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The Garb of Infamy1 Gener -e give prominence to a philosophical Hi e. tvoIlbl logical ar limeot, taken G: s aent number of the Cincinnati fnrirera Much wisdom is crowved into Gem *irer. without the sacrifice of lucidity. Genera ce in question is specially appro- He wa pats at this juncture of affairs, pnd should tion, j olean d the attention and reflection of was fir every oscientious man. The Enquirer Bacha -sbe Northern Congress has constructed man al ,iteantiary uniform for the people of Legati ia te and the people of the South New ibUe D ,og the question whether or not notori he.ol put on the penitentiary uniform. for se< Ithlrue that iis i e garb of infamy. tunes It is that vorluntarily to put it on is to broke l iU y to an infamous offense. But comna' .do true that to entertain and discuss notori 'i o v he1the r or not to put it on is the hi Ase q sh ameful as it would be io get with I dtout discussion. preset i ...ittin that the state of things *momc the maitary governments is hard, it comm ,ondt dishonorable. A people may dis- struct onor themselves hy accepting an infamous as m tiis when it is offered to them ; but they Radii P"not be dishonored by the act of another to hi ic they only endure, not having the that mios to" resist. It is hot the woist recon i0aginable condition for a people to be in, Presi whe they have lost every thim except so. ioe l? It is worse when bouotis gone, gove hough many other things may have been Presl retsined. The distance betweent the two fore, extremes .--rising in arms to vindicate a dclfi eight, and after a defeat voluntarily -at- and I ,epting a wrong-is very wide indeed ; and ever; the moral condition of a people who show the themselves able to span this space will be resp, ikely to set the rest of mankind to think- part ing, and to excite considerable more sur- and eise than admiration. of tb 'It is true there is, by implication a stitt bibe offfered for compliance; but a bribe is mak not a thing calculated to add to the ospectability of the transaction into which gres it enters. In reality there is no promise nlac bh the parly in power that the representsa- n ves of the complyig States shall be poil admitted to seats in Congress on their coul npiiance. The man is politically, more diet than half an idiot who imagines that Con- con han confer upon the States of the con h a title to Federal representation of c , l'orethat which: they now posses,. nat , h who Infers that by the'aet of aim fslitnce the States will establish a claim act Sthe prty in power which will insure was .dmission of their representatives, will tie d in the result no reason to set himself Br up aS a miracle of sagacity. There iI the enoZ h in it to seduce those who want to dal besesced : but the Bouthern man 'who g M: before the people and asks them to Iha faith in a Northern promise, which to he North has neter made, and *which he an Sinfers from an act of Northern in wrev and injustice, should have a ace of ha tswarranted not to blush tunder any in eireuamstances. "There is also, by implication, an appeal A to the interests of the wealthy. It is true ci that Mr. Stevens does not say, reconstruct fri and 1 will not press my project of confisca- st tion; but there are, doubtless, many who be have so much, faith in Notthern honor aind a magnaninity, that they are ready almost, d ,tC swear that, if they only put on the h striped uniform of political I'lony with c sffcient readiness, and kiss the recon- a atruction rod with sufficient show of alacrity, C the cup of confiscation will he removed. t With such it is of little use to semonstrate. b 2 he notidti that there are human bodies in h the workl, is probably the most absurd b idea-the one most utterly at war 'ith h facts and phenomena-tha .was ever en- r I- _3 no r+_ "'~ejourntals and orators o .t~e party Si in power do not even pretend thata w compliance on the part of the Southern pi people with all that is reqtited, Will release tc them from further demands, impositions Ic and exactions. On the contrary, thi make nocrpathefact th8t the pa ty nind e I at Work,; dnstrioiuly `and vigorously, to contrive new btrdens 'd new forms of hamiliationie. Tlhe problem to. be solved is how to put down the 8oqtsi6 thatbIt it hall remain down, subservent and subodi- i nate, for all time to. cm. ,And if the alpost nioveral rle iso pera i e,.the more g the people of the' outh concede, the mnore St powewill denand; and havipg SI thi iret eoneessloi and iven away the p iucpal, there will beno uspeasion of he process until they are tiarpled' into th.b . , ... A goverfnment or nilltlry satratps, silly, opceitedi ignorant and domiseering, may -otin the abstract, be a pleasanttig to contemplate, and many have its practical, disadvsntaZes; but the party that is unable to resist, and simply endures, has this. o~re of consolation, that the wrong under hit suffers is the work of anotber,. not iRpn. Theinstilutions which a eole on , under restrai4rc`remnain b. 88 do i emrorials f the fg lominio0us8 ee - (f str ithe durance has bean rmoved. It it not the encroaching spiritan the one .~ iktconstitutes slavery.; itiht enthat qil eit ly a spitit of ctavbo shtbordi dntlo cio the other. i "It masy seem to many in the South a vj. e. w olotion of all dil iulties, to comwly with the terms proposed And put on the uniform ; but this seductive .appear a~u f d~tofort will pass~t4ua as soon as te bis fairly on and the decieion made 4týr tisble. Ten.e a Nscomfort will be perceptible, and the dishonor of all things most plain and palpable, He who spposes that in any repcct the new con diin will be prsatically better than the prat, will find himself rievously mista lIn. Political sorvitudds grow worse con tlually. Voluntarily accepting the fact of political slavery\ is to proclaim, its piciples. Once established and sanction .t.n.iuiple, the slave is in the hands of thi itr and it is not the abstract rights of he one, but the interests of the other, that constitltes law of the relation," iro A DAu9tm of Hox. AA1N V.5i' W.--A l Mo tere sting will case has Pth iast been decided in Nashville. Miss & (atth~i 8Saaders, the daughter of MIrs. A. oo . Brown, was married during the lo a Colonel Williams, a Federal ofi uwfluon her affections while affording Som l ictn to her family's property a ima .the war. He no sooner married t hl*eI.lc g to some of the witnesses, eQs ooie d her by his treatment into Wkb. ng miand wretched slave instead goredwife. In this condition he to his mother's home in Phllla re she pined away and died. tortured he is alleged to b.ihe i(ll'which leaves all the property to h , his heirs in peretu.ty, pro its benefits her fond mother mdling sister and brother. Before h sefit her mother a blasphemous informing her of the approaching lon of her daughter, his ,wife. Bri Brown hastened to Philadelphia, S she was subjected to the most cruel Ssuch as humbling herself on before he would permit her to S lji/~dauhbter. When sheiteached them hher daughter was' insensible. ~, ~ the close-of this ill-fated woman's a We knew her as a lovely yonung ool girl, the favorite of all who visited t family circle, and afterward as she .e into lovely womanhood, and ' heYiss with her relstlihdi tAhe mthiaery which her marriage entailed. Ma jry found against the will, Willi fl~t to the usual devices of a desp SS delsted litigant-the gross misco - o~9f jurymnm and that other howl, so hulDaii in these days of undc e outside -PI iJ9, because he is an ex-Federal .q,--t-Memphis Appeal. General Sickles Offers to Resign She' His Position as Commanding The coun General of the Seoond Satrapy. than enonu pudence. General Sickles is one of the political he was t m Generals who hate grown out of the war. ana and ' He was not bred .a soldier as his redigna- torney Get tion, just tendered, sufficiently, shows. He ion, that b was first brough into notice by President and unmai Buchanan, who, wheni he was Minister to Generals, England, appointed him-?then a young and ann man about New York-4liid ecretary of *ho*l Legation. He subseqgaftly represented o New York city in Congress, and became tion was notorious by shooting Phil. Barton Key, eomman for seducing his wife: $f#i poltieal for- dared to, tunes seemed on the wane when the war Congress broke out. He entered the army,. showed tie the ha courage ahd capacity, fad has since hlecome District C notorious again, if not fatuous. Such is It is thi the history of Dan. Sickles; but it is note has b t with his history that we care to deal at has tuff presetit; our purposd"beiiig to loot, for a buke t s momchnt, at the position occupied by the officer se It commanding Generals under the recon- question i- struction acts, and to see what their duty est ineor S as military men requires of them. The the Attor Y Radical papers which have taken exception because, 1 ,r to Mr. Stanbery's opinion, seem to assume seen prop e that the Generals are executors of the ions of a it reconstruction acts, indepetdent. of the nation. u, President. But this is not and cannot be It id r1 pt so. The military, under our system of letter to e, government, is an entirety, of which the insult to m President is the head. Every duty, there- indorse i fo fore, confided to the military, is necessarily Presiden a eidfided to it, under the supreme direction assumes c- and control of the President. In theory, duct unt id every act of every gabordinate is the act of man, aun iw the President himself, for which ,he is which ae be responsible, And every attempt on the f k- part of Coi ess to overthrofi tis theory the Prea 4r- and put a military officer beyond the control The le of the President, is subversive of the Cofl- the affai a stittition--for it is the Constitution which on hig h is makes the President the commander-in- refuses i he chief of the army. When, therefore, Con- strctioi ih gress. assed the reconstruction acts, and keeping ise laced the execution of these. acts In the tion to t ta- ands of Brigadier ,(enerals, to be ap- feelings be pointed by the President, it did not and new iAs eir could not exeihpt these ofilcerS front obe ore dience to the President's orefs, as theil i n on commander-in-chief. It wg his disty t o nion the construe the acts, and in case of difference old one ion, of opinion between hidiself and his stbordi- ity and es,8 nates, to set the-latter right, 'for the in She tof simplfe reason already stiited, that these powers aim acts were, of necessity, hi acts, aid he tion, at inre was responsible. for them .'lle reconstr ted in will tion acts did not, in toy wise, make the ieb of iself Brigadlers civil ofe spoke e o f bein t s them as offlers of the armý, and. all tte d He to dunaregqnied ofthem as n t be pe o mel men whO sducegl oeem Gener. General Sicklesit ,, "feetli to has failed to comprehend this. He seeme graded 1Sch to have fancied that the law put bit above them i 11 he and beyond the control of his commander- Orlean kern in-chief, and that an unwarratqable liberty and ii e of has been taken with him by Mr. Stanbery, like p( any in undertaking to construe the .law .for moos the guidance of that commanderlint. hif ;him ii peal A true military man, who was not a politi- sved true cian, looking to outside influences, woud, the ad tract from the beginning, have asked for n- curse isca- structions from headquarters, as to how red-ml who he should perform his duties. Discipline, ed b) r and as well as a proper respect for the Presi- of the most: dent, require this. General Sickles should open the have obeyed any order. received from his travel with commander-i-~rEhief on 'the sulbjet of his sabs i neon- etecution of the reconstruction acts, pre- o by Lrity, cisely as he would have obeyed n order as Owo woed. to the clothing, equipment or quartering of der h trate. his men. But instead qi this, he seems to unani es in have delled the authorities ditly set over Genes bsurd him, And now, in dungeon, and with the. foreh wIith hope of making capital out of it, with the seen ren-igning party o trhe country, he asks to be It W relieved. The explanation is, that Dan. efimi pay Sickles is the same old party back that e eorn atawas, when he ws dabbling in the Py ithern politics of New Y.. k Ci.y, and is not able lease to comprehend the iigpificance of the uni itions form he wears.--[Memphis Bulletin. ind I For the Girl~s-How to Get a fius rm s of abaPd i md f ts eteclleht ommiostlib u p·i bodi- lishedin the Columbus (Miss.) Index, oct i the June 8, we copy the following "expressly f. emore for the girles 'Col mora . Beia oldi and therefore allowed license eadt Iaovapg 1o' teugthg the kirls on imatrimonia' stb. oftl r IiiY jecte, Ieonsult them albdt their fbtnre oad s rtoPapets often and fnd that the opinion the obtains with them, that thO:yoatg o me w i were never so slow i propoipg as i6these th , slly, Sis; whi;h we maist admit, gives them th ig maya good, noat to sy aill-powerff l reason for wem atinot taklng a husbnd. Now, young ladies, Nor aticalthe whole secret with ninth-tenths of u, tati antbls of not'n galeto get off your pnow' ta u thishandst;siTpy this: yoi don't kdoiow app nder to work. Y: can't keep house. You Sta r,c not can't make a pair of breeches. You can't a tell,for the life of you, the difference be- for ithee brain shoy or which cow gives th the b rttermilk. oe~e gnerally we. """' cameout of Abewaf2*tbhe b their re hene teetmeh' with no fortune, I iigt ,bat bet nhattheir wadrobes of gra tl r nteenfi, thi and to marry with ethme now, 8surd, 801 relates more .to making a livi ~with tha ve otssihtaeisti~sc a tloing, indus4ious heip- to s, to imate, than P dInlghngm opera musid moon- oh md put shine anid poetry. po you know what i the say of one of your butterfly young ho s a whoi ,he as ld theml in the ? tarlor omfort things? Nineteen times outof twenty Sofall is thi-"Well, she is all right, for an an wo evenlng'a elterttainment , but she will not wi ew con- make a goodwife !" ha ban the There is no possible objection to theh Smista- accomplishtments of music, painting, and to ire on- the like, as such, but the idea is to be able w the fact set-these parlor amusements aside for si to the petlod When the stetn duties of married hn life call for: outr practical knowledge.f hands of Show the yo~ng men that yeod can do your t t it er double-bdsitness; thit jou cab cook ae s m oter, eal's victuals on a pinch; that yoi cani t "sweep up, aid diist, and dasth oldstokin~ t I . and save a penny toward an accumulate h a ae has pound; that you will not be a dtead expense te o hs to.him throgh life. Believe me, youngti -M friends, as many trite herolt, .womanly of Irs. hearts beat over household duties,as flutter ri ng the benesth the so light of a psrlor chandeier. l oi- Yoir kiss is just as sweet, yotr esmiles jast ring as bright, your heart as happy and teader, p perty after a day's eXtertiOn in a sphere ovbrth f t tes true womanhood, as in places ofdisspa- 1 itnestein tion, frif(pery and silly amassinent; fAYve ent int ean ambition to do your part in life; cul-t dinitia o tivate idtdstrial habits, and let thd parlor Sacconuliahmenuts go with the higher accom a pin- died shmenI have tblughly entime . It at died. astonishing how soon a domestic young o r lady Ie found out and appreciated. It is, Spropert because she is esuch a rare exception to the do, e general rule. r. Before Wn s BoO? IPI THE. PIWsWMiN isphem ous 'ihe Washin gton correspondent ofe th ew r e Judiciary nimittee rently sent iadelphia, down to Ndalville a conaf4entitl perstm ost rel to ascertain the relationa.that exi.t be. erself on tween J. Wilkes Bodtib d Prsi. ent t her to Johnson when both wdte in NlbVillei insenithl?. ii~ rotlugrmazuY jnfteitlnsuit inertor el woman ' prties, nothing further was discovered ly than that Bo~h pP4 tue ~ei Military asto a Governor of Tennesseeb had no connection ho as shewith each other whatever. Aprepos of [this, a' NashvOle paper sa trnuge to e relate, Gen. r, n oRi~ t kw ,- th 'lwas radi rebel, and bad te'nset take the limat,ogavii a psto go to New Nr e or oowl, o signinog the documeahl-e ' u Feederal i I" f y0tlt'iiritcat p ch e thin c- at J, -. Gibson'R · Sheridan and His Letter. Massacht The country has had enough, and more The pub] than enough, of Phillip Sheridan's impu. order of me pudence. * * * e has done noth- t'West P ing but make miachief antd'ouble lnce brains wed he was appointed to command in Louisi- hish andi ana and Texas. He. has assu d, as ,At- high torney General Stanbery said in his opin. bumanity' ion, that be *as the State.' and s tlade position in and unmade Governors, 1{pdges, Attorney have a repi Generals, Mayors, Levee Commissioners, did himsell and annulled statutes, at pleasure. * ' the State * * His last letter to.,General Grant whose rep should procure his dismissal in disgrace pointment from the army. A more im isednt concoc- But no P1 tion was never conceived by a military He does n commander, and Sheridan would not have dared to write it had ie not s, piosed th represent Congress would meet in a fe days and so tice gener tie the bhands of the President as to mdke the whole District Commanders independent of him. rascalities It is thia~ ea, and the incense with which Irish boy, he has been fed by the Radidal p~a , which by name, hab stuffed him with vanity and insolence. Dawes. i He imagines it to be his plovine to re good Radi buke the President, and, in writing to the tion of Re officer second in command in the nation, to nominatic question the motives of him Who is high- gift and est in command, and to berate and vilify the Attorney General of toa United States, worthle beeause, forsooth, that efuinent jurist has of the mil seen proper to declare Wvhit are the provis- cation of ions ofa law submitted to him for exami- promised nation. cal blockl It is charitable td sitprsee that Sheridan the "greal was drunk or crazy when he wrote this another letter to Geheral .Grant. It is in fact an wanted it insult to Grant. It assumes that he will or, lab indorse its insolence ind its censures of the poor laof V President and the Attorney General. It and to hi i assumes that Grant will appItoe of con- fd to hi r, duct unbecoming an officer and a gentle- gift It ,f man, and will sympathize with the feelings the det s which actuiated the writer. Sheridan has humanity e forgotten the rebuke which grant gave the Irish be Radicals in Cincinnati fordisrespect shown this mor j the President. and geol The letter intimates that the writer has ethics, ti the affairs not only of Louisiana and Texas tringent h on his hainds, but those of the nation. He n - refuses to comply with the President's in- goin - structions, because "he does not feel like gran id keeping up expensive Boards of Registra- statesme ie tion tosuit new issues." What have his a Pene feelings to do With the mattevr . What and pig id new issues were trised by the opinion of others o e- the Attorney General I Sheridan had his "God O* it orders. He refused to obey them, and as- moral id signed a lie as a reason for doing so. The headed opinion raised no new issue. It settled thor e od ones. It settled issues which the van= i- ity and malevolence and contempt of law 1emad he in Sheridan had raised. It defined his q se powers and those of Boards of Registra- and.bi$ he tion, and if the registry has been comple- minds. ted in Louisiana, it has been done in defi- out, an ance of law and thousands of voters have intolere been excluded from the lits e ho were en- Irish as titled to tote tittder the law w degeder He "does not feel like' affording tb white seems t 1il men .an opportunity' to vote, but he does west t 1 "feel. like' registering the ignorant and de ws graded negroes in Louisiana, and placing eve them in conttrl of the government of New leR- Orleans and of the States This crminal A Coi rty and infimois woik sttits hldn fIe feels ry, like performing it at the bidding of vene- on. r moun profligates, who play the tody to delphi f. him in his apostasy, and who, were he was we true to the political principles which he of that advocated before he became debauched by sion, d the :adtiancemerit be lias redelwed, woId Mobile in- curse him as a rebel, a drunkard and"a beside low red-mouthed Irishman." His head is turn- the Ne ine, ed by adulation. * * He prates victim esi- of the opinion of the Attorney General as just as id opening a road or perjur and fraud to reetin his travel on." The reistration which he his says is completed in tie State, was caried t on by these very agencies. It was carried memb ar as oa contrary to the. law which he had deado g of. sworn to support. It was carried on un- saider der his direction in all its stages, and the platfo unanswerable lura.ent of the Attorney of the over General writes perjred broadly across the Kellel ithe forehead of Philip Sheridan. We have severe the seen for what the perJury wascommitted. To thl a be It was to assist in the perpetration of a that' Dan. ctlim sti ediimons and revrolting that, in wouni ie comparison with it, deliberate perjury is a estlw trivial errer.-[Ohioago Times., o,, _ fwili ani.West Qoint ad Annapoli at ath The recent examinations at thete tit) fri ublic shobis, have iniad some curious hal evelpments. The Raidi cal greed fri° ionis ofaice is well known, but we had hardly that supposed that it had bee gratified bte imme practice of such shameful and bare-fa dit urads as have just come to light. The Kelle class of cadets which graduated at West crow< SPoint, the other day, 'was appointed in reach y 186 Itnder the lww of Cong.e, each repel Coigresional district is entitied to one Anl 001150 cadet, who is appointed on the nomination burr! sub, of the representative of the distri.t. Each leys ftztur et e rtauired ,to bea1,o3cu1a.. noa union the Stit , 'i d rsident oft the dlstii romlet t which he is appointed. The late examin- knou atese tion at West Point developed the faot Kell that about one half of the gradating c hou fowere from the Southern fte, and t itof Sfor almost without except]in, they were ( Northertl boys! There were no represen if g l, tatives in _ongress from the Southern ThE SStateb, in 1863, and, of course, no legal w appbialtmenlid could be made from these You State5Lbtt untider the "war liowet," that can't elastigwflOiple which has been vouched of t Se- for so mdV enormities, Massaechosette and of tl other New Bn~lal'A.boY5, the sons and b were sent to the Military Academy to rep- nq ,thir resent the seceded States. There used to hin Sbut b'ilittle.setional ;pride ponnected with Re rteeei, this school, but we warn the inseppting gre sured, Southern reader, when he runs tls eye os th the over:tbelist of grapnlua Beeut to give way hhelp to ally Omotion of satisfaction when he inoon- observes that the six boys who head the ea What list, and have carried off all the academie honors, hail from Southpxn States! It isa were folsted into the instituti0n in plain the Oefviolation of the law. The samie pr~tyiit- wrl w enty tie game was played at Annapolih We on1 for an are well aware of what a god-send thewar sat ill got wato nshnfatorin Npw Enland, ndl e banli' atid Bbhddite'New York, thi we to thes had no ideca until thes developmentse l e ig, and to light, that any Northeri nman who be ableI wanted a son educated at the publie eox aide for pense, wasalso direetl.iter.e athe re continuation of the .p It doubled his a married chance. We np~esko ne of the reaeons ans awledge.[ forraetlcing upon S ouhern-people, of do our th enormity of ollooting bask taxes from mi ot aathem z taee which b lit6d u8ae da ring pr og Ccai the w r, and which they had already paid a ings, to Confederate Government, as hey a m ulatedd hiad the right to pay theinm i, ,.idr thea eepnse of war, ir tohe assist i panBfon yo--ng ti'fl Of the srls bf our .p this.o ud oo-m°a brethrenWhO have lractiehd fnd is flutter upon their own ,overnment .iid upon ns.P. S These are the foell 0a ho tell s that the mdelier. " et f the 0i d 1-X-fh Miyd:tll nwy, #ho l ile s just went South to defend the1r hmeahn toe 1pder, sides when a choice between defending de brth of them aiddeolati n them bame inevita- I i~ s- blise; wir doeubhlyt t hoasO they d i; layvs were untrhe to those uW educated him; i i.c i- cl the fait always having, been that the g npneror Sbuthi at only edcatoed its owno boys a S om thd public sehOos, but t.r-otrthS oft he Stade Ith Nortt boyetobhoth:--[enmhaeilletin. e ic ynqg 'fo S'AEIOU nov Mumr'ro-Th.ildol- t d. It lowi ,t . lowld wl n o ttI b-rie llp g small[ dish, covet it ith Api@te. Mid ae t tytdish on aiflt nd 1 pe be- covr the top with another pillow earefulylii Psi en. • by this means etcludls the eWeitu air fromhil& .eat ar hr.oon- o r st.,,, served from melting. Dr. ,.chwrt s liesovered ta h pl o onnectioan ISgea efforts-stthe elder Dumas to ,re oos . of tn .. . Ittake the -~.r pePb tak*i~t4~ iffdetibDpte .atiOnarth the Meain eelebrity, seei udg ine granteda: isv ato orts .order ,is , fremg ' a _-ogrpiler. " " Massachusetts' :Brains Oozing Out, The Wi The publication we made recently of the .The 4 order of merit of the late giaduating class the Sunda `t'West Point showed that Massachusetts' the clAtiic brains we~e not aequate to achieviig a tified to 84 high standing in that class. The"God and on the da, humanity" State holds a mortifying low of them a] position in t~at institution. It did, indeed, has been - have a representative at West Point, who feit mobet did himself honor and refledted luetrie on spoken of the State of Massachusetta, through one of Anothel whose representatives he ed his apa liam E. C pointmentto that National Miitary School. the littd But no Puritan blood runs in his veins. Ward! u He does not belong to the Ifthilies which ot Wrmil represent "great moral ideas," aslid prac- tenedM, tice general prscription and tyranny, dnd to Geni the whole catalogue of individual and social er, this d rascalities and crime. He was a poor -wasorde Irish boy, from Cheshire, 'Tbomas Turtle fit of bai by name, attppoited by 1epresetitative wteko ab Dawes. It is stated that Mr. Dawes, a newrole good Radical, had yielded to the applies- Now is n tion of Radical fletids And made sdveial mented nominations to the cadetship within his the crose gift, and most of them, weak'brained and ctme out worthless, broke down inder titedlscipline an Conu s of the military edhool to the great morti- Cleave . cation of Mr: Dawes, who had in fact com- that he t promised himself by nominating such Radi- Here cal blockheads. He determined to pass by a the "great moral ideas" stock, and take aronn 8 another breed. He !band the boy he staring wanted in Thomas Turtle, the son of a C tt 1 poor, laboring Irishiban who had displayed neighbdi a love of books and fondness for study, Cooper and to him he offered the vacancy in hi his bloc ogift. It was acepted, and that which Suriatt the degenerate brains of the pure "Gdd Mud adssinati s humanity" stock could not achieve, the tS Jo1 Le Irish brain of Tom d1i He graduated sands of n this month, standing first in mineralogy not one and geology and second in engineering and bat. me i ethics, the highest branches and the most Who nee stringent tests of scholarship. With the until afi e oing out of Webster, Choate and that jaw bit class of patriotic, broad-midded the thee statesmen who glorfiled Massachusetts for are able ls a gennration, came in- the sefltimentalists as then st and pigmies, Snmer, Banks, Wilson and of others of like Radical order, whose cry is lt'd" is "God and a humanity," who boast of "great IN THE " moral ideas, who are impertinent, wrong- ed rer he headed intermeddlets With business not shion, i their own, and who persecute their op- don wh 1 ponits with the nalevolence of a Tor- thebes is quemada and with the petty resentments his fells r and. bigotry of very mareow and. weak He nmd e- minds. Massachusetts' brains hat~e ooezd troops ifi- out, and nothing remains but passionate must 1 ve intolerence and tyranny. An Inftsiont of there v en- Irish and German blood may restoid the certain degenerate race. At all events the Irish -for a it seems to have the needed brains to win the fti 'B West Point honors for Massachusetts." the duI de- (MMlsouri BeptibiCatn. tired fi on w t enal Congressmane in an Ugly" r'ir.L ne- lHon. Mr. Kelley on his returil to hila. thing.1 to delphia from his Southern stumping tour, heavy he was welcomed home by the Union League every he of that lace. In his speech on that coca- from I Ib sion, Mr. Kelley said, speaking of the heel a 1 Mobile riot, that "the man wholwas shot hold I beside the chair of the correspondent of " the New York Herald, who was the first watch tes victim on the platform, would have fallen w Sas just as certainly if be (Kelley) had been man, o reciting the Lord's Prayer, instead of ma t Sing speech." Colonel Mann, editor of Thel , the-obile Times, addressed a notb to the of con Tied members of the Coroner's jury over the tradd, had dead of that riot; asking "if there was any ing un- evidence of any peisdnbeing shdt upon the the platform, by the side of the orrespondent t of the New York Herald as charged by Mr. the Kelley, with an intimation that there were dents, save several victims of shots on the platform." The a ted. To that inquiry members of the jury repily of a that "no one was either killed, shot tr , n wounded on the, stand" ' The only. sig- hi*e. ea gestti that has bee4 made, to relieve the *hiie onugessman from the ugly flx he is in of wilf 'in! id; that he ras do badly scared at th6 tlttat ng with others anhd in erdeiplug under te table in the general tt frigt,'hdid really blive that several The rios had been shot on the platibkm. This opin i foi! ion is corroborated by another statement, Mo ardly Ithat prominent citizens of.Mobile went, Ani Sthe immediately after the breai g t of the Th ed disturbanc, to the platformto ,eAassur i The I of his safety; but, oni aootint of th n West crod, were delayd, and by the time they Th reali thd platfor,; Mr. Kelle hd the An each reporter for the New York Herald had left p a one Anxious to'aeolnplish their mieiion, th' ,. ation harried after, and were guided throngh a " ach leys and by-·eeets to the Batt~se Hou B senof a peenliar odor which the fugti~ a A lronleft along the route of their Wodo, min- know that that will help oog ai KfactKelley's case, but it is prope-' tliatho fl should have the besefit of wbaftevei Iin Jo it of amitigating ehciai. were N_________ thern he Influene of Senator Wilans is g southern Trip n "that . Mac,' tie Washington cornr;e ndeti Do ched ofthe Cincinnati Comnmercial,in h'is letter Q an of the4th inst, sas: ' - gs Senator Wilson's oauthern trip hasa tep anqueetion5sbl dohe him, and thronug sedto himn, as any induftedlal member of the c Iwitsh Reptibllcaen partl ill do the country, a bd eting great deal of good. It has not in any C i eye sitive sense made him odiqe~ttive, but C re wayt has Ovined him that thete is neither pa hen he oisddhl hor statesmanship in the extre-me sad mt eueutaues proposed by Stim~ er, Stevens te deipio 98 othersi nwho wl nothing of the C S South br thb Soauther people exCbet.f h Oft tpain the have learned from private letter, 4 Swritten by a set qfworthlies fellows, whose e onlhop for pkeferment and profit is in thewar such legslat~ion as will prevent retM4S I Idj and nien South g ldtteiptinS i Tl e politics for years to come. ts came Mr. Wilson omere Boo n tdvhi , a who so he tai mni4n 0to ersation, that ofil b inth cation Wolld be d ruinous polieytor 'beth sled his section of the pjt rma.,dthatth O.5bho tO reasons are preaching that dotitrcibto- , segmee peopleof the Sonth now sre doing miaylcale assrom misecief to the, country and to tSaU Re publican party. He says if the roesm of wa ant jand thb3 must work fr it; that it x as is easiner for a negro in. the "South, at te he preent time to earn five aseres of land, I tha n oor aijtitte mith ih Iassa$bideetts to in fraearn one; that land is cheap an. .w. ris neon plenty,o daIdama who,deu the dic- d at the stances, is not atle to esn a fa.in, id ltio fit to owd otlez He hilihseif, ilt the age of ! Lau fire- twentonen,. worked on a fsl'mh ftr Six 01 efending dollar diilbilthi, *heh sel dollas wbilld't 0 inevi- buy as much land in Mhossbbiniett as oie i they dollar will w bu~y in ttei South. He.be ted hin; leves the Southern people are di"jxsed le0 t the treat thienu Mt .el[Sa tii t etot e boys at themn, ahd ps thedl, and endble them to ihloeti. taketae aof themselves. This mtaclt, ein aing from a inan the has .done made -Th e Id- tol atany othra S L ut b (t-its as gico is -- shape the policy of the.Bepiibl cean pryi ~ iits 0gaiadtion, sad tq Ing pmal to Sumner' a polimtical iixetim n the '. ' peied oWesinadh Of its ucese, is qaite sii o See p muht Esand , + me en -says; i plasdM to rcSieflly, tsfnomeitm neti^ n "naoi rei r athal air homes. The lre piano the less *olf, SeI n less ditt 1hi 6betitstilsidid never be te s statee s ot e, tslioglm t Ilt ti i g riht that thll otids of bread should be tipqpi the the table in a comeld ;st fis lt It rshouldib eatean., Dumas to ...,,am I* ul mDA Rta.-The New Oi has 'tr "Boardrej ctsd apj licant be i ~, seen on the grond that an ailtlee g js-l.T is ,,,, oBer." Ga' Sh1ridl'ni +wiIh 3 ey S t~ extreaSe libseulitd oftovoroling thel ling of the Board. A ,dat u iad iiWW~ioti aeluded it i~Bth equalmmd clas. "God liberty!" The Witnesses Against Surratt. FE °The Washington correspondent of the Sunday, Merctry.calls attention. to the chtiia±tete Of the mell who arve teas tifled to seeing S'riatt in Washington EXTRA on the day-of the seassinastio, Some ofthem are hot at all reputable. bye has been arrested for passing counter feit mobey, and atsother of them is thus spok n of: Another delectable witness was Witl liam E. Cleaver, the man who outraged ANTI the little beggar girl of the Setenth Ward; until she died frofl his lust, and fut is nich he was eok ieted a1m sen- ONE PIt tenced, For some reason best known O0 to Geiebtal Carrington aind Judge Fish er, this damnable btite and murderer was ordered a flew taiAll, ant the bene .fit of bail extended to him about two w4ke ago, and now he appears in a new role-a witness against Surratt.- What Now is not this a picture to be com- rom patio mented upon by honest p ot~e Upon Pr: MP the crosesexamination of Cleaver, it e~me, out that both Impeacher Ashley blNo me and Conover had had a talk with him ill - Cleaver--Ond it was through them pill pcured that he as tmmoed as a witness. "hank Here is a man with the halter almost me. Senk Saround his neck, and with, the gallows house." staring him in the face, brought into IAfer Court to bear false. witnesa against hischolic, tw neighbor Who believes that D e,or have had Coopers or 1)ave Reed, the gambler, or "Our d his blood-hound, Cleaver, ever saw stipatioh, lb Surratt in town at the time of the ass: I was in Id assination No one in this commni-' cured me. Sty. Johnt $trratt waS known to thou- I had Id sands of people here, and yet there is me a heal not one of our populace who saw him, "Your ,d buat mere sojourners and strangers, "I seen st Who never heaud the name of Surratt in the he ue until after the murder, now state they "Dr. M at saW him muffled up .and disguised at ws absol a the theatO and in twd ye&se after they g i r are able tbwear to bilk id oped dtirt babe for its as the man. thing got •ld - --"My n is Riali EID BOOTS wrrIT WATCHES "Your st in THEM.-In the days when highheel- of noises g- ed French boots were the ptide of fa- behind.a lot shion, there was a shoemaker in Lon- "Send p- don who made a fortune by the sale of poor fam or the best Paris boots at apricewhich all "I ena its his fellow tradesmen declared ruinous, five cent ,ak He understood the trade, and obtained a dollat. d , troops of enstottles, "These boots "Secs ate must be stolen," said his rivals, but "Let I of there was no evidence that they were; sd Pill the certainly they were not smuggld boots ish -for any oils could satisfy himselfthat 'or a til the full duty was paid upson them at tiot oft the tustoinhouse, The shoemaker re- perfect i tired from business with a fortune. .Afterward his sete was. accidentally p jL discovered-although lie had paid for the bootsi he had not paid for every- r tilil- thigtiat *as in them. There was a ar, heavy `duty on foreign watches; and gee every boot that Was ecnsigited to him maggi , oca- from Paris had contained in its high the heel a cavity exactly large enough to ihot hold a watch. The great profit: ob SOf tained by the trade in s.muggling JA( o twatches made itpossibleforthistrades-A een man,when he had filled up trheir s, ares l m an. telltheirboots under prime cost.- re h of Th ' was worth *hile again. e baus, the of course, by the extension of his boot the trad*, he incorsethi poWer of opor he nmg Watches duty free. Ir. W' There have been seventeen Presi were dents, and thus far no 'impeachinents."-- Ag m." The subjected scrap-the Work of: some the en d~.knoýwn bard-wn inform .,y wo l o bo o silg- harv been Preidents, and thbe.rdc in York, ethe *iich thet bqttipieO the ehsiaf medici m iud hiu bentit* Adams next eame on. TWE oral JeffeibiVIikde thenumber ther* ve Then Madison the fourth was lhe, opin- of All nent, Monroe, the ' fit, to him suaeeids; ' addre ent, And sixth, the junior Adams leads. tre bhe Then seventh; Aiidrw Jackson euse:. Pa And eighth we count Van Baren's hame. I they Then Harrlsou made number nine- dthe And tenth, John Tyler flled the line. ee. le Polk wathe eleventh, as webkbw; y ah #'h*1t was Taylor in i6hr . yer fimore. the thirteentli, took hili~- mous Ado Piereo wasi fdarteenthin to t Oe. o hdinan ttlah il i treo Sthe he LineSin, M1Xteflteenth, ame ii: ie in Jonii6on, the seventeenth an last, still lives to close the mistriouso pas. Now let n stp until we as g()s Who Our aBit President will dent )ol-A Military Governor, uan&er the re letter conStabtion M s, au-- - Slss ~ b letitirer ... .. o ' , Be nieve Mayl r.of Cities, Governors of ~o T ateis, Boards of Commissioners, &o. f tCan,anxlude_ whitealdermen and Ippomint btr, a bi~ik in their pleses. Emi in y Can take possession of savings banks. De ye, but ·c1iu epact sta laV a.nd p1stpn the either t e stiatin o o hof . ev the sale of liquor.. . . Cvan rn dow bityi dtks And rditiite lettersvt i6sand ashbfo rab00 r Shose Can abol~t local taxa andregulate te h ttls he attl of *aga and hi the T a o~ y the 4deztandlinPltthe br 'bot tthe' eln't do, no onf has redtuard Te Yh t aOin. . .. 1886ktiS hMbnaa of ongreas is balled Ui the:Be-l., tjio President' estion tbellnmts., egoe s oheir autheity m . a rnil o -lin- o that it peahoI~edj; h e ay(Congreestod.of f land Is itnot mnadnets-AlAlb any Argue. • . dent: ml aere its ~od deJio oeeling d~i in (zn~io uret ~about M.si.an ai, of ibeni presented. More Oi r *build't end ot neikeeli. gSato,. rOadleraFih i b 4 .ib o L k to- moirro, Sant two or 0o he b three sembeIs of the loiae aiM rbeady- to ..s . t spea i too as the) csigetth bfloo i hem m to i " t " Y' , oi moe moMiLINERY AN. p S - .oites a . IONABLE STORE, 4 , ndFBdT STR T, ALUKAl MALA i on b l tid; .el .. . t aolf, ~t0rlh Oles Pr'ices V . - id1 nbee OhIe fi. '67-tf. / - m r withos the. onlly tem iv O Orbans panies them. Alif arrearito se will plican t be- pleaiSe efh'andi setln e upat , n hi v the r. In themeantimoZ ar jlthe;ding : ·:M1Ufnatialy 17,1867!-tf. lam. "God BIs liO-XL &Fl SENOII IFE NA PILL - X'-- O XJ! L I e 8.ta Court. vs EXTRAOtDILARY1 FFECTS I ier Hul BaoM -4 evident4 SOAGGIEL'1 hhanuetl l decreed, th ANTI-BILIOUS PI m feodt, with five h S , the rendith ONE PILL I' A DOSE, It is furthn ON*E PILL IN ADOSE, beya * S lE PILL IN A DOSE. hretofore trationnd ty and al entire eats What Oite hundred let~trs a day sy Dode .at from patients all dter the litablt e Globe: Sixth day ";ir: Magel, your pill has tid me of all Eight Han billiousness.' "No more noxious doses fel me in five or ten pills taken at a time. One of your Filed, * pills cured me." "Thanks, Doctor. My headache has left me. Send another box to keep in 5the house," the on ' i "After' suerin tort~ids toiit bilious th or cholic, two of your pills! cured me, old I Gvsi U have had no return of the mal'ad'y.' J'ai Al , Our doctors treated me for chronic ooh- W, stipatioh, as they called it, and, at last said July17-3t. SI was insurable. Your Maggiel's Pills - - caured me." ,J "I had no appetlt-MDeggiel's Pills gave ie *id is me a hearty one." -Co r "Your Pills are marvellous." C ", I send for another box) and keep them Lt in the house." ler 1 y "Dr. Magiel has cured y heado he that HEnRY L t was h.ronicf' . Y I _ave halr of one of y ut piltl to myrN It babe for cholera morbus. The dear little e thing got well in a day. ad "My nisseau of a mornifg isnowetured." the Defer 98 "Your box orMcggiel's SalvT ditfed me uhm ofEl - of noises in the head. I rubbed someealte Dollars; - behind. my ears and the noise left." per aunir U- "Send me two boxes; I want them for a ditto of of poor family." . h i 0 "I enclose a dollar; yoiar price Is tWenty- thauitO is. five cents, but the 'nedidine to me is rorth bh ed a dollar." hert•ofou te "~nd me five bofee of yotr pills." solved, tat "Let. me have three boxes of 1tvr Salve trational re; and Pills by return mail" that her its comuised iat 'or all diseases oftbe kidney, Reter., va'le p at tiotb of the Urine, &c., Maggiel's Pills are the st re- perfect cure. Ode dose will sdtidfy any one mo e llY 9g 'OR t DALLIBr ASýBlS rights ,i for ry- Nrvous Pirosttation, Weakness, General Sa Lassitude, Want of Appetite,- t'ledi ed in Magglel'a Pilla- ill be: fdnd an effectsal ih remedy. Dis.tth SAGIEL' ILL . a SALE l Scure caurbealmost always garanteed. Each Box contains twelve Pills. ort- ONE PLL tIN A DOBs . nesibpi real "- i NOTICE.- Ngege naiiq4 Wittioiol Y come- the engraved trade mark around ea'h pot j ; or box, signed by Dr. MAGGIEL, New in York, to counterfeit which is felon. s Sold by all resm tabld delers in medicine throughout the United States and Canada at ... . . . ,. "* . . . . All o er for the Ulnited States must be ad a tJ.Haydock, No. 11 $ine bet*i ie: Patients can write frely abput'tf town e tompaints, and reply willberetrnedb b w the following mail, 4:. Wuithfrt "ia 's eersataneuLof flis eae.". St6ah medl hdl ihsot l~:roitsd ain mo ft inlowrits, Wd I. Wi fotard, if tree stfeet,New Orleans, is theol Age seut i for th~V-tetS of oii . -. nie. Departmen*, ic udig , t the t t and t lCsr, au a t uid late b .bak earsn oae,hk'ow Arithmtku E;. id the Tuition, iakry a Surgeti bn's i h lo'ard and sernt'sttendaneC.. 100 Washing and Mending.......... , de Fiid a IAFu tm n t..;.d...,..:.. -; 00 a Tett Books and Stationery.... . 4 bi. Ue Useof Frnithe.r.s..... .w. 1,, 0 :0 d l t daecidental Fee. s.. . ....... .* 1I 00 Uiat for Pa sblO) 0in0vi.ne 'adnd the bal e a Ildts ance na two nal lnstallments of 1i000 d of lini* on the let d oy io anua 11 tiE1stdhy of April. Fo brefstagAs skil * spelba l shge, ill be umde. agIn cases of dismissal or rest otB, po- no part thU Taition, mibra1 and ou r lug the on, aiit r the ac dha to bo cadet w il 51 tbe it8d el w io y. o or mornt in .ditator will any Q.d. hee l Slowed to be in arrars to the Seminarf edtthe sI he thatt it W er t dano6 a F "t or aLdA.ei- n p.tio .. , n ijan SS,18-td. S T he Tim d lGazette will publish sill Bepte.be b take this metho d of liifbrming a persons se t seei rte t anl le.. a. . i at !O " ai renJ Gietige..i pte Perrya, . mee nelt 1l bithp om a tion V roae . mIa n' prepared to deliver'iufr I oHfob ly CLEM E WT B, EAGER. IB SN. pTR.8ALE.--FLOUR KEPT CON f. -. s tantly o0 hand, and for sale at lew Orleans Prices. R..UOEH. July17. 8I10 T8 & FRECH.i JUDGMENT, 2ke State of Louisiana, is.trc C ourt---TZ7t. o. fapide. S -nmNr BLU, July Term-A. D; Her Husband 1 1867-No.617. EDWARD LuvY.) Ti TIl UASE, b reason of the lsw and 1 evidence being n favor of the Plaintiff, 3hannet $1iam, it is ordered, adjdged and deoreed, that Pliniti recover ofthe De fendant, Edward Levy, her husband, the sum of Eighteen Hundred Dollas ($1800), with five per cent intatest thereon from the rendition ofthe lud u t; and her coast It is ftrtherorderid, adJudgd and decreed that the said Plaintiff be ebpa.4d in property and estate from her said bbmand, that the dommudity of aeaquet a.nd gs in heretofore existizg between them be ie solved, and that she zesme th6 aminl* trationtand control of her separate prope ty and all her rights be enfbred tothe entire satlsfaction nuder thisjtgment. Dodse and siged inr ope Court, on thi.s Sixth day of Jnly, A. D, One Thouano. I Eight Handred ad Sixty8 vOn. Judge of the 9th Distriot; rig J h. w ruijas , Clerk. CLER'S OPFICE, " B Drasior COVET, P~auiE 1 o61tA11 I cettrtie bove to be a true lopy of the original onlle in this ofMfe Given under .my hand and the edal of said Coart, t Alexandria, this 8th day of t- July, A. D.186'1. - - - . wJ , W. Wm rItaox, y lerk. July17-3t-.-Prlt-Fe $15 00+. i gTis CA , bi reason o f1 e l .thal Steinoe beng ln vorof the lainiff s 1i .ipOrlorkua 'nti' orderedo, te dsto azi ;dd4wed, ta the Pliaintif reed 4W -te the Defenda. tHin L. C. Sutton,th e se bum of Eleven thoftnand and 1Twotlt dit ae Dollar, (=1.4,) rith five per eentom Fr anmnum itu tthereon from the " i a trtion ato f i rs 04 It, that t adadnii heretofore a etin between he be di solved, and thahe rn-uo the bdte e tration andc( gioi of, ihoee t , thather tasitand legm , vconisedpdandaoe f tý Ihe 3, vable ropert : e. jaod, *lornt a thet day of . k'j, .i, aid..h 0 mor ecodeddy 'law bereogied ain a oed against his, r nda .it pendet, the 4EtifO ieat Wtio;' "f ! rightven nder thie Judgment. baid on " (B, , lEWI ,,r .o ,,9thi" p.trint, Fileda - July,1 . , -; , . W. W..... .t...... C, .rk I ýerti y' i tlba .th ah d * f ahaviveg e ad l nise tiawhL d V T biddera on BAlitBfhe8AA P"b $18 00; !etx 'o4 oE.a:-S. . .L one- -. . nIr i .of t -i l i i . ." O ,fist fn i Itt ~. t . hp oet more Vi`b . eromb'r I othe . ss de o. -or sle at 4has a s B.oo uRSE. l TShoe.a - i, " .S~0, ~· ~O:li:n~aomi. aai~~'~~k ______ B1T00r Tenmp h~ E4Jo for~ nb a a 11 o~.fcepBostu