Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
LBhinea for AN, The we Sun, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6. 1869 Am ments To-day. Academy of Mucle=M Trvstire. Matinen Booth's Theatre Moy Werner Matin, Bowers Theatre lire Spe) Mow FIM Avemme Theatre Sie Vm) snl She Would Net Grand Opera yume Che VMaliey Meations, RiBlote Garten Lite Nee Letts, Matioee New York Circus Nom York ret Trem on a Diymple Theatre The Str 6: New York Ban Franctace Minstrels, 5 lrstesy The Tammany The Hasions, Lend Dondrary, Ae, Wallack's stil Waiery Ku Deep Weeed's Museum Fics Fock, Matias "Newspapers Wanted. The daily popers printed ot the time, con- tatning the ful arounts of Ue destrvetion by fre of Be abd Soviely Library Bed ling in diroadway, and the dry gourds which it containe?. ———— Tiorace Greeley for Governor, The great vote for Honack Ginenev and Franz § this city is the occasion of varied ment in the proes of the C. Manor the jo Ie—forgoiting that the pewspaper press is a great power in this nifestation of new Tho Repud- country—rogant it as ar Life in the Republican licans of New ¥ says tho Audurn Neva, “did v " The Utica Herald declares that “tho city of New York @id vastly better than the " And the fool sh and disroputalle Yeo York Tinea gays that “a Republican nearly twenty-one thousand fs th Juct of the party's reonranization in the ety.” Th sis all franc fuland meaningless, The great voto of Honack Guuiey is not the work of any Republican organization. It was all done by the freo, independent press. That is the acy Gr ywor wh ch has now put Hon far alioad, and that »way in making him Governor s vote 8 enominition of Mr. Greeny for Gov ernor is heartily responded to in many quar tera, Democrats us well as Republicans, and men of no party, are for rauning him and electing him. The workingmen are for it. The young mea are for it. ‘The Ireimen are for it. The German The In dependent Press is for it. wil be done. w for it Aud it ainliin The Bible Quarrel at Cincinnati. The Beard of Education of C.neinnati has adopted a resolution prohiliting the reading of the Bible or other reliy ous books, and the singing of religious songs, in the puble schools of that city. The question of ex cluding the Bible from the schools has beeuw dscuseed there fora lone tim erable bitterness on bs favor of forbid: ite thus far. Of the twenty-two members who voted for the exclusion of the Bible, the tants, ten Catlioles, eight Free-thiukors, one was a Jew, and three are designated in the telegram of the Associated Pres ax of the ™ Nominal religion.” What this means we do not qnite understend ere were fifteen votes cast in opposition to the r eulution teen of the mir ad were Protestants, one wos al r, and two sore Jews. On the day afics ( tion was passed, an ep plieati the Judge of the £ rior ¢ with consid: Those in suceceded 6 les use hay » were Prote ich the resola- a wos niado to at on wi ut of Cinelu: nati for an injr retrain the Boant from carrying it into ef cl 1 is miated as ground of tho appheation that the Con stitution of Ohio declares relijr'on to be exven tial to good government; and henes the framers of that iasirument denied to the Board of Education any ryght to exclude all kinds of religious instruction from the whools. Tho injunction was granted, pr liminary to nhearing, when the Court will determine the merits of the question. The Ohio Stato Constitution contains the following section, which must be the one red to: * Aji men have a natural and indefensible rf Worship Almighy God prding to the dicta! Abuir O%n conse.ener, No veisun sual be e d to attend, crect, or eupport any place of worsiiip, oF ma ntan oy form of worsip, againet his consent; and no prefer nce shal) be given by law to any: re tte # of Ligious roeity; nor eho! any imereence with the rig of conselence be permitted, * # # Re lizion, morahty, and Koowhdge, however, being essential ty good government, 1. hak by the duty oF the General Aswcatbly 10 poss suitabic Tiws 9 pr toct every relizions de vosun in. the peace enuoyment Of ity own mode fnd to cwousrage schouls aud the wa on, A discussion somewhat s'milar to thet at Cincinnati is now going on in Great Brital: with reference to the schools aud higher educational institutions of Ircland, One party wishes to make the schools ¢ ansecteran in their che from them all religious inetruction, as las Deen attempted in Cincinnati, A larger party, mainly Catholics, desire tu retain rr ligious instruction, puttin worl us of AMDe 4, and to abolis a certain number of schools under the core of Catholic teachers, and a tain rumbor under the care of Protestants, the tion to be de ternined by the relative number of du population belonging to these respective de bow inations, — The Gallows ox a Gate to Meaven,s A fow days ago a murderer named Jony W. Moone was bang ville, Bond county, Hlinois, His vietan was a young woman, cighteen years of age and only a year married, Moen Lad attcmpted to out fage or in ber ow house, had pursued her ge she fled toward her sister's, and stabbed ber to death, He was himself marr od, ard had one child, On the morning of the day of Lis execution, he wrote a: follows in a letter to his wife: * Artin BuRAKeAst.—I have been out and esten Lite drewkiumt; have drmsed myseif ready Wy de rt. 1 feel culo, and my trast isin God, ‘Ts ere ave been & nto Aer Ine this inurning, = Vat Twat ved: but ny soul ie calm tn God. trusting: in in’ whose sacred presence | Well soon appear, bar T feel that Lan gong to Peet a recone! 4 fare’ Oh n heavy T ehinll de rate dod over on the May the Lord bless you, and save you for His name's fac. Gooa by." This would-be adulterer and violator and murderer here talks of lis calinnesas of soul In the very sight of death, and asserts his poufidence of golug straight to heaven, as thongands bave done under Ike cireum stances. Not only in thar own estimation, but in that of others, their crimes Lave been expiated and their evil natures tray formed Ly the piety of their lust fow morta hours, and the gallows has been to them the well-yround ‘od belief, or a mere delusion of the imogina Ie thie gate of eternal bliss. ont ‘According to the opinion of maby intelll. @ant people. the havuiness of heaven js the result, not of admission into a heavenly place, but of the acquisition in (ie soul of @ heavenly state. They hold that a man musi have heaven within, as well as around him, in omer to taste its delights; and that no matter what may be his superficial condition of mind, if he dica with « heart occupied by selfish, ernel, and dev. ilish passions, the abodes of the blessed wll be as uninhatitable by him as the air by a fish, or the depths of the oocan bya Jand animal. This is the doctrine of BWwHDL nore and of his follower Earnson, Others go farther, aud assert that all men are natu rally disqualified for heaven, and can never enter it except by a radical change of charac tor and conduct, The change, they also must be at least commenced durlig this life, and that, too, sincerely and voluntarily, No mere impression of the mind, arising from temporary excitement, will effeet it, nor yet will itavalt caused by the fear of somo impenc ys There mast, acoont ing to th s class of thinkers, bo a free ancon- strained and hearty repentanes of one’s evil couraes, and a firm purpose to avoid them in future with all one's night. Anything less than this must, they say, prove a falso Ground of hope. Viewed in this light, the class of thinkers that weare speaking of, aryne that the mental cond.tion of @ condumned criminal awaiting the gallows must be such as to render his chances of heaven more doubt(ul than they are commonly supposed to be. His repentance may bo sincere and thorough; bat heis Li y or sign some paper, Were he at perfect borty he might possibly comply with the demand; and the pistol may really not control hs action; but every one will admit that this is by no means certain, S80, when ® man under seutouce of death, moved by the dread of the unknown futare Sato which is about to be launched, betakes himself to pious language and practices, and even attains to the ecstasy of religious enthu- sinsm as did that brutal murderer ANTON Proust in Philadelphia, we may pos: Uly believe him to be sincere, and accept his repentance as genuine, but, at the same time, the common sense of mankind generally pults it. A zealous defender of the death penalty for murder once gave as a reason for its rigid enforcement in all cases when onc pronounced, without interference from ex- ecutive clemency, that, in his experienco, wherever a criminal had thus escaped the gallows, the pious contrition whieh had becn previously developed in him was dissipated, and he relapsed into his former evil habits. He therefore humanely insisted that this calamity should bo prevented by hanging the man and thus giving him no chance to Apart Tt does not scem to have occur- rod tohim, as it does not seem to occur to many other good people, that a piety wh eh will not stand the wear of life in ths world may not be of any permancnt value in the world to come. Aud so Joun W, Moonr, edifying, as state of mind woald apperr to have been, while awaiting hia death on tho gallows, may have been really uo better a man than le was whea he com mitted tho crimo for which he euffered ; though we must charitably hope that he bad really become reformod, and was not mercly under a delusion. But it should not be for- cotton that the only eure reformation is that on voluntarily and perse- nd in through all diffleultivs and #2) fait uros; and that a good life with a sincere offurt to obey the divine laws fs better and safer than a sudden excitement of the mind under fear of death, and a religious spasm of 20 the imagination that after all may Le un- founded and deceptive. Poor You Why does not Mr, Joun Russrenn Youxa notice his libel suit against ‘Tum SUN for trial? Has not the assistance of 8, B, Cure. Tenpin's hired assassins of character availed him anything ? Youna is very much in the condition of the country deacon who went home one evening and complained to his wife that he had been abused down at the store shamefully. One of the neighbors, he said, called him a lisr, His wife's eyes flashed with indignation, “Why dida’t you tell him to prove itt” she exclaimed, That's the very thing — that's the trou le,” replied the husband ; that's just what Tdid do; Ttold him to prove it, and he dil prove it.” Youna swore that we had Lreaght him into peat contempt by aceusing him of de fraud ng the Associated Pross, We proved jon true, and rather conclude that we shail not have to pay for bringing hia nto contempt the acew Tet Youna trot up his libel suit, Te will Le nmustog, Tho J tte will publish 1s likeness whea it comes on, and our readers Will havo hearty laugh over the Videnee, and over the speceh af cur counsel, whieh will undoubtedly Le very funny Bring on the suit, Let as have the uial afore Youna becomes OLD, because we ean beat hon easier in his present character (han it ean be chs jred, — O1iyen DyEn is to repeat b's lecture on “Tow to Escupe Hell” at the ball of the Adul- pli Academy, Lafayette avenue, Brooklyn, to- morrow evening, Thisis the same lecture that was delivered at Cooper Union last Sunday, and for having advertised whieh the Methodist Chr tian Adcocate apologized to ity readers, denounce: tae intolerable”? and “inexcusable.” Mr, Drnute theology may not accord with that com- monly received as orthodox, but those who Lave in any for whi heard him say that he talks good common sense, and that if his advice were followed the wor would be greatly improved, z Ane The World, in commenting upon the re. sult of the election in this State, takes occasion to com and disparage the Democracy of the metropolis, “The city Democracy,” says the World, aclous of their streu aspiring and dictatorial, Aisproportio , | cils of the party, contemp! in the recent election aolely to the exertions (OC om heat het ote, fo my a fa ae ; cy 0 itty thereby showin the rural Democracy, the TWorld hurls ta elite | ee CPoss trewde. pergetsuted by the rag in thie went the Democracy of the interior con. th, have inclined to be too Assuming that the success of the yarty in the State depended apon them, aud that defeat or victory rested in their banda, they bave felt themselves entitled We 10 influence in the general conn In the hast State Convention this claim was not admitted; nay, it was treated | Qvurt, and knowing the samo tw be true in every 1 | with something bearing a strong resemblance to Attributing the success of the party | yw in the very fuce of St. Tammany, ‘The rural Democracy,” says the orgea of the Manhattan | valuable Su." Club, have learned by exporionoe that it is safe to renist the claime of the Taumany leaders and | Attorney and Couusullor at how. 2 Chambare street, THE SUN follow their own Judament, They hove foutd thet self-reliance is not a source of weaknowa, but of strength, The result of this experiment will encourage the spirit which prevailed in the last State Convention, and must have an important influence on the positia> and prospects of the party, which grows fn esength and respectabil. nthe country towns fn proportion ws it dine avows any complicity with, or responsibility for, the abuses which are charged upon the Tammany ring.” If those bitter and contemptuous taunts wero uttered by the Zridune, the Taminany braves, ond the rank and file who follow their trail on the war path, would take them as a matter of course, How they will relish them when coming a Journal which arrogates to itself the lend. of the party, not in this eity only, but thronghout the Northern and Eustern States, remains to be seen, The London Tiines declares that Pio Nono can only be universal Pontiff on condition of bis ceasing to bean Ttalian sovereign; but Cardinal Axrovettr and his coadjucorsin the Vatican do not see itexactly in that light, and the eopious contributions of money to the Pope are use the coutrary, Or the strengthening of the tem: poral power of the Papacy. If the Pope were to relinquish bis cliins ws rater of the Pontifical tates, Vieror Eaaxcen would at once take pos a of Rome as the capital of Luly, and the al mission of the Gcuinenical Couneil ia to hes polit avert procisely that catastrophe, ‘The practical question reduces itself simply to the duration of Navotros's occupation of the Eternal City, As soon as the Papiey shall be left to ft own mitie tary and pecuniary resources, it will couse to exist asa temporal power, thoagh, as the head of the an Catholic Church, the Holy Father will to exercise an immense influeuce for generations to come. aii 8. B. Curerenpin’s Hired Assassina of character, like other criminals, are weak, fool- ish, and impotent, But Lattia Cur is none the less re ponsibl a ‘Those partisaus of Spain who have been hoping that no representative of the Cuban epublie would intervene in the ease of tho stoaincr Cuba are destined to be disappointed. Gon, Casraves has specially authorized Captain Hiaeins to appear and claim the veascl, and he Will do so before the 29th inst, when the time to answor the libelexpires, The trial will take place early in Decomber. One of our correspondents has been visit- ing Gen, Lur's College at Lexington, Va, and sums up his impressions of the influences at work there by saying that “the College seoms to be conducting, on @ larger scaly, the samo sort of intellectual propagation which Cattoow and his colleagues conducted a quarter of a century ago.” We suppose that this must be the truth, and that Gen, Lue is more or less directly in- stilling into the minds of nearly four hundred young men the heresies which made him a rebel and a traitor, and doing it with the added weight ot his own personal ebaractor, A single instance Will suffice to slow the reul tone of the teaching at Washington College, We quote from Gen, '# late official report a8 President. He giv a plan for a new department, an agricultural school where acientilic principles and processes may be epplied and illustrated, Similar schools," he says, “have been found useful else- where, and (he absence of any such in our State furnishes an additional argument for its org zation.” It is scarcely probable that Gea, Lee rant of the existence of an admirable J and Agricultural School at Hamptor inia, which has been in operation since April, 1868, with a farm of one hundred and twenty-five acres, with a corps of skilled teache Vabout seventy adult scholars, who are instructed th retically and practically in all the best methods of agriculture, A distinguished committee, consisting of Prosi- dent Horxixs of Willi ns College, Avex. Hype, of the Board of Agriculture, Mass., Mr. Nonvanor, Seeretu of the Board of Education of Con- necticut, and Gen, Gaxrieio of Ohio, whose report has been published, lately visited this school, and ray they do not hesi- fate to. speek with satisfaction and bigh hope of its condition and prospects, Mr. Hype writes to the Springfield Zepublican that, though conversant with the schools and farms of « SATURDAY. Massachiusetts, he has seldom heard betier recita: tions or seen better farming than are furnished by the Hompton school and its black students. The last word no doubt explains Gen, Lee's siMzular ignorance. For this Hampton school, while recognizing no distinction of color, is more a favorite with the negroes, Gen, Lux teaches only whites, and it is in behalf only of these sons of rebels that he and his trustees solicit Norther aid, The North should see to it that its private bencfactions and its public grauts are at loast fairly devided between the sons of its enemies and the sons of its friends ; and that the claim of euch a school as the one at Hampton, wheve intelilgent young men are in training as patriotic citizens as well as skilled agriculturists, should uot be over-looked, —— The name of Mr. James C, Voonmmrs for tho Court of Common Pleas has been received with marked favor by the bar generally, It is now said that Mr, Sea is not desirous of @ scat on the bench unless upon the Supreme bench, and that Mr, Voouuees will almost certainly be appointed, al eh We learn that Gen. Jou A. Dre will probably succeed Gen, Dasict Berrenrneno as Aspistant Treasurer, ——— The following daily sal s of newspapers fare reported tou Gyo) 0 Moone, Thind avenue New ¥ nd Forty fourth street, Sox NO) Herald a) trtbon La aes World nies w Mr. Staxpren, di Third avantion N GS Worn d ae HennToy, #2 Fourth ayenne— sun 4 Heralds. . THUGS es 4 Tw i Wort ese Summary of these three news deers sux sree aN csrsavinny wy Trfoaie Tune " RAEN Timer abead of World, ait Will the disreputable Times and the World please republish these stutistios for the informa tom of their limited circle of readers? ——— FB. A. Conkliug tor Assistant Treasurer, To the Biditor of The Sun, Sin: To-doy you have done a glorious: act in nominating Horace Greeley fur the uext Governor of New York. To-worrow add kindled ip the bes more fuel to the Name you have (» of all honcet wen, and noni nate Col, ;Frederieck A, Conkling for the next As sistant Treasurer of New York, A_ gentleman more worthy and quaiitied eannot be found, Reepeetfuly yours, Fo. University place, Nov. 4, 14 War Declared a ot je Kan ry Come Forward and t Your Righ Te the Editor of The Sun, 1x: Having noticed an article in your issue of this date in reverence to the Jadgesiap of Marine Good Ci vp Regain we'l as the Ninetecnth, I thronzh your columns that ‘ite of all per roepeet In other ws y IMLER Es ‘ canvass, oad shinee “ey A OO PDOMAS W, KEARNEY. place in your 4 LETTER FROM 4 4 ER. Diels Manifero Ae is a Gombler and a Cuban, bat co Thief My Refers to of the Higheat ic escetabihtys To the Editor of The d% Sim: In yesterday’ « yor paper there isan article headed * ont charging that individual with being © vndrel, and vuilain generally 01 5 4 have bern #0 Jong and #0 well kno ee Sor. by the eobrt quet of * Bpanith Dicer © iy terons article in quention, In connect!)” with personal efre cuinstances which your. “onure! has so falsniy and maliciously embe: st 4, ( ere unnot be any doubt as to who was intended to de shown up. I denounce the article as false in every particular, and the writer os a cowardly slanderer, whose only was personal, malicious malignity, bidten fubterfoge and ainctuary of @ public Paper, but {which he dare not make good ia the Tam a gambler and 1 Cuban, bat am not, nor have I ever been, @ thief, robber, deserter. spy, or Ine former; and T once acain most positively and em: Phatically denounce the writer of the article headed Spanish Dick” as « icious, villanons *coun- deel; and as he save that Fean pe seen any ev ning on Broadway, between the New Yorkand St. Denis hotels, he knows where to find me If he wants me; but ff he will put his name to Ms commnnications, Ae Ido mine to this, I will save him the trouble of banting me up. 1 you wish any reference as ty the Felinbility of my atatements, I give you the names of Sefiors PFernaniter Bramosio (lasyer), Fernandes Crindo (planter), Joe4 Romero (meretant)=all gene Memen of w lth and the highest respectatlity, and now tn New York city, and I contd give many more if necessary. Respectfally, RICARDO TAJON Furpar, Nov. 6, 1409. ; icici MOSHYS MURDELOUS WAR RECORD, esate Monstrona Butcherivs now fret made Koown—Indiguant Protest from a Uatow Soldier. Tb the Batitor of The Sun. fia: I see in your varied columns that the rebel outlaw Mosby Is bragging of his offur with the brave Union Col, Boyd, formerly of my reg ment. Boyd would have dishonored himrelf by ae- cepting a challenge from an outlaw. {le sLon!d, low ve shot the Insulting rebel down on the #pot, and meted out to the marderer of Unton men and the stripper of Union women his Just deserts, ‘The following two exploits of te eliivalric Mosby, not generally known, may serve your renders in forming an {dea of the character of the tain, In October, 1864, an express train between Harper's Ferry and Martinsburg was attacked by Mosby and his command, and Mra. ©. W, Toll wite of Col. Toles, Chief Quartermaster on Gen, Sheridan's stoff, her child and sister, and the ott er passengers were turned ont destitute an! unprotected, the train being roboed and burned At the sume time Col. Tolles himself, whiie on tis way with two orderlics to Cedar Creek, wher bis BIA. . OV EMBER 6, ——_— CO OO - Cc. cr eer formed lay, Was sbot by the sume outlow, and died tn Winchester, in the presence of his bea tbroken and destitute wife, who bal been stripped of all by (The outlaw also hanzed, five ac. the villion Mealy, agglors at Berryvilie to my knowledge. that he daring man, but constructed rebel und a murderous 0 rves noayinvatiy, Lreman, enclosing my card, you etiitly, A UNION BOLDIN. P,8.—Mosby wants Northern, men with capital te © Soh. No doubt to give him a chance to steal he eaniiai, and have the ettier buswacaed if be coniplains, —— AMUSEMENTS. - ue ITALIAN Orena —Mise ©, TL. ined her exaited position ox a prima downs in Don! ta'e opera of "Linda di Cuamouni,” at the Ac emy of Music Inst evering Mme, Collin, Signor Ronco, Herr Habeluas aud Miss Kellogg will ap. pear on Monday evening in Crispino.” The Aca emy was Iniernily crowded lat might, * Trovatore™ will be xiven at the matinde to-day. Kellorg matn- pana The Philharmonic Sense ‘The sale of the Academy boxes for the present season of the Phiharmonie Sucety takes plue: this morning at the Acadeiny of Music, Any four hoid- ers of tickers, by the payment of $5 cacs extra, ewn have « box secured to them fur the sia concerts and cighteen rebeareats, ‘The expense is not very great. Tu all, twenty-forr performances are given of the Dest orehesiral music ever written, and by an or- chestra that bas not 18 equal on this continent. The averse cont of tneh extertelament i sbout mIxty cents, for whieh the eubseriber hes his wea tna roomy and comfortable box seeured to nim, Fuoch Arden ot Booths. This drama will be withdrawn fier to-night, Although it will then only have been perur ccd fcven times, It may Le endorsed as most sn 1 for a Sacnrday mighvs pay, witn a week's forgetial- 88 between cach representation: and its unthor, Mr. Artior ison, may be congratulated on suica success, on the fine opportunity wilorde! nim by the prestige of Booth's ‘Theatre, and on the ad- mirabie wise en ecdne bis drama enjoved. We do not, Lowever, tid “ Enoch Arden” farewell, Ti hos bern eo cenerally ertecmed that we may fairly ex Peet to Ave At revived one of these days, oO American Artin the Actdemy. To the Exitor af The Sun, " a8 in entitiod "The Artists couveyed that there are no. Wbitien partion: me trom the Si ydan Usts. “There i an ardicle 'n th the iden 91 foreigu empertority and Ws SUL ore cmpliatically express DHe Abus: and want of consciE WS Is to be exe from tie Tribune in art matters, but why THe SN. ould De ko ObIIV Ou® To every Lig DLE AT ALel for Henefit w one. is Not eo eaRy headed. Ly sel to devy the tr i Winter Pets nth . pietn di represent to any ire the Aca emy uf Dosis. but vate co leet O08 pictures hibition oy Americaa artieta) which are of first-rate mnertts batt tole letter Tan @ suming a new and pe me few by tore ga ‘also, ‘GL course moth ny y Hietn: on tothe wechauienl trash pent Mere ae thie kof great mien, Tdo bot kiow, The) wast eeu’ heme el ves, I am snre, that tho impudent, reckl Meh e nena y appea of our ) Bale, haviig the effect, In a) American artist, iy sometht Yours t vuraals octtnlty i BO. INNES. We give place to Mr. Inneasts protest, Rear’ ae an exhibition of calm egotism, It isa mastery ‘The article of which Mr. Thness compliins, afer referring to notable works by Honeb and Schrercr, stated that there were also paintiney ov exibition of much merit by huntineton, De Haus, Knight, and others, to which further reference would be made ina subsequentarticle, We omit d to mention the name of Nv, Innes, ‘That geoutic tan has menitoned his own name. He has referred to tt in sirvking If not in modest terms, Tle has given himself a first-cliss notice in fourth-class English, lo fact, if Me. luwess were as clumay with lis pencil ashe is with his pen, his plv- tures would certainly not be worth; the exalted rank he gives them. Ills final tangle of words, con taining the nesnrance that the tmpadent, reckless articles, &e,, Is something of winch our journals should be arhamed,” is 4 6ad spectacle for the gram marian, Verte, Mr. Tones, agree with thelr nom: natives even in the fiercest paroxysme of Indig. tion, But to come to the point, we heart ly concur with Mir. Inness in bir estimation of timseif, Th are people who object to his methods, and disiike is pletures, but we are not of them. A year ago, When the Academy gave {ts exlitot tion, we referred to the landscapes in these words: It is astonishing how poor, and weak, and frivolous they are for the most part; feeble and eramped ; Licking boldness and breadth ; the work of cautlous scbolurs, and not of artists, Mr. George Inness fare nisbes the excevtion, Hin landsespe is a picture ivi fine expression to @ right and true fee for nature, Oroadly han jled, larmonions, ful; without attempt at detall, and yet with all detail suM@ctently suxgesied—the perspective the picture alive with atmosyhere,” ‘These rewarks were written a year sinc ad after a careful stu iy of Uhisartiat’s pletures, They aro equally true of, ‘and equaily applicable to, the four landscapes that he as sont to the ealubiuon year, Mr, Inness humagif we have never seen, but his paintings pave always been a delight to ns in contrast with the ef feminate style that characteriacs the efforts of ro muny of OUF artists, and Uhat gives us plewures tone and character ot © ‘We shouki be glad to fing one, oF eveu that it 1s up to the uverige eelience; but we cannot, Tu fact, Kan rei ‘there are some old works of be: exhibition a doze of which our Ku jete 1869, WAR OF THE DEMOCRACY. THE DEMOCRATIC FIELD MARSHAL. peek Renewal of the Tweed-f: Imont Mostilities— Tlow » Poor Boy worked himself up to he Leadership of the Kuting Party of « Great State-Tho Amcricnn Mt, Patrick. The overwhelming Demoeratic vietory in this State bes given aa impetus to tue pretensions of the Tlon, Wm, M. Tweed, whic promises to oust the Hon, Auguetns Belmont from the leadership of the National Demoeracy. In view of the coming fixtit, A short eketep of Mr, Tweed's life will be read with not only by the large majority of Lis adhe- . but by his few opponents as well. Born in Cherry street in the year 1822, he labored dnring boyhood in bis father's business, bat soon rose by the force of bis indomitable will and Fuper- human verseverance to the proud position of a lead: {ng politician and the ruling power in the Tammany councils, Eis present extracrdinary popularity hod Ite birth In his connection with the famous Ameri: cus Engine Company, better known as “ Big in the orgentaation of whieh he took an netive part, and of wich his tmmense superiority i ali winch rendered a New York volunteer fireman beloved and admired soon gained him tie cavisble honor of foreman. Tis political carrer bevan tn 1850, when he ran for Assistont Alderimin of the Seventh Ward against Mr. Joho B, Webb, ana after @ close and exciting contest, was defeated by avery euall majortiy ‘This bad only the effet of arousing hie dorm energy. This apparent providential interpotitia did not have the desired effect, and in the following year he deseated Mr. Webo for Alderman, though all the Whig influence was thrown iu tue iatter's favor, In 1952 ho was elected to Congrees from the Fifty District, beoting Me. Hoxie, who way then an Influential politician, end was supported by tho great) wealth and influence of his party. While Im Congress be took a promi. nent part in national affairs, and was looked upon by the Democratic members as one whose practical, statesmanitke elews were entitied to the greatest cons'deration, Tha term was rendere | memorible to tee Demoer tie heart by the Introduction of tie Stephen A, Dougls Kansas Nebraska bill, and Mr. Tweed, thonzh lookin wpon the bill vs anwise and impoutic, hike @ true and noble Demoerstas he was, stood by lis party and enpoorted the Admfnistration. He refers to the fact with an honest pride that this very bill reopened the whole vexed quest on of Slavery eatensiou, whica rp.vel inte the rebellion of Leu), In 1855 he took sneha fl famous Know Nothing parcy ed him to the grest Irish heart of the metropo Hie reward for this Roman sacrifice to principle was his defeat during the following year for Alderman, by Mr. Fox. i 1h: 134 he was elected School Commissioner, and {t was chiefly owing to bis inGiuence and exertions tbat thousands of crpaane and destitule ebildren have Deen resened froma The of vice and misery. and eduented and eared tor in those noble charitable insutudens on Kendall's Istand. The picule w he gave last yoar to these little o wn his beauutal residence In Connectient, attests what a jarce corner they have In wis unse.finis he rt, Tn 1837 he ran for Snyervisor, and, althonch op- pored by the Know-Nothings and Kepubiicany, he Was clected by # large major.ty Io 1361 he ran for Bheruif, bat, owing to a strone whinaion ageinst fim, «as vated by @ mali ngjority, He was appointed Depuly Street Cominis over in TBC nd hae done meaitiable service to the erty by lis adJily and firmucss in We discharge of that eMce, and alxo of the office of Supervisor, (0 whieli he hasbeen r ly elected by inereusing majorities, He was again elected Scuntor from tho Fourth Dist-let tn 1:67, and on ‘Tuesday was agen ected to the same oftice, ‘Lbough Mr. Tweed was opposed to the carrylig of the War, still Wien It Was insngureted ie did not forget his alleghince to his country und to hie flag, He was Chairman. of the Committee deputed by the Boara of Supervivors to funds for its Brosecution, ant took an active part in. the equip Kanization of several New York regi Liat political contest was in 168, when Was opposed for Supervisor by Mr, Chandler as a nm Demver can hdate, but he bad a inejertty ever the comb! d voles of Cusnaler end the Re- publican candidate, re Uo los cisplived considerable ability as State Senator, ond was instrumental hn the passage of the Broosdys Bridge dill, the estabitslanent 0 for ehiiiren on Randail’s Tsand, and otoor tcagures, Mr, ‘Tweed is stil in the prime of lite, and a iad of robust frame and vigorous habits. I how great tact, slivewd Awa speaker, Le 14 terse, pointed, and fore his clear judgment, excentve abilities, and rest ponularaty «1 tue! peopies have given lnm a eon trolling Influence in the management of ‘Tammany Heli. Ws popularity was shown b, the eucerness With which the press North and South took ap brs ame, When starved by THE SUN, in oppomti Me, Heln nnd his inereartng popularity as to make bina streng eprosien candidate to Mr Lofliian or the next nonination for Governur, fn i Inacenrney ofthe Writer whe Called Horace fey a Poor Business Mu From the Hui (ford Conrant, niows Mr. on has one very bad habii—that of gc at halicoek, He hastily Kects a few lucie and then knocks of in the twtukiing of an cye a generalization which Is very neat, and wonld be very iatructive if Me, Parton only had Kuown What he War taking about, Here, ce. be fia mn the accounts of the Clore of of Roprescntat.ves a large sum set down for’ portemonnaics. peakuives, and the Wee simati gear, ant at once rashes inte print to ae: hounce tae reckless extruvagunce of Congressinen, 1. he bad. only waited long enough to make a litte inquiry into tue matter, he would have found out that Congre n pay the Government for what ar- sot they desire, and. tha Femaining wusold last session ay waluing jor tie customers of this. thy course, the general public would indeed huve lost a “xpiey" tmugvzime article, bat Parion himself wouid bave dene something toward gaining a repmtauion for aecuraey, a repatation whieh Is not wholly wortuless even to! the must brillant back wniter, ————_—— Mow one of Gon, Grant's Cousuls was Re= moved, From the Chicugo Tribune. A letter has been fished up by George M. Towle—a er young hierary man and Consul to Bradford, Engiand—written by Ex-Presicd john A *, tO the efleet that Washigion bud been “hy per-sensative” about appointing his reiutive omer, that relationsoip, conpied with fitness, Was faruer ® good reason for Apporuting, Warhingtion, who did not beheve President exit ye we tolowed by wit ighoninously bora wed his Iso the ariel: ‘on the shelves Had he purseed erved ns vidsscal ehuagier is equivocal, wud i ely qity ed Bue aiiy Was General Grant mn with th of Adame, so kindly revived oy ‘Vowle im the last Galary magiaine, that be *iraiglit= Wey removed Towle irum the Bradiord Cousulat aig put there bis veg Tivins by old Jui nntanice, W. I, Seliced, Pendleton not Dead Yet. Prom the breemas'4 Journal, 1 gentiesca! You ecanmot thus dispateh so ota vention, ax Mr. Pendleton, die hue, this all uver ihe country, more (lends, and more AcVOLod wimircs, thou he vaon tue day tue Na tional Deu oeratic Convention tet im New. York, last year. This iy not saying that he is going to Le ven a cindidate io: President, iu 1872. cep impudent Uut honest frlonds of ie about bin im that reward; bat, Without consulaug Miwat all, We ure sure bee on advocacy, But atthe sane tm 7 fo Who wixes. with the of knows, own Governor Hollman tals nomination, there sno one vp al ould be baited in drverting Wut 1 obtaining this vrowd” lind that with #0 eHthusiustie an an imwtnent by of New York as Mr, Lenulcte even, are reduced to te wre “yf calling Blin * Gentleman George they can iy no Oller curtge to bis account tuan that He ik mw rue genternan.” Democrats velivve in gentlemen. Dew Crais Know that « rea! ecntiemun is the best friend 0! every honest kind of peop.e, nd espechilly of the imborig men, They tat opress peopie wre your forcld Men—not sentlewend, Lub VUL IAL position, tucy are Hot MG to Hil, oe Kod of the Goll From ike Cnie ya Pribune Dan Butterfield, it seems, is hanging on the verge of the Turpelan rock. Mis tuner as aw very We many aed Din sail the ety of v ind Seymour em LO, mistige, und public dee alle Londly val, ‘The exposu the gard ligne ull, & triumph of modern wipe clewi—this irreverent “rik ng ol Yin OUL Of the cobweon of larly years Of intrigue, sta cutug Buctertiold like a fly entrappe 1s Bins, Goal, Lene & Co. to be the spiders that Ciey wre. Dan bitert ka sod Tews uaglit taan any body of this pool to go ano specu dso he Why the gon OF w Very rich ivan 604 recor, and hO}ored Ww! respon: Grant is auld to be very mach ier ised AL Corbin, as he ought to be, Corbin seems to be thoraily incapable Of sativiving bis greed tor moncy ind tor chicanery, He is a nad aitache to auy em: heut Lous aud, as tho Chicago Tritine ong avo Teibarkel, this business of setting one's relatives tn power 1 bad republicanisin aud iaise poncy, the va Four ¥ unknowa to Bither, A suit for $5,000 a year alimony and the eus- tody of a child, the survivor of thre has been begus in St, Lome by Lucy Hall aeanst Benjamin L. A of that eity, He ie elated that Duiple ‘married in Terre Hoate, July 18, 1565, bat that sie place. 1 Two Wives an has some hiv jetures, ‘entle charm which “sh nee. Uiroug! ‘edder uus a firm, strong all etre, and by manly, wastes are Lie work. ‘Wwe walls aro here and there reliev: vi wi ‘ut the 1 efforts jul experimen bhod eropings in the great labyrintue of art, Oro! dant had usly been married to without ber knowledges nor did act untit she had borne jim three ‘the nephew of the live nd 1 th Bt. Lows Has wife wii wk & hivores THE ONONDAGA GIANT RAISED, —- The Mvetery Deeper thna Ever—No Ei of the Back—The Colossns Moved to Sy« aace —Investigntions by Scent Tiactse, Nov. S—-The Cardil stone giant was this afternoon successfully raised from the vlace where tt wae discovered and bronght to Syracuse, Tt was teund to be as perfect on the back, on whielt It lay on {te chiy bed, ae on the eurfnee frst exposed to viow, Professor fill and Dr. Woolworth, who were present, fay that the wonder Increases in inter: est the mor* known of it, They are collecting data and prosecnting Inqairien, the reanlts of whieh will he embodied in the formal report of the eientifie 1n- veatigation soon to be given to the public, peeibbseneny The Wonder not a Petrified Dody, but tho Work of a Chinet. Prom the Rochester Democrat. Professor Ward wrote the following postscript to tis account of the Cordiff giant yosterd r ply a communication ia the mornings Demo. craf, Dntas there wae not time to put it in print, we Josert it to-day: P. 8.—Since writing the abovs Lhave mornin’. Demeeral_the * O:inion of an M.D. on the Cordiff Giant.” The writer say ‘unm testimony i good for anything, exenples of this change (Fetri‘cetion of a Luan boay) have been d's covered repeatedly.” ‘This Is amatter of fact, and not of opinion, Con Dr. Brow ow Us any Rpectmen, ever go small or fragwentary, of fossil Woman Mesa? Ca ie even reer is ty wee cntibe desert tion of such « case in the pages of his medica! htera. tore? The facuity have over been on the alert to observe nnd record itieresiing Parhologieal Guses, and theic observations ard opinions cary convic however treqnent taining any q seit Aven fossi fhosh F en in this of the pro Ces of pe ate, ne he does. in who ing the Onondavo’« 4a pure The change of corpe them —to te elre, Mh case of the preservat! fleali, but not of Ite petrifuetia stance, thas generated. 18 some mere dense than the original fat, but it is not wholly placed beyond the influence of decompesition, Tis Jun organic body, with no mineraliaing what ever; inteed, tts tity, wary structure keeps it quite beyond’ the “reach of those permeniing solutions by which mineral substitation Get rituction) js induead. A case much more nvorly allied — to” petrifieiion ie tht of Uke mummies found In the guano beds of te Pes invian islands, Here the b # had el corrtton tion prevented by the Hine, um tacr dis: Infectant salts of whi nes have been yatmrally injec thaed in all their t Ano whieh have crys+ dergove a translormation ough an tnfo nattiral tani 2 are ry goo! fossil ‘They will not decompose tn ordin apherie influences; they ao and “somewnut brittle; they “are often heavier in actual corpse of the fize, But expose them to grevt heat or to mosture, and see what will become of them, The organic matter 1s atill there; there has been my anbetitution, ao petrifaction. If the Onondaga giant were a human body, # section across one of Its lege or arms would show tue dispo- sition of the bone and flex —the eyludrical outline Of the former, and the muscle fheein of the Initer Thi section thay verbaps be made to satiety the minds of inquirers, or {t may occur by accidental facture in removing the body, ed, We ure ready to assert, and as against the petrifietion theory on the asscrtion, tno central bone oF ne Lines of mnscular bund On the other hand, wherever the ee- Hon be tiken, across a leg or arm, across the body skull, we spall capect lo see the plun parallel hace of ceposition of tue original rock TILE DOOM OF MORMONISM. —_—— However accompli y stuke our repntation Brigham Young's Confession~A D——d Poor Religion that Stand one Rat\rond— ViecePrenident Colfax's Speceh In Salt Luke City~Vae Speech of a Murderer. Mr, Samuel Bowles, the editor of the Spring- Held Heudiican, has just made a visit to Salt Lake Cliy, ond las written a letter to his paper giving an mteresting account of the present condition of ai (aire among the Mormons, Ie visited Salt Lake tn 1863; and this second trip Las enabled him to judge tnteliyently of the progress made there during ‘the past four years, ‘The Pucific Railroad does not run direct to Salt Lake City, Lut there is to be a branch rond from Og- den, on the main line in the valley, forty miles dis- taut. ‘The rullroad has destroyed wach monopol, of the trade of the interior sett!ement was formerly enjoyed by the city; but the eity inci’ docs not mas yot much change: Ke fs very fertile, and haa 0 for two ye fifty pustiels of wh ve year nave, yielaed v. ni n of the nal don the moans Great feel Ly which they are twonifested hy composed of equal num nd dieneilew, whe only one 1. Mr, Col: fax spoke of Brigha romark, that Grant sna Colinx were * 4 drunkards. Ove of the Mormons In the crow never ead 60; but a Jew Uontile, wear by, answered that he heard’ the words himse'f’ Consequently the Mormon attacked the Jew with his fists, and got budly dameged, Mis opponent was sent to. Jail 10F the bigot, aud dued tue next day by a mon mngietrate. Atter Mr, Colfax's gpeech, Porter Rowcwoll, * foader of the Dinltes. addressed thy ¢ Dinites are the churel assassins, and for many. years this Rock wed has nb cinployed to dispo: Mormon sants by murder, Tis was lis spe weite’s book t vd that Young aad everyone cfs tempts ot. and cries tron Ovi (Ate Pai umm dows, and chuers ‘Goon, Ww fed U8 Pteli, luk me alone, Pay A never witic T vever iy (8e 1 tie . you I'm Kony wo omy A tell You. fy iti, but we Hea greatdeal wore beautirol If at huda't be e Aon grashoplere, | (Loughior and youd cheers fron jhe ‘ | 1 tel) you'm coms to write a book, ant Ln going to tell. Yon Trom ine there Lkuow ery one, Tea y your backs, and you Vor get away trou Lies OF GOOD, teil ed ip vuling lin down of, sill struggling and Tro the stand, protesting iat be i gotug to toll.) Brigham Young's policy in reference to trade b bern 10 coutine the Mormon business to Aormon merchants, ‘This has oroved temporarily success. ful. The principal Mormon traders have been torced to aneremier their business to Mormon eodperative stores, up the operstic however, o All these estabilshments are fore Holiness to the Lord. Churen Go- or something similar, 'Tuere 18, » Gentle finn in Bit Lake City whtell does ao so Dianrse and audersvite the Mors mons; Dut the fathiul ure, for the most purt, airaid to buy there ‘The perseention of the Gentiles has driven many of them to Corinne, @ growing place on the Pucitio Hailrowd at the b ye valley, wlaty alles from halt take. Twill be made te establisi the capt'al of the Territery there, The Eyisecrahiaus “form the prinetpal Christian Jenommacion in Utah, At Sait Like City they have n eh oo}, both ver r The evan rally bealtuy ere has sprung upa ng children here, qui 1 of the Kast. The Mor scmploy no doctors, or very rarely, Wusting e witelligenee of the mothers, and to tha tying nis by the biahops, to cure erten of sickness, wives think# that intercourse between the rest of the World will destroy polygamy in Uta. ‘Phe dynasty of Kricham Yeung Is cerca to die with lim, ‘The Pacitic Kailroud bis borne to Wig sun's Of Salt Lake City the Anevitable oom of their sucred Wetiutions; od, as Ar, yowles writen: "Whether it was bravado or spied Bri, ham Ye oor religion At it fehiver ave ye wilverse gud tind wa to th ito pat mu tot on oft Me Mormons and th conceit that ine eto pay that this was a dan ouklo’e stant Ope rariroad,’ af 4 more, Le will have to acept’ the Wont Upon bits religi or change bis power of a rallte ————— The Infam bby Agent of Rochester, From the Triduce, The Rochester Union chatyes the Rochester Democrat aud its proprietor, Mr, DOD. 8, Brow ny Wt having sold out the Republican eandiduty for Senator, ine Hon, Frederick P. Root. 1 presents the ‘act'that Mr. "Brown dictated the formation of the Repabiican Connty Committee ; that this Come mittee gave the printing 3€ the tlekets to Mir, wn's establishment, and also that counterfeit tickets were printed at the Democrat office. 4, that Me, Brown betrayed Lis party by causing the Republican ticket to be printed with the mane of Nr. Root’s Democratic oppournt put in the plice « tis'own. ELere is no denying the fet,” sayy the C that the Republiean candidate for Sen nv the machinations of K Albany lobby ring, hoaued by DD, 8. abrown.” _—————— reeley Ran Abend of Sig From the Albany Argus, head of Sigel in Now York, which lo the Imsh vote, It is dne, how Us of the eity prome (Tale SUN itera! by or ot the head Many thousunad Southerners ", their Greeley, sige nifled their grativude to the by 4 Seif. Davia. ‘The veohibitory crgunigations must have cut gel, not only in Now York—where be was belind Gree: Hatin the rvral districts, ‘Tho nativiet eloment Ino scratched Bigel in all parte State ‘The eanvane of votes, When completed, Will lnake Some strange Fevelacion re Deposit your surplus evrnings in the Mutual Beueit Suvings Ban's tn the Sun Building.—Ade, — Why Me Greeley wai rom SUNT EAMS. — —Divores be hi of thee in Poa ad for @5 of a colored Jus ~A posthumous oratorlo of Be: i to bard bees discovered in Vienna, rch —Rock county, Wiseons hea attained tne age of arty yeore, 2 © Eon which —A Nevada editor says he can look of rattigeaanee from his Wedroom winaowes net —Senator Cameron is going to entertain with Unusual tnagnidcence at Washington this winter. ~There are 500 disabled soldiers from all parts of the country in the Auvusta, Me, military agylan, —Tho whiskey at Fort Leavenworth is seid to he sharper ian Hightming, because it i® 8 eather"? uid —A number of fine hae Map J be Rembrandt Dave lately been added to ihe collection in the rite ish Sascum, —At the Inte Meeca eritos assembled at Mount OW over 1863, —A Norfolk (V man in this eity #0 Kila bu idog."” bentley Tows, has a club of young men ‘orn to marry only widows, and th tn four of their ves, biatch d derives a comfortable revenue from tabholiments, bawling then up und cxuee eculorly once’a Weel, op'e in Lngland now find it necessary to corde donyiog that) they bave written auye thing on the Byron controversy. 2 et MY —The surviving servants of Queen Charlotte Frewive nearly £500 years thesn of deorge lL, £220, ge of Queen Caruhne, £170, ee & er, on a recent Sunday y Worshipers in fon; Churches, Whose pastors rvevived altogesier £7.07 salary, ~The Fort Wayne Sentinel of Jan, 8, 1835, wintrable carriers address, write fllgrimage, 110,000, pile rarak, an increase of 2, paper says: “There is a ly uae Wilu eix frowns he com and th contains : fi i Tlon, Hagh MeCuiloeh, late Secrewry of le —The new Scnator Cooper, of Tennesse, ree Lote at 0 tor several years during the war, quently parti¢tated in the Conncetteat politi cal catupalans, Tbe annual ence of toa eltppers bas been won this yer the Titania, whieh fett anghar a fort PLLC ‘ter her competitors, and made we pastuge to Encived 19 83 day: —Among autographs of the Spanish painter Velozqura recently aiveovered at Miso. e a Fee cept for “1100 reais, about $70, a8 payment for bie celebrated preture, the “ Borrachos.” —The great West has produced a great mathes matichin, He is n Hieids, hives mM ssourl, and folves any muthemot) problem—from twice two to the evioulation of @ luuar celipse—in three minuwe, ~The burgess list for Sheffield, England, cons tains among 54,000 names those of 4,100 (emnies, At cester, Wii # population of 80,00 and a bor res@ rol of 1600), (he female voters number between, 2.000 and 3,00, —the Cheyenne Argus apologizes for an error din that shect respecung the * Worrell isis The types represented hem as displaying jor little naxedness,”” when they sh have suid, displaying their Lalla Rookednes pri (0 Janeiro, ses to are Coit uuntly soticiting dovations for elaritable and relle lous purposes la that civy. —A fisherman of Monterean, caucnt a fis, within waie ornainented with thirty precic emerakisy ru J) saponire at £900,000, —Itis a startling commentary on the terrible disaster to the steatuer Stonewall, that when the Gre broxe ont itvoud lave been extinguished by a sla- gle Dacketinl of water; but, according w report, Muere wus uot & bucket on the boat ! —A new copper mine has been discovered in South Australia, between Port Auzusta ard tue indman, and «splendid lode ot inuncuse with te reported to be traceable for several baodeed yards, ‘Khe Guder hus been offered £1,000 for bis discovery. —The new catalogue of Yale has appeared, fhowing a total of ovce 400 stutents in tae ueadeute departoent, In the other departients t a aro over 2M) more, ‘the «tole vumber Is about 00. ‘Lhe sophomore is the Lagestelass, and nambers 150, —There is a railway in Wales only two feet Gare belug correspondingly ense of running it, ‘Toe exe dia Wortiy of adoption on m0.e extensive Seale Would whole value weil as the exp periment is suecessful routes Waere roads on not pay. —Carlotta Patti, on ber recent visit to Washs ington, Was siown ton handsome parlor, No. 13, a6 Witerd’s Hotel; bet rather iin occupy an apart ment whieh beers that the fair t put up wits he Lop of the house. —One of the results of a “gift concert” in @ Connecticut town is thus noted by a local paper: A Kentlewian Who drew some violin music, and one who dtew abow. are intending Wo forum 4 partner ship with the forinnite pussessor of a vialiu, and Dructige at dd spells,” been singing of late at the ans, in an operetia called * La I oshe takes tue part ot Madame et, « lady who locks her busband out in tue rain he stayed out late at tueeiud, ‘Tue music of the operetta is not wiimired, though the critic epeuks ‘ably OF Arai —The Hertfordshire and Derbyshire estates of Lady Palmerston (Brockett Sleibourne), wortd kraudson, the present while Br sand the Late Lord Palmerstou's trish estates pass now, under the will of bis Lordship, (0 the Kight tou, Wiluam Cowe per, Af, Py ~The the Orcmal flowers of iangu dress ofa letter reeelved at Ben shipiul and whose fect ure Ww 7 erity Ni to his respected pair of feet, —On the road between Middletown and Crome well, Cons, ih an ancient sycamore tree with «hole low trunk, Which, (ration ®ays, Was used by one Of the chigie ot the Narragansevts tor ais «ig wat or residence, The ehicf Was named Mamouuun, aud the tree Is still ealied the Mamountin tree —The Hannibal (Mo.) Courier says: “There seems to be «mania in Hannibal ioe uarrying lady school teicher, especially tuore employed ta. the pubiie schools, ‘Within a suort time Nve have by cuiled upon to put of celibacy tv T comely wotiool mua'win Wu cher ay conshicr hee struck by lightnmg more provable ‘au old maid.” kart Cowper; l I: Mos sloped fo mud. —*Mamma,” sald a precions French miss ot fourteen, “you never let me play the cuarad T know How to make tem too, oond is ston, My Girwt u domestic animal. My i put, mamma, The reader w roueb for & hus: eucea it Ivis mariage.” hat mart uw toe very ilupie, lesa observe nd —The Stevens Battery is bei pushed forward to completion. unc ment of Gen, George B, Meciel Newton, beq., lute Cliet Kopin cer of the U8. Navy but it Wik fequie over ¥ to complete it “Vbrough Commodore Stevens, New Jersey wril ther vigorously Pthe monaud ussisted by Isang be te Brot State In the Union equips & d tron-elad battery, The quesuon gataruly arisedy Vhut Will she do with it? —A_ non-explosive lamp, filled with non-ex Jos.ve oli, and capped With a jacent nunexplos.ve i Onio, Penny b suiduMy movived might, Agenileman inthe 1.0 that “the Temp seomed ty enlarge, Hy drew back a step orto, when the lump expluacd, seating & Luared pices of glass fig throu ct the ror Twas at the time, wnd at peoperiy tan under 5 yeh wita ak Mose * non-expiosives,” it did Cap ode. =A surgeon in Russia recently showed Low red tape cin #ometines be eut vy a skint band He bud becn summoned to cure tor jour injured by an uceids town a the interior. ‘The ¢ Pulvoud train tO sare soon Was for veight, Was iid that be could not travel on ii, except as an excort to ving irciht, He hurriea t alouse nvak by, and bow noster, whieh he ewried upon Ca thin, and aw permitted to proceed, the requires mens’ OF tue rule LeluK 1ullil ad, —One fine tome time ago, three Enylish ladies visited the studio of Kaudviph Rogers, tu Rome, Use or them, thin, Woak-Voiced, and nea sighted ; another, equally sligut and deat} the thr A stent, heavy female, with deen, masculine ve who evidently played (he interpreter vor te pt Btonplug in oot of one of ulasvituetion, Mr. Ri said?" Lhe th Nyda, the bond girl of Vompell What is It? rqucuked the uesivsiguted cue, + Hey L hey L what did ag say 7 enimos in the deat F Rutla, the iad girles Boudhay 2 Counder> accomplished aad Welletead iuterpreter, Woe ly posting her frieads and pewiying with Astonisimient the seulptor, —A portion of Brigham Young’s prising cavalry, infantry, ond ertl comp pear ball Leke City, and made a ty avec. The Deseret Newanuya: “ she order, sobrivty, good feeling, and inugcent girth that rein dev where through the eneamoment may possibly, ed thorou, cqtailed, but wever exce-led, outside of UGk. Th troops, from the youngest drammer-boy to th» cou minding geveral, maaiiested that they Lelonzed ‘o bled at all times and tu al) cu ances to maintain their digwity aud set ar eu ng and devotion r whom a bigh relwious f truch and th n the Emperor Nupoleon, after his ra cent dines, rode out & the fret time in the en- Viron Of Saint Cloud, a litte boy cane raonins UD fo his carriage, houlng up im his band # petitios winch tie Emperor's Agjutint took irom the lit follow and presented to This Majesty. Lt War Peqient the boy's mother, a vp widow, lor the parment of a clilm whieh tue Minit: had rejccted for some informality, W Tur Unfolded aul bead tye petstion dhe ite (ellow dked intently at bin, Finally, the Kmper raised fis eyes, and. the hoy exclaimed, “Wit mother get (at money 1 "My son," reptiel the Kinperor, “tell your mother that T phal) look Inte this mal ter, f connot now say whelher she will get th money. * Wit cred the Wile hoy snerilp. and with ining eyes, you aperor, you wiwaye Bake oroiaises uni nreer leep them 1 "Sy saying, be turned Ins back op His Malesry on rau away,