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Mia Ne EE SS ET a le —— AMUSEMENTS. ncaa aa WOMRELT SISTER W YORK THEATRE, 7 and 486 Brondway.—Grand Duchess. Matines on Satarlay WALLACK'S—Lottery of Lite, with an excellent distri | bation of eh ‘tere, | DON WORTH THA! Trnadeny, June A eoriee of ‘Yrittiant, Hamorons, Laughable, Py tonable Entertainments, EW YORK THEATER, Aug. %Font May New Com pany, new Fcenery, &¢. Matinee on Saturday at an. WOWERY THPATRE —Jora Ward, Buislay Fay Cobnrn, he Norn, Nelee Sey nour, ae 1 Fash. bar, a “y fo mucl: from the violent | De Paden Teme q notorious estminats, as from the evidence | te hurry ane The ee Sun. | whieh it affords of the debaset condition of | body Wi TA whtnca fer AI. hier jridietary and proscenting offlenre, at | ate Sons Toast in the region whore thome torrille appli. | belch Wide caticun of Lynch law have occurred. The Peritous Position of the Democracy. losophy of tha fektngen wives AY Is | Phe rent strike of the bricklayens of this fig inthe enrrent ennvara Is rapidly | yt’ ane onfercement of the eighthout | ( roopening the main issuesinvolved in the War. | jay, witch entmence:d nearly wx weeks ago, | Wig Its platform, not so mach becanse of par. and ehh, W"hloely tek autelp drawing | palate tienlar phrases us for its sreneral scope, and | 46 4 triumphant cle, ia worthy of considera. | ¢i! more eapecially on recount of the construe 1 darkens spounders, tion put upon it by authorized tends to this result. The am of Gov, Suymovn, and the Laritin his violent an! reve: Jatlor letter to Col. Broadhead, authorize the same inference in regand to. the objcets dwitch the perty is drifting. Tf any ton this point could linger in dixpns eominds, it will be dissipated when yous attitude | clearly defined nofGen tows emat nieniplatings the | ronduct of the Demoeratic adgrs at the South since the a | of the Tammany Convention For fifty a8 previous to the rebellion, the Democratic party was raled by its South: ern Having by their mad ew plunged the nation into civil war, in the pro- cress of which the party inthe North, be couse of its former affiliation with there | leaders, was not only thrown into a power. lees minority, but driven to the verge of irre trievalle ruin, they have, since the close of the war, remained quiet until now, But, stimulated by the netion of the Tammany Convention, those architects of ruin— Toonba, Cobb, Wise, Bh , Hamp. ton, IM, Semmes, nd their | allies—have emerged from the obseurity | wherein they wisely buried themselves the downfall of the rebellion, and, having re- sumed their old places at the helm of the | party, would fain steer the Democratic ehip | eraight upon the breakers of ane civil a All these distinguished ex rebela— some in explicit words, some by irresetible impliertions, and some by unmistakable in- nuendoes—declare that the success of the De. | nweratic ticket in the November election | will and shall secure to the South all that it | forfeited by the results of the late war; that | its defeat on the battlefield shall be retrieved by a vietory at the ballot-box ; that the Lost | Canse shall have a glorious resurrection in | the success of Seymour and Brain; and that to attain this end they and their condju tors will, if need be, set at defiance not only the laws of Congress, but those of the re constructed Legislatures ; will upheave those now State Governments; will drive the co lored voters from the polls; will ret at naught the recent amendment to the Federal Constitution, known rticle XLV., and enst thelr ballots for President in spite of ite provisions ; in a word, will fire another Sum ter gun, and again let loose upon the cx try the demon of rebellion, We might fill our pages with extrocts from the ratification speeches and editorial articles, delivered and published during the past month by leading Southern Democra In proof and illustration of our declarations, loaders. ner | n but content ourselves by giving a | few samples in another column of | the prevailing spirit at the South, | Now, does the Democratic party inthe North | imagine that St ean succeed in the pending Presidential contest on issues which are, mu: | tatis mutandis, identical with those fought over and fought out during the late war ? The bare suspicion that it is in complicity, even in the slightest degree, with these fireenters | of the Seccesion era, these sanguinary dis | ciples of the Calhoun school of nullification, will cause it to be swept from existence by | overwhelming majorities in all the old Free | States, Tt was that it might avoir the precipice down which these worse than blind guides ould plunge the party, that we counselled ittotura its} ack upor these war 'r6 ic8, under which it could never hope for and bot its face toward the glowing fut ¢ it was sure of atrium)! r thes: rears wo augyested that it should elect Chiot Ju tice Cuare ns its representative man, and, i berlling the inspiring a Yeform upon ite baune tory, But, instend of this, by sul tothe arrogant lead of those whom should have compelled to take the place of | obedient followers, it seeme to be doing its Dest to ingure the defent of ¢ ShyMoun and the election of Gen, Gist - ee The Logic of Lynch Law. Three more men have been lynched in In Qiana, They were accused of having been con ed in the robbery of the Adams Express, 1 other crimes, ‘Thoy were on thi took them from the | r way cilson, when a m Ferrersion of the officers who had them in and lung them to the linbe of In new countries, where jails have not been erceted, the impossibility of contin i nals is urged as an ap: for summarily executing them, when they are known to be mien of desperate character, and the commis tion of capital crimes isclearly proved against them. Butnosuch excuse exists in Indiana, an old gnd populous State, which must be well supplied with jails where prisoners could be tufuly kept. Why then do we witness th's return to the practices of ruder and more barbarous times? For two reasons, ‘I'he first is, that it is im possible to live where there is no protection to property or the means of existence. The punishment of crime is, therefore, an also lute necessity, Some way or other, people must be prevented from taking, by robbery and theft, the bardearned fruits of honest industry. Labor asserts peremptorily ite do- mand for the protection of its accumulations, The regularly established courts are sometimes deaf to this demand, The judges have political relations, it may be, with the thieves ; or, what is hardly more corrupting, they may, in some cases, share in the ill-got- ten proceedsof crimes. Or, as sometimes hap- pens, the friends of the robbers are put upou the tory and tha canviction of the most noto- | | | | | | \ | the law | from making exor ! Navy Yard | pricktay rious criminala is rendered impossible, ‘Thala, without the sor prosecuting: officers But, in either event, the depredator® are per mitted easily to break throngh the meshes of Lis state of things is lowed to exist until it becomes mnendurable any longer, when Lynch law is resorted to, the only preetieal le method of putt nals out of the way. A Dlot reste on the State of Indiana ; however, cannot often happen connivance of jw as imi not tion in other aspects than merely those of a contest over the rate of wages oud the length of a working day, It is one of these events whieh are not so mach of themselves as they are when viewed as indi cations of the marks of the lifting: up of the laboring claws. esto a higher level of dignity and power in progress of society, ond am the community In the first ple thie strike line by » of welt Ar ntrol and. aly on the part of those inence from viol ongrayed in it, which proves the exister them of a degree of pel pect and reg for law and order, which ought to rjolee t hearts of all Jovers of our republiean f tuto, It ta ‘ mumon fora eertain elnes | euperticial reasoners to assert that the mass of our people are walit: for self government, and manual laborers almost invariably pointed at os iustrations of the fact, But iT we have had, for six weeks, three thou. sand men, generally regarded ea the least ed. whieh could not, by its nature, fail to excite thelr footings to the highest piteh, and resist ing the cetion of a wealthy and powerful combination opposed to them, without inear- ring even the whisper of a charge of disturb. ing the pea Such a demonstration is, init | relf, a victory for the bricklayers, worth all that their trike has coat them. No man can hereafter accuse them of being: lawless or divorderly citizens, and the mouths of those who would withhold the ballot in other lands from their fellow workingnen are forever | stopped, ‘Thon, again, the strike has brought to light oeontinent of unity and fellowship among men of different trades throughout the conn: try, and aeapacity for united action which must disappoint those who heve been count. ing upon the presumed weakness of the Urieklayers alone. A® the record which we have kept of the movement in the are of Mteclf, and wages ean ne than the wants of business can aff make then. Gon. Br at's revel’ Domoeratic ticket as The Dem it, older v 4 | | | We are disappointed that du VS) nominated by the importance in | thera | iner growth tollige | sinew Day Vance only 8 Un columna of ‘Ti Sun attests, those em. ployed in other branches of industry have | made common cause with their bre: | thron eng well aa sympathy has been offi hout stint, Of course, the same result | will follow when the men of any other trade find it necessary to strike ; and thus we have, | for the firt time almost in the history of | | labor, the sublime spectacle of a union for | J self protection and selfimprovement among the members of the grreat army of tollers to whom the world is indebted for all its wealth own work, Another important feature of the strike, too, is the stimulus it has given to the plan of cofiperation among workmen, whereby | y deal with the moneyed classes face to , Without the intervention of middle. men, and divide among thumselves the pro fits h» etofore supposed to be the ination able perquisite of the bosses. ‘Time and ex- perience alone will show how far at present thissystem of doing things will be success. ful, and we are neither sanguine ourselves with regard to it, nor do we advise others to » 80, There are many difficulties to be overcome, and it may be that, under the guidance of an honest and liberal master mason, a bricklayer will earn quite ag muc money ax by ony plan of codperation yet devised, But inasmuch as the master masons, for the present, have retired: from uw the men, by stepping forward | wd showing the public that they ean, if | be, make contracts and put up build. ings on their own account, have gained an advantage of which nothing can ever de. prive them, They have a cheek upon their bosses which will forever prevent the latter jitant gains, and can now act with a consciownes# of perfect indepen dence. The eight-hour law itself, which this strike secks to make more than a dead letter, is a great step in advance of former times, As our report, elsewhere printed in today’s Sun, of the workings of this law at the Bro lyn ory plainly shows, it gives the laborer a freedom and opportunity of reeren tion and selfimprovement which he never ad before, and thus helps on that elevation of the workingmen to which we ave already referred, The fact that human beings with immortal souls have something else to do and to enjoy on this beautiful carth, than morely to drudge like slaves from yeur's end to year's end, is beginning to dawn upon the comp? we are getting the first fruits of its enlighten. ment. The approhension is expressed by sont that all those efforts of the laboring men of the country to make their power felt will end in such a rise in the cost of labor as to paralyze Industry and ruin the prosperity of the country, Let them dismiss all such idle fears, ‘Che law of supply and demand will prevent any abuse of this kind, if it should be attempted, Whenever the position of a r, ora carpenter, or a machinist be- comes 80 luxurious that it is more attractive than that of a dry goods seller or a stockjob- ber, or the thousand other comparatively useless professions, men will leave one forthe other without any urging,and the country will be immensely the gainer by it, For our part, we should be glad to sve the wages of mechanics $10 a day instead of $450 or $5, if thereby the drones who try to pick up a living by robbing the real workers could be induced to pull off their coats and set about making themselves really useful. S80 far ax this is concerned, the mw wit take | ju chension of the world, and | arkal presenting the pri ged in bricklaying, and money as | ey wart gar ise red them | Union Po part w aminat | thorough | portan | \ never in this aubser But th be like th pende party Den the of the Just Ww thele truth, in the mt and revol the work this way much longer, it is doubtful wh Democracy will even be able to carry Kent! ccation of there | Delaware, and Maryland, t the pond ¢ Pa Ml that hor by the Reputlte firl two ri } to tho politicians wh | fanatics who are yi | neated among ma, engaged in a straggle | ihe people like it, axis proved by the constantly | ie hot its th of thew Mr. VALLANDIGHAM hos just delivered at n, Ohte canvass, upon the Democratic side, ate, shrewd, telling. shut up its Southern orators, such asx Forrest, , Hampton, Toombs, and the rest, and let eh om Pomeroy, Randall, Blair, an the North, it would stand some chance of s but as the canvass now seems to be manag only the advocates of the most extreme seni ments are heard, If it goes on inthis way, the party will be swept out of sight, as it was during the active operations of the war, and Guayt will boat it jnet ashe beat the Confederacy at Vieks- burg, Chattanooga, aad Appomattox, The recent editorial excursion over the ifie Railroad wa cious manner, and was conducted with re- ple sus ific as § 0 mile ings ion | from observat and comfort, but who hitherto have reaped | where the new track | only a meagre share of the fruits of their | greater art Was able to investigate with th ness both the kind of materials ¢ anner « the Rocky Mountains to Omaha, the train ran | most of the distance at the rate of ab miles an hour, which of itself is a conclusive f of the excellence of the road, opinion was that a more solid, wsefwl, and wtory railroad than the Union Pacific has ne v Journal reports that © the made that sheet extremely distasteful to Repobti cans, and The when their eubscriptiona run out city a who deliver it to regular bu; week, and nobody in this neighborhood has ever bed a espondent would seem to have telligence he c free land, and if anybody y, his reme it without delay, and not wait for the expiration of a subscription which never exis Stand not up order of your going, Dut gout ong We learn that Committee haye determined to test the virtue of photography ag a means of electioncering. have ordered 250,090 photographic 1 Seywova and [iain for the poor white a ger voters of the dates are both should say that this was 4 Republicans will p tato fit, and every darke will soon have a free breastpin, and can vote for © set ideas of their physical and moral beauty, On this | ground, we should say Guan and Courax would ywin; batif the Dei ed such @ mag Haxcock, they would have been as fi the personal loveliness of their champions us are now likely to be behind, ly Our philosophical conte tion, pays a tribute to the influence of the Inde- ut Pre. the late distinguished failure of the Demoeratic adopt Chief Justice Cuase as its candi- date for the Presiden “To 'T Chtef Justi the n or to enw ized his mind and that of the public with tt, and thade it seem feasible, ow Written no letters and had no interviews, and le! matter in the would have got avoded a good deal oF the humiliation under which he now labor four th some degree inte for a malicious slap at the Chief Justice, we must confess that it is not devoid of The is apt to be in direct proportion to his niasterly inactivity is his true line of action ; aud nething even of the extraordinary strength n. Guant, with both the people and the politicians, which he holds hi illustrated the truth of our general proposition in astonishing @ manner as Howatio Seymour, Cuase and Pexpueton made efforts to get the son to allege sale of Tux ¢ nts, so complete the of the Union The train was stopy nin heme we cannot he) ee tary letter killed tha nas hie name was put on | 1 atin, | ss than Blair, and just as jonary, are Lard at it complet If they are allowed to keep oni wratio Fr raters at the > Gov, Seyworn ong! Hoff hisdogs, “hey are hurting ne ir own party and its prineipal eandi- | — | ‘The Bangor Whig is one of the most | t journals in the country. | ava, “iano more a Republi e Portland Angas is" and this Inet | alis one of the and beat | in the world. that Tun Chase bravest Th un’ was not nominated, yor the Den: ata, and into both parties iudiseriminately.” statements are only partially true. Citas wren Jud was rod w Democrats, but wen are hit, and to the political 4 to have the truth ¢ sof every party but their own; but | ly | Hy among that in- e and wd the st nations i of the ablest apecches of the It is moder. If the Democracy could Valle Woodward, | nas igham, Harlow be heard in secellinertlineas planned in a very ss, Some thirty gentlemen, re- pal newspapers of the coun. days the gu af the Company. Of this time the greater | nt on the rail in travelling, at from | an hour, But so perfect were the wvenionces both for meals, that the fatigne of the r Railroad was | 1 at every im- t, and nothing was anywhere hidden | At the extr of the road, id down, the and utmost minute. miniinum, Pacific a day was ery one | and | ning buck from of construction, ut 60 The univer. | onstructed in this country, —_— —_— srrexpondont of the Chicago ese of Taw Son has York e4 of several who tend to drop it As Tux Sew yd the vicinity is sold only to dealers, | ‘sat twelve conte a | ‘paid for it in advance, this cor inventod the i However, this isa spleased with Tie Let him stop takin mmunicates, is simp! ane the Demoeratic National | They als of ni As these two cand od-looking fellows, we y shrewd dodge. ably hasten to inui- in the Southern States uth, very f men or th sther, according to his cracy had nom- ficent ticket as Cuase and ahead on — porary, The Nae in the subjoined comments upon ly due whatever approach ] recently to getting the | We do not say ft suggested ly cle, the idea of hia ‘becoming ndidate; Wut it certainty famil omnia anyb: He The sub P, ud tient miscarriage ribing to the Chief we kept quict, and Te the of TUR SUN, We do not say he ‘¢ nomination, but he would have a medding, ni iat this compliment to Tur Sun isin ded to afford an opportunity Never- success of @ Presidential aspirant c0 ; s owing to the sturdy skid with tongue, Dut no man has ever dabout | | j the IRDAY, AUGUST jews, and gave promises and pledges, and they both failed. Sevwour, on the other hand, not merely held his tongne, but never opened his month except to refuse the nomination, and to protest in dulect tones to all Democrats, 1 cane not be vont candidate!” ‘That was carrying the policy of silence and saying nothing to a height too lofty for ordinary politfflans to dream of, j splendid tactics could not fail to win, and Pendleton, Hendricks, Hancock, and all the reat will do well to store up thd fessou for their future guidanee, a It is officially admitted that the British rwar are worthless for fighting twit xponded in their construction. ot be fired when there is anything of for the reason that the water washes in at muzzles, and to discharge them 1d only Le to shoot into the ocean, ‘The Bellerophon, th Lord Clyd the Werrior, all of them in short, have be ins close for ol? hostile purposes—in fret, good iron, John Bull had bet- country and learn how to build iron ships that will both run and fight, We Mr. sworn, the Repu Governor of New York, 1 n this subject. ter com nididit teach biu se » useful lesson a The Rowad Tobh hes been at the expense sited to have the Republicans take him, Oar | advice to. them always was, Stick to Gaase! | OF sending curresponvents to several of the pri lle “has’ brought the country: throngh the | Clpal watering places: We preseme that tt | war eo: tary, and: Kis election will nia tp | Protas OF. wEleh. We:eew abour ite ive: Beds tte it But the Domoorats | *eciniens will be read with deep interest at Subhit: bo: tow tomidated Cuan, if te root centres of American sovial life, One ho other reason, to alow that they ate on the aide re iforma oe that all is felicity at | of tho United as thoy really wore bis “Turn where you will, whether to the {he more active staien nt the War, arnt againat | fumbling, surf of & more enriched with a suols bold, insane tebals as. Wade Hampton, | hotsnd blushing ny Whose. white Jinks | Fort Pillow Forrest, Howell Cobb, and Robert | Elance in to the rolling beach of whom nothing but death can ere of | tt aheranon, w oe ee ee i hostility to th countey, Ti Bangor | t weeee and fash strike panic to sus ig ie also in error when it affirins that we fi ible hearts; wh the noble refertorios, | ike Gos: trace eskales. Gud re all of sumptuous viands and coxtly trary, we endeavor to do it with great dixerimina- + that imagination can conceive, oF to the | tion, uttacking each when itis wrong, Lebbpet ibe dad taal elidel porting either when 18 ts onthe wide of te coun. | M*tly arace surpass aff that ast be found in the | try. Of course this renders Tue Sun distasteful Workd boside; whet ts any priceless he glories of Newmarket and old smi; Whether in the dashing spray, the radiant it, or the solemn starlight of the night, all is par excelenee.” Oue of the chief 4a Manin S Ruse tow aiaigle fun elles of Newport at prosent is suiemER, to waom APPOLLYON , the eminent dry goods jobber, ix Mics Mealie is tive feet and three.quarters high, @ brunette ing bkick eyes, long lashes, a profusion of raven tres vely bust ditto, generally wears corn colors, violets, and mauves, and to the Rev, Dr. Sadman's, on Madisoy aven Her fi dasplendid thing in cor. nering Rock Island lost «pring, and abe is now ure oftleee. She tw # superb vocal. dd could easily eclipse Patti or Kellogg did hot ecelal considerations ferbid such a thing. Next to Mise Schriemer, we learn that the bright star of Newport is the b ful Mrs, with large sv inv ey nie ist rating @ great excitement with her claret and blue-satin basket ewrriage to four matehed bay i Mr. Keno is absent wet Lipsalve, of , is paying her grent attention, She quisite blonde, quite five feet seven ine! high, and her taste in dress is greatly admired. At breakfast the other day she wore a set of din monds and op ls for which, rumor says, Ball Black & Co, received no less than 235,000 in gob If sho has a fault, it is w trifling ten tency to the décolleté, but us she bos the most symmetrical shoulders at Newport, this is excusable, Her sv twin boys, the hardsomest pair on t attract much attent on, One is usually dressed as the Dauphin, Louis XIV,, and the other as Hamlet, Prince of Denmurk, They are six years in Europe, and the Rey. M. Fifth avenu of age, have ¢ i brushed by machinery daily, and meas t inches round the calf of the leg!” At Saratoga the di to the is sor ylay of fashion, according: srrespondent of this enterprising journal, thing extraordinary. “The Hon. Billion BE. Slodge drives eight cream-colored mustangs to Fifth avenue omnibus—very stylish; and Mra. Slodge one amall picbald pony, seven hands high, tandem to English stage coach, Value, 250,000; own stable, Mr. Bawkins's fonr-in- hand to cream-colored pony phadton, with pink liv- eries, is much admired, Valus, €18,000, Count PAs de Fois-Gria, pair rebras, very fast and stylish, good rovdsters, drives jaunting-car, til- bury, dog cart, or lug, Van, OF street car, in- differeut!y. Value, §25,000; on livery, Mra, Piryne Amory, four-in-hand, light sorrels, 18 hands, to sky-blue dog cart; drives herself; two tigers in magenta livery with diamond butte ively recherché, Value, 825,000; on livery The belle of Saratoga is Miss Cassiopeia Jane Slodge. “ Tw!land finely formed, with beautifully bust like the Venus hair like the shower of gold that Danaus od, marble checks, aud a brow like ‘Mercury's New ighied on a heaven-klesing bill,” she moves a thing of beauty and a joy forever, Among the gossip of Saratoga we have the fol- exce | Mastin Jallop drank 83 « spring this morning, and dld not appear at br * Hfon, Billios, He’ Slodge usually eat {or ® dozen trie e piece of P quis schino ¢ wnd w scariet neck t etlo wear On dit Uh barber. At Long Branch there is even a more sumptu- ons exhibition of wealth aud culture than at cither of the other favorite resorts, ‘ We stand agape een while thrilling with rapture at sight of the gorgeous throng, which, a very panorama of swift gliding color, exquisite symmetry, and princely expenditure, dashes before our eye But let us leave these commonplace topics, and come to the picture of beauty as she is seen on her native heather: * Would you see the queen of the ball? Look on that lovely girl in white, in the double-seated phaston tow pair of eUblack rtecds, Hier hair Is golden, such os the old Itulians gave their angel Her eyes are dirk und (athomless as tuldnight, her comple jou pure and varying as an iniant's, “Tis Miss Oily Golddust, the daughter and pride of Golddust, the great bauker of Wall etrect aud Westchester, ' She Weurs the atmaliest boots of any ¢ Bras ae you may see avon When # rom her riake tthe plage, Bight and beautifully formed, she welghe but ® hundred and teen pounds, though towering far above average height of woman, But twenty noat Dirthday, her manners are ewy and elf-possessod those of a coduiess. ‘True, sue siniles upon aud cor qucties wich the siupering youth by her side, ‘Phat is her cousin, young Porter H. Stake, whose fath Was Our tnost Buccosful butcher twenly year ay Dut she is engaged to the Hon, Billion &. slodge, Jr. Who is expected evening train, The lovely Olivia hw 4; und ulthough snobbish K an, Who has come here for the pur= pose of #neering at our manners, says (hat itis more hutural, more Wholesome, re becoming for Women'to hold themselves ercot, this ts, of course, one of thore absurd prejudices which, in rotten and eflete old countries, #0 amentably smother true tuste and poetic beauty." The Long Branch correspondent alleges that he has made arrangements with the best in- formed chambermaids, billiard markers, and rs in equally advantageous situations, by which he 18 confident of securing original and securate information, so that his furure lett will certainly make the hair of his readers to stand on end + Like quills upon the fretful poreupine." A Heavy Ravr.—A raft over 500 feet long and 65 wide, containing 700,000 feet of lumber, enue a few days ago from New Branswick, N. J. and passed through the Kast River and Sound bound for Dateh Point, near Hartford, Conn, Ht was towed by the They wrote letters and bad inter. steamer Hills, and was probably the lougest raf. ever passed thin elew snding the vast sums that | Their | 1 annals Houthern Ald to Seymours Sacecnss The iate repentant, bat now singularly ram- Pant, rebel repreventatives at (ieBoath are doing their “Jevel beat,” however unwittingly, to oat Mr. Sey- mour's throat, Here are a few of their sentiments, ae pnbticty expreseed; and If they prove anything, it is that the gnreaton epirit is as venomous and vindle- tive as ever, Well may the Demoeratic candidate | for the Presidency exetaim in the agony of his soul, + Save me soy frtemeh.” The Danville Register deetwres that de World mis. represents Wade Hampton, emvanded that the white peante af the Oo 140 OY CORT ME new eninge on OF Wf by thee State Muy oa Nort Whee ant fis anetatied In peewer tn ap {nL Une bayonets that shall be brougit mgaiaat them." Wade Matmpion said at Baltimore: « Uaing we call our ows and We look fur relh vemiver. LAppianse.| Itinay be a matrer of surprie | that nen wie fought as nen Hever fought before shod ntl fo Tiiey have sab ee they bel i rouble OF Fale Hot would inure } be t LAppinus: | hey faves been pt pe tat the | GSA ‘heart OF 'thb Ameriona ‘penpies would be tier ete woes. aad ewlan ‘tres burn, bat . " vd to at five base th de edorts now with a wter hear wnaiety, and Hampton, sntwequently, at a meeting held tn m honor of his return trom the Demo- onal Convention, salt of the formation of fort of the party : ut Senator trom offerol by. Chat the righ and Vol 1 waited ml Tiitionalrevotationa y, and. voidy Tint L that party wou Td apy ly the rouedy in Lele own ood + triguiphiut, Une," Kull tater, Gen. Hampton said, at another Demo- cratic meeting in Cloirleston, and his words were welcomed with the wildest t ange andl the ent ro, which us it Ro He had proserved I 1 the Ken: Heo ik (Great appiaune.| And howe had @ ni, 10 {tit avone of t d that It might never be drawn State heeded fis servicers agai, 1a be, wk any tim under any wowasat her di Cheers.) ming vietory ot tive South to her rig four foretathe: ‘This is the sume Harmpton who, in his address be- fore the Alumni of Lee's College a few days since, tald, “The eaare for which Stowewall Jackson fell cannot be in vain, bat in some forin will yob trie umph! Gen, Beauregard, on his return from the Demo- erntic of the Seymour Noveuiber he i people keep (De HOvor tuay be oftere L by, ompromisingty wait, ed'us assured.” In bis Auanta spoceh, Robert Toombs proclalned that “the Inte war war produced by the defeated Deme= eratie party tu be. He also ductared thet Seymour to them—true In peace and true In At a great merting in Richmond, Va., Gov. Vance, pr North Carolina claimed that “what the Confederacy fousht for would be won by the ele of Sey wour and Diair,”” ‘This ie the same Vance who, in ddress to the North Carolina so diers daring the war, urged them * to pile hell so fail Yonkoes that thetr feet would stick out of the windows," and who eubsequently dvelared thot “he was gong to fight the Yankees until hell was frozen over, and then be would fight them on the ive, At the same mecting, ex-Gov, Wise, while eupport- Ing the nominations, denounced a4 a falxehood the Oiret Tammany resoiution w alleged secession to: | be dead, and ti 4 that it was more alive than | over. He eapecially supported Biair because be had promised revolution, At the Loulsville Democratic ratification meeting | the portraits of Jet. Davia, Lee, and Stonewall dack- son were Fusponded over the platform, and afters ward carried in a torebtight procession, No- where in this procession, however, appeared the Stars and Stripes. ‘I Principal speaker was Hum- phrey Marshall, who, along with Preston aud Bree inridge, did bis best to carry Kentneky out of the Union, and failing in this, went out himself, taking a number of the youth of the State with him, rom serving in Congress as a member of the Committee on Military Aflairs, he went into the rebel army, and for his treason Was at once glven the rank ot Gene- Ills tnecs+ant retreats 0 told apon his spirits and utution that he not long after resigned, and was ent to the rebel Congress at Rehmond, as a mem. ber from Kentucky. Ln bis speech on Tuesday, at Louisville, ho alluded with sorrow to the downiail of the glorious Confederacy, adding: * Mut here Tam tn the olf! Democratic party, and, with God's heip, ywhere elte,’” At the Mobile ratification meeting Adiniral Semmes sald: 1 hay durlig Che w vu the principles of Democrat krund old Coustituton which ¢ Was alont to ls destroyed old Hag whi it was not ib naehe the Wak Welieviog that batied thoas prinic 1 4 ig Ne, #0, eatted Del now, in spite ohalelans, wins eodénvored ts atic party, oy evectthe in party COWG ielans of ‘Of those r how: gives, sighs of Cone heke to-night fron th Ne with you ia He te bomlua. Tin, ava awear with bi willl our country to die? Judge Jones, at the same gathering, said : +O the fasue of the contest hefore them depended thelr ail. Hetore the war the Soutiera people belleved In Biante rig Cand spilled thetruiood (oF state Highest for theuiy aud perhaps TOF te whoie coun it extinguishing providence tlp of Se, ject OUF GOULET B Tighis olive, God's ie leacler: -bowored los Gibron, at tie St, Louls ratification mecting, sai In this letter, tells me that tr ected lis te el Pre ected ¥ ice 1 ou that if the Untied States, chat be ex titutional governimentsim the South, the sword, to vanish from the halle of th nation; and he tells You that if in 0 OF i inal powers, It becu "Sut of those ly constitutional and ase HL the majority. of the peop'e of the 1 these governments #hall be pu ‘are el thie ininon ity, " eal bacon aun 1 ry mob, ty whousoover ey mia forvatencortug.l”, idea d —Capt, Dunlap Scott recently made a Sey- monr campaign epecch in the Georgia House of ite presentativer, He closed as follow we all thought the North ws wilt Fo the tera of ve has passuc. eof her Fe: ed and down: e Constitntion Conquerors, how Aiready she has ase of Justice it t of her Ik and the Unie Her vast hi nib—Uie flow i syaily 18 wets “of De rev ralions, Pacitte to the Attia oun rot fr thy Uecand from te se of good eh Stututional rl us, There is no retreat for us bot fato 4 Noy of our poiltic ek Rowe oF, like the e8 ‘Al the Georgia Democratic State Convention many violent things were sald; among them the follow- ing, by Mr. J. M. Ramsey, of Colambu have arowsed In onF might once more, under the oe Seymour mud Bia, to rajse tie Comstttu it eRlidten dating tho. rat Koine of herebilaren, tn ues deserted Ker and jotied iNowe sities in fumeny oar eitiee thon My givolea us at naney od |. Hut we cel af it po to Ve wil how. a ‘all hazards, recover our lost Abe les and re Weare in the midst of w qreat revolu Mt the Wallat box Peat y nd will try. the Hoa ee aes (Laud and enthaeiuatic appiatve. i the qnesstery trom whom sou spruthz. ‘thers fs Nhvihwho are bow truly With YOU, wi tlou trom the aust, ordeal con imply Hood for ‘pied CANE we will stxod- pes or [Lond appl ) Bea, B. Ti), at Atianta, after a long and bitter speceh in eupport of Prank Blair's revolutionary doc- trines, declared: “When Lherty shall retntn, when the lew shall he Again rerpoetsd, and rood mon eal! Ne gata GOr Enters, tts just vather All the Journal, and con-titations, and enact) eter, oF the conve anit Minnpation andeatching e hee Hom ie keen, pure thor up totaver! And right ete, my countrymen, 1 apt you sigtay’ ecveral votes Same it and gua" aha uave uf I ery ‘when the pistons day. tiatt com, bd tf Mae to te the, wiscrabis, te the. ges. "tasty teveral mminate.! ot We might collate cords of euch sentiments from the Southern prem, bat we forbear, We have given enough to rhow that the vomination of Seymour aud Blair hus let lowe all the bitterness of the rebel lend- 1d we predict that, unless rome cheek I¢ #00n pat upon thein, they will make as bad a failure with his political eampatgn as they did with the war, ebro rath gutter mi tow Jutamy, jet the ufc [remendous cheer w untoward termination they all #0 decply de- lore, a - —— WORKMEN AT THE NAVY VARD, es Benefits of the Bial jonr bow. It may be interesting to know the practical of. feet of the eight-hour movement thas far at the Navy Yard, where it has been under operation a month. ‘Those opposed to the measure argue that a change from ten hours’ labor would only give working men an additional two hours to apend in barrooms, to the detriment of themselves avd fumilies. ‘The ex: perience here shown by no means corroborates the supposition, A number of men in the different de- partmente of the Navy Yard been questioned, and the following are «peeling ys of thelr statement T— M-—., a ship Joiner, has worked seven years at the yard, He lived in a confined tenement house, amile anda half from his work. Rose at half-past five, hurried on his clothes, did but little washing, breakfusted at a quarter to sia, and soon after, wit out reading @ paper, started of and walked to the scene of hit daily labor, reaching there at a quarter toweven, While walling tin seven f oper, he sometimes bought a Sux, whieh he read for evening perusal, Worked 5 hours until noon, and rested during the dinner hour ti! one,when he again labored five hours, nntit six, and walked home, After washing his face and hands, he took supper at even, Feeling too fatigued to walk ont or visit with bis family, ie would not change his clothes, but read his two papers, talked a little, «plit @ little wood, and went to bed at nine, Sometimes he stro!ted into a neighboring barroom for conversation, feeling that to be the only place he could frequent In his working drews, Under the etght-hour rule, he has lately taken cottage with a ¢mall garden, on the outskirts of Brooklyn, at a lower rent than he paid in the tene- ment house, He rises, as before, at halfpast nvo, takes a more thorough wasti,and breakfusts at haif- past #ix, three-quarters of an hour later than before, Previous to breakfast he works in his garden, or does any repairing in the house that his wife re- quires, and which had formerly to be pald for. Leaves homo about seven, and reaches the yard, an foot, be- fore eight. Tis work closing at five in the afternoon, he arrives at home before #ix, works in the gurden or at repairs, washes, and takes supper at seven. Feels no fatigne; finishes his two papers, and aces a maga- zine and an agricultaral Journal to his reading, At times he dresses and makes @ visit with his wife, Goes to bed between half-past nine and ten, oftener at the latter hour, He finds that be accomplishes as mueh work in clght hours as he formerly did in ten, {nasmuct as he works more rapidly and with a great- er will, He feels pleasantly towards the Govern- ment, and Iw disposed to give it the worth of ite money. This he finds the invariable sentiment among Lis compan! ‘Tho steamer Wampanoag, now laid upin the yard, was lately housed over ander the eight- hour law in precisely the same namber of days, and with the «ame number of men, as the Madawaska under the ten-honr rule, Another ship jol lived three miles from the yard in a cottage with w garden, He rose regularly at five, breakfasted at half-past, and started for his work at #1x, reaching the yard on foot by seven, He read no paper in the morning. Leaving again at six, he arrived at home very tired by seven, Washed and supped at balf-past, and, after reading @ while, wout (0 bed at nine, Did little to hit garden, and nothing to house repairs; paid for its being He now breakfasts at half Fast six, and basa little more time for both remain- lng Iu bed and working in his garden, In the neighborhood, and glances at it after breakfast. Leaves for the yard soou after seven, and reaches there before eight, Enjoys bis noon hour without fatigue, and reads hia paper, Arrives at home a quarter to six, Washes, works in the garden, his wife in different matters, or reads uatil to seven, when he sits down to supper, always fond of readin Hes, and anbseribes to ® circulating library, For- merly his fatigue rendered him unwilling to change his clothes and go ot with his wife or grown danglter, Now he often docs so, particularly with the latter, and takes her to lectures or plaeca of amusement, He feels that he has taken the lease of anew life, and hears the same remark from those around him, Similar experiences were given by married men tn the other departments of the yard. Among thesingle men there were many of studious habits, who found the extra hour, in both morning and evening, a great aid to thefr mentaleniture, Some lived a considera: Die distance from their work, and, If disposed nd lectures, meetings, oF p of amusement in w York, had not tine, after reaching home and taking supper, to dress and arrive at the proper y can do so, and a number attend de- whore formerly they were content ogealittio in the street before bedtime, or look {n at a barroom for an acqaaintance or for con- versation, Those single men who have hitherto been fond of barroom lounging and taking drinks, still porsae that course in a measure; but even among tliis class it is observed that they oftener visit places ofamuvement, whe {¥ an {n‘ellectual step in advance, and more often vislt lady acquaintances. The uniform testimony of every man addressed was, that there had been less drinking in his range of ob- rervation, under the eight-hour law, than before. Among the less educated laborers, good results were similarly shown, ‘The last hour of thelr shoveling, under the ten-hour rule, was felt to be hard work, ‘They now co home uufiticued, and have more time Having been for asmoke, and for aiding their wives in household < matters. paper rea are lighter, and they give more time to talking at home and playing with their children, In this do- partinent, asin all the others, excessive labor ren- dered men disgusted with work, and they would fre- quently lose a day or two in the weck. At present, it is rarely that a man does not work the entire six ays, If s short month shows this change for the better under the eight-hour rule, excellent effects may evi- dently be witnessed as by. eons a The Discovery of tho Hndson-Historical by Jesse Talbot Mr, Jesse Talbot, one of our veteran artists, who has followed his profession {n this city for over thirty years, has just completed a very interesting picture, representing the discovery.of the Hudson River by Hendrik Hudson in the year 1609, The canvas is about six feet long by four high, The point of view {s at Fort Lee, and the observer is supposed to be looking northward toward Spuyten Duyvel, In the foreground ts a group of Indians watching the prozress of the Datch galliot as it sails up the river, some of them being in the act of em- barking in their canoes to attack her, ‘To the left the Pallsades rear their heads majestically, and, Deing seen in profile, present a much more pictur: caque appearance than usnal, ‘The painting Is fnoly composed and drawn, the coloring good, the sky and atmospheric effect generally excellent, and, as whole, the panting execedingly well done, Mr. Tal- bot's atudlo is at the old Dodworth Building, 800 Broadway, a Nonweaians Comyxo.—We learn from Mr, Caen, the editor of the Norwegian paper, tho Fre: mad, in this esty, that arrangements have already been’ made lor briuging to Wixconsin 4,000 Norwe- flan immigrants, ‘he Tandy in «ligerent sections of he State have been selected for them, and un agent has now gone forward to vather the families, and make the urrangen.cnts for sends ‘The parties come from seo north have sornewhat increased thelr news- f of re, Indy, Andustrious people, the gate to | a quarter of an hone, adding a Willamyburgh Times | r stated that for years he had | Buys a paper | quarter | he adds to his stock of week- | ing, though not largely, but their spirits | John Brougham is reported to have cleared $17,000 by Nis“ Lottery of Life, at Wallack's. =There are 9,000 Jews and six synagogues in Chicago. —Wagner hos gone to Switzerland to compose his new opera, the Vibelungen, | Gen, Stovertah hes been obliged to come worth from chmod for the benefit of bis health. —The recent rains in Virginia are estimated to Tove been Worth many millions of dollars to the State. They undoubtedly saved the corn crop. —Mr. Henry Bergh hae written a letter to the Herd of He Ith \osavor of living on vegetabie diet exctustvely. | =The orange ¢rop in Florida is unusually | promising, aud bas becn generally engaged at $30 @ | thonsand. Other tropeal fruits are growing Mnely. Hon. Jool Parker, of the Cambridge, Maas, Law Sehool, I ted Professor of Law at | Dartmouth Cottege, Hanover, N. Ht. Large deposits of phosphate rock, containing from & to 7 per con’, of fertilizing material, have vd on te Kdiato river, South Carolina, iginal “ Jack Downing, and hoetand of Mrs, Kilznbeth Oakes @mith, te at the point of death, sa remedy for mosquito bites, keep a vial hanit, and apply fresiy to the bites, the irritation and swelling at once. jon Is generally euMlcient, he emigration to Minnesota is unprocedent- Iv large this year, and is composed in great n sure of well-to-do and intelll it Swedes and Nor wert The Canndians, after having vainly attempt cd to bnlly the Nova Scotians into liking the Do: minion, have concluded to send a committee to Hall- fax to try the eflvets of pereunrion, =A ton-acre field of wheat noor Platte City, | Ofo.), belonging to Mr, Withite, recently harvested, yielded five hundred and etetty-three bushels and twenty-two poundd of whear. —The Northwestern om manufacturers ‘Will hold an exhibition of wootlen fabrics at Chiengo on the 4th, Sth, and 6th of August, A capacions building, affording 40,000 square feet of «pace, has been sceured for the exhibition, —The driver of a stage coach near Coopers. wn, in this State, was asked If bie was an emig age, Well,” he rejuined, “1 don't know the Fyni, bat it Is a darned good Grant stage, 1 know. —The Swiss have at last begun to make practi- cal use ofthe giaciers, Near Martigny small eabes of crystal clearness are cut from the jee, packed In Doxes, and sent olf by fast trains to the large cites of France, where they @ rive with trifling waste, —An cccentric Parisian advertised that he was gouty, of a violent temper, and terrioly quarrelsome, but that he would settle $20,000 a year on a young and handsome wife, He received fortysix applic tions, and is now married, —A young gentleman ona visit to Pittsburgh Invited a Indy to take a drive, A fow miles from the city they were encountered by a lover of the Indy, who, in a transport of jealousy, and with the ald of @ seven-shooter, snatched the fair one from her com: Panton and bore her in triumph to Pittsburgh. —German mourning candles are made by heat- {ne paraffine with the shells of the anaeardiam nut, which contains a black resin soluble In paraffine, While the paraffine is liquid it is of a dark brown color, but on solidifying it becomes jet black, The eandfcs have a thick wick, and burn without giving off any unp'casant odor or vapor, =A rumor that Geo, Grant had been ambushed | by Indians on his recsat tour gave occasion for the following effort of the Western muse, which appear ed in the Hariavilie (Tonn.) Veustt Ulysses Grant who went out West, 1 skins, Was Thomashawked gnd Sealp--ed By the bloody Tn yi-tns, —A Ripley (Ohto) paper says that an elm tree in the neighborhood, which was set on fire by a porty | of young men for the purpose of eatehing econs, on the 10th day of February last, t# sti! burning. ‘The fire was commeénesa about fifty feet from the ground, and burned down to about twelve feet, Tt isa fingular cireumstance tha’ the many raing occurring in the time interven'ng have not quenelied the fire, It is intimated that Jefferson Davis is going to become a business man in England, Weis not a lawyer, and therefore eonnot dep | fessional exertions for a lvl Richmond Whig, “other employment t* necessary, and the expected opportuntty of a commercial con- neetion with a house in Eycland for American busl- ness probably now takes him abroad," —The Japanese have discovered that a few | seconds previous to an earthquake the magnet tem- pornrily loses lis power, They have Ingentously constructed a cht frame, supporting a horse shoe magnet, bencath which is a ca» of bell metal; to the Armature is attached 4 weight, so that apon the mag- net becoming paralyzed the welzht drops, and, strik- ing the cup, gives the glarm, Every oue in the house then seeks the open air for safety, | Yale Collece has received during the past four years 300,000 zoological spcelm A proportionats number of fossils have also been added to the geologi cal collection during the same period, Most of these collections eannot be arranged for exhibition until the completion of the Peabody Museum, which, tt is Loped will be commences in 1870, But all the coltee- | tions, as fast as received, have been put into good order, and systematically arranged lu suitable store- | rooms, -T Sicilian Railway Company not long since ought in Catania, for the purposes of iis business, @ hous two etories high, formerly belonging to the ‘Tho workmen, in demolishing part of the building, diseovered a cavity of nearly two metres in Jength Ly three-quarters of a metre in bres Within this space lay three human skeletons, still covered with some frazments of cloth too much de- yw whether they had formed part of @ ook or some other garment, the Leadon Morning © of the Guards, a ut the other day with a on bis tail. | pric | —A correspondent of Post relates that an of | ateeple-chase rider, went vorite dog, with a muazte fistene had not gone far before he was ac He by & police who told him that as his dog was unmuzzled, ould take it up and detain it, This the offcer Ja question defied him to do, maintaining that ae lie | dog had a muzzie on his tail, he had complied with Sir Richard Mayne’s order, becanse it was not stated where the muzzle was to be placed on the dog. ‘This s0 fuirly baffled “the Intelligent policeman,” that he at once gave way, and let the Guardsman depart i peace with his faithful companion, —Victor Hugo writes ull bis manuscripts with avery soft lead pencil, which he often forgets to sharpen, so that the letters assume a gigantic alse, and eight or ten lines cover nearly a whole sheet of paper. Perlaps no other eminent contemporary author complies so conseientiously with the sensible adviee whieh Horsce gives to poets and authors, Victor Hugo corrects Ms manoseripts again and again, until the work ofen undergoes a complete fe. Some of his most coiebrated pooms he re- o often that his son, Charles, intends to pabe lish, after his father's death, an edition of the poeme | of Victor Hugo, with the stanzas which his father ree Jected, ‘These stanzas, it is sald, would form a vob: | “ume of great beauty and value, Sometimes Victor Lingo works very rapidly; thus, for inatanee, be. pleted the lat part of Les Misérables in a week, The Toilers of (Ae Sea vas written tn eix montha, Some of his best poems were written on the spur ot the moment, —The St, Louis correspondent of the Cincta, nath Gazeite thus deseribos the Democratic candidate for the Viee Presidency: * Prank P. Blair, Jr., Isnow seven years old, 1s about fivo fect seven tm t, and welgis about 150 pounds, He has @ small and rather an iuteleetual ead, covered by light auburn hair, His comp'exicn ts sandy, and his mustache a magnieent sorrel, He is rather free and easy in bis ma ners, makes acquaintances easy, and | is popular with his c#sociates, His volee is peeuhar, and was dese ibed uyon one occasion as the * Anglo Afiiean,’ It is simply the usual Southern twang. Asto his personal habits, his friends can best deseribe them, Gen, Blair Is a married man, and the father of seven or eight children, His wife was formerly Miss Alexander of Kentucky, and is much beloved by ali who know her, His son Andrew 18 now @ naval cadet at Annapolis, Maryland, and is @ promis. ing youth, ‘The fimily residence is a plain, substan. tial brick dwelling on Washington avenue, near ‘Twelfth street, He is cousin to B, Gratz Brown, on ‘the Radical side, and to the famous rebel horseman, Yoo Shelly on the other side” Se ote: nee