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THE SUN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1872. on the other hand, Graxr slough off | theaaesamente upon which they are based SOME NRW NOOKA. Aolph only says: "There ts @ silly org, etoat #00RM CAROLINA'S TROUBLES. GREAT PLBCTION FRAUDS. youn, af or * » dec! Se that the Queen sometimes carries a pistol.” Then, bore ™ ” * the thieves, and eschews all forme of pub-] are feclared null by the courts, and thus the Wetee Srclan Biles, Sa lare ten Geen © rita accel tie Weniles Hiank Warrante-The | How Philadelphia's Vote wan Vitiated te % lic plunder, we shall rejoice at our bappy | Payment of the bonds falle upon the tax- f a United Mates Marshal, October ‘The Heturne Falsified 4 r Jminta payers in genoral, and not ne pr ‘We have examined with great interest | at her escaping prey." and “the odd glitter in yora October The Merarn at Lense Oo disappointment and wish iil min Jeter ' ny im gene a , and nol Mile t) “ ac the nvm pooh of ip Taitms F, Mascih Oauitied | Ror open fashing pride and defepes.” "Mr, From the Columbia Carotinian. aes Fresiasd) ne of Repeating pili It Bhines for Lan tion godspeed, But nothing that can hap- | erty owners, who are most benefited by bool A: 64 : Froude’ his critic, " precise {nformatio From private sources we learn that the is = SAY, NOVEMBER 1 ie | Mtl! (am justify his retlection for asecond | the improvements for which they were ire Omit Pubneasten ‘Gouin Th ia am | an to Mary eunst’s eyes’ ta really remarkable.” ehilorn Monchman of KK Rootte, whowe chiet | Aram Forney’s Frew, Nor. 8 7 " 7 ee , 5 hod Adana ms * pie nt . .! chivyemet 01 nt bated ie Bll bt s TAN | time, ieenod. “There are in Now York, says the | amazingly clover, and at the momont opportune | But—and thie ta the last specimen of the ple- | fui capture fon fo targe © merority, War Covered his salary and contingent fund, | go public and who, since hie apporntment as Mr. Wallace's | (char gry mica ayrare, tt aeat on revaniti chief deputy, bas been singularly qulety t¢ now | result ae fraudulent. Our Judgment rested on Staate-Zeitung, lawyers whose spectal occu- turesque run mad we have room for—atter Ma- pation is to assail the validit ty’s escape from the rebels In '6¢ she dictated a and damaging volume, Tt is literary and his ~-oclgtaghe Nha di Baveey of assess- | torical controversy In {te purest form—a bold . ct very 5a " on the war-pat ‘a corpa of equally aseente-chiahs lines svi vneicna Woue itm At this very hour @ scene is going for- | ments that have been recularly confirmed | and manly chellenge, or rather the acceptance | letter at Reton to Rlizabeth. Of this Mr. Froude | brave assistants, ie striking terror into the hearts | quevence (nat ip aed the tve--Kerty and Joule Brows, Matinee ward beyond the ocean which cannot but | yy the courta; and it often happens that | of one in the outset, and a falr fight without | says: “This letter she wrote with hor own Be e women 08 obibaren OF Tayegag county quence of the surrender at Baltimore had Mowery Theatre Courter thrill the average American breast With | they succeed in thelr purpose, In this | eloves afterward, aa to the result of which, we | hand, flerce, dauntiess, and haughty. The | ayoted victims of the Ki-Klux acte, Many ar- | We work ; but every hours subsequent ox if {n the recordo of elections in this county. ‘The Inst evidence ts that revealed in the Court af ence has pr Dan Bry Minstrels Teeny 0 THooston street, BR. ved a system of frauds unparal rapture, Between Glasgow and Loadon, | manner a million and @ half of confirmed | Tther regret to say, therocan be no mistake. It a distance of four hundred end four miles, | gee {s opportune and damaging In thie, that It is co- strokes, thick and slightly uneven from excite- ment, but strong, firm, and without sign of rests have been made, and tho jail at Lauren yale is represented as full of men who have iis, ments, for which bonds had already Md ty ” com. | been taken from thelr avocations by these men | Common Pleas on Baturday last, reporte: there tuarches # procession Dearing in Its | heen iasued, have been aet-aside, and it iw | eldont with the arrivel and exploits in our | trembling.” On which Mr. Meling grimly com: | under the suthority of warrants, some, If not | length in our local department, Iv docs hot dee ; . chan 68 (hs , . country of the eminent author who is the sub- | ments: “The insanity for the ploturesque and | ali, of which have beeu in the Marshal's hands | end on nowspayer surininon, but. Is the. rosie posom the welfare and greatness of the | probable that a great portion of the other 7 romantte would wreck far better historian, | for neatly two be ferried uA eatre-Lvdie Thewpeon Troupe, Matteee ‘ i 4 in ite hand the Amert Ject of criticism ; and though tt has no direct or . | Pine chtet significance of these arresta appears ay examination made on the authority Radioctia. Mane merican name and in its hand the Ameri- | seven millions of these bonds will prove to | indeed indirect reference to what he is now en- | The prosate fact Is that, although as Mr. Froude | from the fact that there tneme rer | Of Judge Plerce, of © tho same | wotiry tr9~ ae Pre " can flag. Itis not numerous, Nor indeed | have an equally unsound foundation; and | lightening the American public about, It ao seri- | states, the letter may be acen Inthe Rolls House, | the marshals and United tnd | Zaotaten (ar, Alte Wee eS 1 iia 8 Matisve isitloud. We do not learn that it is ce | thus the whole eight millions and a halt, | ously impairs his credit asa writer as to make us | Mary Stuart did not write a word of tt. It was | |¥ Avo believed to give these mercenaries favor | amdayit was read by the eminent equnsel of 1 6 inthe eyes of the king. It matters litle who Bil. Matinee companied by so much as a brass band. | instead of being paid the property | question bis accuracy, If not his integrity, as an | Written by an amanuensis, the address and sig- that association, E. Spencer Miller, Req. ben are arrested on the four hundred warrants | fore his Honor. Jud ond ee Finiotter. We need ‘oni Le hte Ad refer our readers to this painful and eetiwore nary disclosure, not the less painful becat twill of Judge Hond, and subject them to the | gy atly perpettatod by” NeodpHean erection process of «rinding and to! officers, and not the less extraordinary because, Prom the Laurenavitia (8. C.) Herald. in our opinion, wholly unnecessary, except to Améancholy etroumstanco in connection with | save from defeat the objectionable men on our the revent death of Mr. James Copeland aud | State ticket. Judge Finlettor made a very sis And yet it is impressive. It consists of nature alone being in her hand.” Oddly enough Bates, Bares the pedestrian too, Mr. Froude could hardly have been ignorant of this, for in the letter Itself the Queen “We thought to have written this letter with our own hand, that thereby you might have bet- ter understood all our meaning and taken more owners who are benefited, will be eo much | oral teacher. ‘Phis modest little volume re- Bates the | added to the general debt of the city, lates only to Mr. Froude as a historian, but, = | patwiot; Bares the Sergeant; than whom | 1y yiew of such facts as these, the severie | 2at1aging him aa such, it will havea decided ho purer patriot or more persistent pedes- | ty with which the StaateZeitung speaks of | heney to assist the young Doululcan who trian ever bore the flag and kept step to | the Jegistation at Albany af ting this city now is answering him as a lecturer, Being thus which they say they hold. that number of white citi . » » Union, Through thi y pxagyern i opportune, our readers will, we are sure, thank wife, mentioned elsewhere, is as foll nificant remark on this startling disclosure, an : ‘ : ites Dalted Hlngdou th tbe pavous and ine | 82Y HO means exaggerated. ‘That legts!a- | us for making them acquatited with It. familiarly therewith; but of truth we are so | “Wise Mr Copeland war dying, @ United | followed Itby an order om Prothonutary feusie tion, according to our contemporary, is Let us, in siinple justice to ourselves, say a characterized by levity and ignorance if | prefatory word as to Mr. Froude, the lecturer and the oritlamme of the Great Republic | not by corruption. Gentlemen from the | and this, too, without involving our readers in in the other, aud the merest hulf ration of | pupal districts of the State dispose with the | {he actual Celtic controversy now waging. Mr. Bass’s pale alo in his coat-tail pocket, be | greatest nonchalance of the property of | Ffeude was warmly wetconed here, aa he well flits Like a beautiful dream that has to go deserved to be, for to a largo circle of readers tired and {Ih at ease, what through ridiag of twenty miles in five hours of the night, as with tho frequent sickness and indisposition by occasion of our child, that we could not at this time as we were willing to have done.” Mr. Meline's book ts not strictly biographical, States Marshal went to the house of Mr. C. to | ridge which must lead to atill further evidences arrest him. He was not taken away. however, | of tho des Planned conspiracy of the sth of at the time, and a second visit was made for 4 | October last. ‘The light thrown on this cons similar purpose. In the meantime Mrs. C. had | spiracy op Saturday shows a state of alfairs vo died, and the said officer found Mr. Copeland | disgraceful as to call a blush of shame to the himself, on his second visit. Ina d cheek of every honest citizen, Hon, | Death n relieved the suffer The affidavit read before Judge Finletter sl troubles, hospitable clin hb his life in one hand Deeysany Anenery that varigus alterations, erasir: citizens of New York for the mere pur- We age that not even the cc and els ; late m no . ook shows us, discrim- | and yet therets init a complete chronology, from ‘dying In any bar to the “red right bi of figures are apparent in tho returna ; that sing slow to be appreciated. A bloated aristo- | hose of obliging interested parties, riley inad ted Yass Bead Wes AoA the erkdle oh Holyrosd 40 the soatold at Ww and greedy cormorants of Govert- of the envelopes containing the hourly liste of cracy and titled landed gentry bebold the | those members of the Legislature who a WotlattUGip URL Ta mblie Oo, de Ravor: et the divisions are inissing; that many of the re- pleasure. He was more sure of a welcome than his groat prototype would have been had he turns are not to be found, and th seem, from the deliberate manner of them are not «'gned by the prove beautiful vision aud shudder at its pro- h the arresting of citizens began, and nur sent from the city itself are rarely able t vigorous controversialism it may be read from yh » While an oppressed and dow " rate! ve! ; " < persisted in, that another reign of t quired by law to certify to their Leaditee people Hi iran ie: Word oa perform their duty of watching over the | ever come here, for while Lord Macaulay, tn | bexinning to end with all the interest whieh | !§ hclng persisted in. that another rolen of fer. | dived Oy tam ais eepetrated ar e —= | trodden people rise up as is , ia ae interests of their constituents; and thus | the true spirit of a Scotch Whig, made no secret | accredited blography excites. Asa specimen of | painful fact to realize that the ong arm of the only thirty-five alyisien a, of bwrolre. SUM UE Uy tuna Feeldeute, adver There goes Bares!” and salute his com- no row | 0! 01 his mode of writi wide from politics, we | Government should be used thus—that the very plan was systetnatic, and it fs safe to assert See ee en eee eee | Vii AE THE GRWE CY HAADIEK CAGE the confusion in our riunicipal finances | of bis dislike to us and our institutions, letting | bis mode of writing, seide from politi Dower which ought to protect Its people lends | that there wore numerous cases, as yot undis- owe bavrltadteat GOI WEE Wowk | Siawiee br Amini Gate Tulsi are. soy | hits attained to such frightful proportions | !t crop out wherover slavery, oF, by way of con- | give the last scene of thie sad story, Itlsinvery | fte'aid try such dlabolical tyranny, Where or | covered, of alteration of the vous In the trv deen eerie rt oatcer sad clan |. Bates is doing this thing on abet. Not | that it can hardly be corrected except by | trast, the Pennsylvanta Quakers were concerned, | few words: of harassing and torturing in- | hundred and tw: ity-four divisions. The divis~ Jonsin which the frauds were perpetrated include about one-tenth of the vote of the city. If they wore equal in extent in only one-half of the others (and fraud in the great majority of ther 1s not only possible but probable), the vote of Philadelphia was fal at loast ten thousand on the evening of the 8th of October by the ele: tion officers alone. This is exclusive of the re. peating, personating, and ballot-box stuffing by the tools of the ling on the same day. We now verily belleve chat an examination of the entiro returns and a contest in which the frauds com- mitted, but not apparent upon them, could be exposed, would put the stamp of guilt upon at “Then she knelt down, saying: ‘O! Lord, nto Thy hands [commend my spirit.’ The first blow of the executioner inflicted a ghastly wound on the lower part of the skull.” (‘The French au- thority has it sur le chignon du col.) “Not a scream, or groan, or sigh escaped her, but the convulsion of her features showed the horrible uffering caused by the wound. At the second stroke the neck was severed, and the head was held up to the gaze of the bystanders. The ex- ecutioner repeated the formula, ‘God save to gratify the whims and caprices dno one can tell. ‘There seems to be a kind of personal spleen, the bitterest ant. mosities to gratify. ‘The sinallest personal dis- lke, or the most trivial quarrel is magnified into ve offense against the United States, and he unfortunate victim is thrown into prison, ‘Tho thirst for revenge seems insatiable. —— Views of a Veter A friend of ours,who has had fifty years’ experience in politics, and 1s a calm observer of political contests, caring no more about the re- ie, and 30S W wera Mouse. +t Bre that the bet is of any special moment to ont Mr. Froude, dealing with other days, his History t Tweuty.third st a reform in the Legislature itself. op the east seat 311 Grand | bin as # patriot and pedestrian; but, as goth aedhat beginning before Jacques Curtior sailed up the ay, from A.M. toSSOPM. | they say to young men justenteringupon | The African slave trade is far from being | St: Lawrence, or John Smith came to New = the delusive game of draw poker, it serves | dead. Gen, KuukHam, the English commander | Bnéland or Virginia, has bad no occaston to say The Opposition—What Should be Its] to make it interesting. ‘The amount of the | of the forces of the King of Abyssinia, estimates | S8Ythingonthe subject. His lectures, ns listened Policy? bet has not transpired. Possibly it is two | the number of slaves annually carried off from | 10 oF read, confirmed this favorable feeling, and tion whether there is | dollars anda half, or something of that sort, | Afrise to the Arab and Turkish markets at from | We are bound to say and Ais, aa crition we do Sort, | eighty to ninety thousand. ‘They are brought | With entire respect to his antagonist—there was position capable of being made | to cover expenses, But the from the centre of the continent, at ages ranging | 82 linpressive alr of candor and manly frank- eainst the Administration and | understand them, and as from seven to sixteen yours. Subjects of Great | Des# in his tone and bearing, that it is diMeult, party inpower, ‘TheNovember defeat was | American will be proud and happy to | pritain are sald to be engaged In sve w@ ftisan open Hong ny O effective ns, as We ry intelligent he detestable | if not impossible, to reconclie with a design, tod saye | vite of a, Presidential ctection than ebeat the | ett avg (lundred men in Phitadelphie, end = to overwhelming that the half-welded ele- | understand them, are that be shall march | trafic which is a disgrace to the East, but which | however latent to decelve. ‘That, too, which in | Queen Klizabeth’ 08 perish all her, enemies’ | ti ts ten usil, Guclis OMA Bac che, | phia by aclearand ample majority. bets ments seem to have lost not only their | from Gluagow to London bearing the | seems an almost indispensable part of Turkish | these spoken essays must have impressed | added the Dean of Peterborough, km Parilt | Any Oe comclusion to which he haa arrived —— jesive attraction, but almost the ability | American flag unfurled without molesta- | domestic institutions. Le erpind bated blot gha ear Materia hoon Bugle A ais BE vie We after @ careful consideration of the circum- TO DISCREBT LEARNED ERBN. t nost th ‘ d aol resolute abstinence, when addressing an au- | Earl of Kent. But not one was heard to sas, sinensis to asemble themselves again, The singu- | Won or int nce. Notice the supreme It appears that Hurenixsgx, Kort & | dience, or at least speaking froma platform, | Ame On this, too, im an odd way, | stances and incidents of the bitter and pro- very by William Isnee lar unanimity which prevails among men | confidence Bares has in the ability of bis | o. ¢4 whom was granted an unjust and unec very susceptible to such suggestions, from any | Mr. Froude is painfully picturesque. He tracted struggle which terminated on the 5th » Pastor of the Grecapers of ull parties as to the result, the universal | country to back him up. He knows that | ituuonal monopoly of the fur-seal trade of | Unpleasant allusions to the venerable form of he labored illusion vanished "—by which he | inst. He writes plainly and frankly, and if tho concession that motwithstanding all the | the first disrespectful word uttered toward | Alaska, aro exercising high-handed authority | falth which Father Burke Is so proud to defend | Means, we suppose, that the dead woman | reader cannot accept all bis statements as veri- an grt Seipdisen {vauduleut appliances used to bring it | the flag or the bearer will arouse the whole | over the free Rusaian traders of that Territory. | and Mr. Thomas Nast delights im caricaturing. | Of forty-five bore no comparison to | tes, and dissents from some of the arruments | SIR: 1, The origin of the axial rotations About, it must still be confessed a popular | American people to avenge the insult and | Ina letter signed by several Russians, and print- | Mr. Burke has to resort to other productions of Rizzio’s mistress or Darnley’s bride. “The | by which be supports his positions, {t will not be | of the planets was unknown to Sir Isaac New. endorsement of the successful candidates | tear down over the heads of the royal | ed inthe Alaska Herald, it is stated that on the | the historian to prove hie postulate of bitter | lady who had knelt upon the block wasn the | dened that he makes out a plausible case. ton, hence his principta and system of the world and party, is a significant feature of the | family the walls of that effete monarchy, | Mth of June last Capt, Sarri of the schooner | hostility to the Church of Rome, There was not maturity of grace and loveliness. The exec Clearly the lesson of the late election has not | are not true to nature. : situation, ‘Tho result of one of the most | In that confidence he marches, and there | Bustace, belonging to the monopolist frm, hear- | & word like It in the lectures, Old-fashioned | Uone:, when he raised the head, ae usual benerdf nt tives rameter roy th pared arate preorder baggy didi Ae biter and passionate political campaigns | being n very great stufivienvy of ale houses | 18 that Russlane were trading with other | Boiscopaliaus. if there be any such, who still show It to the crowd, exposed the withered fea- | sttuation been intelligently or satisfactorily de- | parallelogram of forces would, {f possible, re = z r ’ " parties than the company’s agents, went ashore | think an Establishment a good thing, had much | tures of « grizaled, weinkled old woman.” By | scribed. epee bitdig anton ry Gey tiape Ho omhod Is accepted with good nature on all | on the route, he subsists upon the country | {ith hia crow and tock the property of the said | More reason to complain, for Mr. Froude cer- | Way of answer to this, Mr. Moline quotes quietly | ‘The contest was anomalous In ta character, | {20 poselvilty of maintaining tho parallelisms tides. Almost without exoeption the | as he goes, > traders, amounting to 1041 skine of various | tainly dogsshow his teeth viclously atthe Hiber- |! his appendix what Hawthorne says of the | Many of it» Incidents and accessories being | “3. Newton, and all others of his time, not | Opposition uewspapers vome down grace- | And now within thirty-six hours the | Kinds, and transported to his vessel. Only Anglican Bishops, ‘This, then, Leing our | Picture at Abbottsford, painted by an Italian | without precedent in any of our party contests, | knowing that a single motive force could ta fully. “Whatever may be our belief and | wires that vibrate through the watery | 200 skins escaped hii, and these were left be- | favoring judgment of the lectures, we can the aftor the Fotheringhay murder. ‘Its | and the result wae asurprise to everybody. The | RRM al“ motion was originally and naturally ia @pinions, they say, “the people by great | waste between us have trembled with the | cause not packed In boxes, and therefore In more freely criticise the History, or rather, hair curls or flows all about it. The face is of a | Most astute politician was as much at fault in | the direction ofa right line, In my experime: huajovities have expressed their contidence | news that Bates has reached Bolton, that | venient to transport. At the same time Capt. | this is all that within our limite we can hope to | death-like hue, but has an expression of quiet, | computing the chances as the veriest tyro in the | On foatious, on, eicnes, fy Sredavered a lana after much pain and trouble, very beautiful, very sweot and sad; and it affected me strongly with horror and strangeness of such # head be- ing severed from the body. Methinks I should not like to have it always in the room land. At the openingof the campaigu ry thing was in confusion and doubt, forthe reason that a suMfctent number of voters to decide the election were looking to see which side should develop the greater strength before commit- Wy Ges, GRANT'S administration, They | be has been received everywhere with | SM¥5il also abducted the clerk tn charse of the do, note the fale and nciave criticiune of ane tithe: disbelieve the char rought | cheers, and nowhere been mo! . G: property, named KoMAnore, and transported | other. ee ges brought | cheers, and nowhere been tmolosted. Great | ii across the bay to ® barren wilderness, | Mr. Meline goesto hisIconoclustic work with @ keainst him aud his party, or they have | news! We welcome it. Beside Bates the | Gonment on such an outrage, perpetrated un. | will. He confines his strictures to one topte, pardoned his offences and given him new | glories of the Geneva Conference pale their | Ger the as of the United Beaton, and wich the | the interest of which, from Buchanan to Scott, pportanities We acoept the verdict. | ineffectual fires. The Sergeant has dis- ed laws of motion, and that a globe by a single motive force could be urged in any conoelvabla course, lm pressed with one motion, or with two inotions, of with three motions, at the option o| LS mover. For the want of the Knowledge rm natural law of moUona differed from the accept~ w it was not possible to construct the 4 ting themselves to either party. There was | (rue system of the world. ' ldiers of the United States to back the rob- | from Burns to Schiller, seas inexhaustible, and | With me.” ‘This ts certainly not Mr. Froude’s Phis but is over, Now let Gen, Grant | tanced the General. For look ye, while | bers, is needless, he makes thorough work. There are critivisins | “Withered features of a grizeled, wrinkled old nothing certain or highly probable up to the oe NATURAL ved oF crepes atovuieter the Government as his friends | our Brig.-Gen. Scaenck bad to mine the — and matters of historical correction here which | Woman.” Thus is tt that controversy—and, as } time of the North Carolina election. And if the in consequence of the inertia of matren © lobe by the agency of a single right line motiy force may be urged in the directton of a right, « curve line, Impressed with oue, two, or thre motions, and also be made to describe the curvi+ Democrats had swept that State by a heavy ma- Jority in August, itis no certain thing that the we are forced to believe, slander—pursued this woman throughout her life, And it le not over have Leen promising he would and we | capital of Great Britain, our Sergeant | Notwithstanding the fact that the vote | we do not see how Mr. Froude can answer; Will stand quietly by to applaud when- | marched upon it with his flag unfuried and | fF GRANT In North Carolina is everywhere | faws picked in hisglittering coat of mail whieh } smaller than the vote for CaLoweit in August, | he never ean repair. We are not prepared ao far | Yet: Hide which hed then just begun to ran ie.Geees r conte sectio baie ~ well, criticise when he acte | won his two dollar and » half without o | Gui sr'y majority la lkely enough to reach &f- | to disparage Mr, Proude's ctives inwriting as | Mr. Froude cannot afford to remain quiet uns | ley's favor would not have gathered force | en eae Ot an ere impinging om a w and condemn when he or his | struggle. teen or twenty thousand, Nothing could more | he does that we can adopt the unduly harsh | der the direct, manly criticisms he has provoked. | enough to have revolutionized the country, | globe in aline passing through ita centre, the rdyicersvun to folly ordishonesty.” This] Bares is a genius, We remember that | clearly show that the recent GRaNt victory Is | theory of his critic: “ Mr, Froude evidently,” | To measure their gravity, the considerate and | The political elements were in @ state of sus. | globe will Le impressed with @ single silding — | ds Uc tone of the Opposition p not long ago ona similar bet he marched | the result of Di ratic default, says Mr. Meline, does not approve of the hum- | conscientious reader must study this volume | Pension, ready to be precipitated by events | jing without axial rotation. ‘The first mode of No \duiuistration for years has entered | with his fag—perhaps the same, who ———____ “rum, plodding honesty of the conscientious | from beginning tocnd,for really wehavedone ii | then {inminent, and which tt was generally | fore was used by Newton as bis tangent jjou power With so clear @ popular en- | knows?—from Texas to Tammany Tall, he assertion of Hosea Brorrow that | historian, who in. statements concerning the | tle else than indicate one or two minor points of | foreseen must have acontrolling influence onthe | ceptrifuaal force. on gl eproach, W t fal contest, ‘The first news from the Vid North on pinging dos t, and Dy consequence such | arriving at the latter place just in time to | "they didn’t know everything down tn J great dead of bygone ages is profuse in author | Feproach, We will refer to but a few of the vi globe, aside from, Ra mae to, aline passing hed fhnities fat sod oF ill te | tale rat in the Detmoeratie National Cone | might well e reversed, fur the more we tearn | Wy. sober. Inputation of metives, and totally | sraver ches—euch as the alteration of the Boa | State, that the Democrats had won agceat vic- | throdgh ita centre, will be impraased with two tory, carried consternation into the Adminis- tration ranks. It was felt generally that the contest was virtually decided. The most saga- cious and farseaing Mepublicans adinitted that a fatal blow;had been strack at the organiza. ford letter, asto which controversy originated im this city years ago; the misinterpretation of the Killigree despatch; the marvellous mis take, to use amild term, of describing aleter from Mary to Darnley, signed, too, by her “as the couatiy. Upon Gen with great } Sbeut far Bastern nations, the more pre fwe find | abs: pious in Gights of Imagination, He la dis- that they know more about some of the useful | custed with the blameless inanity of sincerity, arts than we do ourselves, ‘The map of Japan | with the imprudent weakness of telling all the brought from that country by Major Consta- | truth, wita the silly hesitation to inserapus motions, and acquire an axis of given inclina tion, around which the matter of the globe will revolve In axial motion. The other, or second motion of the globe, will be an orbital path, and the parallelisin of the axis of the globe will ba maintained in every part of its orbital path. Grant's manner | vention and be welcomed t of encouutoring these high responsibilities | enthusiasm. BarEshas become a name. depen Is the final judgment of history upon | always roaming with a hungry heart—as hin fils frends who nine months ago | well as with a flag, he has gathered in sev- BiB, and exhibited at the recent meeting of the | lous when a point ts to be made, aud with the This second mode of force impinging on the ~ believed hin to be incompetent, but who | eral wagers and been frequently men-] Amorican Geographical Society, is a splendid | slow pace of a style unadorned by fancy | bis humble and obedient wife,” as a letter to | Hou. Nothing could be more trifling or puerile | surfaces of the prlinary planets Kenerated thein fo © mouths past have made the coun-| tioned by the Assoc Press, What | specit double (axial and orbital) motions. and aa than the pretence ofgthe Administration papers that Gen. Grant never bad any apprehensions Bothwell, to whom she was not then married vet of the “Kirk of Fields” of topography, net surpassed, if is left. for | equalled, by any of our Western geogra tohes ond sensational pletures, Then, wor- shipping art more than truth, he resolved to to the parallolisims, and inclinations of lence, Lannounce the wonderful try ring from cud to end with praises of his | more could be desired? the whole sub, on uate ability, will have an oppor- | BarEsto live for? Unless, indeed, his pur- | To bring things nearer to Judee, the gold coin | give to the world a history which should be read | treated most judictally,and the “Casket Letters.” bets the para mee mateons areas penn ree Mbetaliame undesnood bese merines tunity now of learning decisively what] pose holds to carry the flag beyond the | of the refgn of ALexaNDEn the Grout, found | for its pijaancy and its brilliancy—which should All these are very grave matters indeed, which | election the White House was pervaded by & | iors were generated by this wonderful mude pnot be pooh-poohed. So with the Froude denial in his first edition of the peine forte et ure for Thomas Cobham, in relation to which we ob- serve what may have escaped Mr. Meline’s atten- tion, that Sir John Coleridge, in his notes to Blackstone (vol. 4 p. 925), says very distinctly that he foars the torture was used oftener in feeling of terror and despair pitiable to behold, and this fright was communicated to his parti- sans not only all over this country, but in Europe. A gentleman calling upon Minister Wasbburne in Paris found hin im a condi- tlonof agitation and alarm which was wholly inexplicable until the supposed Administration near Tyre, and exhibited at the same meeting, Ided ina style from which our Phila delphia coin grinders at once be better than a novel and as good as a play.” ‘This, Mr. Meline will permit us to say, Is D. vs, in which case we 5 bert Larpsbtlrcgsag dre sea pilacabaceryathy dade ested ht well take a lesson, | rather too fine writing for sober criticism, and pe better qualified for a] bid him a regretful farewell, embracing —— deride: Mia AGN Gon Gan clan Gre TORS RAY tecond terms than he was for the first. Dr. | the opportunity to send by him our tender | ‘The request of the New York Board of | inent, Mr. Froude ts the last, possibly the inno= Gre ¥ is quite fallible in his judgment of | remembrances to Mr. E. P. Weston, the | Steam Navigation for the removal of the Gov- | cent victim of an abominable school of nistori- men, We shall shortly see if this isto be | other Great American Pedestrian, who | erament seow at Hell Gate, and that it be | cal style, Start not, reader! but we declare force. sortof aniun be is, It was remarked sev-| sunset and the baths of all th eral months ago by Dr. GREELEY that GRANT we western was 1 right line motive force Impingl more aside than above, will in with three motions on an axis, 1, round (he circle on Which the epicyclical orbits bed. ‘his third mode of fore otion of the moon! ir in eptoyclical orbits, ‘Th generated the tripii« f the primary pla eet down us one of his mistakes. when last heard from was walking iu that | moored in the channel only for a specified thme | open and perpetual war against otctureaque | the reign of Eitzabeth than Blackstone's text | revere wae publi announced, Grant bin ey eye ratepayers red pltept Meantime, what should be’ (he course of | direction “in good spiritsand confident of | 49!!¥, should receive prompt attention. The | story telling, whether it be Macaulay and implies, and cites Dr, Lingard as authority, self, an impassive, self-contained man, probably | Danies the earth round the sun. nel ts sufficiently dang didnot betray his apprehensions. Nor did they ‘This little volume is sure to excite attention ; the Opposition, which has made thissplen- | success chat ‘ous without the | Froude, or Motley and Bancroft. Let the par 4. Aright line motive force, more aside than fl seed an in eurve: above, impinging on a globe, it will turn onan @id fight and been beaten init? Coriuiniv i on eS, presence of this monster barge, and three steani | tent, earnest seeker for truth, by direct though | 89d 4t will repay study: If tt remain unan- ~ ” cheers “ pene es feed cedar eee abemitie cite nec eating isi ask’ BE GLRL DRM the Narragansett, Galatea, aud Providence, | not flowery patho contrast these with Prescott, | swered, then will Mr. Froude pass away into | to erives his impression and when the globe reaches the centre of the no head can now be made against the » sene cpu nisi. have been damaged by it, It 1s also claimed | or Lingard, or, n'a leas deelded form, with Lord | the companionship of the Lamartine pic- representations and bearing of those around | spiral orbit, Ite orbital motion will cease, but ita cessful party, intrenched as it Is more | In his recent message to the Legitlative | that eight vessels have been sunk by the ob- | Mahom and he will Judge our heresy not un- | turesque story tellers (we fear Lord Macaulay | bim. Not being distinguished for perspicacity | Sal rotauen will continue ‘The fourth mode of fore cenerated the rotary motion of the US, Bbc Lin: Ite spiral orbital and when the sun's centre oomoatkt 1 w e centre of iu spiti ibe eum s crs bital motion cemsed. DUT the uximl rotation cons tinued. causing the sun's entre & oaimcige will the centre of the 5. When the Loree are understand ingly used, a globe by one itm puise may be ure Inthe curve Lue of ax fic nection, elitpe circle, epleycle. epiral, parabola. hyperbulay a! bissful was that moment of o w with a mode of the right line pro! CU T urged a globe in the line of the figure (#) cig! re iu the (ue science gf nature and art of 6 M. Teaacs Loomis. WB. D.. Pastor of the Greenport Baptist Chive iy Gaexxvont, Suffolk Co., Long Island, N. ¥. strongly than ever in all departr nts ofthe | Assembly of France, President Tarmns says | struction. The blasting of the rocks at Hell | kindly. Government. Whatever policy Gen. Grayt | that his policy is to stamp on France the | Gate is a great and beneficent work, but it ehooses to pursue, he has the power to car- | features of conservative republicanism. | should be carried on with as little danger to ry it out, if he only has the skill and pru- | To judge from his course hitherto, this | Sound navigation as possible. @ence to keep his own forces in hand, Can ] means the cruel punishment of all politi- Self-propelling pepo ‘am fire engines are | OUF Present criticiem Is necessar@@ dosuitory, he do this? Is headequate to the emerger- | cal offenders, with strict censorship of the | 4... by any means a recent invention. Fifteen | ¥¢ cantot better compass it than by giving one cy? Will he, with the marvellous sagacity | press, and a rigorous restriction of the veare ago it avas proposed to use steam propel, | OFew0 spectmens taken almost at random. It his friends claim for him, surround himseif | right of forming political associations and | Jers in New York, but the volunteer Bremen y Perfectly demonstrable that Mr. Froude with judicious advisers? These are ques- | holding public meetings, Such republican- ferocious antipathy to Mary Stuart was not a opposed 't, fearing that it would lead to the o op! - u 0 of tions of the future. If those of us who | ism cannot pass for much in any country | breaking up of their organtzation. It is appa- | Matter of developinent—the gradual growth opposed GRANT's relection were right in | where 1 republican institutions are un- opinion forming itself as his work advan . rent that the present system of horse-drawn | OP!" our estimate of the qualities of the man, | derstood, engines 1s but little tess clumsy than the old | fF a# Mr. Meline shows us, though she does not really atep upon the stage till the seventh ve or insight, and having scant political experience or knowledge, it would have been preposterous in him to attempt to forecast the result in any stage of the contest ; and nothing but the most fulsome adulationfcould have prompted his fiat terers to stultify themselves by representing Dim as calmly awaiting the {ssue, relying upon the intelligence and good sense of the people ‘The reaction consequent upon the contradic tion of the first news from North Carolina and the election of a Republican Governor was fatal to the Democrats and Liberals. Their exulta- tion had been unreasonable and excessive, and falls into the same category), and Mr. Meline will share the bigh honor which Lingard and Miss Strickland have won for themselves, of tell- ing more truth about English bistory than any of a different form of religtous faith have as yet beeu willing or able to do. ——_ Not @ Correct View. To the Eaitor of The Sui Sin: Your article of this morning, under the caption, “ The South—A Lesson of the Elec tion,” has cost many of your Southern friends surprise, regret, and mortification; and one of ‘The way in which, in the hands of a pictur- esque writer, truth suffers, is made almost gro- tesquely clear In Mr. Meline’s volume; and, as i ' in |b ‘a style, When extraordin i them would fain ask you, responsive to it, a | the succeeding depression was in the same ratio — BAG in'our judgment of the tendencies of here can be no genuine republic in | necgeg te can seldom, he Attained: and the | Wes Mr. Froude had tried, na far back as the | tow questions: ‘They never recovered from the blow, Andwhen | The Tarif Cannot be a Leading Polliieab the party, wehave only to wait and see the | France so long as the present system |) orses are frequently in danger. especially on # fourth volume, to paint her black in the cradle it was followed by the untoward results in Maine Ieeue, Prom the Utica Observer. The present tariff system is very faulty edit, YE First Do you delfeve the election was con- ducted honorably and fairly anywhere? Secondly—If the Northern people were not permitted to express their sentiments at the polls, of, more properly to speak, the ballots, when counted, were not permitted to reflect Dublic sentiment here, how could you expect the same power that swindled you to tolerate a fair elestion there? Thirdly Had the South voted as one man for Grecley, would it have elected jim Fourthly— How did New York vote? Fifthly—Did any Northern State vote for Greeley / Sixthly—If neither your own State nor any part of your own section voted right, will it not he as well, think you, to adjourn the discussion of what ten mayb ein the premises, at least until we can have an election conducted with integrity enough to know whom to blame for apparent results’ Seventhly-(s this result. G not the bastard brat of that co eligibility to a second term? Kod lastly, wi you not engage yo {eurnal in a much loftier missfon by dev ight to a war upon this curse of curses, and an earnest and able advocacy of an amendment {7 ghie Constitution that shall Iimtt eligibility to the residency to one term, and thereby disband the army of officeholders that rally under the fing of a re#lection candidate, and save to the country the disbursement of millions of the seoret fund to foist frauds upon the States, whereby the popular vofee goes Into the ballot box in one tone and comes out in another, t Administration and party verify both, of centralization is maintained, This sy- The danger is appreciated by the sup- | tem was established to subse porters of the Administration themselves. | poses of di » rule, and as long as it Already the cry has gone up from the carc- | remains the ernment will be despotic, ful and prudent, the men who think beyond | whatever its temporary name, The first their noses, and who are not blinded to the | condition of political freedom is local self- difficulties of to-morrow’s march by the | government, and this is something to @ustand smoke of to-day’s victory, that the | which Mr. Trrens's theory of conservative party is too strong for safety as well as for | republicanism is utterly hostile, When the comfort. They are yastly more appreben- | day comes that the statesmen of France five of the future than they would have | and the party in power shall seriously set Deen had the decision been more doubtful | to work to overthrow centralization, we and the results more evenly balanced. The | may not only hope for the establishment very faults which they themselves com- | there of a republic worthy of the name, plained of a year ago, and have so affec- | but also for the perpetuation of domestic tionately condoned since, have now t peace and order and the cessation of the endorsed by the popular verdict; and Gen, | periodical revolutions which for three- Gant has not had so much as the neces- | quarters of a century have weakened the vary discipline and reminder that a closer } country, yote would have furnished Conservative republicanism, according Plainly enough, the policy of the Opposi- | to the views of Mr. Tatens, probably also tion toward the Administration is to give | includes the conserving of power in the it rope enough. Utter passiveness is the | hands of Mr. Turens himself du card to play. Nothing can be lost; every- | period of his mortal existenc thing may be gained by down grade, of being run over by the machine. When, in 1643, Sir Ralph Sadiler was sent by Many arguinents might be offered in favor of the | Henry VITT. to apy out the land at Edinburgh, self-propelling engines, and the question of | he Teported in precise and simple words that their adoption ts well worthy of consideration, | tbe Queen, Mary of Guise, had once taken him Sleok horses make avery fine show on parade, | {Mtv the royal nursery at Holyrood and shown but what is wanted in time of fire te prompt | !m her steeping baby. Now, observe what he of arrival at the spot, and the ready projection of a | {He Hl-natured picturesque does with this mat- strong stream of water. ter-of-fact Incident. We quote a littl: more ae than Mr. Meline does, and italicise a few words The acquittal of the man Fewest, re- | “She saw the Impression which she had made, Uy on trial at Brentsvillo, for the murder of | 884, wh winning confidence, she led him Inte e CLARKE, Is a disgrace to Virginia justice, | ber nursery, and lifted the baby out of the cradle It appears that CLARK was lodged in jail onan | that he might admire its health and loveliness accusation of having abducted Fawe’s sister. | Alas! for the child. Born in sorrow and nurtured rhe two had eloped together, but howa young | @ treachery! It grew to be Mary Stuart. And woman of common intelligence can be said to | Sir Ralph Sadler lived to sit on the commission have been abducted by aman whom she accom. | Which investigated the murder of Darniey.” All panied willingly it is difioult to understand, } this, too, elther fora mere rhetoricat point, or, While CLARKE was helpless and troned in a cet], | What s worse, a design to prejudice, in advance, Pewee chivalrously shot him through the bars, } Without the least logical coherence, and to and a jury, supposed to represent the impartiul | Paint the ghastly events of later fe, imputed spirit of Virginia law, has acquitted the bratal | murder, adultery, per as it were, rocking and cowardly murderer. the cradle of the It would have —— - been @ better pletu t the child Col, WM. M. Grosvenor, formerly editor | ot crime and misfortune sucking the of the St, Louis Democrat, and one of the lead Guise férocity from its young mother's breast! ing spiritein the Cine ati movement, has be- | Aga! and for th f course are indebted come editor of the St. Louls Bvening Dispate?, | to Mr. Meline’s research and Judi ‘lous collation, and Vermont, the struggle was up-hill work The result was so astounding, the overthrow and dispersion of the Democrats and thetr alll so utter and universal, that both parties lost their heads, and were disabled from fooking at the situation dispassionately and with cali in- telligence. ‘The question is, how are the Demo- crate to be affected by this new phase in politica, immediately and in the remote future? Sufl- clent time hax already elapsed for reason to haye begun to resume her sway, and we can de- Mberately consider what are to be the conse- quences of adisaster so apparently complete and irremediable, Political parties recover from misfortunes and defeats with more facility than Individuals, Disusters threatening momentous consequences are easily retrieved by political or- ganizations, and it frequently happens that what is prima facte a misfortune ultimately tends to the deneft of the defeated party. It will hardly be seriously dented that at the opening of the Presidential campaign a majority of the people were opposed to the relection of Grant. The onty dimeulty tay in consolidating the opposition. The Democratic party, rein- forced by the discontented Republicans, would undoubtedly haye been strong en to electa ve the pur- as everybody knows who bas exami is nobody but a handful y to be hones efit the laborer, for he Is obliged to jay toll to ad ista Out of wages whicls are by ho meuns high, Mr, Edward Harris, the great wool manufacturer of Rhode Island. was a ferocious protectionist till somebody induced him to study the question, and then he found by actual Qguring that the protective tariff on every part of his machinery cost him annually & sun in excess of what he made by the pro tection afforded to woollen fabrics. Ife heeaie A revenue refor But the damagogues ¢ still frighten the workingmen fof Rhode [stand with bugaboo storles about their being drives guc of the feld by the pauper lat or of Huroy es The tariff fs bad enough, but it cannot be mais a loading {sue {n polltics. It Involves too many intricate questions, and even if it were clealy understood In all Its bearivgs by the maxes of the people, It would be completely overboria by adozen'matters of more vital interest. Are Federal marshals of the Davenport, and The. Allen stripe going to control our elections In the ure? Is authority to be granted to the Pres ident to suspend the writ of habeas corpye at bia own willand pleasure? Are gigantic corporis tions to fatten themselves on the frul ? Is the South to be given o industries paral pern These are questions which must be answered before the flues of parties can be drawn between the duties existing, and the duties prop: sed oa ool, and pig-iron. nt's reilection: titutional curse, ing the The love it. The elements | of power is a part of human nature; and by cuffing the ears of any State or rection President. The Cincinnati movement was a fall- However, the visionarte of the Opposition, decried as they have | of late we have heard of @ President for | He was the Liberal candidate for Congress ia | when, in 107, tho Protector Somerset invaded | voting wrong, when, how they did vote, you can | ure, viewed as a method of accomplishing a giv » in prot been as heterogencous and discordant, are | life even in this country; but upon the | the St. Louie district, and was defeated by a | Scotland and marched on Musselburgh, we read | S*Y¢? kaow? SOOTERRN OH en result, The primary consideration was to se lect a candidate who, while making an inroad upon the Republican organization, should re- ceive the united support of the Democracy, Mr Grecley promised to fulfl one of these condi tions, but he repelled Democrats enough to make his defeat certain; and this should have been foreseen at the outset. The question now is, hag the rediection of Grant permanently {m paired the strength or weakened the disct pline of the Democratic party’ ‘The history of th hain v od States Senator for New York, To the Baitor of The Sun, Sin; The Republican party naturally turn to Mr. Conkling as a probable candidate for retlection, There are many Republicans, how- ever, who favor the election of E. D. Morgan. Now, sir, ae there existe considerable opposition to both these gentlemen, low me to suggest the name of Parke God: pon whom ¢ whole party can unt if dwin will » found a pure man, tative, an in corruption, Wise Couns ‘mmistration: 9 one man did more to secure thé re- { President Grant than Mr. Gudwin. asa matter of fact perfectly homogeneous | whole, this sort of republicanism must be 4nd congruous, Cincinnati and Baltimore | condemned by impartial observers as are at ove upon the issues now before the | nothing better than a hollow mockery. country. On the other hand, the pa — _ the Administration has, now that the elec- Confusion. tion is over, no principle of union, Uponno | The Siaats-Zeitung undertake vingle important question are they in | lent public service when it calls attention accord, Upon the tariff, foreign policy, | to the chaotic condition of the laws affe financial measures, the civil service, the | ing New York, and especially to the db franking abuse, and even upon what re-| order and uncertainty which they neces- mains of the issue of reconstruction, they | sarily produce in the fuanciat administra- are at odds among themselves, Nothing | tion of thecity. It appears that in reports will keep them together except a factions | of the Comptroller upon the city debt the small majority at the late election; but if his | in Froude (vol. y., p. 57): "'Phursday we again foat brings him back to journalism, for whieh | advanced over the ground where fourteen years he bas positive genius, it is a result upon which | later Mary Stuart practised archery with Both- he maybe congratulated. The mission of the | well ton days after her husband's murder,’ average Congressman of the period is to hang | Well may Mr, Meline say interjectionally: around the departments, and do messages | “Consummately artistic! ‘The reader has not and provide offices for his constituents, Col, | yet reached Mary Stuart; her history is not yet GROSVENOR 1s aman of too much ability to be | begun; he supposes his mind, as regards her, to wasted in that line of business. In the new era | be amere blank page, and yet our historian has of politics the newspaper fs to wield vastly more | contnyed to fnseribé upon that page there two power than the politician, and there {sa world | facts; She was the murderess of Darnley, and of good work in Col GROSVENOR which would | she war guilty of adultery with Bothwell, Not be lost in Congres a tittle of evidence has been offered ; no areu- —— ment Is presented, With gracefal and almost t them, wh fered somewhat n their certain to let them severely alc the worst of the Grant blackguard canpaign, and now they have stilts again, and are talk and the alwenities of journaien pass! fro an exce — Two Daye Work in One, he Baicor of The Sun. S14 | Please tell us poll clerks and Inspecford Who served in the late election in thie eity what s1ituten a day's work, The majority of us worked f eighteen to (weaty hours im completing the eany ture Then we were summoned Before the (ow 'F pnclusive reply to this terrogatory. The party, when beaten, has fallen victim to itsown Internal divisions and When united and faithful to has been uniformly invinelble, Th 1 It speaks well for Mexico's future that | careless desinvoltura, Mr. Froude has merel — - 848, and again in | Panvessers and County Clerk, and after waits " careless deainvol 4 ‘oud y and again in isd, it was overthrown by in M ie Warfare from the party they have just de- | item of assessment bonds is set down at | her peopte are crying for ratiroads instead of | alluded to two incidents, one of which Is a long. Home fer No: Young Girls, teatine contention, with alarge popular majority | (Ouiplieg with the election tn feated. The duty of the Liberal Opposition | cight millions and @ half of dollars. ‘These | revolution. Fourteen States h Io dts a it concelvable that & party jent through | exploded falsehood, and od the caso against | 7°.!* Biitor af The Syn Kc ontrol of t Gor t fo! iw to sit quietly by and ict the Gna | assessment bonds are issued according to | thelr Governors resolutions to Congress inviting | Mary Stuart ig complete. Fur thore are the two | , SER: At this season of the year the foettugs of | more than tmo-thivde. of the’ tine since. the party develop all that isin it. If our as-| law to provide for the payments necos- | the House to settle the question of railroad | great aecusations upon which the entire contro- | the tharitable are much tried by applications for help | adoption of the Constitution ts to be dissolved sumption during the campaign was correct, that Grant's re#oction would lead to freater corruption than ever, there will be \n due time s withdrawal from tim of honest Republicans who Will comé over and shelter from homeless young girls. Great a of people are ignorant that Snitch for euch tw tue Gi Mark's place. Tk uy U oo sh € pie bet der it Fears Ald can be suiainecat phere or retire from the feld in despair bec an nt or combination, unnatural and eodent in its annals, and which f the wisest men of the organization protested against from the beginning, failed to scegmplish the, end in view? Is it not absurd to suppose such a thing? Or ls it unreasonable sary lo be made upon contracts for new paving olf streets, the reconstruction of sewers, and other public works of neces- sity and utility, But it often happens that after the bondd are istued and their grants with the least possible dolay; and nine | yerey titmgés—a controversy that has raged for States have sent similar resolutions through | three centories, Very clever! tery élever, tn- thelr Legistatures, Meantime, owing to the cés- | deed.” Again, and here t§ more serious sation of Intestine troubles, thousands of men | incalpation ; Speaking of Mary in later life, Mr, are Idie, and ready either to Aight or work, By | Froude says, quoting as authority Randolph (Bli- Was nots mature Firet Assembly District, Tents hice tie — office of the Chilaren’s Ald Boctety, 1¥ Kast at given to ai) young girls appl: ype all moans, let Mesioo give them @ cletios +, nee Oe sat in fie ; to expeot that (his party, profiting by experience, vo. ome portion af he ranks of the Opposition. If, 1 proceeds handed over to the coutractors, | work, rm | Semen OO? he Sete) Od eared Hamlet Op jae Hea A illregaln Its amelent prestige and \n procens of mt weekly Rectners inthe Musva’ Best saves 0! - be _ Rap- A 5 me possession o! \ Government agi Baal Om building, 4a