The Sun (New York) Newspaper, November 9, 1870, Page 2

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=e WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 96, 1670. ; Amusements To-day, Rreoth's Themtre—Nip Van Winkle, Hxcursione Kr Railway Fifth Avenwe Theatre —Nan ami Wit, Grand Opera Mowse— La Grande Do:bense, Globe Theatre 1% leondway ‘Lina RAwin's Thentre—increae A\meions, Mible's Carden—tinglinh Oper. Rip Vau Windle, 14th ot, ep. Arademy of M Oly mple Theatre Wee Willie Winkie. Motions Han Francisco Minstrels 0%) Browtway. Opera Mowne New Atractions. Matives, fe) -Opee tw Viton, The Etectior The country is to be congratulated on the signal defeat of SrewaKt L, Woopronp, ‘Nomivated through the interference of Presi- dent Grant to an office for which he had neither capacity nor character; #0 cor. rupt as to have connived at the slave trade; connected in busincas with a pardon-broker and a lobby agent, public morality required that he should be detoated. ‘The vote shows a considerable falling off of the Demoeratic majority in the city, as compared with 1868 ; while the returns from the interior represent a largely en hanced majority for Horr an over his pi vious vote. As near as we at this writing gather from the returns, the country gaing of the Democracy will more than bal: ance their shrunken majorities in this sec tion, As we figure it, Goy, Horratan is retlected by 30,000 over the slaye-trader. ‘The Democrats gain two Congressmen in the Troy and Saratoga districts. Exvtis U Ropents in the Utica and Joun H. Kereir 4M in the Columbia districta are elected Jo this city aud Brooklyn the Democrats elect all their candidates, The Republicans warry the Orange District. In the Fourth District the gallant McMa. NON has been defeated by the candidate of Kuow-Nothing principles, whe had the sup- port of the Tammany machine. A superf- cial observer might conclude thet this ma chine is so powerful in that district that it would, a8 one of ite managers has expressed it, elect a jackass to Congress if they chose to nominate him. ‘This, however, doos injustice t the people of the district. McMauon took the field only two weeks before the election. He bad no compact organization to back him, and yet, thanks to his own ge njug aud the support of Tuk SUN, he has re duced the ‘Tammany majority from 16,000 to Tews than 4,000, Thi if le had hada week longer for the fight, Tammany would have come out of it thoroughly beaten Gov. Horratay’s majority in the city can shows that is eut down from 69,000 in 1868 to about forty thousand, while OAKEY HaL.’s majority of 4,000 is reduced by nearly or quite twothinds, The next Assembly may be Democratic by a small majority By this election the Tammany Ring gain a new lease of power. If they are wise, they will turn honest, stop stealing among their subordinates, and give this city a cheap and vast government A greater apper. tunity was never offered to any eet of politicians, They ure rich, they are skilful ; and if they will reform, the people may learn to forget their earcer hitherto, It is never too late for repentance Je it Better to be an Englishman than an American? Some the steamer Sal alter having, successfully landed « cargo of frm and ammunition forthe Cuban patriots was captured by the Spaniards, At the time of her capture she was in a sinking condition, bat on board of her were five of her crew who on speculation had chosen to tick to her in the hope of being able to take hor into Jamaica. ‘They were British sul Jecte—natives of Nassau. There was no doubt of their having violated the laws of Spain Under those laws they had incurred the peu- ulty of what Spain chooses to eall piracy ; for alrangely enough, although the expeditionis of the Salvador had time to save every article of any value on board, they left in the veesel 8 lot of papers and letiers which most clearly rriminated the men who remained in her. But they were British subjects, aud Spain and England differ materially as to what vonstitutes piracy, So docs our Aduiinistra. Won, for that matter; Laut Hairon Fisu ha always been 80 deferential to Spain as politely to v time since dor, aive his opinion when the eul lect wae of no greater consequence than the fives of # few Americans, Witness ti Wetims of the Grapeshot, the Amoriean tons murdered at Iguani, and a host of piers. The § in Cabs at f 1 1 pxecute these Salvador 4 ‘ thy w of preparation contined they Cientu But a note from the F gn Offlee in Tou Won at oneo settled t 1 Spain might call it piracy + ns were toncerned it she was requir hy Lord RANVITLE to release those men at cues, bnd she released thew These fee's not having been published in We Spanieh papers, w them for the particular information of Mr. Fist, aud in prder that Americans may understand that Kpe'n can kill them wi phe doce not « have perfor Buch is the d report ¢ to fuju. d precisely the same acts. between living unde & Government that Las sense and courage to Protcet ite citizens, and one that has not Are the Inhabitants of Other Worlds ut The Rev. I ¥ Wanp dwerng in t in L Bri » him questions whether Vante at ail blows In the first place, Mr able todo more thaa by t pomibility of there 1 hworlds than ourown, A ian larg bud liberal views ought to see, without argu ment, the absurdity of supposing that the Countless siurs, which astronomy teach Yee so many euns, shine only for the sake of She feeble light which, on moonlese nights, Prey afford thie Liile earth, or even that the bited cB us many planets which surround us are mere barren masses of matter, If the Creator be at alla being of such power and goodnete combined as every religion represents bith to be, his creation of intelligent beings can- not be limited to the narrow area with which wo are acquainted, And, if there are such Yeings, it is equally illogical to suppose that they differ from us in any essential par. ticular, either as to the body or as to the poul The tendency of science is, without excep- tion, toward the demonstration of the unity of creation, and of the subetantial harmony of all ite parts. From the moat elevated man down to the lowest reptile, comparative 1o- ology traces a chain of gradaal descent, each step of which retains a resemblance to one common human form. The vegetable king- dom has its analogies to the animal, and the mineral, again, to the vegetable. The bot- anist shows that in the tree there is a system of Dloodvessele and lungs and physiologi- cal functions, which are a perfect counter. part of the corresponding ayetem in the hu- inan body ; and in the processes of crystalli- vation and chemical combination, there are many features of resemblance to vegetable growth. As to the races of men, they differ among themselves only in superficial details, ‘and not in essent No exploration has yet revealed men without human bodies, heads, legs, and arms, or without hearts and lungs and other vital organs, or wanting in nny of the fandamental constituents of tho hu- man mind. To crown all, we are told in the Bible that men was created in the image and lkenoss of God, thus clearly indicating that the Deity himself is the common type of which all men are finite and imperfect copies, ‘To those who, like Mr. Bakcmur, profess to accept the Bible as a divine revelation, this should be decisive as proving the unity of the races on this planct at least. But if the inhabitants of this earth, widely scattered as they are, and differing as they do in color, features, and outward appear- ance, are yet alike in their essential bodily and mental characteristics, and if all the in- ferior works of creation have @ unity with man and with each other, by what process of reasoning can it be made to appear proba- ‘le that the creatures on any other planet arc not substantially just such beings as we aro? If we find throughout the world with which we are acquainted a uniformity of type, why should that uniformity cease with our boundaries, especially if we admit that the same God created them and us? Mr. Beecnen may talk as much as he pleases bout not exhausting the “ possibilities of variation,” but unless ke limite that varia- tion by fidelity to the common divine image, he talke of what is impossible on any other hypothesis than that of a plurality of gods — Portifying Canada. The Iudépendant of Quebec urges thut fortifications should be erected all along the frontier line between the United States and Canada, a8 a means of protecting the Domin ion a, t being overrun by American soldiers in any future war. It eave that the success of the German invasion in France shows that in such a war Ca would be in grent danger, onght to be thoroughly fortified. is weak reasoning Can Canada by aay possibility be better fortified than France ? Can she have stronger forts than those of Strasbourg, Thioaville, Phalsbourg, ‘Toul, and Metz? And yet those great works, con structed without regard to expense by the most skilful engineers, have not sufficed to protect France against a million of German The r in Canada would be the same, however the frontier might be fortified. Five hundred thousand Yankees, or evea two hundred thousand, would defeat all the Canadian armies in shor? order without pa ing attention to their fortifications, The armies being destroyed and the couatry overrun, the forts could surrender afterward at theirleisure, It is not by forts that Canada can ever bo protected against a people so fur exceeding hers in numbers, wealth, aod military re. sources, The Lost possible protection for Canada against invasion from the United Statcs would be annexation, Let the ada ele This sulliers. Jadépendant and the people of Canada think of that © little, and save the millions that fortifivatious would cost i Will the French Hold Out? The Freuch are going to fight it out to the last. ‘They adhere to their resolution not to surrender an inch of they have refused the armistice otfiied by the Pras 1u8 because, as we are given to understand, t Bismanck would uot agree that pro might be introduced into Paris # the proposed suspension of hostilities territory While the Parisiins would have beon ‘om fylting u the truce, visions, without which they could not tig afterward, Under euch gn exaction they were quite right to decline to negotiate any they had amade up their minds ythiag that Prussia requires. Accordingly, the war goes on without any change in its prospects, The half million of troops in the city of Paris are continually disciplined, Doth in the drill grognd and uz der fire, This should make them good sol diers in a comparatively short time. But while they are thus got ready to fight, the Prussians are enclosing them ina line of for. tiflentions they and agaist which they can only fight at groat further, unlet whieh cannot avo’ disadvantage, They must already bein very much the «6 ndition a8 Baz stNu’s army Lotz; and although we have no doubt had Bazsine been a trae man and a Ne C tent geucral, he might have broken tthe cost wf heavy lossca. No dou ax a soldier noctu is as far superior ME te Me 8 § tame) et he begins to take t offeasive he will find th tacles to conteud 2 Prussian army cau not force its way into Paris, 6o the French army cannot force iis way out without euor mous sacrifices, Besides, the diMeulty of su an effort becomes more formidable every day ; and while for any ordinary strateyieal opera tion it is of immense advantage to a comp tent goveral to have half a million men under his orders, the posseesion of such a force bx comer a burden when the question is one of food as well as fighting, Aud it is quite probable that with all the genius that Tro ehu may potecss, and with the most skilful employinent of his vast foros, tho world may | py, gewte's Observations and Mantes | Fearful Night yet witness the surrender of Paris with half ‘@ million soldiers, just as it haw witnessed the surrender of Metz with a hundred and seven- ty thousand. Meanwhile, in other parte of France there is doubt that the people ate fired with | from medical technieafities that everybody can un- tis wall, tah te maeraioed to envo | derstand it. We give some of his observations in patriotic zeal, and are di their country or perish, As yet they have hot discovered any military commander of extraordinary ability. Brave men they have in abundance, but no great soldier has expected that the be found in #0 brief # period. continued by the French people with that desperation and obstinacy which they mani- fested in 1793, the military leaders whom man of the crisis would et come forward, Nor could it be | mosctes and brain to sterve, hint hoe paca abet nastion, Dr. Dro Lewin, has just 0 title of Talke about People's Stomachs (Weide, On- food & Co), A book MW OF prectios! wisdom, ex- Presed ina homely and simply manner, and #0 free his own language ; OUNGrS We bave condensed a little, Ginttony count one hundred vietims drankenness counts one, ‘To regulate health we most regulate diet. Certain kinds of food feed the fut and leave the Certain other foods d certain others the where food the masctes exclasively, If the war ie | Drale. A large part of the food of Americans is composed of white flour, sugr, and butter, Peo- ple whe try te live upon such stuff gradoally starve to death, ‘There is a gentioman in Boston who har amaceed they need will presently rise up. A nation | 8 Immente fortane. His carriage is the Anest in of thirty-five millions of people who are really bent upon maintaining their inde- pendence cannot be conquered. should fall, the firmness of their resolve would be geverely tested; for while that event will not of necessity put an end to their struggle, it will weaken them very seriously, If it were any other nation than the French, peace would certainly be made after such a disaster; but it ig not likely that they will be ready to submit even then, —— Levantine journalists deplore the fact that, in the present crisis of Turkish a@airs, Fuap Pasta is'no longer tiving. Fran was the Pan. menstox of the East, but his admirers are apt to underrate the ability of his successor Aatt Pasua, who is @ species of Mohammedan dull as Peap was brilliant, but more prudent and cunning, and a fanatical Moslem at heart, not- withstauding all bis apparent friendliness toward Christian powers, He is at present bard at work quieting the excitement of the Sultan, who has been beside himself since the downfall of Louis Navonaos. RvsseLt, ———— ‘There ia a tendency in certain quarters to regard the engagement of the Princess Louise with the Marquis of Lonxe asa misalliance; but surely a handsome young representative of one of the oldest houses of England aud Scotland is pre- ferable to a pauper prince or an old rake of wayal lineage, It is true that by this marriage the royal Princess wil become the sirter-in-law of a the neighborhood, and he wastes money lavishly ; but his face is the ploture of despair, Life isa t ture to him, because he is nervous and dyrpeptic. If Paris | talf the rien men and women belong to the cate- cory of the miserable; they cannot digest their dinners. ‘The common notion that cnr health and life de- pend npon a mysterious Providence is downright infidelity. A child goes ont of a hot room with naked arms and legs in purevit of ite daily sappty of poisoned candies, and then dies of croup. Ts that a mysterious Providence? If a man indulges himself until he gets the gout, and the disease at. tacks bis heart and kills him, tetris death a mystery? The reason that the American people are such Ayspeptics is, that they ext and drink so much, and eat and drink #o fast. ‘The teeth will not decay if they are keptelean, A toothbrush it a good thing, bat one good toothpick is Worth an arinful of toothbrashes, There is a gen- Uieman now Tiving in New York city wiio has vires beautiful front teeth which he purchased from the mouth of en Irishman, His own teeth were remoy and instantly Patrick's were transferrod. he process of digestion begins in the mouth ant ends in lungs. The mood: grinds the food ; the Jungs supply the oxygen which converts the products of the food into pare aad usefal blood. Dr. Lewis once attended the lecture of a Thom- sonian doctor wlio explained! the use of mercury as follows: “And now do you know how marcury produces the rheamatiz f 1H tell yon exactly how tuaroury produces the rheumat.z, see marcury lass great wany sherp pints, and them suarp pints go tiraicht in the flesh, and when the muscles rub over them aharp pins it scratches, and that's the rhea watiz. Many people imagive themselves afflicted with FeTIOUS Aiseases when they are O% suffering fro: Adrift in a Wild Bea-The Deck Lend aad a Portion of the Crew Swopt Away— Bafferings of the Burvivors. Prom the Detrou Pree Press, Now. % On Friday night the tug Zouave started for Bay City with six, barges heavily umber inden. et b> heat) to Port Anstin, she found the tug Clem- tis lying there, and the sea was ay heavy that she decided to (arn over the Joseph A. Holion, Mobawk, and the Milim to ber charge, coming along with the other three herself. The crew of the Holion con- sisted of Capt, Robert Kerreat, « Canadian, the mate Harry Morrison of Atronaé, Peter Doan, and the woman Josephine Dean, his wife, and employed ‘on bonrd in the capacity of cook, ‘The Hollon was well loaded down, but the storm tad not been much felt until after the Clematis took her line. ‘The gale continued to grow fresher alter the tugs started ont, and the Zouave was soon out of sight, the Clematis going along slowly, The sea grew con stantly rougher, and the men at the wheel on the barges had to lasb themselves fast to keep from be- ing swept away. s Sunday evening set in, the captain of the Hol- Jon expressed his fears that he whould at least tone his deck fond, as the barge was tumbling about in a Wild way, the sen going clear over her, and her Froaniog iimbers tefling plainly how she was Tabor: ing. The gaie did not abate in the least, slight change of the wind came bail botil they could not discover the. lights of the tux, The weather was much colder after the snow squall way, and the crew put on all their spare The woman retired to bed abont 9 anxiety for the safety of the barge being carefully kept from her. About midnight, while it feomed na if the barge would be knocked to pieces, the tow line suddenly mapped, \he men heard & shout through the gloomy darkness from the tug, and the three barges were adrift in the lake, utterly at the mercy of the Storm King. The barges broached to iu the troughs of the sea, and the crews shouted to each other that there’ was no hope, They knew that the tur conld not pat about am that wild fea nnd pick up the line, and that she would haye enough to do to make ber own po hey #0on drifted quite close to each other, and prim despoir settled down over all, The deex the Holion bean to start, and she eut loose fros she driited off into the gloom, und the shouts of alarmed crews Were s00n drowned out by the boom. ing of the storm. In half an hour nearly all the Hoilon’s deck load was gone, and tnen the captain thinking that’ she Lebo:ed Voss, eoneluded to est Anchor, having plenty of cable, and hoping that the frorm would abate belore whe should co to pieces The anchor failed to get hol round, and tie Holion dragged about two efore tele! ing vp During this time, Wave aftor wave weut over her, and the cabin flually went overboard, The wile bud been called up a alort tim vious, hat was too mach wlarmed to dresr, a deck in her nizut clothes, « louse ¢ nover tem. She wae lashed to the rail by her lusband, who at length told her that there wes no hope, and they crouched down behind the bul Wark toxe'her, devormined taat death showd aot separate then,’ When the cabin went overboard Capt, Forrest de- clared that their fute wus sealed, and would hee! Morrison # to hold out bravely to injunetic the last, He threw bimself dowa on the lawber yet remuining, refusing to even pass a lashing sroand is body & great Wave soon lifted « dn vf amid the tossing wat ard, deuth without #cry,and made not the #) At day deal, und t TO Wus every prospert ti Sectna New York Ti Deal Better—Tho Adventures of a New York Peddler inn Mott Haven Bari oo ry. William Byrne, a fruit peddler of West Twenty- seventh street, went into Westchester county on Saturday lest to vend bananas, A litle way from Harlom bridge, lie entered a liquor saloon and called for a drink, After he hed hed his liquor and paid for it, he asked the barkeeper to buy som banana Offering him two for Often cents, The barkeoper aid that that was too dear, and offered him ten conte, The peddier said that he could not take ten cents for those two bananas, but that he would sell him two smaller ones for the money, ‘The barkeeper kot enraged at this, aud sald : * You — — —— —— —I take your trash out £004, honest fruit,”’ sald Byrne; “and T'm trying to make & fair living, I can’t afford to tell you my best fruit for less whan I ask.” ‘Out o' this!” roared the barkeeper, doubling ap hia sieevor, and looking lke a Tammany rough on election day; “ Out o’ this, or Pl break your b—y head.” Byrne turned toward him, and gazed in wonder- ment at the furious ruMan, The barkeeper. en- raged, leaped the counter at a bound and went for the poddier, seizing him by the scruff of the neck tnd shoving him out into the atreet, giving him « ting push, and so letting him go. par wish there was & policeman wear,” said Byrne, then I'd know what to do.” Upon hearing this the barkeeper again rushed at the peddler, and citehed tim by the neck, baryin of his victim, erush- ad puncbiog him on his talon-like nails in the fh ing him down to the ground, the bead There, take that,” sald the brate, * and get out of thi Tho peddler gathered himself up as well as he could, and exclaimed : “Now, by God, I'l get a policeman, iff have to bant ell day for him.” Horeupon the barkeoper, after looking at the ped- ler for «moment, bolted Into the saloon, and to the utter amazement of the peddier, emerged in a few Seconds with ® policoman's eap on his head, and drawing on « polieeman's coat volioe you, you vr. T'll kive you what vou want.” Aud making for the collared pedaler, | Lim, and led him off by force to the Town Hall where he locked him up in a cell and left bir, After remaining for some time in wondering eon fusion as to the strange turn things had taken, the diet gave himselt a shake w was not witnessin of his site: was (oo evident, and he resolved to mak of it, Hoe asked one of the attendants around hali to send a telegram to his wife, and the told him he would do it tor $1.00, Not having apy change, the peddier banied him a @5 Dill, and he went off with i. The paddler has pot seen that man or that bill since. At feven in the evening Byrne was released, no charge having been pre- ferred against him, ‘He visited the SUN ofice on Monday, and guvethe above particulars, exhibiting at the sane time the finger marks of the’ barkeeper- policeman ou bis neck. The look of besvilierment had not then died out’ of bis couptenane*. aud exch one Who heard his story was disposed io | ith at he ne ed wich a thing in his i 5 off dyspepsia, A dyspentic patient always despair Ould hold oat.” The Weather was extrome With, bie that “he never seed of¢ blade in a merchant's office of this city, Lord |. consumptive always hopes, ¢ three suffering severely, and Dean wax vimost | He cilities Warren Cap ot inGnitely me " ti nteat | Gone. And yet, seeing how his wife was eufforin: : ee Campanis ; but is it not indy Nn hn Abernethy wos the greatest mn the meaieat | cone, And rely swolng how hie wife was culturing, LYNCH LAW IN INDIANA. creditable to be connected with a hard-working, | profession bas produced in modern times, Pars<os | om hie cout, aud wage the wife wrap Lersedt vue tt spp Selbcs honorable commercial man than with legions of | no other man has contributed 99 wuch totomper: | This left the mau with nothing on but shirt and | Phe Hanging of Two Men by a Mob-A Night starved-out, good-fur-nothing royal idlers and | ance in eatin as he Beis tua ala” Wester bons: Wed be youn of Terror. hangers on to the skirts of rich relatious? The | To muoke te bast brcad dat can be mato of | up'a tte. aaw dial the’ storm! tad gone down, | | Aow he Mae Albany Ledger, 4 cky in exe Wheat, obtain good wheat and ering it without bolt. | bade bis wile good-pre, 22" dr d vii to his here has been living in Orange connty for fying in Lis own family that there is noth agers Mae sunt it by as thick 88 | Guim to cat from, Banday might until Monday is Tungate, who bas beow a terror to Ue weight commerce leg e nobility. n h r be ve weil en aw i ahlor ie thor . a at ur o'clock, Waen & Kk hove * borhood in which he Hred wameree to degrade nobility, and that t : toon pan, | Hebt, uiteved Ver course, and seut @ eaisll boat to somewhat wealthy farmer, has had is nothing in pobility to degrade roywliy, Dy a j f vay te Leu off Je feoding for som remarkable coincidence, one of his sons str hes | , ; ee ate Wis down the barrier which prejudice b be 1 ' SINKING 1N10 DRATH . tween aristocra d industry, w werson | rw ‘ ° oo Greene counts, where be secured conladera reinoves the boundary line that sy ' us a large ‘ wwening dbpiath-Baatchan teow Deaths Plead, with two ovier mea, lef Néwarie, Grenne royal from the unroyal blood of the British realn “ eat From the lhaca Journal, couuty, s# we ure informed by a respectable citizen In view of these achievements, the Duke of Ax ‘ is ! k on Friday afternoon an unusual Pdeporlure the night. hefore the roti orut deserves to be elected President of the | Netter’ she d bee wren crecuared at the Intel. Tu | to their unrest, Diskard ‘And Wh gale ind rota ' h t ’ ' 4 Fr. King « quantity of bariey was | to Greene eouuty, bat their coniederates had may future United tates of Europe. Ther tag let dows from a lorge bin in the third story t0 | ago. to exeape. When taken buck to Orange true republican mettle in that nobl wd | : tue second tory through the weual spent leading | Plewuni was recogmized by 3 Fisive ir, € King and bie cousin G, ¢ | one of the rodbers, ond hav hat t and heart than aumoug all We ay 1 3 | te mis ¥ King superin’en ding the process, and Jere heend Tungute had been prow.ig around in the of the period j A Meee ta Lee thoat 16 years of wos int ird | neighborvood of Mr. Fisaer's, the eominanity was \ ve, hee i When te gr large vin began to | greatly exeite In Russia the newly discovered eval fields | in the contro, yo ard Bot om M dnd -ot | © On Tuceday Pickard was taken to Orleans to have attract a large share of public at Sine : MY grain Was g down the fastest mace Wes alee. tonen: re urtal the comin t four vears f th . ¢ on of dnced the m to prison nt un} ’ ‘ | ¢ eo niticls thst Ww os thet wintry, 4 fihet ; onary [EC he omy rank the uid be alk was i ‘ | ’ { ina t of quick ver it, the a) arore and demanded is only na the Ru: ‘ k f ’ est can be ne > nee ry ae the othe , closing #rouud the carria aud With oue of their most valuable articles of export | bot F Limetion OF What the dearest parts Cort, “witeb tho grain was” img Wenner, With sre for bioody Work it thus perishing before their «by millions of | 4 tingle pourd c 1 in a stow with dry bits of of twenty bushels per minute, ont cribed as a terrible read. ott meal far a iro fauily When he looked in the bin he saw oe by thee w cords, should look eagerly wround for sone new | brett ¥ rabiallarhoccevalioess hand sticking out of t i moved sa ty t. The Arst sound ‘| Wie Greek and Ro isn ate Hat onee & Ga moved heard Uy. the eu was the clicking of supplies of fuel. The coal fields are consequent 7 fs ; $ oe ence hen drop arms, aud thea ¢ eats ond bitter ly regarded ax a godsend, and they are so |, npirepetai as tetas it case | teal do eoiking tot CONOR ot ; abuadant that people already look forw 10: | gh ath th shbmia wa'eriit rant oo Anever | Sais, Be Tue efort upon the part © of th raiaé oar , Pp ime ; ? forthwith the carriages were ontercd and the (p- FARO? thy Sealey trails Dri OA erie ig a . : tof h J fown Jast as Le eat, { Pickard wus nt, and besonght the ; tolael be head ot e highest), but could nt ofticer ave his brother (rom'the handculfs, but The spirit of the canvass which ¢} Tot > . whol ut . rea to 8 evel for oar of cult WZ | he ssid he bad uo wey. Pickard, the prison re. with yesterday's election in Missouri is clearly | #6! ¢ Wis Dini wil £ | ance Out nls his camore cant iftabs shown in the following extract from th ‘ n 1 Their 7 ; jared away by hand. tl | would bang ay innocent wan ate : ‘ssc hanat ; na tn and v rotu. | {ie boy Hy ere full of grain, | earnest!y, red rpecch of Grave Brows, the Liberal ate | peek a we veut ; » black, and he dit not | over the abut fe bridge, with oath of ded for Governor, delivered at St. Louis last Satur. br for some seconds, Soom he gasped, opened | guce. ree sh When shail we lon to for lanninara ? | Lis eyes, aud bezau to breatiie. Mernwhile {was | SO’ scon as the prisoners were taken from the off ay evening wea fy oe : z apossioe ty pull biu out Ul'sbout aixty bustels mere, math wate Week “T have been assailed by all the combined weigut | 1 ad in had been drawn off, those in the bia d they did. a of a notional and State Administrations whe eng | Rooks” sare Dr, Lew A.D. Sieww apport! Dis Lead, vat all sinking with the bod They hae . Ras gone {Orin to SCO here her tah Meade | wretcned & Ue bor wee finally cot ont almost senseless. He | and guve the alarm, aud with assistance returned wou'd be in the bariel before the moonligit if tev Light 6 are in nsable to healt. | pecnveriage Te dee cal Aid calcd. wud he is now | but too late. ‘The mem were left hanging veud on dared to say their gouls were their ov aaa i " Tee eR Rhee te ae nrcee epee, from sulieca- | aah end of th The brother of Pickard re. freemen, ‘The levy of blackmail on 1 curative ax ina ¢ Should be a warning to boye who play | mained the light, and even autu tem suluries bas been ruthie eirried on. Veose wh Her from hwartbara should gi | Beas ee ee o'clock, but was not permitted to take his brother's reputation 1 flaunted in tho aly aaa drink nothing at mealssay “No, thack body down until tue Coroner came wbout that time freedom. Let me. say then again, ie anaad cata hace ites Fine Dwetilug Houses in New Yorks | to Mold an luquest. He thea had a coffin Preught, Fre Mae Wad } claim ali ; net be indanas New York Cor, Sprivgteld (Muss.) Republica and on the twelve o'clock train tuok nix brot hat it is the verdict of a tree that powor fyou wish to live toe ve in tie full enjo: : body to bis home in Greene county, while Ta above; that the civil service shall be purged of ti : y ani | witom Tiearned some fi ustrative of the vast | the coming of his friends, no one sevtning diepored Partisunsnip that breeds measnrelese corruption, | Ht tWice & day a moderate quautity of plain food. crease of luxurious t this city oflate years, | cee comina ¢ 1d be used no longer us a machine to elect to office Lie native American requires more sloop daan the Ti a ee y at, and devotes hi siceainintiaiaae men whom the people do not want; and that beiore | ayor ae ; exc! i desighs for the most cx ‘ God We will tewtite. the Declaration Gf later, | 8% European, Nine of toa penisive kinds of furni Some idea of his seus | @reat Fire in Sor ‘The Engine e, and deciure not merely that every man is | Music Hight I+ very ‘ of prices. and the kind of work he does, may | Houne of the ry Dock To+ orn free aad equal, bub thas every face chen lite | & ace oriued trom the followiug Ogures: A carved wooden Hy Destroyed~ Lose about $40,000, and die free wud «qual iu this, our republic a clwbreh On Lee Nght pling, casted sa bascrelicl $1 d00sectdeencen At about 4 o'clock P. M. yesterday tire wus dis These are words of sound doctrine; and they | yr L M 23.00); 0 French bedst $1,000; on't wi oak ea’ | Covered in the engine room of the Krie busin dry were uttered by one of the clearest thinkers und | were aa { crime can Need Ce rae tats @G4.000. Not tans | dock engine house, Red Hook Point, at the foot of : We Persons can afford ta fneatsh their house a this i aie purest statesmen of this country . ‘ ‘ to | st there are some who do so, ap’ their num | Pllzabeti street, Although the fire companies were th ; ; i Aiily inereasin ready on band, the flames got so much headway by A tition has been addressed to the King | jy ; 4 Mex: | a seouler tocareent upholstery Arms inthis eit Leon | the insumelency of the water, that the whole tlre of Holland praying the Crown to give up the | 4 Ie und to | and ure toing & turiving Dusines. Goupht enone | story brick building was totally destroyed, together right of making war and peace, and to transfer | os cvcther : oy Datthe nine. | cence picture deniers say that the mc Whole machi The fire originated from the power to the nation, The Dutch have not | \ re Hell quite ta Hoaduly as tho 4. ‘Che loss on the building is estitnated aad eve cc ae ane ee enc pag F . who | i, ria of the city stores tis mount tothe faine tus, There te ina One of th f y | £ : corte Justice Cox Flung tuto Ludlow Strece gait y t for the represeutaiion of the city of | | Pe A oki aL \ jimenta Arp. not the Bat Released on Wail. ‘ b Congress. The ca: sw i itrue e ations, 6 they ure, to Jus John ¢ of the S 1 District Fier, 1 , " taste ond cultivation, w Court, was arrested yester nw warrant from t r ngiy, and doh ted lates’ Conan known as Cu inter r ? i pend mtdeped tg ngs, gh ot ae CUR tos Comm The i 10. " ‘i oint, Which is alleged to have been t nominee of his pai t ag 1 6 Heative of the | n trump = ' _— 4 ¥hich ts more ard by the Theodore Ailen gang Aha Wextwortn, or J 4 . x igs jnore Wecoming like 4 at French metropolis. | Honor had con iM nate ee F : 7 ge . F 4 inex a list « wats which were begun conspi mp bof th called, ran as an ii ‘ r m ¥ | to be Duilt bist yenr, to slow the style in which election laws, The arrest was muic supported hy the Democrats, The comptiaents | read ner eaithy ettizens 1 Tho Agures give only the | o'cloca Inst evening, and the prisouer wus tik passed between them were peculiar, as may be ee hows “or there ere ett ee erat ky uuiture. | eiore Marsal Bharpe, who ordered tum into Lud fud 1 " M favurger's ‘euch Readin, P . iit : ht ww Stree ” judged by the following extract from one of Mr He BY bi s Free h x eal me ete Fori}burd, $110,000; D. AL Haight, $150,000 ; Lee Just 6 Wak taken to that prison in a curriuge Loxo Jomx's speeches: Ph c 4 Friday evening, at | Augustus Sault, goQuw)s J. F, stu ziven inclarge of Warden ‘Tracy, but Was bot ; Ne Uuion Lengue ‘Thentte, was a very cuaive wid | iW: James, @ Nes locked up. He rewained a prisover only binit an “Now, they said L had been soon duncing witha | op ; ti , ‘ Woe Theolore Simpson, Ur, when he Was Felease oh boil by Conuuiteaiun servant ‘girl, {Lnughter.) They caricatured mer | °! Batortig of persons interested tn | OrCouge 8; James Brown, etl ; ‘Onde Arrest. Was mob unexpected by Bat how wus that dancing? Leoutess that 1 was | Prened titeraiure, M, Favarger bimsol gave tokon | Bixby, § ;erance Farley, $69,00)': Char e Cox, to Whose ears had come Uroats of ven With a servant girl But ¢ partion: | of great p in his art since he was last among | Butler, $09,000; Jolin Walsh, $70,000. With one or fends of Theovore Allen, wioi taion CHARLEY FARWREL wis fitting 1h does not road co mach 1 act and wbite bi, | (we caceDtions they ore all’ DUM) by Weir owners ‘ committed on charge of perjury mon Nov, Iam & MEERA Re aed ie sun $1 Morin avers £70,000 4 H i walking bi roctety, sed) thongh es te ane which speaks pretty well for Ny ol thele | ELASMAS PROM IME OCBAN CADLEs, vf ave Kot more in ’ ' - vout Clicaza’s history than a ¢ au 1 wr — r r T have preserved on t hey i on afoot y x" Prassina 1 Frouch gunboat have arrived at caricatures ma cing with a servant girl. | CuCl ts |, Bovarser bad 6 LOSSES BY Pink How Here it no speaker produced ene ofthe | fy Hiri a ig. r The) c s has passed the Tehaunte Hic 8, Crerianecne foar may vo e geet! appreciniten! stl Natsu Plevee & Co.'s % aot : ; Frenchy yp u clothing Here I tha servant tirl, while Cus ‘ avod wh oy fully 4 0 : : LRY FARWLne is fh wnother room (shown iu the cari a e ite, $100,¢0 Ue be : y n closed ai Mapa io coture) p at girl's lover, and stealing 4OTLINGS ABOUL TOWN . i oF re < money from Lim (Laughter, Now, what if did ots ! ; ! Yokghaua for New ork oa n nt wirl? Now, tiny fold t pronin ih ' now & S Wetig d 8. ‘hove always found. to this town, at any ral Doe parca Bn oh ite ee ae ves row H heat tha 2) Who have married servant & ve | Med Boolal ¢ ‘i + ho insur with her erage of umgar at tonkona A as, ip i hay | V. 9 Ue New York Cugtuo an 1 Cleve! and, Onto, The King of 1 ou k at proved the’ buat mothe } tat nD dee ANd for a ath Ae ita flor this speech H from New York yesterday for Mdhat , Bts,vestar he Gui t town of Cor TH Must have received quore votes mand cartridges, aud several te Neecicle Maka ie vn uel than would baye beou bis if he had o seit, | 1 tin lined lead pipe | SPARAY FLOM THE rep wanarat, |. Viconie d Aum f Frenchy Cuong oe : 1 6 Fair ; ese is ta es J . : © Ball of the Bays, Manuiacturing Com tw sedbla ‘ y yes! Re eataiane er Mexico to forn a 1 s Hall, in Ae Gise ved Judge Cr vn ia Sauk ate Hue fi Tesldengy o ithe between n Hryant, Gov. Ho'fman, Seu W. 2. We Mr. Anat \mericnn Mh A. bandera is ling, HHA O11ler8, WIL SDGAK. rangene 0 js in San Francisco, perfecting ar- | ¢ get n of Master Mr. Mackenzie, agent of the Tiunsutlantis line of | steauohi for the exiablishueut of ay Auatradan | Kramer, the'aew MM ' well managod. 1 Haveg to New Yark,saysvoritively that | ay. _« tne M, Thiers hae written a 1 ur F Buemek was | QO change to be mate in the devsriuee of the atone fourth sanval Convention of the American erp tyi: Ruraps Wil conse ng wus Mio | $8 Dut that they Will walk gyury wring) ws besver,, | cls bean ts session in Philadel | h f Wah A potion w f music, & He Ca avon, Phomas S, Walker presating, | G Vice legeat will b ‘ed bias a St committee of mutual fritnie hes & t at Salt Lake Cliy yestorda: Signor | Je, Chairunan pecial committee Another Nath rer. her the Justin D. Fulton tor vie and (ayy 0 case of Fld & I nagainet the Chios | on tho smijert, hue made a rey ort to tie Halian se) Rudolph D ak tended to te, BLL DT. Kev. hao: ie Ratiroad Company, the jury rendered e verdict | recommending that Rome be Not, mude the capita udulph Duyer @ Gern dered hi a8 by FMOME BiAdg ya eyeing ‘a favor of the pluinblite 06 e100) Tisiy WUUL alter the decease of (he pr r Self yesterday alternoon a eutral OMee pp had by nL & rostaur yi tuak y . 1 1 as the murderer of Bevjan {ral OMee, | before hin Athat Ate Malton ue ou! bottle be wi A United States Deputy Marshal in Troy, who nad Phe steamer Virginie and the schooner 1 fuund: by tie : ' In aBowery saloon ou a sundag’ A draye later Meer | ar ‘ Ruts, fom New York, have acrived at wud ao been Cured for accordingly. Cou) sik Lua Lube lee sug we vers parposk " vl, Dub Wa Al of wy eApedAyl dpaluel Bava, Kv y OGh ai, SUNAEAMS. —Hair pins are now called switch-tenders —Evening lesson for shopkeepers—sh =A bair ‘em scare tion—Th non. —The flower of the new year—The cal-y, fower. —A word to croakers—-When the whive’s ia the wit's out —Wall street version of the Golden Rute—De Others as others do yor —Figaro says that a wild duck properly cooked te indeed a rara avis. —It is © peculiarity with bachelors that they. Are always getting mismanaged. —A hore stealer in New Jersey keeps @ * groom of the stole" in fall very. ‘Are cats good to eat, mother +’ course they are—my son, good to ext mice * —An American traveller says that when the Rey. Mr. Spurgeon, of London, getaexcited, he howe like & wilderness, —One of the titles of the ex-Empress Fugénie of France i* the “ Marquivede Moya.” so manach de Gotha. —There has been a free bridge acrots the Con ueut, between Hanover, N. H., aod Norwich, Vig for the Inst twelve y —A vessel in the Briti#h channel lately picked Up & live pig seven miles at sen, dieproving tie popular Jdea that a pig cannot switn, —A Yankee has recently invented @ rat exter minator, consisting of @ fort of snuff. The nnimap Jerks his head off at the third sneeze. —On some of the freight cars which went ta the front loaded with German foldters was ieseribed the sentence, * Not to be kep —Leather merchants complain of scarcity of hides, The supply in this city more than one-fourth of what it was tea you Perkins says that if anybody will bring him that hundred and eight caret diamond the papers we speaking of he'll give him a cart load of cari ote fort —To Providence and way stations ” Anecrip'ion on a sign placed over the chapel « Trinity College, Hartford, lately. It wee stolen frou the rafiroal aspot. —The Collector of Customs at deen ordered to prohibit the entry of b poltry from the rogious of the Rod Rive pox is prevalent =—In Turkey patiouts to ale are tried by court martin ciples of Asculapine do not thidk it a'ptee Yo practise medi¢iue In. —A moon-strack youth of Harrison county, In- diana, voted half a sheet of note paper, with « look ef vinegar-colored hait curied wiinn, instead of toe req- lar icket, at the last electio. —Parasitic thrush is a disease to which people have heen lately subjected in ths midiand coanies of England, in consequence of drinking the milk of cows afficted with foot and mouth diseases: —The tongue of a church bell in New Hamp. shire having becn struck fron {te place lam eumver bp ligheping, local preacher alludca to Ue event aa mont remarkable cave of fapsus Unguer, —A mau in Ohio, while a collection was taking to ala the heathen, pocketed all the money in the plate, Wheu asked (0 expiain his condact, te replied that be Was the greatest beathen in that part of the couucry, —In Chicago the percentage of races is stated ows: Angio-Saxon, 3; German, 9; Scand 10; Irish, 10; all others, 6. The percentage of inv chige “or veil roarcely Pembina bas Malo #iciae and where smal native doctors who allow their Foreign diss nt country religious connection Is: 6 mone, 18 Protestaut, 18 Catholic —A Mormon, of Salt Lake City, has invented A novel apparatus for Killing grasshoppers by steam, The machine ts very email, aad oan ve abiacael % Wom WALT Of the operator, Wis plays on the grasshopperm the ich Is eSocted from a Mexible tute Attaghed to the generator. ’ —Tounyson’s admirers will be glad to hear that he will shortly apvear again before the public tn @ terles of twolve bruet poetas connected by a love Mory, nd iliusivated Doth by the and by music, Mr. Arihur iualos wil cive the artistic Liuatrations of the Wwork, aud Mr Arihar Sullivan will set to mura there Intest utterances of the poet Lanreate. —Mark Twain produces one of the most striking canes of a sonrecord, He rayshe knows a to- ty whicu bired # naa to blast rocks, and as he was poundiug the powd ha crowbar an exylosion took clice, rending the man and crowbar owt of alahte Bown canve down ail right, and the man went to work again promptiy, But though he was goue only Afteen Minutes, the company * docked him for lost time. —LKussia hes 697 cotton factories, employing 120,009 os, Before. the war In this country coe During tht period, however, the Iurstane bean te wauufaciure Boklira, Persian, Indian, and owicr eo tom, aud 4 | (hat (eit factories are now thie moet ple ¢ Koglish establisbinents, The produce amounts to $59,000,00; annually Although no precise date has yet been an Louise to ounce! for the marriage of the Prine Lord Lorie, 1 is woderstood that the muptials will probably be ceebratet about the fret week in Feb Foary, a: Windsor Casile, It is expected that Pariige mens Will De asked to preseut the Princess with the ¢ dOWFY us that granted (o the Princess Helens om arriage to Prince Christan of Schleswig: olsen, 0, ant an annuity of £6,000. y sueriff’ in Keene, New Hampsbire, be > state, of qulelsly raising hie right baud F cxiended, wid pretacing nie re- mar xelamation: " By the way It being 4 duty va-erier to give notles of the opening of Hear ye! all persons the Court of Common Mie your attention, and ye shail be heara,* down, but remembering that he had for- kolten the finishing touches, instantly rose, aod em “By the way, God save the Kite of Ni shire 1” AUTUMN SONG, are faliing, (hough coal is not, And pumpkins are yellow. and inaids are olve Potatoos and apples beyla to rol; There's many al sled, too, f, bage I A, ret beet forsaken the And fewer waters are loafing wrouud vale the turalp fa 1 w touder stea And mich fh chestnut ra Wi ue thougiit uf the stomach ace The Last of te cattle shows is seen Tie wouser equa: he Coe be fod very ms DFOW I t wis Bree Excont tomavoes, and they are red. The drowsy eltizen hates fo r Tiel f are less atfuetioua b veey at pe i r o regret u Indi Willcom st Lage may be®-eu trough 4 gla wt “ALL A MUDDLE! aon (utile 0 tae Worl Ugh an Sorrow, troupe, Lage tebut a, Bushing vubbie! Leleure, pleanur tuted measure Gold ator eangard trem Ww Rloowde vded Dauner tastog ‘ y Milt . ‘ ais t Iloride of ¢ 2 y h Mia L part by weigit; al 1 , r ton wick, ‘Lhe f ) 1 unt har \ hal ' i % 3 . SU 2 bMAKL 0, — pus the Macial be - babe ¥ \ Ling Ade

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