspaper, September 5, 1868, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

6 NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1868. a e 4 Y ya Fe der of them were ; eee re sa iy 4 nals in every respect. For nearly an hour NEW YORK CITY. were appointed, and certain othery citizens ite with ust our de. | unfortunr,te indtvidual, of no crime, who had | social eat this when [left his snop. the @ list of the aps POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. Keramation to mani the Unig ofton stn te eho | led to Vat sanctuary vil hat Tetuge aiid jad his | be continued in that he Wan nentang 4 the re, seo F wa a8 fi as made’. D. sonnel we of consolidation and the arbitrary exeraise of wiliiary Powe’, | away and handed back again to the “slave power” egned 4. 8 Horie apes err tee yorum of THE coun’ =~ ‘and David eis, \ aveltd ‘THE CAMPAIGY IN NEW JERSEY, ——_| $5 Maul anarchy ag wo Sacer | Ce opprenors eke, mBnOne seOuOLt | AN inte Thavegeen art MRC Om 7 “arse oy ae Hohe Bed and cuuapiachananeaas Ble peace, progress and pi - Vented the judicial exposure of one outrage by com- } Veraation because, in spite of his parua. — m| UuTeb STATES COMMISSIONERS’ COM. 1 the discnarges ."°'™ Consequence of the Republican Ratification Meeting tm Jersey Lasanand itting another sill more atrocious, | | 18 undoubtedly oneof the most ous characters — i ments in we Union Repuctican General Commitee; Gity—Speeches by Judge Gale and Ashley, SPEECH OF JERRY BLACK. Inted in wifal and corrupe disregard of tuetr const | the Ignorant maawes of his ace, he has usod ito the | T° AUeaed Asemalt Upon tho Minister from | he friends. of areca Z Fithian having oye F, ‘the Impeacher—The Financial Question Dis LORE LIAN I AL A: tutional obi Ought to be popular judg- | Very Wworat purposed, By the admissions of several Honduras. iene and Seeeenene bcapaar td Indge Jeremiah 8. Black presided at a demo- | Ment w be the verdict upon were jacent Before Commissioner Osborn. tn spite of th¢ inclement weather last evening | cratic mecting held at York, Pa, resemtty. On tax. fhe Catholic Jastitute Hall at Jersey City was ing the chair the Judge expressed himself ap fol- crowded, no doubt on account of the announce- | jy. ment that the Hon, James M. Ashley, of Ohio, The candidates of the two are now fairly in would address the audience, Mr. John W. Pang- | the field, and we have abundant cause to be proud born occupied the chair. ‘The first speaker was | of the selection made for us by the Convention which speaker ol ? What | ders which were prevalent a short time ago in maa be your nm Bo te for the and thee. cannes He t boasted to our correspon hearing of Since mentees ‘rete rel mpm Presidency who, Policy” his own, louston county gone be remembe! 1e fent gantenta to become @ mere instrument i their aoe last spring wemaues pores, 40: 90 SO = he aby i fe of t\Vronista (a newspaper published in | The Charges Against Revenue Oficiale—The nat political philosophers and all men of common | until Long went there the two races were living ami- | the Spanish language in this city inthe interest of Mean a Vice, Prealtoa ier vss toon | gouusy for violeiice bette the heottens eames gees Jenn pachaa didate for wi en 1c Li al otieutter aaa of suc Congren The United States vs, Ferrar de Conto.—The farther | purepWAy, REVENUE INVESTIGATIONS» a sense concur in the belief that ue is the | cably, friendly and peaceably together. His inflam- own of Spain), ig chargad with having re- puage Gale who opened his address by atralgning | szsrmbled in New York on the Fourth of uly. 1t do | Goiy secure foundation pon which « government matoiy harangues to the negro have had thetic | Conny qanuivea a guatie Cemex tho Minister to | _ The investigation of the cuarges prefered ‘agatnan J 10" public sure ion Lol col y {he democratic administration of 1859-60 for its apa, Re are opposed would 80 grossly fatter Grant and Taye ‘who do not recomnize oy ‘duty of | being now one of the most lawless localities in | the United States from the republic of Honduras, at | Mr. Thomas E. Smith, ex-Collector o nal, Reve-. thy in allowing the leaders of secession to mature Colfax. as to say tons a RS gg moray 4 hy which tical their plags of treason, He read an extract from the Aan by Paper ar Blair, and a man in of Teal message of Andrew Jackson in 1838 declaring, against | candor will admit that our candidates have a very Uhe pretensions of South Carolina, that the Union | decided advantage over theirs, ‘was indissoluble. The republican party to-day were | After eulogizing Seymour and Blair the Judge Feally the democrats of the Andrew Jackson school. gg PR pS Ee jue the 8 He asked any democrat im the andience whether he | | ie. the mere personal merits of the different can- could associate with such men as Wade Hampton | gigates, The continued existence of this govern- and Forrest, who butchered men in cold blood at | jent—the life of the nation—isat stake upon the issue, Fort Pillow. He declared that he supported General | Some of you may possibly suppose that this is a fals¢ Grant because he would wipe ont every vestige of | giarm, If you really believe that the institutions of this secession in the country and its administration, vitn | Country are not in very great danger or that their Mr. Ashley, on coming forward, was received there | destruction would not be a very sertous calamity, of Joud cheers, the audience standing and waving their | course you will disregard our warning, It is true, He said that he jad met that morning a gen- however, that many judicious and sober men, unin: Weman who had been @ member of Mr. Buchanan's | quenced’ by party prejudice, have come to the de- scmmnisueation, and he saked {hat gentleman What | berate conviction that uniess the ship of state is opinion he of the political oo 3 speedily put upon her constitutional tack she will be jocratic friend replied that he considered the | Griven Sopon the rocks and become a total wreck. election of Grant and Colfax a foregone conclusion, 3 " hi rh That was the admission of an intelligent man, What pine ner het gocarad open danger is devil's ith district, and Daniel Murray;, for obedience to that fundamental law which is the only | Georgia. The planter is roused from his sleep at night | Delmonico’s, in Fourteenth street, on the 1th of | ue in the Eight protection we have for the rights of life, liberty or | by the crowd of negroce engaged in drilling, they be- August. ae the previous examination the session | merly @ distiller in Twenty-fourth street, both of property? ing already fo into companies, ail duly oMicered. | was taken up with the testimony of Mr. Gomez, | whom are accused of having conspired, in connec. Congress must be sadly demoralized already. Of | The result is that the whites, who are in @ helpless | wno testified to the circumstances of the tion with Commissioner Rolling and Deputy Com+ course you will not believe, without evidence, that | minority, have armed themselves, not only for their | alleged assault. ‘The defence is that Mr. | on they vote on money bills as they vote on constitu. | own defence, but also for the purpose of Be Gomez has departed from his character as | missioner Harlan, to defraud the government of the tional questions, Sein 2 to their interests and not | those blacks who still stand by them. Here, then, | an ambassador by descending to the writing of tax on whiskey, was resumed yesterday in the United according to their public duty. Butif it were proved | is the manner in which this mulatto has “fixed mat- | letters in reference to the defendant, who claims that | ” ¢-Court, before Commissioner Gutumam. to your entire satisfaction that they represent their | ters” in Houston. It is stated that he has become | guch letters are libels upon him, and that whatever States District Court, before Com: own breeches pockets with far greater fidelity then | badly scared at the fruits of his own teachings, a8 | occurred at Delmonico’s was provoked by the publi- | Considerable time was taken up with a discussion as they defend the rights of the taxpayers it would not | for several days past he has kept unusually quiet. | cation of the alleged libellous epiaties. The case was | to the legality of the prosecution, Mr, Courtney and excite your surprise or lower them much in our ¢s- | His tailor shop is always filled with a dozen or more | adjourned to yesterday for the production of transla- | Mr. Binckley appeared on behalf of the progecution: timation. hey cannot commit any higher crime eet who act as a kind of body guard, A mere | tions of the letters referred to. When the case was | and Mr. White and Mr. Patterson for the defendants. than that of betraying the liberties for which our | It at Long will suftice to leave the impression that | called Mr. Ignacio Gomez was cross-examined by ‘The case having been regularly called, forefathers sutfered and died. If they have done tat | he isa dangerous negro. As he intimated to me this | wr, Morange, counsel for the defendant. . Mr. Patterson, on behalf of Mr. Murray, moved you may say to them what Othello said to the mau | afternoon, he will push his ignorant dupes into the | Mr, Gomez testifled—I have not seen this publica- | that the charge preferred against him be dismissed, who had slandered his wife | vortex of insurrection, if he can, and then desert | tion (produced) before, containing a letter in refe- | contending that the affidavit of Mr. McHenry did not Never pray more; abandon all remorse; them. And this man is one of the most important | rence to the defendant, nor did 1 know whether uny | include him in the charge, which was of a vague de- On horror's bead horrors accumulate: leaders of the radical party in Georgia, for he con- | letters were to be published. scription. The information referred to oilicers of For nothing canst thou to damnation add trois the votes of hundreds, if not thousands of | Mr. Phillips objected ou the ground of irrele- } the United States revenue, but inasmuch as Mr. Mur- Deeper than that. negroes, vancy. ray Was not an officer he (counsel) moved for the But look a little further and see the horrible effect In pleasing contrast with Long and other negro The Commissioner understood that the defendant's } dismissal of the complaint against him. of their example. Congress has taken contro! of ; }eaders are two colored men of this city, named Tay- | counsel introduced this i to show that the as- Mr. White next moved for the discharge of Col- the Executive branch. The Senate ugurps the | !or and Butler, 1 ppiasing. not because these | gault, if any, was provoke. by the publication of the } lector Smith, grounding his application on the fact were the issues before them? That every man, what- How can the - 5 en have united b- - government (which is the constitu: ower of removal from office and forbids its exer- | Men ha wit! e whites, for that is @ sul Jetters in question. that Mr. Binckley had no right to appear against his Seetond by tne Vivo of" sha ve a | {102 ae) gure ema anof | Cyt Prien ey are tasty of he | Jeo 98 portance pour ‘sorresyondent ut | at Morange repo mat such was thapiect.., | superior ater. He contended that Mr iki ag in i ‘saa 300 those who are hostile to e struggle we are n ce- | deca nee is directed an i e exam! seve! @ sul a oi is fair hance’ with every other’ man in the) now taaking tp sare Maa) nadion' Solvent Or the | ministration and command the y. of oftice: The Commissioner sai te, no legal right to prosecute hi holders. Of course, the subordinates are ready to | the work of restoring cordial feelings between the | authorities on the subject. He could not allow the | superior officer. race of life. He was not in favor of! hands of its enemies, lopt the code of morality which their masters act | ‘Wo races, Both men are glad they are free, and | evidence as to the justification of the assault before fter considerable discussion on this point and potting he governsinns in the igs? of ered Vt Who are its friends? Who are its enemies? These sep Oe Cotte sunee wmband may say to Senators | neither of them would consent to be slaves again on | such assault, if ae were committed, should be | several happy interchanges, ‘ Qners whose hands had lately deen red with the | are questions which can easily be settled. and Representatives, “You are bound to protect us; | 4y conditions. ‘They also ask that the white people | proved. The Court decided that Mr. Binckley had a right to Blood of the nation’s sons and who had starved their | For more than three-quarters of a century, while | We are not faithful to the public, but we are as true | Of the South protect them in their persons und | "Mr. Morange read the statute with reference tothe | appear in the case. Wrave boys at Amdersdnvdlie, BAllabury Si PY | the democracy controlled our public affairs, no se- | hsyou are to the purty and ourselves: you swore to | Property, give them an’ equal chance before extraordinary protection which was given to minis- | Mr. Courtney rose to make an explanation regard- prisons. | Andrew Johnson undertook to reorganize | rious infraction of the organic law took place—none e ert the Jaw and assure thet ct ‘. - e' ¢ Southern States, and he appointed as Governers | [0uy wine they had power to prevent. We were support the constitution, and we swore to perform he lai m that justice will be done | ters in their oficial character. But when he de- | ing his status in the prosecution, He said he knew our duties with fidelity; our oath 1s not stronger | to the colored race. Further than these they do not | gcended from his position to attack private citizens | nothing about the case, and was not in any way con- men who had been in rebellion against the federal | faithful to the constitution because we sincerely be- it indle the nati {her | claim, and as the constitution of 1865 and the demo- | he lost that extraordinary protection. suited respecting the affidavics upon which the war- authority. In fact, the new administrations were | jjeved it the best form of government which could be | {#2 Yours; if you can Sw from Chesting. the | cratic platform come up to thelr views in these par- ‘ssioner-—When the Minister makes the 4a of arrest hil been issued by: the Com aunply the old rebel State governments revamped. | adopted for any Daniele our situation. it was | Locres. What shall ‘hinder us from cheating the bi The Commissioner—When T mal rants of arre: y missioner Treasury? Aye, the lesson*you have taught us we | ticulars they have allied themselves with the whites | first assault he can claim no protection. previous to the issue of these warrants. Certain very will learn and it shall go hard but we will better the | 4nd are working hard among the negroes for the Mr, Morange—If this is a personal privilege— extraordinary statements had appeared, he said, in instructions.”? democratic ticket. Butler, in particular, is quite | Mr. Phillips—It is certainly a personal privilege. the papers respecting his and Mr. Binckley’s connec- ‘The consequence is that we have the most corrupt | Outspoken and bold tn his language. He says that Mr. Morange said the complainant could waive all | tion with the matter. Some of the morning papers government on the face of the earth. I cannot speak | the white people of the South and the entire demo- personal ttiloge, and did so by the writing of the } concurred in saying that the Secretary of the with perfect accuracy, but 1 believe I am within | cratic party having guaranteed him his freedom, he | letter. ‘The Minister says in the letter:—‘I deplore to | Treasury, whom he (Mr. Courtney) had no hesitation reasonable bounds when I tell you that a thousand | 4Sks for nothing more than to be allowed to remain | pe compelled to descend from my diplomatic posi- | in saying was, according to view of the inillions would not cover the frauds committed since | auietly among the whites and make his living. He | tion,” &c. We say that is a waiver of his privilege. | law, the superior oilicer of Mr, Binckley, felt the close of the war. We have the heaviest debt | believes he will be protected by the laws just as | and having waived that privilege the defendant had | “very indignani—that was the expression—about that the industry of any people ever ssagied under | the whites are, and 0 believing he shall vote the | a right to show, as in a police court, that there was | the conduct of Mr. Binckley in the premises, The without being totally crushed, and it 1s Increasing | democratic ticket. If the democrats get in power | g justification. papers further concurred in saying the President of instead of being diminished. ‘We are taxed enough | and they choose to deprive him of the suffrage, let he Commissioner said there was no waiving of | the United States disclaimed ail connection with or to keep the government running and to pay off the | them doit. His people are not fit to vote, they never | the plaintiffs position. The letter in which he de- | approbation of Mr. Binckley’s conduct. As an an- whole debt in ten years if the money were honestly | €Xpected any such power when the war ended, and canted from his diplomatic character had nothing | swer to these animadversions he would read the cor- applied. But one-haif the internal revenue imposed | he thinks they ought to be very well satisfied with | todo with the assault. Under such circumstances | respondence he had had with the department on the by the federal government and collected from the | thelr freedom, for the present at least. At any rate | he must overrule the point. subject. i people is stolen before it reaches the Treasury, and | he feels convinced that for the whites and colored ‘The cross-examination of Mr. Gomez was then pro- rr. Courtney then read the correspondence which the other half is squandered by Congress in sciiemes | People to oppose each other in Mayers be dan- | ceeded with as follows:—I swore that Mr. De Conto | passed’ between himself and the Secretary of the of the most extravagant corruption. Before the war percue to the latter, and he shall do nothing towards | said that if | repeated that he was a lower bred man | ‘Treasury relative to the matter. Mr. McCulloch our current expenses were leas than seventy-five | bringing on a trouble which can only end in injury | than myself he would slap my face; I did not repeat | sent him a telegram saying that according to the millions of dollars; now they are nearly four hundred | to the negro. He knows the whites will never sub- | that; he assumed an aggressive position; 1 told him | jaw of 1789 it seemed to him that he (Mr. Courtney) millions, besides the interest on the national debt | mit to be ruled by colored men, and when he remem- | he was a ‘ower bred man than myself, whereupon the | should take charge of the case. In view of that des- and without counting what is stolen in transitu, | bers that they have always been the rulers of this | defendant told me to consider myself slapped; did | patch, and in view of his duty under that law, le ‘These rebels, by their treason, forfeited life, liberty | framed by the wisest and greatest men that ever mac Eaeneeey.. TE Be (Mk, ARSE was, Ape dered UD. lived dn. Mul the tide of’ time, ‘at. the. head such a ight he would never condescend of whom was General Washington himself, to bend his knee to the conqueror—he would leave | an jonor not only to his country but to the country, But the reconstruction of Prosident | j;uman nature, and a man whose name is never pro- Johnson is that loyal even must leave the country nounced by any true patriot without emotions of or bow to rebels submissively and ask, “What kind profound respect and reverence. They told us in of government will you have, gentlemen?’ He | language at once sublime and simple what were the Wanted tohave the leaders punished. If there be | opjects for which they had established and ordained not punishment for such men and such crimes, then | i¢, ‘They said it was “to form a more perfect Union py, the Majesty of heaven and by just men onearih | perween the several States, to establish justice, to re was ho justice anywhere. With regard to the | insure domestic tranquility, to provide for the com- nancial _ question, heed republican party Mere | mon defence, to promote the general welfare and to rged with the creation of an enormous debt. | secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our What did they expect President Lincoln to do when sterity.” These great objects it has accomplished hhe saw a rebel horde marching on the capital? To in times past, and will accomplish again if its surrender the government to rebels and fly? No: our | jimitations be observed and its precepts obeyed, We army must be raised and maintained, and this could | owe no personal allegiance to any man or any body pot be done without money. And thank God that | or men, Obedience to the constitution and laws is 4n the hour of trial such was the confidence of | the test of all loyalty and the essence of all patriot- moneyed men in the administration of the govern- | ign. ‘The country says to all her people what the ment, such was the patriotism of the masses, that all Founder of Christianity said to his disciples—“If ye the money that was required was poured generously | jove ine keep my commandments.” bi the red eed. e1 Y ‘he financial difference between democratic rule | country he cannot blame them. not strike me, for if he had J would have returned the | now appeared and proposed to proceed. aie ee sexcneaner Ah Six, Seven Sd eye thee (h. : Ou teelother hand our opponents, by their acts | ong eae cere certainly worth your serious | Placing aside party considerations, who can com- | blow; I was living at the Clarendon Hotel; Mr. Er} "Wim? Wheaton, on being examined by Mr. Court- iaeretny with thoes. a “who. inthe hour of | #24 their utterances, express the profoundest con- | attention. pare the sentiments of Long with those of Butler | ker came ona mission to me from Mr. De Cont ney, staged that he was employed with the United need, stuck fast to the country; in fact, tocheaythem | (MPC for that insirument which we consider so | “'pnis is the necessary resullt of the radical system. | and assert that the former are to be commended in | told him that I could receive no communication ex- | Staves Surveyors under the hew law; was engaged Out of what was theirs by a Just and’ fair contract, | 8#ced. ‘They clalm the privilege of doing whatever | tt cannot be otherwise as long as they remain in | Place Of the ater? 4 have given the views of these | cept in writing. last year a8 @ special agent; Mr. Thomas B. Smith fe in’ greeniacks, Would | Seems to be good in their own eyes, without regard | power. No evil tree can bring forth good fruit. If | tWo men as specimens of the arguments being used ir. Courtney submitted a question, with the view | was Collector of the Eighth district in the fali of 18675 Ba ae ee eaneroeanexg., Would to any prohibition of the fundamental law, if it will af this should ever be done it will cost’ the nation | Promote their interest or gratify thelr passions, or more than the interest they would steal. And this | #!V¢ them an additional chance to perpetuate their is the proposition of the conclave that assembled in | POWer. They have never upon any occasion treated New York two short months ago. If they could issue | Wt! decent respect @ constitutional objection to any peveral millions, more ti pase, 4 hey could teswe | of their measures, no matter from what quarter it you cease to be governed by law and allow your- | to influence the blacks. On the one hand is Long, | of eliciting the fact that the defendant had slapped | knew of distilleries owned by Haggerty, Ray and Belves to be held down by mere brute force you must | teaching the negroes his high fown notions of politi- | the face of Mr. Cammachio, Consul for Honduras, in Baggies, all in the Eighth district; had examined all pay for it. Tyranny is alwaysexpensive. The price | Cal and social equality and threatening the whites | one of the public 8 of the city, and of showing | three of those distilleries in his official capacity. of your own ‘enslavement will be proportioned to | With a war of races if they attempt to deprive his | the animus of the defendant in approaching Mr. G At this point Mr. Patterson objected to all evidence the cruelty of the vassalage. Congress keeps up an | Tace of the elective franchise. On the other hand is | mez at Delmonico’s Hotel on the occasion in ques- | not referring to his client, Mr. Murray. Mr. White army, a navy, a Freedmen’s Bureau and other ma- | Butler, pleading for peace and good fecling between | tion. objected that the evidence sought to be elicited from. rth $200, came. Private individuals who have attempted to | chinery of despotism, makes us pay hundreds | the two races as preferable to political power, yet as The Court ruled out the question. :xamination of Wheaton was altogether irrelevant. Tae owe ‘mean Sn, and tls would fail heaviest ou | argue such points have been arrested, thrust into | or milous tor'them’'in order to maltain inthe | earnest and firm in his demand for the guarantee of Raphael Bombo Semnine by 3iy. Conrtney 1. re. | ete te eee eee toa wus nota friend of the bondholder. Who are bel- | (@8geons and treated with a cruelty such as no hu- | South a lawless domination of negroes, scalawags | his freedom and the protection of his person and | side In New York: I know both the complainant and | open’ investigation, He cited the charges against mane man would inflict upon his beasts. The Presi- carpet- erBy e roperty as his radical opponent. It is tmpossible to | the defendant; the latter is the editor of the Spanish . the effectgthat they combined and dent took ground in favor of the constitution. ‘They eh eres at eee ey, hove na 1 Hi p the defendants to the ty y sd anc only to control the South, but to do what they please | avoid the conclusion that Bucer is pursuing the | paper published in this city; { was in Delmonico’s in | confederated and entered into a Crapinenid for the in the North—to rule us for their pleasure and piun- | Safest and most politic course. Already there is not | August last in company with Mr. Gomez;'we went | purpose of defrauding the revenue of the United der us for their profit. & white man in Macon who would not protect him at | there to dine; we were in the lower dining saloon, | staies of the tax upon certain whiskey. The testi- The most hideous shape that tyranny ever puts on | the hazard of his own life or aid the negro should he | where there were about sfteen persons; the first | mony now adduced went to show the regulation of is that of a corrupt oligarchy, where the forms of a | need assistance. He assures me that no white man | thing I saw or heard of the defendant was after | those distilleries. free government are coupled with substantial despot- | ever influenced him to support the democrats, but | dinner, when I turned to the right and saw the de- After several objections from Messrs. White and ism, where the rights of the people are acknow- | that he is doing so from a iirm conviction that it is | fendant and bowed to him; I suggested an adjourn- | Patterson the examination of the witness was pro- ledged in theory, while they are practically trodden | the best course to insure the future welfare of his | ment to the smoking room; shortly after the de- | ceeded with, At the time he visited the distilleries under foot; where there i8 a written constitution | race. P fendant came after us, when he said, “Mr. Gomez, | they were in full operation, He made severai ex- which the rulers swear to preserve without keeping In this county (Bibb) the negroes have several | every word I have said to Cammachio consider it | yminations for the purpose of seeing their capacity. their oaths. Rather than see General Grant elected | hundred majority. Until within the past two weeks | said to yourself; his attitude was tragical, but not | ‘he witness not being able to remember tie exact President, with the understanding that he is to ad- } the terror of Long and his radical followers has been | as if ‘he were going to strike; subsequently, {| dates on which he examined the distilleries, Mr. minister the government on the Congressional plan } 80 great that the four or tive hundred negroes who, 1 | thought it was better to stop there; [ tapped | White suggested that he be allowed time to examine of disregarding all constitutional obligations, it | &m assured, will vote the democratic ticket have not | Mr. De Conto on the shoulder and_ said, “Lou | his memoranda. would be far better to let him or somebody else be should not have selected this occasion for this,” Cross-examined by Mr. White—I examined a great prociaiimed absolute dictator and abolish the consti- when he replied, ‘I take the first opportunity { | many distilleries and made reports to the Board; ution at onc ‘or myself, if I must choose be- 7 find,” and said to Mr. “you are a liar and in- | sometimes the Collector sent for me and | made re- tween the two most frighiful evils thateverscourged | about it on account “of Jet Long and his decent person; Mr. Gomi attitude was quiet and | ports; the Metropolitan Board was composed of Mr. the iuman race, Fwill without hesitation take an | short time ago, however, Butier defied the radical | dignitied and he answered, “You are more indecent Parnell, Mr. Tracey, Mr. Courtney and Mr. Kisbey; Jowing about taxation’ The thieves and the whis- key rings who have stolen everything they could lay - ; ne : oe ld lay | answered him by an impeachment, and came within + thelr hands upon. Ii the democratic poilcy of | one vote of deposing hit from his ofiice aud putting Cee ole ete ee adopted then every dollar | in his place a creature of thelr own, who would With that of the rich man. The mer ai, yauaiy | trouble ‘them with no conscientious scrupies, ‘The jai art aoa en who pay the | Supreme Court came to the rescue. They broke bulk of the taxation of the country are in the pro- riadic portion of one to five in the number of voters, His SSimpled sta just auehoriny ander thes fest if Policy was to spread this debt over a term of years t e So that when this country comes to contaia seventy | gic enero ar Halk aS UOt B dispute upon an ab- Balllions of people the burden will not press eavtis apna rag sotys Prescribe alge P S| out thely hostility to the constitution into the fullest on any one. The present generation has borne a tic t r ones eet f “he nay practical operation. And this they did not merely mighty weight already. He charged the advance in ima time of war, When the passions engendered by goid last July to the promulgation of the democratic ‘contest might : attorde 20) C1 Pistform, and he called om his hearers to aayort | ie comlest might have atforded wome feeble excuse Grant and Colfax if they would save the govert- | wen the United States had for more than two ye Meat and the country irom disaster and ruin. ceased to have an armed enemy in the world, Co ‘ ae gress deliberately sai down and plotted the’ total Repablican Convention in Somerville. overtirow of the constitution in: ten of the States, At the Republican Convention for the Third Con. | for no legal reason expressed or understood which | unitmited monarehy in preterence to a rotten re- | bully and organized a ‘colored conservative club, | than myself;” said De Conto, ou say that again | | made several reports to Mr. Pinckney. gressional District of New Jersey, held at Somervitie | Rye note ee ee tee awes. | public. starting with eighty members. Long was present at | will slap you in the fac mez told him, “This } ‘The other witnesses for the prosecution—Gropf and. the frat meeting, and, it ix said, took down the names | is not thé way how genilemen act,” but he did not oHel whom subj as fast as the roli_ was called.’ Since then his tools | say how they act; De Conto said ‘hee would send. i Seer ee er dah se i galerie ed have been threatening the darkies with terrible | person to Mr. Gomez, to which the latter replied “All | heing forthcoming, and the District Attorney failin Punishment if they do not withdraw from the organi. | right;” De Conto subsequentiy left; De Conto was | io show grounds lor Lie issue of attachment agains The republican Congressional nominations in lowa | zation. But they stand firm, relying upon the | very animated at the time the defendant made these | tiem, Mr. Patterson and Mr. White moved ior dis- are complete. The democrats have still to nominate | Pledes of the whites tor prot Indeed. from | remarks; he assumed a threatening aspect, but | missal of the case. Gancnd duatrick ha cunainatee fol. | Slt can learn, if a single conse negro in this | French, Spaniards and Italians are more animated in ‘The District Attorney asked that the case be ad- in the Second district. he candidat are as fol city suffers violence ai the hands of a radical negro | their conversations than the Americans. Jjourned until to-day, and on the Commissioner in- lows:— on account of fis political opinions, Long will be ‘The case was further adjourned till Monday. the rst to suffer therefor. te hus already been i om quiring of the counsel for the defence if they had any en Thursday, Amos Clark, Jr., was nominated. Dr. | wi R. H. Gill f Plainfield, " ered a stirring add iu Lhose limits, but they annililated the federal ws called op and deliv- | government at the same time. They left not one support of the nomination. | vestige of either, and upon the ruins of both they He was lollowed by of Belvidere, and | erected a despotism as absolute as that of an Asiatic AlVan Brant. Mr. Ch nator from Union | sultan, It was not only a usurpation of power not county. granted, and therefore forbidden, but it was exer- cised mn &@ Way precisely most destructive to those CHIEF JUSTICE CHASE AND THE DEMOCRACY, j Heal ony tie constitaiion \was, made on POLITICAL NOT asc = oe re Republican, Democrat. objections to the proposed adjournment Messrs. lt is undeniable that the reconstruction acts (so " c 1 were rned of this, and the warning muy have the effect ~ , : Copy of Fiatform Presented to Chief Justive | called) vioute not only the whole principle and spirit Seen Se Phonaan We Claggert. entinng bloodsuad.. On Meudaycuisht next the SUPREME COURT—CHAMBERS. Hepp ee Were ae TORSO ee hase by Members of the Democratic Come (ee eee ee Me amenditente tacking | &—Wiliam 2. Allison......< William Mis, tod Magen eo beinen trade tie mnie Decent he Decision. charged on the ground that no evidence had been vention and Accepted by Him, Their owh ainendtuent. for the abolition of waverys | 4—WHllam Lougridge. ohn P. irish. largest possibie number of conservative negroes. Jndge Barnard rendered judgment in ihe following | adduced to implicate thei; that the prosecutton, {From the Cincinnati Commercial. Sept. 8] ‘Thai declares that slavery or involuntary servitude | °—Frank W, Paimer eg te Arg . at mabe 284 caye this moruing:— bound to produce the witnesses who were now ab” bagi ag ash Wy eaepbaay o Harriet BF 8. W. L. Fisher.—Roffort of ve- | sent, had failed, and that it was unfair to compel un- The Washington correspondent of the Chicago THE TRUE BLUES OF SCHENECTADY, feree confirmed and divorce granted. necessary attendance from day to day. Tribune write: é Mr. Courtney, in repiy, contended at iength that ‘The following platform of prin to Chief Justice Chase by the m cratic National Convention of 18 Was presented | shall not exist “except for crime whereol the party mbers of tie Demo- | shail have been duly convicted.” But under these and was approved | acts any person may be, and it is notorious that » be : | eo 3 stly inne . a T the circumstances required a postponement and that expression of polltica principles, ainurablytadgpeed | ezine uve been, redueet fo “slavery or mvotuntary | 4 Here It on undoubted authority ‘hat Mr. Seward's | Anauat Masquerade Procession of the Mystic CITY INTELLIGENCE, a fali Investigation of te charges was necessary. to the present needs of the American people. It'was | servitude” of the worst k oO hard labor tor. |, Saands, Bs His, direction, Arg Worning with sipoany Brotherheod—A Gala Day in “Dorp.” . S After Bome discussion the Commissioner adjourned ate of New York, | years and for life without the sm the cane UV MOMay next, &) one dTolodk: your, who pro: | due or legal conviction. ured persons nay suppose that these out- conceived and written out in ihe Hest pretence of a and was approved by Horatio $ fessed a desire to have Mr. Chase nomunated on this Good nit clerk in the State Depart ro 18 & revenue ‘The ancignt dorp of Schenectady deals iargely in Tue WeaTHER YESTERDAY.—The following record officer in Western New York, and h is putting in ] the mysterious. A dozen different seoret organiza- | will show the changes in the rermper oh ale THE LABOR QUESTION. Platform, and pledged his earnest effort to secure | Tages were not wilfully done. I admit we are bound tha Wand inalconsenta are gtiica aantttr an frd tions have ramified from gs classic precincts. ‘The | past twenty-four bours, as tid'sated by the ther- that end od tak colgutenty wibaoaeent eet charity weer | 8ME cause. Mr. Seward has no ambition to | frst of the many college FFaternities extending ali | mometer at Hudnut’s Pharmacy, 218 Broadway, SORERE IE TER Gad Tn the tnuelligence, the patelouiens aint riseaat ander | wove a mantie broad enough to cover such crimes | KeeP the State Department except for Mexican con- | over the country was instituted by the students of | Henaxp Building:— © Master Masons, siderations, which,Rosecrans has sadly anticipated a _ saa " m for the bad, and it'ts said that ne will make a Grant | © College, which haa since become the parent of Speech before he quits Auburi. many similar brotherhoods, The Order of United ‘The diMcuity m the Twentieth Congressional dis- | Atericans, dark lanterns and all, if not founded at The master masons held their weekly meeting yea- terday at the Traders’ Building, No, 51 Liberty street, Mr. Conover in the chair, The minutes of the last justice of the American people, declare their fixed adhesion | a8 theirs, There is airect evidence, corroborated by a tothe great principles of equal rights and exact justice for all | strong chain of circumstances, which proves incon- LL Stat nd the! to apps them, within | testib! y that they knew what they were about. I to all q ng which, in the varying ex- | gught to mention, at lest, some of the evidence to aire, may demand consideration and so | which 1 refer, and I Will. trict of Pennsylvania has at last been satisfactorily nectady, Was greatly stimulated after a branch rage tempe ay meeting having been read and approved tie various ate cach other eat tis whee pees Ps sch gin het gS saieeseeeennts toe adjusted. Mr. Henry C. Johnson, the nominee of th had been established there. Average temperature 73% | committees submitted their reports, which were war; and, offering our most earnest thauks to | members of Congress have read the constitution. | first conference, has witharawn, and the new con- | One of the latest manifestations of this love for the | PERSONAL.—Ambassador Burlingame arrived ip | adopted. Mr. Ross, a master mason, then addressed “endurance ‘and’ seit-aac fing parole commage, | Having read it they could not believe that it | ference has selected Mr. W. C. Gilfillan, of Venango, | mysterious is the organization Known as the True | this city yesterday. the meeting. He said that eight hour men had been ntry, we discard from | @uthorized 4 pag ithe bee an ‘as the compromise candidate. Biues, which parades annualiy about this time of DRATH FROM DROWNING.—Yesterday afternoon } working for some ume past in Booth’s theatre, but od wil, vowaru shone who, | AOPOtRT sat all per with, the light of her, year. Iti composed of many of the wealthiest and | Coroner Keenan was notifled to hoid an inquest at | that they were paid off yesterday and told ,that they as We welcome them to a | and justice. They could not help but see that it pro- GEORGIA. best citizens of Schenectady, who march in a | No. 28 Desbrosses street on the body of JohnConner, | could not work there any longer unless they con- noble rivairy in earnest efforts to surpass each other in mu- | vides a jury trial and a habeas corpus for every citi- who was drowned at pier 49 North river, sented to work ten hours per Gay. At several other masked procession, The custom originated, it is js Suppen DraTH.—Ann Daley, an Irish woman, } Places where eight hour men were employed the A Mulatto Incendiary iu Macen—Wudt His.) tary company that ook part in the Revolution, | MPU-AX ears OF age, dled mudtenly yesterday at | mamer mamnan. The mee were Soneet ts: ine Views Are—Trouble to Follow Distranchine- | {tie ail the rebels Were known As True Bites Ting | Ret late residence, No. 26 Spring street, from un- | bosses that they must abandon the doctrine « elgnt ment of the Blacke—Organization of the | tradition of Munchausen, which is now regarded | Known.causes. One of the Coroners was notified to | hours and work for ten hours per day or vamoose Colored Democracy of Bibb County—A Cous | by the ‘True Blues of the present day as the veri- | bold an inquest, the. ranche. eae eae a table one, says that sixteen thousand years | THe STREET DEPARTMRNT.—The opening of the | ,, Messrs. Sayers, Disbrow, eld, Bidiitze, Webb, ple of Honest,jsensible Darkies. the ‘Valley of the Mohawk was an exten: | piag for ike pid other atest K Cost and several other master masons stated MACON, August 29, 1868. and magnificent inke. The hilis which | for the Ast nee daguet ie tanier. yen Le ghee that they had as many ten hour men in their employ . th castles, e eC the \ 1 Long, who is the leader of the radicals of this part aces and prisons, the’ former inhabited by the a of the absence of the Comptroller from the | member of the practical masonic order, addressed of the State, As the newspapers charged him, or | founders of the True Blues dnd the latter, saith tra- id the meeting in favor of a more vigorous prosecution rather negroes recently arrested, with having ad- | dition, by degenerate and unworthy Sons of Malta, Tak Fire IN RIVINGTON Srreet.—The loss on | of the war against the rebellious workmen. He aaia tual Kindness and common devotign to that Union whose | yen, ‘They must have known that it forbade searches - " ¢ t aa torye hacing. pétiehied ty ihe wear ain bere Ant | aud seizures of person and property without a war- ed by an’ amendment of the national constitution, | rant. They could not close their eyes on the words ght to be restored; wh wise regard to | which declare that no act of attainder or bill of pains the altered circumstances of the country and Impartial jus | and penalties shall be passed; that all judicial au- tice to the miilions who have been enfranchised demand ‘the | thority shall be vested in the ordained and estab- sdoption of all proper constitutional measures for the protec- | lished courts; that every State is guaranteed such Mion, improvement and elevation of this portion of the Ameri- | royin' republican government aa it may chouse ean peop! “4. ‘hat ina land of democratic institutions all public and | and that Congres# shall not regulate the right of Private intereste repose most securely on the broadest basis | suffrage. There are some things tor which ignorance ‘of wufrage, but under the ayatem of distinct, though united | is no excuse. A man who has studied the ten com- States, whieh distinguishes our American government from | mandments cannot be allowed to say that he the consolidated governments of the Old World. both wisdom J thought it right to murder, steal OF bene falas wie ‘and duty require that the application of thia principle be left t his neight ise wit th the several States, the constitution of the United | MESS against his neighbor. The constitution is as - tates, 8 i jain as the decalogue. Abont one thousand years subsequent to this period | stock b rol ya 2 | that no man or body of men should dictate to him Thenalional government Tae WiBous Interference By | Pili ther thing. At the time when these laws were | Vised the radicals to arm themselves, and as tte bears | {)00111 0 Tiysteriously “iried up. leaving nothing = ee ranks of Coles Eee. rs ae orl and should not be permitted to dictate to the master 6. That public security is endan and the public pros. | passed Mr. Thaddeus Stevens was the great leader | the reputation or notoriety of being the most infu- | but miasmatic wastes and unhealthy swamps, if we at y occasioned by the Ore on Thursday | masons the conditions on which men could work at rity arrested by the unwise and unjust disfranehisements , ew gel . a . | night, wi 5 t the . pm y, aan the poopie ‘of he x Hk, by recent legie- of his party In Congress. fis vast intellectual su- pt a few werms of broomeorn, which were after. ie ‘as over estimated in our report yesterda: he trade, Whether a man required one apprentice ential colored man among those of his race in this | €X« ‘ moe riority entitled him to “that bad eminence,” Wards cultivated by Ceres and a descendant of one | It will probably not exceed $3,000; insured f or twenty was his own business, and no one had a pope all Sent ie thee tate et BE | Lowered above all others, like the King of ae Tieng Congressional (istrict, 1 patd him a visit to-day for J Oring original founders of the True Blues, A large | $12,000 in the companies previously named. right to interfere with him, As for the boys, he «in complete anv ubiversal amnesty, “and the apeedieat surrounded by pigmies. “Out of their unlimited con- | the purpose of ascertaining his views. He de- | and proiiuble crop rewarded the labors of the two, FATAL RAILROAD CasvALTY.—Coroner Rollins was | @8ked that apprentices should have the ‘same . ay ae ‘all civil and political disabilities. fidence they trusted him to fratne their measures ac- | nounced the statements of his having incited the ne- | and had it not been for the attempt of an “unworthy yesterday notified to hold an inquest at Bellevue fen be ean” poeta ae ee ie observed with alarm the growing ten- | cording to the views he was known to t; ° dency o the tralization and consolidation of all the pevrtirn> ef questions. He drew up the reconnscen Eoents and are constrained te onpece van ceimative depart: | law, laid tt before them and told them that It was Sistanice. It ieor the frat Imporiance that every deparunent | HOt constitutional. He would not stuitity nimsell by f the government, whether asserting that he found any warrant in the organic be maintained jo ite full law for such an act. When democrats objected he c n said their scruples were merely the splinters of the ait not only in the deairuction of the | Ol brokem constitution festering in their kidneys, ces of the conatilution, but uitimately inthe | Some of the smatier radicals pretented to beheve that eubjngation of the Sena yn of the Staies aud | the war making power—the power bestowed on tw the overthrow of the C Congress to make war upon foreign natious—would ot p~4 faty justify every ena of imseraioved emation wainst es ~ vieerelally | onr own people ina time of perfect peace. ie si. pnaiatent wih the “Teadamental principles 3 lenced that paltry twaddle by the expression of his ber military goreroments nor wilitary com. | Profound contempt. Afterwards, in @ printed aud ence can be tol- | published letter, he boldly avowed that Congress ee institutions. | had repudiated the constitution and that the Recon. and navies in time | gtruction act was a usurpation, He not only av- ery nd is, danger. | knowledged that he himaeif Mad commited that of. tent with due | fence, but he turned State’s evidence and testitic that his associates were equally guilty. His testi. mony is directly to the point. He knew the truth, 1 and he prociatimed tt unequivocally. Now that death Mane ah # | has disarmed him of his mighty power it would not w be magnanimous tn us who opposed him, much ‘our institutions by force npon any people, we aii in those who followed him with servile admiratic eeasion W& the American Union of t wring § in his Lifetime, to vex bis great spirit by asserting willing to that he faisified the history of his party In regard to this most important affair, Again, when the bill was first passe dent sent it back with a veto messag whieh he showed if to be uncoustituttonal by pointing out the particular articles and sections with whieh tt came in direct confiicl, and the demonstration was so clear and trausparcnt that any child conld see it. Not a man in either house had a word to say in reply, They saw themaet arraigned before their co . te stituents by the Chief Magistrate of the nation and hich once possenret this bi " charged With the violation of thelr most sacred ob er 1 weakoons, te the plain deny of the por ations; but they stood mute and made no defence, eded them Vial could this my vonsclousness of guilt? This ts not all, Court, in the Milli- fan case, had se that Congress could Hot pass # law, Under any circumstances or at any person within the United States pe scion of noble sire’ to convert the unwholesome aes ae and he would guarantee their success. The Groes to riot and bloodshed as “rebel ltes;” NE WAS | voreal into whiskey every ouward bound ship of | Hospital over the remains of Wm. Neelan, nine years | boys should be free from the control of organized so. only organizing them into Grant clubs, and intend- America would be freighted with brooms fr a of age, whose death was the result of injuries re- Priced — Fogel ee pd a Ne Spd - t tinue with t rork the election | World! Failure to manufacture an article on whiel , y . ed that not or boy should han 0 contin ih this work until the the traditional descendant and his friends had ie aaa one fe last by Jumping from the | be disturbed in his labor. As for the master masons, takes place. All the injury he could ao the demo- | », hope reer ra Ni joston train, corner of Forty-second street and | they mast stand firm and resist to the last the pres. fourily hoped to get “corned” induced him | Fourth avenue, Deceased lived at 549 Third avenue 2° OF y % + crate it was his purpose to do, ifeven he is killedfor | to emigrate to Ireland, where he founded P * | sure of the strikers. We number, said Mr. Koss, so doing. Thus far bis remarks contained nothing | the modern though honorable fraternity of Masons, ATTEMPT AT SuictpR.— Henry’ Boder, @ German, | sixty men, and we are fully able, by united and de- 2 from which sprang other secret organizations, until | thirty-five years of age. supposed to be insane, at- | ‘ermined efforts, to defy any combination that may Unusual or unnatural; but in answer to a question | the whoie civilized world and a part of the Canuck | 4, mpted ey comeait ilicid rend ft I be organized against us. After some further he openly declared that if Seymour and Blalr are | country is filled with Odd Fellows, Sons of Temper- | suteide yesterday afternoon by | tnarks to the same effect Mr. Ross concluded by mo elected, and the whites of the South attempt to de- | atice, Know Nochings, Fenians and Orangemen, each hanging himself in his room at No. 14 Leonard | ing that the society of master masons adhere to their i M n a good for something, no doubt, but all devoid of an- | strect. He was discovered suspended by his wile | or iwinal resolution of recognizing ten hours only ax prive the negroes of the elective franchise, “there | tiauity and that broad catholic benevolence towards | before life was extinct, and cat down, when he re- | a day's work. The motion was unanimousiy will be trouble.” 1 asked bim if by “trouble | the widow and orpian that has rendered the name | Vived and was taken to the Fifth ward station house, | adopted. he meant violence and btoodshed. “What else | Of True Kiue conspicuous for a million of years, where he was locked up. Mr. DisttveT said that they had fonght the good nm 7 Stich is the account as promulgated in the oMcial SOctAL SCIENCE MEETING.—Four members of the | ht and the battle seemed to be in their faver, put can Mt meant” was the reply. To the | organ of the fraternity—a little paper entitied the | social science » ction of the Association for the ad. | {iat ® more serious contest, growing out of’ this next question, whether he thought the colored people | 7rve Blve, which was circulated on the streets of Science section of the Associa «| strike, was yet to be decided. The apprentice law could succeed in a confict with the whites, be am | 5 ady. vancement of Science and Art met last night at | will be brought before a New York jury on the woth swered that perhaps the Mego ‘ The parade on Thursday last was unequalled in | their room in the Cooper Institute. The subjects | Of this month, and ff it should prove, a4 hus often Perhaps they would not; that Was ac> | numbers aud in the cost of its masks by any of its pre- | under discussion were;—«The lamentably unpropi been Leo ag that in a legal contest capita: has cording to circumstances. Anyhow, they would do | decessors—a fact whl i@ Blues are | tious condition of the weather,” and “The exce chance with Tabor, thelr cause would be lost a @ heap of damage and revenge themselves, for they | eMnentiy progressiv day was a holiday with | ingly remote prospect of any other members putt ‘ieir efforts against combinations would go for not would fight like the In / i every one in town, while thousands flocked in from | in an appearange.”” ‘The entrance of a drenched re- | Ne. Le urged that it was the duty of ile muster idians, destroying property | Aibany, ‘Troy and all the surrounding cities and porter threw such a damper on the meeting that i, | "isons to prevent that resuit by every means in and life, and Keeping in the woods, He did not ad- towns, So (hit the street# at midday were allve with | ‘adjourned incontinentiy. their pow ors, . Distives ext ail ded to the slim vine this, but he kr sabe cal . | people. Break of day was announced by the ring- w nan . ‘ ec © last meeting, of wh feed Of thie che It would come, and being sit | Tre or ail the bellain town. ‘Twelve o’clock was | N#W YORK TyrogRapatcal, UNION.—A grand pie- | pained; gave noiice that a call would « led 0 ts, should the democrats come in power proclaiined by a salute of cannon, At two o’clock | Mle and summer night's festival of Typographical | to (he society for material aid, and cone! he a to leave the South, The colored people - foot herr | on Pegg ens Meg yg Unton No. 6 comes off this afternoon end evening at grassed tighthlug an be Lm nd i‘ were determined to dete he on foot, assembled at the rendezvous, hree + Wood Omticks’ sreu und the result would be vic themecives. They canst Pielt Fights and revenge | Groiock tte procession, which was & mile long, formed | JONES’ Wood, As typos are no “sticks” at knowing pada * They could only get killed, and t } and marctied through the principal streets, their | how to “chase” the golden hours with fying feet it LONG ISLAND INTELLIGENCE Would be better for ail of them to die than to be de- | progress being ac rompanied by an incessant ringing | is fair to presume they will have a good time, Alex- "nae ‘i prived of the sufirage. In a word, they would not of all the in. Everybody gto ast. Td sandler Troup Hs the “Head ech sius cocaman, wit Came MEBTING aT FLUSHING.—The camp meeting otly submit 2 . ‘ essrs. i. 1. Sandaver, Robert F. Kerr, He S. Smith. | in wp, © " ws 7 ns oped ane seaine tee Sahn away of he avr eeetea ! f W. H. Bodwell and John C. Ketd will help hin Mr. Cntter's grove, near Flushing, commenced viaine the white people for being demo- | headed ea crats, but the colored men who vote with them are Hothing less than dogs. If one of these “dogs” at | Jupanese tempted to speak to him he would horsewhip the | fexu, aes Ri “brute” on the spot: if he dare "4 follower prute” on the spot: if he dared to speak to his page to d wife he would feel like killmg the finuanee of Abe tral of wnwise end ix civil liberty. minsiona for the trial of elt therefore, we have neither the the Presi- “make up. under rather inauspicious cireumstances yesterday, THe WoMAN’s MeprcaL Couirar.—The next ses. | OWlig to the heavy rain storm, The preparations, sion of this institution, which is sitnated at No, 126 | Lowever, contemplate a success when fair weather nstitation a earns, Among the distinguished persons tovited Second avenue, will open on November 2 and con- > Right Rev. Williain H. Bi hop of Newark; Right tinue five months. ‘The course inciudes three ses- Sampson ‘Taibot, of Washin and Right OF his right to be tried by an iinpartial jury in a reg- wervatlve | vesiied sions. Students in the first year are occupled in the of Baltimore, The committee in t tie working nen othe | aren sera i y Sobapeplbhiteg edna ainem.. hie ings BH - ‘ sts. A. Crook, Peter Hardin, Abram bag A Hecision waa pe well known | darky. Here Long became very vindictive and in- | fe best tasks in bie Hine was anatomical rooms, the laboratory aud the pharin Voornis, © aries Te tewh, George Underiiil, Samuel Congress whe alike requir determined joudiy’ dressed man an aske Jim if the dewo- cendiary in his langniy ipo pettres mitoine, sur. . sag in the second year with lectures on medicine, sur | \ijuon, James Hicks amd Wiliam 4 ; preadwell, of ort liver aine inilitons of people at onee hang | cratic negro hy 1 as good 1 feal | woman in # stylish phe Heures “7, . ; tien oe ple at ones 4 good a right to his politica } gery and obstetrics, and in (ie third with practical t ale OF Linprisoned Without judge or jury, according to | opinions as th l. No, he had no such rights | on either side aud the iwseription. “Saratoga, 1s fiedical work, under me, supervision of the profes. | !'tsting. e any jaattied we speck 1 as a pod ue or eaprice of the “sattaps” or “lord | there was not acolored man in ihe South who Nad | behind. The Grecian Bend was done to perfection | gors, ‘The great charitable insututons, particularly QUEBNS County AGRICULTURAL “Socirry.—The of iawe iit canew of con | Wry’ Whom they might send down to do the Jet me mention anc they acted with their Last winter—e. the right to join the democracy, Those “dogs” who | (or imperfection) by an extravagantly dressed mask | Relievne Hospital, have been thrown open to women | arrang a twenty-seventh annual exhi- ul joined the rebels would not be admitted into re- | caricaturing the original as seen at Saratoga and | for clinical instruction in the science taught at the | ments for the iy: bition of this society, which is to be held on the 224, onge to tie Thos fi te the duty of Congres jute the burde her fact, which shows that es wide open to the truth. ear after the reconstraction the question of ite constitutional « (Here was social ostracism | elsewtr it was a carnival seene throughout and would not dare toenter tne | would have done justice: to many @ display. in Kuro. | Cede. » slat 234 and 24th instant, have just been issued. ‘The un cities Where such things have been the enstom Fiout OVER THE SPOILS OF OFFICR. he deputy | sum of $2,534 will be distributed among the exhibit- that the whites would try fo return them to slavery uries, commixsioners and clerks in the offices of the Com. | ors for premiums, $1,300 of which will be awarded again. If they did there would not bea bouse left The festivities wound up with & supper at the | missioners of Taxes and Board of Assessors wore | on cattie and horses and the remainder on sheep, He (Long) did not fear duty of every branch . y Congress knew that the court © and practice the mort rigid ba beam + pabite irate, is decide against them, and for that reason alone ead wehowe the cooperation of ai | Hey ‘Yade a law 19 forbid way decision at al. ‘The © ihe yne mt to en standing in Georgia, If the whites wanted to vile at | Givens House in the evening, where much amuse- swine, poultry, farm produce, carriages, neediework, i Was croited on the removal ob Masks and ine | Yesterday morning surprised by a wholesale dis- snanufeerures, ‘Ac. kentries must be made previous a) LECOvETIC® That Look place: ebarge of thew entire foree. Subeecuendy a nom. | to the 19th, in order fo secure stalls or stabies, peace with the blacks they conid do so by recognizing | 0 the Jailer, Hoi only we freemen, Oni ae political ane

Other pages from this issue: