The New-York Tribune Newspaper, October 26, 1866, Page 4

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Ampsements. N HE, SEA OF ICE. Mr. C, W. Clarks WO HUNDRED THOUSAND CURIOS! ! Dailp Cribune. A ll{»”!AY. OCTOBER ‘2-:7, 18066, IMEN WITH SUPPI o OLYM PEIs FUENING=RIP VAN “TWINTER GAKDE CRET. M:n. D.P. ™is ¢ G-LADY AUDLEY'S § Bowers AT T S & ? T The continued pressure wpon our adrertising colunne AT0s 5 VENING=THE BLACK CROOK—Grest Pailsiouss | obliges us toa, ain present to onr readers an extra sheet. bl L O — RS ;h. the second, third, sizth and seventh pages will be =t WALLACK'S THEATER. Sfound The Cotton C'rop of 1566 ; Indiana and Kansus ofHis BYENING- 00, M, Frntle A2, | Sate Faire: The Hartford Mander; Sporting News;: the i - Board of Heaith; Annual Mecting of the Sons of Tem- NSO L ARORON, perancc; National Raitroad Convention; Base Dall bl NCHO, Matches; Enropean News; Lawand Police Intelligence; * e Mecting of the American Missionary Association ; Rail- road Disaster in Pennsylvania; The Indiaw War; Com- mercial Matters ; Market Reports, and varions other items of interest. * 113 £V ENING=THE MARRI LAY AUDLEY'S SECKE T. it Mis. Win. Gomersal, Mr. Mark v W YORK The West Indies are still being visited by terrible hurricancs. Ono has just swept over Turk's Island, and cansod an immense destruction of property. Twenty lives were lost, and 3,000 persons made homeless, CIRCUS, L ThIs BVENING- GIRCUS TROUPF. M:. Kob. Quson and hidnfaal THEATER FRANCAIS IS EVENINO—ELIZABETI. Muwe. BROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC A4l4S E) ENING—LADY MACBETH. Mue. Adellde Ristori, An iuvestigation is now in progress in this eity in relation 1o the disastor to the steamship Evening Star, which wo hope will shed some light upon the cause of that dreadful calamity The justice of our criticism on Mr. Phillips will be justified, we think, Ly reading the report of his epesch last ovening, published this morning. Having said what we deemed best about him, we allow him to speak fully about himself. He says some wise things, and some which are not wise. His assault on Geu. Grant is not sound, and is especially weak when we seo that he fails to do justice to Gen. Sheridan. e ] IRVING HALL. THI9 1 VENING—Mz, and Mra. Howard Paul. PERSONATIONS OF LIVING GEL EL TROUPE. KF 1118 § VFNING ¥ ANDY ANDY. 0. 70 Broadway FIFTH-AVE. OPERA HOUSE. FUL bV ENING — BUDWORTH'S MINSTKELS — GEORGE AND T DRAGON. ST QPEN DAILY=W. MOZ N MARBLF DOUMW ORTH LA 0-M. Llartz, the INDIAN TS =1 BASKET TRIC MUSEUM OPEN 1 BSTORY TS V2 SRy 5 Lyt 2 . Wo rogret fhe cheerless sequel of the Canadisn invasion, as on right grounds of humanity we doplored e B!‘»mm-e’"ao!"-g-’:m~ ~ | the invasion itsclf, Ous of the Fenian prisoners, whose trial is reportet at length in our columns, was CrormiyG, 3 yesterday found guilty aud condemned to death. e Though 4his news must have been c.q-ecllefl. it will no dombt create much foeling FALL AND WINTER BEASON. and we oan "0]-" among our citizons of foreign birth; 5 ; AR, hope, for tho prisoner’s own sake, that extenuating FATHGERA ciroumstances may yet mitigate the severity of his a5 ouis, Noa 121, 129 ord 125 Faltonat, 1490w | eoueanca, According to his own scknowledgment, ho w and superb atock of resdy-mede reoeived az impartial trial CLOTHING, contion is fnvited. Gilsd w The nin West Virginia has been again car- ried un My for the Union, as maintained by s loyal Congress, Our telograph states the majority a8 considerably in excess of that on the vote to amond the State Constitution last May. The Hon. Arthur J. Dbremanis ag chosen Governor, and Choster D, Hubbard, the Congressman who refused his increase of salary, is reéleoted to Congress from the Ist Di while there is every probability that Messrs. B, II. Kitchen and Daniel Polsey bave been n in the otkers, We have thus ended the eighth poli Jesson siuce the 1st of September, and there are many more to come which & wise raler should o wirt Buia of ovacy sizs pade to fit—man, youth of boy—sud sty'er of awoli vari-ties s to salt the tastes of the most fustidious. Phas oot of the Lonse is now the same ss ever. *To Sxry Cnear Pow ovw Prion axp x0 DeviaioN.” RAYNMOND' Nos. 191, 123 aud 133 Folon sl heed, —_——— Tha dispatch which we have received from Win- chester, Va., gives but an impezfect idea of the char- address which Gen. Wise delivered at the Bat we have no doubt it was eloynent, and that bearers took from it new inspiration to cherish the past, to which Stonewall Jackson and tho living Lee indubitably be- long. We cannot dispate over Virginia's obedi to nature in mourning her dead, nor agree with G Wiso that the cause for which they died still lives. Mr. Wise himself may have philosophie doubts upou that point, if his confessions concerning Slavery be truly reported. Yet we shall be glad if one-half the young men of Virginia take the good advice which the addreas contains. ‘Why are GENIN'S like & serios of Pasarno Srvi pular o Dr. Grover's CHAMPION LEVER TRUSS ver gota oot of place ; » the most diffic Eimtic Stocking Shou di Braces, Bandsges, o Junet. Snd for a pas Sigoanth, Twontioth aud Twenty-first Werde,—For Congress, B. CANS ns SEWING MACHINE. use or wear, than the d Park Trial" | Band for L ont nufim kind stilchios ou (hs saine viece of good No. 308 Broadw V¥un Aws Axp LEG, by B. FRANK PaLwge, LL. D. nd low to officers and civillane. 1,600 R.Y.; 19 Green st., Boston. Avoid sreudulent imitaion Tak Howk SEWING Wor Fauilies avd Manufscturers. They sre world renown 5 Hown Macwrye No. 699 Broscway, New Morr's CmwwicAL Povape Restores Gray Hair, W ficm falling out ; rewoves dands the fitest drs Rusnrox. No. 10 Astor House, and druggists. MBREDE'S, Nos. 599 and 872 Broadway, ' o 1t will be seen from Mr. Cyrus Field's letter, pub- lished this morning, tist from the 1st November noxt the charges for mesaages by the Atlantic Cable will be reduced fifty per cent. This i< awise step on the part of the Directors of the Atlantic Telegraph Company, q:‘ il vanor atictes oot iciperted. sellos o | and it will doubtless result in inereased gains, asa RTADORO'S EXCELSIOR HAIR DYE j8 unive great many people hitherto deberred from making use wiodged as the best extaut. Faetory, No, 6 Astor House. | of the cable, owing to the very high charges, will now eturaovep Lovk-Stircit Macuisis for Tailors and | avail themselves of the sdvantages it offers in businees L kel AR Ty otberwise. The present rates are simply pro- For A STYLISH AND ELFGANT HAT GO TO Espix- ry to the public at large, and even at the lower b, Manfictarer. _____________ | mark scon to come iuto operation, the charge will be :S,‘f‘:":—'rf. mmu;mfun- a sufficiently beavy (ax upon moderate resources. X The undectaking of laying the cable has been a costly one, and it is ouly fair that tle men who have fur- pished the mesns for carrying it throngh should re- ceive an adequate return for fhe capital invested at such great risk, But it is not too much to expect that in the cotrse of time forther reduction will be made, and the nsefulness of the cable be thus greatly in- creased, Tt is to ha hoped that the intended lowering of the tariff will bring #o large an accession of busi- ness aud profits asmay lead to such a result at no distant day, 5 HEKLER & WILSO LOCK-STITCH BEWING flgm wud Rorrosworn Macwixe. No. €5 Brosdway. Orover & Baxer's HiGEEST PREMICM ELASTIC om Swwina Maowiyms. for famby use. Ne. 499 Brosdway. YWRED'S IMIROTED SE MAaCHINES, 506 Broadway, Tho bast pawizy M Duplicates, $2. _xgul'a.p.... " N.T. At WHOLRSALE—CHILDREN'S GENTEEL WAk @anvun Copper- Tippsd Boots and Shoes, Bewed and Pegged T Biensow t Tuas BEWING-MACHINES and To Rext. , No. 74 Brosdway, cpetalre. - CONSTITUTIONAL EQUILIBRIUM. The elaborate absurdity of Becretary Browning's letter on the Constitution (what else should the Presi- dent's redoubtable servant write about unless it be tho Flag?) is almost past comment; hut, as Mr. Browning is fair typo of those narrow logicians who conserva- tively think that the Chinose process of dwarfing a nation is necessary to keep it from suicide, a few of his yet uuserved sophisms deserve to be treated to death with the instrument they invoke, Mr. Browning opposes all amendment of the Con- stitution, thongh it has been amended in half a dozen instances, He objeots to changing the basis of repre- tion, hecause ** aggregate population is its true basis.” Then why not disperse from the letter of the Iaw the ¢ three-fifihs of all persons 17 He thinks that these three-fifths should remain as they are, because Gt | seitber unfranchised women nor foreigners can vote, i | though they are inclnded in the represcotative num- | Ler. Yet the conviction is universal that foreigners, der our vow unsmended laws, can vote after » shory sud needed experience of our fnstitu- tious, snd that women are more or less inti- wately represeuted by fathers, brothers, and children. The nurepresented *‘three.fifths” wero until lately slaves; bought, sold and liableto he maltreated, by the very terms of law and sale, They bave no voice in representation wave through their owners, who are not expected to vote against their own bar. guins, Those mative vitizens Liave not even the pros- pect to vote which is accorded to foreigners of any class, unless we assure it to them, Hence, the nation is heartily in favor of rostoring 10 the negro the frac. tion of twoifths robbed from his manhood, end erecting bim futo full citizenehip, ‘Wo must either do this, and Dby the incontrovertibly influepcos of law, interest and justice, make oll races friends, or we must consent that the black man shall be repre- sented by his encmy and our own, to his oppression and our Jefeat. We counot yield to o bargain so stupendously absurd as to make & platform of mur. Aerod rights for treacon to stend on and confront layalty, Ifthere is any danger in the superstructure of representation which we are to plant on the popu- Lar basis ut the Sonfh, it will be tenfold more disas- «t forms of Rbenmatism are T being daily i ool g ! iy CoRe. Dr. Grunmer ¢ Piis Duraturss Tdpowty hise e v e of Pien St by mal o 1o A 8 of 6 Coronlers free. Fod Uy draggiets. Agent wenied evesy Addeoss 1. B Rowaix, Miseger, Ne, Vi3 Bionbwsy, Xy / Mr. John B, DeMornt of Philadeiphia Les invented oo l-rovul tolegraphic cable, for which superior electslc Elpower is claimod. Tho invention consists in the combina- tion of o sories, of separate cylivdrical conductors, one ithix 14 other, and each jnsulated, foring oze cable, » ‘lu‘i whioli & number of different dispstclier, equal to :-'nw-w of tubes, mey be transmitted simulteneously. ¥ spieal strcoture of the tubes gives grest elasticity “.githont danger of breaking the conneetion; the destrue- + fion oi onaoylinder would not affect the use of the re- msindor, Tho cable is said to be lighter, more fexible, Wors powariul and dusable than the beet now in use. Let- “beta patont have been grauted for tbe invertion, both in e Unt*a] States and England, , _~ MyxriwG 1§ BRHALY OF DisasLEp BOLDIERS AXD Bas 029, ~A oall Iins been issued bearing the signatares of [ gass Graslor, Poter Cooper, A A, Low, 8. B. Chittenden, - Wiitiam (1, Beyant, E. H. Chapiv, Heory W. Hellows, Heury ¥. Kavwoad, Mashall O. Roberts, Wi, E. Dodge, Joha C. | $remout wnd other well kuown o tally n;:'::':m'i u-':m‘ the E .I'h-u:ty "'""f‘ Nov. u,'.n;:, ‘n:.l o’'cloek. Kiver, mmunu Bay, has been 1oy U it o the National Anlim. 48 e fats sevsion, | (5008 if wo deny justice at the foundation. \ E‘m'(wm r‘-lull’ngflml:'! 'y nm}.:‘ Mr, Browning may mistake his own drift, but wo onsl 5 ok e 4 hjm that he has beeu molling backward in the o 3 e M) the Trobty o | interest of dishonesty, Why should he repeat tho | operty of ibe Asylum 46 soei a8 8 Lile to s ok ourd of Managers shall be. toude 1 the Ary. B of o Tram thrse Tundred ‘scros of lnd, Inchoding thnt om which B8 ooy of the Uiod St s wow bulh wnd’ mwintained or o d L fur thivranoo of tiis object an effort {s now belng m o i wde ot gocure o st IB0ESATY 10 complete the puyment. The under usd, thorefore, would M who have the inte o ‘fl-uo; el of "ths sadsn "1 b Yitermtol obr stale talk about * equilibrium,” when, if we must know * no North, Sonth, East or West, but the whole country,” we must dismiss such antique logio as this: ‘It would be better for all parties and intorest, and far more hopeful for the perpetuity of the Govern- Wonk U eolstlag lik wu eauddbeium of atrength bg- < — twoon tho differont sections of Tl countf¥ conlT be maintained.” Does our oracle of yesterday mcan that we are still to conserve a North and a South, and draw lines between East and West, under some notion that in & national union of commonwealths there wust be some such old-world idea as a balance of power? The truo equilibrinm must every year make the Uion more nationsl, aud South Carolina and Rhode Tsland more local, and the country, to all poiuts of the compass, more united and homogencous, But we cannot do this by perpetuating uvder a compact utterly violated on oue side such unrighteous advane tages in Sonth Carolina as we cannot tolerate in the much larger State of New-York, That is not oqui- librium, popular or otherwise, wherein the South has most privileges and the North most popalation. Mako a true equilibrium of equal rights and exact justice toward all men, and we shall hear little of State lines and risky balanees between North and South at the mercy of Whatever traitor who chooses to kick the beau. By advico and consent of the Prosident, Me. Brown- ing opposes amendments to the Constitutiou im tole ; but neither could bave remembered that, when & Senator, Mr. Johnson offered amendments to that same instenment half-a-dosen times, and that in his first Mossage. to Congress he suggested this very one con- cerning representation which has becomo the body of the plan offered by Congress to the people. 1f l'h'. Browning be right, should wo not erase every section and article whioh has been added to the Constitntion? But the Constitution differs from Mr. Browning and the Prosident. It provides for its oWR nllxonqulxl. Clearly, then, is it not irrational to oppose amending the Constitation, vhen the great instrament itself so provides? Noy—is not such opposition UN-comstitn- tional THE MORAL OF A VOTE. ‘There are not many men in this State, we hope, who, if asked to go to the polls to vote for murder, arson, obbery, torture, cruelty, oppression, systematic swindling and tyach law, would not indignantly de- cline the invitation, and give the proposer, if not a touch of their knuckles, at least a piece of their mind. We are willing to believe that many thousands of citisens, though not, thank God ! the majority, will be deluded into voting as the wregenerate and unrecon- structed Rebels wish them to vote, by the melancholy notion that the defeat of the Republican party will be the triumph of peace aud sound policy, snd that nothing stands in the way of public serenity except the obstinate adhegence of € ¢85 10 Certain meas- ures of which the President does not approve, To the men who langhed when we beaten, and cried when wo w war, we havenothing to well-mesning should vad: the State Union Ticket would be hailed Ly traitors who are still ion bitt s and the bond of Confederate and as opening to their w were during the late it is right that the 1 the gatl of sec iniqui Istas of ture mischief, and opport ] ruling and again secking to ruin. Ifthey bave any g powder left thoy would choerfully expend it in salutes for Hoffiman triumphant, while whaterer breath a clemeney, some- times mistaken, has alowed to remain in bodies long ago forfeited to the ontr: would employ in hailing the overthrow of the s d ** Radical” cause, and the defeat of the sc cane didates. The first cffort of ignity would oxpend itselfl upen th freedmen, A man should well of the precarions condition of this important class—im- vortant both morally and materially—before be votes whips and knives and rifles into the hands of th oppressors, Please to take notice we do not any means inclade in holders, Bat the bu praved Whites of the South are rife for mischief, of which a very fow of them can accom alamentable deal, as New-Orleans and Memphis bear witnoes. The peaceful and acquiescent Whites may accept the ro- sult of the war; but they are themselves, mauger their colorless complexion, at the meroy of a few men of violence and blood. They caunot protect the freedmen if they have the will, aud the will we cannot expect all of them heartily to have, while most of them are in that feeble, nervous aud dis- pirited condition which is inseparable from privation and disappointment. Tl real outlaws, hard-hearted and heavy-handed, know—for, at the risk of their necks, thay have proved to their own hase satisfaction —that from the ** Administration " they have nothing to feat beyond amicable censures and half-earnest re- monstrances. They feel how pataral and pleasant and profitable it is for them to fraternize with the Johnsonized Democracy ; and the news of any trinmph of that party, however | fed, wonld arouse in them that most doyilish of inetincts which prompts the stroug to bally and smite the weak, aud to oppress the friendless and the unprotected. Even now, in Arkan- sag, we are told, npon the best anthority, ** the only safety for a freedman is to demand no rights and to assert no manhood.” Arkansas is far away; but take from the emancipated tho moral protection which a large, powerful and predominant party of freedom gives them, and we shall have o multiplication of wicked~ ness at our own doors and almost under our very eyes, And it is not morely a question whether we will abau- don the Black to the mercy of bratal and exasperated Whites, All of us have pockets, however some of us may be wanting in hearts, Oppression and cruelty at the South mean anarchy, and anarchy means renewed taxation of the North, Blindnoss, indifference, preju- dice, are luxuries which must be paid for. Bloody brutality in Louisiana indicates fresh asseasments in New-York, National Justice alone is cheap, and only the majesty of the law is economicals Aud haviog thus appealed at once to the consclences and the cashe boxes of our fellow-citizens, we leaye their conrse on the Gth of November to tieir own charity sud dise cretion, 3 NURSING WRATH. #There ave times,” it has been said, *when the dove ean ill spare the wisdom of the serpent,” A man, in the prosent emérgency of publio afairs, who values bis vote too much to carelessly east it upon the wrong gide, must necessarily romember that the Johuson fuc- tion assumen the sincere and geueral repentance of the clags lately in overt rebellion, The hugging and kissing at the Philadelphia Convention were the out- ward manifestation of this inward charity and meas- ureleas faith, 'We are to believe, as wo should be only 0o happy to believe if we could, that Sccession is not only sick but sorry, not only besten but convinced, not only cowed but conscious of its extraordinary error—that its wonted fires are not living iy its ashos —that it is not watching for new opportunities, and that the hearts which prompted it are regenerated aud altogether changed. But caution, though a homely, is an extremely valuable yirtue; and bofore any citi- 2on of Now-York votes for a ropresentative who will apo the forgivenoss and the forgetfulness of the White House, sud reduce regepstrustion to the lovel of boarding-schiool reconeiliation, he will do well to in- vestigate the actual state of Bonthern feeling, so far a8 it is ropresontod by the brulsed but by go means humbled sorpents of the oligarchy, The Codar Blufl Female College is sitnated in War- ren County, Ky. The proprietors of the establishment announce that they **will recelve and oducate, board and clothe any young girl from Middle Tonuestoe, Alsbama or Mississipp, whose fathor was killed in battle, and whoso ‘medns woro destroyed by tho late war.” This may be charity, and it may bo an advor- tisement, But it 15 to bo remarked that the gallant father must bave been killed upon the Coufedorate side; and it is this proviso whioh awakens the irre. prossible admiration of The Mobils Giazette, which,with o ey ugon Ao Rty S48 W 0 upon We (Ul exclaimss * With such women to breed heroes, verily the South ought not to have been conquered.” Wo do not understand this precizely; for we trust that the pupils of the Cedar Bluff Fomale Collego are not col- lected dogether for tho purposo of Dbreed- ing heroes, at Jleast during the collegs curri- culam, Dut the ides of the Mobilo news. puper evidently is that, ofter due indoctrination in the College of Blufl Females, theso young ladies are to become the mothers of & fresh generation of traitors—the soldiers of a new Confederacy, which, being supported by militia-men whose mothers were oducated in the Codar Bluff Female College, Warren Connty, Ky, will be luckier aud longer lived than the last one, If *the South ought not to have beew conquered,” then, s 8 mattor of conscience simply, the Sonth ought to try the game over again, 80 soon a8 the bogs of the young women educated in the Bluff Femalo College have grown to years of military ability, We may legislate and wo may reconstruct; we may conciliate and We may compro- misey we may fondly think matters to Dbe settled for a century, and so foolishly make ourselves merryy but when the small Hannibals of the Cedar College ladies orrive at man's estate, having been previously sworn various oaths too big for their little mouths, they will one and all rush to arms, and quite cast into historical shadow the exploits of their unfortunate graud- fathers ! g Weo muke great allowance for mere talk, for the sour garrulity of disappointment, for the growls and groaus of baflled passion, We wish to be neitber un- generons nor suspicious; but we caunot help mark- ing treasonable obduracy when it obtrudes so public an exhibition of itsolf, and calls upon the world to pity its undeserved discomfitura. We hold that, as a matter of sclf-defense, to say nothing of self-respeot, this Government has a ®uty to perform, and that duty is to regard treason, whethor in its major or minor developments, whether rampant or couchant, whether plotting or performing, 65 the one crime sgainst tho Republic with which there can be no parley. Criminals may be forgiven; their crime never! Against the Mloody aud blasting repetition of this erime of rebellion, no precantions can be con- sidered too great; and they should be persevered in, nntil not one man is left who feels them in the least a8 & personal hardship. To tamper witl the spirit of insurrection now is not, as some think or say, to pro- mote a salutary aud universal oblivion—it is to sus- tain traditions which will always be mischievous—it is to keep in the bosom of the Commonwealth a liv- ing thongh half-frozen viper; and, this being the sum- total of ** My Policy,” let the freemon of New-York tell ns, now that they have an opportunity, what they thinkof it | — e ‘ NORTHERN MEN IN THE SOUTH. Of the considerable number of Northern men who, at the close of the war, either remained in the South or went thither for the purpose of cultivating the soil, or engaging in other legitimate business, most of them have prospered; some have large fortuues in growing or in well founded commercial relations; a fow ve barely made expenses, others buve fatled. Sen- sible men in the South have already learnod, that the hope and prosperity of the country are great), ent on immigration from the North, Cupita vot risk their money, where their persons would be Tho prostrate planters, merchants and manu- have expe bt of the folly that repels the intre of men and money from the North, and they are becoming less incliued to iu- quire into the political faith, but look more to the financial and practical force of the new settler, Proscription is unpaying; starvation and nakedness are, therefore, working conviction where the logic of bayonets failed to convince. **My policy” will stir ip strife, but 1t does not feed the hungry beyond the narrow ranks of the B, and B. brigade, The people, even in the Soutl, are growing sick on promiscs, and lean on hopes deferred. Unionism has become radi- ealism, and radical remedies are demanded for radi- cal wrongs. ‘The people must bave bread, and, fail- ing to obtain it throngh Presidential reconstraction, come now, with a direct and reasonable appeal to the great North, besecching it to send down men and money to purchase and cultivate lands, to open miues, establish factories, give labor to the idle and food to the starving, In parts of Georg! ore Texas and Arkansas, meetin of citizens have b old, and resolutions passe viting immigration, and pledging protect Northern men who way settle in those communities, A very fow of the less rabid pro-Rebel journals have taken up the subject, and are urging Northern mwen with eapital to come South, and counsel the Southern people to welcome and afd them in their enterprises. In a recent number of The Richmond Enquirer we find the followings #Tmmigrsnts fomthé North, of the substantial sort, will not nnl{ od an amieable reception here, but & welcome. The South 1s greatly 1 need of capital to redstablish its indust:y aud develop its great resouress. We want the oapital to cote. but we waut the capicalists to come with it OCall the ills that can afliot o country, absenteciom iy the worst, To bave vur State under m«n'iq« to New-York; to bave our tive n pro¢ there, to huve our merciants pertics owi And farwers and manufscturers paying esormous tributes of iuterest, to be spent not Aere but In the North, 0 make of the Boath what England bas made of Ireland, We do not want absenteslsm—wo want the lvcome derived from the capital employed here, to be pent here, aud, therefor: e-&n.umunuu capital to come amon, whether the sonlmux:urulo would not do t lo with their difico s beat they may, relying whoily 0| hoir own resonrcos, and developing as these 1noicase, than to seek loans which will drain away our lifeblood for over, through the ovils of absenteelsm. But Af copitalisis will come among ws and take hold of enluglhfihnm and will spend thelr revenges hore, re impelled by every considerition of necesalty and of prudence and wisdow, 10 give thew & waim bearty wolovwe, o Tho present is the time to make fecassaty Arranges monts to engago in planting next year, The 1st of Jannary should find the planter with plantation in order, laborers employed, teams, implements and pro visions on hand for the work of preparing the soil to rocelye the seed, Many failed utterly, and many more will gather short orops, because of late planting, while most planters, who entered upon the work in seagon, are uow rejoicing in the prospect of most lux. uriant crops. ttor rather to Y BARKIS IS WILLIN'.” Mr. Demas Barnes being nominated by Demoorats, a3 & Domocrnt, to represent -the IId District in Con- gress, was called on by his nominators, and in @ short speech pledgod himsclf “to bo governed by the wishos of the great Demoeratic party, of which he waa proud to be considered o member.” There belug two Demooratic parties in this city at least, we wish wo had been informed which is to be regarded as the CGiroat and which as the Little Joker, But Mr. Barnes koows, we prosume, which side of the split ko is “proud of,” and in matters of taste men are not to be too olosely oross-examined auy more then the pride itself, which in this case, we fancy, is of that kind which “‘apes humility.” Mr. Barnes is neither Dbetter nor worse than tho majority of his ticket, aud if @ man cannot conscientiously vote for Van Brunt, perhaps hie had bettor vote for Mr. Barnes, At the ::::, voting on the Democratic side is & pretty blind uess) and it is to this optiga) fuck Yaat W Wi Thy great tio party " is a umfin phrase, although, sinoe the late elections, it does not convey tho old Indefinite but impressive notion of magnificent multitudinousness, But candidates, with nothing olso to say, when thoy are Lowleg al for o specch, can lay their bands upon the proper side of their waist- coate, aud declare that they are, always Lave been, and always mean to be * Democrats;"” and this is quite enough for most of their confiding ayd enthu- siastlo supporters, Mon, however, who make it a poiot to make up their minds, and who valuo their votos as the expression of theip honest opinions, whoen they are told by a candidate that he will go as tho party goes, are quite justitied in asking whither hay i gy igs of griog: 1le oy Bt NEW YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 18300.—~WITH SUPPLEMENT. 3 Ao, ¢ g ; a mere politieal apecnlator to says % Take me and uso me !—guide my pen and control my tongue!— keep me well supplied with opinions, and I will vote as Iam ordered l—grateful for your nomination, I surrender ot diseretion !=I will be your mouth-piece, your server, your willing instrument, your pointer and your retriever '—I am content to live and move, the unquerying ereature of the great Democratic party " Does this seem unmanly, or, as we moy say, morally flabby to the indignant reader? ‘We cannot helpit, It is the ** Democratic” fashion of putting things, aud has been ever since the Robellion broke out. Gen, McClellan set the example of safe imbe- cility,and most of the candidates upon that side of the fiold have followed in the same puerile path, The party is worse off than the Prodigal Son, who sbared husks with the hogs, for all the candidates, and conventions, and committees of this *great” organization fill the bellies of their faithful but hungry admirers with the merest windl The party, if it may be called so, does & desperate business upon a forlorn stock of names, and traditions, and reminiscenees; it does not exactly exkume the bones of its buried worthies and ran them for office, but it grasps at majorities on the score of virtaeswhich were fully developed, and exhansted their purport A, D, 1800 or 1832, It lives from Land to mouth, and hails as a God-send the quasi accession of o bewildered President or of a renegade Senator. It calls this consistency; and es it raises its old slogans or mutters ite thread-bare formulas, it pute on such sn air of vitality that many vietims, who are reasonably intelligent, are deceived thereby. The truth is, the old Democratle party, a3 sueh, oxists no longer; and if proof is wanted of that fact, look at the 14,000 Union majority in Tudiana! The departed has left a considerable nnmber of execntors and administrators, who are forever bringing out the corpse, and calking upon us to mark how quick, and fresh, and fragrant it continues to be. All the “ Dewmooratic” candidates for Congress iu this State are running upon tho strength of this violation of the sepulcher, and trusting in the galvanism of specious generalitics. Unfortunately, if they shonld be eleoted, we shall find them suddenly in love with particulars by no means.s0 harmless aud unsubstantial, The bearts of most of them have been all along with the Rebels. Send them to Washington, and we shall see whother Loyalty, pure and simple, or Treason, bloody and intrigaing, will their hands, B TREATMENT OF POLITICAL PRISONERS, Some of the English journals have thought fit to reproduce, with sympathetic comment, the state- ments and remarks of a section of the American press relative to the alleged cruel treatment of Jeffer- son Daris at Fortress Monroe, In this watter, ss in imilar kind, it would be well for the those journals to look at home before conduet, of the Americans. we Hennessey before the others of a conductors presuming to eriticize th In a paper read by Mr. Pop Social Science Congress lately held in Manchester, that gentleman, referring to the treatment of the Trish polictical prisoners convicted of complicity with Fenianism, stated that Leigh Hunt, Ernest Jones and others were treated with much 1 severity than is now shown to the nnfortanate Irish, This statement has brought out Mr. Hunt in correction of Mr. Hon- nessey. As an illustration of the *leniency ™ with which e was treated, Mr. Hunt tells the following tale: * 1 was kept for inore on the £ system, most an fuvol bread and w1 nt for tire: t 19 months 1 wes 1 that time in n cell 12 without even a table three windows, two %, throngh which constituency, who nowminated)Gen. Bhanks in bis Stillwell thersupon went over to the Domootacy, and carcied @ith him the leading newspaper of tho districs. The rotarns show that Gen. Shanks has beon oleoted by o majority of 2,577, » Republican gain of 637 over . Stillwell's majority in 1864, Fhis is but another itens of the accumulating evidenco proving that the peos+ ple who govern this-gountry are guided by prinofples - and not by men. ABOUT GOLD-MINING, itor of The N. Y. Trivuna, Your paragraph in yesterday's TRIONE about* Mining" in Nevada and Colorado, &, needs a litgle more “explanation.'s A friend of mine—a consulting-engineer In Nevada—, me as follows, giving the canses of the luflllh(d‘-*‘ and silver-mining in that place: ST tell bave to work hard for a li where :My::.flnm'm -' a«‘u:‘. From -n'm'fi.‘.':'z"‘ duee but very, very small fraction goes into the bands ual, ' otill amaller fraction the hands of the stocl Bat in most oasss + Yorkers are ot fault themselves. They out some manage, inspect and what is £h6 cone- on mi neuce! Tl are_oh - purpossly , and 3mf1y -onnnlgem ‘We who live hete m upm feel bad whenever we see an ageat from Now-York, beoause' is evident that he and his wmy will fars bad in the ‘ But what is the use of pre; &1 They will coatinus te engage, for exorbitant salaries, some dilapidated sea-captain bummin kmldilm' o ran» u':am'A'm common senss s nowledge uired. on. undertaki ike this must have studiod rr-hmq”:’nd m-n;;‘ % possible, wust have had practical expericace.” ’ Very respectfull T Fort, Oct. 2, 1865, o4y [All this i very probable, and very well, bu i neither serves as an ‘‘explanation” of our artiol, nor proves that auy is needed. —Ed. ] &3¢ Lu The Republicans of the XVIlth Assembly Diatriot, in this city, have done well in renominating the Fon, Wil lism Berryman. As a member of the last House, Mr. Berryman bore the character of a stralghtforward and ese. nest representative. By strong and united offort he oan be re-elected. The District is closs, with a small Demo- cratic majority, which will bo overcome if the truo mep of the Distriet w:-rk earnestly for victory, . — WASHINGTON, ———— . BY TRLEGKAFN 10 THE TRIBUN®. ‘W asumNeToN, Thursday, Oot. 25, 1968 The Democratic Committee of New-Hampshire, of which Edmund Burke is the head, has succeeded i’ obtaining changes in eight Post-offices during the present week, the principal offices being Cl and Newport. Manchester still remains unds This Committes doos not possess the Prosid confidence, his Excellency rather following the viee of three ex-Congressmen, two of Whig and ong of Democratic antecedents. Just after President Johnson became P and it was thonght that Gen. Butler would usiined to command at Richmond, Va., 8 mi of the Virginia Legislaturo offered & resolution in structing the Governor of the Btats to isuo of proclamation to the people to bury their silver, The said member has just tarned out a defanlfer the sum of $50,000. There are & number of Philadelphia Demooratie peliticians hers who were candidates for the Le, tare and other offices at Lhe recent elootion, but w defeated at the polls. They arenow bereto get frome the President what thoy failed to recsive froni the peo- ple. The Rebel Gen, Dick Taylor was 8 visitor the White House to-day, Phe Hon. J. 8. Black Pennsylvania also had an sudience with the P this morning, Gen. Schofield left this morning his command at Richmond, Va. Lient,-Gen, Shoi is expected iu town to night, While hero he will the guest of Gen. Grant, The President to-day had interviews with Sacretary of the Treasury, Secretary of the Navy Attormey-General, upon business of an official Audience was also given to Representative Law) of Pennsylvania, and delegate Goodwin of Arizons Territory. The President has ordered the pardon MJM or enchs other | over my bed rain fell 0a Jept, satnratin i t vie water dripy it'as I pat it on sack of straw and o piece of carpeting. £0. when I rose at five in the morning, irt and trousers onlr, to wash and otting wet through io the rain nm{nll duy in wmy wet clothes ia he first twelva months T was allowed frosts of the Winter of 49 1 had to h, in which 1 was compelied to er that other United States Distriet Court for the Northern D of New-York, of passing counterfeit United fractional enrrency and sentenced to the Penitantiaey for four years and six months. James Lauman, in a dispatch dated Onited States flagship Tacony, Mampton Roads, Va., 25th, reports that the boats of the Tacony and Yantic res- cued from dmwninfilfunr men, constituting the of the sloop Farewell of Hampton, Va., which capsized near the Tacony, sud towed the sloop to beach. The United States Medieal Musenm, now in C Winn, convicted in November, 1864, Worfi across my cell W Neither knffe nor fork ar my food with rheumatism, aud racked by ta have o fire. but this was denied me rying to do this, T fainted, iad narrow escape from belig 1 b recollected that, in the year 1848, fully iu London that ou one day as buring the hight of tho pla may T was sent 10 n dark while sulleris on hread and was brovght us After this we shall know how to appreciate the sym- pathy of Tory editors for political prisoners in the United States, Tbe confinement of Davis for so long a time in Portress Monroe without triel is one thing; the barbarity with which it has been alleged Le is treated i« quite anotber, The people of the United States are pretty well satisied by this time that the stories of cruelty inflictod st the hands of his keepers Dbave little or no foundation in fact, We have not yet reached the r. ment of aristocratic governments—e may we 1 add, of ¢ !xvp Ql.u.vhul.l,»n t=in these matters, We are informed Ly The Chrowicle and Sealinel (Augusts, Ga.), that the Radicals of the North *“ have Leen stoadily creating in the heart of the grossly in- jured and vilely insulted South, & spirit of Late, resentment, exasperation, and almost infurintion, Aud these things are gotting worse and worse every day. Northorn fanaticism and rage are continually making sdvances In their oppressive requirements, and the injured South is becoming all the while more and more hotly impatient of the condition which is lier preseut doom, Let matters go on for two or three years more as they are now going, And the res- toration of our partially lost nationality will be among the earthly impossibilitica, Every Southern father will swear his son at the altar of God, as Hannibal's father swore him, never to be st peace with his peo- ple's foes and opprescors, It i¢ @ sad thing that the Radicals know so little—almost nothing—of the na- ture of the Southern people, about whom they write aund talk so flippa Oue would think that even the dullest Radical must have learned from the late dreadful war that the men of the South ave not a foe T e Vo S S i~ 5~ Sl S S b i Sl . ran building, is being removed to Ford's Th 7] whore the specimens are to be arr: —n A CARD, E —— Waskieroy, Oot, 25,—~The Washington oae respondent of T New-YOrRK TRIBUNE must have beon mid informed with regand to the position and business relations the Washington reporter for tho Assoolated Press, for it is believed that he deliberately uttered an uatruth whea he qs in today's TrsUNE, that * Soward rofuses give reporters here any ftem uews uniess promise to pelat, it i1 his_ precise 3 at the Associated s reporter® will aoes hese terms. Hence, when any item connected with his sment appears in print aud he does not Like it, no matter if Raporter The Washington rej knowledge whatever of such usages, nor is ke subject to Tt is very necessary, The main features of onr Asedy ciated Press dispatohes from Washington aro, thay have said, We havo always felt that the agont of the Associated Press was more aa agent of the Governe true or otherwise, by orders the Press cotradiot it." rtor of the Assoolated Precs has a ders of any public officer, gl = ) L We are very glad to hava the adoté &plu“ they rarely contain any news, and that they alwaga say what members of the Government would like tar ment than of the newspaper press, aud we are to be othorwise informed. Now Iot the 0o streugthen this faith by his works.—Ed. Trb, e —— ARMY GAZETTE. it W 10 THE TRISCNE. VETEEAN RESERTE CORE HONORADLY MW . B. W, m. Fochom »re OEFIC TERED OUT. Brevet Major D. C. McKean, Oct. 23 ; Tyles, Secoud Lieat. from Oct. 13; Second Lisut. Flth Regiument, from Oct. 1% RESIONED, ¥ , Firit Liont, Andiew S, Grakium, Voteran Roserve Corow, from 0ot s LANEOUS. Major Gen. o & shott leave of shaence. Bravet 5 Sh Rock, Ask., bw 5ih U 8. Anillery, on daty et Littie daya leave of abseuce. —ie NAVY GAZETTE, e ORDERED. i &m. IS.—(‘h.\pI.:in ".n. B finn"‘, o duty at Nava! Agwdemoy) Cusphin Muson Noble, o duty st Navy Yacd, Now-Youk f:'.;" S 1, Hont. Sorosd R, .8, 3% “on ‘oruance, Heary Sayder, aud James M. to Steamer ke '1 Oct, 18—Chaplals. Ch e B Do, from Saky o I N, st waling onders: Chaptata H. B HibSac, trom rdars: to bo stung and gonded to frenzy with impunity,” Nenl Mfl'fl;{- and ondered to duty {s North Pacific Squadron 'The fajaréd Bouth; the vialy Josulted. South, thede | ssiam o £ 1 S s eskeistl CERD) {1 arc expressions which almost make us forget that m“.,;,,mm‘,"m‘:.my_‘. Portemontl, ‘h cruel, causeless Rebellion, which cost the North "',‘.':l',‘f";*l '“'*"m:’fl" p"* RIS thousands of her bravest sons to quell. This Rebel | Cster, «-onm‘ i ponsy. sesesell bravado is more thaw insolence, it is meanness of thy ‘ffi,‘.":‘%. !:my acoount ol“l-l-l lowest kind, i “..‘?’.‘:‘::':‘m‘:.‘.‘."..". s the Yoo, c.-’-‘-cge:_n Tae SeMt-WeekLy Trinwye for October 27 con be ;,fi:'.'.:"-'_v';' M--yfll-=|=:.~¢*t" o bad at our counter this morning. In addition to its usnal variety of instructivo and entertaining reading, OBITUARY, it contaius the lettex of our spe udent, e <C Mv. Goorge W, Smalley, deseriptive of an afterueed’s b yu. pail TI\.:n wmo:::u% e interview b had with Count Bismark, srom Tudla brings the sad fhot that Dr. &“S Edward 2 v TR f"-.mn. Bishop of Calentta, has bean drownsd in the Ganges. et ust tou years 4g0 the sermon {n the The Indians in Colorado ave agein oy the war-parh, [ Wizieal o e oessecration of the prassat m“’ A dispatoh frow Juleshurg, dated Oct. 24, states thet | tho S thoy drove many herd of stock, killcd several of the | ) to Teinlty Ot night-herders, sud wounded a numberof others, Two | ing mg-fll" companies of avalry were at once seut against them | 5eiier ¥ imuner 'ap - Hughy - School, ndde. the ote from Julesburg, who hilled qud wounded a number of | Arnold, and fu 1852 was ep uted to the head thew, and captured all their poneys, wigwams, and ;v!_helnn;‘-b;-?.ufinfin 10 llll. .:l“x'z‘.fi'&‘.“ l‘rn‘a %‘ur{hur troubles nr.»mlpecteld. Tle feeling fn &fi‘&:‘uaflfi:“mw Ly &}l:ew.“ the Territories agninst the Indians is very bitter, and | Dr.J. T, Jlm:ppninlmA A otfld«{)r. i thoy will have to poy dearly (s every outrigs oms ;;fi:‘,";?_"yf{:#{*fi' e ated fa 1638, 'Dr, Cortons witted by them. RBishop, in 188, The o of Calcutes, inchdes tho Prosty P _— e o Bengal, with 1, orl (TS aad ihe bt Bt . 3 can, Tle Ropublicans in the XIth Indians District elects meuta.” Tho uu‘htll'l“.;.a'fl umd Ty g‘-u-:nm ofuI: od, in 1864, Mr, T. N, Stillwell to represent them in :{fii&’.‘%}fiifim :lh!'mo‘l.l(,mlynl. e nomina~ Congross, Me. Stillwoll entisted In tho bread and | tonlo _g;f;;m{;‘;m'l,'{“;;‘m'“(;“m}f‘ i i e bt Wik, yod 4 Shorelern JoRpdighed By WL o doncos i i Bom o (it

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