The Sun (New York) Newspaper, May 20, 1872, Page 2

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PR ee eg SS RE oy, SS pe a ee : ne a pap Spe eS Rh Booths Theatre Powery Theatre -Vemle Ditetior Vitth Avenne Theatre Arile Oly mpte Theatre Homety Doopty Kam Khurpley’s Minatreta- os) louleay re Mi ra Mouse Neptune's Sw '¢ Hihernieon, sed Pye of The ment @150 ii, int of 8 oe + 0860 4 4 Agate space, Avvanrans es Te cet ya ne PAnkO ADSABTISENESTS «Barges only 1OF ine apace vecupled, and diyiny Gye may be we jo Weekly and beat Weekly Criettia charyer at tbe tition of the advertloer. For the accommodation of up town residents, adver: Hirenents for THe SCN Will be received at our regul’ tates at the up-towa advertisement offices Si We t Thirty-second street, Junction of Troadwoy and Sixt avent BOS West Twenty-third sirect, opposlt braud Opera House, from 8 A. M. to S By The Strike To-Day. The peaceable manner in which the elght- hour movement in this city and Brooklyn has been conducted is creditable to the good sense of our workingmen; and the Fuccess attending their efforts goes to sho that resolute and courteous action will ge 1 erally prove effective, where violent meas- ures would only provoke determined re sistance, It is to be hoped that the general strike of certain trades to-day will be et ter- ized by a law-abiding and conciliatory spirit, ‘The workingmen have the right to determine how many hours they will work, and for what rates of wages, The ployers have the right to say whether th will pay the wages asked for. The seaso isa busy one, Houses are going up on all sides, There is a demand for carpenters, masons, bricklayers, plumbers, and stai builders. Contrac her have to nocede to the terms exac the men, or run the risk of their contracts remaining unfalfilied. Under such cireumstances there can be but lilile doubt of the final success of this well-timed and simultane- ous moverr a Hope for South Carolina. South Carolina affords an interesting ex- ample of the results of Grantism, pure and unadulterated. In no part of the South have the friends of the President exercised more wnrestricted » in no South- ern State ha the local authorities re ceived more undeviating support and ex couragement from Washington; and no- where in this country does a more disgrace- ful state of affairs prevail. The bonds of the State, to the a millions of dollars, e been uttered without warrant of law, and for their us no account has been given. A carpet-ba and negro Legislature has passed an act legalizing the illegal issues of bonds, The Most reckless expenditures have been made, the last session of the Legislature costing the State over a million dollars for pay certificates alone; while p reconstruction three or four hundred thou- sand dollars a year was sufficient to prc vide for all the publie wants, including the support of the public institutions, The most exorbitant taxes have been levied and collected. Every man, woman, or child who has an occupation which yields a living must poy a leense for th Nebt to work, ye millions of dol : is empty to-da: Tre Credit TH hogshead of bacon in Columbia to supply its asylums, ‘There is no money to support schools, to pay the interest on the legitimate debt, to provide for the lunaties, the deaf and dumb, and others dependent on public charities, Tris proposed to open the jail und let the criminals loose upon the com- nunity, because there are no funds to pay for their support. Even the salaries of the Judges have not been paid; but the ca pet-bag officials who have ruined the State are rolling in wealth, And to overay frighten the p redress their wr mothod « mount of pyious to » this community and + from any attempt to s by tl peaceful RANT, at the mof the plunderers who have the ontrol of the State Government, has har- ried whole counties with United State troops at a time when profound quiet pre- the ballot-box vailed; has made wholos#le arrests by the military power, and carried the terro: martial law into communities where the ivil courts were in full operation, and where less hawlossness existed than in th y of Boston, Is it any wonder hat under th iroumetanees the most IheTliyont net esperar puapte of mrt tarolina, without distinction of party, should be cuthusiastic in their zeal for the Jection of Honest Horace Gree whose vial tnt ity, liberal sentiments, and rest consistent efforts for concilia- indamnesty have gained their conti dence and carned th Itisasignificant fact, which exhibits in rerdent gratitude? } t str light the conciliatory vid ’ iz tutluence of the Cinvin- im it, that in no State in the Union has the nomination for President of | the ma listi hed of abelitie ts re ived a more wn y respon than in South Carolina birthpln f » rs We read in th s “y that if Morace Gaeeney is nomivated at Baltl- re it will split the Democratic party in pieces, In short, according to the Sfaals Zeiiig the Democracy and the Liberals innot unite in support of any candidate ylresident, If this be true, the country wed Aanzorous sitt ' On tie one hand, If Grerney is net sup ported by the Democracy Guan’ will cer ' 1; and on the other, if he tt Convention resolver to stand ny the ididates of the Lib= 1 ther ‘ 1 to the Staats fei th Demoorath rly will | woken in t , 1 votes sent red, and thus of course Grane will be retleeted, In. either our ¢ Mun contemporary appears to think tha here is no hope of getting vid of Gray in this election; and ifthe is not beaten new Here will be nothing to prevent his bei reflected President as long as be live Grane has always on remarkable for Bis luck. aud perhaps he may now have the greatest luck of all in being retlected by the inability of the Democracy to eon- ntrate their votes upon the only eandi- date who ean possibly beat him. This is the reasoning of despair; and if ves to fail into that ling, they will t nas they can to fasten Grant permanently upon the coun- should allow theme deplorable state of f the Cabinet. Reorganiz Mr. Bennerr earnestly Herald that Haxiiron Fist ought not to be kept in the Cabine competent to perform t tary of State, and becau has repeatedly 4 ved the country his is all true; and y Benyerr has not sv getting rid of Fist t dismiss him; y maintains in the use he is his administra- up to the present appealing to Gen. Graxt to and there is no nly way to reorganize the Cabinet and to fill its offices with men of stamp is to elect b GREELEY rest, and give country a Cabinet composed of its ablest et the Herald ade suey, and Frstt will be surely and satisfactorily disposed of. and purest stat here to Gi What Is the Necessity t Snppose that the supplemental treaty is not approved by the Sen tions between eva arbitration will not thereby of necessity be brought toanabrupt termina- ¢, the negotia- President Grant has already declared diness to withdraw the demand for %, provided that England will admit that such dame any event to be itral power, Now England not only admits this, but she has all along mad lation principle of her whole treaty is nece eof the rule, No supplemen bind her to the observa is what she has contended for from the be- is no possibility that in any emergeney she will wish to depart ginning, and th proper thing in this complication is President Grant himself to withdraw mand for indirect damages without any further ceremony and without at- through any supple- s got himsc pe, and he ought to tempting to carry ry into the get himself out of it. ———_—_ The public would be very why the committee of the United States Senate which has had the cases of the Senators from Kansas under consideration do not act promptly. inches of the Republican Legislature of as have preferred grave charges against Pomenoy and CaLpwett, and although Senators are ardent GRant men, and MORTON Is the Chairman of the committee charged with whitewashing report has This looks very glad to learn the investigati been present 1 in thefr case, If matters are so bad that MonToN fails to protest the innocenc ors, the corruption must be very rank an the proof overwhelmin over to the next sess! of the accused ir case is to go n, and the only infe' drawn from this is that the committee do. nee public before the 4 against Sen- not dare make th Presidential election. ator CLAYTON also are held in abeyane the Arkansas Senator's services are needed for Guant next November. ‘This delay will not de- iit, and will be ec ming exceedingly ed to corru al by the public, impatient at the whieh has been ishing feature aNa’s Adininistration 1, Who has been chosen ‘an hardly be resentative ¢ disearded Mr, BUTLER, who was formerly ¢ eid in this city 1 brethren not to have anythin We doubt whether k ns State Convention, wi Sencea Falls this week, » preservation 4s for the benefit of the ated on the ground that the forests is of Phe Mohawk river, w! all the region above Ich ts gredually Herkimer, still forests which and that re- shrinking tr two Canada ere as the Lumb ermen invade t about the water supply waters of Lake ng one hundred of water which the or JOHN O'DONNELL, Mf the great w onvinced that nt rate of pro TANABE YETI Thee ved than that destruction of it is evident atend merit instructions ‘6 withdrawn fe race back to the train he the way in I Ata recent Dlulned that the refreshment stations are made THE mero drinking saloons; the trains are often di layed while passengers have a hilarious bout, and the conductors often allow themselves to be treated to such an extent that they are unfit to take further charge of the train, There is cer- tainly room for reform in the Enelish style of conducting the railway refreshment business, The disagreeable hot coffee and sandwich im- pusture is certatnly preferable to drunken cc ductors and dangerous delays, be ie "i The Pall Mall Gazette has made the dis. covery that disturbances of the Intertor fore of the earth have a remarkable political changes. ‘Thus In 1856 the resignation of the AnenpreN Ministry was followed by a serious eruption of Vesuvius. When Lord Denny resigned in 1890 the same voleano made another demonstration, After the ‘Trent af- fair, and the release of Mason and ‘Torre del ¢ atthe base of V destroyed by a stream of lava, On Noy. 12, 1867, another eruption of Vesuvius began, and on 13 the Fenians attempted to blow up AWell Prison, This eruption continued until February, 168, when, Lord Denny resigns ing and the DistarLt Ministry coming into power, the mountain ceased its mutterings, Mount Aut teal disturbanc sions, I sin 18k, when the It ‘orm bill was passed, town of Bronte, ‘There was a violent eruption of Aitna in 18% when the Duke of WeLLixcton died; and in 1865 an eruption losting from Feb- ruary to July was followed by the death of Lord PALMERSTON and the accession of Karl RusseLn to power. ‘The Gazette Is of the opinion that the recent breaking out of Vesuvins will be follow. ed by the breaking up of the GLADSTONE Minis= try. Accepting these views as well founded, It la not diMeult to yunt for the late eart quakes in this country, whieh, beginning In Call- nia, made the earth tremble from the Pacific to the Atlantic ocean, These internal distur- bances were evidently the preliminary indica tions of the great political earthquake which is already beginning to sha Grant's corrupt Administration, and which by November next will result in a general upheaval of political strata, the burial out of sight of humerous fossil politicians, and a general puri- fication of the political atmosphere —— The election judges of Anve Arundel county, Maryland, are on trial In the United States Circuit Court at Baltimore on a charge of refusing to accept colored votes at the State election last fall, If colored men have been prevented from exercising the right of suffrage, those who have so prevented them should dealt with according to law. But what can be thought of an Administration which, while vin- divating the rights of colored men in Maryland, permits thousands of white citizens to be un- justly and unlawfully debarred from the suf- frage in Khode Island ? an How many thousands of colored men there are in the United States who immigrated hither from foreign intries It would be dim- cult to estimate, For years past there has been a steady stream of colored emigration from Jamaten and other West India islands, and the Middle and E States have received many colored laborers from Nova Scotia, It would be interesting to know how many of these un- naturalized foreigners exercise the right of suffrage, A correspondent of Tre Sun charges that the colored delegate to Philadelphia has never taken out his papers as a citizen, and on that account enjoyed during the war a weleome immunity from the draft, The Inspectors of election In the Southern States should make it their duty to Inquire strictly into the claims to citizenship of colored men suspected to be foreign born, ‘The amend- ments to the Constitution do not extend to aliens the right of suffrage, whether the allen mes from the West Indies or Dahomey. here are doubtless many colored men in the South who have almost forgotten whether they foreign or native born, They should be made to refresh their memories, and to settle ny doubts on the point by the corroborative testimony of neighbors and friends, The quest of naturalization has lately been receiving considerable attention from the Ad- ministration legislators of our State. It ts but right that similar attention should be given to it elsewhere, Let the most serutinizing casures be taken by the authoritles, both Soath and North, to keep aliens, both white and colored, fr fraudulent ballots in the roaching ay The Elmira gathering refused to listen to an address from the « Bernen, and t mong whom he was regently a shining light FUP iiithisters Tw to his speeches ts bad enough, but to have his eloquence pooh-poohed by a gang of graceless officeholders ts adding Insult to injury, Mr BeTeen should have remembered, however, that the bread-ar ude don't want the colored ¢ ad They want thelr votes One of the peculiaritics of the political revolution now in progress Is that everywhere the pe var to be Ln advance of the poll- ticlans in their comprehension of the situation, ‘This is especially noticeable in the South, wher the masses have accepted the Cincinnati ticket with enthusiasm, ‘The Nashville Unton says that red delegate, Wa. F Zion Conference. GHeELEY and BuowN can get ten thousand more Demoerativ v pb Tonnessee against Grant than ADAMS or any other candidate, And while the Hon, Jous Pousyvrn, here in New York, ts writing letters in which he is endeavoring t throw cold water on the Cincinnati nominations IMs paper in Alabama, the Mobile Register, with better opportunities for judging of the tone of public sentiment in the South, has fairly taken the bit between its tecth and Is making a grand run for GReeLey, Tn its issue of the 12th just it says: * We believe that the GnEeuRy-Brows 1 vention have nominated ; and it will poll doublo the vote here that Mr. AoAMs could Ws, CRT I hi veawene the Treasury Department at EL Paso del N retary BOUPWELE for to vislt the dierent virtually at as and the customs res celpis are dally falling off. The Apaches and Cochise Ind wed with improved rifles, keep every! ntl Grande in a state of excitement for fear of attack. ‘The Deputy Cole Jectors of Customs are sending in their resigna- Doputy Collector J. M. Leu an isthe only Ameri can at Presidio det Norte, all the rest haying ted from the border, and LEGUAN wants to bet lieved rotary BOur WELL has sent A ite applivation to th etary of War. — The model convict has turned up in Rage land inthe person of Mr. Witttam Re ' an ex-moniber of Parliament, who vo yours age for the f y fellow prisoners, but to 1 he declined t pthis | leave. He prefers, it is sald, remainin where he hasim int v its inmvat in bis attention to the suifevers, Lf Mr, Rous. suit can only be prevalled upor t mense Induence upon his fellow convicts and duce them to follow his example in the ti The stone man of © ! may yet yw to hea ne fossil oder mains of n t. A b hival nparison, Hf Just human nature to ta 1s ott an Whole, and the men who ov reionate to inl they devoureds domust have bad throats pr the size of the sli a New Quarter Pay—Pablic dee Meets Shorter Hours an: Meeting of Servant Girls in 0 ing of Mervant Men im Leamington, Correspondence of The Sun. Loxpox, May 6.—Slavery in any form can nevér for any considerable length of thine survive the repudiation of its rightful extstence by the slaves themselves. There Is slavery and There was slavery the rightful exist ence of which was never questioned by those who had to endure it, and there has been, and ts now, slavery the rightful existe tand branch by those whom cir- ‘Tho most abj of which ts cumstances subject ancient slaves never questioned the justice and necessity of the existence of the institution they only deplored the adverse fate that had sul- Had the Greek conquered the Roman he would have sold him with as little o a4 a slave as Ca and no power in the world w ded him that he was doing wrong. ts fought against ; te who was to be the slave. when the slaves themsclves, alded by the Chris. tlan dispensation, repudiated the very existence of the institution, its ds slaves of the latter Jocted them to it. too, has been affected by the polit« tnyland on several occas | NUt slavery as a tna boiled over and destroyed the neighboring were numbered. ‘The sof the Roman Empire were no doubt in every respect in a much better position than the slaves of any former period had been, but they had given up the notion ut who was to he the slave, be- cause they had taken it into their h other Jew or Gentile, G had any business to wrangling ab TLAVOR MOVEMENT ‘Time was when in duty bound rs much the same chara n thought they wer hours that God Almighty sent butall that hay at the eonvi for a bare subsist the foundations of of wages labor alt yet ripe forsuch astep,{n thelr opinion, h working only a limited ‘The labor uni than to rais en were obliged to work ¢ twelve a day the (en-hours workin d fact before irs agitation d, and inspite of opposition and. re- crowned with success, sb far that Its isall but an accomplished fact the ulne-hours working day will no more satisfy them than the previous reductions grows with eating fhe more they wil t the less they will ors would willing! t that offer has sk “What guarantee Ix th sent to SL hours a week now.that we sh er to make it 487 * is the reply of the men give any pledges for the future,” and so the mas- ter builders threaten NERAL LOCKOUT, en going on forthe d the plague of n rejected, and ‘The commotior last twelve monttis hay ¢ into quarters whe ve the upper ten thou- d froin the shock which the dis- f unionism was raging covery that the plague districts gave t were inforined that worse cellar, the st nie lasses of Dundes and the garden, ‘ing men getting thelr Cabor reduced If their sweethearts are mitted to meet them # servant girls s except by th n redress theirs s were taken does not appear, but irls of Duncee held a crowded m which was add demand a half-h very alternate And how are the ross of their griev- by which work- wed by servant liday each week and the feasting and ¢ more work £ servants on Sunday than The girls think too, that there teh as any slave uisidered the re reproached with having ample op. bout at their ited him with as much indiffer- hereon TUoliuD to Tistei And then the impudent husstes the servant's and modest maidens, once the pride of v lavery, aud’ the prescriptions, f upas an int relusion that wof being marked as duty in the he upshot w was formed and r wnugements should be made to obt as to character, temper behavior of the ladies who require servants, en her heart if not rrner in the eve young man b was What am Leamington hiv When thy moral Cour SUN, MONDAY, MAY 20, 1872. THE SOCIAL REVOLUTION, —_——- UPRISING OF DOMESTIC SERVANTS IN ENGLAND, age of the oppressed has risen suffctently bigh to publicly repudiate the conditions of their op- pression. The revolt of the domestic servanta, coupled with the renunciation of the allegiance of the rural laborers, ta | unmistakable sign of all s0- at stir without upset that the established state of things has lo: its moral hold upon the lowest stratum o clety. ‘This stratum cant Ung the whole superstructure. Hs. THE RIGHT-HOUR AVALANCHE. onsale The Sone of Toil Banding for their Right What is to be Done this Week. The movement for the enforce taken uj come get On Friday evening the master carpenters ro- nt olght hours after Noy. 1, the men solved to to work nin hours until the The carpenters on Saturday morning rejected this proposition without a dlesenting voice, and d that on and after to-day not a blow decid should be struck from) Har until their and Was 4 mass meet! dito, Ame ls att eve arponters assemble at Masonte Mall, nt. this morning. The Amals mated Carpenters’ Union, the stair builders sash and bin penters of Will them in thia move makers, cabinet makers, and car: tite ‘The plumbers also strike to-day for the eight hour reform, The proposition made on Friday evening by the master masons to give $4 for eight hours’ ly Lwas not acceded lus MeAul pore Iperative Masons, info: esterday that work would fi nt rates until Wednesday next, when further action will t ing that evening in Demilt Hall, Yesterday afternoon the German’ carpenters of Willlameburgh assembled in Military Hall ‘They resolved to unite with the others of their trate in the strike for eight hours, which begins to-day, Mr. GL, Johnson, of Ninth street, the largest builder in the district, has complied with the request of his men. The wood carvers will atrike to-morrow If the emplorers refuse theirdemands for eight hours, with no reduction of w The Bakers’ Grievances, Zo the Etitor of The Suns Sin: I x to call your attention tot working hours and sm<!l pay of the bakers Workingmen of other trades, earntr to $5 a day, have established eight day's work, whih fitte fr the bakers h nH hotirs out of every twe n $12 to $b a we Jes’ union, at their ni that our 1 r xt meeting, call a pubs any grievances may be righted, We have over four hundred members in good standing, the majority of whom are veterans of IMis, Who deserve ald frot other trades untons should it be necessary. A Bake > The Michigan Miners Threatening to Fight ifthe Troops Make any Arrests, Hywanron, May 18.—The troops who arrived here on the 16th inst.left for the Calumet Mines last night to make some arrests, Tho rioters are now quiet and have made no demonstrations whatever, except releasing the prisoners who were arrested by the Sherlif he Lith. ‘Then the rloters, abont 40) in iumber, # ied the guard, who had nineteen men in custody, and released them, but offered bo violence to the guard: The hhiners’ wives threw some stones at the guard, ati Molent than the men, But miners Aght If the troops make any arrests, trom. the min y the troups, tthe Cala i AMUSEMENTS, —_—-— ‘The Liederkranz Society's Compliment to Franz Abt. The Liederkranz Society, which is always foremost in doing graceful and kindly acts, gave Franz Abt a testimonial concert on Saturday evening at Steinway Hall. The audience was very large, and the famous song writer, to whe the world is indebted for me of ite sweetest and most popular melodies, must have found it nb ucewsion of subs tial Leneflt. The greater the better, for the sons of art at the best have a small enough patrimony. The programme was made up almost entirely of the works of the beneficiary of the evening, comprising choruses for male voices and ot ra, unaccompanied part songs, @ composer's best Neder, Abt himself played the accompantments to the latter, and personally pducted two of the former, He was very cordially received by the ence, and his round, florid, and pleasant e be ned with pleasure, Miss Krebs, Miss Henne, Stynor Sarasate, and Herr Graf took part as soloists. The singing of the L derkranz Society was by no means all that could be desire ‘There are men in it who are ubtless very good fellows, but certainly are very bad singers, wh lacking all singing quality, and that reason are heard all the more conspicuously above the rest, This is unfortunately the case with the tenors; the bas nd basses 8, especially th strong, firm, and good, The Ninety-first dalm, by Meyerbeor, for fall charus and organ a diMeult, elaborate, and beautiful composition Wis MESO Pyettones Te passages toward its close, very badly sung. It was uncertain both in time and tn intonation, Six Minute KENTUCKY ASSOCIATION Racers, May {8.- The Consolation Purse of $13 beaten horses, onde. 1G, Thomas's Aureola, 8 years otd hoo dames Metntyry's Deke, d pears old ete We | T. Fe MeCnuly on Piggy, d years old dis Zeb. Ward Aine, 9 ye i duit ' { ; whlch, WiLL cutFal to got Foun Har 1 1 Me H ft ‘ \ 7 Tinie 13s, Same Day—The Wooley Stakes, for three 0 #35 entran Vou adding Hon PMay't 1 W. Mant itey ao yearn old 2 G.Thotnia's be f WY. Mee i ist A i mood, a seared off rin ' " \ ut tan) &\ mm, Day.—Aasuclation | £84, mile heats, for | Aneroid : ‘ fine TROVEING LN FLL op Fr M - fore 1 \ rachet re ‘ enters brom. Rat 1221 Wil riieat 133 A ' $500 ef ; Foil's Longfellow Ween Aad rm y eRe ee A bitd The Loss of the Pripoti ' %) May IA despateh from Wexford 1 * Fearful Rain storm in tina | ' i ' WEL wiby Lil) deliy ede THE BRIGHTEN! AN OUTLOOK FROM THE WASHING. TON OBSERVATORY, NG SKIES. | iment of the Democratic Masses from Maine to Texas So) crate Nearly dence of The Sun, Wasitinaron, D.C., May 17. nati platform and ticket have now been b slong enough for reaponses to reach this city from nearly every portion of the Unt That the ticket is acceptable te Liberal Republicans whose represen lately mot at Cineinnatl ts sufficiently obvious, apparent that the name and Greeley will attract singin a large class of Hepubs rs who pay little attention to conven. tions, but earnestly wish to cast thelr ball It is this universal conviction ley's honesty, added to the generat weariness of old party trammels, caucuses, rings, achinations, which creates an undertow for Greeley that utterly haftes and sets to naught the flnespun calculations and plans of the pro- ‘This undercurrent of en- spontaneous sentiment rd nt last a cry and a name that moves them, and out they speak, not asking or caring to ask what their member in Congress or their usual party organ will say about it iustration of the latter fact may be « There Is only one Democrati ment of the Fight-Hour law, successfully begun by the painters a few weoks ago, and more recently y the carpenters and joiners, has be- really no more than the fly on the cart wh the War movement, but he nn finagine self tho cart Itself. Great. ide 1 soul. Hoe began to nourish Presidentll a tlona. His term of office as Govern character of Hor nto the Btatery aster ng in nit this decision enthusiastically dle, he hag stuck tolt, Mat ination at Cincinnath, and a win there at the little end of the noven, an honest man, maburgh are hand-in-hand with fessional politicians, thusiasm is @ genul ‘The masses have » by the ary of the od a ne equally resolved to east th ley. Lam told that t determined at @ 1 no opportunity to as- sail the Cincinr ly every Den ed In legitimate busine nominations, ¥ and they turn to Horace Grocley as the erer fr uaintance wh: sand disconnected They dust ask about it, nor do they care. 1, the mecha in IL it were deemed ait able a big ratific nm meeting could be here to-morrow, and it would be THE SOUTHERN DEMOCRACY SENSIULE, As for Congress, it Is ¢ theedis between the temper of Dem rd of Greeley’s noml- The first day T curious to ne from $5.50 erats when twey first he nation and their present attitt doubt if half adozen members could ha found tosay right off that they accepted 1 cautions, a few Gre now fora straight Democrat North intimated t cavorted in arent wrath. aliberal and se gallant Maj. Harry Gilnor, who ts idolized by Marylan am told fro Convention should meet somewhere ireeley should d rinate a strolg ticket, and al They would ne toned Democratl e party would itis much stronger than the poll Thave heard itr be famous for the slaughter of politic they ¢ deceive yoursely a large-brained and thoughtful ex-member from the South, with more wit and presc xcited crowd of small-fry Congress- men, “don't fmagine that your Convention will hold the South or even the De’ palm of ite han vention can possibly meet, the pe South will have broken t ly beyond your control." This prediction Is already verified. The people ve taken the bit in their teeth and fore your Con- “| FORNEY KICKI we and will be COLEC: | Refusing to be Instructed or Ord: everywhere h started off for Greele: himself couldn't hold them, stil! Less the se iticlans who now infest the public stage, Of course you know how these members sent off despatches, telling thelr people t wait for the Democratic Convention to meet. ‘The answer in one case was, “go to the devil ;” and [doubt if any of these gentlemen has ex- erted the slightest appre way or the other on public think of the impude of asking the American people to hold their tongues and let the whole matter be manipulated ion of party hacks huckstering for nt on making their jack SOUTHEAN BRAINS FOR THE DEMOCH ATIC Democrats in. ( perfectly amazed at this unwonted exhi independence on the Southerners nave been bold war by their Hselves LOO ¢ hold still and | advice was not wanted, but an opport sired to instruct and order him. Against thi he has rebelled, and to-day an article believed ta be from whic on the tre » of the thing: tional prid us that method bus been hit w n tt all know, su hot only a with the A ing committed a grave blunder tn untenable claims, We bind. ourselves by n tre ‘ plemental treaty, It settles Of international law. If wr t ) Lack seats and leaders take tt wins year after ye irown state atiwated suc torneys and arbitrators for the United States, bat it voices are harsh, | nor William Me Evarts, An have concluded at last t Per contra, the omer resis aati eeeeb bee tbe: ooh coe phen e with Grant him as an ally spine Tenteesceep eee th They don't war will not stand him as a master, all the fat jo Gen, Grants 1 all the fat j f who runs ‘the Ad amounting annually t the President and b sand all that sort of thing THE WORK OF GRANT'S HPSSTAN hees's speech was expected to do great r Hourbonism, but it tas done G first by shaw vagress do not tile stand that a spe Hdelight to the tof hearing from the y Southerners in both branche ' \ Ipud to bull de Se, by his outapoken and repeated ¢ eral amu eee ay Nand fr pie VIRGINIA'S BINGHAMION PAnAsiTE, The ily pple upon this current row outet the morbid and ri Hous an « Gilbert C. Walker. — He way t 1am though watranger, and very little known tatty plo of Virginia for one thats was deemed advisat he State ndinitved ta Union tesaed Republican, Tt was not atinia «Union record, Thad: gune ines Hovenent, and tiv tad Hie bert, Walker's golden opportunity, tke wae hardly was he warm in te. ton tn n'a Vacancy The ‘igus Was held. Hut (he idea of the ry r nee Iniby node tplin was a nome gation from Vir Pin bisintevest. Hecame one and Is sow was fixed Boing to try bis hand over aeain ae faltimere for the first of second place on tive + HM Shot his vanity and greed for om boundless asthat of all the carpet-hegvers, and allord a lusive reason. for Mr. Greeley a of sending all th toth ne K you ay weite It certain tab vane itl sely ha ed ( furtlicr this. mats eon Mantis hoy Will send a strong Greeley delegation to Dalthnore. f THE CAROLINAS AND GEORGIA for the old N State, her people ara trength for Gree: sentiment there Is very nd Lam not surprised to find It so. ided South Carolina will send a unanimous delogns tion to Balthmore forGrecley. This people need relief from intolerable pillage and oppression, mM thieves and oppressors em a base coward, who in time of nice on the falle nt ned to Hourhe ity there is so large and so the people do not feel the ne ance with the Liberals, But there are bor i sensible minds in Georgia, of whom Gen Join 1. Gordon and Martin J. Crawford are type. ad Lhave good hopes that @ portion at Teast of tha rgia delezation will be for Gre THE GULF STATPS AND ROWDEN STA Florida, Alab: Missi 1, Lousiana, Ate Kansas. and Texas will unquestionably be for y at Haltimore, Tennessee has already spoken with emphasie for Greeley and Brown Kentucky Id divided, with the proponderanca T apprehend e the National Convention uurrent Will be the other wa Hand the Baltr ) ihe large un, whieh has rotry pape ible tone on this subject. ‘Tho Hy Is « ley heart and soul. cHent sources that the populat iment both in Baltimore and. the counties y for Greeley. All this is spons Tt has not been worked up atoll, and ns. sis year would i ked that inthe way of this popular ube jog the 3 but Phave rong, se fellows Will In a mouth be ley men than you aud I Le G INTHE TRACES, —— lent—A > Treaty Bland Wasttinaton, May 19.—Col. Forney wat ere Critic: sent for by the President some days ago for cone sultation on the political situation, and after two interviews with n. Grant the Colonel ta pendently. He says it seems de king pretty ind is pen in the Suid ey Chrontele, of his nephew is the ostensible editor, opens ty as f If there could be devised Jeulated than another of the Ateric lows one method better huniilitate the nas people, it seems to Hental treaty submitted for Senatorial judy nt as a proposition from England, but, as wo sted by the United States. It ia awal of the disputed | Dy tix adeclaration that, hav taconfession tha rant of law and humbly se p Bagland. W ‘ Hatin i We ainly Was not party intluen: r her Caleb Cust t fies r y-lieneral and privat Francis Adu to the Bra i aid fort m sure of the job Republican lawyers who could: | ! this With less ¢ ase Very ie Lito th sacritice to nia ybody pretendit Have managed these pettifoggers aud indirest dana the necessity for, its | “a follow t t any 0 Eax-Gov, f uM « Jorsey om d Dour, a1 t f. ‘i follows try, B Hay 13,1 N My Lp Ine t 1piter { I 1 nd reat hathonal 1 1 1

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