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AMUSEMENTS, . — WALLACK Fire Fly. Lending character by Lotta. WK THEATRE Foul May. New Com | new scencry, &c. Matinee va oP. M, | eas BOWERY THEATRE mime Troupe, Th : in ee i | exter The = ; Tt Shines for AM - MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 199° 1 ji Terms of the san, he +r yone to minh saber 0 | ( tren ‘ 19 Lwonty copies toone w ‘ ) Wrrney, per year Dl is Twer foe too Atrers ” Fifty copie Adres Rwy | i Audition « im Clay pacaazen ai Cid eotew | Thls, of course, would be q Payment invariably in advan ips Forrtn Paar, per toe oe * oonte ‘ ‘Three Nnoe (20 words) oF ieaw couts | must ine Bretiress Koriees, per line, : : d Leaner ADY Wouly fur the ny will pro} ecenpred Where =p TNE SUN t« cory Nore At thele hones Mhronghout the Metro; Nee tH 1 conte p to population now existin, oc any ob te newest te a Nottoe to Subs state whother Darty, Seut Wranty, or Wrenn, and nlvo be pastientar to give their old State, Connty, oud Pot Oiliee, ae well as Lhe new place thetr paper Fe Ao welt to re ent. If A small bat shrewd pe ern Democracy are at last bey out for the negro vote, ‘They Beouting that wofortynate plas Honal platform which declares that the Re- | t construction nets of Congroes are unconstitu. ecem to them the most important advice could offvr to persons of th at fruit of th tional, revolutionary, and void, as well as | wh the Jacobin policy announced in Gen. Blair's | own sex— letter, wherein, he proposes tooverthrow the | and of their varied observation and experi It is needlens to say that the t of 60 novel a collection of ved with interest, aud that | reorgan | the nogroes of th Mr. Seymour may perhay Wo see ereulating throu; ratification mocting at Den “alm exelusi the lack spea who addressed the iar; thusiastic a ansembly plause, was Mr, Sandy Cameron, Camero: Southern man, aud the $ to the black man that could come from these | Yankoe peddlers in secret politics. Tl ern men have nover lied to him or him when he was a slave, nor since he was free, That God had pat him and the South ern man here upon the sane soil, and they | must either stand or fall together, 'T) Mian grave them « seathing rebuke for being | blindly hitched in by a set of travelling ad ventur who had only leagued themselves together as a kind of ladder upon which they could climb into office; and wound up by waying that “he had rather be lathered with | aqua fortis and shaved witha handauea ive on pills hered out with abroad axe, than tobe leftin the hauls af sucha wt of sata wags.” Mr. Cameron has touched a chord that will Gnd a hearty response inthe bosom of the Southern Demoers The fervid diction and picturesque rhetoric of this venerable darky will fire their hearts, ay did the plow. Ing eloquence of Yancey just previous to the Febellion, while his appeals to. sectional pre judices and State Rights remind one of the polmy days of Calhoun, I the p Promptly wrest the helm from such reckloss navigators ns Raphael Semmes, and place it in the Lands of such skilful pilots as Sandy Cameron, they will stand some chance of Weathering the storm, —— | The Supply of Gold and Silver. Since the immense extent and probab! enormous future yield of our gold and silver | port mines have become known, the question of | A#sumes the pla of this vast addition to the world’s | the result ¢ stock of precious metals has become very im. | the most famous cities and the most various portant, Some years ago, M. Chevalier, the | forms of social activity. eminent French politica? economist, express. | that young women ought by all means to rue dea Deux | Study vase in the prico of | Spanish, ¢ hing would result from this oxtra | ofthat development of the intellectual pow: y of bullion, and that the Int. | which results from such culture, but be ter might therefore be less of an, Cus no translation can do justice to the advantage than it has usually been con | grand and beautiful works of the immortal sidered to be. No doubt prices have risen in | authors who have written in those tongruce. , bur the increased supply is a | Mrs, Luca Giterar CALMOUN next takes 88, Not only isthe con. | "Pp the wondrous tale. sumption of gold and silver for manufacturing | Midicules our fashionable weddings, and at es herself a de! val that appertaing to the mys es of the heart and the still deeper mnys. considerable addition to the available | teries of the fominine toilet tireulating medium. The amount of | Mrs. Gon, By } money required throughout the world is ao | optim the effe ed the opinion, in the R Mondes, that an inci consequence Great good neverthe purposes largely increasing: every year, but | thi the commerce of the world is advancing with | timentalist Buch rapid strides as to demand annually a ¢ constantly augmenting that, with the st tus which the Pac’ will impart to trade, the product of all the | Ye j great, and we may thersfore have no fears of | Dr Eivzanerm Buackwery, in an article worthy of her high professional reputation, rts upon health; states that half 1» the deaths of children are owing to violation | the fact that in 1857 India, with a popula. | of physical lawa, and that just now hygiet ie tion of 150 millions, had a circulating me | knowledge js in America the most desirable dium of 400 million dollars, or $2.22 a | of all knowledge, Bead. France, on the other hand, with a Mrs, President Banxanp points out the & money sup: | dangers to be avoided in the formation of ply of 910 millions, or $24 a head, If] character; argues that politeness ia likely to now India should eventually attain to as | result in hypocrisy, and dignity in haughtl 8 glut of precious metals, ‘Lhe sum whieh will he needed in future by | animady. India and China alone may be estimated fy population of $8 m'llions, }y oe high @ degree of commercial activity as | noss; thinks the heart and conselenee should | France, and if the current supplies of be developed, and the love of God and of His bullion since 1857 havo brought hor | laws placed abo } circulating medium up to $3 a head, | of dress, | there will still remain, before the condition of Lire, HOWARD Crossy deems observation ti France 1» attained, a difference of $21 a! necessary and bolda that habits of observa LONG BRANCH, On the Reach—On the Road—On the Croquet Ground Lovers-Twenty-secoud = Megi- Encampment — Distribetion of Woedtord—The THR NEw sovrmeny stare Gor. head, or 8 sum for the entire population | tion are indispensable to proper culture, es ERN MENTS, pecially observation of entireties, Mrs. Chancellor Fenits is brief in her be- ing of womon to unfold their latent powers ; to govern their temper and read the Bible; to be charitable and forgiving ; and, | Fron oar Special Correspondeat, above all, not to miss the road to heaven, Wirits wisely tells her fair readers to learn todo. their appointed work ; to be full of purpose and earnestnes take, care of their health serapulousl; tolive for thot children, tastead of laying down Ife for them. It will be neon from this condensed review of the serics of articles, thot those who may | have expected that any extraordinary | would be cast by their writers upon the great | an the poet human destiny must remain u do not find a single great novelty or stariling discovery in th of the twelve essays. hand, there is in them much prnetical wis. dom ; « uniform tone of moral elevation ; much alvico that It were well to have generally fol- lowed, we think, with not one word that ean mislead the simplost mind or do injury to If we leave the school amount of instruc fall, Mrs, Benedict, “hve opera Noutfo, Narve- | CqAl to four thousand million dollars. ‘There Wen | is little dowht that commerce, accolorated by i developments of human indus ress of the artsin the Kast, will ly algord all onr mineral surplus. of Tadia took from England five dollara, almost entirely Mrs. Set the afinnced of Rovert th, the charming younzest ARE THEY LEGAL, OR THE CON- the inereasi card. Connolt ‘There were several p Aiong Whom were Majors Prizes—Speech ot G foo Personat-Polittent-Presentations ford, and Col. Post, font frow the Quaker City, Tobias, Lewis, Prevost jaties were charms, regntor heart emashers, fowk some ot (hein stu wodaunted liearts of the soldivrs, + bioombig Monde w uid eyes, ronul, phim tay at | try ond pro An Able Ara thelr Favor, iby the Hon, Marr. M1. Canrerten of Wis tepublican meeting in Chieng cotto hundred | Const. see | ions that the means of jorts of @ power may, na Stetson House, Loxa Basxon, Ang. 16, 1848.— On the bench at Lone Branch is @ yeasant place to be, cepectolly nt Ort | ed wiih the | The bathing m ing hay while the long. dreary wiutor, when, Hike Ottelie | tion will be gone, The water ie crowded with t | young and lovely wou iow, enter the 1 vested thomselve a hybrid Moom ewith inearant | Tho paeposs of the Democrats to overthrow @ the rebel Stat A beneath the Jo when the ho Deanty and fishion of the metropolis. 1 ore io all thelr glor: ry finaly cub features, and -well-develop See how she smilies nt, eather a goo the Houth is € and are mak- ‘0 provide for the irrigation absorbed nn tal sum during the same period. 1,186 miles of railway in oper onal miles have since 1 laid out at an estimated cost of $F In China, Aueteatia, and Japan eer being undertaken, neither brunette 1d, having die | one on eaeh side of au exqitisite mouth £1 ditnple, one of ti 1 recans!raetion. do this it is necessury to review tie fuels of the 100,000, « neods not the becoming, while inte that fovelin T © State of Georgia, for tnatines, was one of the original thirteen States’ whic the adoption ef the Co She had at thar ¢ wed to Neve a repitblicun St voy with the t similar i i forcinabing | and before night b Tt would be w | this personal de | Orting it may entered into the Union of the United HL LW), comtine went in hate Calted Staten, prelen aid of orn | in others the reverse | h embracing the lov y. of the world, But, on the other | to be a decided favorite with them, tor turn again and again to have tuken their baths tounge pavilions, oF stretched at full length upon the sand, amusing themselves hy wa who ore sporting in tho surf, | and «moke; the Iedies ehat nod read, but don't smoke; and the children dig h With the nearest wave, or pick up shells from the These, with the ever-recurring changer of by imperious Fa which will roq | ment, and not thet lntter country there | f tings 6 among the the principal mediam. lest. women of ¢. If continued craph a woman who was not a), We Won't say fitly, for no oyes Of & trie aud charitable m ¢ a few progent Who Were not dangerous'y limited cirenlat etitation of on of Lineal, «tor; copie determined tothrow ited States, and levy w. copper bein | tory and pe Thor who | there w und, siiting fa the the costumes lielit, | and ongantasd an verninent with anew act of oMeers, and rade war upon and overthrown i had before existed, and | ry Government | with the jean trade thera liate influx of Europe and America ening of Ame ng the antics of those men rend, chat, then the sheressful revointion unfoderacy of Gowernms } should renal velons metals, bly gradually substit silver as money, while Asia will continue to ratio of currency in Europe shall extend over the Eastern world, the exchango: Je value of both gold and silver will rather Union, every nary State Government ws inbors of tho An in the eand, toy the least judicious, rather disappointed in th tion we have received, we may well be grate: ful for having had tho familiar leseons once more impressed upon us with so much con- seiontiourness and puch winning geal, have Leard somo things that from familiarity commonplace, we have also listened to truths that can never grow old and never lose their significance, he weight of Cie nok in front! while use silver, costume demanded Vin every parti ae a State of the 1. tho present rate of pro: hierar, wdiling 3 ‘The hoit of iadfos | Instead of walking batt Fiat, sanure shonliered, they now aieet » forward ealute we itt thay be an ii the Intest etyl ia casenthal to He exister Will soon nttain the perp ‘of the wearer the evening, eum \tentored, tn th feign powers over the’ pe | wandering about with thete bh In the breeae, and drossed in come ont made up in the height of fushte in the one case ow queored and stiff. ho turnowis are style, There goes flowing and drying an easy négligé atyle ‘The Government thus fe rihers, increase than diminieh. fon. If not a delnston, eaased 0b) Constitation of Jed all It officers to tah e Government come h to eupportthe Woman's Counsel t res nitogether, are Tong aa ever, | Mr. Ronen Bonner, whose mind seems witt ane — Always fertile her v me time sinee the plan of * | of the country tu co State Goveroment, Rinir, the Republican candidate for Governor of New Jersey, ia a millionaire, aud makes a capital sp feontirely pardon in hot weather engaging twelve breast as if he were offering up pray tlon from the perils of Uv distinguished # for preserva. Hbute a peculiar series of ar A New Southern Lender. | ticlos to the columns of the / tion of the Sonth. | article ning to look | not chiefly of the women who read that in re practically | teresting and omnipres succession tho ear- rite in the South and West | going in for negro suffrage in good has been broug! to Raleigh, N.C., t State Convent t the atrrender of ee pase in review, for were all to 1 apparently Wy ek Isat his Hut, me's four-in-tand k in the na. | writers were not r any particular | They wero to give whatever might and the people of the geographt of Georgia were jit without ap ment whatever Supreme Conrt of the are einal! and Gt toh footed woman Lovers stenl away from | 0 bold sweet Down by the b wre that his love oful ae the oc | vested by this Alat tl the busy world ar Alabama, the United States in Ma James Brun, the banker, and Howord Potter hang out on the Bini! Mail, and Cou f wixty, are near re delivered by Mr Beebe! The surrender of Lee and Jolinse Not seta war, vindicated the United States o Will Ho ay Mnlim.ced but not eha the wind, the sky, th 'y Wo swear poetically by, side chapel, witite | of Mts dtning-roo the tthetnation ‘Thore is much po! the Mansion House ts Peter Bir marck Sw; brother, and several Tumuriny Lndiins of 1 Counseiior Row 1oeratio club of Memphis to come and got bership, «0 that tt hotels are. ero , Which Is the are wome ten th | ery “instill they comme oust Hiver ‘Queen brings down Lowiionn Be | Tio cadentet vanker ts movteenee fare full of tranks of sil wines and worta, ‘Tho doors 9 rooms are not wide enough to adtnit Were | formidable [repositories of tho mysteries that euntl. robe ‘and toilotte of 4 lady of fowhion. wrrived last week with ber husband, who was in of twelve trunks, a Walling m 1 State Governments and deprive | ence of life, ballot. If the mea who | annonneem: have initiated this new programme can only | essays was re silence the rash utternnees of such discom- | the articles themselves have been studied | ness alw forted ex-rebels as Hampton, Vance, Toombs, | with and their allies,and induce the Demoeracy | appr to throw overboard these political Jonaha, | plete Her poopie had destroyed the Government, and set up the their cards of n the credontials of their son thelr persons, | Domocrats have got m black orator, who is so | eflvetive with his people that the Radical dark So it goes all through the ving off their op- labor boing done litical sound. Our. vietory sw full cargoes every trip. w The gorridors indeed restored over Int the Federal areful attention, as they sucecssively Now that the series are , we have taken the pains to collect cape shipwreck. | them together, and propose to state with brevity the counsela which oach of these fair | Journals an account of a Seymour and Blair | philosophers urges upon the »polis, Alabama, | hor readers. > which, as the report informs us, was managed ‘The first article is by Mrs, ly by negroes,” and where | CutLp, on the education of her sex. $ as compared with the | great defect, a white were as six to four, Among others | in life. p nit Inader of the Dee asiond nw hefore the war, proper In Georgia, at the War, as no more extensive than In New purty of the United States taiked! of etrongly fo have mobbed him, owe in the Ninth Distriet, York or Iiltn could not enter otitens of G breach of the peace, | never extended to sich subjects in any State, are excluded from tte jurisdic. ie Democrats ave h sition to negro suflrage and going in upon th Of course, when they do this, will soon have to give up entirely Wad Tlampton's and Frank Blair's not A | the blacks of the bullot aftor el do when you ean win without them; but when call them in to fight for you, it must be on a ting of equality and of fair dealing, ing aymptoms appear in th The Hon, A. M, Puert, of Indiana, in | Iti bupossible to re Pp, has taken the most | tive ground in favor of universal suffrage ; and everybody will remember that it is not man months since the Chicago Timea proclaimed the It is saanifost that ag soon as the Southern Democrats adopt the principle of the political equality « friends must do the same, "eter B, will capture wooratic Unionists If the * Bi te nowluated fur Rexiator Party, rid of the Whely to soln ha His certain that punish murder, arson or ‘The Federal ju too humorous surelved by the ald of stimatants, slent everywhe cot4, on Villard tables, on the pluzz: i i 1 onsideration of Lost night men ‘on ind fori a strong in New York ly of Connolly, unless it be iaas passed aw Wood's | the Constitntion the ke steps towards the organization of n State ent for that State: and the question t to have done so? The Democrats si But who were the peop were they, and what were their Fernando Wood, aud Lt strength hts Dat, | wa was proved at the 1st eles friends are the friends of Connolly, bes George Wilkes, of the spilt, is As quict and reileor | at worke at Washingion durty Bs kes his appearance at the over the local nent of the Twenty second Reg «the exeltene people of Georgia, Steteon's, lookiu as Wough he bad is their want of aim Women should be trained to be use. mid en. | ful wand practical, to do anything that men do; understand themsely @ colored Democrat of years and weight, | sically; tobe independent and earnest, and whose sharp hits aud graphic illustrations | to de would have done no diseredit to Tammany The second is from the p Hall or the Cooper Institute. Old Uncle | Mann, the widow of the eminent reformer | 8 the reporters familiarly call him, | and humanitarian. said, as we learn from the columns of that | cation lacks solidity. They are capable and sound Democratic organ, the New York Be. quick, more eo than men; but they are eatis. ; prees, that he was born in the South, was a | fied witha smattering of knowledge instead outhern men wero | of mastering the selences. his friends, He had yet to learaof any good | have the ballot, and they must therefore As betore stat a fell to the west of ocean, Where amp was pitelied pon the Southern theory of secession took Georgia out of the Nmits ty of the Committation of the ry, when Lee and soll of Geory | 1, growi « The same astonisl tthe wik! wave vt what the waves did say, as the conversation was #trietly ¢ reappeared Lo enjoy ea o When they camped ont under les# es beneath & Southern #ky, within view of rebel Watch-Ores and within reach’ of rebel guns. ‘The, | told thelr war stories and fought thelr battice o'er | + were named, and signs hung such fuserpti ne ast “ Busaard’s Roost, ‘the Astor Hous | of rogvet that a larger mum) not respond to the tnvi | week's tun and frolie, merely An. expe ‘ond the autho nominations with Lopeman, the hi who hos been ow th Since he was a boy his xubord! iates with & Waiter, presented It tua neat speceb, hardly know which applauded him the mo: Demoorais oF the Kepublicuns, sueceeded by a glec mentally and phy- | Jolinson surren ‘were ours by th P ly subject tothe wil of the Cnited States as would bo the soll and poopie of any foreign country con: queret by our arms; Wholly incapable of pertorining any sove without our consent, Upon the Northern theor; net of sceession was wholly vold, « Tegal validity Geoigia were rebels and traitors taken in arms, had forfeited every right ty lite, properiy, oF his speeches on the stu | pecwsearily deci (pall their faculties, . of course, the: of Mrs. Honacn | same doctrine oulude Beart of the Constitution, the titute of ‘any whole people She says women's edu- | Government an | tioonal, Tess tr | last long enough. ying weene, and the guesia took great interest In the presentation, the nigger, t © regiment did and partiespaie in the Such are our poli- To the Pai or of Th im: Died, on Sunday moi Comstock, after a short illness, born in 1811 in Providenes board of te L. 1. Sound, steamers, on one of ottalned a command, and always con. css with great skill and s | the establishment of tae Cullins Line of oc Comstock took command of the Bultic sined his Migh Cupt, Comsiork as a pilot—a qualification aequired in his Sontid navigation was equal to any emergency he was ever cai rienn in the bre: ie flag, ond deepising th ¥ it has been driven trot biding hiv tue,’* scrote! Tho Citizen, whieh sooma qui and interesting as before the loss of its late gifted , has the following paragraph : “The World persists In calling Ta: Sew a Rep Hiewn journal, an party’ allegiane | coutroy They will soon to as clever any sovereign the Goveruiment of the Hresnit of these comping urd of rifle practicn, so exsential Ln military last week war bet Held rifles which toy kicked like Vastealincss tn doubtin! test of skill was th lerday the men who seored hi 8 tad esha we without the conse: | make thomeclves Independent of man’s sup- 1, La thts conctne! not form n State govern every department that the people of ¢ t without onr consent, ‘nN aniielpated. Which he soo nt of the United States, In Decewber term, 1th, that every citizen of Georgia war a public my, and that ev wus a traitor besides. solemn proclamation, recited that Goorgin was w form of civil the dhity of the United rate civil gov The thirt essay is by Miss Louisa M, | Atcore, the clever author of “Moods,” and the daughter of the famed Orphie sayer of | Concord, jh Tue SUN has ereditably rize cuses decid Thalutained tts Vit over just, aceur | Au its political statements and diseu Though the Citizen supports the ew In her apprehension, the theme on | onda navigator or Which woman expecially needs admonition Is | the dread which is now cherished by the sex #enerally on the subject maids, Stetson House, W A course Of MillLary sprouts for the unwliitory audh f ov, Woudlord made the nment in tuat State Proceeds npon th uly when we come to foveriiment of ged with this d to calumniate a edt | senso oF the term, lovin and Congress contemporaries, Why cannot so wholesome a rule rdingly | be more generally observed t of becoming old 4 and the President, agrainet that unsuitable kind of anxiety ; ex Lort# them to have some higher aim than bear thelr burthens cheer: Yennnot love and be loved, | to fll their lives with noble womanly work, ‘ Mrs, Horace G Fatulations to-day * point the Sap The question is, therefore, an o ation of the ‘provisions of ‘the Ce Vaited States ; Brick Pomeroy’s Democrat m aturday afternoon, et of the sige of Tue Sux, and sold Tt is made uv almost enti | ginal matter, and is rather less racy with the pie | f jaritios of its editor than had been | The following extract fir ing article is strongly “stamp de ite ap | Tt is a hand. Cad ofa Qudiau tu Tesus pt. Rand, Bureau A more marriage ; "| fully, and itt ing man, though Lom of maning eal provision we WUL enabio all one mil vaslntod with the 1 th, one of Cullen Bake Wh portion of the Scace, | Conge | festing the nor ti ral Government are sepa- rated and vested in three “ELEY ia the next con. quant peer tributor, Her trenchant, analytical faculty | and fearless original views of every subject nuke hers one of the most interesting ar. | is She adresses herself | y« The Dest of educa and gun in bh A hinself ome of nily eaptured and appropriated Government commissary train Just killed two Yankees and ‘a pistol from a necro hoy m Clarkev! teen Med with whiskey, and, sturting y wanted ‘him they coul: Supreme ‘Court can. meddle with the matter of organiang State governments, ciission is, therefore, nurrowed down to the respec meres and the President, and cach his such, and only such, powers as are comterred by the Constitution, ‘The powers of the President are earefh in the second seetion of the second ar tive powers of our ood order and tationt enuueanes ti that ‘ iy commended | that tf and wen of our veteran aris. | the Boston A few years since, we walked the streets of Now | hunt yhiless and. fri nr sheaves, to a nterprises of this rent city ; ness snpport as we nre dev: ay they are worthy and unfortn | sco labor better. re | lessened; would see e ticles of the series, | especinly to mothers, | Hon, she tells them, is that of life rather than | that of books and study, ‘The judicious com Dination of indulgence and firmness is the means of training pt, Rand was informed that Grin od | bad been in to as Deen eriinhe Hl volver, he su oned the sheriil and citizens to fol- Only one citizen besides Lhe shurif came krant reprieves i}, ON extraordinary oceastons, conver #, or elther of thi N the Houses, he may adjourn ansators and otier pub- shall take care that the laws be 1 commission ail the 1 ver meni ho at eld an Imperitlod count at quarter tay, shall ever tp 6 | We Jed, and the hour ar city aMirs, that | b of dist reement betwee them ; he shall aM@th about to murder a froed bay. ile out of Clarksville, and, whem with and ordered hit PUL the spars to hiv bors, bot ‘of the sheriif and e} mado to the ground Littles, Haker’s band, apport ome another at all times anil shall ever agatu thee \ best st men rather rty will | Bae fitty rods of bin they dismoun | to surrender. sand corruptioutst with conrtexy, they will b anyone has liberty to a xtreme in our polit trome for the Ry the country, In no aya ne font Lam the futur de of law. and will be first ¢ We shail be | “al Views, but for the good of the people and 8 to be of benefit to the prine|- | struction thorough, regardless of fashion, | tradition, or conventionality. ‘The mere ex. | terior of life, the glittering surface of po favor with Mrs, Greeloy, | #ubstance, inward truth, fidelity to the high , form the essential spirit of her ai, ANOW ie LO ee | pewer is undoabi whiel he bed They are all exe Gall Jor the exer Our fathers were Jealous of ex remembered the’ strny Wrest power from the * in helr nacure, 1 political lixeretion, nd renienbering Mound OUF Teg under all clrew than to ‘testily terror tothe Wil jes of the Enlist peo nas and place it for practi: ‘They designed oars to be a not one. of aritrar and they contined the powers of the artnvent within ver | clet oi, Eteel hat uote will ruolew Morg N # tian thie Who t it ie row wy pleasent duty du'tha 4 | ‘To all persons who want @ fearless and uncom: ising organ of the Democratic party, whose and which is red-hot, the Demoorat | Sub» he Demoorat were called, and the them wih the st eb other. country where they travel, and ‘These men ar nt of laws, ‘an orthodoxy cann strange, audacious, and may be recom est prineiph | inculeations. ly fearing the lo#s of their lives or property by some of the band cireamsecribed Limits, Hightost exam none of the powers granted (o the Prosident include f organizing State go Jef, the President a Mme. Ocravia Wanton Le V of teacher, and unfolds gthened experience in Dear ova Youre Lavy rrow Disarr even prizes in all, A and that the marksmen w of the prizes in mente. Ax demolish goverti- ut when the war toward cousiruet- ‘The Baltimore turn for Grant and Colfax and by the Swann one of the phenomena | no longer doubuful men who crushed Kepublican- ism in Maryland pow undertake to reconstruct i numbers requisite to do aed Susan Kinj warn at the prosent tine deceased had been adianged to a young um % she was deeply attached, Some happened to observe him tn com young Woman, under such cir. | sof jealousy on tuke their eho Mer doctrine is Aho third highest Ist 1h tre. Stotec % is the order of morit: gold medal, Won by Private Gook, ve War power eniled, the Presiiient had no more power ove © peopleot New York, ite any law oF ¢ Stato, and in meri But this point meod not be ued further, for the Democrats concede that the evidews has no such antherily, cr Congress has such power, Ounus upon whieh the power of Congress this subject may safely be rest 1. Lt is echeur that Wf this ps ut of the United States at all, and Is not by express words conferred upon the President the courts or some other ofilcer, tier for (he constitation provides that t ywer to make all laws which #! Frying Ito exeeut ning powers [that ts ihe powers specially granted to Congress) and all other powers vested hy. ‘overnment of the United any Wit another culstances as to clive rise to feell: She upbraided him for h remonstrances ina si whieh turther provoked her to seems, however, that she still cherished in sccret the ection, aud the disappointment so. welg upon her mitid as to canse a severe nervous resulting, about ten days since, In utter pr this condition which occurred on Saturday last. The elven been so pecutiar, and the «kill of the physicians, it was decine Proper an gutopsy shonld’ be perfor done on Mouday by Drs. Cotter ard.) obvious cause of death in ap entirely healtay ‘The deceased was a person people of Ceo n either State alivetiug the people of and they have the Wonders will neve the Rowers meat languages—Fro rman—not alone for the benefit ‘ —Field oeers’ prive very handvome l oy Corporal Dun The Democrat explains the report that Borer stole spoons in New Orle saying that “by bis order the plate and sp certain private citizens were ‘confiscated and sent North by him, aud never reported to the If this be true, it must be easy to © the citizens who thus suf. What precisely were the articles taken ny silver spoons did Gen, ‘0 what place at the North Lot us have the facts and the We wont the truth, and caunot admit that any one’s vague belief or any on assertions are enough to prove a man guilty of Tt rowsins to hi She remained until’ her death, 2H. Company. K exists in the | Highly Muished tat; Qu.ttermasier co drum, prosent Wou by Private itn vested in Government,’ presented by cx-ofticers, coverabte, but th one seal Hane and normal condition, of excellent character and tne and was inuch esteemed and bel joved.— Boston Jour same time 7 Us constitution in the States, or im any department or officer thercof,” 4. IC is the undoubted provinee of Congress to admit States to the Butler contiseate* were they sent? Gen. Aspinwall. To be awarded to com in pract ce fring, W averaged 471) Fines rs rime W Rainoap,—On Sat in tho woods for ms Batfulo and Erie railroad, between Yoous ov tar Lake Suone ® terrible dre was raging uth side of the Eighteen: mille ‘al places the snent had cropt up to the track, and endange The truina passed at. leas ‘This will make avery yome addition to the ornamentation of the cole pany’s quarter When the presentation was coneladed the ba | marched back to the tented field, clr arms and prepared. for the important event of the event Thix was given in retarn ment tendered to the regiment on. Thursday by the | generous proprietor of the hotel, * uniform, with white pants and all opened about 9 o'clock in the large 4 .ning:room, which was uncomfortably crammed, reat was the crush, that a large d forced to vepalr te | regard all mn | isto be: n admitted into the Un State of Hillnois, geographically speaking, was Tr territory was a cheerful and co Se | ie view of existence by giving nu. | lous adinonitions to her daughter. Railroad and direct Joins upon her gentleness, consideration, and ae Meam communication to China and Japan | charity; thinks cbildee ely governed, but should be taught what | @ines in the world will not be at all too | 18 right and just and true. always in the Union! dominion oft Wele always citizens of the United States, the State ot Ijinois" wisich Was adimiited into the Union by act of Congross and thus became ens titled to representation ti Con tion or State government whi 5 splendid enterta The violene disagreeable a pis genorally | 1 sometimes disgusting. | latter epithet belongs to the following extra n the Aflas t ant ls instructed Gov. Fenton as to the be made of the office of Register ‘The State is ni Progress during Saturday, through the fire, the passengers, ind the ears fi Ar night the scene was terr! trees were burning, makin vistble for a’great distance, must have been considerable, fallen for months in that part everything was as dry as tinder, like peat heds on the fire, and the railvoad people thet wood piles, tonees,- about midnight of Sstur two portions the trains mm ar Farnham’ Station, rose, Was (he Corpora: should not be se- ich Was Organized ad with cinders an ‘bly grand. Tall thagnificent coluinns of jetachment were ie’parlor, where they went through in more comfort, because Doxworth's Hahd and the band attiched el furnished all the music that was wanted, ‘The ladies ait loved the military, fearful discount, nat the boys in bias Vogue with the far, the power to admit new Stato y {alr implication the to be admitted, and hi been preme Court, ‘Organize new State | ecrtui is universally admitied by ‘over and over that the grant ot carries with it, io Very little rain hi of tie country, an: yet under tar After the death of Gen, Malpine a number of in decided by the urtieulr power In express words) plication, the power to do what! cver Is necessary lo cxecute the power ranted, For instance, the Constitution empowers ‘ongiess * to establiat’ Post Offices and post roads, From (his is implied the right of monopoly In. mua to establish and maintain th led postal system now existing, and to Jaws for that purpose, ‘The Constitudon Is a mere chart of government; not a code of procedure. may be exercised; not Civilians were Tn_fuet, they stood no chance None but the brave were in them were natisted 4 heroic arm measured their delicate waists, ‘This was not all, for among the military there were nees, und’ the epauletter and sash of an of- more favor than the unadorned uni- 8 soldter of any kind was ‘he Weakness of women for nt; in fret, it was soil Was burnin were out, fight his friends jo to fill his. pla din requesting G that the revenues of his oflice of this yeur, be secured to One of these His act was purely one to regard for an old comrade, and of Christian kindness for the widow and orphan, Hut to the infuriated politician, whether Demo- erat or Radical, nothing is good or honest that is dono by one of the opposite party, and nothing sucred that can be made an occasion for attack. Partisanship has no sense either of decenoy or of | @ ugh aud track, Fortunately, at day the rain tell very heavily over the whole district in whieh the fires were oF it is impossible to nd her children, have stopped. ‘say why ‘morning the evidence was plain wetting down, where the fires had been h the watery element re Was much threat friends was G. form of a private, althou; preferred to a civilian, @ uniform was never more apy uniform throughout, Followlng are'the quotations Civilians, @ per cent, discount ; priv yreniuey seruean Heutenapta, 90 |. premium ; colonels, 100 per cept, premium. per cent,, and Gen, Dg, and 1 looked as thoi got the beat of It, Oke, and it would not su that the miles of molds again,—Bugalo Conimerciat, the manner of thelr exercise, ‘There is wtrong disposition in our day pornls, 5 per ceut 10h, from that in whieh ft ia, to define and Init the not by the Constitution, Tue Wersanr or Coxvicts,—At the Massachu- setts House of Corrects kept ed both af the tive of their From bis recent annual in in drams), Capt. Robbins has for the ite of the weights of convicts, ie ahs Ey rant would have ral exalted pitch of enthusi pliment to the army, au what young man who vatnes the em! with and mount a knapsack, "De, evra wie [Rha ede of Congress, tn @ the love of man, or even ee son earned £300 sterling recently, will not go for {none day and evening, by singing at two concerts in be the practice of the Government, would It have been subject to any constitutional objaetion? And itis evident that If stich a proceediny constitutional in the first instance, equally so now. The course adopted, and hitherto pursued was such os Congress, in the exercise of ite secretion, degmed most advisable under the elreum- stances: Dat it for any reason it is now th \isabie to vary the practice, It Is perfectly com ‘The language of Story's Com. on h Temnet be ob- | crying into effet the ab- be, varied im order vcles of the nation |, ec 4 and avefal in osture of clreanstances, techiewous, at another supposes the existence of @ tional to do so, Ho eatupe lemneiven to ®. Government Perpetual mutahihty Who are its snlgects; an adapting itselt to thelr wat , their secupation, and thelr infirmities ons fui blu Valted States without eivii x rm a State Cove the | ment, It any take #tops to f for them, to be admitted inte the Union, can it make, in *u wwe never hud aloes Koverntn which they have since Js the fet Of such ped which ‘Thwrefore, it wor fon. To th to admit not a uew State, But the a member Government; and a. siroyed that iu Fevol. jonary rovernn war, there Was no Bhate G ge sequently a constitute nized when ined for Anil again, Art. 1, Sec. wer "to Wake Per for cary Ing in ited Stal Tf as T have sbowa, ( wernment Whatever \ repu! Lean form of governs } rihtand duty of tho purpose of puiting war, had civil § had ni and It was nent, Congress to pass laws such government ther Balto this it will V at first pase any laws npon the subjed President proceeded to cai myself th nal poreer future of the Pr ‘The question has of the Luited Staves, Taney, w wuthori Democrat, in the ease 0 rt, by Mate a rey State before tt oF not. Aud what State ate adult nd tae 4 in! | authority oothe Govera Olt. ae Welk Os ie hized hy the proper eon tit a hiking one ‘could not ‘hat the contertm tile & oF to Mats inne Schators ot Representatives. were elected under vont of whieh Mr. D ison authority of the G load, Cong and not in the eoarts In Se by the p Tilssion of the State, tig excusive mn oand Mr. dus polats, Dik wort ns tau the polver of Congress in + wet of Uke Con the United fon a Adiihe ite edutitutle ‘These decisions are conclusive upon the question to determine whether te of the power of Cong! 'o this, Deme discus very thing wilh & stitution is r ment th ber of the Cuion, inspect her present Cc for Hot kis repul Hat although Mv whott 80, she might tom art of Congres York would bes g i the Democratic pha cu are co) plithorn Geycrame ly guilty —— Gen, Gravt and the Jews, A Grant club in Chicago having asked Mr. & prominent Jewish banker views on the relations be: tween Gep, GRANT and the Isrueiites, Le has replied Henny Gurenenav: of that city, to give as follower Our Jewirh fellow-eitizens are brought conspieu ously torward in this Presktential campaign, oWing tow military order issued at ove thne by Gen. ‘This order. was and in this way repented Wrong (eequently cominitied agniast my race by Known as order No. ayant Jews as ae the non-Jewlsh wor Gen, Grant committed a fundamental error in the | euly he seleted for the purpose of dealing with some ohenders agulnst bis militar were sup posed to be of the Jews | “There does exist a most nnjust pre Tows ax a clase, axainst wisleh Tso Geou, Graut may or may not have share, dice, Th race, His filth In one ened by a history of forty centuries, 1 as brothers, aml hie h in the interest of God und bumuni- meauing im these Words, and very | Ky (wel this, and in polities ies of the war are fully ap d by them, and it will be usclcas vf impeding the progress of of strictly Jowinh efforts and We eaunot ty, Ther Mang Unigeilies in thls are Ltepublican, The “eo how ul Listory,, The’ whole tendene tends to wt pe | lend our iid to inflict on others ed ourscives, and hence know thom to be have sui wrony General Grant Ie the ing ® puor compliment to dewish Pultiotism to suppose that we cau sink alk bencath the weight of personal vindictive reven holy Invignation, General Grant that Jews must not be jul | more so than Chiristhans ; ey men and bid men, fully considered, ve ppeet full meaty ies RY GREENEBAUM, > Vast multitudes of the a i 8 Lo fed wpon, are ‘ani would lave been 49), is applicab! y be wholly vain, or i torritory within destroyot? It fut such govern. the close of the war, the terri: § wond Without @ le of Georgia were «Inhabited by #0. many peo: Rocky Mount atier onrely within the desertion of cress to say how long the people of Georgia subject to such gover dd be proper to ad nd west of ‘The power of Congrosa Is conceded ; bu x no of the original thirteen, 1 Georgly,” when we speak of it the Ameriesn fauilly, wens (he Sta rennized nnder the | her government w to the Union, ity had nover been & in tho family of Sta we concede Purpose of the are | ways been a State of the Calon. a Stace without a Siaw Ko- o Was a State at wil, at the y the Constitution provides, hall enarantes to every State i hliean tora } at Congress shall have the Y hs stitntion i ment or otiear ture ropited that Congress dit not overnment was formed wae {n operition, In fact, borore Co to pass any laws for the ogeasion, i distinct questi its power wisely and The question here is: Had Congress the constitu onal power vo say that the governments which were | organized in the Southern Stat tent, were not rept | refuse to admit (hem into the Unton ? settiod by the Supreme Court n by Clef Sustien Hii be deni an, herve, Borden (7 iow’, out of the Riode Island dificultion, he Chief Justiec, says: er this artiele of the * to declite what goy one ina state, For asthe t bican government ernment th esta o whether it is repabilent and discuss the Whither Congress haa | jean in form, a ietitation tt rests wit What gov vast Charu’, bring th Joue4,5 How., Si, the opinion of the sa. preme Court Was sougit ae wo wether a a wel Bale Governigout 0 He was admitted into the t 1 that Congions had Huson as to the val nd when Cong ple OF wm Leriiory, wis Hof Congrensy da chalet rr | ‘onetitutfon Foguires Of & State into tl P dlien ¥,10 Raitiing @ State, (or Congr rnments ere ® procecdings were ch oaght to be udiaitte ‘sin f this ie no, then Hower fo-martow to decide that | Ge Constitution of Massnetusetts is not repabliean | in tora, and deny ber representation in Congiese. | Cudoustediy Com wight, Mf it eho ‘Tint is, Congress | | how the power, or, ax lawyers Would say, the juris diction to determiie wheter or not her present Con- bliean in form ; and thy pow cide iteitber Way, Massachunctts has amen Constitution, and’ thus changed Ler form of govern- OF four times vince sho became & mem. on asmachusetia, Jution, and determing au in foram, ten it fale | hus not yer done on In defunee of the other States and Constitution, Of course such @ proceeding an owls Massichusetts or buse of its powel OWeF Mus FER some Where, and iis fur eafer to leave it to al the States ents the Consuitiition proceeds uyon that theory. Wlemen, Lhave tried to meet the ineue uuwde by tried to show tut te Res struction wets of Congress, and the State ments now in existence in most of the revel Stated Hutional; and consequently that the Demo is unsound; ad that should Me, Blake ieMpl 10 CXeeULE his policy of #\ vepi is be Would he guilty of tren | who aid and comfort Lim 18 Uuat direction dice townrd | uly protest, — truc Israelite has no preindice ngainst ap: Hod, having been strength eur he Hai'ihe nomination of a Presid tial candidat been lef to Kepublican dows, “y aC | indy not Lave been their € But, now Wat 1 the varty, Ht is ntellvet and Jewish nows by this tine class," not any s sows soery C3] us there are good men and icra PI at ere eet thermore, I belleve that t re to Was Issued in the must of complicated mili re sponsibliities, its sweeptn; it that the order was ever issued, Tndeod, 1 know that a letter from General Gi expressing these sentiments, has for some time not ha jeneral Grant regrets ‘at