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AMUSEMENTS. sonal (WALLACK'S—Fire Fly. Leading character by Lotta. WIBLO'S GARDEN—Oftenvach's Opera Boule, Barbe iene. PIKE'S OPERA HOUSE, 284 st, cor. th ay., Pept. 7 McK\oy's Macica, Pictorial, and National Bo*er ‘tatmmvent. PEW YORK THEATRE-—Fool Play. New Company, ew scenery, Me. Matinee on Swtarvay at 21. M BROADWAY THEATRE—Douciewait and Rewde's Ko- mance, Fou! Play. WOOD'S MUSHUM-Fnelieh Opera Rontte Troape, : Biamore Twins, avy Woman, MVIRG HALL—Grand Moving Diorama, 100600 Mo | tage, Calhonn fought ander a sectional ban- F ‘ving Mechanical . dabonad ble oli " - soweny TitkaTn ‘tm the Birsets, and Gate | O°F Ils ost naib] ject being the overthow § Breescly. of the tar. Null fication was the parent of i —— <a = = | fecenmion; and the apostios of the original ‘ici herosy, following the lead of Gh) great Car mt olinian, thoreafter libored at the congenial The ex AVY, | occupation of extending slavery and dissoly- ing the Unoa, until Jeferson Da id Shines for Art. : ——— other apt dise ples of the Southern creed BER 4. 1863, plaoyed into rebellion, Daring the null fi- ‘ rm —— === | eation era of Jackson's time, the British islus Term ve San a } (han.y, per pier fo wna teeeribors wm | based through a period of ‘At ait cal oxeit Baas-Wereiy, per yoar..... © | ment more per lous to their Const tation and alan geterysd pape 3} | more important ia ite consequences than had WPPRLY, PEF VERE. occ ceoes 10 | ‘Tho Parbamentary Reform bill of Gr ‘Twenty copies to one ail 1 theo hahad the Fity copies to 000 addr tay | Brough ved the ane Additional copies, m Cla» packages, at Ciud rates | gine of rottun boroughs, Iargely extended | are ane he, the right rags, exalted tho Housy of | IE BUN ts perved to suteeriners at thelr hanes, * Ihroughout the Metropolitan District, at 1 cents per | Commons toa piel of power it had never kK. Orders for the paper received at We SUN Odice | before reached, made the middle classes moro | Rany Othe bowen eis influsntial than the Poors of the realm, and | } wns Atak ade ovtuined a gonerous moasure of thoss bene | f Forten Pane, per ne ay * cont ; a | ds) or ies. conta | Goent obj for wheh liberal muds had | ‘ weewa | Loon struggling for a eentur, per Line, Ae ‘ 4 s i LeADED ADVERTIORMENTA Chargod Ouly JF Lue space In the years 1814-5-6, England en: e seceupied gated in tho controversy for the repeal of | 4 ds WaeKLY—per line her cora laws, a Iandlord me ly which | { was rooted tothe soil by the growth of hun. { fobeer'hs deol of years, Tho privileged classes clung. state wheter DarLy, Sua WReRLy, or tothe raysion with a tenacity that is har tly | ako be particular to give their old Sta anette ‘ " oh the bi ig Ghats paper rent. now bostow upon Chote imperiled establish: HS Our triends in sendins tn their enbecriptl ment in treland, But itfell ander the sturdy | flo well 10 reinit in Port OMice ord lent. If not, then rogitter the letters coutaiing WonEy Aud Lue save A good deal of —— The Elcetions in Vermont and Maine. Nobody doubts that Vermont and Maine will give their electoral votes to Gen, Grant, Nevertheless, their preliminary September contests are watched by both parties, as indi- cating the drift of public opinion, Vermont | ' has spoken. She was sure to go heavily Re publican, and las actully gone in that di- tection more than three to one. The infor. nee to be drawn from this is, that if there De a tone of feeling in a State so clearly one- sided as Vermont that largely swells the majority of the dominant party, the presump- tion is that the like fiflucnces are operating in other States. The result in Vermont in the current less surely than will the ap. . proaching ¢ n Maine, where both par- | \ ties are fight. ng tho battle hand to hand. Since | the great struggle of 1840 between Van | Buren and Harrison, the September election | in Maine has been found a pretty sare burom: | eter of the condition of the political atmos | Phere in the Northern States, At the last | vlestion th Lf the Democrats now suceced in reducing it, or even holding it to those figures, the Ke. publicans must prepare for equally weather. | But if the Kepublicans follow the example | of Vermont, and Inrgely increase tt, the party | for fave. at the leates the wet of rary ureyly » Ohio, aa tin will feel | \ Should | nl be re ct tae spou shrce States, a this ns virtually deciding (0 in Novewber in favor of Grant. On the | sther hand, if the Democrats diminish the | majority in Maine and ry Pennsylvania in Betober, it would ntensify the conflict and toave the probabilities in favor of Seymour, | Maine is to strike the keynote on the Mth west, and both parties are listening with eager sol citude for the tones of her potent voice, ited States—A <tealiaeeea Great Britain and the Parallel. The excitements prelimiuary to elections | of rere importance, whieh now agitate Great | Britain and the United States, naturally re- mind those who are conversant with the re rent pol.tieal history of Chose countries that Turing the last half century both nations have been deeply moved by great questions at precisely the same periods, It would Le | Interesting to inquire into the causes that produced these coeval agitations among | kindred peoples so widely sepurated ; but bur present parpose is only to deed in & sum. mary way with the historic facts In 1820 this country was shaken to its contre by the Missouri controversy, which resulted in the famous compromisy admit. ting that State into the Umon with a constitution which tolerated slavery, but for. | over prohibiting its adinission into wuy terri tory lying north of (he parallel of 80 dog: H 30 min, In the same year the British throne | was seriously menaced by the aitempt of a libertine King, George 1V,, to impeach and Aoporo his Quecn consort for alleged conjugal | infidelities. She soou succumbed to these peraecui‘ona; and the effort to carry her coffin through London, bearing the ip | tion, “ Carol of Branewick, the murdered Queen of England,” provoked riots and | bloodshed, tn which the people took the wide | of an unfortunate princors, and the came to the support of a debauched monarch Both of these famous coutests, whorein the Statesmen of cach nation took part, gave a deep tinge tothe politics of both for many ‘ years, In 1938 England and Troland were aroused tog point of dangerous exe'tement on the subject of Catholic emancipation, After | reaching the verge of revolution, the storm was laid by repealing portions of the Catt ic penal code, and se modifying the test acts that Catholica could sit in Parliament ; whereapon Daniel O'Connell, who had won the title of “Liberator,” was cdinitted to the | House of Commous, These events left an Unpress upon parties ia tom which they yet retain, In the samo year odeurred the great President nirogylo Detween Adams and Jackson, when political parties assumed the garb they wore, with alight changes, for thirty years, ‘Tho triumph of Jackson reorganized the Democracy, which, auder the neutral policy of Monroe, had lapsed from tho Jeffersonian #tandard, ani compelled the forifiation of a new oppe- ilitary neeessarily overleapol itwelf, for from that hour the de- cree of “ Death to slavery” was registered in the hearts of hundreds of thousands of our people, Aprang out of those Republican majority was 11,000. | jamin KR, Curtis, t | viqhts of the newly entrar | to use it in disestablishing the Irish Church, the oonflict hus alinost universally been be- j form in both countries with the most eu- Whig, under tho leadership of Clay and Webster. In 1830-1..2, Mr. Calhoun, soured by digap- pointed ambition, and envious of tho fn- fluence which Van Buren and the North exerted over Jackson, raised the standard of nullification, which, after a struggle that skal the highest powers of the great) minds of =the nation, war stricken down by (he hero of the Hermi- THE ‘all such statements by reference to the official records of both armies, whieh aro preserved at Washington, but wo havo recently re ccived some additional figures, which put the matter ina still stronger light. According to the World, “Tee's total foree, including reinforcements, wos 70,000. Against this we have simply to set the fact, shown by the records of the Commissary. General of prsonera, that the number of preoners taken by the Armies of the Poto- mae and James from May 1, 1864, to April 9, 1865, wos 66,512. Add to these the number of killed aad wounded, and the absurdity of limiting Lee's force to 70,000, or anything like it, becomes apparent. Tho World saya that “when both armics had reached the James, June 10, the number of Grant's army which had Leen put hors de combat was 117,000." The fact is that Grant's ontire loss from May 4, 1864, to April o1 was 12,561 killed, 64,152 wounded, and 26.083 masing; total, 101,001, Durng the samo time, Lee's losses were at least 10,000 killed, and 50,000 wounded, besdes 66,512 missing ; a total of 126,512. trancheon of Cobden, aided by the el Jfal | jug from what bas already been made publi Vlad onover the «ns, oar country was vexed with | © the sabjcet of Toxas annexation, for the co- vortly avowed purpows of ¢ main of human slavery. 0 Duay in this work, and be the unserapulous Tylor and the pliant Polk. of Pool Whilo this contest was going toning the do- | The wily hand of min and ofthe negro propagandists were | t to their purpores | Tho plot was successful; the Mexican war Howed; but vaulting ambition Tho Barabarner revolt of 1843 | it—a revolt from | atic party never ro whose effects tho Dem covered, In 1954-5, ambitions politicians, in order to give an all y to the com; mises of 1820 1850, repealed tho prolibi- tory soction of the act of the former year, and domagogacs, who seemed to fool honored in licking the boots of nogro worshippers of the Calhoun school, precipitated the country into the Kansas iabroglio, whose twin offspring, were the Drod Se decision, to which Be: noon the bench of the tae Court, could not subseribe, and the uplon Coustitation, a swindle so bare. face} that Robert J. Walker, then Governor of Kansas, poured upon it his burning dena ations, Inthese years Great Britain was dooply agitoted, though on a question less funlamentally haportant—the Crimean war, into which Lond Pabnerston was dragged by the imperious hand of Louis eon, This was hardly a parallel to our troubles on the Kansas question, though it broke up the Ministry of England; while our kindrod across the ocean, though seriously vexed by dno during the four years from 1861 to 18 that deserves to be named in conneetion with our civil war. ‘That great convulsion haw no parallel in the recent annala of England, sad | but few in the history of nations, Bat the eimilitude returns again in 1866-7, We were perplexed with the reconstructi the Jnsurgent Stat-s of the Bouth—e task attended with sharp collisions between the “Ixccutive and Congress, and painfally di- versified by bloody riots below the Potomac and the Ob During the samo period land was engaged in violoat struggles over Parliamon'sry reform and conflicts between the plans of Gladstone and Disracli, and acrows the channo! Fenian uprisings disturbed tho repose of the Emerald Isle, But the flow of blood in both countries: was stayed, the Reform bill was passed, and reconstruc: tion became @ settled policy, each measure bestowing the el.ctoral suffvage for the first time upon hundrods of thousands of men. ‘Today wo seo both countries engaged in fleree political contests, Ove party in the Un ted States, under the lead of Grant, is striving to maintain the policy of enfran- chisomont; tho other, under the lead of Sey- mour, is alming to revorso it. In Great dritnin neither party dreams of disturbing the ivod class, but Gladstone and the Liberals are en leavoring Bap Lace | | | Various political problems, exper while Disraoti and the Conservatives would svoke its aid t rowist such @ uiwasure of ro ™, ‘The most casual observer of the events we have traced canuot fil to sve that nearly all the grout controversies that Lave stirred this countey for (ity years havo had reference to the extoneion aud maintenance of human eiav- an until the rebyllion, almost every poll- teal victory was won in the interost of that | antidemocratic aystom; whilo in’ England tween the privileged few and the common masses, botween monopoly and beralisin, botwoon consgrvatiom and enfranchiseme and the triumph has beea with the people. Whilo there lussous furnish food for grave roflection among all classes of our citizens, they inspire the frienda of progress and ro. couraging hopes. pase : The Armies of Grant and Lee. On the pretended authority of “a Republi ean General,” who, it has since appeared, is ovly an anonymous seribller, knowing nothing more of the subject than he has learned from Swinton's © Campaigns of the Anny of the Potomuc,” the World has fro quently made the assertion that Gen, Grant's forces dyring the lust year ofthe war outnum. bered the rebel Lees three to one; that he Jost six men to Lee’ and | at in various one other ways he evines d nn Suabil'ty to cope with Loe, except at trenendons odds, faally con, | The House of At the opening: of the campaign, Grant Jad on the Rapidan 98,019 mon, and under Butler 25,000 more, making 123,019 alto. | wether, Lee, at the same time, had on the Rapidan 86,742, and in and about Richmond | and Petersburg 82,031, making in all, 119, | So far, then, from being outnanbercd Ly our troops three to one, the rebels wore neo n with us Whoever, after this plain statement, re- iterates the falsehoods invented by the writer in the World, will prove his want of com mon sense, as well as bis utter disregard of the trath The further examination of witnesses in the int revenue conspiracy ease has been tponed until (oday at ove o'clock P.M. In the mean tine the air is full of rumors, but, judg: it would seer to be a fires rather than # conspira- peel for Collector aseerted that the mey, on the port of and a few whiskey operators, to de- faine Co} sand Deputy Han Lanp, with @ view of getting upa pretext whereby. the President may feel justitied ia removing them from oilice, If this be so, it certain: ly ism villainous piece of business on the part of those engaged in the prosecution, ‘The statement which has been published, that Thomas B, Saari, late Collector of the Bighth District, was in office but two months, refused to con- | firm him, was (o It wan toade by | some roporter who had becu intentionally or accidentally misinformed. ‘The fact is, be held | nously | has been at all opt when temporarily ab await further dev missioner Ror the oflive upward of one year, was wow th firmed by 4 accessibl Senate, am tim from the ¢ | in this mat y W opm newer Tho Californin Stute clection, whic on the first Wed September, was this year postp ber, by a special act of the Legislature, bers of Congr dinarily takes place ed to Noveme Mem- Klvetors, and minor officers, will then be chosen, — Gen, Fuank Bian has written t down South to say that some conte bug ¢ hin made, slandered itor has I have " y such state ent as he attributes to m ontrary, T 1 give peace to the couniry.”” rrective for the effect of rated Mroadhead letter, but it hardly seems to cover th In that letter Gen, Dain said; Thore is but one way to restore the Gover meut and the Constitution, and that is for the Trevident elect to declare these acta null ana void, compel the army to undo its weurpationas at the South, disperse the carpet-bag S.ate Governments, ailow the white people to reurganias their own Go- tornments, and eect Senators and Representatives. spreseutatives will coutain a ma- jority of Democrats from the North, and they | will admit the Reproseniatives elected by the | white people of the South, and, with the eodpe- | tion of the President, it will not be ditlieult ¢o compel the Senate to submit once wore to the ob- ligations of the Constitution,” It ix not zh, in view of this letter, for | Gen, Buant to deciare th, he is for a policy of peace, Dispersing the existing State Govern ments of the South by armed foree is not peace. | Setiing aside State Constitutions and the laws of | the United States by lawless popular uprising, is | not peace. Admitting as members of the House of | Representatives those who have been elected | eonteery to lave, and whom the law expressly ex- | cludes from membership, is not pence, Ci pelling the Senate, by the illegal use of the sident’s authority and of the army, to submit to these victations of the law, and to sanction them, isnot peace, All these things, whieh Gen, Bare proposes to do, aud to have done, are not acts of | peace but of war, The performance of the first and least of them would light the flame of fear- ful, bloody conilict, and for atime would reduce our couulry to worse anarchy than was ever wit- nessed in Mexico or South A a. If Gen, | Brain and bis friends cannot see this, so mech | the worse for their understandings, The intelli- | gent people of the country see it very cleariy and all the explanations aud disclaimers whieh he may offer (hem will serve no purpose but to meke them doubt his sincerity, and question his moral couraye, e- | or of senor alah 1 that Mr, District Attor- ney Courtney, who is familiar with the testimo luced by Solicitor Binckley against Mr. Role ling, and the sources from which it has been | raked up, pronounces Dinekley’s movement * one of the most ridiculous cases he ever heard of.” —— Why not face the frets when you are beaten in an election? Why attempt to conceal, deny, or belittle your defeat? The truth will not be hidden by all your efforts, Those from whom you keep it buck ty-day will surely find it out to- morrow Tho World imitates the who told Noah that it wa a shower after all. ' We aro inform famous swiminer n't going to be much of It argues that the Vermont election is of no account, Dishonestly comparing its imperfect returns for the present election with those of the Presidential election of 1864, it asserts that the Democrats have east more votes than they did then, and the Aepublicans not quite so many, ‘Tho Repubjican majority, aecord- ing to its figures, has fallen off about 8,000, Be- sides, nothing was expected from the Vermont Detnocracy, It is all just aa the World auticie pated, This is nothing but cowardly nonsense and humbug. It is shirking and hiding the truth, ‘The fact is that the Democracy of Vermont made ‘a gallant eflori in this election, They held moet ings, took care of their organizations, aud brought out all their voters, bey did their level best; and hence it ts that they were able to east 4,000 more ballots at this State clection than they cast in 1867, aud 2,000 more than they cast at the Previdential election of 1864, But tho current SUN. | the ow y te r was f aw till a as far aw th 8 pity Grey Could NOt | eee eae ete tho oniy’ oF put . Mr. O'Lrten is a respected | jig relieve the ‘Guveriiyent | citizen of Ve He is a prominent and somewhat | wold wes the only aan at hana who hid the power eulucnt lawyer, Ho 49 patronized and trusted by | Of influence aud money combined, and (6 lberality 1868. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4. Democratic platform, and the insane manifesta. tions of the rebel leaders have combined to pro- dace in all parts of the country, could not be re- sisted. It has overwhelmed the Democrats of Vermont in epite of all their efforts; and if the same effect is produced in Maine next week, the conolusion will be irresistible, All men, even the blind, will thea soe what has long been visible to the judicious, that by their almost jnconecivable blunders the Democracy have doomed themselves to defeat, From this fate it is as impossible for them to escape an it was for Lee to avoid the final catastrophe of Appomattox. —— ‘The ense of Joux Srroun ia discussed at some length in the Madical Qasette, That journal somes up as follows the testimony concerning the seidlitz powder in which the Coroner's jury de- termined the poison was administered : “Mrs, Bpicer meets the rervent who tae with idlitx powder enrctuily sive celle fe por . and room, whe eae tay ‘on Lie Apcaning table. % Jig her absenee froin the room the potient mixes wed taken ice thls pon dee, and on hee rebyin complalne Liab a Meong taste of eanphor,, To abl in Ia eee tng rid ret procuees Lin Ww! of coffee, which: Ne drinks, and roon aferword ts relzed with ital convulion®, A. car ful analyais substantiate the Furnicion that death has been Gans d by tne adinin tration of etryshning, and, ot a matter of courne, th fault Us Inid ot the draggiai’e dooe, toro expecially aa the papers whieh had coutained the powders have a Vitter taste, Bul sequent «xin in over, ls to detect any truce of po son in t powders (rom whieh the one In quewtion. V aud Lbe dispenser is necessarily exoners “To our wiad the facts above related render It ry doabtinl whether the scldlitz powder wow the POLITICAL, ae ‘Maine this week and next. —A canvas sof the surviving members of Gom- pany K, 19th Kegiment New York Volunteers, = 86 for Grant and 6 for Seymour, Gen, McClellan is expected to arrive here in the Cuba, which leaves Liverpool on the 19th inst, He comes here to vote for Seymour and Blair. —Kentucky has not a single daily journal out. Kide of Lou‘sviile, Tt han just given 90,000 Democra- ths majority. Ie Maryland there is not one daily pa- per publisl ed oatstde of Baltimore. —The Soréland Pree publishes a list of fifty. ‘one mectings to be addressed by Kepablican orators, while the Argue bas but une notes of 8 Democratic meeting. —A correspondent in Llinois writes us that the majority of Grant and Colfax im that State will ‘not be loss Han 000, and may reach 1,000. The acccesions from Garmaus are said to be important, Geo. Carl Seburz has arranged to visit Bufla- Jo on the 10th inst., and speak to bis German fellow: citizens oo fe political questions of the day. He also rpeaks in Albany, Bept. 1; Byracuse, Sopt Rochester, Sept. % In the procession at the immense Republican mare mecting in Bangor, Mv., there was a battalion of returned roldiers and sailors, wio bore thelr tate tered old battle flags aod this signideant legend : * We go for Sexcaonr as we went for Lee.” —The Detroit Tribune says that Verry Fuller, who bas Just bean appointed Collector at New Or- Joums, although a resident of Kansas, is a profession Al lobby ist, @ cotton apeculator, a dabbier ja rotten on her s taken, Foluele in wich the eteyednine was conveyed. Tho | tydinn contracts, and loading member of tbe wits- characteristic itierneas of t | chy bo wisinkan for tie taste | key ring. ‘Thiais tie wart of readent dulmcon phon,’ while the penetrating favor of te Inte | is putting in responsib'e public omices, face cond comly be cortausionied (9 dre =Gen, Rosecrans, in oouversation at the i a wet li Astor Honse yesterday, #ald that he did not believe | ly nb the Southern leader# intended to lene an alitress, t, to aequire ® miter | muaitie to on 7 has been reported, In regard to the Mexicaa elle It Was tivo mission, he say# the poliey will be one of Kindness ax brief @ teunsit; and it and © ciliation, and that Mulibu a ing or Ve rexretted Miniet enemied ana yee ; Spplien tu the contonts of tne bow! trou W tion movements will not be favored, : Gecoused (Ook lis val deancht.” —The Hon, Thomes D. Elliot, of the First Diss ‘The testimony of Dr. Doremus, who analyzed the papers which had contained the setlite | powder, as well as the evatenis of the stomach of the decwased, was, tie Colds of the puper about half a grain of white powder was trict, Masnwchusetis, after ten yoare of serv! proposes to retire, Among ti ned for the succession, are the Hon, Mr. Buttin who has previously werved te district; th William T, Davis of Plymouth, and Copt. Pi Crowell, President of tho Cape Cod National Bak, | elu t ton, | u nee 8. at blue | | found ; both the paper and the powder lad an | “76 ion. alved hily ns dechued to be aca. alkaline and persisieat bitter laste, and dex! | aidete for Congress tn tip Rochester hetge to the bicrbonate of soda, tartute of soda, aud | sds Mob uhrlontion at dedéa dons tiavia ne k:| sh tests for strychnine; and adds that | candidate of the highest character and eapseiry, @ few particles of this same powder, dissolved in | whose unanimous endorsement by the County € water und drop duced the d don the skin of a frog. pro- th of the animal, The white paper vention of Orlouns, le rays, exproksos the uncom tested preferences of the people of that eounty, as | also, we ig (o him, “bad an acid and @ bitter | well ns of a very large proportion of the Republicans tust part of it," and by immersing this | of Momroe. paper ofvem, winute erystuls of strych- | —Tve editor of the Fhatericheburg News, who nine were obtained, It seems quite clear irom | ™ st the White Sulphur Seria, writes as follow * Lee, of course ares, Wie ie ful private character, whien has no parallel in bis. 1 teres, okuaqve rotundus, wine for him universal veand adujration, A delegation of his old sol: some ariutess and wounded, called on Iii on urday, and the tears ro'led down the old ¢! this that strychnine was mingled with ue con tents of both the blue and the whive paper, though it may have alto been contained in the coffee. Tee question, Who Is guilty of tho | poisoning? is still as tar from being auswered us | cation In th ever. face und fell upow the Moor, Abt that tender h arty | 7 tit tet him bern Fredericksburg and | un “a ‘\ +t d and end tie war iow A. M."—The Cotnell: Univ wh ei is Oot: CHAAR, OT pened si sada lee Laethaasteidy beget * t, honest man, of good ads.inin- xteen yeara | woring, &e,, &¢,, me the departments of Seiene ve arte in they mut be dl For adinisaion to the classical © ied In the neual English bran ek, For the Selentific und Agrivultur wily a common English edueation is re ¥ wan to be President in mes which require eteadiness, char sense, kindness, and tried petriotisim, 1 not onty believe that be will be | President, bat that bis civil aduinietration will be as remarkatle ag his military career, 1 is Mt that all the mon who stood up for the Union should | ga her abont Gr Tr is an bonor that will not | Literatare, cara of ney wil! | eral tse, ve and G partir Seieiiy ee Sirviragseladdedeional (rae lifetine to have a chance ta | petebeed idl Aeesh y which may be pall bY | vote fue suet a wan us Grant, No young man can | his own labor, Further Information can ve had bY | 40H turd to throw away ble ebanoe | eolng Franecta M, Pixemt, Secretary of the | bth es - | Hoard of Trustees, Mbaea, No Y....°A Constant | Gey, Dix axp Gov. Serwoun.-—A correspondent Reader of Pua Sew mewspaper.”—The Commlsslovers | writes us for Gov. To Publte Charities and Corsection are the proper pub Nie authority to pr for the support of destituie | childrens but th N, ¥, Juvenile Asyiuin, 17th wtreot, near Teuth avenue, and the Ghlidrou's Ald olety, 10 Kast Fourth street, aay also be applied to, AN ys proper 910 abirets (he Superine Jent of Pubhie Instruction for the tate of Con- | fihere bo euch®n officer, is at Hartford, Gudado Aweric No man ean be deprived of his citizenship by any process ob law. | Aconviction of felovy merely takes away bis | Prom the New Jurk Tomes, to vote, Delay in passing eentence atter eomvietion luiceala: have @cdaave is of non The conviet muet be pd | in order to reetore ever telegraphed to Gov, Seymou “T beg to tet you, know that Ehave troops enongh at | ad W Wake Care UOL OMY Of Lue FiOterS but af | | | We do | authority for the s peart in the Adjutant G York for the years 1 know where Gov, Tod finds his 0 No such despatch ap: porta of New preacued la the Old School and Reformed yterlan Chvvehes, Yo rly Will find a list of them fn the appendix to the Bev iriewold was probably we weil secured us | hve Philad » to general lyn Directory Vhen the Philadelphia | pre Is just ope brief, onembarrase | Convention adjourned sine die, {1 officers went out of 4 potorivus fact, that takes the Whole batance ut of every suck statement ard ‘Tue contract ‘or the Meniter contained | and forieiture in ease of filinre tn any of | polnls of nev igh three-fourths of the con: pI el had been advanced to Mr. Griswold and " wece pte yed' the Merrimac, Sue he property of ML a which the Governme F an we Government und its advisers dlsbeli Iu the Monitor gad Intended tu bold bar bali office as w matter Of course, and there was no ned of thoir resiguing,...°C, W. H."=The first Ateri- can cent war coined in 1187. We eannot tell Value of a collection of coins from 1800 to 1863... SY, P= the U. 8. Bankrupt law requires 850 to be | Aeporited in advance by a bowkrupt; but if tie feew avd expenses exoved that amount, he must make up | » difference ” A Soldier."—Ifan agent agrees to | collect a Gaim for ten per cent., tt appears to us that | 1 ho has no right Lo make yon pay any expenses In ad- Government only coutracted | dition, ‘The New York riots of 186 were put down | Wich them upon tne semnrunce that hey were Atle V0 | by the polic waisted by (he United States volunteer | pay the toricit. Ltadvanced a part of the money, just ke a bank would have done, npow ampir necuri and it took (he same precaution agalort losing It a did the banks with which the contractors dealt, ‘Phe wore! cawo—the gravest charge that can be made out against Mr. Griswold, Ie that he borrowed 4 part of the money required to carry We Monitor, If te hud borrowed it from one soures instead of unother, ho wonld have been lield to no stricter acrount, but hen, forces, nader the command of Gon, Harvey FE, Browa. Governor Seymour did nothing toward it... HL L."-Letters addressed to Kev, Henry Ward Bovcher, Brooklyn,” will reach him in due course of mail...."'T. B. #."~The book on Cull can De ordered through any respectable bookselicr: “IL —We have never heard of auy American | Hem, perhaps, Wie, patriotic and liberality would Pantomime Association, Just one other consideration renders Mr. Gris- lle wild's record in this matcer not only clear md. ne ‘arrection, e Cuiarcased, but brilliant and enviable, A® no Court anne ews 0 Hliows the reading of an cht patent by the leit of ie later “hpproverents, 90. It ia ‘taan'featly unjust and I desire to correct promptly, if you please, an untrue and injarions parsgraph which has found ite way intu to-day's Bow, relating to Win, W, even ridiculous to méasnre tbe rk of Monilor by the present success of iron-clad warfare, We inust fo buck to the state of the art, whtelr bi since the Monitor «as lannched as much as O'Brien, candidate for Comeress from the State of gation hes since Uke dayy of the Sirius and MMinols, Tt ls etated that * Wi'\am O'lrien, of Car- pais 4 Comtsaeting dad He Monitor la Unvilte, Tiinais, ineulted Gen, Giant on a railroad | {Ot war tke cagtructing to cree aN tn tate, | car by siriking lis bat io his faec.” Fiatly false in | Had Mr. riewold carted off the @ vtract | every particular r Semerous competitors: {2 fae an | WoW “ ” ary te, ot screw steamer, at a good price a | 1. W, W, O'bilen Is not " of Curhiville.” He ts «| fy'prersonabte tue bi Tiss of hina we mtd'no! have | Peorta man, bee But be Leniege willing Buren’ for ee to rell them what ewomed to possible, althongh as valuable us the pl wt cor perpetual motion, So complete unbelief that they wou oto eke by work, and only Fresilent Live ti of ureveoanble compe 2, W. W, O'Brien fe not the man who strack Gen. Gront, 4. ‘The name of the man who strack Gen, Grant is not O'Briem ai all. Btragglere from a Democratic mecting committed go. W. W, O'Brien waa one of the speak- | philcsopher's ston Cr at that meetiug—was, in Met, the leading apewker, | | Mr. Urtawol and in that relation wae by the Radical Minots pas | ABOUNE Of pe sophisiry cau chu rs held me je for the sume, This ie | fu! strait for naval dete record is simply this San miigreprosenauiion 6 "The conutey wus kno dread- w Tearful the ood and patrioti«m to exerese them’ in tis direction, persuaded he citizens of all parties, we all do, the ob He, no doubt, condcmnes, as reperous ruilaplam of Carlinyille, He stioulderet hs part of the risk, and Dis enlightened assuciates ty ehoulder thetre; . ueted at once, he mivanced woney, he devote Yours, J, W. OBKILN, #0 Nossan at, N, own time and eners) he was jostin ti ee prevent what would e The Poller, the Riot the war, Meanwhile the Goverament Burexus «i» Attorne: holieved If they did mot ridicule him; bul be pressed lor of Te Sunt om in what promised to ve disgrace 4nd. ions, vut tor Which, thn ie faith, energy, avd patriotiou, In lookin over the editorial columns of | Tyrie outa" bo of almost inestimable value wo ins your valuable paper of today, T saw tt stated therein | couatry, that Distric! Cs ceenanala. on maces and secure the punish Hopes for the Lost Cause—Down with the Uifably 1fs bl Radicnia, Brom the ato ¢ Tribune, mie th live query why heaees OOF Dying the lan If we are successful in the approaching o of the St, Patrick's Day rioters to punishment, It fest we shall regwir all that we have lust ia the lost now a little more than @ yenr anda half ago wince | Cause.” We shall be freemen once more, We sivail i hoard an | Wave a country, We sbail be able to reverse the Irom Wat occurrence took place, and Thave not heard ws which has’ been imposed. voon us, and. turning yet of any of them being brought to punishment, though seven or eight poligamen were Injured for Wife while in We performance of thelr duty om thet that tron into brands of dire hut! thei’ back on ibe heads of the fagivious wretches who have inflicted so many ful and Sagrant wrongs ou our biveding country. Onoe more to the recs then—yet oued ‘And when the cloud, shall hay occasion, A POLICEMAN, | more!?’And when the cou, shall lave cuted away Yo from the fami eld, our, —the era old Con Maw Youn, Avg, #1, 1908 fderate fnge-till be seen tn ail Ite glory, streaming 7, * like the thunderbolt against the wind, Let us thon rally once more around the deur old flag, which we have followed so often to glory and to viciory, Let ts plant ouF standard fn the midst of the field, and iet us oner more raise the wa He Who MOUDLE is —— Revly to the Rey. Mr, Van Meter, To the Editor of The Sun, Siu: There appeared im last Monday's Svy, the Hib ult. a lecture delivered by the Key, Mr. Van « authority, that Gon, Dix | 4 | feront FROM WESTCHESTER COUNTT. oman =—The Democracy are holding 180 meetings in ) Correspondence of The Sun. Warre Prante, Sept. 9, 1968, ‘THE FEW CENTRAL AVENUE. ‘This waa n very busy day for the law officers and others of this county, Barly In the morning the Acricaltaral Society met in the Court House to dis- cuss what action siiould be taken by them to extend the new Central avenne, which it is intended shall fun through the county connecting New York nll the intermediate towns and villages by a di- Ee citer aie err Sapte evan te acaent fs ae GEA Abn taps ean Ba hs Th ‘AN AMOROUS FRANCTMAN, Court of de Cochrane pres\: ghey named L. B. Ouveley for ax. Ws charged to the walk with Intent to ki Hot cule ai i Sa : The youre who is it twee years age, and & counte- nance indicating @ Inek of intelligenes, bat othing morderous in hie alter pene ine ® respectable patrimony jn his native land “{n riotous living,” emigrat country Jast January and took up his abode well farmer anole of . Pravela Ouveley, renides about a mile north 1 Chappaqus. The old man has a iter for whom young Ouveley formed a strong wtuchmert, and there seemed every prospect of a marriage. But in an evil hour the oid man heard tid ‘of tive mer dongs of bis nephew from, his brother, te. falher of the young many who recently arrived bere also, He therefore by Of the engagement with bis dangh'er, This 80 enraged young ‘Ouveley that be & brutal attick upon fatier, for whict bis uncle ordered him out of houre: Awa .ting & favorable opportunity, om the 1 Aasust the enlprit assaulted the old man with # heavy eidoe hammer, In the cow stable, He broke his jaw in three places, almost ditabted bis right nd mate avery ugly looking woud on ck, near the nose, Besides mearly fraetur- ing th ‘The oid Wan survived, Guvely then tries to cut hie own throat, but dida’t Consable Wynint terlifled to the finding of Which Was #meared with bool, seeing he bad a bad ease on tu show great excitement srisin love being crossed, and le angod tb tion not of the crime iteelf, Wat of b Ale eon tended tere could mot be ‘Kill tnarinuch as the weapou used could omphialed that, motive. tent t the stable cy. Couns ie 1 brug in jeadly Weapon, Dut BOL Ww. the jury 1 ansauit With @ Is good till the other 48 tol," din this ease, When Disirict-. Lup to present the ease for the peop iy dcwolialed tue arguments Of ‘ve perivo se, and by a laughable naration of his own experience, showed that no unluo excitemer sary at all under such circuinstane ment wis then resssuinbilag, tiken for di Judge Cochran joo the a ed law. covering and also to the point raised by covgsel After a brief deliberation the jury returned ® verdict of guilty on the fndlet- ment. The penalty for tis olfente is. hnprisonment jn the Stat Prisoo for wot tess than five wor more thaw ten yeu rf MONRISANTA BRICKLATERS, While the jary were absent deliberating on the obove cave, Mr. W. FP. Angel, counsel for the prose- ease of the Mori isania bricklayers. con- Vieted last week fur conspiracy, in refusing to work foramen who employed an uniudentared Gare. tlee, moved for the ‘woe of the Court on the de- fondauts, Mr. J, O. Dykeman suguonted to the Court that the offeme et cue wad (be punishiaent of tue kind that and im view of Rance of Ye deveidaute ty eup in Westchester coun waned ign law, and the ligh h the public heretotore’ looked — wpe organ\ rat ld impose as penalty @ consiatentl; n- Nostrand, the ned $00, and the ad commitied up days. Mr. Dyke. that the case m of the pelynin FF conspiracy Will then bo kty Shu ineanthine the Drieklayer with thelr work aud U ver, The he uidiested HiZaOR ws Usual of eur pF —— —- jon of Union Mou la Arkansas, Rock correspoudeat of the St. Louls under date of August 18: Ansunel The Little Democrat wr > Menator te or wom Bade OZ read tie a A vest, Whea buth wen ware ordered oT Vion indicated by the assusains. ihe woods, # hundred yards disten men started after bim--stil mounted—and monced Gnivg. " They headed him 02 fro the point nr; woen ho came back past one ol them, succeeded in getting lato thick brash, ina dif. direction, with smpiy a flesh wound in the aus, having Deen ahot at sore #ix of eight Uuics, “His pursuers did Lot give up the ebase, but fcoured the brush for # bali bour ; neverticiees, he managed to elude thom, and made’ his escape. Tits companion, being loft, to bi took his bores of the Dugey, hastened to West Point, and giving te alariu @ coupany Went Out to the place of attack, It is auderstood, however, that some of the part were only ac aious ty know that Whecler was Kilo Tlie cmt, but and valise were found, and report was ut to this place the next day that he was killed. ‘That evening a despatch was received here frow him at Duvall Bud, wuece be had just arrived batlevs coatlens, ret © Hien Who attempted to Kill him wore be kuown by him; one a resident of the county by Tame of Lewin a Urether in-law of tue rebel Gewera MoCray ; the other, a deaperado by the name of Hil Vaving recently come Loto the county from the soui ern part of the State, from whic pl he had In ‘compelied Lo flee fur murder. ‘The night after the attempted assassination, the two gold ® Bol and two outlams went to West Point, thelr friends eol- lected, and. they had a tue Peale beng drauk to the mau who Wasted his powder, ‘On Saturday we learned that the ing become alarmed, i*lt the rulles owt was wayiaid by U wounded in (ie arm, He returned the Bre, but out enect, ‘On thevame day a despaten was received from Mewphis informng os that Senator Barker, of Crittenden county, wos shot through 4 wiglow with buckshot, turee taking oftect Ia tho head, end one in the acm; Wounda wnpposed not to be mortal, ‘he circumstances atteuding the attack on Senator Wheeler leave no room to doubt that ir was pre: meditated and assented to beforehand by « large number of influential rebel® in aceordance with @ settled polisy to marder all Uniom men or drive thou from the eountry Duel in Claiborne Parish-A Sea Defends His Father's Honor. From the New Orleans (La,) Republican, om a letter dated at Minden, Claiborne pa- on the 1yth inst, we learn that on the day pre- rougiie at and the ratic member of the House o hho was absent from the Leg T les fought with pi Pratt was peintully wounded at above the bip, from the efects of 4 wad eundued to lis bod, Mr, Lewis wae not bit, The duel arose from politreal causes. Mr. Pratt, In his pince in the Honse of Kepreseniatives, on (he tho: duy, having eesailed the reputation of ihe Hon, Joho t., Lewis, tater of the euallengiug party, Aobért %. Lewis, the eon, Just twenty-one years oud, Was abseut from the house of ive father until (he 100) instant, and when he returned and reads report Of Mr, Pratt's speech In the New Orieana Tiines, be immediatey sent a challenge to Mr. Pratt, The objectionable epecell wan made in disc m Hicks, hav- five in the ny whieh he was disab solution a Jering the thanks of oly io. owed of Registrati oF tlh los during the late € ‘the staleinents made’ in the re- referring to outrages fu country It inpossible, In many instances, Fvote ut the etection in April, trom Air Pratt's speech, reproduced ¢ © ofionsive Words which led to (he duel} elif, Repet.taids 2 desing to eall epectal attantion to @ letter (Lo Dy sound 08 p&ee fourteen Of be Teport, date’ Mitty April 49, and Rildresed to she tion. W Saaper ar ee port of the I parishes, ren for Repabl co The extrac here, con skin Mack! den, wy on’ whien the ear are eh Of false redicated, and w' d. That ictter ¢ min Drala of bigh ex ination bikck, but whe f ace, turued trailer to lite i Waditious, prover Teel sown bivod, say eal thst UTD, v0 il ehidrea~{0r he bas ud Unnatural as Lioed 16 Min devoured hie Own contumely wpop las waive Hoter. “i! that personage used his sphere of useful | damned, he who dullies ie hems in correctiny forvwing luis flock, It would ————— He bettes; bot when he asgalle in ts inorant and tho Street-Cleaniug Contractor Dead® bigoted sibain what tite Kn ora eg Ku teow © Catholic Church feveres fiom iis catoaca lmieit to the charge of forant allovether of Catholle det tint Calhing Hineelta mister of tue Goael to HOt to bern teacher OF Love thy. neigh hor felau witivews agalnet Ls'that tho way lo sew pewse ‘To the Pulior oy The Sun, Sia: Will you allow a constant reader of Tum Sun that “shfnes for all” to ask the above question through your valuable paper, Fears are entertuined coucernine that ‘unctionary, ashe as not been beard from in Bast Fifty third street, between First nveo ‘ A preacher ae tliyselt was too mighty for them, ‘The tremendous reae- qnering him by seer weight of numbers, tion against the Democracy, which Frank Blair's sition party. that finally took the mame of + We have already exvosed the falsity of | revolutionary letter, the Southern plank of the nd? Whein ne dilates ou tht relic and Enst Kivers this. season’ and but two. or hive Kmw wun Hine about. Catholice | times tust year, shore will be no uced for ily e permit sueh has, Impnuity, Lasteal of | Vices much longer, tor if he te not dead, the intiabi. Peace wid urotherly Idve. 0 ali, discord | (Cts PR nee Fre OF ae ea ee RIORDAN. ‘A KESIDENT of East Pifiy-third street, Pantrrion Steer, SOUTH BROOKLYS New Yous, Aug. 1, 1863 home. An conelurion, gentlemen, Allow me to ayy as {le le gay elected rope made athe twist ob Claiborne fully recogn zig tho ty eor the position which | hold, Weighty may fall my Ips, and Hie re God and for what TL may that wi ‘halt NOC presume to qmoation the lit 12 yey on pug the moLiveebr the Hy or tpg MOL Ves Of the How oreble Bi Kegisuation, F do take that of the report which seters to te ‘y the nae of tay goustitaeney Who represent tha bone and si foterest of the virgin of trath and pore whive ri i lond of old Cat {neticc, in behall of the Anglo-Saxon des Ot ak & falwehood wn! brawl ews yl practice of duelling cannot but be 4. and cannot he sustained under any circumstances ‘The awe of God and man alike condewn i ce of the Court, | SUNPRAMS, pinahnet-—teeary Ole Dull is now at home in Norway. menacly suecessfal in London. —An wousual number of fashionable weddings will take place this fall. —The great dearth at the mountain resorts in Vermont is beaux. It ls mournful to contemplate. —It is announced in Paris that Mr, Odilon Bar rot, nephew of the distinguisied Senator, is engaged to marry Miss Fanny Forbes of New York, —Female medical students are now admitted ta all the privileges of the medical school of the Univers sity of Paria on the same terms as men. —A writer in the Jadependent says that Charles Sumner “owee hie greatness to fdolity to his own foul.” Good. cinnati has weekly reports of the quality of pos furmished the citizens. The photometrie observations aro rep by a city Inspector, —A disrespectful writer says that the Bmpress Eog(nie exerts er womna's privilege quite royally by being ia an almost perpetual quarret With her husband, —The Humboldt Register reporta the discovery Jn Nevada of a vast and most valuable einnabar ming large enongh to supply the world with quicksilver for many years. ‘The mine is situated about Minty miles west of Unionville. —Col. Gowan, the Amoriean who raised the ships unk at Sebastopol, is to make an attempt om the Spanish galioons which the Datch and English flects sent to the bottom of Vigo bay, somewhere boat 1702. —The value of the hay crop of the Northery and Western States is estimated at more than two hundre? mijlions of dollars, the erop being the largest ever produced, —A Methodist College has t tne oprned in Bel- the erection of which has cost the body £24, 000 Methodisis of Amorica have contributed £10,- 000 toward an endowment fund, The President of tw College t# the Rey. Wililam Arthur. —A caricature of @ young lady with the Grecian end and panniers was posted at Conzreas Hall the otler day, It was thought to resemble @ young lady fom New Jersey. The artist was de tected and forced te leave the house, The young lady now carries herself upright —The Female Pignic Association, composed of A number of pretty New Haven girls, who, for tive years, have had apnual plenics in the woods all by theumclyes, with no horrid men around Lo molest ‘or piake afraid, las been discontinued, but the mem- bers ure t have a reunion five years hence as“ old maids or widows. —A person who was recently called into court for the purpose of proving the correctness of a doce tor's bill, was asked by the lawyer whether * the doctor did not make several visite after the patient ‘was out of danger!" “No,” replied the witness, "1 considered the patient in danger us long as the doctor continued bis visite. —A prize of 100 guineas is offered for an essay on kieptomania, “ with a view to determine whether ‘& passion for thieving ehould be held as disqualifying for employments of trust end authority under the Crown; also to loquire onder what clreumstances this mischievous propensity becomes criminal.” The essays are to be sent ia Ww Dr, David Wilsva, Brook street, Grosvenor square, —What is the prio of life? We have always #0 A that it meant the morning of existence, bul we read in the Tridune that Mre, Lander “has ar rived at the prime ot life,” and alto that “ber earces | extends over a period of about forty years.” It ie evident that, to any ove who knows the Knglish Jan guage, Mrs, Lander is no longer to her prime, though the is a lovely Woman avd an wecomplisbed artist, —Mr. Horace Tucker, of Franklin township, Indiana, has a cow six or #even years old, the mother of weall ayear old Marek last, which will weigh at the present tune one thousand pounds. In February Just she had three caives, whieh will weigh at this {ime thirteen hundred pounds ech, The th calves are ail males, and precisely of the same color, vd Wey Will Dot Wary im Woight tex pounds, —The Boston Daily Transcript, in» notice of Bivhop Simpson's leeiure, says: * Tue Bishop pro: dicted that fn a few years, hero in Boston, we would have Chinese servants in our houses, Paterfumlliag rolerred to this at the breakfast table, this morning, waen litte Minnie, aite came to his chair, aul whispered, We sual! pa, won't it be nice! have a Chinese fervant, aad she will eat all the rate, 0 we won't bave to keep a cat!” —On Tuesday a sods founisin exploded in gh, will aloud report, At the time of the esposion Mr, Kyarns,oue of the gentlemen con- sod with the drug store, was working at the appa- othe cellar, Fortunately be was in» stoop « porture, aud the copper cap of the ehainber was views over bis bead, ‘Tue eulphurle acid contained in the chamber, however, was thrown over Aly, K,' back aud arms, Yorning him very severely, The tial of Whelan and the other parties ace cused of the murder of the Hon, T.D. MeGeo will take place Luis week. ‘The Assizes for tho county of Carleton, at Which the Uriah will take place, open ut Ottawa on Wednerday, but the trial will probably not bogin before Vriday, The witness Lacroix is | till retaimed in jail wor safe keeping, [tia eald that the defence will be able Ww desivy the value of the evidence materially, —The late Thaddeus Stevens thought Tower's Odyssey superior to the Tlind, He called the tatter “an acconut ofa series of Aghts among Greek buf fers, gods and ten, with an occasional interinde about godd \d the Wives ani mistresses of (ho Dulles, Glled vut with counvellings aud plots by the elders in this Hghting crsternity, ineuleatiog ® moral. ity admitting of a great deul of twprovement.” ‘The Book of Job he ranked ## the grandest drama in any Jangu —A tombstone in a village cemetery in the ine terior of Pennsylvania ta aderned by ® piece of sculpture whieh brings in relief a colt, a boy, and a treo. The colt is represented w kicking the boy im the stomach, and the epitaph is in this wise: * sacred to the mewory of Reury Hh Born sune tt, 1971, of Heur the and Jane his wife, tek of 4 an by ail wi e horses, gan't hich, and where sor amed Charlier has invented a new sort of horse shoe which is magh prais consists of an irow band Jet into a rectangalar gr scooped (rom the outer circle of the horse's foot ‘This band is fastened with seven rectangular naile, driven inte eval holes, ‘The sole of the (vot and the frog are thus allowed to touch the ground; the bor never slips, aud uever gets diseaten of the foot, ‘The now shoe has been tried by M. Langues, a large livery stable keeper in Paris, and af’ reduced lawencas in Lie stables by two thirds, The Omantbus moreover, lave shod 1,300 horves, and speak uf the improvement in high terms, —A correspondent of the any Journ writes of aman at Poultney, Veruiont, who killeg female rattleanake between five end rix feet lob by twelve or fourteen Inches in circuinierence, } opening the anake, to tu utter astonishment jokers on—large crowds by this dine having gary, ered to ece the mouster—he took fror suah. trenty-four small suakes from five to six inches long, twenty-four wore that wore between three and fous inches long, and twenty-four more that had just the form of snakes; and then he touk out twenty-one ere of eggs, each containing twenty-one eggs to waking ia all twenty-four litters of what would soon Lave been five huudved aud sev enty-six real *juruping alive’ rattlesnakes, He (Parker) then spread thei upon the go huge Shanghai roorier belonging to a Me, A. Potter, residing in the iminediate vicinity, stepped boldly uy and goboled up the pile at one meal, -—The Johnatown (Pa.) papers tell of a locoma \ive which ran away while descending the casters slope of the Alleghany mountain, Tk seen Doran, the engineer, liad wxmisted in Iv cinnati express west, and while in the vielnity of Kittaning Point, on his return trip to Alt the brake chain om the engine snapped a der great presence of mind Mr, Doran reve engine Smunediately, but the etrain op the steam Chests Was too severe, abd the result was that one of them exploded, thas rendering him puweriosa t@ control it, ‘The grade here is about ninety feet ta she mile, nud it required but afew moiwents for the sine te ful mou ntdin, aud Doran and his fireman were competed to jump of, ‘The rans away engine, with ily necelmruting spend, rushed down the mountain, and, dont sour ailles J c e Nig brake gave way, eoliitogy” down onde aly fame (rack, smashing ib ali to pie he 1