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= The =e Sun. Jt Rhines for ATL SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER Amusements Tos) = t's Minstrels 6 Cullforuta ME Mt, James Theatre Theatre Comique Boos Pay. wer year, to y i Ry ACsHATT INS ary Wilson, “In the presence of the true and ever- Aving God, and en roly word, 1 do hy obligations toward my bret! weNothings. are that Lwill truly £ will keep sacred en birth ora Ror, leclare and swear t! 1 destroy the in= wad wleudiast, so bel} Republican publish in that wrong yates have been made resp: ection of iwhieved over Grant by the epublica party ance and shou k candidly to under if next Monday's Will They Explain? distinguished persons who, Oakes Amps told Co sachusetts Vice-President, Giesst W. Henny L. Dawes, ire candidates for sow a cand nid Jastes A, Gan entiomen have y say in conti planation of the they will do well to say it without delay. ‘The list in which tl above men- McCoats by Astes in connection with a let- on Jan, 28, McCoatu that he at State mentioned in the list; the one Scuvvirn hen Speaker of the House of Represen- » name is also given in the Pennsylvania rretp and Krur halt from two letters sort of shares did shares each, sok worth at par ave yet to place Only Two Ca romedy at Louisville the people Grant, they will do it; but if they want to beat him and put an end to nepot jon and robbery of the South, and the almost inconceivable corruption Government, they will elect and whatever be their determination, Tar continue to read ite — The Outlook in Indiana. The political prospect in Indiana is en- withstanding that the r North ing. party are preparing to repeat thei Carolina tactics, and are already engaged colonizing negroes to neutralize the of the legal citizens in October, Sen- tov Morron, who controls the Federal pat- in the State, and directs the move- ments of his party, is well aware of the fact that Gras bas no chance of receiving the honest vote of Indiana in November, and is making the most desperate efforts to prevent a expression of opinion at either of the elections The means adopted by Morton to carry his ends, however, aré better enloulated to inspire disgust in the minds of intelligent voters than to effect the purpose he has in view. Just now he is endeavoring tomake capital out of the Buawtox Duncasx Con- vention; but the straight-out movement has no foothold whatever in Indiana, The only persons who have taken any interest in it there are utterly devold of character or influence, As for voting imported ne- groes, (hat is an enterprise which is likely to bring its promoters to grief, as the Lib- erals and Democrats are forewarned, and will not only strictly serntinize suspicious voters, but will take effective means to brin ai to punishment all whe may be en- gaged in frauds, or attempted frauds, on the ballot box. In 1868 Grant had a majority of 9, atotal vote of 343,582, At the same el tion Hespricks, Democratic candidate for Governor, ran 3,64 ahead of histicket. At the election in 1870 for State officers, the Den.ocratic enndid for Secretary of State r ! votwot This year there will probably be a large iner on the full vote of 1868, including a colored vote of about 7,000, which will b mainly east for the Nr nominees. But cived a majority of 2.568 in at in Indiana, many of the most influential Republicans in the State having entered i no most popular Democrat in Indiana, A thorough canvass of the State results in the assurance that Indiana 15,000 majority for Hexpricks in October, | anda linger Pr dential contest ——— Francis Kernan. The Disrepuiabte ns the cam- paign against PRaxcts Kenway, the Liberal candida for Governor of New York, by saying he “did his best to encourage the rebellion war No falsehood more gross could be print- ed. FRancts KERxan was one of the most active War Democrats in the State. THe was Chairman of the committee for aiding the organization of regiments in Oneida nty, and while in Congress voted for every war measure, high an opinion of him did President Lrycoun entertain he frequently invited him to the consult upon im- portant matters. There whi can in Oneida county who does know that the statement of the Disre be Times is devoid of even the shadow of truth, — Iuterests and Principles. At Inst our British cousins have ap- parently scented a possible financial protit to be made out of Cuba, and the help which the patriots confidently expected we it rendered to their cause by th civilized and philanthropic communitic of the world from moral motives is likely | tobe furnished them for the most sordid | of reasons—monetary gain, Many London | tied, whose proceeds, if refused by Spain as an equivalent for the indeper dence of the Island, will be devoted to the fore ble accomplishment of that purpo Phe extent to which Spain and her sn traps in Cuba have deceived the outsid) h, prospects, d final result of the patriots’ strug for independence, is beginning at last to be world in regard to the stren universally acknowledged and its object thoroyghly understood, every- body knows what, but for the gross decep- tion practised by Spain, might have been wi long ago—that the revolution can- suppressed by any force Spain can oppose to it, and consequently that its final triumph is merely a question of time, Impartial people see, moreover, that the utrocities which the Spaniards have com- mitted in Cuba preelude any possible ami cable solution of the question, and th even were sucha solution otherwise pr sible the Spaniards have themselves cl the door to it by the blind fanati a “nm which they bave excited in the minds of the ignorant and easily deceived masses in the Peninsula on the subject of uational integrity Spain bus gone to the length of her tether ev efforts to exterminate the Cuban people; her treasury is bankrupt, and she owes to another bankrupt concern, the Bank of Havana, some $55,000,000, advance: for the purposes of the war, And now finally, When the Cutans by their indom itable valor have proved that they are in nt to be exterminated, the Stock Exchange men of London loosen their purse string and suddenly discover that the Cubans ought to be helped, What a satire upon our Republican Ad mini-tration, upon the Exeter Hail aboli- Loulsts, and upon the morality of the age pain is trying to effect a loan in Paris 8 es her Would-be dupes believe that she tillowns Cuba, The agentof the Cuban Goy ernment in Paris has juontly issued a ett colar in which ne states that prospective fenders of money Lo Spain necd not expect any recoun Uon from the Cuban Ropublic of any elaim for money advanced to Spain, ‘This action has, a 4 to lust advices, considerably embar rassed Spain in ber praiseworthy attempt at raising the wiad ‘The split of the Granr party in South Caroling has left the Prosident in rather an em: b ng position, The reputation of the ’ wing, cor ne the most prominent of t nderers who have preyed upon the State Tre y during the past few yours, Is Bo exc ingly unsavory that GRANT Would undoubtedly be glad to escape the discredit of aMilation with it If he could do #o and retain the electoral vote the State, But the rascals control the nore vote, they have hitherto had the un lating enance and support of the President, and if he should undertake to repudiate them at tht time they would have a speedy revenge, Under hose circumstances itis given out from Wash ington that President GRANT has no choice two State Lickets, but esteems them THE SUN, SATURDAY. THE CAMPAIGN IN MAINE. THE CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATES AND THEIR PROSPHCTS, able to compromise matters by extending secret aid to the corruptionists without openly appear- Ing to favor them. What complicates the situa tion fe the fact that Speaker Moses, the Ring candidate for Governor, who has acquired @ national reputation for raseality, represents inaonthe Grant National Executive me is found in harmo- nious compantonship with those of Powsn. Chayron of Arkansas, and Addition, Division of Pennsylvania. pe little doubt which faction Grant 8 to Boo SUELO ‘The Exact Pacts of th now to be Expectod. To the Buitor of ha Sun. You are wrong about Maine Nas boon no test vote in this State since 1468. ‘The majority then on Congressmen was 17,645, Tho vote for Governor 1 party majority. jority on Congressmen at from scattering votes and from dof plantation votes which were not So that the actual majority in Maine on Just about 20,000, Instead uf 10,000 votes, Afult vote any time these ¢ last years would have shown this major You will see how this might be by observ. ing the diminished aggregate vote of the State since 1868 ‘The following are the figures Whole vote of 188, Whole vote of 1309 Whole vote of 1810. Whole vote of 1871 eased vote and diminished Republican majority last year arose from an attempted coup de main by the Democratic party. t thelr vote silently without disturbing their opponents ; and partially suc ceoded, throwing @ heavier relative yo usual, But that reduced majority of 10,000 votes was and is no criterion of the actual majority in For the Republicans then threw but 68,000 of thelr 75,000 votes, In computing the probable majority this year you will fall into graye error if you do not rec nize the facts as herein presented. Ing election the State will be raked cloan of every voter, and whatever the majority ts re- uced below £0,000 will be the actual gain. gain willbe between five and ten per cent. of the aggregate Republican vote. five per cent. then the Republican majority Should it rise to 10 per cent., it will be no more than 5,000 votes, and 8 in expectiag this result. But the greater probabilities are that the ma- found somewhere between 5,000 in any event showing great gains, and as great as ought to be anticl- gains which if made In the Indiana, New others, will be Mat Blections— | rebels for their slaves a aine e, where his 1 RANT and on Governor 19,316. showed the actu clency of the r SUN which shines for all will continue to publish all the news, and everybody will | | Disreputabie greatest feat In denying that Pre: Everybody who knows him at all Knows that, while he does not drink exc sively every day, he yet every now and then gets drunk, and sometin tas notorious as the fact of his existence. re the war he was compelled to resign from drunkenness, and after his resienation he continued to get tight every During the rebellion he made an effort to keep himself steady, declining wine or Hquor almost always when {t was offered to him, and excluding it from his headquarters, theless he could not enttrely refrain, and every once in a while he got drunk, lected for this purpose the times when h ho very serious duty to perform, so that the Ine- bration was comparatively private and harm- Jess, while his friends had tho right to say that lly a temperate man, has been President he has pursued the same general line of conduct, getting drunk from time ire and opportu These facts are perfectly familiar to every poll- per writer who knows 48; and no one having any respect for truth would think of disputing ever gets drunk. very drunk. as you estimate, the army on account now and then, enerally he se= undertook to get o he was habit to time as de ticlan and to eve anything al A well authenticated Ku-Klux case has aticst been established in Carter county, Mis- The victims of the outrage were visited f the night by reduced tol inthe middl we are within bou the visited faiyily was removed ted to a severe fle recognized by Jority will be of the band we p, and in dui ne to trinl, howeve it was discovered Ku-Kluxed was a Klux in custody were The Court eame to the conehi- Enforcement act was never In- caso as this, and the pated, for they ar of Pennsylvania, Hampshire, Connectieut, and amply sufficient to throw them all to the side of the opposition, Maine people are much like other people, only perhaps a litsle more qui but the causes whi Just as likely to operate o other States, ‘The Indications ¢ not wholly in erre given, furnish abundant en tion that Hora all GRaNt men. sion that the tended to apply to such re at once d the Liberal Republican movement isstrong to see and to ime PascHan, a ident In Washington, has pub- luressed to ch he takes the trou Hty of the idea tinguished Senator and divine, in his Washington rtily into the struggle forreform, while Mr, Hespricks, the candidate for Gover- of the Democrats and Liberals, is the the population of election, if Tam n the baste here nd for the exp ry all the States he is sure of, elect him, with a large margin HARLAS, in w dvanced by that is good for Chronicle, that there isno constitutional inhibition In the way r its manumitted slaves. Us HARDAN, in his efforts to propagate the baseless slander that Homace GineeLey is \jority for Greg.ey in the A Maine It atring In the Fifth nidler's Mouey~ Pike Makiug In the Fourth Con Liberal candidate is Marcellus Bi ery, editor of the Bangor Democrat! ability, and personally unex ond during the war is so d nst him that Republicans find it a ha tu swallow to vote for him, was so outspol ernment that his oflce was m rtunate nomination Just at this juncture sible to be t Radical, snd it is pretty nderstood that be was put up to be bea' was very unwise, however, to h up who would wea District the which the payment of oremancipation of any slave hibited in the instrament which governs all our while exposing the fallacy of the absurd views expressed by HAWLAN, sug- night be in better busine show that one of the plainest provisions of the Constitution might be su All of this may be very true; but ot could ever sappose that be in favor of paying ould be done. “any claim for the is expressly pro= and opposed every meas sure Cesigned for the prosecution of the ptionable, except Mr. Pasentat During the war he in his opposition to the Goy- gests that he was hardly pos is overwhelming! fully evaded no one but a born i avo a candidate The Radical light vote of that In 1865, which Is the has been no fight In t anything sine minumitted ken the tleke years ago on th tribution to then, it was thy manufacturer ly into the great co ty in the State se money flows free. f the Radical strengthens the person wi MORRILL WENT FOR HERSEY s country d vernor when Perham was first the had been Hanni ul Hamlin’s next friend n Hamlin and and had excited A. P. Morrill, brot er of Lot, the ts a mild-mannered man. Anson P. fs a bellicose individual for a funerat Hersey cam nomination hatchet, and at the had that gentleman's excited great bitterne > of the proceed Ip at his belt. sof feeling, especial- own neighborhood, the Bangor disaffection the he hardest part of over all the dia ers ; but altho: eful precautions are taken t y find to thelr ma the most ea thefts, which if discovered are severely pun- ished, the blacks succeed In concealing ni A late number of ntofa Kaflr who was kill largely, hundreds staying away from the polls entirely, and refusing to ote. the vote of that year cannot be taken as any criterion, and comparisons made with the election of 188, when a full Ke. publican vote for this reason of results must secreted Inthe seams ¢ his clothing, no less forty-five diamonds, one of them weighing A Boer working close by h and as a servant of his had died shortly re he had the disaffection Hernatortal defeat that that gentleman was nominated for Cor WHY Mit, PETES WAS SLAUGHTFRED, Peters had repre for two terms, but they said John croc to represent a Maing constituency, and through fear of being defeated In the Convention if he allowed his name to by left a clear field for Hersey nibal Hamlin was in the ose thls year, His trouble rty diamonds. w fleld for explorers be industriously worked ew Hush elds a diamond wel, carats was found in J great a curlosity, even th on exhibition, t dy exhumed, ented the district id have liked a third ed his elbow too mu h will probably » withdrew and The hand of Han- transaction likewise, Jes being anxious to reward his hench- man, Hersey, he had a misty notion that Peters, ifhe continued In Congress, was Mable to turn wnd by at the expiration of Ha uididate for the Senate, a, that It was placed e owner giving the the hospital fund, doseribed as beautl fully shaped, off-volored, with an unfortunate Figs thrive well inl eral other Southern States, A subseriberin I cured great quantities of n simply by mashing them flat and ‘Phe native fi thinks superior in fl as they do in sev- Senatorial term as a the business wes over and his goose had t one of his friends went to Condall with he had not re- So many reg uh they have a dark color mained in the kind were expreased that Ps had been hasty in withdrawin made a push for rer 1 for a while to kick out of the the many appliance A for such. purposes were br hear, and he gave in Persons unfamiliar with the wool trade surprised to sce how much a flee unwashed wool will shrink upon being th and to wish This is espe a tine variety tities of oll and sum in their wool, which add ral State ticket will ran ional theket, as Bin ni vill damage him even with hisown party CONTRST IN TIE FLERE DIsTRICH in Mottville. nt of a fleece which was raised r Skaneateles and sold « woo! manufacturer » welght was concerned in the ¢ Lut this tle d only 8 pou running against Bug represented the district Uh to bei, when he was suce whon properly washed produc Ginarily the closest district tn the State, Hal but Lagimajority in 1870, though y the only dis had any hope of an experiment who took a merino fleece weight J exposed it to the acti ud of whieh time it unrolled it a 4 man of ability At personal popularity weighed but Without soap, Just as a sheep is wast d but 1 pounds. side of his party Finally the fi and scoured with soap and and when dry the we ed to 9 pounds for washed and unwashed wool the 1 have lost just n here has ¢¢ the up his 4 n-law, Senate expiration of his term If lection Hf he is defeat anvass, and liaving # ex wn means, the full money mi the Government posed he will ht of the f is making @ very 6.80 on bis pa yatem of gra 1 that if dealers would be examinations of s would soon L wool is required, a to draw upon THE DISTRICT FILLED Wrrnt MONEY Tt ls the universe! testimony her was never spent so district as n be toh GIL after elvetio plying the low at to bring thelr wool into At present tt is tion in this Beet it is to haye cannot but the Radicals of Dewoorats with the argument that they have no candidate tn the field and no question ¢ that thers are but ty publicans, « whieh of th elrown Interosts, and vs There are no means of ) mnarket In & Kood conditio just the other way are excellent practical ideas in the letter of SIMON BreveNns, respecting the use of steam on canals, which we publish in another we how the thing may be done 2 ao banks, and tha ily. This will hardly satisfy the plunder who pays the host, lug party who are ln power there, but he may be SEPTEMBER 7, 1872. the worst feature In the situation from the Lib eral point of view. HAL Hale himself is on the stump, and fro counts tn playing a desperate gama of f lander. telling people dell ages tliat Mi debt, and all th falsehoods, Of the Mtr ain who p makes such statements as that to repr disitiet in Congress sensible men can Among the speakers who have foll Halo through the district contradic aurd slander who bas done excellent 9 campalzn, He apeaks to-night to ence Calais. ‘The fnflue Ia dreaded more than bis sp it is helleved the masses are be docelved by any such noms tailing. Tt has been reported th nell; law. He was here early in the It wise to either withdraw him itt which he can make of much greater than his sveec! AN ELEMENT OF WEAKNESS. One ele’ hy with the Liberal m tie community. the war ceased, and has not yet by an} disappeared. The men who havo differe widely and waged such relentless warfare upon each other in the past find it very dimfc vote the ame ticket at the polls, much less work roniously in the same organization, The nomination of Pike, a Liberal, helped ity somewhat, but there together b smooth over this dific are many Republicans in the district w yote for him on perso will not support the rest of the ticket. ANOTHER SOURCE OF WEAKNESS T have alluded tots the extravagant outlay of ney by the Hadicals, and the yory lim{tod vals have likewise about S00 men in th tng out stone for the straight >» much clear gain to Hale and ‘The Lib- ns at the command of the Libe Vinal Haven, Idings,wl reasonably contider that proporiton of the party yor like ail the rest and the State at Lat \ for lack of organization and i art of the Liberals, There has here and hardly any effort to get ¢ thing fs at loose end: rate information or ™ ata for estimates, ‘The strength of the Liberals, as eded by the fact ity, when their opponent bo gath that Halo co in only 1 nthe last in Isis h 2800, Liberals themselves count on a much bet rospect than that. ‘They fancock counties will be abc seven towns in Knox county in this ¢ sional district will give Hale about 20m and that Washington county will gi majority of from four to five hundred, him by two or three hundred votes. ‘The Calali expected to be very closely balance sides ere working hard to carry it. It how Hite man rganization t erals have had v have no cany of Calats. the home ¢ BLAINE IN CALAIS Blaine was here and made a speech! the only spe pade out district sin campaign fairly this was uy positive engay not get rid tack Pike persou gavage onslaughts audience either of the Congresston fined his remarks to the co readfal perils to which the Greeley would expose t ement ction that by this thn: enough of personal warfa own district on Lang, his n hia personal and politi yon) years. They begar awhile to agitate poreonal record fn re yonse, and it was ty fore he saw the policy scontiny kind of warfare. st UATION To sum erals hy down Burlel vasand and perh ne Third to “Kad twenty thous sand. ‘The Radic men by abe ve hu Ja expect vate Ut to give Perham fifteen thousand majority.” Unless they do this they will be ppein They will make their compar 1 course WIth the vote of 1870, which coodiney unfair test, na it ts admit sities that there was really no contest th and the full vote did not come out ey should be held A ral View of th hollers Overranning state like Arniy of Grasshoppers The Country Lite ally Carpeted with G packs. PortLanp, Sept. 6.—Ther ments in the canvass in Maine which r tremely difficult to forecast the e anvasses, almost anything Is Hable to happen in the way of victory or defeat to either, first place, the Repyblican canvass, usually a curate almost to a fraction, cannot be relied on this year, as, in addition to the h tions fro desire to invite a charge up whole Administration army, as th Liberals have great he counted APATITY OF THE Another thi ‘al uncertainty is the utter La tlon on the who more who are set down asd clo 1 PRATS, ve several | ny the local commit quiet, and in th the State, there las b ot PeLUPNs oF Make up a canvass, the only means the Liberals have of esti their own strength ts from sp ront reports fram seattered localities The regular Ropu are Counted Up but the nar t working aayatom of machinery as ev imperial plebiscite, “A long-continued Powe has hardened the rale and intens Wiscipline of the party, whil Village, With Its ofllce holder or connected with a larg wh turn tsa tral wir ty the of fa Is of men are depends eial favor and patronaze, nacional, State, nuat be pres kept working, and thes local, to gay und the machinery Pendents are so seat that itis no did organization for which the Republic in Maine is noted, ‘fhe men who run machinery can afford Co give thine and m it, for ft is their business, they live by isa tremens! wer, and It would t Hoss wunitaclo Hf it ay euiirely by the tirst eombin whieh the party ed all over the THE GRANT ORGANIZATION, What more bet rfect organi ka Which thus rej vorts the voter in the Sta f steps, fr school distriet or'w ommitiee up ‘through the town aud comuittees, to the Chairman of the Stat mittee, in whose hands are all. the me appliances necessary to coax and Hatter the sus= ecoptible. bribe the venal, and. intimid weak? Tn no Stato is tis machinery 80 as in Maine, and inn hore able und unscrupulous director th G. Blaine, [tts safe to add that in nop campaign has it been used to such an extent as ver in any remote village or hamlet, an honest Republican, siek of Grant in this, W Wavered in his allegiance the brought to bear or him, and the a culated to tniluence him put ino ana ti fully established. On the other hand the Liberal Republicans wore without org ‘ization or association, oF even acquaintance with each other here were Republl- nearly every town, t : if disaffection in the general istration, had decided and support th t they were scattered fras- without cohesion or ¢ They found each other dent, and there was organization to whien pt the Democratic party, PLAYING A DESPERATE GAMB. y from the old p moyement, bu’ orately in publio Greeley sin favor of payin paying the Cont Kind of Irtedeemable hhorhoods only by nothing in the shape of a suld gather exc joy wore hot prepared for that. THE DEMOCRATIC ALLIANCE was natural enough after the Baltimore Convens Hon had endorsed their platform and ticket; | atic party In Maine was hardly vinted and unorganized mass. fdefeat had dishoartened the o organi 7a wed re than ad that they had not prete they had not 6 was no hope of reward 0.05 ho it Zach Chandler was {inthe district on the stump for bis son-ine ase I believe, and made a speech, but the manacers thoug irely or keep him out of sight, and he has not since been dof. Hale fs using his money, however, everal towns © money in the Preparation of a canya: kerve, are no more anxions th Work for nothing and And themse tepublicans and ‘chaotic, and Democrats but little better, then, were nvasaing and an active to be exercised i Hominations and adjusting terms of avoid friction and do away with the gurles between old o that both e Had either wing of the allian fthe great executive ability and reparo for thorough « i algn, with great ca nt of weakness on the Liberal side ia the repugnance of old Republicans, who are with the Administration and are in sympat ement,to vote and act with thelr old opponents of the Demo- cratic party. Strife ran very high here during and the hostility between Reput ocrats was bitter and \ncomproml pervading the social and business relation feeling continued after ements lack~ ed leadershtp. i finess for emergench hinery of the new wen extemporized so as to the overwhelming defeat political campaigning, the 1 ave been effe of the Administration part cases out of ten, where you of mind they are united v ainbition and an utter lack of principle and un 3 in the use of means. perhaps that the elements of the Reform hould struggle on in a disjointed fi pat the outs ith towering personal than be given a | aselfish and am publicans of M men, though they have no AN ALMOST FORLORN HOP’ om this hasty survey of tly al party in Maine has be fan almost forlort endous odds, with ership that of its imstanves, Would have beea rounds, and be i , The Liberal Re: they are in sympathy with his liberal views, who snest and earnest ant loaders: You may see fleld that the ing the fight ainst the moat t lack of oryuniaatio nd wetting up has been brov rry the district for Pike d ten per cent, of the Repub! With less than that Pike will be of taking but comes up the question how many Democrats Hale's men will be able to buy up on the argu~ ment that there ts no Democratic candidate in the fleld, and they may as weil yote so as to make the most money out of it, ‘This distric ey without stint a justice of their cause and the Instincts Gf the peopl ceed next Monday in eutt AK tn Ids more they will, it will be @ great ship ont a hatf, aa 1 thin nh canvas uld have heen a mistake to expect from Maine any demonstration for tie Liberal cause, a just crilerion of the ises Which operate | F States In fivor of the m 1 do not think the Maine. as a general thing. grasp the innatl nominations, to and no one has any accu- z which would b in. other. States. observation of ali tl further apart people are In po that Waldo and teven; that the ws, the more easily estranged, and less » isa great way of from South Carolit ‘The average voter in which gave Hale 500 majority in 188, ia Carol nians with ( who have plunde: em, and cares per bere was an ugly war ere for it, broucht it ith to think loody hast «nor has any relation readily believes the Ku-Klix ders of the (C clasping ha eof h pened, and swe don't know, blican voters in Maine are nut sus tible Lo arguments upon the need of re FEELING OF THE LIMERALS, he made sca 7 Hust Phiehe tac of, Course but nof the inking men business intereste and | CoUusiderable Anances of the country. They think down here . Hisine has > began it in bis it, who hid friend for ma ! ticket next Monday will with many of the promi clusion that (he imgust witha th its disgrace! perals leads me The movement has not the breadih here that it has in the West, or iu the other New England na narrower basls. ustrued by the partisan | out an anchor probability say it isa candid Blates; it is this theory w nthe State, the Libe ol » Virst District, cut the windward of a Liberal defeat os mA J itseif to any diced mind that will give ita moment's tho’ Very strange If here In State from the S cial relations w the need of liness betwe “Maine, the furthermost Hy any commer- ty In rebejlion, tored friend- or eight thou- tall the Cc tthe same majorities as two rs ago, and Hlaine by a little Jarger majority the Mississippl puthis in direct and ley, with which the h will follow the suc- the Liberal mv arison Is with the vote of 186s, rhe Om me plain en odds agains are two el nder the result unusually uncertain, and make ft vent with any thing like accuracy, Both sides understand this, and both go into the election with the feel- ing tha’, notwithstanding thelr estimates and Most parton opposition Adininistrat y will, 1 am confdent, show a positive victory ih a ureatly reduced Re- publican majority | ts a brother-in-law of ¢ the Thousand tsles, an Went a We Canadian suinmer round by Bnt Hirain’s summer has No cares of state perplex bi Such trifting thugs he wn defec- » their ranks, it is admitted that hun- dreds of Republicans in the State who have no n themselves of the would by letting their intentions be known beforehand, will go quietly to the polls and yote the Liberal ticket. These are recorded in the Republican canvass as sure for the ticket, while many more are left ay doubtfal. From this element the “8, and the regulars positive fear, and no one can tell anything about it with certalnty until the votes are St, Lawrence’ current # And meets that strean from Cuba's eile 5 ‘Thy istaud yee ‘The chalnless current, mute with piard’s name! om Spantah crime?" The hanghty Sp ‘That we are weak wh nt his flag along ¢ once were strong our eagle thew, wz which contributes to the love's Weak and puling oo When Ingraham seized the A Korzta from his hold Whow ingrahat fought aud Webster wr ‘They nelther foughtn rt of the Liberals, Many voters © classed as sure Republicans, and many wbUful, hay d thelr predilections forthe Liberal cau and tieket to the Liberals themselves, and F die Win gu And what art thou y organizat ‘attempt restars then di Aud fewor gems thy dic and incohe: or forerd thy son tean organization, on the Dut blush for days Hike th other hand, ts in Cais Slate as Compioete aad per nmated @ coup (etal or carrier, through led the very town ‘The Thousand Isle the Thonsand Lies, vy State Liberal Moult hing to keep up the # Hn part y 1 be broke jon made against it, N. Stebbing, alter could there he is it in the han Important to Henry Wil Me Wish to refy sh your memory ion with the 51-5 G You can dom by call ety Howtony wher Nah your native town of Natick, the highest obliga. of the Know-Notnit Pats at your house te sane i Taborod wit ‘outapol aborod With and. te-outspoken Cabused and slandored, until it is not Loo ¥ that a political reign of terror Was ing at oy Congre find the gentle tfully yours, MR. LOUIS DENTS CARCASS mentions MR, REED CLAIMS IT, AND FORTH WITH OVERHAUCLS 17, He Wools It, and Sking it, and Peels off tho under CuticleAfter whi he Sounes ition Aquafortis-The Carcass now tn Pickle. Wastinaton, Sept. 6.—Mr. Henry Reed, the editor of the Capital, who was assaulted by the President's brother-in-law, will publish tm to-morrow's Cupilal 8 card giving bis account of the attempt upon his life, as well as of the faret. cal trial of Judge Dent, It is written with ail the vigor end caustic sarcasm for which Mr. Reed as awriter is justly celebrated. In regard to the provocation which Dent had to enrago him, Mr. Reed remarks as follows : The act was entirely without provocation, ‘The facts stated In the artlelo of which he pros fessed to complain had been circulated through the press of the country for a month, and werg Believed to be true, as they had gone uncon. tradicted. If they wore false he had abundant moans for his own vindication and the punishe ment of all offenders, for the criminal laws libel are exceedingly stringent In the D strict Columbia, and the brother-in-law of the Unit Sates is not without his influence to expedie and to, prescribe in the processes of publig Justice in this latitude. The author of the article in THE SUN, as T now know, lives in this city. a fact which he weil Knew, and the article Itself, after it was put in type and before it was published, was submited to Gen. Dent, Gen, Babcock, and Gen, Porter in the White House, and a denial of the facts it contained challenged. He did not care to ¢ pose himeclf m the source from wh report emanate diministe Gistance from th vernment increas and he has too t for the soundn of his anat ro there might be @ chance doubtless, know enough of the situation he would Ond me alone, ignorant of his person ov rity of Unsuspicious of danger, wid felt that t Kill his man without Imperilling the inte vhe President's family, and at the sa e time | obtain some, renown for himself. ‘Through a dent, and through accident alone, te hag derer in fact, as he was one look upon Louls Dent escaped being an in intention, I thereto as a plece of my property. He belongs t the carcass of the assassin belongs to tt he has tried to slay, Ho is a vulyar ruff not [niu ; as mny til hin was not vobin 1 hav Y les to offer, / me and 1 have been the subje eral marisia’ terous enterprises, and L have always succe In putting to good use the property | thereby obtained. The following on judicial rtlality in the District of Columbia is severe, but strictly true The judicial proceeding was a fares. ty who was on trial brother-in-law of the President of the United States was offered hig betwee bench beside the nd the of the descendingiy chore ter. he tenant of the White House p tribunal, and Wholesome fear of the power that ean tirn litte men into imposing officers and turn thei back again into ttle men was visible in the coune nances of all concerned, ‘The culprit enacted an intermixture of several Ape parently undecided wis us Judge, as withe as and testitieds pettifigved, and’ ruled accordingly, as one of the other of hist fined $1 ody predominated. He was ran unprovoked a=sault and battery arned and unirmed man ;and here upon as rather an ae ofthe ther in-law of the ed States, under any cire cumstan nsure of such ‘There was an ostentatious prete: the tine, prefaced by a strategic plea in mitty ton of the amount, which was @ part of the play. ‘The President’ will remit the fie, or the officers of the law will fail to collect ity and if ip has been handed it willbe refunded. And here ts the end. Kedress in the courts of civil furisdiction for personal injuries intlicted by tue Gen. G eis none in tho Dige an be none so long ap resident of the United Suites, ves in ways that a of the Executh it on their own responsil danger perhaps is not wreat, for such viduals as Louls Dent will only assassinate under clreamstances which will not admit of personad risk to themselves - vawoonu the War Path ules Threatened. the Boston Pott Wastusatox, Sept. §.—On Monday last, Beat to his canis of Mr. Reed, it di Judge Jent in his excitement went to several ape cary shops to buy a bullet ild. as he intended toarm himaell forthe fray which was to cecur, Dent, another brother-in-law of th nt and ~ brother oof the Judge ut the ante. m of the White How Two Brother Yr Speclat Despat The immediate cause of was the receipt, through the called the Caucasian, published in ntaining what Dent said was lous article, abusing the White clique. ‘The’ paper was addr Honorable General Dent, High. the Dog-Kennels and Statles, Whi Washington, De ¢ s ery was that he vowed that he would get the Pre to remove the Postunasier at the pla the paper mailed, Qurinformant also swor at it th ud ! which pr th itor of that p w made sick of rcoitt place of wallsing-sticks. Who Dent is, aud How the President Regarde h The advecates. of the continuance of the Grant Administr and sorrowful in confessing «that the Dent who beat Henry Reed with a cane » President. The Cine jon wre slow math Gasette attemy rake out that tho Dent tn the ease is not in-law. He is however, and ¢ On about the White He bein A great suc thought @ fine thing to hay is that ef tt resident, he b aim lawyer, Le a brother-in-law employed aa acclaim lawyer. The hinges of Dew partment doors are oily thereinelaw This Judze Dentist who, when inter viewed about his. re with the White House, said he had a i before dent In “only a few case As a matte the President had beard from this man argue monts on cases after they had been passed upon the Department where they belonged. A brother-in-law, it appears, i allowed to | it the bur of the Chief M he reinarked President's of the family Judge Dents Prout like brother-in-law has enriched ae with a detiniti extin juslictal cording is one who Uakes. rey instead of acudgel, ‘Che latier byiplee the thinks, may be used without Hputne tion of cowardice, In his estimation, it would have been very dishonorable fer’ him to have perforated) Editor Ke with a pistol Hh but hy no impropriety in stealing hehing an elderly gentleman and a conparie tive invalid, and beating him with a bludyeom Unul the weapon is broken to pieces by ° theattack. And now that the question wardice” Is sett ivene ture, and the cost of éatube Nahed ‘by judietal rutin aed Dent has a plain war-path 1 ' oluatiyasin t dyna The dude ¢ there was no use in suing Don } fore that gentioman has nothin a ost in Washington elrcles, ¢ ally t Va “malignant spirit of t r f btn \ enn hias tal { tt Ant ‘ 2 Pere Hyaciuthets Wites ysis t Mra, Emilie J, Meriman, who h Pere livacinthe in London, ¥ eparated fren. her husbe id ) th, sold wand nn ia Brooklyn, w heh ‘ went with |i hter to a it for a patent” cor toact as correspondent tof she was iy esata Mrs. Meriman wa nyertad 4 he returned tot y ° had pr Vito her dart 1 lites and which she had abroad, Wine here s\ h Koy. Josep Thompson of tie | Pabernacle; but finally heft Nov ' back to Parl, Where Pore IL her back again to Romauisat. si 98 by her to matrimony ACh Billed by a Ont PORTLAND, Me. Se ell of Me. Herr Hig bY @ cul wu Working pe m4