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10 HORACE GREELEY. He Receives tho Formal Notification _of His Nomination. ‘he Democratic Committee Wait Upon Him. THE DEAD PAST BURYING ITS DEAD. The Speech of a Novice at Receiv- ing Nominations. GREELEY STILL A REPUBLICAN. The Democratic Committee appolnter! to notify Mr. Greeley of his nomination met atthe new din- ing room of the Fifth Avenue Hotel yesterday—the historic apartment where the famous Vario-Lioyd Conference met some weeks ago to blight the Gree- ley Dud—and organized for the purpose of waiting ‘wpon the Philosopher and tendering him the formal Domination. There were present THE FOLLOWING MEMBRRS:— James R. Doolittle, of Wisconsin, Chairman; Alabama, F, W. Sykes; Arkansas, J. C. Maccabe; California, J. G. Downey; Florida, ©. W. Jones; Georgia, W. A. Hawkins; Illinois, G. H. McCormick; Indiana, M. M. Ray; Iowa, J. D. Thompson; Kansas, T. P. Fenlon; Kentucky, B. McGofin; Louisiana, G. Campbell; Maine, J, Calladigan ; Maryland, P. F, Thomas; Massachusetts, J. G@. Abbott; Michigan, George H. Bunce; Minnesota, William Lee; Missis- sippi, E. 0. Sykes; Missouri, H. Brockmeyer; Ne- braska, J. C. Crawford; Nevada, 8. D. Wyman; New Hampshire, C. G, Chandler; New Jersey, A. A. Har- denburg; New York, James 8, Thayer; North Caro- Ina, A. M. Sculls; Ohio, J, A. MoMahon; Oregon, ; Pennsylvania, W. A. Wallace; Rhode Island, A. Sprague; South Carolina, James Chesnut; Ten- nessee, John C. Burch; Texas, A. Smith; Vermont, L. Robinson; Virginia, John L, Mayne; West Vir- ginia, William M. Clements; Wisconsin, D. 8. Weil. There were also present Augustus Schell, Chair- man of the Democratic National Committee, Fred- rick 0. Prince of Boston, Secretary, and two or three personal friends of the members who had ap- Plied for the honor of accompanying the delegation end secing the Presidential candidate. BX-SENATOR DOOLITTLE. A portly, broad shouldered westerner with silver grey hair and whiskers, deep voice and hearty manners, called the meeting to order, and read the letter officially announcing the nomination, {tis as follows:— Barriworr, July 10, 1872, Dean Srr—It is our pleasure, in contormity with the Instructions of the di SoraeS PATS, as represented in ‘ational Convention wembled inthis city, to inform ze, that you have b unanimously nominated as can- idute for the Presidency of the United States. The Con- vention, Pynsteting. ot 78 delegates, representing ever: State and Territory in the Union, adopted, without amend- ment, the declaration of principles astormed at Cincl: hati, which has already received your approval, and has been strengthened by the terms of your endorsement. The action this great body of” delegates proves that they are with singular unanimity determined, under your leadership, upon the patriotic duty of restoring purity and integrity to the administration of the govern: ment, and that independence in all its departments whic regards the constitution as both the source and the limit Of federal power. Laying aside the prejadices of the past, Sbandoning all purpose of mere partisan advantage, ask: f, no pledges other than fidelity to bt) coor lea to which they have given their deliberate and resolute ad- erence, and which they believe will command the ap- proval ofa large majority of the American people, they Ask you to accept their nomination, contident that peace and good government will be inaugurated with your ad- winistration. The committee accepted the letter, and each member signed it. THE PROCESSION. Then, at twelve o'clock precisely, forming in pro- eession two and two, Augustus Schell and Senator Doolittle leading, the committeemen gravely walked out of the new dining room, through the gorthern corridor, down the main staircase, through the grand hall of the Fifth Avenue Hotel, down Fifth avenue, past the Glenham Headquar- ters, through Twenty-first street, past Broadway, to the Lincoln Club House. : : AN IRISH OPINION OF THR PROCESSION. The party of Irish laborers who are at work on the corner of Twenty-first street and Fifth avenue, and who always stop work to follow Horace Gree- ley with their reverential eyes when he passes, were nonplussed by this stately looking | eet and inquired of one another what it could be, “Whisha!”’ said one of them, “mebbe ite the Orangemen.” THE GRAVE AND REVEREND SEIGNORS marched wit an uncadenced step, and some of them straggled here and there, and when a slight shower threatened and a few of them hoisted their umbrellas they presented rather a unique appearance; but, taken all im all, with the port y figures of Doolittle and Governor MagoMn, he fall and vigorons form of — Schell, the lithe and prim figure of Fop ce, and the small, compact frame of ex-Senator Chestnut, of South Carolina, there was a weiglity and potential look about them—nothing of that woebegone aspect which might be inferred from the remark of a venerable looker-on. ‘That it was the demo- _ party going to be buried by the Reverend jorace Greeley.” GREELEY'S MOVEMENTS. In the meantime the Ae apo fignre of all this parade, Horace Greeley, had not been idle. He had risen with the lark—if any lark papper’ to be in the neighborhood of the st. Cloud Hotel yesterday morning—and after breakfast wended his way down town. At the Fifth Avenue he presented his card to the clerk, and asked to have Senator Carl Schurz informed of his coming. In a moment or two he was ushered into parlor 42, where the Sen- ator from Germany, In his light cheviot suit, sat at & table writing. While there Governor B. Gratz Brown arrived, and was shown tnto the room. It is to be presumed the candidates and their power- ful champion had A GOOD TIME TOGETHER, for they were closeted fully half an hour, It was bow nearing eleven o'clock, and Mr. Greeley walked over to the Glenham Headquarters, whence he took his way alone to the Lincoin Club, A “CRIBUNE” GROUP, Here he was joined soon after by Whitelaw Reid, Samuel Sinclair and John F. Cleveland, the “very only’’ brother-in-law that the Philosopher is blessed with. These gentlemen remained with him until the ceremony took place, and as they are all Tribune men, @ casual observer might have sup- L Sete that Doolittle, Schell, Chestnut, Magoffin and heir friends were a body of country republicans rushing to renew their subscriptions to the Tribune at club rates, and secure a likeness of the sage into the bargain, Mr. Greeley was at his high desk, looking over a newspaper, with his journalistic henchmen ranged about him, when the committee quietly PILED INTO THE PARLORS, There were about forty of them, and they filled the front parlor, When they were all in the Philosopher rose and advanced tomeet them. Angustus Schell, the Grand Sachem of Tammany, and Greeley, the Grand Sachem of anti-fammany, shook hands quietly without the exchange ofa word. Doolittle advanced and shook hands, and at once com- menced to deliver his spe which he read from the manuscript in an impressive tone, as in serious conversation. THE PHILOSOPHER STOOD with his head slighly lowered, as if in attention, Except that lis black alpaca coat was a littie awry behind, he was faultlessly arrayed, ‘was as tail as the largest Western or Sonthern man in the delegation, and the “great globe itself,” which surmounts his shoulders looked noble and majestic as the “front of Jove,” a station like the herald Mercury new lighted on some heaven-ki: ing hill.’ The delegates ranged themselves abot Senator Doolittle, and Augustus Schell took station atthe right of the candidate, spoke as follows :— EX-SENATOR DOOLITTLE’S SPERCH. “81 Mr. GREELeY—It is my pleasing duty as chair- man of this committee, appointed by the Demo- cratic National Convention at Baltimore, to notify uu of its nomination for the Presidency, We were Informed that it would be agreeable to you to meet Pa here, and we have come in a es 4 accor iy. The published proceedings of that Con- vention show great unanimity and cordiality, but those only who had the opportunity of wit- nessing them can realize the enthusiasm with which it resolved to sustain the liberal republican movement and the yay enunciated at Cincinnati, and resolved also, as the surest mode of giving expression to those principles to place you in nomination. We both witnessed and feit that cordiailty and enthusiasm. You will now permit me to present to you the official letter of notit tion, and also to present to you the members of tue committee. PRIENDLY GREBTINGS. Mr. Doolittle hereupon handed Mr. Greeley the Jetter printed above, and then introduced the nem- bers individually to him. When Ilingtg was called Mr. G, H. McCormick, the tuventor of the reaping maciiine, advanced, and Greeley, sht&ing hin warmly by the hand, said, “No need to bgeoduce us. @ are old agricultural friends.” MR, BROCKMEYER, OF MISSOURI, came forward. ‘We had made some mistake as to Missouri,” sald Doolittle, “but Mr. Brockmeyer is | @Nd at ten o'clock, when the HERALD Ana of tho leaders there, aud as that State is the | tus he was sicybiug comfortably, eee In height no | Senator Doolitue | _ ‘NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1872--wITH SUPPLEMENT. toate, in this movew.ent it must not be passed : AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE, Judge Mason, of lows, “advanced somewhat tim- idly, but the moyaent My, Greeley heard his name he said:—"Tbk ty-six fears agé the Judge andl / ” Were very well acquamnied.’ “Yes,” said the “edee, delighted, ‘‘we boarded together!” ONE /p THE RESURRECTED, “Ihave especiy,) pleasure,” said Doolittle, “in in- troducing tO You ex-Senator Chesnut, of South i the Senators of 1860.” ‘or, a short, compact man, with sil- vers and whiskers, fierce dark eye end dark comp? exion, clad in gray, stepped forward and shook "jancs with the Puflosopher, who towered above him like Pelion ypon Ossa, It was a some- what suy’ sestive meeting, this of the earliest rebel of Sout! , Carolina, the Senator who first left his race fa the United States Senate to follow the rtury’ 98 of his flery little State, with the old aboll- tion ¢ aief. It was'a more thorough burial of dead past asus than anything yet, and, in the person of he ex-Senator, YTesurrécted from his political des .th after so long a time, it might have been m- ff rred that the dead past was reply burying its #.cad. The introductions being contluded iree- uey cleared his throat and Spoke as follows :— MR. GREELEY’S BPERCH. Mr. CHAIRMAN AND GENTLEMEN OF THE CoM- MITTEE OF THE CoNVENTION—I should require time and consideration to reply fitly to the very ingore tant and, I need not say, gratifying communication that you have presenien to me, It may be that I should present in writing some reply to this. How- ever, a8 I addressed the Liberal Convention of Cin- cinnati ina letter somewhat widely considered, it 1s, perhaps, unnecessary that I should make any formal reply to the communication made other than to say | accept your nomination, and accept grate- fully with it the spirit in which it has been presented, My position is one which many would consider proud one, which, at the same time, is embar- rassing, because it subjects me to temporary—I trust only temporary—misconstruction on the part of some old and life-long friends. 1 fee) assured that time only is necessary to vindicate not only the disinterestedness, but the patriotism of the course which I determined to pursue, which I had deter- mined long before 1 had received so much sym- thy and support as has so unexpectedly to me en bestowed upon me. I feel certain that time and in the good providence of God, an opportunity will be afforded me to show that, while you in making this nomination are not less demo- cratic, but rather more democratic, than you would have been in _ taking an Opposite course, that 1 am no less thoroughly earnestly republican than ever 1 was. (Great pee) jut these matters require grave con- sideration before I should make anything that seems @ formal response, am not much accus- tomed to receiving nominations for the Presidency (laughter), and cannot make responses so fluently as some others might do. (Great laughter.) I can only say that I hope some, or all, you can make it convenient, will come to my humble farmer home, not far distant in the country, where I shall be glad to meet all of you, an where we can converse more freeley and deliberately than we can here, and where I shall be glad to make you welcome—well, to the best the farm affords.” (More laughter.) I hope that many of you—all of you—will be able to accept this invitation, and I now simply thank you and say farewell. ke the 8:16 train.” THE CHAPPAQUA JUBILEE, Some informal discussion then ensued regarding the trains to Chappaqua, and Mr. Schell stated that he would have some extra cars attached to the 10:40 express, which could be dropped at Chappa- gre this morning. Quite a large gathering of the hilosopher’s friends is expected at his “humble farmer home” to-day. The committee then with- drew to the Fifth Avenue, ‘MR. GREELEY AS AN ORATOR. One individual, charmed with Mr, Greeley’s off- handed speech, spoke to Whitelaw Reid about It:— “Did he write that speech,” asked he, “and com- mit it to memory *"” “No,” responded Retd;. “he couldn’t write a speech any more than you could talk an editorial.” THE LIBERAL REPUBLICAN National Executive Committee met at the Glenham House in secret session during the day and resoived to retain their organization separately from the democrats. They passed a resolution, however, recommending tliat conventions of the two parties in the same State be held simultaneously and at the same point, so as to secure co-operation and harmony, Ethan Allen was re-elected chairman and Daniel R. Goodloe ana Jasper W. Johnson sec- retaries. During the session Horace Greeley en- tered and was iieartily cheered. Carl Schurz came in afterwards and recetved a similarly enthusiastic welcome. Among the distinguished visitors at the headquarters oes the day was General Stephen. G. Burbridge, of Kentucky, who, witn his little Gaughter, called upon Governor Brown. ILLNESS OF GRATZ BROWN, The Governor of Missouri and Vice Presidential Candidate Taken Suddenly Ill Yesterday. Carolina, one Th 1 HE AS SUDDENLY RECOVERS. Governor Gratz Brown, the Vice Presidential can- didate, left his hotel in New Haven at twenty minutes to eleven o’clock Thursday night, in the carriage of ex-Governor English, to take the boat for New York. On board the steamboat he was met by Commodore Peck, the Superintendent of the line, who escorted his distinguished passenger to his own luxuriously furnished stateroom. The boat did not leave till a few minutes past midnight when Governor Brown retired, after having accepted the Commodore's hearty invitation to breakfast with him at eight o'clock. It was arranged to call the Governor at half-past seven, and promptly at that hour the steward tapped at the door, Governor Brown at once arose, and after performing his toilet was conducted to the saloon below, where an elaborate breakfast was spread. The Commo- dore presided at the board, and besides the Vice Presidential candidate the only persons present were a friend of the Commodore and a HERALD reporter. Governor Brown ate very sparingly, and, among other dishes, from some nicely SERVED SOFT SHELL CRABS, | to which dish the doctors attribute his illness. He | drank neither tea nor coffee, but only a simple glass of ice water, At breakfast he remarked that the previous night he had enjoyed a refreshing sleep, the first good night’s rest, he added, that he had obtained for a week past. During the day previous, as well as in his long speech from the crowed balcony of the hotel, he had been exposed to considerable exertion, and owing to the sultry condition of the atmos- | phere was perspiring frecly. On tho Sound, however, the breeze was fresh and cool, and as a fears sat smoking in the stateroom for an hour after the Governor bad retired, and the win- dows were consequently open, It is Lola the sudden check of perspiration had something to do with his tines, Breakiast was concluded on board the Continen- tal at nine o’clock, and at about half-past nine the Governor left in a carriage from Peck slip, by way of the HERALD office, to Broadway, and thence to the Fifth Avenue Hotel. On the way he again re- ferred to the fact ot his refreshing night's sleep and iis exuberant spirits in consequence, Tt_ was about ten o’clock when Governor Brown alighted at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, where he re- mained about an hour, when he was met 4 n- tleman from Lexington, » & friend of his boy- hood, with whom he strolled over to THE GREELEY HEADQUARTERS, at the Glenham Hotel, in Filth avenue. There he met other Kentuckians whom he had known from boyhood, and sitting In a corner of the committee room they talked over old times, No part of the Sonversation had any political significance, but it was confined to reminiscences and eaare in relation to matnal friends, After half an hour Gov- ernor Brown rose to return to the Fifth Avenue Hotel, but before he reached the steps of the Glen- ham, he felt a sudden dizziness in his head He Pg of it toafriend and & moment after asked the same gentleman to attend him up stairs as he il and faint. where ‘he was placed @ essen; despatched for @ physician, Several tors were speedily at the hotel, but Governor Brown was insensible. An ex- amination of the case showed him to be sufferin, | from an acute attack of cholera morbus, At abou one o'clock Dr. Theophilus Steele arrived, followed | by Dr. Henry, | Governor Brown remained tnsensi- ble till haif-past three o'clock in the afternoon, at which time he recovered and passed into a natural and tranquil sleep, At hali-past four he awoke, and his eyes encountered, among the first persons standing over him, Dr. Theophilus Steele, whom he had not seen for ten years, “THROPH, 18 THAT YOU said the Governor, and being ans afirmative, he put forth his hand, grasped the doctor's, he seemed to recognize for the first time that something had befallen him, “Where am I,” he asked, “what's the trouble?! fou have had an attack of cholera morbu Governor,” said Dr. Steele, ~The Governor put his hand down npon his stomach, and said, “Yes, I feel the pain acutely here.” He then stated that he had | been hag ry 4 unusually well, but as he was about | to leave the hotel felt for two or three minutes a | sudden dizziness, after which ail was a biank, At six o'clock he felt much better, and occaston- ally volunteered a joke in a low tone and witha | peculiar species of wit, of which he seems master, and which 1s half humor and half sarcasm. Speak- ing of his condition and the number of doctors tu attendance, he said ne had been surrounded and nearly destroyed by them, They dida’t have a Vicd President to pactise upon every day, and they scemed determined to make the iost of one when they canght him, At seven o'clock Governor Brown retired to bed, Speer lett danger ig was very He was taken to room ua upon a sof ani past, and te candidate for the Vice Presidency will ABLM TO BE ABOUT TO-DAY, Shona, "his visit to Chappaqua will doubtless be postpy/ae Ei as crowds of siveneese and curiosity seete. ers called at the Glenham Hotel when the news of his iiness spread abroad, and many of thew, left thetr cards, but none were admitted. Among tho friends of Governor Brown who called, iin, of Kentucky; ex-Gov- Were ex-Governor Mi jana, and Mr. Friakhauser, ernor Herbert, of Loui ula, GREELEY ACOEPTED IN TENNESSEE, NASHVILLE, July 12, 1872, Judge T. A. R. Nelson,ina letter declining the nomination of Presidential elector, tendered him by the liberal and conservative conventions, de- clares himself satisfled with the action of the Bal- timore Convention, and be nd all opponents of Grant to cordially and cheerfully unite in support of Greeley, whose entire career 1s an ample guar- antee that he not only possesses a high order of ability, buta kind and genial nature, and that he would endeavor to adininister the government with the strictest integrity as President not of a party but of the whole nation. AMHERST COLLEGE. Closing Day of the Fifty-first Commencement Week. ORATION BY RALPH WALDO EMERSON. The Creat New England Ora- tor on “Greatness.” EXERCISES OF THE DAY. Conferring Diplomas on the Suc- cessful Graduates. AMHERST, Mass., July 11, 1872, Alumni day has come and gone. Last year ‘the tribes came up from every land,” from the East and the West, to join In the semi-centennial jubilee and rejoice together in the prosperity of their Alma Mater. As was expected, the attendance of alumni this year was small. A meeting, however, was held in College Hall at half-past nine in the morning, whereat the customary speeches were made, and the recollections of happy college days were quickened. Rev. Henry M. Storrs, 1846, was chosen President. A vote of thanks was returned to Mr. Samuel A. Hitchcock for the gift of $100,000, and also to Mr, A. B. Ely for his efforts before the Leg- islature last winter in behalf of the college. Steps were taken to comply with an act of the Legisla- ture whereby the alumni are allowed to appoint the five trustees now appointed by the Leg- islature. The college treasurer resigned, and was requested to continue in office until another should be elected, It was voted to transfer the bonds and securities of the college to Boston for safe keeping. There was a social gathering of the trustees in the evening. day was the address by Ralph Waldo Emerson in the afternoon. Mr. Emerson, I belleve, has a natu- ral antipathy for newspaper reporters. The HERALD reporter called at the President's house in the morning. Mr. Beecher, Mr. Emerson and two young ladies were sitting on the front piazza. The reporter inquired for the President, when Mr, Beecher replied that he was to be found in the study. Entering the study he asked if Mr. Emer- son was in. “Yes,” said the President; “1 will speak to him.” Mr. Emerson soon walked in, and “guffered” an introduction; but I found it impossi- ble to get what I sought in the way of “a first copy” of his intended address, Mr. Emerson objects, as a general rule, to have | his name in print, and he so stated, though he made the proviso that on the present occasion his address would be of no uncommon character, and that a mere mention of its delivery in tonnection with the proceedings in the college would be all it merited. His subject, selected for the instruction of the Soctal Union, was “Greatness,” and your readers, after a perusal of the oration, will probably. form their own opinions as to the ¢xirewo modesty of the author's remarks. RALPH WALDO EMBRSON ON “‘ORIATNESS.’? GENTLEMEN OF THE Social, UNton—There ip a prize which we are all aiming for, The more power and goodness we have, s0 much the more energy. Every human being has a right to it, and in the pursult no man stands in another's way. ‘There are as many degrees of skill as there are in- dividuals, and ‘every one, by success in pursuit, not hinders, but aie Success is variously termed, I might call it completeness— might call it character. I- prefer to call it great- ness—the fulfilment of a natural tendency in each Master, It ig a fruitful etudy—that of the humant- ties, Gifts of the intellect and sentiments of the moral nature have the preference. This is the worthlest history of the world, Not the soldier, not the governor, not strong hands, represent the highest force of mankind; but wisdom, civility, laws, letters and art, We call these the humanities, No man stands unrelated, and we admire eminent men, not for themselves, but for their reiation. ‘The Intellect and the moral sentiment which are in the last analysis cannot be separated. There are many men that say thought rules the world. Who can doubt the potency of an individual mind? It is this that fires the ambition of every man, It gives them moral character. We count as the world’s great masters Alaric, Mohammed, Mira- beau, Napoleon; even Henry VITI. But Tam to say that no way has been found to make heroism easy. The key note of the true man 1s greatness— that which belongs to us all, to which we are sometimes faithless, but of which we never quite despair, but hope to make our monitor through the eternities. It is only the best anec- dotes of mind that we wish to hear. 1 know that men of character think that they must go to Africa, to Rome, to China. We have learned that the college, parlor and counting room demand as much courage as the sea or the camp, It is very certain that we are not, nor should be, contented by any glory we have reached, Every man comes one day to be superfuous. How soon we become sick of the play- things of the nursery, and the time will come woen Homer's poetry will sound like tin pans. The raise we give to the true hero we shall unsay. he very word “greatness” provokes a feeling of hostility. Greatness! Is there not something un- fecling In the word? There are points alike be- tween the old way and the new way of the road to the stars. SELF-RESPECT IS ONE. To use a homely Illustration, we are at once drawn to that man in a tavern that maintains his own opinions ip the face of all the by-standers. We know his self-respect, The common laborer re- fuses money for saving your life, and makes himself pd equal by the act, aud asserts his self-respect. What a bitter-sweet sensation we have after pour- ing out our praises on one to find him quite fndif- ferent to our good opinion! One sometimes meets a gentieman who, if good manners had not existed, would have invented them, showing what man originally was to man. Self-respect, then, 18 the following of an inward leader, and Is one of the main ciements of greatness, There are functions of nature supplementary to the pent of tndivid- uals; thus far geology, ere willbe men born for an eye to viewing Mountains and marking the differences of strata. Such a man will have a desire for chemistry, for natural physics, for fishes and for plants, Men of the present find a stimulus through the wonders laid open by means of the solar spectroscope, finding the same or similar elements in the san and distant planets as in the earth. Again, one boy longs for the sea, another for foreign lands, another to be an archi- tect, Thus there is not aman born but, as his enius opens, turns in that line to his pursuit. ere is the poet, the orator, the schoolmaster, the college man, thé physician’ and the jurist. {It is singular to see the adaptations of men to the world and every part of it, I remember that Sir Hum- sy Davy said, “My best discovery was Michael ‘araday.’’ In 1848 Thad the pleasure of listening to Faraday lecturing on dia-magnetism, or crosa- magnetism. He showed the force, by experiment with several gases, that when eee eee is from north to south, in gases {t may be from east to west. Further experiments led him to say that every chemical substance had its own polarity, I not there a aiinilar attribute in the soul? The min of a man differs from every other mind as it opens. There is a teaching from within leading him in a new path, which signatizes bim and makes him more Important to rca, G We cali this his bias. No one will ever accomplish anything © unless he listens to this so-called bias in EVERY INDIVIDUAL HAS A PROPRIUM, Swedenborg calls it @ passion, The individual must obey this as it becomes developed, and only as he develops this does he gain true power in the world, It is his tags cage needle that leads bim through the world, In morals this is called con- science; in the intellect it i# called genius; in prac- tice itis called talent, I remember a critic at a college commencement cared more for how much of the boy waa left Ia each speaker than how much improvement they had made. He looked for the roprium of each, is self is often overlooked, et feu men be set to Me nag m paren, and nine forget their own experiences {n describing the ex- periencas of others, Others fail to mark the “self” in otuers. Young peovle should Dot leaye out the The most attractive thing of the | one thing 4.4!" qurse would say. Ihave observed that 1 “il the public akers there is SHERMAN IN BERLIN. THE FILIBUSTER FANNIE. desirg to please rather than to speak their deep convictions; when the thought that stands for gives him fuller greatness in the intellectual powers, so that mankind seems to speak through his . rans- fguration to aman thus speaking. speaker has sprennes he ia the true orator, \d all who wish to be similate him, Shall we ask, what is this self-respect? This would involve a search into the highest problems. A man needs all the armory of thought, and must wait sedulously every morning for the thought the spirit will give him, And in this self-respect, or hearkening to the rfect oracle, the man ought never to be at a loss in respect to his deep religious convictions, This is our practical perception of the deity in mah. “We do not pretend to any revelation,” says the Quaker, “but ifat any time I wish to perform a Ln Sigg A something interposes in the mind I let it He, it don’t pass away I yteld to tnis deep conviction in iy religious nature.” If you ask the nature of this I cannot describe it. It is too simple to be described, It is like a grain of mustard seed, Yet the opposition of all mankind could not swerve me from Ts leadings, nor the consent of all mankind contirm it. Respect the bias of the individual mind. The world is created as an audience for the scholar, and the atoms of which bis world is made are opportunities, Let the scholar use genius to cope with giants, Another would show what, Stick to your own. Do not engage in a local, social or national crime, Thus will you develop @ charac- ter somewhat more clear and incorruptivle than the midnight star, The man with Catholic genius draws the extremes of society so that the very dogs believe in him, We have had such EXAMPLES IN THIS COUNTRY. In politics, Clay, Webster, Lincoln—a man who commanded the admiration of all, There was not reom in his heart to hold a wrong. In the pulpit we have Father Taylor; in England, Fox; in Scot- land, Robert burns; and Ihave some conviction that this can be justided even where there is great imperfection in character, Perhaps the old Trouvére poet was right:. Toft have heard, and deemed the witness true, hat man delights in, God delights in, too. Every sensible man drops out of his narrative all allusion to himself, He is content with putting his theme on {ts own ground. You shall not tell me that you have learned to know most men; your saying 80 Simproven it, You shall not tell me be thelr titles what books you have read; you shall not tell me your house is the best and your pictures the finest; you shall make me feel it. I am to infer itfrom your conversation. A celebrated Marshal of France said of Albert Durer, -‘1t seems as if the sea stood in awe of that man, so strong was his personality.” What a difference there is between man and men in history. The inventor's skill never dics, One man tends a stocking loom, an- other makes shoe pega. Newton, Laplace and Letb- nita are ready to construct a world if this one does not suit them. Biographies of Raphael show what he accomplished. Of Napoleon, eyen in his down- full, what power remains, ahd what an in- fiuence he handed down to his Gecavine dynasty! He pierced through the surface to the heart of @ matter by the speed of his action, and his letters of instruction to his brother Joseph in Italy were, “Be master.” When an earl of Ireland was brought to London some one said that all Ire- land could not goyern this king, ‘Then let him vern Ireland,” was the reply. Gibbon pretended vices he did not possess that he might ESCAPE THE CENSURE OF HYPOORISY, Men of great perception appear to have an en- thusiasm approaching insanity. The favorite of Wealth more than the educated man 1s preferred, “{ never knew a bad man without some good in him.” The Five Points in New York are even said to have their own virtues. Déderaux was the best man in France. His humanity knew no bounds, A certain man wrote some lampoonery about him, and afterwards was obliged to come to him to write an introduction, which he did, and thus secured twenty-five guineas to save his poor lampooner alive, The great man is he who fills the relation to all humanity which he possesses, He exists for the widest use. He isthe friend of schools, churches, &c. All greatness is in degree—there is more above than below. We have seen an intellectnal torso, without hands or feet, and oaly working by presence and superior inteliigence. Such I call not Inen, but rather influences. There is a class of men who, without address, possess talent—tn whose persons genius is admonished for itself. We admire the intellectual gods of the world— Homer, Plato, Shakspeare—but who were the these gods delighted in? They are the silent, poised lovers who make the sense and conscience of the mind—only working in the intelligence as a living force. Such are our influences, Miners in California tellus that there is an ore from which the gold cannot be separated without loss, There are men from whose mind nothing can be detached without the disintegration of the whole. How often, then, wo lament when we SEE TALENT SUCK THE SUBSTANCR, How often we are unable to separate general from specific ability. Some ome has said, Blessed are they who have no talent,” for they live. It is impossible to inventory the minds of the gods, We meet people who réad us, but do not tell us what they read. ‘The only real benefit of which we are susceptible is what has been dignified for us, We must ask, with M. Antonius, if a picture is good what matter who painted it? What matter who does good if the good Is only accomplished. It 1s always desirable to collect examples in which greatness is dwarfed by greatness of a higher strain. You must not wait till the sun is entirely down, for this is a subject which ends only in eter- nity. I must read you a story of humility: Bra- zier, a Jesuit, was once in his cell when the devil appeared to him. In his humility he arose and asked him to sit in his own chair, deeming him the more worthy. The secret of the true scholar is hu- mility. Every man is my master in some point, and of him I learn Young men, you may, peri ADA, think these questions belong to ‘the Church. I mus‘ Sy that they belong to the datly service of the college, the profane service, if you so term it, Young gentiemen, I have detained you perhaps too bet 1 only hope that from the ney of these humanities, youmay have gleaned something wor- thy for a useful lite, ‘o-day closed the exercises of the week. They were done in every respect as Amherst is wont to do them. The graduating class numbers forty-sev- en, whicn is smaller than the average. The number graduated is only about half the number of those who have been connected with it during the four years. Of course the speakers settied many ques- tions wnich are agitating the public mind at pres- ent, and if there 1s any doubt as to the wisdom of their conclusions, it does not rest with them, The speakers, this year, were fewer than formerly, and were chosen bi | Bented, instead their scholarship, gramme :— an examination of the ee ty pre- of being appointed according to The following is the pro- ORDER OF EXERCISES. nts 1,a Salutatory addr wih in Nation ess in Latin; “Mg phil 5 a oration, * tion, “Alexander: Was’ he Gr 8, an orhtion, Warning from France; 9, scientific oration, “The’ Ra- tlonal Basis of Science; 10, an oration, “Pleasure or Principle” 11, an oration, “Discipline ahd, Drudgery;” 12, English oration, "The American Corner Stone.” DIPLOMAS CONFERRED. The diplomas were awarded publicly, and the degree of A. B. conferred on the following :— A, B.--Herbert Baxter Adams, Amherst; Harrison Bailey, Fitchburg; Herman Augustus Bailey,’ Marlboro; Bernadotte Bancroft, Prescott; Nathan Dickérman Bar- ‘ows, Bast Otiafleld, Me.; Elisha Parks Bartholomew, ‘est Springfield; Arthur Jared Benedict, Bethel, Conn,; Spencer Randolph Bonnell, Worcester; Otis Cary, Jr, Foxboro; George Everett’ Church, West Woodstock, Conn. ; Patrick Clane Falls; John Bates Clark, Minneapolis, Min lark, Tewksbury; Emerson Davis Simsbury, Conn. ; James Di Amherst; Charles Andrews Doolittle, Utes, Pascal Monroe Dowd, Now Haven, N. 'Y.} ‘owler, Gouverneur, N. Y.; Solon Tenney French, Kansas City, Mo. ries Edward Garman, North Orange; peaty, Arthur Gaylord, Stamford, N. Y.; Lewellin Middleton Glidden, Panam: ; Northampton; John # Loranus Hobart, Amb ; David Le Gordon Robert, Ha shaw, Utica, N, peg, Moses itoritag ¢ Todgman, Bath, & gago. I. | Alonzo Mallary, "Brooklyn, 7 Manchester, Mo.| George Htevoen Metcalf New harles Mich Morse, Union, Conn.; Walter Frederic Wijiiam Packard, Albert George Baing. yman May Vaine, East ddstock, Conn.; Frank Parker, Gloucester; Ge: Felton, Bast Windsor Hill, Conn. Robinson, Salisbury, England; Timothy Gridley Spauld- Ing, NoriMampton; Harry Sidney Sevens, Chicago, iit; Albert Henry jompson, Searsport, Me. ; Walter Thomp- son, Troy, Y.; Steven Alvah’ Thurlow, West Au- urn, Me. ; ryant Tuckerman, Cincinnati, Ohio; Frank Melville Wilkins, Peabody; W: M. White, Canton Centre, Conn, Of the above about one-third will study for the ministry and one-third for law, The alumni ate their dinner at half-past one, according to the pro- gramme, and so ended the week. The tollowing degrees were alao made public about two hours since :— A, B., extraordinary—Charle: = Hallock, J. Howar Sweetser, A. M., honofary—Samuel H. Emory, Edwar A Kingsly, Joshba Porter, M. D.; Rev. George ‘H. Pratt. D,, honorary—VPaul H, Chadbourn, Marshal Henshaw, Rev. WM Pavior. THE PRASENT OUTLOOK OF THE COLLEGE is very gratifying to its friends. Considered finaa- cially, the college is conducted on the close corpo- ration system, and the statements of its treasurer, which might Ue of public interest, are reserved fot the special edification of the truste t a | pears, however, from the statements made to the Legisiature last winter that for some years past the expenditures have exceeded the receipts; bat in consequence of the donations received the past ear, the opposite of this will be true for some time oO come, 10 improved con- grounds are Linge 3 tinually, and the coliege wears the appearance of healthful thrift upon every side. ie Stearns chapel will gon be completed, It is a perfect little gem of architecture, and a fitting monument to the memory of a man who has done so much for the m- stitution and whose name it bears. An art gallery will be established this year, and a department of science has already been fixed upon. As it seems at present, the next class will be larger than any which hi preceded it. Mr. Beecher will have & son in {t; Mr, Harper, of New York, will have two; Hon. Horace Maynard, of Tennessee, also has a son in it. Professor J. H, Seelye will start immediately on his journey around the world, The objective points are India, China and Japan, and the object of his visit is to inquire into the social, educational and Feligions interests of those people. Mr. Spencer R. Bonnell, of the graduating class, will ope md Protessor eelye as special correspondent of the [LmR- ALD. Professdér Edward Hitchcock will go, also, pro- vided the trostees grant him @ leave of absence which he has aaxed for, The vartous cabinets have received over a siouasnd new specimens during the year. He Snubs the Kaiser and Regards Prince Frederick Charles as a Snob. . Arrogance of the Germans—How 01d Tecumseh ‘Was Treated in the German Capital and How He Got Even—Fine Soldiers, but Socially Nothing to Boast of—A Comparison Be- twoen Russian Courtesy and Pros- sian Arrogance—A Curious Reminiscence of 1868, BERLIN, June 10, 1872, General Sherman has jnat left here, in company with Lieutenant Grant and Colonel Audenried, for Vienna, after a stay of four days. The General, it would appear, was not very favorably impressed by the Germans, whose arrogance and assumption of superiority did not go down with him in the least, and he has, I understand, expressed himself dis- gusted, not only with his reception here, but with German manners § geverally, Their manner towards him was of a coolness bor- dering upon Insolence, and while acknowledging their great military prowess, and admiring, with a soldier's eye, their splendid military organization, and fully comprehending its strength, he says that of all the people he has yet seen—Spantards, Italians, Greeks, Egyptians, Turks and Russians— the Germans have the fewest social qualities to recommend them. BANCROFT’S DINNER TO SHERMAN. Mr. Bancroft gave him a dinner, at which Von Moltke and two or three staf officers were present, but owing to the apparent assump- tion of superiority on one side and the con- sequent disgust, resulting from such preten- sions on the other, the two great generals, who, one would have thought, would have been delighted at an opportunity of exchanging ideas and conversing with each other, did scarcely any- thing more than exchange salutations, TEOUMSEH’S MEETING WITH THE RED PRINCE, His meeting with Prince Frederick Charles passed of in about the same way. It was at a dinner given by the German Ambassador at Rome some time age, and although General Sherman tried hard to engage Frederick Charles in conversation he found it impossible, as the latter satisfied himself by replying with a cool yes or no to any remark the General addressed to him; 8o that, finding himself reduced to the necessity of carrying on the conversation himself or not conversing at all, he chose the latter alternative, considerably disgusted with tne whole aifair. He further remarked after dinner, when they had re- tired to the drawing room, that although Frederick Charles had two pipes in his hand, one of which he was smoking, while the General was making these abortive attempts at conversation, a pipe was never offered him, because, as he supposed, it was contrary to German etiquette lor a plebeian to smoke & pipe in the presence of a German Prince, and he was therefore left without anything to smoke until Lieutenant Grant offered him a cigar. He declares, however, that although he rarely smokes a pipe, if he could by any possibility have laid hands on one without asking forit he certainly would have smoked it, in spite of German proprieties. He ac- knowledges Frederick Charles’ military talent, and says his reputation as a great general is undoubt- edly well founded; but, from a social point of view, he considers him an unmitigated snob. GERMAN TREATMENT OF THE OLD SOLDIER. Here the coolness of German officials confirmed the unfavorable impression made by Frederick Charles, and he at present detests the Germans socially as much as he admires them from a military point of view. At every other capital of Europe in which he has been the Minister of War always detached an alde-de-camp to accompany him, show him everything, and see that nothing should be wanting to make his stay profitable ani. pleasant. Here they did nothing of the kind. They went to Potedam and were refused admittance to the Park because the Emperor was entertaining some royal guests, Bismarck was in the country, so that they did not meet him—a circumstance which is to be regretted, as he is much more affable and less arro- gant than the military autocrats, and General Sherman would probably have found him much more socially disposed. PAYING BACK IN THEIR OWN COIN, All of these little things combined have led General Sherman to the opinion that any attempts at getting upon easy and friendly terms with them would only be labor lost, and, not feeling inclined to pa act their airs any longer, he determined to pay them in their own coin, and snub the first man of them that would give him the opportunity. The occasion was not long in presenting itself, and, as it happened, it was the Emperor himself who be- came the unconscious victim. The day before the were to leave for Vienna Mr. Bancroft, who, witl his admiration for the German Kaiser, might, one would think, have insured the party ot distinguished Americans a more cordial recep- tion, received a uote from the Minister of Foreign Affairs, saying that the Emperor would review a few regiments of troops the next day, and that if General Shermun wished to be presented he should be on the ground at an hour indicated. As they sent no aide-de-camp to accompany him, but leit him to find the way himself and run the risk of finding the right persons at the right moment, and as the invitation did not extend to Lieutenant Grant, who had rejoined him after his visit to Co- ponnegee, he declined, in polite but peremptory anguage. am very much afraid that the Germans will be thrown into a state of horror and indigna- tion at such audacity, and there wiil probably be a howl in the German papers when it becomes known, TO DECLINE THE HONOR of & presentation to the mighty Kaiser Wilhelm, and in a way that almost amounts to disrespect, is no small sin in German theology, and they will, no doubt, denounce it in the way It deserves, I fur- ther understand that General Sherman, compariny the cordial reception extended him and the kind- ness shown him all over Russia, with the sti’ and formal severely polite manner fn which he was re- ceived by the Germans, and with no fear of the con- seqnences before his eyes, and not caring a pinch of snuff, as he tersely expresses it, for the German vote in the United States, having no covetous thoughts upon the White House, went so far as to say that in case of a war between Germany and Rn which he thinks inevitable, his sympathies woul be soee oe Mu — i Bitte that he might even sposed to do more sympathize in case the occasion offered, — GERMAN PRIDE AND ARROGANCE. It is most curtous to notice the revulsion of feel- ing that has been Boing on in Europe since the Franco-Prussian war, with regard to Germany, and how German arrogance and pride have alienated the sympathies they had acquired in the beginning by acting upon the defensive, After all they have only shown themselves servile imitators of the French instead of rising superior to them, as we had hoped, even copying and exaggerating the weakness and faults we had thought pecullar to the #rench character—that presumption and inso- lence which rendered the latter so hateful to the whole of Europe before the A CURIOUS STORY OF THR At T heard a curious story the other day which, while showing how great were the fears in Berlin for the results of the War of 1866, serves at the same time to measure the it mies tne growth of German re and arrogance since thén. The story, which have from unquestionable authority, {8 to the effect that after war was declared between Austria and Germany, in 18¢6, the Crown Princess came to Lord Loftus, who was then the oe Ambassador at Berlin, and wished him to take charge of her jewels, feeling snre that the Austrians would come to the capital. Loftus dissuaded her from auch a step, telling her that it could not be done without befng known, and that {t would Inevitably create a money panic, and 7 seriously embar- rass the government and the operations of the army, He told her that if the worst came to the worst it would be time enough to take charge of her jewels when it was seen that the Austrians were eae upon Berlin, His counsels pre- vailed, but the incident shows what were the fears entertained even in gover circles as to the results of the war, And yet when he found the Austrians at his feet King William was so elated by his victoiy that he was determined in spite of rea- son or argument to march upon Vienna, and it was only with the greatest diffl- culty that Bismarck succeeded in dissuading him from this step, After he had exhausted every argument without avail Bismarck at last asked the King, “But where docs Your Majesty propose to stop? We have accomplished the ends for which the war was undertaken, and there is now no more Treason for rebeots Be ‘Vienna than for march- ing upon Constantinople. If Your Majesty pro- Faye marching upon the latter place also we will ry and prepare transport for the army, but I would warn Your Majesty that we wili have the whole of Europe against ug.’ His arguments prevailed in tho end, and he finally stcceeded in convincing the King of the folly of such a course, and it was only owing to Bis- marck's sagacity that the Prussians did not enter Vienna, as they did Paris, Truly success is @ harder test to undergo than adversity, IAN-PRUSSIAN WAR. The Particulars About the Failure of the Cuban Expedition. The Burning of the Fannie and Landing of the’ Expeditionists—The Flight of Ryan and His Followers—Execution of the Cap- tured Onbans—Ryan’s Story of His Achievements, HAvana, July 6, 1872, Another topic of interest during the past week, canvassed by all parties, and which has been the source of fruitful rumors, has been the expedition of the Fannie. Thore who are interested in furthering the views of the authorities place the most implicit confidence on ali the reports emanating from the authorities, who furuish the oficial reports received from the interior to the Havana Journals for publi- cation, According to these the entire cargo of the Fannie and the greater part of the expeditionists have fallen into the hands of the government. troops, commanded by Colonel Valera, The latest telegrams concerning the expedition, which have been officially published, are the following:— Jury 1, 1872. Sixteen more of the Fannte’s expeditionists captured, among thein the guide and -everal officers. All were time mediately shot, with (he exception ot some boys, between fourteen and cighteen years ot age. Valera wishes to: consult the Captain General ag to their fate. A largo number of barrels of powder, ROR two cannon, 150 carbines, and’ other war material tured. The ‘activity of o}erations do not permit « ee account. Continue discovering con OLY 2, 1872, Right more of the Fannle’s party caught Taare how remain but twenty-two, who will soon be captured. One hundred and fifty boxes more of war mate: discovered, A thorough search 1s being made along the coast, THE LANDING. The Fannie landed her expedition between Ce- bollas and the mouth of the Sagua de Tanamo- River, about twelve miles northwest of Baracoa, on the 28d, The matériel and effects captured by Colonel Valera’s command was put aboard the gan- boats Activo and Alarma (by the way, two misno- mers) and sent into Baracoa, the Alarma after wards returning to the Faunte, which waa still burning, for the purpose of saving her hull an@ whatever else might be possible. Since the arrival here of the Crescent City from: New York, via Nassau, we have further intelligence from the latter place iu regard to this mismanaged expedition. On Suturday, the 20th ult., the British schooner Charles witived at Nassau’ with some twenty-three persons, comprising the crew and Captain Speed, of tiie Fannie; Kyan, bis aid, Luis Aguilera, and Captain George W. Brown. hilo the schooner was lying at the southern point of Long Island two boats with these men arrived, and six landed from one and crossed over to the village to obtain provisions, but afterwards re- turned and secured passage on the schooner for the entire party. In regard to the disastrous result of their enterprise they report that shortly after leaving Baltimore they were met by two schooners, from oue of which a large quantity of arms and ammunition was transferred, and the other put on board General Peralta and 100 me! On the night of the 22d of June they reached a point on the coast of Cuba about twelve miles northwest from fay ee and here got upon a reef. being un- able to get off they concluded vo attempt a landing, and General Peralta and his men disembarked. They also landed two cannon and a large number of arms and ammunition, some five thousand stand of breech-loaders—Spencer, Rewington and Win- chester repeaters. THE BURNING OF THE FANNIE. For thirty hours, they state, they labored to get the Fannie off the reef, but withont success, Al their coal was throwu overboard to lighten her, and it was during this operation, as they state, that the vessel took fire and in a short time was burned completely. General Ryan, Captain Speed and his crew took to their boats, and after some sixty houre reached a point on Long Island, whence they succeeded in obtaining passage by the schooner Charles to Nassau. Taking into consideration the ditferent reports frail this atair which have reached us it can easily be st ised that, being compelled by the untoward circum- y Stance of the Fannie’s grounding, General Peralta conclued to land his men at once, and, not succeed- ing in reaching his destined point, decided to con> ceal his war material by di trenches and cov- ering up the boxes. Tlie Spaniards have for some time been advised of the expedition, and Colonel Valera’s command was stationed iu that neighbor- ood, and, according to the oiticlal report, General Peraita in the frst engagement and cap- tured many of his men and war material. ‘fne fact remains that through bad luck or mismanagement the expedition has resuited in fuilure, and the ater part of it fallen into the hands of the Spaulards, Reports from Nassau state that sev- enty-six of the expeditionista landed with Feraita. Account of the Rescued Expeditionists. Nassav, N. P., July 1, 1872, ‘The schooner Charles arrived here on Saturday afternoon with the officers and crew of the steamer Fannie, which was wrecked aud burned oa the 234 ult, The Fannie struck a bed of rocks at half-past ten o’clock on the night of the 224, one mile from the shore, near Porto Mauito, on the coast of Cuba. Finding it impossibie to get her off the men and cargo were landed, and Ryan says he sent out scouts and captured the only Spantsh picket post that was within nine wiles. He also clainis that he took nine men and a flag, and that the prisoners were immediately executed upon reaching his camp. They reported that the nearest Spanish a was some fifteen miles of All the night of the 22d and the «ay aud night of the 230 were spent in trying to get the Fannie off; but as {t could not be done Captain George W. Brown burned her, and the crew, twenty-three in number, left in two small boats, and, alter a fearful passage of four days and welts, ina very severe storm at sea, they were ae a up by a smali schooner bound to this port. ‘tle engineer says the steamer Fannie turned out to be a perfect “old tub. she was seventeen days irom Baltimore, whereas it ‘was expected she would make the trip in six days, At nine o’clock on the night of the 23d President Cespedes and staff arrived ut the Janding, and gave Bf flattering accounts of the progress and pros- ity of the revolution, The wrecked crew will jeave to-day for Key West in schooner, : MISCOLLANEOU BSOLUTE DIVORCES LEGALLY OBTAINED FROM the courts of diiferent States. No publicity. Advice. free. “Notary Public and. Commissioner for every State. Ope 1, KING, Counsellor-at-Law, 30) Broadway, ACHERALD BRANCH OFFICE, BROOKLYN, « corner of Fulton avenue and Boeruin streot, Open from $A. M. to 3 P.M. ABSOLUTE DIVORCES LEGALLY OBTAINED FROM courts of different States: legal everywhere; deser- tion, &c., sufficient cause; publicity’ required; no charge until divorce grantea; advice ired, M. SH, Attorney, 180 Broadway. ES, GROCERIES AND suit the palates and the THOMAS R, AGNE' reen wich sireet, New York. FORMS SUCCESSFULLY So CAR ARGAINS IN® COFF Beat hod ee wo 0c! @ million. pockets of 0. 69 0: JANCER IN ALL IT: treated,—Send for list of p PENTER, M. D., 43 Greenwi Dut Duty, Great Great Great reat in price tn price in price it all our Stores, GREAT AMERICAN TEA COMPANY, 8 TARRHEA, DYSENTERY, CRAMPS AND CROUP* cured without full, when first taken, uy Dr. Ti LAs" ETIAN LINIMENT; twenty-five ty 10 THE PUBLIC. rT The NORTHWESTERN (BABCOCK) FIRE EXTIN- ISHER OOMPANY having brought salt avainst the HILADELPHIA (GARDNER) FIRE EXTINGUISHER COMPANY foe aheee? infringement of the Carlier and Vignon Patent dated April 13, 1869), which the said Babe cock Com) any pro‘ecsee to own, in the use of water {m- regne ith carbonic acid gas asa means to extin- 1) cS te desire to make the following statements, ll of which we are prepared to fully substantiate by Foot — Pipiret, The so called Carlier and Vignon Patent ts invalid for want of novelty, in that a patent was issued to W. H, ete in Bngland, in 144, and in this country in L. 4 fora Fire Extinguisher. in which water imprerus BF rad acid gas was used as extinguishing ni Gecond. The said so,called Carlier and Vignon Patent has no legal existence, no lege lication ever having been j¢ for itto the Patent 01 ;. and its issuance therefrom was accomplished by grows Third—The lawyers ‘conductin thi mht suit for the same | om th & inst Du 6 he State: ‘the public; no one should be without it, Sold pists rea, in the the ¢ at the cost Haintitts, ‘The Babeesk Company expects to destroy the sate of the Gardner Extinguisher, which has so seriously inter- fered with thelr long-enjoyed mono ot Ly ‘advertising this suit, and thus intimidaitng the public. ig our purpose to defeat their fraudulent desigm, and to will shorily publish history of the’ matter undecelve tho public aud expose orth- panes "4 that sham called the Carlier aud Vign: ‘atent Copies will be mailed to any address on appiical 5 This company will give Peres against all loss, the ner Ratingulsher, and will, at its sole expense, dofend all sults that may be brought againg tt. damage or Sie for use of . B. WAGGENER, Secretary, Philadelphia. Vie Bxtinpaie Fon pan ” 1 ‘hhestgue wrdet, Philadelphia, Pm