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THE SUN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1872 | i not less than sixty years, Under the couns { them to their own emolument and the con- | Iate canvass to polnt with pride to the impris- | J} J) |) ayn xis a wild theory, Any code T COUTIT CAROLINA POLITIC ination franchise a yoter must have | aternation of the unfortunate taxpayers. |} oned HoDgE a eridence thot the Adminiatr BEECHER ON COMMUNISM. Leen ee oe oeeried hand and d civ ipartinsirvotal ICS, 1 for twelve months as owner or] In some exceptional instances wood | Hon punished thieves irrespective of rank, sia aii the same pay Is rotten. This would be to abolis! . " ry ri nt 4 ” eh TH nt 4 r. tennat lands or tenements of the eatable | pavements have afforded general satisfac. | clon religion, or condition in Iife. | Hereafter rimprahale Re k A EA AD FA he he ete dhe Ine or masts as Tor amen tiveny and DS LERaaE HINCIION: valucof- twelve pounds or upward, and | tion to the people; but judging from the | he may be used vo coordi an paul rata tl False a giant oak from a huckloberry hush. Libel schon ; have paid all poor rates iu respect to the | results of a careful attention to the reporta | U'***?*- Honan Is REISS Cotvelsvs: ‘The Great Preacher Discoursing on War Pie Decne pinehaikaes GAN RULEE The White People Prevented from Voting by premises so occupied, piven of their trial In many different parts | Pretoria, the capital of the South African | and Peace-The Commen Peeple the Ba | 1, ihrem state of thiags, sald Mr.leecher, || Warned inte Man, Heaters The Pare If these provisions regarding the exercise | of the country, there is no more than one | republic of Transvaal, a country which Is likely yet & blag eee aieriouen Ie every man will have a right to all that belongs dy dinbaeni ‘he Paes “ of suffrage are complicated and restrictive, | case In ten where they have been in use | to attract a large European iminigration soon je Rurope-'God Bless Germany.” War should be tne work cP ths sorinn people; | Cerresponesnee of Ys oun Academy of Musto -Hogvenais. many of the decisions given by the courte | long enough to afford a fair test of their | ‘escribed as n pretty Iittle town lying about 6.000 hot of the. rulers, The peapleshould have the | Cont, ‘ es “ , . ny, ute ‘ eater V Couvania, 8. C., Nov. 20, 1872—Eve eee which have the power of revising the regis- | merits that they are not pronounced a | feet above the sea level. Te tea healthy and | Plymouth Church was crowded yester- | Rive eay—then the rulers. ‘The mon who most 72.—Ever sfar aye they who rude oppress tne comma | siuce the palmy days of reconstruction elections in Burope the common people feed the | have been in this State nothing mo nd’ thus the inen who most oppose dy- | Lage ie hetniee mows ts or FE eee aot Cpprossnts | broad fagce, and the elections of October and other. ‘The | November of this year were, perhaps, the broad- well-watered place, surrounded by lands which | 44: ning. Weautiful anthems were sung, yield abundant crope of grain and vegetables. | Aud Mr. Boecher delivered a splendid oration on Every kind of vegetation to be found to Italy or | Peace and War, touching in bis ueual happy | nastie HAM claimed to vote on account of having | blocks of unequal hardness, they become | the south of France will thrive in Transvaal, | Way on a hunared side insur The great | b: Aehting sesinse nd fa eae iy 7h occupied some rooms continuously since | disfigured with holes which are both un- | Pretoria contains only about six hundred tnhab- | Pre’ rher seemed In excellent health and spirits. Pattie hee (ee “nf ray ite ees, a Opnarmente, estof them all, They demonstrate the fact that. 1870, paying fourt shillings a week | sightly and inconvenient. Itants, bap it has a great future before it when | His cheeks were ruddy, nd his voice was clear | hutit rests on the carth. ‘There may be just as | the white element therefor. His vote was allowed; yet when he price exacted for nearly all descrip- | the projected railroad connecting the town with | and ringing, After an outburst of Praise from | much arrangement as vou please between king Teonty third vn Dry Book Chrous, de. Foot of He ‘Theatre —Merry Wives of Windsor, try lists are simply absurd. For instance, | failure. Frequently they rot away in a in Westminster recently a Mr. Cunsixa- | short time, and often, being formed of this Btate is effectually, whed out, overawed, and outnumbered by the Day ound Keeninge re San Francis Mipsteelitg x of ve and peasant, yet the wer of taxes is in the . b , oS tesa oy hha he retuened into court and said that he | tions of wood pavement is so exorbitant, | Delegoa Ray shall be bullt. English {s commonly | tho choir, Mr. Beecher prayed. He thanked | poor Lsilese Ha Teer CUA tn RISEN tan TRAreaunia tines Tony Hetee— Actors by Bay tehe, had forgotten to mention that during the | and so 01 »roportio! . spoken there, and the place boasts a large and | God that during the year He had sent forth His | sug sax wo CAN AFFORD TO HAYEK A DUNCE my, andthe immense and intractable black, y re ut of proportion to the cost of the Halon Kquare Theatre Ar Our America Coon vreater por’ » time he ‘ well-furnished reading room where English and | mercies on the earth both by sun and night. FOR A BON. population, It was this same in greater portion of the time he had paid | material and labor required in their con- |v yiniat newspapers. are kept on Ble. Pretoria | He blessed the Heavenly Father for all house- | Mr. Heecher referred to. the evils of Kuropean | that kept the whit ets —Wardrring Dutchnas, Mosinee, ut twelve shillings a week for his rooms, | struction, that extraordinary means are | 4. anout 360 miles from the diamond fields, | hold mercies, for the Joy of affection and the conscription. The rich could procure a substi- | and the same feeling of hopeless despair that’ = Dut that during the last ten weeks he had | often found necessary to secure their adop- | from which point it may be reached by a | hope that springsthence inthe future. Ho gave tute. The man who had nothing but his hands 4 ra prevented them even from voting at the locak Perine of The Suns had akitehen for which he paid the addi- | tion, Hence the formation of Rings to | good, hurd road. Under the excellent ad- | thanks for national sand prayed that ine | £2 areeR on Wan kon ay Mant ave years in | Cleotions, ‘he correspondent of THe Sux, in a | se9r, tounait pubectibe tional two shillings, his name was at once | press the claims of certain patents,and the | ininistration of President Buncrns, the | telligence might more and more pervade the cam, 2 ould seem hard onically) to take conversation with # leading man of the upper. pias 1s ane address, struck off the register. This was not done | free use of money In many cases among | Transvaal republic ts making rapid pro- people. He asked God's blessing on the Presi- t) " section af the State the other day, asked why Deewuse the rental was too small, for the | local authorities in order to obtain con- | gress in material prosperity. ‘The Transvaal | dent of the United stat nce of fear from voting for Greeley, nie kentleman, the son, perhaps, of very learned, 1! tepies te ove aa tre State ‘ and on all in authori- weaned parents, and treat Wim wae But if it was that Grant's majority in th opis te one audrews a to bi ol jon't matter put a coarse Suablan asant. | amounted to 50,000, when at the election held umount required under the act is lees than | tracts. Where the local authorities cannot | Parer currency, which before his election was | 1! Se Tr Tee ciie ean and out 18Gb, don't it!” said Mr. Beecher. Toney. 8 | few Wonks age Wetuen'd BAGO fae Governes five shillings; but the man was actually | be approached in this manner, the plan is considered almost worthless, has apprectated to | Cast; and entreated that vice and tanorance | matters more for him than the aon of 9 million. ay y al Gisfranchieed becnuse he had added «| sometimes resorted to of making bargains |° Yalue of fifty, per cent. es compen! wae tht be overthrown, and the viclous and erim- | IFS, If soba cn ae orve poor mam head | © Wells” rep ol orit inal purified and restored. Seon, itisa ric’ , man. The poor man has ne Well,” replied the gentlem Kitchen to his Foul, Geer oases EqHMlIy | with intldential property holders, by which | (peels: aed ihe Esesideat Iss ott ee et taultal but what God has put (nto his body, and “that is bow ; to borrow £60,000, which will be sufficient to re- MR. BRECHER'S BERMON. hende lt ail and all the time, ‘The weight of ail | Cause the white people did not vote. \ ridiculous have frequently occurred, in | the Ring assumes the payment of their as- | {ire all notes from circulation, Several deleca- | After an anthem, Mr. Beecher gave by which persons fairly entitled to vote have | sessments in return for the benefit of their | tions from the diamond fields have lately | text from Isaiah 1i., 2d, 3d, and 4th verse od help thom ! vented them from voting ? , 5 ond fle TL eai eee a is avn tani Beecher then gave statistics showing that Wie Peed Waite DeDSLe DIUEE Deen deprived of th xe in conse- | influence among other taxpayers. In such | visited President Burgers for the purpose of | Ant ie Longe house thall ve extabliahe dia 4,000 of ten were in the armics of ITH PLOPLE DIDN'T VOTE y coved quence of the complications of the proper- ys the small property hi fee ee Wolly, sant | ty franchise, ly obliged to pay a large price for a poor | farms may be procured on easy The extension of the electoral franchise | pavement in front of their own premises, | thelr mission will doubtless result In measures to the agricultural laborers is considered | but also, in fact, the assosments of thelr | *tlculated to attract a lange immalgratt froin the uid be arr ‘ious part of one natl lustrious part of a Over $250,000.00 armies ers are not | arranging terms with the Government by which the itl nditions, and | “And iiany people shall ay, seo un ta the “moutain of th ve of the God of Jacob; and be will te | wars and we will walk mmon people. Allthese | Mr. 8.—I'll tell you, sir. It was Federal bayoe “lone against anothe a taken to kill ther patio year fe consumed on the: After this,” said Mr. Beecher, “do the mountain *h id all nations eliall Now unio It, ets, something that you people at the Nortty don't know anything about, except at dress Tread a ut his | the suffering caused by war always comes on the Correspondent-I know that, but what pres | ding editorial in THe Sus paths: for n of Buropeans, which at Arat will be come y forth the law, aud the word of the F a r day, in which the Southern people ror the seco nmodation of aptowa retldente adver | to be of great iinportance to the welfare | richer neighbors. pened pan ally of diggers from the | “STH thal jokes demons: tie abllonh tad, nasi Fee ye os Sflave tare wat Feligion, in the world’ | were somewhat blamed for the election of Grant. ae see moma auvertisencat ottecs og Weat | Of that class, Joserm Axcu, the leading | Very likely there may be some yery Up- | giamond fields possessing more or _ less oe ae ene J halt Went their swords | believe the story that the bright Orlent beamed | Now, Tam aconstant reader of Tux Sux, and een nn a nation af Mroulaay and sists | representative of the Agricultural Unions, | right and honorable men engaged in the | capital. With the Introduction of Buro- | hatien shall vot ti nd thelr dpeare into pruping bucks: | with light ap angele nang | Hence on eart ie | have been for some time, but, I tell you, the wvenue, and 308 Weet Twenty-third street, opporite | is very earnest in his appeals for such an | business of laying down wood pavements, | pean energy, capital, and hebits, and the con- |e) Wey! in their shops. Tan (lies Wrcke Uae Sctuaries Goean's know Brand Opera Hlonse, and on the enst side at O11 ried | extension, especially on account of the | If so, these remarks of course do,uot apply | struction of « railroad to Delagos. Hay which | Was it not strange, Mr. Beecher said, wheu we LET THE PLANU TALK TO THE KUSH, much about the beauties of the free ballotim | iid Swaine oC ; me ; ells gh etl a6 looked back upon the nations and read thelr | ang the saw to the spade, and the sickle to the | South Carolina, It's all very well to say that » ——————— educ ational influence of the franchise. | to them. But it is very certain that just at | will open an utlet for the products of the | io ire, their poetry, their philosophy, to dis- anvil. Pcruelty of war, with the | man ought to come out and vote; and so he Horace Greeley Gradentty Sinki Tho Liberals of the great towns fully | this time the country is infested with pes- | Country, there can be little doubt that the rich | oe i ngatde of it all a spirit of rivalry and a | dynastl heat the head of it, will ace Greeley Gri ySinkings | impathize in this view of the subject; | tilent wood pavement Rings, like that mineral and agricultural resources of the little | Over Tk hold men down as long as It fs permitted. Ys We deeply lament that we are obliged to | Caer u recont Electoral Raform Contar- | whose illegal practices have Intely attract- | TePublte will soos be developed into commercla | a should under ordinary circumstances ; but it's another thing when coming out to vote is at- 4 tended by such little, trivial consequences ax ilitary glory? Was it not strange | vate—educate the common peo Importance, espectally if the newly discovered | ‘Pat only ane eweet voice was lifted up through | folly, and then wars shall be no r at there has bee i ve- | ence he st. a . , ‘ i . I Ll the ages, breathing a spirit of peace and love | every king was as seasich as I ain, the visit of a squad of eavalry to your house the eport that thers has been no improves | ence held in St. James Lfall, London, the | ed attention in Philadelphia; and any | cog elds fulfl thelr promise. From present ae prestiilng 8 6p! ve Pk ha dl eG Fae eae oe ea corolla weriaa Wea pele nent in the condition of the Hon. Horace | Chairman, Mr. Caampennaiy of Birming- | community which has business transactions | appearances the sanguine expectations of Prest- THE OLD Hennew PeorLe? went to war. (Laughter) 1p the face of sil two ‘or three months, afterward. Turguey during the last twenty-four | HAM, declared his belict that no remedy | with such sharpers will bo sure to regret it | dent enarns regarding the future growth end | | The Joma mere nos unvearlie, They were men | fals,wten Communi AG te tat a ny a eee Looked upes as perfect mousy was to be found for the sufferings of the | in the end, prosperity of Tranvsaal bid fair to meet with a | of flerce passions, of aay tempers, which ittook | jy horror, and wonder how God permits such | hunters, ‘They are all placed at the beck ands aours, but on the contrary, he is gradually } gorjcultural laborers save in the power — epeody realisation ages to subdue, to direct aright; yet thelr | wickodovss among the common people.” nod ‘of one or two vile: worthless, drunken bad i Le! I What in the world are we coming to? | “P°°'’ _— : prophets, instead of applauding war, taught that devils called United States Deputy Marshal secoming weaker, and his physicians are | which the possesston of a vote would offer. | n.4 pittsburgh C at ‘si ‘i La Consaneia of Havana asserts that when God should rule the strife of contendin OD BLESS GERMANY, Who direct the arrests, and whose power in th sf opinion that the last sad event cannot | There are many indications that popular © Pittsburgh Commercial talks ut the “ 5 aruiles should cease, and the earth througho' Mr. Beecher then referred to the that Ger- | County is areater than that of the Czar of Kissa. P canno| y probable Cabinet appointments of Governor. | 4,000 soldiers will leave Spain for Cuba about the | her borders be at peace. many had tried to stop emigration to America, |“ Gorrespandent-I thought that these Ku-Klux puch longer be postponed. He iswuffering | Pinion is shaping itself in England to nc- | ciect HawrRANTT as though there was a poss. | end of this month, and that before the end of | 4p, ‘rom extreme weakness, acvompanied by cept a large extension of the electoral fran- | pility that that eminently good and upright | the year this number will be Increased to 12,000. | the text there was a prediction that the day | because it was takin ald come when nations wo ‘sway the very men that | arvoste were all over. ‘id be governed | supplied their armies. The preacher would not . 7 7 . Hoda will; when empires. and their laws | wish {tho brave old Em- | TH! ORIGIN OF THE KU-MLUX EXCITEMENT. y to. Weaken the hands o | fl ti + tie Wr i chise, and at present it looks as if the | man might go back on bis friends, And this | [t adds, with ill-disguised sarcasm: “ The Gov- would be controlled not by a Le Wet, Apdintn =) or Ua Blend fey 4 alttt Als pra Bo they are pies 10 88%. i pute in ; “ i ¥ . ht te eh ublic men, shoul noble morally, jaws | lt waa anoble country, st just now ne Ku-Klux arrests are over, hey are om tee cnet aed teee ead Moca aoa ct ve An lial notwithstanding the fact that his moral and | ernment believes that this number will suffice | B'taued for the moral interost of the whole | throw off the last q)vos of priesy despotism, | another tack this time. ‘The trouble is, thera { till, as ho has been for some time past, fn — = political rectitude was endorsed in October by | to wind up the insurrection people, and the policy of a natior He loved the ancient land, and would say, God | were never any Ku-Klux outrages committed im roject. | SIMON CAMRRON, CHARLES T. Yenkns, and - —————— Oo bivine. Providence. ‘Then there Ww: tess Germany. (Loud applause on the floor | Laurens county, and those of us who didn't state of entire mental derangement and | Another Postal Telegraph Project 0 * | rhe Philadelphia wooden pavement in- | peace. Then the resources of the nat tnd with the hands). He would aay, Germans, | know of the dark ways of these fellows were Besides the Wasimuns project of a posta | Eres! Many thousand of his rellow wens fie hiladelphia wooden pavement’ In- ) Fe turned Into channels producing wealth ftay at home forthe. present; stand by the ald | sumewhat at aloss to account for the suspen 4 unconsciousness, é x come to this? HARTRANFT suspected! Well, | vestigation is wot likely to amount to any- | condition J be brought about by tho labor- | roof tree. Thank God that tto come, | sion of the hadeag corpus in the county. Butt ; Ite needless to add that he receives att | *eereph. which te the pateras) goverm | ro1i up the 1uap of Pennsylvanie thing. The committee has no power to com- | ers, the artisans, the husbandmen of the world, | ‘Thank God that there is a1 Shed down | you see they dont care for Ku-Klux crrestes | hats sat he receives Ql) inent plan pure and simple, there is one ——— pel the attendance of witnesses or to make | Thé people © shall beat thelr «words Into plough Kime years ago a pumber of drunken necruess the personal care and 1 shares and thelr spears into pruning bovks.”” THK SOLE BUSINESS OF BUROPEAN POWRIS. day, said Mr. Beecher lical attention | other offered which has occasioned much | Mr. ¥ that the most friendly regard for him | discussion, We mean the scheme of | som led ow by that immaculate agitator, Joe Crew! | raised @ row at the Court House, which ve! soon resulted ina general riot. A free fight en« J. STILLMAN has in the Nation | them testify, or to punish them for per- valuable remarks upon the most beautiful | jury after they have testified. The conse- ns against war. and the most enlightened scientitie knowl- | Mr. Ganprvza Hunuarp of Boston, and noble of statues the VENUS of Milo, as itis | quence is the parties most wanted won't ap- ia to teach their gublects= | So tromiee chery a tense atone waste tae See ee ee were quiets | * eit with whom is associated Postmaster nly called, of as he cally it, the VENUS of | pear; or If they do appear they testify only wh w to war. Wien the | acrosm the sen and ting in the ears of brothers | down and peace restored. That was th dge can bestow. \ ‘| ales 4 ‘ During bis residence in Greece Mr. | suits them, and b — Burr of Boston, whose latest public | oii vay visited Melos and made the acquaint- | largest freedom and entire impunity, they have | with, and the res The Credit Mobilier. appearance was as Chairman of a commit- ‘the man who discovered the statue. It | made the most of their opportunities, The im- | teaching men to ght shall be turned voward the | ar. rowan repeatedly interrupted by | mulitia by Gor t. and the inc tee appointed to blow up buildings in Bos- | was not found buried in afleld but walled up in | portant question whether the price of votes was corufort and wealth of the people, | Sorrow and fuse, The congregation emiled and wept | harangues of the carpet-bay members p Mghing shall flee away, and po ton, and of whom it may be remarked in app riy shall be un- | tHe having been carefully concealed by | $50, or $300, of $1,000 has not been settled. In view | known. To abolish war de hands ‘the cod by turns, A collection for the poor was | Lesisieiure. This wna at jug at liberty to lie with the hope for what we posscas—let it say, for the | disturbance that hax ake of everything prectowi ever occurred in our vile tn liberty and real | lage, or, indeed, im the county, and it was en« in,religion, Pus down war Urely consequent upon the arming of the negro ee tad The Spring d Republican thinks that no ut three years ago searc’ ete Inve: cobpera- | taken u) and it is upon this that these deputy marshal just, searching, and complete investigation | hagsng that unless he is more successful admirer who desired to preserve it from | of these facta, Cul. Fopsey sorrowfully remarks | tlon of the great laboring class of every country. va . -— SPS raiding how. ‘The process In very siuples of the Credit Mobilier is now possible. Con | ig plowing up the telegraph monopoly | destruction. It was then complete, with ite arms | that the investigatif® is a farce Bn tie eee cet eas ou gut trecs tus aesetuaey’ A draapdlerkg ng dde yt dyattiioas were beaune Unect tase ducted by any Congressional committee | than he was in the other blowing up, the | nd ail ite parte unbroken, though for security | “the truth is something that caunot be gotten” | Phen men wire savages. Savages live by force. | WASHINGTON. Nov. 28.—There has been | Ckerations Wate hop eetdatctad nee appointed by Speaker Biarye, it would be | western Union will be in no great danger, | {¢ arms had been detached from the body, | frou it. He calls upon te Common Council to | They have only so much mind as is necessary to | « great deal of talk about the reason why the hbeheeed MARSRALG @ farce eressm: besides, too many influential Con- Inaie them cunning and treacherous. Although | ton. Elihu B. Washburne came home from | Paid a vagabond negro one dollar to swear to amy en of both parties have been mixed n general principles, | we have not yet arrived at that higher stage of affidavit. the contents of which were entirely un~ nd | because “the people believe there is aring" in | existenc when, physical force can be wholty | Parts just.before the election. He is commonly | known to the aMant, and armed with this doow. ‘The fuder, who was French Consul at Melos, | expel somebody right ¢ sent word to his Minister at Constantinople, The Hvssann-Bunr plan is to incorpo- rate a Postal Telegraph Company which i as ‘i » deep sity. Auliched, yet the Inw of development requires | credited with the purpose of becoming United | ment, aud accompanied by a formidable squad up in the business to aliow any real investi- | Shan i - h | he despatched a frigate to secure the statue; | the board, Philadelphia is an linmoral city. QDGLABAG, Sak Ube Tay, OF re eet nny eax en ee eg on gation to take place. hall institute a sort of partnership rela- | put before the arrival of this ship the com- SPE Piya ETHER OST Seon nal concentrated theteed oa ne, | aeaees Senator im the place of Mr. Trumbull; tion between the General Government | mauder of a Turkish vessel had taken possessioa | Those whose pride of ancestry is offended Puree’. OP don't think aud a private corporation—a pleasant ar- | of it. The Frenchman and the Turk had a pli 5 = onarald which results inthe arrest of a hi Said Mr. Beecher, “that | and notwithstanding his denial, this theory is | dozen of the white citizens of the county. Une by the suggestion that men are descended from | 4 government can just now exist without physi- | quite generally adopted. The truth is, however, | der these ciroumstances you will admit that the ‘This is a sound and judicious view of t subject. It is justified also by experience. ; Delleve, too, that physical force » inducements for white men to vote for Greel rete tactic Pach vpenones, | rangement whereby the G sical contest for the statue, and in the struggle | monkeys will thank Dr Lupwia Burcunsn for br lieter feginag vo that pnyaieal forthers | that Washburne cane home merely that he | aro. not vory. Mie Sanuk the vutck ot in the Ias' ie no! rine the ae NM} becomes bound to meet all losses, and | the arms were either thrown overboard or were | endeavoring to show that monkeys are simply | is a lingering remains of savagism in us all. might not be forgotten by President Grant, and | filthy jail staring them in the face (for no man arms investigation and the Custom House fi : e hold of the Turkish vessel; at an yusins and not eat sors, | further we are from this savagiam the nearer we sht no out of sid q safe from arrest), it is not much to be wondere: the company with great magnanimity too _ hadi 1 if we a set . ‘ a at any th Min i 2 : not Ul Shae oor ai oT aes 8 Ore aeuteanon Ts might not. from being out of sight and out of binds itself to divide all profits, Govern. | Tate they have never been sewn ain Hae x? pai PHYSICAL FORCE RIGHTLY DIRECTED ment having already post office accommo- in which the statue was walled up was near the | who, unlike Darwin, doesn’t ‘The giob cher cor e v Lend : MMO | theatre of M we Minted work ef the | the half-ehel! clam—wae s bairy, lung-headed | ,,"Re, globe, Mr. Reecher continued. was no te | strong social nature finds Iteclf at home ia the | .,4cu'r correspondent admitted the force of dations everywhere, with letter carriers | Roman Empire; and there are no Indications of | animal, with long arms and short lems, and the . . there remarks,and term sated. the intervie Bysioal foree | Seonch capital, and the salary, $£7,000 in gold, te | Shese Somers, ene term pated Ue inierer appointed in the principal cities, it is stipu- | 4 temple ever having stood near the spot. Melos | race took many thousands of years to dev rdand spear | not only ample for hia economical habite but | tot investigation by the Senate were nothing but the most shameless whitewashing; while the Navy Department investigation by the House was only saved from com- pletely falling iuto the same degrading mind, get turned out of hia prosent place as | Was, the wiite people are willing telat soe w sand Gen, Grant have things ail their own » back as far as Minister to Paris, ‘This place suite him. His out of use. not) ted. Physical force tb to the maiter has convinced me that the lated that the co:upany shall occupy the | was a favorite watering place with the Romans | into its present imperfect state, Whatever their LA kd ded eb beacd ysical force must be OF- | even jeaves a small bolanco on the right aide at | statement of the geutieman with whom I hi condition by the presence on the come F F 5 “i p ganized and directed against It | Conversed was not overdrawn, The deserte By aye post offices free of rent; that the letter | of the Empire, aud Mr. SiiLMax supposes | nationality or rellzious belief, naturalists seom | plerce the mountala, penetrite the rock, the end of the year, In addition to this, his son Med willngee, the idle proughshares. ar mittee of Gov. Biarn of Michigan, 09 UP- | carriers shull deliver telegraris; that the | either that the statue bad beom previously car- | to be generally tinprossed with th fides that the | Gut the secrete, Ce Fie om raey, athe is Secretary of Levation, with a salary of $3,000 a abandoned homes, the desolated hearths that right and feartess man. The majority re- | qepartment shall furnish all stationery | red there for safety and concealed by the | monkey cann tbe ignored as @ relative. Even | Giints of war are to be civilized, and to t year, Hkewise in gold, which raises the official | have taken the place of thrift, und proaie ety tm ported that Romgsox’s act in taking #99,000 | OUD V TT ooo hall issue stamps for tele | Athenians, or that it had been taken thither by | the strictly Christian Waruintow sald he always | foeisten ti atig five ut the oart family revenue to $90,000, Besides, Mr, Wash- | aro iiving monuments of the glory uf G from the Treasury and givimg it to the | crams the same as for portage—in short, | ‘be Romans as an ornament for thelr theatre | felt a ahudder when about to dine on monkey in | Sefyant and the heavens thelr aly. ||. | burne has commenced the education of his Grant's adininistration, whieh will endure to ecoRS in direet violation of an express met with their approbation; but Gov. eternity. THE RESULT OF THE E and hidden when some invasion was me It isan Interesting f: aced. | the wilds of Guiana, that the bronze Hex- . Fee ive Would be an organization of nations | Younger children at Bonn, in Germany, whither for the peace of the werld, In our cities, towns, | Mra. Washburne has g¢ shall furnish all the facilities forthe transac- oTION ; to take charge of pe jon of busines: de . The orange culture pays we Florida. | i lagen, ore Sto secare peace exist= has not excited surprise, ‘The people here were Giite in his canort Wiavastednad this ours | eee that the department shall | copys of te Vatican was found uear the same THS OMhHige Suture He in Florida. } and villager, onmanizations to vectre peeve eAlst- | them ; and It would be an inconvenience te have [ fully propa, rie, AG the time uf the nod ont ey cae be abit Geeeeved oh sell stamps and receive all tolls and keep | theatre. LU Mr. H. L, Harr of it Se the St. John | ¢4- pany waticuaie iva itd Maa these arrangements broken up at present, | nation of Horace Greeley by the Cincinnatl Cone = a : Gese' . 4 essag: * ‘s- s a “a river, has agrove covering eight or nine acres Por af Doubtless, als we unde f vention there was enthusiasm stirred up itt ti f the Credit Mobili t to be exe al a e A O' euty-fve cents for | statue « ENUs, but of Mrxenva-Vicrory, and ; 800,000 is ae | Detween citizen and eltizen By-and-by it V e ws precedented. L say unprecedented, for th jon of the pilier is not to be €X- | twenty-tive words or les, for five hundred | in this view he ts confirmed by the change re- | © sich, it is said, yielded him 800,000 oranges last | hall bo as unlawful for oue nation to make war | be developed within the next two or three | Was nota man, woman, or child in ail the Sot pected at the hands of this Congress, our % 4 tly sin tte cuitude.. White the Ty winter, which he sold for three cents each, thus | on another as it ia now for one citizen by sheer | yours, and that by rewatuing in Bure strane | Bat hud Deen’ Suht ‘from earliest tafaney td Springfield contemporary calls upon the miles or under; and that the Government he y ma t in Its attitud te ue Pru. | 7 aiiging 824,000 for the product of nine acres of | Physical force te bear down upon another, and | Y&8rs aha oe sd look upon Horace Greeley as his most bitte 8 shall have priority over the lines for of sians were besi rable w , maltreat and batter him. For half a 0 fearless and 5 advocating the prin arty Zand what pri Feistenl House to perform the duty of expelling Oanes Ames. “There isno question about vidos datury | ker to such disturbances, # statesman as p enemy. Who has bec Dad th Nac tarsevaa te fety, aud for | Had. It ts not probable that another instance | there as heen a gradual tendency toward abel | nent as he ls may stand a better chance of high | a# he In \ he for | can be found where the orange culture bas | ter plan than war for settling national disputes. mati : e jean thls purpose the two pleces of the torao were | CaM be found where the orwage callie Ake | ie priacipie of arbitration fas had wvany illus | Pron otion than if he were at home, taking part ples of th busi ples could t 3s, and shall change or regulate the tolls bylaw. The company will put up the E obnoxious to these people than those of t his guilt,” says the Republican; “he ts | taken down separately, This disclosed the fact i A rult } wrations botore the recent jireat Inatance which | im whatever rows and rumpuees may occur, party under whose sanction every conceivabl@ vt itloted out ofisewn mouth; the proofs | Unesand pay the operators for an annual | that when the statue was first set up In the itty cultivated seldom falls to yte has sulted not only in maintaining peace between ae oppression and wrong were being heaped upot | pple ina ea hae ta Me 1 ; charge of ten per cent. upon the capital | Louvre a thin wedve had been inserted between returns. In the Indian river section of | tw tions, but also in binding them to- YACHTSMEN AT WAR. them? But the nomination of Hon 6 handwriting; and Ls ede had heen Inserted betwee gether In stronger fraternal ties. |The principle grows, Dut there must be a code of International | whe abd over banging all an educated public sen- a eee stock. The company proposes either to | the two parts, clving to the figure an exaggerated Florida, eighty intles south of Pilatka, where i ireGikeeg | ley changed the entire color of the pleture, ond \ Tie tH EEE TTL AL mora oeAlseen ant’ | IECGING. CEWATH Ane: THANK REI fororesa tn ros | Ue ATR: (es itipene naae an Snes ONG 88 long before the Democratic Cynyention met i Baltimore the white voters of South ¢ na therefore he ought to be expelled. Very good! But is it probable that Mr. Axes oO any he comme: oD) i mi tempt to Take Lt from Jamate were demanding his endorsement by that Cons 4 at tile ean ad okra iF produced is considered superior to any that ts It is the common people thar must f vore demanding ; r that ¢ soatd consent to bo expelled without at- | OF ¢0 Dulld new lines, aa may bedeemed ad- | storing tt this wedge wax of course not replaced, | PToUuoe’! IA Til a ene ang established | Bring this shout, Until lately, men were not edu- | About a year ago Col. Degraw of Ja Vention. This euthusianty reached oad ls, Whe . and the statue is consequently now more up- cated to hate war. But the Visable, When the Company £003 into ae eae aaa eae ee ton ee” | but Iittle labor is necessary, but It ts very essen | Hitherto the asses of the p operation it is to be a Government agent, |" de rebiasdbtes 2 tial that that little should be provided at the | favor of war, War lias been and will have no responsibility for daim- val host popular w from Mr. Smith for $4,000, receiving a bill of sale. | tion Was announced; but when the Oc ‘bed n Emperor of China, who was | tighttine, ‘The cultivation consists In opening | Struvute they have come t Stith exhibited a bil of male PUrpOFtIN 1 ae es een ae. ulty ad wh ages in case of blundering or failure on the \e : t ix dawning in. ps ne dy dawning In: | cay ke Ts pixcuased the yacht Kaiser Willian | {ijn of bir cireeley by the Democratic ¢ teh when cheering news of the nomined end himself? And would mischief done to prominent gentle- men of both parties, and especially of the Republican party, by such a defence be greater than any possible harm that might come to them from ignoring the whole sub- ject and letting Amus quietly remain in his place for the few mouths remaining to the present Congre This is probs the view they will of the ubject. To attempt to deal with Anes ‘ é trat'oa party hope began to die out, and wh atly married. has over one hundred ladies | the soll Uetwcen'the rows of trees, the appll- | name of war, but they have hated it po lon been signed by Mr. Beline of the Bayou litle remained part of its employces, putting it ou the | in his harem, who attend onthe Empress proper, | cation of fertilizers to the roots, and the careful | than wax needful for the grass to grow ayer the | Ciub. Degraw paid the money to Smith and | squetched by the same footing with the postal service, | The ladies are expected to make themselves | Temoval from every branch of the parasitic gray | Eraves of the slain, and then war has became | took the yacht, Last Wednes bt an were Just at this tne called into service, their passion a: b tempt was made to take the Kaiser Will! DEMORALIZATION AND DBAPALR, wherein if a citizen incurs loss by the | useful as well ae ornamental, and from each of | ™ sewhich In that climal ‘ edily covers the careleasiess or dishonesty of an official he | them is annually expected a certain amount of trees if they are neglected. The culture of the THE COMMON PEOPLE WILL. RESIST WAR, from her wioorings tn Jamaica Bay. A siall | Now there is a feeling of abandonment an t i lncartang: labareat The time 1s coming, suid the preacher, when | {tz carried a party of mente the mouth of the | despair prevailing theat | have seldom seen in tn fs : ” orange Is becoming an important interest in 5 has the American privilege of “whistling | P!in and embroidered work, The race of 5 np for it.” } “s } Chinese Emperors bas sadly degenerated. Like | Florida, and te steadity increasin common people wi » A stand hat | iiet, but could go no further tide being amu ES Yarolina it is evident ty — a those now who protest against the high crt the creek and cut the yacht loose from her | on among the white people is s@ A Credit Mobilier £ ere the successors of Clovis, the descendants of According to the Boston Transert but they are generally prophots without a fol- | Moorings, x vt being ncquuuintod with ea mplote, 80 utter, so crushing, that not ev A Credit Mobilier feature fs also attached | K qsq.ne and KIRN-LUNG may well be termed ceording to the Boston Transcript the | jowing.” Ordinarily they don't live to see any | Bel the yacht woe fun ashore ot & pal. | tite to the organization. The eapital stock is President has announced his intention of adopt- | fruits of thelr labors. ‘They are the John Bap- Francis, S om tae ones ¢ @ bay, 8 State was ‘effectuall ets of Gen, Grant whic! tt in’ restore it, Th ce of all its trous peace, Was he not prov lone would certainly result ir foindants. ‘Their brief lives—the last Em- | iw that. tt PP pan removed: and | clam tase Som tne prep as ye eg | ould certainly result in an ; ; rola fainéants. Their brief lives—the last Em- | 10 ine reformed « Ser eccteat Can Uste of the Christ that Is to be, ‘They are a | SW that the boat lad bee weds aud | vote. has been bad generaisiip, ‘The loaders of anes eettal te disturbance: and we cup, | BUt at $1,000,000, upon which ten per cent, | yeror died under thirty—are spent in childish | ng the reformed clvil service system far aa | tite OEving in the wilderness, * Prepare the | winking her adrift went to —the | rescue, | the Democracy in this State belong to the ef <t4 pose that Asm will, acourdlngiy; bel FP" | anmuntty is to be paid to meet the expenses | indotence, and not a remnant of ancestral en= | MANCUre (00 | abundant capactty for all the and found the men trying get it of the bar, H8 | sohool of halt s century aos the party la: nse that AMS will, necordingly, be left in ; zs } , | office abu acity for al! the oMiee ® soure oug! a intelligence bi ; 0 b 0 ie spark o| has gone to the w . of organizing the company, Besides this | ergy ia discernible, Still, the governing power | °™ Ie ap Wrfonast the siete ares Of though’ end Intellinence, Mr, p single spark of weailty, and fee gune Xo the wey 4 to be n pure stable Wilkinson and others, went to the bay. A | heat 1G; sre em} NOs 80 the soures OF fan employee was seut to the bout house, is all that Is needed, it won't be necessary t ‘and crushed out of existence by the fol amount the com: sy Is anthorized to issue | In China is so well distributed that but litle and blamele wer resides in the bea. ie of its own leaders. Everybody sees th everys patriot by the result of the Raa the tient, resides in the mas If th ts own leaders. rybody see very 4 nop) : Oe Th while the othors approached: by r route: | body know ’ (4 medle eausa? stock to an amount <uMicient to buy up the | Teebensibility rests on the Imperial feurehend n people are for war, war must come: | The German, thinking them. in Aicg | boas brows Ih, and yeu the ost fe Bok remediags aor ee present lines or constrtict new ouee, upon | Each prosince te virtually a separate sovereian- | The people of Calloway county, Mo., are | that war aaa Risbre, the aristocratas | upon then, several of the abot hitting the party; | Democracy from running an Independent Ueka y, and the Governor of a province exerct er nage i oh Is no ne nobles, the d ; ne men were found LURKi a y a i Wr iba weee th sitte Sufitage in England, Which ten per cent, will be pald by Gov. | % and the Governor of a province exerches | engarad ina bis undertaking, which is nothing | Whe nutes, 1 ‘es Hie ret Meee ithity Wate thal. Hanis as tease | Shrtaterecranicaisact coimite | Wom despotio authority. China may in le lent. ‘act be | less than an attempt to turn the course of the | MMs BEECHER ON COMMUNISTB AND INTERNA ] Mi if aeoe Henussceon. end Jong Ay Wile: | Party wrese eo edly ous ub with Tear have des fon of dexpotisms; and the | Missourl river, For some time the river has ORAS Tie conviction is daily becom tions that a vigorous campaign might have des g stronger called a conf Worth, Mr. Beline Was. also arrested, Justice | fy : ak eves arrive when the eloctoral franchise will be | B°*!0r utes Chinese Carer will drive the lazy Emperor from | lands contaluing some 5409 acres, and tt was | them?—as I do (very emphatically). Do you | Mr. Beline, of the Rayonae Yacht Club of | hee buried She party 99 deep thee erence |e to extended as to include the great mass of Wood Pavervent Rings. his throne and Infuse rew life into asluggish | feared thas it would eventually overfow the | suppose Lam an International because 1b aym- | rucilin, aud 9 renidedt of Nirgad, Bly isd | bayonets are, 9 rapleting ther work and tgricultural laborers, who in some couns |. to Phuledetphis an e@hit has heen muda ne whole area unless something should be done to | Bay 7e,"i'theit crocus neither wise norten: | it faulty. Smith wanted to buy it, Belin was piling the sari Ubon tae. eres pees ties fori a very large proportion of the | to get at the facts in relation to an alieged | Some of the business nen of Bridgeport, prevent it. ‘This tract consists of very rich land, | able. In fact, T see much therein that is atros | satisfied to take #40x), but Bmith, who profess Reuryam upon the slab that marks the restin settee tg, | cloud and detestable, But iny heart is stirred | to be the owner of 1 In order to | Wien Pare the mass of luboring men, the come | had not that amou noting which is | jon people, tznorant, blind, weak, and when | | Mr. Beline s mortway 1499 feot into the river. In the exe | hear the says "Can wa not by ‘combination | {he mortgage in Mee een ne aenel and averting | make our burden less? Can we not by combina- | Suith waa in pos nof tithing the channel and averting | ton teak the yoke which our oppressors have | hi valued at from $75 » an acre: protect It a stone dyke Is consti to bo exten peet Hace of the Demo With his defoat has th ~ —— - ‘The Grent Volcanic Eruption in the Sun-It is Seen by a Sun R population, In case Mr, Giapstose | attempt made by persons interested in | Conn., have hold a mocting to protest ax should introduce and carry through a | laying wooden pavements to bribe the | Be appointment of James f. DumiAa as Poste | veasure for the redistribution of seats in | Select Council in that city. Itis said that | Master and they call upon Senators Ruck ina- Parliament, it is conceded on all sides that | a fund of fifty thousand dollars had been | MAM and Fenuy and Gov. Jewéut. to provent th Carelli tte redivtouag mney, but’ offe aa), Mr. Helle t and ar acht. twenty-fours clapsed before Col r : the threatened inundation, Tho estimaced | p : eve rave | became the owner of It. Mr, Beline s sow \ . ii’ gomfeeasiony Th ett m4 put upon us? Are they to be cast out because | became the owner of it, Mr, Beline, Well, what's z on in the sun to-day ai eatonaion of Hue electoral franvhiw | yaised in orakt ta’ wet through the Couns | Cer nee cost of the worl is $29,000 Pat On Tow Haw todo Itbetter? dtow are | gave the mortgage into his lawyer's hands, and | inquired asvw reporter on Monday of the teles 1" muot follow a4 a matter of course cll a dive ncndias snousaua apiiae wood (noone Bridgeport. Didn't DUNHAM support WES they to learn’? "There areno common schools in | that gentleman soon ascertained that it was | to) ny alse hey vant " y h ed thousand dollar wood | Gynt when everybody supposed he was going | The Hon In the Mobile | EArope sich as we have here, where all may | Worthen ith was not the owner of a six. | § Broadway apd Park place, The telescope was yi i awe of Great tin relating to the | pavement job; andit issuspected that such | for Greenry? Aud what's he going to do, ‘ PAO BOE lessons of liberty, ‘Choy lave no op- | pence worth of real estate. Efforts wero made tly at the sun, which Was riding ip the southertt exercke of suf ‘ ‘ ; P apts N r # * | Reviater, receives with several grains of allow- M studying political economy. ‘They | to find Lim, but it was ascertained that he had | heavens, at an angle from the pont of obscryation af ry © awkward and | satisfactory arrangements had been made | pray, if he loses the Port Offive ¢ But what | H ) ht Me ei M GURRERiC aaa ani ay 4 n f ance the assnrances of anew departure on the centuries misled by their priests, | gone to Scotland. Mr. Beline, who is the owner | about nifty degrees. There was a crowd of seekert igland and Wales there | with members of the Council that the | Gov, Jzwettuot todo about It? Ts it a d shaadi waa THe eet ea icdoreaned by theit | Of the Meteor, last August discovered the Kalser | arcerinstraction standing erouud, sll appar fe ure four different kinds of franchise: The | scheme would have beon carried through | sure thing that he goes Into the Catinet? Dart Uf Hie Preaidems tn favor of Fes ation, pliagBd by thelr dynastios, and | William, and refused to acknowledge the salute " wren “ abi retina svongh While he doos not wish to be * crying wolf when (rae varkened by their spiritual | of the latter, under command of Capt. Cud. | erating between gratifylug their desires a weeupation frauchive for voters in bor- | but foran inopportune exposure made in 5 saree se there % teachers that worth, Mr, Beline says he acted under the advice | (ne of the ten cents which the (elercope tian dys ded pughs, the lodger franchise in 1 1 ig. I Welearn froma mining engines, who has | ReF it no fresh wolf visible,” he thinks he can oughs, the lodge anchive in boroughs, | re rf seo blieye tion to the bribery fund, The investi- the property franchise in counties, and | gation thus occasioned has amounted to the occupation franchise in counties, | very little, however, as no st Kade puch beets TRY WALL THROUGH LIFE DE coupsed, aud Will combest We Matter to the | <r iMe PAVE ay spent some time in explorations upon the north | U2 NO Kood, “can lead our people nv step | with the prospect of walling forever inthe world | bitter end. soe Licceremnierns ro | through the dark night of their sorrow toward | After death. {Sensat fiat th 4 rar shore of Lake Superior, that the gold discov. afterdeath. [Sensation] Shall these poor men | mye Election—Has it Decided in F anous efforts | salen on Lake Bhebandnwan, of whieh ao much | he dawn of a bruln-born polley of peace, by Ox~ | Ue Hell fo oo tec tecaiien: oe Pit enoo Or of A great volcanic eruption of WHeee § There are other laws applying to other | appear to have been made to elicit the | wan sald ayear since, turn out to be of ttle | nk thelr minds the idea that ts not to be.” FeOBINGPARL Ge Poet tteat in ives tant peer a ree Lamiace. MARE Oh ter parts of Great Britain, A citizen living in | truth; and two important witnesses who | practieal Importance, There is gold there in | THe “Hsht beyond,” from which the optinists | ments an inspiration, « dry.alunginganupholds | Of all the false and defamatory aconsa- | The telescope man, In auewer to tue reper STOUR ia aiay Gosire to vote tor'w | Were aap poacd to KAGw RA AUCLE tHe Rly | aches TOOK In welkdekewA veiw bun fy connan | cnpeet to mush: he shies may “proves jugr |\(DEGE NA AAd aman Wie ets lus cne itn: | One matt the honesty. of Prosident (rant, | tgn-nouted fhe la ahi metber of Parliament under the occupa. | thousand dollar fund, how 1t was raised, | be made to yield more than ¢40.0 ton, and this | SNe and fartoful as che gleasn Of the fouls fatus Je nitude -aue woah OF (Be etveme oF Rls, | [ete Ban None Lik Parencer et marainee atin | 9 ive, eelsenne inti, ea " tion franchise must have been the ocou- | and where it was deposited to awail the | not enough to pay the cost of getting tt out, | 1 The yroat opportunity of President Grant, | drawa my heart toward them (with emotion), | in relation to the proposed annexation of San | 204 (Br SYi unr nir de tuutuat t 7 i : In the Saskateh y ES the Regtat cgesta, fs now offered at Mont. | When Tsce these men carrying thelr vast load, | Domingo. nn B View Of the a f rae pant for tweive months as owner or tenant | time for distribution, failed to put inan | | ln the Saskatchewan country, however, it ap- rushing attr this theory and that in thelr awful | | ‘Phe rt of the commisioners, Wade. porter Non | agee DREN tigi su. Hh Of n divelitng house, and have paid all poor | appearance. ! 40 T pears that gold ts found in constderabte quanti. | Kmery, where anod from the President would | distress, my. soul te w Ttain would tell | Howe Witte eeoed ah chars’ changes | ariflus'wesrwaruiy over fie. Malu, uow 1 act rates becoming payable in respect to th I be sen the alluvial earth Droueht down frame the | DHhe order out of anarchy and settle the hash, | them thore tea toate for them, a Justice, wtove, | to be falsa and unfounded, but the Rey erate the volcatite cruptlou ing payad! resp ne tisto be regretted that the investiga- s Naps . sa 3 #o to speak, of Senator Spencer. a triumph, Ifaln would make « revelation to | lican press of the country, with very few ex- Why, dou't you gee th : mountains, On Peace river especially a co specks up there Io the right haud Ay premises; but no man can be registered as | tion has resulted so unsatisfactorily, as the | siderable number of dl ee ae a (hema thee would ony what haa not heen sald to | ceptions were 00 fear a Riie rifts through, the deuse puotosphere of a voter by reason OC bis belng a joint occu- | public would be highly interested in gains | §0to$Maday, |, See Bonwmam family is subsoribing five | ana feat ie WHE AAR || ARDS. GE GPOMo, caren AE TREO EDRR (ROMreILy? |, SAAT Me Mace CMD ALOR fs \ at of any dwelling, Cnder the borough | ing an insight into the interior workings — thousand dollars for the purpose of recovering BALLOT BOX BEMIND THE scHooL House. | LY Of his charges. Their report was allowed, u gazed Wo ‘ Jodger franchise a voter must have occu- | of the wood pavement Rings, whi It is pleasant to be arsured, now that the | Property to the amount of thirty, millions, situs @ chitd born into the worl Mr, | litice! situstion, to he pone’ asides ‘und unis ured the position pied as a lodger, as sole tenant, the same | not peculiar to Philadelphia, but exist ina | St ts over, that Paymaster Hovar, wirose | uted in England—she precise locality not stated, watt ta he stewed to with: | ner, Seuurz, ‘Frumbull and ‘ipton, with the ee Of aalronoIny lodgings for twely “4 rere q 1 @ | defaication amounted to a mere trite of €430,000, | The proverty was wilied to three American education. Every Government bi bound, not | New Fork friane and SCN, poured upon the Miuched ‘at a rignt nueie ts thy 4 months, and these | flourishing condition all over the country: ; to permit a child to bo ated, but to compel | Presid: : Pee, Seechee ee reer sual rot Jodgings must be of a clear yearly val aucloneray ney 4 + | is a gentleman of excellent moral character; | BURNHAMS in 1655, and now that the American | it to be, "1 would put the ballot-box behind the as one tale phials of defamation almost un- the reporter observed (hier Vodkings mut bw of @ clear yenrly value, | In Washington, under tho ausptces of | that he was led into speculations with Govern. | BUANWAME have waxed wealthy, Mr. CnAatts shook” Mr Heecher wild, “and compelevery | “Mine Cite for vindication haa now come, the | {herjaud Wileh Mereprerent sto be ff ward, Ti ied, of ten pounds or up- | Grant's corrupt and reckless Board of | ment funds hy some wicked New York brokers RoxsErt of Hoston expresses his willingness to | “Pid to go through the seh otto vote.’ Lt waa as | peop je havo spoken emphatically in favor of the | torpbere of tie aun, where the eruption wae rd, ‘To vote under the county prop. | Public Works, the wood pavement gentry | that he never made a dollar for himself In the | UNdertake the recovery of the English estates | anyother virtues peeducated astopractise | Knnexation of San Domingo,and no dine should | 8M eunon the reporter slipned hia cable a ny franchise a man must own real estate | have had glorious pickings; and the people | *Peculations; that he bas always Deon anxious for the small sum of Ave thousand dollars, A | ithe law of intelligence and skill should be | Br ioet tn bringing the matter before Consress. | away, . 9 the clear yearly value of not levs than | of this city are not without experience in | t® PFosecute the wicked brokers; that the | little acquaintance with English law would taught. 16 le Hanwenne for combinations to | ¢ pression tothe voice ofthe people. Se ne Gaming ti Causie Hye pounds over and above nll rents and | their peculiar methods of promoting public | Prokers cannot be prosecuted unless Ne te re, probably ease the minds of the American | beta Month: ie istebeliten sosiems Coke __ Fe ee eee iere are nome NATO payable in Tempect to the same, or | improvements. In some of the suburban | leeds that he hes behaved beautifully during | BCRNHAMS of a heavy load of anzloty. Mr. | Mal ate nitwe and e ywal in thie’ the thing right A Harn and Fifty Morves Burned. Washington about forty sof Congress, aad he must hold property of ¢ ’ P PUrbaN | his confiuement; and that his health ts fufl RUSSELL is reported to hi at the top should be right at the bottom Sr. 1 Nov. 28.—The b 1G nanagion Abeat foray maciier © Iie tenure per y of equal value ona | cities in this region the wood pavement : ealth 1s fufline, reported to have gaid that there is | thing should be no wroneer. at th .O018, Nov. 28.—The barn of Garrett Mil- | every arrival of railroad tralus increases Heir nuntere cnnve, oF for botto ungxpired tenure of | Rings bave foul extepsive felts of wane | Liver all those circumstances hie parton by | ! » need of haste inthe matter, Ho is right. Tt | itis at the top. , ne fouse off 2 Trsere’ Ff ae bee Jer, near Mattoon, IN,, with carriages, agricultural in: | [¢ 4s certain a quoruin wi! be presvat in cach House term orizinally crea the President is trul: if l would hardly be advisable for BORN HAMS who der i 7 wr} 5 plements, a considerabk: quantity of hy de ato Preis n vinally creates for ¢ period of | fulness : ruly gratifying, Lt wus the | MoWld bardly b no | amurder it is considered four time worse th train yo THABAT (of hay end core, and | Congress on Monday, when the President will © » aud have industriously improved } habit of the friends of Gen, Gmanr during the | or ln proftavie city if anoble did the same thing, ‘This ‘wrong: Soho? 'No anerance: ue Are wen the werk of au | Dicate hie message, twill be telegrapbed to tne Pree fy Men are all alike in point of justice; but iucendiary, aa hereiorure,