The Sun (New York) Newspaper, November 4, 1868, Page 2

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—_———— AMUSEMENTS, country or put to death. “Lat us have rence |" hs OPERA TO Delle Helene. peace! JALLACK'S—The Lancashire Lass, Elowant cenery, Wo hope, however, 1 intments, eo, A splendia ca fled from th rn that reason has net uling eloment of the WERY THEATRE—Afer Dark, Matinés on fat ; ae South, artd tliat under the firm, eagacions, BEW YOKK THEATRE, Nov, —Uoder the Gar | just, and liberal administration of Gen EMATRE FUAXCATE—Genevieve de Merant Gnaxr, the sober masses will turn a deaf WOOD'S MOSEUA—Ixi0n, the Man nt the Whort, and | car to political agitation and violent counsels, Popnine farce every other BEW YORK CIRCUS. Mth At, opporite Academe of Morvic—Star Riders and A Bomiegs and Saturdays, at Oy P.M. of manufactures, BUROPEAN CIRCUS, Mth Bt and Boow soy. Pee formances every night at & Matingess ., I'M. ernOON. and devote themselves to Industrial pursuits, ‘abate, Afarintes Wed. | tO the revival of agriculture, to the founding to the establishment of commeree, and to the encouragement of com: t opt danbenrerhe- diem mon schools, eo that they may became the most populous, enterprising, and wealthy c— portion of the Union. The Sun. hurl the contemptible ‘epithets of carpet Let them conse to bagger” and “scalawag” at immigrants = | from the North and from Europe, who would WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1868, bring them capital, labor, and skill to restore | eer thelr waste places, lest they engender the Returns of the Election. belief that they are venomous serpents, Atthehour of going to press the returns crawling on the face of the ground, rather show the election of Grant and Colfax by than civilized men, walking ereet in the dig- very Inrge majority, but {t fe impossible to | UtY of citizenship, give the details, The returns indicate that The incoming Administration will give confidence to capital and labor in the North, bee ip non b silat Yan for them by | 4 infune such vigor through every depart Maine New Hampshire. 27,000 Connecticut 8,500 Massachusetts... 80,000 Vermont... 80,000 Rhode Island. 6,000 Pennsylvania... 18,000 Weat Virjinia.. WSs esesdesesy Minois. . . 8,000 000 55,000 vite and e cOUTR, Nobraka Cong edie Kansas 10,000 fudlask 10,009 | S24 Prosperity. Michigan, sone 26,000 Wisconsin... .cceees sieves . 20,000 The following States have certainly gone Republican, as indicated by tho returns, but the majorities are unknown, via. + California, moneys. We tr Missouri, tailment of its Invieh system of appropri Nevada, tions, and thus relieve the people by reducing Towa, the burden of taxation which now oppresses Minnesota, ond vexes both the rich and the poor, The returns show that Seymour and Mair | Among the reforms which we hope to see hare carriod the following States, but the | instituted either by the closing session of the majorities yet remain uncertain, viz: present Congress or the opening session of Louisana, ite successor, ia a radical revieion of our na- Alabama, turalization code, Let the right of aliens to Delaware, Kentucky. As we go to} Among tho first duties to which Gen. Grant will devote lis attention will doubt- lees Le the Introduction of rigid economy and accountability into every departme connected with the expenditure of public that he will exsclod need. lese offices, and urge uy the allot be so protected by safeguards that Maryland, ite administration #liall cease to be o libel upon Judicial proceedings, a burlesque apon #0 New Jersey seems to be | the elective franchise, and the sport and prey close, but wo think Seymour hee carried it, | of reckless partisans, and that Randolph, Democrat, is pretty surely In one particular we anticipate that Gen. lected Governor. Guant's administration will prove an emi New York remains in doubt, but we feel | nent uccess, Above most characters who pretty confident that Hoffman is elected, and | have play Pied the Ft The probabilities are that Grant hy ment of busincas as has not been folt since the gloomy yenr that preceded the war. The absence of all fears of an attempt to overthrow tho reconatructed governments by foree, and the rdjustment of our financial difficulties on an equitable and solid basis—a task to which the new ralers will promptly address themseives—will calm the public mind, exorcise the epirit of repudiation, in- » the early return of apecie , ond carry the whole country for ward ina career of unexampled enterprise t pon Congress a eur da commanding part in. extrnor- Ancline to the opiaion that Seymour has car | dinary tiincs, he possesses rare skill for pu ting the right man fue- | This quality is emential to the ruccessful dis. cooded in 25 States, and Seymour in 9,and | charge of the duties of the Pre In the right plac dential that Grant will receive 203 electoral votes, | office. The President must trust very much and Seymour 88, tothe honesty, the angacity, the discre rere oe ee of subordinates, Gen, Grant has proved The Election of Gen. Grant. that he enjoys the faculty of selecting assiet- Leste the poople of the United States | ants wisely and well to a very remark. elected ULyerns 8 GUANT to the Presidency | able degree, Hoe has shown that ho haa the v ta protracted content was antl | point to important positions those who are ter portion of our ci Convention in July, and has not been doubted by any jutelligent American elnco 208} worthy of his confidence; and we feel sare on the adjournment of the Tam | that he will not fail to exercise both in. the ow field whereon he is abont ng to his judgment, and ins the October s, nevertheless, so much | guro or clamor from frie of hope sud fear has mingled in this exciting | If the new Administration shall prove as npalgn, that the popular verdict cannot bo | successful as wo believe it will, bo completely recorded without emotion, must it dispose of all the leading eu’ 0 el an eight year with events wit! of this or any other nation, During four there years the Republic was engaged in « of the greatest elvil wars that ev mapk ud, and throughout the other { has been the prey of factions and per that have inflicted evila hardly jess calani tous than strife on the battle-fiel named 8} Jacksc From the opening to tho close of this | and decrepit lead 8 on of Gen, Grant Is the finale of | that have troubled the country for the last ruggle, which has teemed | ten yoars, and some of which eprang into ex- a parallel in the annals | jstence as ministers of evil a third of acen tury ngo, that it would not be marvellous if «ite close there should be # reorganization ed | of political parties such as occurred in th ar It | adiministration of Jerrenson and in that of a Under each of the great chieftains just old issues and effete organizations parsed into oblivion, yeriod one man has borne a leading part, | and during their respective administrations and for the larger portion of it he has beer drama, Starting in obscur by slow aud sure st eminence wher he challenges the r andadvaneing | men, and has mado his nam word throughoat the world. This man, b, of wlich the partics assumed the forms which they the most conspleuous actor in the wonderful | for tho succeeding thirty years, Bo v © cl wore im- gine it will be under the rule of Qnanr, It be has reached an | would contradict the precedents, Lelio the pect | leasons of history, a and the confidence of the body of his country: | ductions of philosophy at naught the de- if the convulsions household | through which woe have passed, and lection of Grant the suffreges of his fellow-citizens, has beon | ig the logical conclusion, aid not result placed at the h of public affirs for the | In a new order of things whose culminating four years immediately before us. And 60 | point will bea reorganization of political par. woon as the prejur and the passions | tos, Oure engendered by @ furiously contested cam: | (he enlarg paign shall have hal time to cool, no candid | wtruc vil war, theabolition of elavery, nent of the suffroge, of the Union, aud fundamental tho r person will for a moment doubt thet the | amendments of the Constitution, have ear: Interesis, the honor, and the glory of tho | red ue through a revolution not less radical Republic are acoure in his Lands, than that which delivered us from the yoke One of the first objects to which the new | of Great Britain, Adininistration will turn its attention, will be ‘Those who are too blind to recognize the | the completion of the task of reconstruction nowera, these who aro too slow to keep the pacification of the South, and tho restor Hon of order and security to that euilerin portion of the Union, | pe As to reconstruction, the triumph of C d the dofeat of SuyMovn, in a manner 4 left to wandor ame ; while men of val and conclusive, will of themselves vir- | of prospertt, hually solve the problem; end we hopo to | as deo the three States now outside of th: restored to their relations to tho Gover ment during the approaching eession of Cor gress. Wo entreat that body to hasten the poimplotion of the work, so that when Gen Grant shall take the President's oath every 1 beam with undimmed lustre from or that waves over his head, If, it shall be delayed till he enters the White Houss, we are eure he will push It too rapid consummation ; for he is aware | My Daan Sim: Uhat the people are desirous of seeing this pbstacle to the pence of the country hamed: | jim (expense duly arr ve ily Lefore yeaterday’s Bely removed ont of the way. to William M, Tweed, Mebed as a tras co Pie with some reliable person in three or four principal towns, aad io each elly of your county, and request " pace with the progress of events, must bo ie the tombs of the d ear vision and elast atep will become tho guidesof the nation, and lead it forward in a carcor of expansion, of power, and ef renown, such ated no previous period in. its Listory, end willecarcely Gnd @ parallel in | the anuals of any people ——— What Docs t Meant The following has been extensively p y of a clroular sont, just ction, to leading Demo crate in various parts of this State: Prieule and Strictly Confidential. Rooms or tum Democnatic Stare Conwirren, Get vie nos f at once to communicate for this en amany Hal to telegraph 1, at the minute Tho bare success of @ candidate whose | of closing the polls—not waiting for » count—such outimal platform and policy are embodied In the | Pe Phrase, “Let we have peace!” will | *,@uem gain (or loss) over lust year of — of the voto, Let the telegraph bo “This town wil show @ Democratic * Or this one, if tause the wavesof passion and violence in | sumeteavly certain: * This town will give a Repub- the Southern States to luk 1n repose, If, | Heun (or Democratic) majority of —." There ts, of however, after ho shall have assumed tho | couree, an important object to be attained, By a thair of Stato, ex-rebels of the school of simeltancous transmiselon up to the hour of closing the poil, but not longer waiting, opportunity can be Hampton, Forrest, Wise, Sommes, and | taken of the ueual half-hour juli ia telegraphle com: Toombs continue th mont whi manimously spared | be declared, and Lefore the Avec SADE VIED DA RAGUALSOUN. the telegraph with returns, and interfere with indi- sages, and give orders to wated carefully thelr lives, and shall not instantly refrain | te ie ir assaults upon a Gov. | munication over Mmes belore actus! resuits begin to ted Press absorb from stimulating areon and murder ond | iyo count, Very truly yours, eognate crimes, the loyal people of the nation BAMUEL J, TILDEN, Chairman, will demand that they be tried by court | If this document be not a forgery and the wartial for violating their paroles, or by | story of its issue ® pure fabrication, it is cer- triminal tribunals for treason, and if con- | tainly eo suspicious in its appearance as to fisted that thay be banished from the 4 call foram explanation af iis true weaning ase cs ttn ap nn a Pe nn ae THE SUN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBEK 4 ee ee from the gentleman whose name |e oMfxed to To Trivmpbet i it, His position and standing in tho com: A THANKSGIVING SONG FOR 1868, munity are euch that le cannot of rl to'rest —— quietly under the imputation, which it fastens 87 Ove, urpor.-cov. 1. m. MEREDIOE, upon him, of being a party to a conspiracy to oe ae dofent the popular will pith kery ied hae pace epel paring As the matter stands now, the instructions Right te triomphont, which he appears to have frsned adinit of no ‘The Nation ie free, other interpretation than that it wos hie ine Thander, O canront tention, In ense the majoritios of hie party ot vain was our trast; elsewhere than in this city should be ineufl- Eiht adie gph cient to aceura the State, to supply the lack “A shinaeat Abrog by false counts here, ‘The meannoes end Beat the drame gaily, wickedness of auch @ transaction require no snd Sheet Layel Saad} ‘The Chief of our Army mee ie mia as es Ss Is Chief of our Land, Observe, in the first place, of the action recommended is not plainly “tn bantarhrgg , tated in this cireniar, but only hinted at. “ Stand fart and stand sare, “Thero is, of course, an important object to Cnato Evtacnie be attained.” But what object? Why aro ‘Wave on the freo winds Mr. TILDEN and his associates so anxions to O14 Flag, 80 long riven; know, in advanco of the Associated Press re- On ite encred folds shine, turns, the approximate vote of the parte of Dwrary Hose Bee yeu Babee the State outaide of this city? They do not Flash, Nghtnings eleetrie! ask for exact figures—they be satisfied Pe the een Cer with estimates. Setting aside the Sinproba- ‘The Hend of the Lord. ble supposition that they desired, in ease of dofont, to hedge thelr bets on SEYMOUR and Whee pokes artes TlorrMAN, thero remains only one conclu. And slow wains are boaring sion, and that fs, that they had some plan in ‘The Harvest gold home, view which they dared not explicitly de Binjie, Moon of Hunters, seribe, but which was no loss important than And tenderly shed the figuring ont of a Democratic majority ‘Thy radiance where slumber Onur glorious dead, sword, in your reabbard, ‘or won ts the flabt; Grant and Colfnx are eboren ; by foul means, if the fair reeult of the elee tion was against them. This view of the matter is corroborated, too, by the conduet of tho canvassers in the Foarth and Seventh fo God speeds the Right, Wards, in holding back tho returns last Ring, ye elad Joy-beliat evening long after the time at which they Lit enmity couse #ould Lave made the O Lrothers, groep bonds tn Here we Lave a measure originating with Thonkegiving and Peneet | - ——— the Demoerntic State Committee, and rane | he Carell GC Pent Benda, tioned by its Chairman, which, to any per: | Zo Me Pittior of Tha sun sou of common senge, seems to contemplate a | Sin: The light-Gingored scoundrels in this city diegraceful piece of knave: Let the Com. | ve become to bold and adroit that the plan I bave 1 i Ms, 8 adopted may be found u and it 19 a8 follow: mnittee now, and, above all, let Mr, SAMUEL | “7 wit mention, in the frst place, that I have eharge J. TILDEN com ut and explain to the pub | of the sceurities of a company, and they are kept in a lic What this eirewlar moons; for, if they do | Vax (not a carpet bar) In an tron «te eoithin a safe, not, they wil have no right to repel any | When necessary to take the bag from the safe.T calle chatyes which may be mado sitainet their | Str ta stand deride me; 1 take out or put in the bag hare Y i si ‘& bond oF othcr security; and when the bag must be honesty as citizens and their honor ag gen- | Kept ont of the safe for any lenzth of time, wiiteb ts Uemen, frequently the care, T hand it to the clerk, saying, i —_—— Keep that bay in your hand until Lack you for tt. Whatover else may be the result of 1 | In these perlious times Lact on the principle that Spanish revolution, it bids fair to make itself | eecurttion must be locked In a fireproof safe, or they historically famous for the abol when out of i, be actually 1a the hand of « slavery in the last of the elvit trustworthy person nntll retarned to the safe, B, which have upheld that institution, All the RRRRE ene HRT TOU members of the Revolutionary Junta have signed | 4 New Orlenus Nanker Mwindied out of , $15,000. a memorial, which declares that slavery is au out. Prom the Neve Orlane Ti Fage upon human nature, and a blot upen the | | About two weeks AACE Feats nation which maintains it; that it fs so repag. | TMi clhntly a nied Ay kis pod nant athing that it ought to bo abolished, not gradually, but immediately ; but thatin view ofthe dificultios in the way of its immediate abolish. ment, they propore to the Provisional ment asa preliminary measure the enact fa decree declaring free all children born of slave mothers after Sept, 17, 1868, Not is the | m ; action thus recommended likely to be talks, | eter caepta ments Gell porn tha: mntaritecmenli ce but it will also, probably, be followed by the | emined the refoerres and coterprte liberation, under proper safeguards and restric- Gelato pee and—b tions, of the whole edult slave population of the five thewen and popu l tn tne id New with capital to engage ranch of business, ‘There was the new comer} y attractive, @ iraiknew Purpoee, mc all show and #linaa, piniet © and om exteil apt i young fr in. the 3, of Miteen then-er ready clue, gilt Spanish colonies. &e,, and—there it Wor reflcetion onr fricud sroniniain iinet thee they cond ms, why, 80; Mf on The recent controversy between the Cath. | feehew ls orale olic J row, and: op of Ch A Nit bas for the present resulted inthe Bish- favor, has nevertheless provoked a di Which seems likely to result in depriving all the Catholic Bishops of this country of the arbi trory power with which (hey ere now invested ‘The Church here, being regarded as 9 missionary Church, is so constituted that the parish priests | the sbap ve no way of obtaining the reversal of their | Wirhest te pend gome of his cle pointe with Fe he packed a ri hero they Were, in all speaking in t . all staniped with the s \erilers’ firme, komme Of whi inated he: shops’ decroos except by an appeal to Rome, | * peel seuimnent in Now York eis ch, from the delay anc eh colves, | Asif these were vot enough, he proceeded to plle Pr which, from the delay and expense it involves, | Asif these were not enough. bo promceded to ple Ve is practically no remedy nt ull, ‘The Bishop's | Fenton, of New Yorks exbibiting. the closest Inti With that official, ent a eo Me filenes in bis 1 trerlty, cays ty, ard honesty will is absolute law, and the priests have to sub other rare for ¢ mit to it, wh think they are treated Leutsludiond age we live In. The area justly or not. te this evil, it Is proposed at luilinde wus allowed for Mestre, supposing ny exinted : that the American Church be put under the same | uubiusuingly war tne cowe p canon law as obtains In Europe, aud that priests | spleion Vet ert Who feel aggrieved by the ection of their Bishops Ne ¥ Rciave of appeal to local councila, who | of arue love, this ooth ; the banne were may baro a right of appeal to lecal conneils, who | of true lave. ts iaie) a Mone a8 shall hear and decide cases according to well es tablished and previously kn form of this kind is in entire wo expensive engaged, in opp to the ond more prudent Ideus of cconomy — were by New York insisting pon rdance with the demoeratic spirit which has alwa; rized fice carpeted, Mo intended to introduce “new weink! ess here; be raw no the Catholic Chureh in its interior organization, | peusen yruy he nvfortable. Ho did tn- . 2 ccln!! ain to be | treduee new e decidedly eon and, in this country expecially, is certain to be | freitire new wrinkles and Ucane deckdedly gon. rineiples, A re- accomplished sooner or later, waniested hin readiness to cali at the bank and ar. ote eR —— rh ve marred bs ness, Thither the 3 irtners went; the letters were here exhibited anew, In tho Inst number of his witty and caus | the tile of exchange. atied snd depositeds he tic Lanterne, M, Roenrrout strikingly exhibits the t desiring to ase them until trade bad fairly “ 0 ed, The Ir enh wae wally charmed ast between the purpose with which Napos | With him, ‘Thoroughly posted nvon the m; tid | fiance, ay he wus with Ue detalte of trad 08 ime of the corte With the nature of its business, oda es ence in the mind of profitable, as it afters leon TIL, undertook bis Mexican expedi the results which it actually accomplished, That expedition wos set on foot ostensibly to compel the payment by the Mexican Government of money due to sundry French subjects, Ap army was muintaned in Mexico dwing four years, out of which fifty thousand men perished Kk, on well Ai)y establish own. rtanding, on to pay for ar note, If re fiheen by the discasce of the country, Bonds were is- bs steep sued under the patronage of the Freneh Govern. | Money tm a few Jase. and would th Ke mont, and those who took them were ruined. Hored to do so but prudently suggested the Ministers speculated on the full of these bon gate hi Ns yeecd gh AE ag 2 | after they bed themselves recommended them to d-humoredty he couldn't think of thie! the public, and gained enormous sums by the ey might die before they were fairly 0 nO, it was a private matter, If he re vit must be on © conditions, and he amifleda’hepoy, earclosa, shrewd aiuiie, the free Tunsonry ef woleh as «oO well i cline in their market value, An Emperor was shot and an Emp | M. Recuevons, wot one of those pe ceived a cent of the sums which were to be col- lected from Meateo for their benefit, ‘The antithesis set forth by this powerful ax | conist of the Seeond Empire is per facts of history are not altogethe sents them, The money which w ess made crazy. Bu ce to whom the ex- ion was especially undertaken has ever re DPy New York’ mn erow, and tharp. Would hile pa Pio be a few win 4, and he did, He waiting yet, aud the ct; but the who repre- | late? Certainly to be forced | Waited the succeeded im selling out their interest before the | Nank President his grown suspletous of all i e hn e Dusibors men, Je looks sharper at vie Mexican Rmpite bad collapsed, | busihans men Te rN egg to eo " drawn tight, Phe feial portals of hts tus tt expedition and th Ofcourse, the purchasers were swindled out of their money, just as the French taxpayers lost the tha tall of car ting to let whole cost of the expedition; but the friends of Mthewum and result Of all th Napoleon were enriched, ‘That great end being | brian’ paliong of that fim w.th the necured, the calamity and disgrace which Frauce - derived frou that luckloss undertaking must be | A New Mops or 1 fn the Weat el 1 regarded as of little consequence, days a, yi rit or Wilma 4 ralles vouth of Chicago, om the Alton Kallroad. Just arrived there, a burglary x lumber dealer named Cava ot! abot en from a des ouse i @ Very my'> M er % ‘ouval is a keea-eyed Frenchman, Ftheh aticck Obituary. Samuel R. Betts, who was Judge of the United States Court for the Southern District of this Stu sa-eyod Freachuien, for @ period of forty-fve years, and who not lo: my dare OF Ce re dyad since reaigned to make room for Judge Biatebford, | foc Lap tyery | ‘Tombieson, who tnd re dled wt New Haven on Monday night last, aged 82, | cently been in business with lam, whi He was a lawyer of the old school, an able Judge, | Ming of Lis aduirs, aud was familiar with and a worthy citizen, ile death carries the memory | ¢% ,tpertweate of his dwelliog, le, foil, care of back to the thnes of Monroe, who appoluted bim to cemetery, wepates aeeet Chad filled ‘atl dug 8. grave im 8, COU : tho office he filled #0 long. Bundey wereise be ealled io 8 trendy way ou ee eee , and invited him to take ® walk up the river —The Iatest accounts from China and Japan | @ shor! distance, to nee a lot of lumber pretended to have been purchased im, and lying ow the prospects of the Christian missionaries to | {21° sre i) aud on thelr wa: ton, | ‘They started of La lh A “4 be anything but encouraging In those countries, At | passed through the censor: Yanechow, Mr, ‘Taylor, the head of the Protestant | the ewiy made gravercwhich we Frenchman took bb "Mr. T. lnguired of mission, ond bis party have narrowly escaped death | fare shoud be scon on thee ree ie dug t ut the hands of a mob of infuriated Chinese, some | Wien, drawing a revolver, be replied, “It mean for thousands etrong, who attacked and burnt the mis | You; you Thun ve by dae it yuu, salt not tll me sion house; and a decroe laying the Christian religion | frcciy knew: what to, ay ef d0- Fle, however, under @ formal interdict has been posted up at Ho- the Darglary and, on mura and tho gates of Yokohama, ‘The placards | fert describe Christians as “the devilish sect.” ‘The | woul eaeoute Brive and American Consuls have actively interfered | the moner enterpr to make his ap from Mexico was nuiuly to cover the famous ob- | fenrine ea) or any wliete ; Fs spinaegahoalnry yO Spat, before ligetions hell by the Swiss banker Jecker, agrent | times, He. bo Rat Bete Ro pit of which really belonged to Napoleon's bait | ate win ’y Men aout Walk OF with A i 15,000, No Hn Was acoures for two days, | brother Morny. It to true that those le when Hires sent over the wires revealed 1 fre were never paid, as they ought not to have bee that the letters and bills af esatones were all for iy SAR forny and Jecker | Fiery aud the ew. Yorker a awit for thoy wore fraudulent; but Morny and Jecker | Atos ira bus Deen dissolved. Oried he, holding the instrament of death near tho | cities and towns, When he reaches St. Paal, Min. head of Tombieron, “and den down you o—Socre | We Will ave walked 008) wire, Te retur's Dieu! you wast.” The fellow, know! we'll the (i= je that will bring hin to City Hel, Position of his neeatiant, dropped on his knees over the and of 5.011 miles, ve thie periornin the pit and, fecling tat lus end lied come, »! than he contracte to do, \A# Will 08 Fern wembithe Hos, oimid his ery fOr, mercy. con egntd 1,8 Falls an was relieved by the Frenefaman, whom he led lot fo where the money wae dopo ite 248 fone of his letter, he fc id we trust that h we mus fe cu ident of suc ver & arly te wane amount was restored to. ht, ard | stave gerne Om toe CulOrit suddenly left for ie unknown. ve pedestrian’s hy Correapondence Rochestes eas may, we prey that ay not be de ————— siroyed.— Troy Bw a How Miles O'Reilly Wrote Cravan's Prison Life of Davis in Nine Dore From the Onapiasion Mor cury, Oot, 2. Feenpe of n Kemininn Borger. The Hartford (Conn.) Courant has addition rHielurs of the eatape of Mrs. Harper from together with some fartucr facts ¢o% forgeries. She got out of the room Tt is asserted that the book entitled ‘na_kept by picking the jock, and thea | Life of Jefferson Davie,” and fey te Wrongh the faller's residence got into the oc sai ‘That night there was an excars!:n boat down conveying poiltical elute, and It 1s probable he got aboard, and went fur with the Bhore Ling road, Of course of this character oceurs every ni with the movement of the prise Prison to be the jays by the paragraph ts going the rounds of the ugh te connect | Bread on an item of siranze ne an eneape OU readers will remember, came outin jent connected ew Yi soon af the releare of . Davis on fer is collated, to | Bail from his imprisonment st Furtress Monroe. Tt forniah (gome clas to. the abair ; how it was man: | was the gensation of the day, and exalted deep vn aged, ete, Aud the fuct that one of her counsel | terest for the iamous prisoner, whose story of ile it called upon her the di eceding the night of | assumed to give. While it stirred the hearta of the ber cseape, and Secured from het an onder for Southern people, of whose lost cause he was the 00 on & bank in New York, the woney tobe | oMelal head, it awakened the curiosity, removed 1a (providing bonds, paying, fren, {ho prejudices, and enlisted the sympathies of the bly, "Whon she went away | N behalf of on frou | el, In winch were written the names feeble captive, residing in Alton, Illinois, as follow eqnat ny ot a Piet . | accomplishments of his mind, and Gentier, Or readers will be ssvonished to learn that this twindier for several | statement is true and that, thin popular Look, over whieh so much. ak feeling. of indignation, pity, Inter esi, and admiration has been created and expendi ts work of | peep novel Woven Upo! slender threads of fact. Soon after the admission of Mr. Davis to. bal, Graves, the surgeon of the post, went to New York, is quondam messinate of te same in different Staten, | staff Gen. Ialpln is Bterary friend eomeratn- the aise of Mire. 8B. Harper, Mra. J: | lated him forthwith om the opportunity he ‘bad to pe batt Mra J, di Van Beet, Mes. 1 Ktnmmortallze limeelf in print. an a8 the gine tine Fmith, Mrs, J. GW ye make money bya book on Jet? Davis, Tae idea ‘Thow pron.” OMicgr Sargeant, of Porton, had thé | seemed new to Mr. Craven, and be suid it wrs im- busineen Of the Maine banks in bis charge, and | practicalle. Halpine asked him where lis notes was looking for her whem Officer Wilcox cought | were, He replied he had none, and could not do It bir in New of Poliee Chamber! q id Haipine, “Give me whatever materials diately ant, and he ame on, | you baue, and I will write in your name, and we will Jnging one of the bank oficors who recornized | shore the prodts.” ‘This waa ugreed to, ye woman at the preliminary trial in Midd ‘Craven furnislied three I of Mra, Davis to town. Arrangements were made, In © (some notes written on the margin of x /Jer honld seeure the bond of 91,000, to im is, touching the points he desired rest her, and take her on & reqa in defending bin for trew York Bhe has re herself * 4 tryin te diofoce of © copyright, and is other charae- | where he tere Tas made her appear nd for trial, but exenpe bi Bhe represc ots horse made thougl their dare Pon eo di and other details wisted, his fale teeth, and of Mr, Davis, feet, When sho walks wiping then called to see several confederates tn Dve the other, New York, wong others, Gen, Diek Taylor. He eight or forty fe about tive Urown hair, which ake wear ofexion, and sr shoulder is ei high, haw the post and . pained thd Mr, Davis, bis views and opin Jonson pab #0, 'In roward to leasing Floaue h Mayor. Southern men, wid Mr, Dav.s's relalons and feellogs The grand annual dinner of the Licensed em, Ke Victuattety Association of Mackburn, Englonte aes | A Philadelphia pabitehing bonse now advertised ines, at whieh the Mysor Trcic, | ROL IC WuR soon to "gays the Preeton Iorald, hoy fe “ to do Justice to the vigor and enerey of cur thor oughly Lancashire myo utterances on tis 00e We thereiore give and wticipating this pub ju New York to furninh hie ally, vm Drneqneness, only reuretting that words reproduce so inadequately the inimitable tone and in. he worebiply weaker.’ Toast. ing she Ari Worship ral th army, th’ navy, and't_ volunte aye da n graphic and eluquen nity "at This {one of the ¢ tare, and tt eveh op, but wel eo) * the talents of pan Who eould so plane Theywola ia watt suunvatty est | bly manafieture out of whole eoch the “Prisou Life two 60 hecowond fo: of Jifcreon Davis,” with bis private views and weHilat att |» inions og men mod Uni Neely ent ath ty —————$—_——— Fete atta test, | Au fndian ©: Years Among t Savages-A Strange Story. The Colorado Tribune has the tollowing strange Wer bls oe ttory: We sow at the Planters’ House yesterday « ay, WHD Kend awerte make ‘em | Wotman vd Liede Blackvurn, a native of Mount “hey athitd.ant | Jackson, 4. C., who claims to have been a prisoner evre calcd | among different tribes of In F years Sho is how 2 yours nd Iw a cripple trom the loss Of both of her limbs, which have been amputated with how we ah shoul not pe amie for einy saclety Adon’ i, He ty jrovan thet re) ©@ hawt denon ear lone on awl ached awong them. In lous or Aw the evening advanced, t ving bi for so ne beeu accustomed 1 iwing among ve Morme mother and two y ten Wau nla, ‘They took with’ the Indians, Lizz. nper sisters, age wetively coneluded (o run away irom 1 if ponsibie reach Califor: only what they could ud Ler which be r Mr. Feitd Cio have a pack abon’ their persons, and with @ ride aud suine the Manor tf poor | minmunition, #taricd westward L And Ethank st wie | der njoy 1 ne Eradely inds. yenine than Wsiael hed: {frozen to, Peanut, F nborn ‘Lhe Foxes roid Ligzio t Viet. he learned of the death of Ler better that b She ran was A frog suntinus a nere ber among them o4 a kind ef hte etme, She ways that her ther lias #0 ypenl | woot of his time umong the Indians for secu or eight years, and is one of them now, Me mw with the Arapahoes or Cheyennes, ‘The Srakes traced aiukioe b her to the Armpahoes, from wliom she cseaped Aibink uy wt troctorcet | wont ong year age, by the ass stance of fred, a0 who ata thelr b re HOLT | Jones, a Govern out, anid was Liought Inve at of tha wa’ of the Fellas ieee ‘ ping Inworth, At the Utne of her escape th Bl et the Way?or thoreler meddaws ware Gey wabied « 1 some brass, *# were encamped at the big end of th 2 Manchester a ee = A yx the time sine i seout, but f Staging tn Colorado, housework Saurer, Rowse Spriagheld Repu ie ut road evenly take p in Color oul dam he tn: posed that b the Indians i was She venne to f the Territory camp id while wet 1d, next year, Wo scout, and that there ure we e tribes, ‘Tue diggers t dhe more nih all trented her ¥ey rouyhiy ast ‘thou sh, often protected ber from sey rolling | ment.’ Sie rajs that she bas an uncle living sowie wy » prartes, ent ever iy wiles | where on the North Piatto Kivi uid she is how on corous ‘river, with barder of rich an her way to him, ervale and line of tree warklns ite progtoss panes Stare A, Trou mic untain debouehe to the #low-rinkIng, wiue reaching horizon—to the rignt the grim me _ Ahend of His Pignres, 7 With towering fore of rocks and snow—to the The San Franciseo Bulletin has a story illus. the unending prairie occan, with only an occasion: trative of the speed with whieb the Pacitle Ralirvad bin and scattered herd of cattle to break its ma | is bullt: jeatic solitude and indicate human set “A few days since a merchant came down to the Is such tagnideent outdoornoss in the continuons | elty from the eastern wide of the Bicrra Nevada, keene as ho Harrower OF dil ed land: | Having bought an extensive assortment of goods, he * mie itis a | gave direct ey should ba shipped to the thing of beaul w twenty: | end of ic Raliroad, wherever that Lour ride, and ents make a have a consi job of night of it age riding It is peentia betweew the workin end that itis th rable th night hat costs, Tt Is 1 his plaee of business. His directions to the letter, Ny the tc mpe with bu cle of contending nature racks every every § Every feeling: everybody nneks and eipleas despatr tace will gel ing, be Inveluntarily and wit foods to the end of the roa, they Will bring up somewhere this aide of Ralt Lake, probably In ome ambitious tittle fown that ho never heard of beture Lis departure, Miles of rout ure created, and even towns, Ino momentint apreads himself, Joga, boo y. ‘the dot onthe map showing te »ork er the whole inside of the eggeh ; the girls | ing terminas o road ut the begimuing of the the profune swear ; some lad fwants week, must be woved forward at tie eud of tho Ing-bottle out of her bay, and the big I somewhere | weck to & polut reprosenting from elghtecn to tweniy Le floor—nobody kuows where—bat found It | miles ot prog Only «will elapsa be yboly's back bair comes down, ond | fore a genoral diveetion ure end what is art in costume Foad will’ insure thelr bein er ts revealed—and then, hardest orniag breaks the and everybody eri fait, cos," rosea nehanting nt ‘The girl that i# lovely ten, the man lant and perenc-—tet them be cataloged for and translated at heaven cannot spare naments, and they are to agcravating for A Fatal Leap. Every ten mites we stop to change bore:a, Nemoerat gives the following ac. iit the driver, night or day, slqnalizes the approach | euunt ofa des): rate aitempt by two thieves to escape to a station by'a minlatn F whoop, that, as the | from custody hy leaping few the train om which Lostonians say of thelr great orgnn, *thust Be heard | (uey were traveling to Jal © Ou Thersday to be ociated itis cortainly rather start » | morning, about Lo'ciock, while on the way to ther iy Every thirty miles oF so, a * hone! sta | future home, they found an oppertanity to cut thelr avd a fsupper, or brouk: | shackles Willi Axaw pocket hulle made of thy finest fast are all alike; ta and gocd, more | steole Dut Mr. Myers, being aware of the character uitforinty #0, Indeed, than those along the railroad | ith whieh be tad to deal, watohed thom closely, Uno trom Chicaxo to the mountains, and discovered thelr eperations, He voand then ———- Logethor agun with bandents and returned Cem to the prisoners’ ear, He bad not poe ever, before Burton and Zanes Tolled off te ears, which we re long, how: fn at the raie of twenty miles Depnty accepied the proposition of Dan Rice, Myers instantly rang the bell and st Which We published In last week's Abo cepting the terme of that he found the i Eee "vondred age severely Injured in the hipe that he cripple which reduces the actual time granted to complete | for life. Mr. Myers succceded in conveying them Station, near which the utiilr oo ct, is nine Prisoners in saivty, If not tidn physically. Burton canuot survive his jajuries, and bas ere this tue bly suilered the tate of all mortailty the mareh into ciphzels dare In case be accom: | ‘rom Lulkie Plishes the task, he in pledged a purse of $20,000, ‘The marc of 5,00) miles will eurry Westom from Bangor, Muine, (0 St. Paul, Minnesota, and thence | sibiy back by a diferent route to the elty of New York; | prol and it {s well calculated to-arouse the enthusiasm of ‘ ur somewhat mercurial people. On tue walk from | Iyponpant Decisio1 important decision Portland to Chicago, the distance and time | yas suet been rendered, by the New York. Court of to accomplish Ik required that the pedestrixn | Appcuis between the American Mutual Life Lusur- should make an average of forly-soven milce daily, | rance Company and the widow of an assured party. ‘ud that walk, made ina more propitious season of | The ‘payment of the insurance Was reCused on the year, called forth the wildest applause from the | ground that ber husband bad invalidated his polic thousands who, Right and day. thronged the line of | fy committing sulcides Fle Company alvo attempted march, Tp theb,000 mile march Weston will be Fe- | 49 Drovo that the Ineufed mam was an ateist or Malle quired to make an average of €S 1-7 miles, or | Gel end therefore that the suicide was Intentional, more than eleven miles in excess of the ays the deceased not having the fear of God before lim; on the road to Chicago, and this at s season of the | but ‘the Court ruled out this ae Irrelevant, and held year when rain falls aud pow inpedes the that in am action to recover fOr an insurancé upon the of'even railroad tras. If the past may be taken a8 | Life'of the deccaned, i 8 id competent to ingulre inko ‘an index to the Fature, ‘the ereater difl- | his religious faith with a view of influencing the ques Sy of the feat, the hero of the wonderful wall at | ion whether, in suen case, death Was occasloved rally around him unnumbered ( : Mion'or of accident, The Whousande to sleut hie “hame and cheer bim on bis | ent”! oe AChess theretore aah ‘ie judament ef for the. Fespoud- Weary march, Ass matter of course, Young and . “ OldAmerien will pray for bis success, for tela a Pt Sourt by giviog \ineMiy principle tat, 8 th clement of Amopiean character to credit. & i tof mocessily invalidated by balve-borm here ‘with extraordinary prowess and ulelde of fue iaaured person: to flatter themsclves with the paige ‘that Miss Anna E, Dickinson will lecture at Cooper ferns cay TF adywets warped re. “he ma for &. purse of Institute to-morrow (Thursday) evenlog—subject, ‘and star(ing on the 1et of ber, conclu A Stroggle for Life—for the benedt of the Work- Bulve. bo a trough i? GiSarent Staten, 16 counten aad ta ing Women's Unies, the is the SUNTEAMS. > =It is proposed that the Austrian army and navy shall be estabilsied on a wor footing of 80,008 =—Mile, Dejazet, the setress, who made hes début under the Fret Empire, and received her first communton a few months azo, has just been com firmed by the Arenitetop of Lyons, =—Mr. Stetson bas retired from the St. James Hotel, Boston, after a briot reason, and Mr. Baftog, the owner of the establishment, bas succeeded to the management, . =The relucipeds mania has reached Baltimore, On Wednesday lart & large concours of people am sembled st Dewid Park, to witners a race between the Hantons on these unique velicios —A Spantah Jourualist who had been sentencea to 102 years’ imprisonment, for aticcks on the gow ernment of Quecn Isabella, was one of the fret po Mueal prisoners Liberated by (he revolaion =At rchoot at Wallsend, near Neweastl, England, the master asked a class of boys the mean ing of the word “appetite,” when, after a short pause, one little bow said: “know, air, When I’ ‘eatin’ I'm ‘appy, and when I'm done U'm tg —One of the most significant and disgracefia stories of the time is that whieh dereribes the Quoes of Spain, the King bi hand, and M. Marfori paramoar, twecives all In one comb together trom the scene of their glory In Spain. —There ure aixtyaiz churches in the city os Lonieville, via,: Methodint, 16; Catholic, 11; Bptseo pal, 10; Presbycerian, 9; Baptist, 8; German Rvane keltea), 6; German Latheran, 2; Christian, ®; Jewiel, 2; Unitarian, 1 —An advertisement in the London Times om nonnees the forthcoming publicition of a first-class dally paper in which the special feature ts to be the abanndoment of the anonymons system. All the leading articles are to bear the algnatures of thelr writers, It having been hinted to a barrister who was Norrying the Court with along and dall argament that he ought to bring it to a ctose plied, “1 will speak as long us {I p have spoken longer than you please already,” sald his antagonist I wish Ehad your head,” said a Indy one day to w gentieman who had solved for her a knotty point “And f wish IT hi rt” was bie ro ply. “Well suid eho, ar hend and my heart can agree, T seewhy they should not ge Into partnership.” And “Ma, if I should d should I wear my moire antique di love; We can &arecly #uppose Ww attixe of this world in the pest, would the angels know I bei efety 1" —A stoam sloop 284 feet in length, and 1,192 tons new measurement, called the Alaska, wat lagnched at Charlestown, Mows., navy yard last Beat urday, Her battery will consist of 1 tpivot gum (ih inch) and @ broadsite guns of 65 ewe. on the gam deck; 10-1. rifle on the forceastic; 2 MID, rifles And 2 12-1b, howitzers on the poop deck, —The Providence Herald of Nov, 8 saya: The Jory of Preshyters were to have given wielr judg ment in the Hub‘ard ease yortorday, but we ander stand that some further consultation ts necesmany, 0d that the verdict will not be rendered for several days yet. It is supposed that there are some diffen eneos of opinion among the members of the cecleate astica! Court upon some of the points invo ived.” —There isa real idol temple erected and for mally established jn the United States, at Portiand Oregon, ‘The bulliling is completed, aud the Chinas men are actively engaged in furnisving it, ‘The vem Ubule contains two Lire olf globes, inside of which Juinps are burning, sy 08 (0 #liow to advantage the heathenish Ogures paluted on the outside, One of the transparencies represents cclestial warriors ov faints, rome on foot and some on borscback, Who go round and round, propelied Im some manner bye eur rent of heated w —Under the name of “Jumpers” anew seek has been formed in West Prassis, At thelr “Mare riage with the Heavenly Biilegron," as they eal it, they fall into cestarie expressed Ly wild Jump. ings. ‘The whole congrematicn rice at a eertatm moment in order to fmitaie David's dancing before the Ark. ‘This sew sect fs ehleMy reeruited from @ Village new Sintalg, where some years ago a virgig commenced proplewying with great success, until the Governinent «ent her to the Wori:ouse, on behalf of the injured wis go to Heaven, 0h No, my shall wear the “Thea, ma, how wed to the beat 20 —Crockford, on retiring from the nianagement of the club in St. James street, London, awhere gembilog was carried on openly for many years, ang large * Jost nightly, ea farew nace te bie Patrous, at which he took the opportuntty of expe on the good use Le Lad nude of the wealt® whieh he bad accumulated ut their expense, He told thew that be considered it ese Often had he fed the unery” (his euppers, free to all the habb tnés, were unexceptionable); “many were the naked whom he bad clothed on he paused for an im stant, and Lord Alvanley fir the sentence foe him, * And the rich be bad sent empty away —John Bright having been lately consulted by & Paisley elector a8 to whether Literals should stand by Mr. Crum Ewing, the old L'beral member, ot vote for Mr, Kintrea, new and more radical candle . Who was formerly an ageut tu London for th¢ federave States, replied as follows: "Lata un willing to Interfere in your election maiiers, bat tx answer to your question I cannot hositate to say that the workingman, the new elector for your burgty will in my opinion make ao gricvous mistake if b¢ attempts to remove Mr. Chun Ewing from the repre sentation of Paisley, If Mr. Kintrea was the cond tial aceut of the friends of the slaveholder, he I¢ man to oiler livaself as the representative of the now free men of thie country." — The Minister of Justice at Madrid has te ened a deerce formally ordering the immediate aap pression of all monasteries, ¢oi.\ cnts, cuapela, cone gregations, end other religious establishments, of doth sexes, founded since the Wih of July, 1897, and the transfer of all their property, movable and fm movable, to the State, The convents established ber fore 1837 are to be reduced th number by one-half and those left are forbidden hence forward to recel noviees, ‘The monk# and nuns thus releared from their cloisters can enter the conventual extabliehy ments which ore not suppres or reture to seeatay All congregations of woucu who have devoted themeetycs to the edueation of youth will be pro served. Some time in August last, a box neatly pro pared and marked “Hon, Frank P. Blair, Jr., Omala, Nebraska,” arrived nt that place by express, a was placed in the ands of the Democratic nominee, Being naturally of @ generous and coumunicative temperament, Frank invited his friends into hit room to witness the unrolling, ‘ihe cover was ro moved—thon came a hide saw-dust—thea @ pleco of thin board—them another layer of saw-dust and shavings—ond last a paper bundle about ten inehee Jong, four ineb jek, and seven inches wide, Thig Was very carefully unsealed, avd on removing the very Inner eviicla, what was displayed? W package of icke's, “Goon FoR A Pastaow UP Salt Rives, Turepay, Novemnen 8 onvy,” andan a6 fectionate note o.Jering a furtver supply of tho same article, if Mr, Bintr should think there might be more men who would like the trip. At 6 Rue Mont Thabor, Paris, once upon « tune, there was an office for a certain Mexican loury which, as an investment, was uot #o strictly remus neratlve as mizht have been wished by shareholders, In fact, arrears were due, and the office having beex closed for some time, all hope of dividend was dead and duried, The other day light was let into the shop, and that event let hope Into the minds of the sbareholders, An English company had taken the place, and guaranteed the payment, Bverything looked rosy. The office opencd; enter » mam with ® poeket-book and papers. “You are Engtiob 1 “Yes, sir,” or “Oui, monsicur” (English alwayd ‘speak French, and Freneh Englis!), when they shoald not). “Then I require four pound, sire.” “Bon, sir, four pound, Witt monsteur have tt mixed “Ob! for that, { ts mothing if I get i.” Five minutes supposed to elapse, and a large parcel offered, “Ah! itis copper? “Nu, sir, perfectly pure.” Then came the explanation, The Evglish company which liad succeeded to the Mont Thabor office was a tea company—the Licentious Victualler® (Uniimited) Tea and Toast Ansoclation—and they had guaranteed the gooduess of the cup which eheers but not inebristes, not the payment of dev parted dividends for a loan which does not eheer, bul may possibly drive to totoxication, ‘The dividend holder went away tearing his hair, and explaining thalr error to his brother suilerers, a bo!

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