The New York Herald Newspaper, November 9, 1874, Page 5

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“SUNDAY IN THE TOMBS The Mystery of the Bowery Theatre Explained. | ‘ NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1874..-TRIPLE SHEET, THE POLITICAL REVOLUTION. What the Grain and Cotton Men Think of the Democratic Victories=The Dawn of Hope for the South. ‘The grand victory of the democracy is still the chief topic of debate among all classes. In the | clubs and counting houses, the exchanges and TIM BOYLAND'S BOILED TURKEY. ‘The noise in the street has ceased, and aSunday quiet has settled on the Tombs, The old pile, so Jeong a landmark in the great city, looks gloomy | gs ever; It knows no Sunday or Monday; its duty is the same to-day as it was yesterday, as it will be to-morrow. It hoids within its granite clasp the enemies of society, and its countenance is as | severe to the punisher to the punished. Its | exterior appearance ts aa cilly and menacing | ‘to the passer-by as the steel rivbed cells within to the desperate, perhaps broken hearted, criminal. Sunday 1s, indeed, to the unfortunates within a day of tation, All t# quiet, not a sound is heard save the occasional clank of a@ tumbler fm some lock, as the jailer opens or spouts @ door, The silence is so profound as to be disturbed by the expectorating of ® keeper who, deep in the mysteries of some nitro-glycerine novel, or all intent on a Sun- day paner, has gathered in his mouth a copious “spit.” The only visitor is the sunshine which | enters at the skylight, and as the hours wear on | the few slender sbaits of golden light move from left to right, down the rows of cells along the gal- leries, peeping for a few moments into each of | “the dungeons. Here and there throughout the | @reat structure @ favored prisoner has a book, | which he holds up to the little hole, called a window, that be may have light to read its contents. The Poor, ignorant man, who can neither read uor Write, lolls around on the bed and feels that Sun- Gay is an awful day. When on week days the rat, tle of wagons over the stones, the jingle of car bells and the buzz of machinery are to be heard, bis mind is active, for they all suggest to him familar sights. IN THE COURT. While this lazy scene obtains in the jail a lively One is being enacted in the northeast wing of the building, in which the Police Court is hoiding ses” | sion. Judge Kasmire is the presiding dignitary in the tribunal, and his good advice and kind words bave done much to create a better feeling among those who conie before him. Before the Judge ar- | rived the court room presented a peculiar sight. | The boxes where the prisoners are kept were full tooverflowing. Twenty women, soled and sad, | Occupied the Jeft hana box—women, of whom it Mas been said :— Their wanderings never knew ‘The world’s regard that soothes, though halt untrue; Whose erring hearts the lash of sorrow bore, But tound not joy when they erred no mort Those iriendiess women, at whose dejected eve ‘The unfeeling proud one looks and passes by, Gondemned on penury's barren waste to roain, Spurned by the world, and left without a home. While these poor wretches, crazed with drink, In which they hoped to drown tue memory of the Past, are saying maudiin things and singing :rag- Mentary glees, the vuice of the priest in the prison 1s heard to chant, in measured numbers, ‘Gloria | in excelsis Deo, et in terra pax, hominibus, bone Voluntatis.”? B ) ‘The Judge takes his seat and the sérgeant begins | to call up the different previncts, and as tne | Bumbers are called the officers irom the respec- tive stations go to the boxes snd conduct their risoners to the desk. The birst, Second, ‘wenty- eventh, Twenty-sixth, Taird, Fourth, Fiith, Sixth and Fourteenth precincts are called off in order and the morning watch is relieved, CHARLEY 2088 FOUND. Officer Davia, of the Second precinct, is called aud he brings up his prisoner, an old man, whom | be 1ound on the street in a beastly state of intoxt- tation. “Charley,” said the Judge, “we have been Jooking for you a long ume, and we can’t let ou go without paying us for the trouble. 1 will ine you $5, Charley.” Charley paid the $6 and left bhe court room rejoicing. GO TO DINNER. Timothy Boylan, a shoemaker, Was among the risoners from the Kourteento. He said he had ever been drunk betore, or at east he was never arrested for intoxication belore. The Judge said it was the first time ne would fine Timothy only . Tim said ne had just $6 left, ana if needs be he would pay it to the Court; butif he did so he 4nd iis family would have to go witnout dinner, When the Judge iound that Timothy had a family be said he would discharge him if he made a romise to go Gut and buy 4 turkey for his wie, im promised, and the Judge discharged him, Tne Buylan iamily had turkey Jor dinuer yester- THR BOWERY THEATRE MYSTERY. For many weeks the actors of the Bowery Theatre have been much perplexed, owing to the Mysterious disappearance of their garments and trinkets {rom che dressing rooms. A case which Detective Dorsey, of the Sixth precinct brought | juto court explains in a measure the mystery. On Monday night Samnel Halpme, an English actor, who bas been engaged at the Bowery lor some time, loat his goid watch, valued at about $100. He aid not know who took it, and went to Detec- tive Dorsey ior advice. The detective told hits to nothing about it to any one and watt aeveiop- ments. Halpine took the advice, and on Wednes- day night, when he got to the theatre, he recov- ered his watci Irom a newsboy, who brought the following note, which was given to him by the woman wao ured him to hand over the watca:— END HALPINE "ln Go not try to look for the man that has taken your Watch for it 1s oF no use, bat let this be a warning vot to | trie # oid Watch with you jo the theatre again, jor it | through a triend that you afe gettin ic back again, so et take advise from a iriend. LW. Wish tne friend good luca as it is no man. Dorsey took tue boy Thomas Cary, an intelli- gent bootolack, and from him got an accurate description of the woman who nad sent him to return the watc.. Krom the description Dorsey kuew that the woman was no other than May Thompson, a n2ymphe du pare, whose husband and two subsequent Jovers are now serving terms in bing Sing. Saturday night May was arrested and brought to Court yesterday morning, when Judge Kasmire committed her fur examination. | | THE MODOO SLAUGHTER, A Peace Policy View of the Murder of | Canby, Thomas and Meacham. | The meeting in behalf of the Indians, in De Garmo Hall last night, was attended by an appreciative audience, The speakers | were Father Beeson, an old Indian missionary, Dr. Newbury and the Rey. E. Schwackhammer. | Abundant facts were presented which were re:led | bn to prove the following points: — First—That the Indians and not the whites are | the most aggrieved in their collisions with our set- fers, Second—That the so-called peace policy ts really & War practice, as demoralizing co the whites as it Is degtructive to the Indians, i And in retation to the killing of Canby and Thomas it was averred that it was proposed by | Captain vack and agreed to by General Canby that neither army shouid make any advance toward the other while the treaty was pending, aud that the | Peace Commission should meet the Modocs on Deutral ground, midway between the two lines; | put Canby disregarded this agreement, and, divide ing his troops, took position on the hilis pm each side, whereupon tne Modocs, believing that treachery was intended, deciared that they would kill the Commissioners. The go-between Indtah woman gave Canby the tacts, Meacham pelievea her, and remonstrated against exposing | themieives to certain death; but Canby trusted for stiety to the guus which he had placed in a position to protect them, and Thomas trusted to the Gou of Peace for protection; Meus cham, though Chairman ot the Peace Commission, Was tevertheless suoordinate to military com- Mand, and accompaiied the General onder pro- test, No terms were offered to the Movtocs but Qnconditional surrender, Wuich they regarded as tertais, ignobie deato, They therefore resolved to do that which the generality of Christian men would do under similar circumstances, sell their | lives as dearly as possible. It was not a peace but & war altar. ior which Canby, and not the Modoes, As thespeakers alleged, was responsible. The tollowing resolutions Were read and un- snimotsly adopted by a standing vote, a8 ex- resaive ‘at once of the cause and of the remedy F all existing Indian difiicuities :— Whorms 11 the gospel of “eco on earth and good wili to dan” was carried opt to tho Indians, it would be m1 Tate sot great joy; theretore, At condition is a call upou » to preach in ning Clrisimas every starving { know that my ‘Re ner iver! by ihe next bourth ot July there tbe ods but can unite in (he song of joy for this our d of the irce and home of the brave. The hleeting then adiourned wil Taesday, at shree P. M., in the large hati of Cooper Institute. | exclatm, ma "an THE ALLEGLD WIFL MURDER, Yestetday morning Woroner Kickho took charge pt the case of Mrs, Mary A, Rosenthal, whose death occurred the evening previous, a8 pileged, \rom injuries received in consequence of | belng ptshed from the roof ofa five story tene- ment house, No, 413 East Thirreenth street, by her husvand,Josepn Rosenth: A jury was empan- eticd at tke Morgue, Where the body was taken, and an ivquest will be held. ‘There wows to be ho withess touching the guilt of Roseainal, except his little son, Who alieges be Gow bis 1ythor push deceased from the root, | | country wno | Spring belo! | of offices throughout the whole country, the wonder- ‘ul political revolution, which virtually changes the admunistration of the government, Is the one absorbing subject which tempora- rity overshadows al! others. As the HERALD has been the recognized leader of advanced political thought, and iong ago indicated the is- sues which must be decided during this campaign, so Its correspondents since the election have been busy gathering the views of prominent politicians throughout the land as to the effect of the recent victories on the next Congress, while ABRALD re- porters at home have been among the merchants to ascertain how trade interests are likely to be affected by the shifting of power trom the great party of the war !nto democratic hands, On Saturday a representative of this journal waited on THK PRESIDENT OF THE PRODUCE EXCHANGE, Mr. frankiin B, Edson, to ascertain his views, That gentleman replied as follows:— “4 do not look for any immediate effect on trade a3 a result of the Jate elections. Business in prodace circles had been steadily improving before the late contests, and I think It will con. tinue. 1t is possible, however, that as a result of greater confidence in the men who are soon to administer tne government, new enterpises may be developed aud increased prosperity fow from this cause alone, It is yet too early to hear from the South and West, but I think the country should be congratulated that the voters of the pa- tion have proven themselves to be so wise as to have grasped, with euch wonderful unanimity, the grave questions put to them for decision by the press and to have decided them so tn- telligently. Ihave a much greater respect for THE AVEKAGE AMERICAN VOTER than ever before. Thoughtful men got tired, year alter y of having the Ka Kiux and White League spectres marched out to awe them into voting for the administration, so when a vital issue such as the third term appealed to them they deoided it with rare good sense, Every old farmer in the reads the newspapers was fright. ened at the idea of the Republic bemg governed year alter year by a strong military hand, and if to this feat you add the distress throughout the country and the conatiion of the South, @ ready explanation may ve found of the recent victory. I think the tore 1s full of cheer.’ THE PRESIDENT OF THE COTTON EXCHANGE, Mr. Henry Hentz, was visited. He said:—“TI am ip receipt of letters and telegrams from the South which prove to me that the re- sult of the election Is hailed in the South as almost the frst iraternal act on the part of the North since the war. Nothing but cougratclations aud jubilation. 1% 18 certaim that the Southern people view the victory as iriendly to a most gen- erous treatment of themselves, “I consider the NEW YORK HERALD contributed im no inconslier- able degree to the grand result. Its exposure of the third term ideas certatniy presented a grave igsue on which the people were eager to place the stamp of their condemnation. On immediate busi- ness it 18 hard to tell what the eitect will be. The country just now is poor,and it may be next great revival wiil take place in trade; but certuimly the recent victories lead me to believe that the future is full of promise." A PROMINENT REPUBLICAN, &@ member o! the Cotton Excnange and formerly on the stat of Governor Tod, of Ohio, satd:— “Grantigm bas gone to seed—played out -dead. The third term killed tt, I tought against tne rebels during the wat, but the former rebels are the only people 1 would trust in the South to-day. All they want now to make them prosperous ts the Muitary hand withatawn, and they view the late exprenaion ofthe North as meaning justive and equality. L. P, BAYNE, THE BANKER, of Broad street, who is largely identified with Sonthern improvements, said "+ Lhe recent elec- tions can only be viewed with pleasure by every | patriotic gentieman, | met a prominent represen- Tative irom one of the Southern States to-day, and he told me that ‘he felt tnrilled with patrivtic ardor and fraternal feeling for the North, the first time in ten years. when he heard of the grand vote which had given democratic « party © victory.’ ‘As for myself, I had almost despaired of tne Renuolic, and teit that constitutional liberty was endangered under the military ideas of Grant; corruption was the rule and bonesty the excep- tion, As sure us the republican ticket had been elected we should fave haa a starting spectacle of Grant’s an:bition; the intrigues 91 oiice-nolders: und the distribution of patronage for the purpose favoring the President’ views would have been a humiliating spectacle for re- publican America. Ag it is How, if the democrats are Wise, and take @ broad, statesmanlike tion on the great questions agitating the country, they can retaim the power the people have con- yerred upon them. The North nas at last been just to the south. Now let the Soutn do her duty 1m all things, and we shall have a country one in- deed, more glorious than. ever tle sun shone upon. THE SITUATION OF TENNESSEE. The State Swept Clean of Carpet-Bag- gers—Feeling Between the Races— Influence of the Civil Rights Bill Among the Whites. MBMPHIS, Nov. 4, 1874. Yesterday's election had nowhere a more sig- | nificant result than here. In the small village of Bartlett, in this county, the /iberal movement was reneweu iast spring. “The Bartlett movement” | was a union of all political elements opposed to extreme radicalism and to the rule of rings and monopolies, Its utmost strength | Was shown in our August election for county officers, when this city, polling the large vote of | 10,515, gave the Bartlett ticket a majority of 3,600 average. Yesterday the ticket had got to be called, quite familiarly, democratic. Mark the difference— @ total vote of 9,230, and an anti-radical majority | 660, The democrats all over the country are | o. jubilant over the result of the elections yesterday, and confidently anticipate a deme | ocratic triumph m 1876; bat here is a practical test of their party strength, show. | ing that even here the democratic party does not wield more than four-fifths of the strength of the anti-radical élement, and hence, in any general contest single handed against the republican party, Would again suffer an overwhelming defeat; as when, two years ago, this county | and district went largely republican, the Bour- bons persisting in placing the democratic label | on the liberal movement. But the election yesrer- day, when the same attempt was made, illus- | trated the growing strength of the movement which suffered de‘eat in 1872, and is a sure augury | of its triumph in 1876. A change of more than | three thousand votes jn its favor in this city ts the measure of its progress here in the brief space of two years, Allover the country the same ratio appears to be maintained; but I have dwelt on this locality for the reason that here the princl- ples involved have been more sharply defined and | | strongly emphasized than elsewhere. Our Bart- lett movement epitomizes the genera) movement throughout the country and seems to illustrate ee specific strengtn of its several elements. wy the Bartlett ticket openly in August who yesterday went back to their party allegiance, The eiection yesterday Was quiet as usual; noth- mg was sala or apparently thought of the pros- ence of United States troops. They were not vis- ime and nobody cared about them, tor no one dreamed of there being the slightest occasion for their presence North there is not a thousand inhabitants where so little ex- citement was manifested yesterday as here iu Memphis, As I wrote to yet from Austin, Miss, last summer so the resultproved, ‘The presence of smail numbers of federa troops at the points whore the negroes threatened or had attempted to create disturbances testored profound quiet im all tis region. The regroes dared not attempt violence, and the evil dsposed whites had no pretext tor tf. ‘There was a show Of resentment at tle inter- position of the federal Judicial omicials in tle affair ul the Trenton. Massacre, growing out of a mis- taken notion that federal interierence Was not warranted by luw; but when the expianaton was ven that the United States Courts unqwstion- city of flity & ab varrassinent (rom local and personal Inf\ences, all reasonable people became satisiied wit what was done. It was generally understood before the ebction that our coogreseman, Hoa. Barbour Lew, bad lustigated the quartering of United States sidiers among us, ior the protection of negro ani owner republican voters at our elections, so “ld they Might yote ireely, Without intimidation tirouga | fear of yioience irom the whites. In jusice to truth ana to Lewis, | must say that here he taghed to scorn any sugh idea, as beg too absur to be | sertously entertainet fora single moment but when | mention tne juct that poops, not stitred at the timo When the dnger was reai, were scattered about and stdioued here and ebewnere only @ short tim be- fore the election, it is lest to the inteligent ablic to judge whether this movement was not tended to create the linpression thas here Wasa turbulent population who could only be restrained from breaking out toto iawiess violence by em- ploying. the military force of the United States, with the view and lor the purpose of influencing elections at the North, where the real facts were unknown. Itis iamentabie that the exigencies of party should prompt its managers to a course of Mmisrepresentation whose effects exercise the | most depressing influence on the business | interests of the South ana of the whole coun- try, The race antagonisms between the blacks and the native wites of the south have no exist- } ence outside of politics. In all neighborhood and H business affairs the negro habitually coufldes ia and governs bimsel! by the iriendiy advice of his | White neighbor, and especially if the latter nad | been his former master. ‘The patience and for- | bearance of the Southern whites toward the blacks is far beyond what the Northern people arc capa. bie of. The only distarbing elements are the med- | dlesome, oiice-seeking or swindling Northern ad- | Venturer ou the one hand, apd the native | Southern “Cracker? and ‘a foreign element on the other. The negro ts ignorant, creduions and {ndisereet, and his imagtita- tion 18 easily wrought upon, Havitually timid, when his passions are aroused and he is ersuaded that power snd protection are with 1m, he at Ouce regains the cruelty and barbarous Tage native to his tace, and becomes a dangerous social element, and loses ali inaustrial value. These outbu of savagery are generally of briei duration, and disappear suddenly in pres- ence of jorce. O!ten those in pursuit of a flerce and malignant desperado find only a tremoling and harmieass fugitive, an object of pity rather than vengeance, finds nere an element pteuliarly suited to ms pur- poses, and ne uses and apuses the contidence of the biac to their injury and that of the coun- try. Foreign boro men of tne laboring class are gencrally antagonistic to the negroes ior obvious reasons, i bagger as his naturai enemy. This class embraces most of the Ku Kiux element and the provessional politician, The “Cracker” has two, extreme points—the poor white trash and the old aristoc- Tracy, of which he scorns the former and has tor- fetted all title 10 be classed with the latter, can seldom be in tis company fiye minates with- out hearing tms utterance:—‘'l want you to understand, sir, thatlam a gentleman, by God, sir!” He eats fire habitually, isa trae Gascon, a chevalier of industry, a patriot, and devotee to the code of honor. His mission ts to exterminate all earpet-paggers with dre andsword. He has no animosity toward the negro, except incidentally, ‘aa the latter is associated with the carpet-bagger, or When occasionally Sambo himself puts on brag- gart airs and threatens to use firearms and fag- Ote against the whites. Here in a nutshell I give you the sum of THE DISTURBING ELEMENT IN THE SOUTH. For tnis cause heaven and earth must be moved, the industriai interests of the country brought to the verge of ruin and the South consigned to hopeless bankruptcy. On Sunday, the ist mst., the largest funeral pa- | Geant ever seen in Memphis paraded our streets, It was the !uneral of Thomas Swap, a black man, President of the Pole Bearers (iaucers), and lead- ing member of the other principal colored socie- tles, all of which attended his iuneral, the finest bands of the city being im the procession. one of them periorming the requiem of the ‘Dyin; Christian” with remarkable effect. The 1a8' Words of this, tne most influential colored man in Memphis, uttered at a moment when passion had i lull sway, Were written down and communicated to one of our city papers by his attending physi- cian, himselr a republican, aad I give them here in a Shp irom the Avalanche:— T have something to say to you for the benedt of my Tace, to whom £ have been ‘devoted. I teel at peace with God, whom I thank and give pratse for bal psy mercy tome. I feel at peace with all mankind. , ol that i could spea ni y in tones or persuasion to my color to make pe with their white triends, cease all this galling strife that now renders life and happi- Ness so Uncer.ain. Say to my people, tor L believe you ‘w be our true triend, to cnt loose from all those poli- ticians, white or’ blacs, that continue to discord among the races, We know ft overcome the prejudice of any class, and particularly the tears ‘ot our. simple. uneducated people. say to them io shake off thore tears, for they are uniounded intact. Let them hecome free and un- trammelled in the exercise of their political rights. Let them struggle to be tree like al! other nationalities that compos and sustain ouly those who have living interest in the soil in this community. I could speak forever on Gis aunlecs, but your admouition to quietuce cannot be disregarded, I Wiilsay, however, one tarewell wor. to my people, the last. tuo, iat L will ever say on earth :— Y people, endeavor to’ cultivate more attachment for the worthy people of the routh; be true fo them and | Worthy of their confidence, and remember # dying | friend says to you that peace will surely 1ollow. | _ Such words, from such a source, outweigh whole | volumes of sensational tales of outrage, and pre- dictions of a war of races, predicated on no other basis than an imaginary race antagonism, whicn is Jar less intense here than at the North. Bat toere ig one measure, the Civil Rights vill, to which hardiy @white man at the South, democrat or re- publican, of Southern, Northern or foreign birth, ‘will sudmit, except under vigorous protest, Some- body, thinking to prejudice liberal republicans against Andrew Jopnson, mentioned his veto of a similar bill, when President. Well, we bad @ poll opened for our voters to ex- press their preference tor United States Senator, 5 ana, of 4,740 votes deposited Andrew Johuson re- | ceived 4,197. ‘Ihe personal poputarity of Mr. John- gon, Who seems to be a universal iavorite with the people, aided peraps as largely as the unpopular- ity of the Civil Rights bill and of our Funding law of jast winter, in producing the revolution which nas swept the State of Tennessee clear of radical- jam. | LOUISIANA. | pet How the State Was Redeemed from Radical Rule—Stampede of Radical Negroes—Beneficial Effect of the Penn Revolution on the Conservative Cause—A Lesson for Future Guidance. NEW ORLEANS, Nov, 4, 1874, You people of the North were doubtiess as much surprised yesterday morning as were the conser- vatives and republicans of this State to learn that | the masses who for so many years have been the polls won @ signal victory and routed the Jeeches who have been fattening upon the over | burdened taxpayers, horse, foot and ar, tillery, and in tones of thunder rebuked President Grant and Attorney General Wil, Mams for thelr partisan interference in the | internal affairs of @ sovereign State. Such a result under ordinary circumstances would have been unlooked jor; but when they remembered born | ‘The upscrupulous carpet-bagger | The “Cracker” pita himeelf against the carpet- | One | | Ceased to act and reason und conscience alone had | suffering irom the ruin of carpet-bag rule had at | | and threw tnetr votes sola for the vwtuite ticker, While iu the tront part of the cl where the Same vs, Michael Rochford, concested weapons; Same vs. Frederick Wanie, larceny from tne per whit generally voted, many bdlreke boldly son; Same vs. Solomon Weiner, tise prete: % raarched up to the polis, singly or im squads of Same vs. Allred Jones and rank Ennis, false pre- from three to ten, apd deposited «democratic tences; Same Witham White, burgiary. Court oF OYER AND TERMINER—lield udge Barrett,—Nos, 1, 2 3, 4, 5, 6 7, 8, % 10, 1 VON ARNIM AND BISMARCK, tickets. Aboutevery poll where the republican blacks Were in the majority, and there Was danger of intimidation of colored democrats, fisom twenty- | five to filty young Men connected wiih tue leagues were posted to protect them. ‘The resmilt of this | protection exrented to, ana confident: placed tn | 4 the negroes, sows’ that both were WIS. | we Acensed Diplomatist Defended by | Iv is estimated ‘hat over 4,000 bviacks in | P y this city alone voted with ‘the white | His E'riends-An Anti-Bismarckian people. The same course was pursued Press the Medium of Communication Tm the parisses. White Leaguers met the over- | tures Of the dlacks in a generous spirit, protected them from violenc the polis and pliviged them employment for the juture. ‘These are ‘the secrets ot pie ‘aiMpaign in a iew words, and tise whites o! | thé State, wno early in the campaign were indis- rae to Make terms with the blacks, | am satis- to the Gorman People. | (Bertin (Oct. 24) correspondence of the London Times.) Count Arnim’s friends publish @ second justiq- fag ndrtpere cation of their client’s conduct, selecting as tueir way to coatrol their own affairs; that so long as Xreuz Zeitung, | emigration from other States is swelling tie negro | THE ARGUMENT, | popalation so long will the biacks swamup them at | | The press writer says :—Iin oiscussing the case of | the polis if the two races work in pout ical antago- | Count Arnim the press in general reasons thus :— nism. The election, as 1 lave said belume, has | ‘the documents Count Arniw refuses to give up be- ASTONISHED LOTH PARTIES, | tng official, the accused has no right to Keep them. Governor Kellogg, weexs before the edection, in | Those documents are official because the Foreign | Conversation With me, waintained tha union Office regards them as sucn; and us the Count, | between the blacks and white democrads was an iacing ilmself in Opposition to the views ol the | utter impossibility, snd deciared that tim: negroes ‘oreign Ottice, deciares them to be private letiers, | Were suil loyal to uim end wou'd sell the whites | there 1s nothing ieft but to hand lim over to the out, after securing money from demucratic clubs, | Criminal Court. But this argument is altogether ; Last night jor some tinke I sat before ‘is parlor | Wrong. Count Arnim dves not assert that the fire a8 he looked into the grate and partied a pet | documents in question are unofficial and | black and tan slut crouched upon his knee, and [ reminded him 0: tie previous discussi@as We had | had on the subject of the union between the | two races. Mr. Kellogg, 1 must say, Was one of the most asvonisaed ralicais in his party. He admitted that te had been deceived in the negro vote and mystified at the resu’ bur he prsates all he says #3 that they never have been | In the arcnives o1 the Embassy; that they do nut | belong to the archives, and that he is not obliged to piace them there. He holds that as those pa- pers reter to his conflict with the Chancellor und bear au almost exclusively persunal character he things himseil entitled to keep them, He beueves | would not admit that the caures 1 have | that if the Foreign Ofiice tukes a different view of | assigned above tea to the nezro stam. | the matter the Foreign Office ought not to arro- | pede jrom his party, He case in which | asserts silent | gate fo itself the right of reggie intimidation did it; tows the fear of losing their | they ate a party concerned, and he proposes that situations, the spectre of starving children, had | the Civil Court, or, Wf there should be considera. | driven large numbers of colored men to voce with | tions rendering it tnadvisable to spply to tne Civil the whites, and, with a sigh, lie adued, “I cannot | Court, a committee of professional gentlemen, | blame them, Our party has not the power togive | should arbitrate iu the case. It is true that the | | them work, and, poor creatures, they and their Covnt has decimed to give up the papers on the | my | Jamilies cannot die under our eyes of unger.” | ground that he requires them to uciend hide Now that the wail of partition between the | sclf against charges brought against him races has been battemsd aown by both races | by the Chancellor of tue kmpire. He | there i8 @ glorioas inture for redeemed | also admitted that the correspondence in | Louisiana if the whites continue the concillatory question referring toa very painiul eptsode, he Policy that nas led them to a grand victory over disliked the ivea of leaving them in tue arcnives | dishonesty, knavery, autraye and oppression. | for we inspection of all tuture atmbassadors, sec- | | Let them prove to the blacks that, after | retaties audcierks. Yet he never absoiutely re- | wl, they are their better frends, by | fused to givethem up, He only contended that | encouraging them in industrial pursuits, | he need not relincuish them until it had been to a higher education, and instilling imto | proved thar they were not Ms, How, in a case ike their minds the fact that the interests of the | this, a criminal accusation could have been lodged owner and tne tiller of the cotton felds and | agulnst him he does not understand, Indeed, the sugar cane lands are inseparable. A faithful com- | papers in quested are DO pudile documents in | Pliance with all contrasts made with the blacks, | the sense given to the word by tie letter or the the passage oj stringent laws to enforce them and | law or the usages of the service. They hav the prompt pupisnmens: 0: persons guilty oisuch | netther been removed nor injured nor de- atrocities as the Coustyitta atfair willdo muca to | Sstroyed, though it 18 disputed who is the owne! Make the union of the 4.wo races @ permanent one, | That Wis latier question cannot be decided | and enable a State, rigt in agricultural wealth, to | by one side alone ts evident. As mu¢gn ma, | take its place as one ci the proudest of tne recon- | be imierred from the iact that, though the structed States, THE RBEFS AHEAD, the concluding papers of tne missing correspond- ‘While ali classes of .usmess men rejoice atthe | ence reiating to the Count’s recuil trom Paris, | result on Mondas, grave lears are still entertained | and his appointment for Constantinople, this de- { toat a partisan Returting Board may render the | Mand was subsequently withdrawn, and forms no | victory @ barren one: by throwing out enough | part of the cuarges upon which tue criminal pro- | ceedings are based. Now, itis very certain that U the distinction made by the Foreign Oitice, alter consulting lawyers, had been made at an earlier votes to deleat the wi'] of the people recoraed in , the Jace or most gigaistic frauds, tuo. This Board | Dhust Canvass the retairps witlin ten days alter | the election, and while: Keilogg professes to be still | @isposed to give the conser ves two members . reiused to deliver up the rest. But mstead o: this | of the Board, 1% 18 douttful whether he will do so, | tte Foreign Oftice, more than eight weeks ago, | The Board, a8 at preseat constituted, is composed | intormed the Couut, in the most ol five republicans, lio one ot Whom will resign unless alldo, if those be a fair count the whites | Meuld—imeluaing those relative to bis appolat- | will waic lor time to s/ork out their emancipation | ment to Coustantinople—conslitured a peual | Jrom Kellogg rule. | offence under ciauses 133, 348 and 350 of the Crimi- | Hthere be nota faic count they threaten to re- | nal Code. | sort to the ouilet and barricade again, even under | clause 350 has subsequently been given up; but | the eye ofthe federal troops, believing that they | the accusation of embezzlement remains. Clause canso manceurre their forces asto avuldacondict | 360 treats of embezzled “things and moneys,” with them while cha: ising the minions of Kellogg | Whereas tne two other clauses reier to papers and Packard. There izeems to be among all par- alone. As ‘things’ include papers there 13 no | tlea an indisposition ta bave the Louisiana question | appreciable difference between the present charge acted upon by Congress, if it can be compromised | anda the original one, sooner by-any other means Several gentlemen | Had Count Arnun yielded to such a threat he have asked me to Sugiyest through the HERALD a | Would have thereby admisted that he dreaded means of solution thag it 1s beileved will please all beimg responsible jor lemenw However | parties und settle wire matter oefore Cougress tis may be, to imprison Couns during the pre- meets, If isior the President or Attorney Gen- | liminary inquiry into Nis case, When sv Drapy do7- eral Williams to writ3 a letter to Keilogg, asxing tors pronounced him dangerously iM, is beyond him and his associates in the State govern- comprevension, 1 Ment to call toge-ther at once the newly woeld pabise the papers such apprehensions are elected Logisiature, #.nd, binding all parties to tue | easily dispused of, he inteuded to do any- contest to be wover ued by the verdict, bave that thing o: the Kind he might Nave contented himself bouy canvass the reparns of 1872 und deciare the | With simply taking coptes and teit the originals at Tesult, If, he clutms, he was elected, Kellogg | tie Embassy. That the Count would have fled the will taen be vindica u2d, as will likely be Lieutenant | country unless itnprisoned 1s un idea too absurd ro Governor Penu, Wa» ran many tliousands aliead be eutertained for a moment, Nv one hasa greater of ms ticket, The s:onservatives, It is oelieved, interest in pushing the casé to a legal decision will prefer this comrse rather than be taxed for | tian the much injured statesman so harsily de the expense of angcher ciection that may be or- | prived o! his liverty. dered by Congress, and it is believed that the ¥exed question coni fl tous be finally sottied before | The Duty and Etiquette of the Diplo- matic Corps. Congress can possialy reach it. Kellogg, too, I | beheve, would acctipt this, a8 last evening he sald | ‘Anpther utterance, which 1 must not keep from your readers, touches on & | be would willingly cetire from a position of $8,000 | ol the case, Tuere is uo doubt that the sensitive- a year in State w:&rrants and the abuse and sn- | oyance he is subje,sted to if he saw a way clear to | Tacs of diplomacy has been wounded by the puo- te alfair, It ts asked do it with honor. iy whether all iriendly meaus at the disposal of the | licity given to the uniorsul TH uk government had really beeu exhausted before I: 60 18. Darsh Measures were resorted to, Li iw supposed that there must nave been some conciliatory FIFTYSEVENTH STREET POLIOE OOURT, | m0d¢o! persuading the Couns that he was in the nme May, is le Minted tee: IE to com) . f Sie ieee anes Prince, Bismarck” failed to talk nis’ sub- George Pratt, whcee residence was not given, was arraigned on @ charge of felonious assault | with intent to kill. George F. Cobdier, of 490 First | | avenue, testified thas he keeps a pawn shop at that | \ piace; on Saturdays ternoom a woman unknown | to him deposited with him a silk dress and re- | ceived thereon a loat of $6; a tow hours later she | | brought another silk: dress, which was trimmed with pene one mime ee here las were en aroust aint he reins y | There was, consequentiy, no waut of peraunal ad- bt Oo Weenee thar ene ates | Mounition bejore official severiiy, though wuether bat in a few minutes aller the prisoner en ered | the language used ih Warping the Count was suf- the shop and demasded back the dress; Mr. | DCiemtly pote and iree trom provoking plainness Covier refused, and attempted to detain Pratt | 10! course, more than any one can say. His until he seut for @ policeman; Pratt broke away, however, aud, drawing a revolver, fired it at | Cobier, WhO pursned him through several streets. What followed thereufter is tvid by Ufficer Har- aigap, of the Twenty-iirst precinct, who tuok up | the chase, which Cobiea had 1ennguished on being | fred at. Pratt also tred at Hardigan, but was | finally captured oy OxBcer Koberts, whom he also attempted to shoot. Ay the request of the police Pratt was remanded fot further inquiry. ESSEX MARKE® POLIOS oovat, | ordiuate over, & word iront the Emperor—to whom the accused is personally known—wouid have ha@ the desired effect. With reference to the first of these doubts and queries 1t suouid be Tuptare, There is also reason tu delicve, though no avsolure evideace to prove it, that correspond- ence with the Count was broken off only when a | suspicion arose that the substance of some of the ais susticioas | hissing documents migat find tts way mito priur. avio ieature. i Ambassador when coming to Berl on the occa- sion of bis daughter's death, a sympatmizing aiaposition, it 1s natural to ae- sume, Would not have omitted to conier upon an old acquaintance tne benellt of a word in season, even |’, to avold publicity, he did not choose to caution 30 eminent a member of the Viplomauc Corps. Unable tu explain the motives ot this royal reticence, I must leave it to the reader to draw his own conclusions. | and Iron Company | organized outlaw brotherhood, wno were driven Foreign Onice originally extended its claim to | pac, stage of the affair, the Count would never have | peremptory lan | guage, that his relusal to return the missing docu. | ‘The plan of extending the charge to — it Was feared Count Aroim | arly patniul side | remembered that, as the Couat’s iriends them- | Selves admit, long negotiations preceded the | Majesty’s non-interference is certainly aremark- | tis aggravated by His Majesty not recetving the | A monarch oi such | 5 THE MOLLY MAGUIRES, to The Lawlessness in Pennsylvania—Prig- ands Infesting City and Country— Cruel Murders and Robberics=Ku- Klux Outrag ry HAZELTON, November 7, 1874, Although tols, the Upper Lehigh region, has been comparatively {ree from outlawry since the assassination of Chief of Poitce Simon H. Clansea by Frederick Lapp, a month or go since, in thiscity, other districts of Luzerne county, in which Hazel | ton is situated, have recently become notorious by the enactment of dreadiu!l deeds of murder and Plunder, The class of niggards who conduct thetr terribly ilitett profession in the adjacent |, county of Schuylkill, peuetrating to this ; Tegion in @ large body, have leit a trail in various directions. Tne brutal butchery | of Capt, Jonn Riley by the fiend iucarnate | ‘Molly Maguire,” and Andrew Lenahan, in the | matn-strest of Wiikesbarre, and the riot started | im another part of that city, in which several per- sons were seriously injured, were pu»lished at the | thme of sheir occurrence; but there are other more important criminal events that have never | reached the outside world and which I propose to | furnish to illustrate the extent aud feartulness of | the prevailing criminality. At the mining town of Plymouth, below Wilkes barre, on the line of the Lackawanna and Blooms. burg division of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, attempts were made, a few weeks ago, upon the lives of a mine boss and foreman of colliery No. 3 of the Wilkesbarre Coal by @ member of the off, but uot until one of the ted was wounded. Shortly subsequent to the above Jonn Dunleavy was found dead in the streets of the town, the body being iright/ally mutilated, The criminais ta both cases were allowed to es cape. The adjoining town of Kingston has wit messed numerous Ku Klux outrages, and the citizens are naturally alarmed at their frequenoy, | Particutarly as the perpetrators are allowed to go | undetected and unpunisned. In the city of Scrane | ton considerable lawlessness cxists, Persons are | Murderously attacked im the very heart of the | municipality, and, alter being plundered, are | lett to die in the streets. Ruflans openly attempt to outrage women upon the prity | clpat avenues, and in several instances have succeeded in their designs, ‘Te most recent cases Of this Kind Were those of the assauit of Garret Walsh on Miss Eliza Kroit, and haita dozen derperadoes upon an unknown young woman in nc nna avenue. Arter a desperate resistance all these outragers were arrested, THE BRIGANDS roam the streets aimost unchecked, and indulge | io the most riotous demonstrations. The housee of John Fehrenhold and Joun Taorn, on Penasyle vam.a avenue, have been attucked and damaged, | Great stones were used in the work of destruction, | While a snower of builets were poured into the dweilings. Mr. Thorn received puiniul, M not sere ous, Wounds, Ex-Uity Treasurer O'Dononue, Josepd Pariry, Messrs. Cour, Wiliams and others nave andergone painful cruclties at the hauds of tue ; banditt., On Tuesday nigat Michael Judze, one of | the fnspectors of the election in the Thira dis | trict, ‘f'weitth ward, Scranton, while returniny | home from the polls, Was latally shot by some roa agents, aud reports reach here of the committal ot similar ucts elsewhere on the sime night | These evil doers haunt the city during the noc turnal hours aud disappear to their secret head- | quarcers upon the approacn of daylight, Aclew 1s Never obtained to the whereabouts of those who make these midaight assaults. In the border. | ing, towns ot Duumore, Olyphant, Pine Brool | Pal and Bellevue lawiessness an | incendlar are quite prevalent. Sinee the strike at Pine Brobk the diabolism bas augmented con- siderably. Tne strike was occasioned oy the | Lackawanna Coal aud iron Company reducing tne Wages of the operatives about tiventy-seven cents per day and stipulating that the loading of six | cars, instead o: five, should constitute dans work, A dificulty of the same kind has originay | atthe Fatriawn coiliery. As von operators an | colliers are equally determined to hold the post- tions taken, tb 1s hard to state when the trouble ‘Will be adjusted. The Pine brook brigands usual | Maugurate & riot on the Sadoath day, aud makt Onsiaughts Upon all innocent and inoffensive Cit | Zens. At the last outbreak Jacob Hetzel and Cone | rad Bebblea were badly injurea. At the same | place P, McGinty suffered in the same manner, rode bery, however, being added to the crime. At Olyphant, ag elsewhere in tue northern coal fleids of Luzerne county, a deep and oitter natred is exinbived by the law breakers and others toward the Welsh miners, and at every oppor tunity atlorded they are made the subjects of at- tack. Many of them have already sufered physle | Cally ana otherwise. and they live im datuly dread } Of 4 renewal of these attempts upon their liv Dawa James. a Welsh mioer, employed at to Grassy Isiand mines, is the latest victim of thi Moliy Maguires' vengeance. It appears to be the’ | general impression throughout the a that @ terrible conflict between the nationalities may break out any time should the least provocation be made by either of the races working in the collieries; and it is also asserted that none of the outbreaks would occur were it not | tor the influence exercised in tho different districts by tue desperate men belonging to the Ku Kiux organization. Last week Tony Moran, a well known Moliy Maguire, attempted to the town of Dunmore. Fortunatey the | Hames toat he kindled were discovered in time to | prevent any great catastrophe. Moran was cap- ured and treated to summary punizament. ‘This not only stoped, temporarily, all simiuar law breaking, but checked what might have been @ great and terriole uprisng of the dangerous Classes that inlest that section of tie coal country. On Sunday an attempt was made to burn Presdyterian church, The fire was extingaisa | before any damage was done and the supposed im cendiary arrested and imprisoned. Since | THE RESIGN OF TERROR was increased :0 the present aiarming degree, ) the representative press tas dwelt upon the sub ject and in several instances the editors have been tureatened by the m<bs jor the course they have adopted. The annexed article is irom the Pottsville Journal;—‘tAre the days ot the Molly Maguires aud the Blood Tuos of Pat Hester and | the “iour Barrel Hotel commg upon us agatut? | It seeing ike it. Such a carnival oi crime as has numbers Ol pronounced republicans voted | I venture to say that in the whoie | nly had concurrent jurisdiction in sucn cases, | and that their offctais could act with lés em. | | that feaerai soldiers had been roistering through | the State behind federal marshais, tearing innocent | but suspected gentlemen from their bomes and families, ynd by high-handed terrorism driving timid whites by the thousands to the bayous and | | ‘morasses, the result was much more marvellous, | | | East Side Bilghwaymen. Before Jucye Wandell. When the registration returns, manipulated by radical Commissioners so as to exciude bundreds and some other small arucies, of whites in many parishes irom the regis- | after regaiming his feet, pursued one uf the men, [Ty (which We a nmeceraary quaildeation for | init arrested oy cuitcer Kennedy. ct tue sevens | Canst aie . | i . he Seven- | Count Arnis vase is ; Young), came im and showed over 20,000 | reenta precinct, Ruyter was urraigned beiore | ou 1 é | blacks registered, the democrats had no | Judge Wandell yesterday saorning and committed hope of carrying the State. Yet tney resvived to | in $5,000 bail to answer, exort all their power to reduce the radical majority, Pry” and while not sanguine of securing a suMcient OOUHE CALENDASE-THIS DAY, i colored vote to overcome the republican majority | SUPREME special eflorts were made to take advantage of | | divisions in the ranks of the dominant party to | 2, elect members of Congress and a majority of the | 25 House. How gloriously their efforts have been | 25: crowned with success you have already learned, | and I now propose to state what Iconcelve to be THE SECRET OF THEIR SUCCESS Boe. v in the campaign. You will recollect that in the | } ju brume—Court first letter I wrote trom this point 1 cwelt upon | Issues o1 117, 180, 134, 188, 153, 157, 169, 160, 175, 177, Qty, 2% 280, 234, 235, 244, 245, 248, 247, 248, 249, 208, 271, 273, 274, 22, 276, 277, 278, in 238, 28° 29%, 205, 298, 299, until December 23, 1874. om 1 x4, 205, "208, 235, 245, 246, 247, 449, 251, 252, | the relations existing between the two races, and 282, 335, 245, 2 ao 2 253, 254, | charged that the prejudices of the whites pre- | y@7, x Fas Be mn in Pg rd a6, a ae vented them from forming a union with the blacks 279, 280, 281, 292, 238, <4, 255, 286, 237, 288, | against the adventurers who bad remained here | 25° aa | SUPREMB COURT—CrroviT--Patt 1.—Adjourned | at the close of the war. ‘These prejudices | for the term. Part 2—Held by Judge ‘Sradye-Noa | alfenated from them the respect and | 584, 2400, 3130, 2098, 26uy, 3083, SHLY, 161, 160, 1883, confidence of their sormer slaves, who were | easily led to believe by the men who nosed them for political purposes that the whites would re- enslave them. So great was thelr confidence in | | the power of the Kellogg government that they | | feit tt would be permanent and conid not be over- thrown. The revolution of September 14 cured 554, 072, 650, 680, TU, 404, 712. | them of this idea and reassured them that the | “Common PLEAS—GENERAL TimtM—Held by Judges | whites had no personal hostility toward the blacks, | Daly, Larremore aud Daly.— Nos. i x ue 85, 141, 143, 1704, TAS, 2482, 2555, B844, 2825, 2050, 390, 2B, 6.9. Part 3—Held ‘by Judge Van ‘Vorst.—Nos. 1051, 457, 2001, 1499, 1213, 1465, 1651, 1286, 1007, 1747, 1899, 1553, 1911, 3533, 118145, 1, 1791, 1891, 1893, 360: SUPERION OOURT—GENERAL 'TERM.—NOS. 7, 15, 22, 80, 31, 32, 43, 39, 47, 49, 50, SUPERIOK CouRr—IRiAL ‘TERM—Part 1.—Ad- journed ior the term, Part 2=-Heid by Judge Cur- Tis. —Nos. 1122, 1440, 1076, 1186, 64234, 424, 532, 865, | In consequence there vegan at once a stampede of | 45, 48, 61, 67, 87, 91, 35, 50, 92, 43, 144, hegroes irom Kellogg rie tue conservative party, | 152, 101, 162, 155, 157, 168, 159, 160, 161, | Phe course of the whites in generiily agreeimg to 16%, 163, _ 164, 165, 16%, 169, 17 | cease employing colored radicals was another | 17% 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 170, rt wedge that widened the breacu between the white | 184, 186, 187, 188, 10, 191, 102, £94, 195, Lv 200, and vlack republicans. The biacks saw that the COMMON PLEAS—THIAL TerM—Part 1.—Held by the steamship | Judge Robinson.—Nos, 1036, 119, 487, 525, 05, Part 2 cotton presses, the sugar mi lines, the ratiroads, the cane and cotton fleids, the foundries, shops and factories were owned “11, 1157, 25134, 1646, Yld, LUNG, 397g, ISL i, 80 Adjourned tur the term almost entirely by the whites, to whom they MARINE COURT—TRIAL ‘TbumM-—Part 1—Held oy Must 10OK jor that sustenance whieh they could not = Judge Spauiding.—Vourt opens at ten A. M. 08, | get in politics, where vearly ail the ollices were 44% 30, 655, 102, 1642, 4689, 541, 542, 643, 545, filled by white carpet-baggers and Southern 46, 447, od], O52. Part 2—Hald by Judge Mc- scalawags, and large numbers decided to desert Adam.—Court opens atten A. M,-—No8. 146, 031, 532, the goverument of Kelloug for the party opposed | 540, 288, 156%, 13,0, 1 170, 140th 1553, 1653, 1Usd, toit, Leading negroes made promises to the cons | 16 1686, ios7. Part 3—leld oy Judge Shed Court opens at ten A, M,—Nos, 1609, 1444, 164, 1531, | 1083, 1454, 1451, 1204, 1612, 1225, 1. Gl, 1883, 1484, 1260, COCRT OP GENERAL Szsstons.—-Held vy Judge Sutveriand.—the People va, Roveri Watson, 10d. bery; Same vs. John b. Eadinger, robvery; Same va, Unaries Granding, tei nivus gssauit and bate tery; same Vs. Jong Bryson, (elon. ous assauit and batter); Same vs. Joan Dononue, Gurgiary ; Same va, Frederick spring, burglary; Same Vs. Joho Doyle and Peter Marun, burgiacy; Same vs. servatives, organized in the city ana elsewhere COLORED DEMOCRATIC CLUBS, apd only asked as a guurantes in exchange for their votes that they shoud be employed and | shoald be surrounded at the poids oy suficient Wilte men to protect them irom colored violeuce, ‘The whites were suspicions o: contemplated ; Weachery; bat, neverticless, they resolved to sik prejudice and join the blacks in an effort to carry the State, On the day of tne eiection bus Tess WAS very yenierally suspenaed; the merchant, - the cotton broker, the manuiactnrer and the con- | Patrick Mulone and John Finan, durglary; Same tractor going to the poll with ts cotored help, vs. dames Grifin, grind larceny: dame vs, Join | protected them trom violence and gave tiem Kerrigav, grand larceny; Same Vs. Jonepli Jone es | un opportunity to prove the sincerity of sop, grand larceny; Same ys. Jon Wisgins, thelr proiessed conversion to the demo. | grand larceny; Same va. Meio Dugin, grand lar. | crate inith. Colored ciubs, flanked by White ceny; Same vs. Francis J, Kerr, nd larceny; Leaguers, unarmed, marched in bodies to the polls | Same va, William Tucker, concemied weapons; As Mr, Henry Frederic®, of No. 840 First avenue, was walking through Sixtu street yeaterday enna morning, about two o’cimck, he was attacked by | races, yet two men, who knocked !@m down aud robbed him of his pocketbook, contam@ing $21, a handkerchief | Mr. Frederich, Couxt—CHaBeRs—Heid by Judge | Lawrence.—Nos, 2, 79, 86, (85, 105, 106, 107, 111, 115, 1 262, | duct of this g Surneme Covunt—GsneraaL TsRM.—Adjourned | SUPREME COURT—SPECIAL ‘TERM—Held by Judge | t Opens at ha h Alter these lew prefatory words, I append the | Taged in Schuylkill county since Farreti’s pusile following leader ot the diplomatic aspect of the | !@Imous jury Strained an iiladvised law 0 t i i ig enough to create & lively apprenension. Ce A Ah A eS aca ws altogetuer "too, ttle | security "for 7 | human ‘e im this region; the murderer re is a corporation in Europe which, though in %, fs Members of the most varied and antagonistic | 10, 28 they please, and one judging only x | (ha cause trom the effect wonld be obliged | tiem 'tegether into a compact and homogencons wiole. | tO think that in this community it was a greater Ve mean the Corps Diplomatique. ‘ibe members of tne Crime to carry £100 tn one’s pocket than to take @ ropean diplomacy are not only in close social xein- | human life. This 1s too evidently the opinion of ea No ence other, pat, perenne tbe opmmson Samm of | the lawless characters who commit the murders mediating between clashing interests, nave a certain “ . tandepey to act indepenientiy of the governments by oi robberies which 5 aged given this regiou an uns whom they arc accredited.” From this pot er view | pleasant notoriety. you are caught alone with 0 Meuns an isolated one, vut | $1001n your pocket you are shot without time or trial, If you are caught m the act of killing a map you are fed and lodged at the expense o/ tne State has the peculiarity ot tusing and weldin | oat, | wa ilustrates iit a peculiarly significant manner what ive wi.nessed else Where in tines of diplomatic selt- rellanges, Under these circumstances it 1s natural ; a‘ so that the diplomatists of all nations ‘should be PTC RS seth A ALR cesT E TS connected by a certain solidartiy of | iuteresis. y ay can Dring, to Tndvet, the attacks horied ‘against this yoy: | bear onthe parioning power. Let us be thanks erument by the press of some foreign capiials | fui at least that the new constitution has so | be chiefly referred to diplomatic inspl- | hedged in the Executive clemency that it ra Yon, Ip is exceedingly characterisic.or the specie 1s Jar less habie to abduse than was the ye er and spirit oc dipioimacy that it should in- d certain papers ww protest against the heinous con- rhment in arraigning an ambassador | betore the courts o: his country. knvoys and secretaries | regard it as an offence against themselves that une of their caste should have been treated like a common mortal, And this although Count arnim, as, iudeed, the wiole of our diplomatists nowadays, has never been popular with his foreigt colleagues. The light, it is rue, that has been reoently thrown upon the batter us served to mitigate the complaints made by dis. \ personage ret certain journais and corre- | spon tetits accessible to diplomatic inspiration continue | tw pervert facts, and endeavor to represent the ac- cusations lodged’ against an ex-ambassador as an | inewit to hie whole cings, [t does not diminish these | plaints thatitis Prince Heamarck who originated | Proceedings against the Count. A portion of the Corps te: case belore its adoption, But this mistaken kind. ness to criminals is tie bitterest cruelty to their innocent victims. Ibis better that one guilty per. son should be punished than that a hundred inno cent ones should suifer. At any raie, we have tried the kindness policy long enough to kuow thatit willnor meet the case, Let us go back to oF spelling book, and learn from them the apol ofthe ola man, who, when he conid not isloaie a bog irom nig apple tree by Minging grass at him, changed bis tactics and knocked him out witua stone. The murder of Chie! Burgess Major furnishes a good subject to begin with, Daniel Dougherty, taken red-handed, mashed beyond all dispute as to identity by the bullet of his vio Diplow uc, having been long hostue tothe Chancellor tim, 18 Ostensibly confined to a sick bev, from | of the Lmpire tor ituoring the ordinary routine ot their | which {t 18 dangerous (in more senses than one) | gigem igi the more exaised by gaat happened the shag’ | for any but his iriends to remove him. Our repre day. Bismarck, who alw: vowed his pol nly | nC gt upreme wisdosn by sentative and Dr. Carpenter visited the man and onsider | though reserve ‘is © | colleagues, iy naturally more, feared than loved in cot ound that he was only shamming, that his sicknest tain cireiés; apd as he endeavored to give German | Would only last until he had a good chance to get | diplomacy adiferent character to whatit had when | away and uo longer. Now, why does not he entered it, his innovaiions are not contined to one | the District Attorney get Out a& Warrant pordion of thé service, but extend to al. from what | jor his arrest (if as claimed, & Constable | the Chancellor franXly said a short time ago in Parlta- | 40 Wwevieee tee bring ini, “wad Cea | ment, we may gather that he is desirous. togive the | | heh gs oo MG DREN Ls 2 a4 represen os of this country a strongly imarked | the Sheri, with a sudicient posse, to bring him to | national character and poitcy. “It was injudicious,ne | & place cf safe keeping! This, we should think, is explained, to leave ambassalors too long abroad, espe- | Mr. Reilly’s imperative duty—the more so as his cially at the same ¢. A prolonged stay abroad | term of office will soon expire. 1t i$ @ bad record ate Rad uae thet ART ag Toe aeaaaaTS | 1OF Bum fo leave nis, dustrict more disorderly ewan 0 2 04 ately Sonnested at tho court fo wMieh they were accredited, | H€ found it. Then let us have a jury of impartial, ‘Tho Frince might have added that represenratives who , Just and upright citizens, Who Will make work tor | have jong soiourned in toreigu countries are apt to over. | Sheri! Werner and give the dangerous classes @ rate their owl importance and to assume a position and | lesson plain envugh for the most illiterate to ttheirs, We mustsay that in Count | re. re attempted to believe his object Sousa’ we Eiir county.” Une Wood sholssome hanging, gently much to amuse the publi jettiug ¢ ¥ 2 > Meee erate notre te: eta ecnet ee his eiettaa. then put firmly admuniktered, will cure a great deat leagues of bis inerits and the unjust return meted out to Dad biood and save a great Many lives in this com. him, All usexpiains the (eilngs ot the diplom world bat too ® But though Prince Hismarck | not have ingratiaied himselr with ambassadors and e: by making the representatives ot this country national Instead of the international einvioyes they formerly were, thouvh he may have shocked thei by appointing non-diplomauisis to some of the most im- portant embassies, the German public have no cause to echo the grievances of a caste incensed at an infringe: | ment of their ancient privileges. As tar asl can perceive, diplomatists are not agerieved at the aiieved disregard of their priv. munity. ‘The case of Farrell, Mentioned above, was adb abolical one in the annals of Schuylkill county, Farrell first butchered a triend at bis supper tal | and then chopped up the body and torew the Pteces down a deserted coal shalt. He was con victed Of murder in the second degree and re. ceived @ slight imprisonment. At last accounts | Dante! Dougoerty, the assassipator of Chief Bur gees Major, Was still at Mahaney City, the author: tes fearing to remove htm lest a riot should en. Heged fositiou—imdeed, they have ceased gue, The streets are crowded with despel to ciaim ti—bay only disike the comments men and the cliazens are anxiously awainag@ passed upon them as a class to which movement on-the part of the authorities. tue Incident has given occasion. This is | wrtcccinanitansitiiplaniiandin easy to understand at a time when their raison d'étre is every now and then Called in ques- tou by persons insalticiently acquainted with the requirements oF Dational and tnternstional ite, ‘Taxing 4 wider range, one muy say that in a demo- cratic age, When the upper and highly enitivated classes are but too frequently the viermms of vul- THE TELEGRAPH IN AUSTRALIA [From the Sydney Herald, Sept. 7.) An experimenrai message was sent yesterday te Java from Sydney, and a reply recvived in twe av ALLUCK, ali educated people ate aitke atfecied | MNUtes and thirty-five seconds, The distance ty anevent Which pices an ambassudor tn the | travelied by the electric current was $700 miles, do@k, This aspect of the matter, you may be sure, | The rapidity of mani ation 1 Bo shore a thwe 1s is very geueraly deplored im Germany, whateve prooi that We have good operators, ‘The carreat | the praise bestowed upon government for lowing | Of electricity from sydney to Port Darwin wae Justice baye ite course, 4 Slantaneous y

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