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THK WATERING PLACKS. rUBATOOL BAtUTOOA ANii us Minn iiuN- ii i-.:ni, ?m: mi.li kaTtTJ? sppiNi; i'i;o.-ii( n oi nu si v l"i n0 BABATOQA, .lull r>. WI. Tatt auspicious (lavs ?n? BVBtOft |? _.m and end Milli the leu-ii of the DinrM.ii. Inn,, thia favored H)sit, itainaliiMi milli?mes, ktjimdiug f? vet-, and pet 1ilenc(VM. ?ne vvitlihihl. The town, all Winter. In? quiet and forgotton, bottling a little] mineral water, und amiisingjitsclf ?in a feeble wa.v.luit vv Inn the Notitii winda come " rtashlng wann." they m alt hither waulall the ?licencies of mild Mil I III, tlifl til the paiaphornulia of of hiillianl disphi.v. Hie hotels spread wide their door*, and all the dwell.ne* lu. min aassnrding or lodging houses. Tin?, ti.uns run at fraejageal intervals, and a nui? nt ?d travel sets throiur.li the place ami eddies hage, The isipiilatioii increases frnni B.OOU tu '.ii.imi. ?if m tv nits alone, .?.ma? enter the town. The path* to the sprinirs nie ? mwiled vv ith fan women. I'ni nages and bsronchet eland in pulihc place* lui hiie, ami the stieets morn? ing ?ml cvetuni? are full of guy equlpngea. Through flin wide doors and luo.ul pia/,a- oi the hotels pass siul repas,* rustlum ?uni svvav ing lulu n sol bright and \ imimI ciiius. Tin? ni'Wspup, i* commence dailj b> tues The ministers pupate themselves for un? wonted eloquence. Thi stone open with new stocks (?firmal*. The) polies grow vigilant. Lights sparkle .it night agninsl the Bonibei foliage <d the trees, and t hele ia a " vol ti pt non s swell" of music upon the soil mr. A* many ?us (lil,(ski people, Coming and going visit this place during the Summer; and the hooks ? ?I the 1 tuon Hotel alone show? da Mel of 12.500arri? vait during last year, Gr< enbai k- doal to Saratoga nisni the Summei breezes, as ?iiv Icayea are blown along country hillside.* by Autumn winds. Foi hi? nt.ince, th?> receipts of ;i men hotel, like Congress Hall, which wa* burned, for a season, are between fcanXBOO and 1*00,000 i rom two-thirds to three fourths of this ia profit. Not so in.iii.v people as ia popularly roppoted coom bore merri j tor display and dissipation. There are rit h families who have bean h? re ? very Summer foi DOorSOjresrs: then tre many aged und ill here: those evidently eome for comfort and health. The mineral waters are without donbl verj efficacious if preastriy uaed, except for diseases of the Inngs; the adsjSdfvandinvigurating and ia sweet with tin liresth of grass and Bowen; there are four rainy ?lays in New-Volk to one hen", theplsce i- einbow ? ted undei elms, map:? -, ?muI tall evergreens : many Innis mu?: in the liiaiulu.s ami robbwa hop about 11 lion tin sward: there is a hreeu In the wannest day and the nighta are alwaya cool ; and if one doea not mincie in the carnival ot luxury and fashion, it i* iileo-sant, as Ma. Wm. L. Stone's guide-book quotes " Through the loop-holes of retreat to peep ?>t such n wm id.* Then isa hop every night in the huge all room ot the Union, there is a ball ? v? ty wuk. the hand playa tv? rj afternoon in the LTnktn grands, occasional entertainment* <?i . ni ?it Lel.md's ( ?pi ia llnusc, there ia croquet on the lawn, and billiard t.ildes and bowling-alleys foi Uuliea and gentlemen m buildings for the purpose : th< re are rambles and sente in the park, and ?it the other side ot it. in t stately grove of talland straight white pines?whj< li though they Kiii ih?- (frass, cover the pound instead with <> matting ?>t then long ? i-n* of leaves ti per? fect asthouirh it were WOVen?-the Indiana have set n(i their Ix.anl shunt :??- called l?v < ?mt ti sy tents? ?nul sell tin u ingenious work in wood, ribbone, and besado The dusk) little Indian children tumble over each other in thru anxiety to gel the first shot with theil allow* ?it pciini? - sel np by vi-itoi*. and cahhle in that hideous tongue from whuh "Saratoga'' end m nanny other excellent nature tre taken. The *-?ma" ?u "aga"?which is an Indian arrant?means '? pl.ne ot, " oi " inhabit.?m* of," asm Ticonderoga, i ?Hondada. Sacandai?.i. <\c. :md the " Serat," or, ? .mu,mh." mean* "hillside,*1 "salt spring,*'or, n* baa been eettled almoal definitely, "herrings." Sara ISfBj then was named from it* lake, which was ;i famous fiahing-gronnd. and is literally " the place of hcinug*." It the visitor desires to ride, he generell} bom to Saratoga Lske, a distance of about lour miles flinn here. It is proposed 1 li?t a grand boulevard 10U feet w ide shall he 1..id nut to the Like. Arrived there, one ma. enjoj a sail, or catch trout m the pooh) st the Bake House fora consideration oi eat a ?janie dinner, with the dry, crisp,fned pota? toes, which arc Bsratof Itv. A stream. called l?v the frightful name of hsyaderoateras empt?M into the lase, and th( outh t ia through Pith Crook te the Hudson. Another drive is to W HiU, which is 9,000 feet above the level oftbeten, from whuh m.iv be seen all the villagi -, towns, lakes, nuil rivera in thevieiuity, including the Hudson ti oin it* confluence with th? i at Luzerne to where it disappears among the Catskills One may nlao visit Corinth Falls on the Hudson, where the i iver luurows to H feet, and bom down a precipice BO feet in bight, or the Sa ttle ground, the m cue ol the delea! ol Burgoyne. Une hundred yeal* ago this very Summer Sir Wil? liam .Johnson, wno had received the title of Baronet from the King oi England )<?: ? defence of lort William Hi nu , >. ited the High Kock Spring. ile had keen residing al Johnstou ti, on the Mohawk, ibont thirty nnlcs from here, and ?vas acting a Indian agent, when he !?? i -ly ill. The In? dian.* lowed him, and tbej offered to disclose to 1 hu the " Medicine Spring,' set up io the forest 1 (?teat spirit for the bealing of the people. They lime lum to flu* place on thi on a litter. 1 hey were ?ni oni;i.mied by ?i young Scotchman Iv named Michael M.ulJ.Ui.iM n ho. willi his family, had inn-need u M-ttlein- ut ?ni Hallston Lake, and at V whose house they had stopped ovel night. They brought Sir William t?. th? High 1 lock Sprii place never before visited bj a white man : and they built a hut and arrpplied bim with game, while he irank large potations ol ti Aftei remaining here a week be ? as so ni ni ly i? < overed that l." aide to walk (Mack on loot. Pot years thewnfter stories ol lhi ? res wrought by this water iriew ntort and more wonderful, until the fame of it extended our the whole country and arrosa the w i an. The vsUey in which most of the springs areaitu it .1 reaches from the to Empire Spring, a distance ol over half ?i mile. A brook runt tin win? h bas been con lined within tin- Inn,:-ol' a wide ditch. At the time when in.-t visited bj white men, the valley wm aivered w ith karg? trees id hemlock, elm, and maple ; dong the lull on the west s:?1?- thi thick growth of white pine, and on tin- cist was a thicket ?f yellow and pitch bin I th ??? trees had been left standing, it would mW greatlj to the besntyof raaratoga, The Flat 1?". k Spi ing, a hi? h bubbli ?1 ut> u vanou? pinces from aperture* in the rock, which had itsell been formed bj Ihe deposit ol the ???? w ?- a little dist.m,? i., ti; ? the High Kock. Hist spnng ha* now disappeared, ii ??topped run? ning tunos! entirely when the Pavillion was tulied, uni its site ka now ?.i upied by a tannery. The \limity abounded in game, and the iuoom and deer iiM'd to come to paitak.-ot the water, of which they aren s-nul to be verj fond, probablji on tceountol inline properties, and ti indians could approach very near thtin to shoot them. Bean and wolves aleo al?ouniled, and the stream wa? the abode of beaver, und of salmon front. '1 le High IO ck Btood close under the bill which rites 40 feet al the west. It .- ol conical sha) feet and 8 ancatna in circumference at the bate, and li fee! high, narrow ing rapidlv toward the top. In the renbar of the top u t < ylinurical opening metsur ing io inches aeroea, though growing wide] lower down. In tin* opening, as though ii were a vessel prepared a. tiheiauy, tin wat? nee irparkling, ( lear, andoooL It generallj carne to within two feet ol the top of the opening, at.?I it.* depth in the pit be? low wa* about eik'i.t lei t. I hu rock ka of that *pei ?es of litiiestone tel lind iah cn,us tula, and it was formed by the dsnetltt from the wat? roi lime, BMU> ii.'mh, and non. togethei w ith sand, ? lay, leaves, ami twig? which mint become unbedded m it. Its has?'was a few indus beneath tin snrfsMof the ground, anil the watti escaping ovel Ita sides cou atantly had added through nuinbcrlesa yean to the bight of ita walls until flntllj the column of watei in tim rock weighed m> heuvil) ?ia to lone it into another outlet. ( hancelhu Walwetth, who live* at this place and who is now about K)years old.Juit w/idl and ii? ?ut v. states that Lauran Taihel, a chief of the St Keifis tribe o? linn:.ns. fold him that the, Warfst once ran over the top hut that the great (Meat ?spirit h?tame angry because some of then women bathed in it when tiley should not have done BO. uinl stopped tbe flow. The wafer rises and falls ;i little with the state of the season; and it WM thought by the early visitors that it ebbed and flowed with tim tide, Last vesr the proprietors of the High Bock, desir? ing to bring the water within the reach of the pub? lic, reumr ed the nsk and tubed tlMspring. Under I be rink waa a nit filled with water, ten feet m 1 pth, with liaru liicruafed ?ides, in which wen tonuda uuiiilmr of tuinhhrs and cups, lett during tbe last century in dipping water, .hist beneath the rock there was the trunk of a tree, a foot and a half ni diameter, unbedded in the around, still linn simiigh to be sawed in nieces, and thus removed. Ii iad evidently fallen there before the formation of the rock b.ulcommenced, s? veral feet lurther down the trunk of au otk eight inches m diameter was dis? covered. At the depth of 17 feet tin hard pim w.i IMohfid through which tin- -.v.,ter flowed from an aperture in which the ann could be introduced, and the eldee of which were firmly incruated. Over thia w;ui plaeea a hopper six len t square at the best, cou traeting to 11 im he* square at the top. uni! holding I**' hogsheads, ii oin this a wooden tub; vas brought to the surface, as in the ?*fTi*-T apringa, and the rock wa* replaced in its old position at the tot?. As had lieeri anticipated, tt/e water. Und? ing no other outlet, again Unwed over the top oi the roon m m the daya before th' anK,.?. ol the Oreel spult TW rock, however, nhich weight loot or live tun?, rested so beuvily on the tul? that aft? i H-veial mont?t the hopper at ihe bottom wm pt? out ot |Hisition, and n becamenseetnarv tsain ??? n move the io. k. Xlie proprietoit concluded, for the purpu inng the v.,itet in us niosl perfect lion, to dig down to the solid rock upon which j fSaratOL'a n from which all the nnportunt ein u. lulu -. When they bud u-uclad the depth oi M feel the unutiai j stream wM found to take a latani mursc. though theVolul io.' lav | I. vi lett hi low The coinse of tin stream was exi ivatod lot som distance with cuit ililli, uli * A ntl nu engine woi kini: two rotary pumps was k, |,t Ml motion niitht ami day to hup down th, water, ami it wn aeoea sarj to keep a i-.nl of eiiarooa] COIlstaiitl.y ni hhi/e to ii move the i.iiiioiio ici?i gn rising from tbg spring, asad tobring beurrent o? pure air tute the egeavatuus. The pi u' i;oin nu ,,f the minera] sp: Inga is fatal to an? una! lite ii inhaled: and in ?HW a atroug man m Im ?ng to till a pitcher from the Pavilion fountain lost ! ultim.' his head into tin- till?'. Tin- ?li red ..ti ot tin stn nu I.m- isi oitann d. a shaft waa Mink is feel square, ?? fei I from tin m inna] location ?>t tin lo.k. At the depth of 31 feet the solid rock was na' heil ?uni tin- mineral stn am w ?is discovered flow mi; from a fissure in it. A firm and tight hoppi r holding five hogsheada w.t.s placed our tin- nasura and mu mundell by earth, a tube iu carried to the ? ?nut tin m? k pi used on cr it. 'I Ins wot h s m finished during the present week, and the wat? bow lions oki the nu k in a small imt continua] stream. Th? very handsome pavilion, whicb had been limit ?im i t l,e spring, wn also moved 95 feet, nn to com i tin rock. A fine building is erected at the aide, and tin work of bottling la now going on. i lo re i- evei \ prospo? t of a good nason this year. Then are more people here than at lass satin' tine last Hmnmei i ne grand wnkly halls will < ominen? a about tlie middle o? tins month. The men au not in iii till AllL'llst. BOSTON. Mi:, siwwi.s BALTTMORg M'Kiaii un HJNDAT t\\\s nu lil IsllDN ?li AMI IU Mi ?- l I <i ST. HlMo I I I 1 HAUY MVlll?.s i-i: I I Al I M I Og I \ I l\ A MW 11 K1: 1.1 I ' ' i Si.erml I ultoj-lDtnlruU 'ti.sroN, .Inly J. 1-.7. Mr. s?! h tue Sewaiii's speeebn an not nowa daj - reckoned to be of any gnat Importun?e, te any point ot \iew. Parodied by ?ewsssspereditonaiid . ?un m?ndente, the\ nrve to make the unskillful laueh. ami read soi>eil\. ii such ?i Using be possible, tli? > make thejudkfoos grieve. Tkej ?ne hut little ii any lutin than Ml. (Inn iii- i'lam da Train's t Botte, and have no1 tin- exoon which Um latin have, n youth and exoberann of spirits. His Baltimore Speei li ? ?illtililis lillie ?ihout lils \ isit to Illiston wini li ki worth noticing, li he meant to bo understood m sax lie; that the colored people ol' this region wen "glad to take Um hand and accept Um greetings of the l'ti -nient." lu- states what is ridiculously tint?n.. 'lin colored Masons tried to mt themnlvn recog? nised bj their white hrethrcn, hut not at all out ol respect for the Preaddenl or any of bia friends. It would he perhapo too much to ny that the blacka despise Presiden! Johnson more oordiallj than the whites, bul tliiie is no su lint, mt lal difference in tins respect between the two denn. It Mr. Seward tl'inl.- he and Ins superior arc fortunata in the fact wlin h he mentions that then naen who would not paj nepeet te them Wen '?tri natue birth," he is welcome t?> thal opinion. Dr. Allen ot Lowell has m.nie sonn- ingenious i elculations n la tlve to tin- deca? of Um native population ol this Mate ?mil tin- prospective linn.?si ami su? pl? mai vol what Mr. Hewara obIIs" the adopted ot naturalised element:" but Um ttetivn beni iwaj hen- yet, and an likely to do so a good ? bile lou 1 would not be understood to brag Much abool this clasaof om population: -onie of the ebie! dunkin who sin munde.! Johnson while here were bora In Ma-s.,, i nisi its. and even Randal] au ebbt fathei wn : i\. of \\ .mest it County?I forbear to name the respectai*]? town-luit it will boareompariaon with tin foreign element. The plain tiuth about the lu sid, nts reception ben ia, that it haa not made ?iie hui w hite nor black. If the House ot K'epre aeutat i vee should impeach the Presid? ni on Wednea ?lav. and the s, nat?- remove him mi Thunda] .aven lai gc majority ol the people would acquieace In their judgment, and even rejoice thal the i bil f obsta? le to [instruction end pene had been removed, [do no1 mean by this that they are urgen! In the matter. They can get along with Johnson ?u without lum. . regard him M B bad and dangerous man, bul tin \ know rery weUtliat the people of the country han ample power to control him, and ever) disposi? tion to do so. 1 heal ?I the I in pea. lu mil t qui sti.h - bated bj ? nnmbei of Members ol ? ongress, on Bat nula., the 33d, win!.- the Presidential cortege was approaching the Tremont tiouse, and three outol four of those w bo particip?t? ?I In the di i> itc wi i?- in ? ot tins ultimate remedy. And some ot then, I know, joined in doing honors, gn ater ?u Ins, to the distill umsind gnnts. Having slept, from ison to is?tJ, it ia too much to expect thal Mr. Sewardwill wake up noa : but is then no remedy tot this .son, hnlic babil oi Insy " I bad rethei be anj kind m a thing than a fool, and yet [would no1 be thee. iitnule ? thon ha.-t pared thy wit o' hoi li sid? s, and lett nothing in the middle." i lui Supreme Com t has been intei preting -onie of the Sunday la wa Like mans other States, I sup? pose, we have a statute which declares that"who . tiavels on the Lord'a .1tv, except from 111 resity harity, shall be punished by fine not exceeding $10 forevery such offense. " ' Al! sheriffs, id jurors, and eonsteblee shall inquire into ami mi of all offenses against ti'? preoodiug provis ions of this chapter, and cause the satin- to be car? ried into ?titi t." Vet not only don every man travel on Sunday a bo ha. ?ion to do bo, ant ind coiistaiihs inclusive,but railroad panics, st? am and hone, incorporated hy our laws, systematically carry paasengcra mi that day, i ami the Legislature -ti udilj givi s rill pi titioni re n bo ask that the Jan maj be enforced leave to with I draw." Occasionally, however, some poor felton - tupped up by a jinln inl d? i ?sion Foi instai *? ?imlay iu Uoceiulmr, 1866. Patrick Stanton weul from Boston to Charlestown in ? car of the Metro politan Railroad tocolloctadebt; afterward he went Boxbnry, and wn injured on the way. 'Un? it lound that be wn traveling in violation ? ?a. and be gol no danuuno from the Company. .Li 11 n - \. Hamilton, in ? sim .mains! the Citj oi Boa ton, was nrved better by the sann- Judge*. On ? Sunda} In the same month, being a little unwell, he waa persuaded to tak i i ill from llanovei t., ami reaching Brom?eld-st.. WM injured bj (ailinn into an excavation there. Th? < ity, bj ita solicitor, tried to persuade the ('nutt lii.il it was un nul.Mit on Hamilton to prove thal be was traveling from ni sityorforpniponeol charity. Bul the < ont nid that walking half emile in tbestr etsof Boston on Sunday evening, with no intention oi going tom stopping at am place bul the plaintiff's own houn, was no1 traveling, and thal th?- plnintifl was law? fully using the highway, aud therefore may ma m ia m h:s ai turn. As Mullion - elland, the collecting ol ? ti. bt?ordinarily a commendable oin wu completed befuruhe went on bin trip to Koxbnry, ii is haul i.> se?-how in- act ihtii ?.ii. nan,nil. tumi Hamilton's. Ami us I? tween tin Bailroadand tin City,sure]] the former wn entitled to more consideration than tile latter, for the City was no1 in violation ol the Sun? day law, while the Bailroad was. On the whole, ii will nuzzle Um beal of the law m is to point out how ?milln justice ban gained by them twodecisions. But et us be thankful for so much oi nun n is dob luiii'd ni the ruling in Hamilton's ? The questiou oi opuniug tia? publii library on Sun ?lay is pending again. The L?gislature, ?is I have ?. has le lu- (1 to pi oh ?h. I tin l.oi -e i .us li oin i a; rjhog the people of Boston into the suburb*, tin re te ramble over uti ? omis and Beide, to the ?voutempt of the ordinary religious exercises oi the day. it hi. aisii denied Um petition o? Um barbers, that theil shopsmaybe shutupon the Sabbath. Newspapers, called "Sunday," are printed here, and distributed oi .sold on Sunday morning, and thousands ol booka ?ne carried home (rota the Public Library, aud Loi tag's, and Burnbanks, on Saturday, to beguile the i< ii nun of the ?Sabbath. Vet certain persons fight as loiisly against opening the Public Llbrarj on Sunday a<- ii tins were tin- entering wedge, Instead ol a sit?ele and most iiiiimpoit.ini a? t in the long Une of innovation upon old usagi sand notions. I hi I ran II,,, v. hit h has imt the Re? . Mr. 1'iun haul bai k again Into its editorial i hair, is the h ?uhr in this stupid truaade :i?_',i in.st ( (million sins,-. '1 he temperan? e cause, w bil h here, m everywhere else, enlists Um aympathim aud act iv? efforts ol the gnat man of moral and religious Bennie, i? sin? to he Injun d and pe? nanea! ly retard? ed bl the attempt oil the putt ol the c\ aliui In al j chun Ins ami organs to proscribe Innocent amnse ] mellis. I notice tliat oneof theTeinplai orgauitttiona the other day ?le? land Sgsinsl ?lain nu.', ?uni the action of tim- < ?Id M? n's( In ist mu Convention at Mon? treal, n denouncing amunmente, the other day, has; been widely noticed bj Hu puss. It is pretty Rafe to say that if the grog-shop u to be supplanted hythe Sunday -School and the prayei Uiect?lg, it muht at hast be by easy ategn : in other nords, any reformer Hith hall un eye cm see that tin-way ti? invent Unpeople from resorting to criminal ami daiigi'MiiiH aiiiusciiiiiits is to provide them with In* nocciit and sale one*. Evan M tlu-v ale onlv ? oin paratively innocent ami safe, something is gained. The papen say that Gen. Banker hienda are abun? dantly satisiied with t?e resnll <>l an Investigation which hn been held Into the Portiand affakoflast year. I mnnoaed that that thing had blown over. I I? ?un, however, that a committee consisting of Mesan. Blanchard of Walden, Conn of Woburn, 1-iske of Waltham, ami others, was appointed by the oliic? i- if the district convention which nominated Gen. Bunks last Fall, to visit Portland ami obtain facts then and elnwbere, on the subject of the al ? I mi-? ojnjuot of (he General. '1 In ir report, ?"?:-,, aneratibghim,rwaT prepared foT publication a mouth n two ago, but has no1 \?d reen the light Accom iianTUiL' it is a lmuss of ?loeunntitai v evid? m ?? iron proliiitiont public men of Portland and other plane, lll'itliliiig SeliaUil ressenden, Keprcsiillative l.vncli, and ltoin phyaiciana, and watten at Um boteis, snore or less positive m its character, which is put into the a? part of the evidence which has led the oonuuittoe to make up theil rerdict. 1 ?lout know why then papen have not baan printed according to tin- ?upposed intention of those who procured th? in. unless tlieie was au injunction of teeney on the part ni some ot tin- bj liters, or uni? ss it w a.s feared that an avalanche of counter statements would appeal from ton. Banks's acctwer, and so themattoi be left un? settled aftei all. At nies? iit the can may 1>< summed up in the style of i charge to the Jury If you belli ve Jones, mu? must disbelieve Smith: if on the other LauUiviu utlic\ u bina tit you must di.dnlicxc Junes.. ? If Mill believe .Tones ntid dl-be!leVe Smith von VV! i,ml the defendant guilty: it on ti.tim hand v.,u believe smith and dislx Iii vc Joui ?. you will the defendant no1 emin I suspect tinte is n probability of an agreemenl of the jury, no matt? how tu ni) i? poiis ami uiii'lav ita aie prepared. I lu ibbai i- to the ntility of classical studies i carried on with great tint? bj Dr. Bigelow in h ?? Mmi. ni liii.iuncs." Wehada8.1 deal of hat in tin Mason u procession the min i dei , m"l kn add! lion lo the old standard mottoes I nota ed ? new roc horne by the Mount Vernon Lodge, ??verth. Ha -unie si,nare wen- the WOHU ' BWpM ipiadl at ill :i. which. I take it, is the atitilarian waj ??t putting into (lead latin the Lim.?five PXpfettlOO, ** Oil til? bquan . I Ins i- aluiusl a- good as ?? Mu i ai m.- i pli nuiit ? ni magniin ;"i that is to Mj. m piala English, " ile tuon*? ran full butt against m v gn t to Tin rVerfi rttrrwani Btrinr, whuh will appeal next week, ha- an amur, molls ultu li mi the .ludici Mj ot Men VorV ( ity. hot H'hitnej ol Vale ha an aitii le ' on the U stimony ol lengosce respectin the unity oi the human race." and Prof. "Lowell one on ?'K'niis-seau and tie Siiiliui'iit.ilisfs." May it ht a- good as In- account oi Leasing. Mr. Henry James discourses ol Swedenborg's Ontologj : Mr. E. L. (Jod kin.of the I.a I.?.. Crisis; Mr. W.C. Gannett, of Serf (lum and tin Emancipationlawaol Russia, and Mr. Norton ol Longfellow1*" Dante, whuh is about a.* good M to have Mr I,on el? ?low u v u w In* own work. After the critical notices oonuta n lette! from Mi. (.. W. Greene, the subjeel oi whuh Mr. l'annott will have no ilitlu uliv in Buessing. Mis* huey Lareoni will, bj end-by, publish a rol? ?me of poema, A- it it no1 nncommou for the Dews p.ipeis to speak of this hull's naine M B " nulli de plume," 1 feel justified m saj ing thai she isa Beverlj cul, who writes iimh i lui own propel signature. ?? Hannah Binding Shrs -.'' " Skippi r I'., n." and other id bei poema are folk songs, which will laet M looa as the Song ol the shut. A gentleman once compli? mented Mr. Whittier on his admirable p<>' m o1 Han? nah Binding Shoes, nndwM much startled l>> the ? m dial manner in whuh tin- poet, whom In- had be? fore supposed a moil' st niau.declared thal b< agreed with his vi-itoi. and thought the poem one id the lust ever written bj an American. (>t rouite,Mr. \\ hit i iii undeceived his friend m to the authorahip b, fun be li ft him. Olivi i < ipiu- hi gina bia thonmnd and lii-t storj in his magazine, dow enlarged andcheapened, and pub lished bj Lee cV Shepard, li in impossible to deny ihut Mr. Adams makes ? populai panel fot the boys and girls. I'crhaps thesi \ o iii ? r opie maj '? ?ntei estedto know that "Willy Wisp," tin greal rebus maker foi " Bovs and Oins," *' Young Folks," cVc.. is Mt. i' li. Joatelj ii of Malden,formerly t Unitarian i lergj man. [bearthat the LTiiversalists have gol bold of a nal heretic at Jas! and are makin?: treal pi? ima tu m s for lau niiur lum. The victim is the Kev. Kow? land (-onuor. colleague of the Rev. Ih M. o? the School-sl Societj*. ITie proprietors of th< pews hy a large majority, have invited him to resign, but it is said thal the congregation, ti"- pewless roi t inn. are disposed to sustain bim. Mr. Connor's ol fe use is aft? milln: the in.-nt In? religious ron iel ence, where bi wm caught is Ha?ranU oVficfa with such eiilprits as 0. B rrotliingnain, E. i Towue, Sand Johnson, li W. Emerson, and others aoiiu ol v\ horn ?in- -till st\ I? ?I " l.'.'V ? t? ml." I hem that M i. l'on uni is vin populai with In- people. The pews however, constituting the wooden part ol the msti tullun in s? hool-t.. mean to get rio oi him. 1 dont know vv hat In- v. ill du, mili ? in- tolluw - tin example i I S I'. 1,'iu. els. vv lu ti c\i oiiiinunicat? (I bj the i'l\ t m m I li N. II. ( linn h. VIS. lui ii about ami cm oin nu: nie.it? the i him li. I MUl-l MH M I /'li I /? tOB / ' / I ..u (hit >, ? i I...W in. Mats . .T111 v ' The paga] eelebt Btton m Ni w England oi thai N;in In Ih Aiimvi t.-ai.v of our Saturnal lill Uni.iv II lill I itV of I...VM-1I. III. I.i.-toll .llltlll.lltl. .- .lilli |H-o| 1. i ibeueted Um Ban iv? - la ih?- reeeal Masonk ? eh ami iioiii?' ttwa bj the addiu. i,ai weight of Um Presl dent's mmi. thara waa m heart to re?nter eo soon upon I ! festlMlV. The I itj Of Lowell, wolld Iclinwiinl tut it- iiianui.il tun -. .uni having ia i onie rich HE the ? '?> velojuni nt ol Ita resources, honorable by deeds of ] linn during the war, and celebrated for the spirit ol lu mi iltlu citizens i-mi Itaell oui for (treatthluga In the um of? I oin I li of Jill] '? . io.it,on thal sl.oi, 1111 )'? 11 > V I milli on ti I? ? lill.H 11:1 I est to the occasion, and whleh Indi ? ?I ? ??- the great fca i me of th.n ali , is thi di di? ition ? \ I, lol I . |,|, -, lit. .1 to III? I ItV I.V I?' .1 ill:' ? I known by lila medicine? n i lionel even tmertcan housi hold, hi the ? ?ni? i of the city, on alcrrimack -i , there is a small puhli? square therein stands a ta i laing fi oin a in.i- Ive has? of I lind in,id ii.ii. I li mollumi nt i- sut' m. nu d bj tin- alniph lu* i ptlona on II letters of solid gran ti itanding out Un -ii.tit. u. .ni to Iii li .- un mon tin Republic, and ?> in ndi ui ol tin ni ni i.'tli of April, i ? i i !?? i 'i- ol tu? H du by traitor bauds. Hi hen lu sacred keeping, by tin u native . it \ . ? i nnuoieot. Looking out upon tie i . ni golden letters Ihe t ,niu B i- Baili i. ? I. iini.il tin ntl ? mil, li .i- i Un.-?inn 11 uv in ti,, uiurdi i ??? ? i si. ti..:, I. . ii. . , -m.;, ti. ?sou ? t in- ' in.it? bli 1 In- u,.,:iun., nt ov11 ii,, i . .nu Whitney. ? ?li of tin opt tin t? rribli ?trtiffgli foi ual uual .nun <l I u ^yer conceived t be i?l? a of ? n ? t i i llililllll lilli llil.'llt a ; I nu inc a toa; of eight in? i Hi- in I .pi .lllllll? li III.lill I I li? tio iiio-t celeb Is ia the t ii ; ? ? , r I ? This design was i.nten t<> Ibm ? .' > ibout sit montea iii'o in- Dr. Ayer, and ly ace? j-', d nuthoritli - The order lor ti,. iintiieii mitti d to Mi,im h. and al ??I I.i-f IlionIh tlo I lahls and a;, vi,. J ?i? t? d paekagi arrived In America, and vas aaaal t.. ...wi ?I Ml ..iiv, hill I? d? -tal ol ected at an appropriate dlataiici In front of the I..old .uni Vt hit III ) ino: ino? nt. and .is -..on . ? . I ?ioHim ita - In aid of thi arrival of the in ti i mined lo i ? lebi .t?- the uni alliua of ile I ith of .lui) ..u.d um- ?l? da it.t appropriate)! on tie d.i> of tin nation a hirth the atatui ? i? ? ted lu bom t "f tin 11 linn).li.mt v ludli al.on of tin nation s life. 'I he ?l.tv oj.i in d r ,-? nils.I.t. cv i iv v, li. ii li.-.- .mil ?, I opon.DJ .-iii .ni;, mid daj 'mi -un -i 11 rough! mon t hUgiOR li, tin'iiioi nun. . ' li.ipai.lt- of the < I-. I .u ina nt. and the children of Hu- (i ram mai s I.la I .??ii \n ipen air concert was given on thi Common i>\ omi j.um i i dren vt ii o'clock began tu? on the kfcrrimnck. The programme anaoum rai I -, tin In ? t In i,-., ? - nil \ I., I in - ii -;.,'. . ! i miles, for a prize of 133 The i.id, .i race between lance three miles, foi a prize of Ho. Ila I ai is I am,- ot) v. lill iii .it sp; I It alni to I lie di thi spectators, r'lve compaulra ui tin Mlxth lb .oi-? tt- Volu at . o i lo, ii |,,r a In ti dull, a prize of S I" ant if ni -ill. Bag, ? 1.11 mi .iii li oi ii., nu ni. 11, lia. i nt: i"i a offered bj t li? cltj a - a prize io o? awarded bj ? o m p. teni lud gea tu the i? st . umpanj of tin r< irluu nt, ? ?? - - v t?. I ndei wood, w m i '? H i " k were appoint* ?I to award thi prize Hie ezerelac lu the aaaanal of araai i well executed that th.imittee could not maha the awarda: eompaitea ( and M wem therfore recalled ami directed t<? u ii?*at and extend tin. drill until u.m mittet could <i< i nie ?m tin u i, la ti ve profli I? m v I ? 11 tai trial, II waa adjudged that Company II ex ((?lied, and was th? i? Ion entitled to thi banner, i Min tua nu: si ii i i The hour I, IVlnS ..i i i vi d loi the mr, .id; mr of the ' ii'ir ?u \ u toiy. tin- iiiiii u v in m h? d In p ip Merri I io Monument square, hut long before the otu? i .ii ? reached the pi u ?. lui whole ground wa. <|, neely packed willi |>eople, while doors window a, balci horns tops bloomed with fair fines m nltb ap eyes, all esger to catch the iii-t new of tin al at m a in mt io in um omi i d | ni ill). tin ii -i i vi ?I seats on a b m pot arystag? wen occupb-tf, tin band ceaeed Ita playing, the ? uahrvudinsj i suva* n? sud fell, and the si * 111 oi vu tom stood face to face with the people, who real tin i h? ? is ?mil about* that utterly drowned thi renewed ef. toils or tin- tiiio.it- m i,i i - -m,, i. In bronze,ou ? i p?-ii? st.ii of ei.ilute standing it n it bl -ii li la a i? male - nu draped, of i olo ind with extend? d and up lifted wini/-, lin design Is tin result of tin best efforts ol the i i li lilnt? d (.el in. i li al fist ?la ia ti. It baa Hi' >.'!.I. ?, lightness, and ?ase in i ni!.u to flu-wmks of tins great m.i. ii i, and i- in imid qui at ion one of the finest | statuary In broute In Ihe tinted st,!.- The Bgure lean* forward, raised on tip-toe hy the act lou of her wmgBi i-, vi ? cdlngly ?iiiiin.it. ii m app. ?ii.iin ??.,- it iiiakiiu.- baste io proclaim, ?*I am the meaaedger of peace, established iii m mi), iiiiiir,uiK honora and arreetha of laurel thal fade not. tor the patt mt? wins?' Um aft, or w boas blood, wounds, tot!*, and sacrifices mahMalaed the prin? ciples offne novel nun lit BmOOg lill li. also |ic.ne, vi lill it- divine fruils for a generous people who sent forth, sud followed with earnest support the Army of the Republic." in un left arm, folded against her breast, ihe pn sheatk of peace, while m lui right band, extended und elevated, is a wreath of victory, is II to remind us that a people who could mini li.c Ili.-t iniirt win the lest When the tumultuous ebeeritg had can!, f|,e If,m George E. Richardson, Mayor of the City, came : on flic platform, and saul: l-l I low ( lll/l \s. I.\|,|| s, \si, m Ml I Ml s (in this memorable anniversary ol the Hatioa'a btrth,we have i?-'iiiMid io di du ate witii becoming ceremony tins statue of v li tory, present? d to the ( Ity of howell By our publie spirited fellow-cltlzen, Dr. .launs c Ay? a statue wini h Impressively reminds us of the trlumnhant issue of our gtgantat Mruggh) for the preservation of the nation's life. The day hi auspicious ?or the recollection of the i -vi nt wiin ti it commemorate* tills our hearts with patriotic emotions The place is appropriate. foi within tins hallowed around reit ali that is mortal ? ?f thoa* martyred heroes a boee glorious di sth i oafei red i ininot tai reimvi u u poii initi Ity The aaaemhlj la worthy of the m ca-ioii. Brave men, who fought the good tight, ami on w Maa brews v Ictory placea her lunn l w reatb, are here. The noble regiment, which when duty called, em vi ' li.id awakened lo a coli-eioii-iii ?- of danger, went marching te the meale ol nattoual anthetna for the de ii ii.-i ol ii?- capital, la here Here, tot. are the reprej Midatlves of the pcopli and the people th? ne? |\ i s wno. when the Kloomj cloud- o'( rshadowed as, never hesitated initi loaf heart, bal re* ponded with alacrity to the re? i., ?ni ?I di meada made apon them bj ?mr ni? ? dina coun? try, I .m ladara bava honored us with theil presence. and their ?nub-- today eucouragi naas theil words tad pi.iver- sye, aad deeds, too?euatalned na lathe ?nut contest I lud von all ni lia. ?uni mi lour Inlialf, an well m on bebau of the municipality walch 1 have tim honor to repu -eut, thank the gentleman foi tins unit,iii cent gift which, whin u adorns our city, will, though by In- di sire it is tuuii??? iilieil. stand as a nioniiiii? tit of Inn i iiitii .ui d taste and leneroaltj 'I in Mayor then lutrodui ed aucrsaslvelv .Indue Ruase). ('(illei tot of the Port at Reston, (on. I'lidci ivooil. unit ion Cogawell, who delivered appropri?t! addresses. Following these, a call was made for in Ayer, through vv hose In u li i Iii i nt lu m l.i, I ion til? < ii v vi .is tn.nl?- tim pos bc-4>avr of thia biuulUiU uuO.Uu1Ui4i.UVc wvuuuiuit. lim I>oet??r came forward amul BBS wildcat BSSSBBUn from the p?'ople, ami a- -non ne iptiet tu i ? .iim? 1, addressed incm auto!, Al>l>lt?n OV lill AT Kit. M? Minni AKl? 1 ti.l.mi -< ii i/i ss. In c in-iileratmii of mi t in ?tittil, -mil modesty, von, Air, uni tie i? i lixjuent STiitlemen, agreed to withhold your compliment?, nr ut least to pile tin in ujioii im no tim ker than I tan I? a: loi then ami ) oar huidnos* of heart hu? N-mpteil j nu all to Lu al. the i omi.oi , ami if theil Mere any bitum?e in in., nu t.ii ?? \> i nil in i irisasse non i ecknowledge the satisfaction yon nffnrd nie hy your approbation of the snpropriateacn of this image for ti,,. 'i ;m ie 11\ tea i im f iiiiin ulty m Uns undertaking. Tin- continent of Europe la in habited byauoklri noopto tosa we. Bsoressivi rcnera tioiis havi i o\i -ii i it mer with the product luna ol tia :r .i n.a.-, ?.iite.i unii li.i\<? wrought out m iiMinii and lirmize slums! everg human rh?nteterbttle all that la ion i in k1 in infant-> uni childhood, ail that is most In anti? ll! I ?mil fawinatiiik' in a am.ni. as will ns whatovel i? noble .i Ininti in man With tin li. ajm mi mind of bunging Minn |>iiie lo oi li ?i lui lit oin ? :t \ . I WHinlered f of wecka nul inoiiilis aiuoiii; these productions m liame. Italy, Aii-lna. l'ru-.-ia. anti with eastoSttl aOBlptota in BoBM . lion nee ami lal lui. lo ali me in st t kui? what I dt sind to til.?I This ggan wa? inol.h ti t.v hain b, UBI treat (li lill.Ill WatptOT, for tile Killi,' ol Uavst a, waa gate Bim a aetenlv pitea far the design. i he orte, nil. in ??utit]ii? broun, elanda m trent of tee Kint h pulsee, ?it Munn h, where I ?lo not think it is cither a? appropriate or effective as tin.-- ?slnie. Hauch waa a li n.--.-! m, ami they love bia marmor) : tiny point ion to in- ?oik- with a i. it.i.n exultation and pude whteh m.il.i - ;>oii BBS hou di -tiin I li Uni ti i 1 "liewa- mir i on uti i inn n." The I'm--ian monument to then vic tom - omi .Napoleon, still.illili; m the thiel .-tl??t. I lit? r i. I I mien, in front Of the in> al pal.ii i , at l? II Uti, was ? m . ntl ii m Moan sad gnalta i?y Baa? a, sad is justly consideredtbc creates! arah el ns kted ka tea ?mid The preiss | ou bestow upon tala Igan w sen j m tell of Ita ci.n ' ami cas?- ?nul epi sklngeffect is merited ; hut it is ? in. u the tai? nt of tin- ci iiipt.u With all the palos taken t n a n le lion, 1 found nothing elae neu as desirable, nor no1 iHin m .im Un i jniie ? an he found as effective or that would till its place as well. Hence I gladly 0*00(4 your approbation, which 1 hope sad bellen ta d?pensa. i;. ... n wn rolled, alter it? elevation, so ? ?lil man Ki MUMd m>' Bg the hand and hllalli -aid, " lint lol'. I thank von tot liai lln.' linn' i' ,,l m I done a thing which affords an bo much plea an" A cultivated wuuiaii before It, s.mi te me wita ? pan no1 ccond to Its own, " I sa nae morad of thal nagel, it -in nita ]???? 11 \ to the heart; its influ? di a a ill n?- enaeblii = io the yonng." Be it so, and I ?nu m sly repaid. It it is, us you i! ittei uijrly say. appruprlafc to Ita place ami pin )n. e. theil w III It COnltnin through the Oil- 'li?t are coming to apeak te the emotion* ? the innis Inn the ti. !.'i-ln of the th ail The aieetiBg then broke np, and the people dispersed to i.m ne ra the Common st night to view the display of trewearks, which casse ol m a meaner teat appropri* uti |j ended the eaerelsi - >i the day t oMMKm i mi \ ra INDI WA COLLBOErS, ( iMMI \i I Ml \ I VI HA\n\l.lt ?uti fi, y MiPIH lS I I ii?n i iii:i-ih\ i \i\ i.i;sii\ - w miami ? m ii?,t. isiiif.v r\nii:>in, wu-i ni: t ni\ki: -ii y. I i in..- Si*, ii ? .iroti'"!. Ina UTM Ut nul |s. Juin M, IBff, The ('oinineuceiniiit sea-.ni was opened bj 11 am mi College .lune '-?'. There Is perhaps n more aeauttfullo i allon for an Institution in the tuite?! Mali-, than that oreapiedbj thin College mt miana ans?t of Mallison, en the Ohio River, The country sboul it is much brokra snd well wooded, sboondhig In romantic cascades and I ii. rp n .. ,-. - ..t ikade The College building? sre l?x st? i ?ma ? nunn mini.: eminence, willi avlea of 16 mitos up ami down the Ohm. ii. Muk preceding Commencement was taken np ?ni ? \ ? mi 11 ilion ot el a--. ?., ioi advanced standiug. of ?ihii a favorable report wn given. The Bret publie performs*?"? I waa sble to attend wn tin? .oh m of tin- Ki i .1 It. st.ii.it ..r Cincinnati, < Hi ii, on tin- I in ral \ -o, ,, in -, .lim,? i . in- -ii?n ? t ?a- "The I 'Im in ii Man foi the Times." The object ?a- io m).'?? the im ? uriti of training the fscnlth - of : ii n uni lo in ike in ? Uni ? is anil .u tlV? im lulu IS ? ?t ? ?? n ti it auitm production, snd wn well re i hy lln- I il nui ii. In the el ? the lilian Horn-tics bad their reunions. ?Im li were itberlngs ol plenaaul |>eopl??. i'luo-iav. .> th. at n o'clock, the? mi ' :-? - ??! tin Graduating? lass to - in Nita .vom./ gentil i n'-n vi ?r /! ai I na 11 ii, ?mi n . i i\ i i the di A B Their orations wer? creditable, nva ..?o then a speech of tm cul eloquence, ?huh v,.n ?omid than Benn. The programme I give In lull a- dist ''nitiil A : v Bart, Vrrno? ti. 1. li .1 I jil I', f \.n, ? In.! Orit.Qti ... M . I ., - ? ? II.?- I,.. ,. .fit. Il n, M My I I ... ..li . , i. ,, ,., , i . ,? , ? . ?Ir.ll.ai ' l.lf. I I . , i\ w . K- ? lad Oral.- i i ellen! i ur wa? Internpei m i Hie exerelucs were ?'?n i. ?I in J W. Scott, I) I? . a- nu.- li. .-nit m ol ? li.-ah nt. hr Wood, bavlug died durlo ?. ol s M wa? .f( m i upon t he ? . uni i,i?.n a fi \i not ? oiim , ni with Hu I ' ! I | .i oufl in 'I i tin i;ii John N. wirlina;, Vice Chaucclloi of the flu Whole pa--. .1 i M nil ? miij to ali a i.ni'e att. mi,ian-of visitors Math tin uren- "ii mon lui? : ? ?...ii .nt ? m m to the i oil. .-?' wa? the election hy i of iii. Ki \ William .1 M. tv I ' I > . t" I '.. i.ir.n.l li. li. ia i . I In la li Iii -iih-lil i - a II ' . ? '. |ni:.itioii. rbe condition of the oulieg? i- lietter thou it ha- bnn . being it- ititi j iifth .v.u. I'lvi aixtba \ nni 1 . ? '.inn' into ii,? t m .i i ali v; Binons . t im n of this ? imr. i i ? ' ? .?? ut t? lui? iii.- j ear wa iver 1 ?? Noll lil ? 1 -i l'l.N i lllisll is I Mil umi i. M. < ; I'ulVCI ill) . locar. ,1 b| lln! . ':n Ho- Miti . till? I'll lib . i al ' ' ? .lillie i of seven srwluatod liu oration* offered wen h .i- i Killi) lie "le-,H ii. alai Ulli' ? .1 i v ti-. of the litV ? - tin | ii ..I mini' , ' . i in , '.v. . I - 11. m I :?.? lin- munie pr..inicii was admirable. Tin.? Institution ? n. iM-t ..limit..I l ille? t? raiial privlh'ijccft with n, though but few complet? Ine full rourae The - ..f ' iiium in ? -mi nt week, examination, .' . ? : exhibition,a<!dn ?? ipto, ?' i 'i Mi> f.ur order, thi i no i, ' lb ti ? christ more commonly cal tod tin (?nmphelllt< Church It tom Mi. ti ..o.of Hin,' men. ii. I amber six, th it 1' lu?ala i- ill! Iii,; the fi.ir w a HU oil i m I I '.I imm< m ernenl or Wah on the v ' .i ' ? ? t mu raitj l ? I In i. ?' .in l mu lu t -.'. i i n the \\ ilbaah ?I!.. oui the rstnri !?? i mi ? m, m i- i, ni.- ? h .n n murki I here than ni am o!h? cr . 'uni ii i it itloti loom- 'h' .in ar of the I'n p aiatoi v in n iitinciit. ?iii?i! hen the ?"nu ' ' i.I ? iii n irnlai exerclsea b) the i the ' ..nt. i- fur pri/i d?clamation and prise , .i ni h tin-year wen m1 the i vamiiuitiou of i la--i - foi util im ? d 111 ir ? h i 11 j, s tin lu.Min ?uk |n. 11 iIihl: tin ?c. 1, of ? ..nuil. 11 ? nu nt nf the ? i- attract large numbera of vUltoni in advance; many ?lealrins to be |.|. -? ni at I he i \, tin i n ilims h lo. h ai ?? i oin I u. I. i Iii the I .11 lit j nhill 1 lilli i lion of .1 I It Mill ni I.V.I III.li.ill'Hl,\l hi. li .i a terror to ? areli m Mudent ? The li i nt oxer? lae ot Ibu College i- the Buccalaiiriete of tin I'n ni. i i. th. Itcv .lo-epli l r?ttle, 1) D in lut li' Is L liol', li li iii !\ 111 the last a- im 11 it? tlie\Si-1. lu h ii m. bad charge of s church lu Nee Jersej up to i-?-.?, win n he ?a- in.ule li. -nl.iit to aupplj fii? plac? "f Dr. \% hit.. .h . .a.-, d He i? also kim? i, as an oecsaiooal con tnbutoi in f Ai IndrpruJrnl. His lenuon wsa uelivered Sunday, the ?:? \. in ? entra < han h, in Hie nflernoon, to ii rrowded lui: i i he aUdecl ?,m "The Perfecti a of and m the ereuing of the asme day, the Rev, \ Hills of < nu ttiuati, ohio, nva the ni.lui.ii si i mon before the Borlcty of Itellgituia Inquiry Thi rab leet wss"TbeTi ne Rattle of Ufe," sugseated In I John, i hap li . iel-, l It is.i. i u n i ami thoughtful. Mr. Hills ia a eli sr thinker, nod ? oui? - b i? i to bia I/em Mater with a grest euthostosm toratttdent life, and boa it should nt mell foi the world Mm iiav ?a-.,, i u|.ii d n nil a report of the i retaining Committee, which waa milicien I ?vidence of the wa j In ? im h the ? i mi nut tee bad dom it- ?oil,, in the evening -ix vonna. irenUrmen.chosen from thi Preafa.n, Hopb omore, sud .1 un un ? la--?-, i mi ti ni. d foi the prix? - m de ? lam.ilion, i h. ..?aid- ?in made HI. to I I.i dyke of Kngene, Ind.; D, tod W Hhaw of New-London, ?Uno. ii. to J I. <o? in of Crawfordavllto. Afterthto ceri i-e the sei n t u nins bold their midnight ? aud ii.ni'|iii t welcoming the returned mem liera, lim itrongi -i of tin ^ is th, i;, ta i beta li. it I* log Hu old? i of the Wi xt? ni ?nu 1, s-,, |i ti, - iiicsiin.y monning the IJU-rury Boctetics held then* re? nn on-, nliii h were hu ci jj ?it ti mied bj the graduate um m liera In the afternoon tie addrcas before The \ toclated Alumni waa delivered n th. Itcv. \\. \ McCorcle of Detroit, Muli The .nilli-- ?as ?ill glTOO und Well received. The audience prosented a aiiargeatful ?hading tiniii youth lomani..and flinn iii.minni.1 to old Bgl Many ?t hil? in d In adi ?ne pn -i lit who hail hei ii hi n as itnden ts. In the evening the sntnal sddresa befare the Literary Societies waa given h.\ ii. Itev. J. M. Ilumphreya, D. 1?.. of Chlesgo, 111. 'tin in .-pi aki i was to shoe i ? a- ahown in -i o--iii -." referring to -, n n? e, law, language, Kuvormut?t, tlie?ilogv, und lu even Inter i st- ami nh a ot lie. It *a a 11 inn K il.h pi m I mi mu lol i le.irm %-or in tion ami ., hoia-tir display,beong at the Mme unie pre? ti? al aud lopului, \\ i 'iliii'sdav Ino! lillie, inn, ... Was ll-heri ii in hi thi ringing of the College bclh and many of the bella of the .iti 11 m. lu n,. i n non m lugthe ?laj aolong expts ted h> the .-. moi Claaa At St o'clock in the morning a procession w'as formed, headen b\ a tim- hami. nth? Coltog? frouuda.comprla bag the Facult) the Trujten, proinluenl vhdtors, the Alumni in the order of thdr claJwiia, ?tudeiita in the order of their ilnaaea, and the frkuda of the College and of the gradnstiug cbvaa makin?, m Imposing dlaplsy. Eleven young gentlemen, u? b> the iiregramm? hilo?, wen graduab i It Ik? WorU 0?MatMratla?t '. IV n**?} W?Hrt ? ? ? ?i I U Hi r .r.'i- Ii.i' i II. ? I t lui . II."? ?t? -s " 01o??r, lu k...n ullr. Ill . IN ?bl, II / M La . Km Uli III . I'???warre si l ii n. Metter, s. I'karlr? vi KmuUiIm iacae Hean RartlbH ? i. liai . HrblilMr TeadlBi Ho?? r. Kataa? s^i.. .. ?iii ... Peraeaal l- ?. ii... l. r. V rVtetl lehbaaee? ut Weahfc. J I ?i i?iil liiiilr, 1'rawwfilaTilli iii .s.-imr?- nml Billfloa Milhm ha 11.41. i. Bara, lag w ?adrad, law All 4111. I?i| ? i iif. n li/ ??! li. ki<.-, ilu'l?- ?a-a in-t di al o! nu taphl shs ii, the oration. Home or it io mystical lb? aud le ne? could with difficulty follow It. tin cuan i part, however, vu eual IJ uudci -t.I President Tutthi baa a atern criticism foi the ?iiplioiiioiii'. and th- i u.U. in Mills it "cribbing." Main an ?the itoriea[of flue iwilodswblch neverwere lu i'ii ii.after the oration paaaed into Hu hands of tim li.-I.I.nt lins, oratlona ?rere all n.I. some of them particularly ao, and were pronounced without falterlua or prompting with good oratory. As usual 8m bum added to i lu m easton, In the pn i Kum ex? itlscHof the Milli? nts bouquets had been threwi? in auch ?(uanUtiea aa to be b1 moat a nuls um c. ami Hie liiMih nt (hieiniiiu il to BUopresa .m trylil. Juutbclon. lUc enmueb htguu, hu auld mur^l eowraaaj wai .1 vcty desirable thirtzc on -nil occasions. Luther and all the creal Reformera hol Moeodedbytt, but he did not think anj of them bad ever greater need foi II Ci m ?lid he, that ?um inn,', in Baking tin fn? mis of the io..dilating Class, most ol iihoaa ?ere ladies, tore fratn from throwing their i.n r?. lie had detected s} mptonis >f an epidemic of t .- kind, and was anxious to suppress It The young gentletneu, bo sahl, did no1 pn -i 'ii i vi tv STSi i lui appi-iirai ce m ei.lli i thftg their flower An opport'iiutv -would be cueii st the ettie, he sahl, for tin shower of flowers After the addrew to the ?lu--, wlui n wa, an earnesl remlndi t bo them thal tin re would lu- ale iv tne.i for ed in -a t? d men; comatentlng at length upon the aaylng Accredited to Webster, that there waa always reoen .it the top of ever] profession. Thi Pn d di nt hil tin class open ranks, standing before him, and tin -t, i u ii i m ii. ni in the ladies thal r w-1- la ordei to -? ml up their floral offerings The pi rmiaaioa was enh kiv Improved, sud for i mu mut it fairij rained flowers: tin y fi'll in oiisiieis ?ni earn the ?tage?ahaM*t*areeptng the ? I is- .1 .i iv. I'la v wi rt-. km tin ted ni an m.mouse pile, and pim.oiim ,-d hythe Hn-.nient th.- wrvath of the (his* uf I-? : \ml s4i the ? baa* left Coln ge for the world. In the afternoon one of the Collegs Base hall Ciaba plaj ed i m.ni li game with a ' lub ftoaa tin ?ity, m a ha h ti,i Callage boys were victories*. A large ooMOurei of v lal! ra a itneased lb? game Ataigbt PresidentTuttleheld haftMtssl levee In the spaetMia and vu ii furnMhi ?I hail-ni the Ly< som and Gol ii-p-iiii Mt ? iefn s. fin? eecapj tu?- third Boor of one al the College buildings, hieing only asperated by t adala bast. A brilliant couipenj was present, tal* beang M se easton al win, h ui\ visitor at Ptmatencemenl -s pn si ni. d io tin pu aident linn is .m admirable spirit ef enterprise among the students of Wahesfa College, i rhaence of which M teen la 'I? publication by tbem of rta aTet?as Magasine, the kargeal College periodical In the Uatted States It is eu llrelj managed i>v the students. \v .?.a ii ( oUege is ?unii r the i entrai el the Kew Eh hool Pn-le, terian Church, or rather ita r'.uiilt.v and hoard belong to that denomlauttoa The present Is tbe thirty-1 third yeer vt its hiatorj it- students during the nMt yeer number about ate. Ita financial condition ?h-oh-u that the Board ordered the erection of additional budd? ings. The friends el this Oom #?? are aangnlna for it. and el.um for it the largest cablm t In the Weet, und the n< at arrangedMdlineal klbrarj ami mechanical appai itu..ia tin-stat?- The eampaa la magnificent,containingterty ?icres of the lim st WOOdS well laid off. 1 simula have mentioned that, after conferring degreca on the gradu? ating class ami upon the i ia-- oi '( i, tim degree ol s B. h. was conferred upon I oin ?ni Baki r, Govern? t of Indi.ma, ami h. h. ii|Min the lh v. lb im Little of Madlaen. Ind. neu. T. J- Horgan of the Henior Class ni Rochester Theo? logical University, and Major George w. Grubba of Ilubauapolis, each len Ivi d tin liomn ezy deglM of A M aeanni iMw.n-m. I arrived at (.fii'liciisHe ill lune to Wktaeaa pall nf lill eneteiaea of rommencemenl of this Institution. The Crowd in aid miali i w i- sin h that it waa Impossible to lu u uni thing. The graduating i lass numbered 23. Thia college never vv.ih in mote prosperous condition, neal SMistance coming to it from tbe Centenary lund. They propoei m u lew \? u- to eui t nea buildings and atriu tin- pn p n.itoi i di n linn?nt mit An Important change was ordered tin- year Young latins am hen after tote ad mi t ted to the college oom -? Among the regular axer l I-es of i online m l nu li I week Wile -ollie ?ullin s.-es ?uni a poem ih.it .m- mu? l, praised. 'Hu- attendance during, tim year waa over its The college ka mulei-control of tim Methodist ( burch. lill BTATI I vii l I!?!Tr. Tin- uistitiirion makes two changea at flic beginning of the m vt rear wini li will revolutionise it 'li., pn paraton eooraels atricMnoel and laatlea are admitted to equal competition In all the college hraacinaa ne Legislature lsst session gave liberal sum- to the Beard, and nun li is boped bj tia- 1 m nil) ami Alumni foi the future. The published reports of commencement exercises shoe that tin- occasion was one of much mere than oi?i.u.m iiit.ii-t. (.m. u.iker ami large numbera of the i.? ir ?latine were present. 'Here U a law depart? ment in the Unirersltj tim excellence of which many I prominent lawyers ?tteet. The attend Mea during the year was something ovei 00 ( ?IVIMI ,M I \IKM Al lill I I Ns-pi Al II PHI YTI.i ii-tn; IVsllll II.. TnOT, We?lncsday, July 3, lWf. 1'lu- annual commencement exercises of the li? MM hver Poljrteehnk Institute of tniu etty wcm held et the (iii-wold Optra llnti.-e, last cn nil,>{. The spacious end beautiful cilitlet Wa* thronged With the beauty, wealth. and Intelligence ol the city, and the exercises In tilre? aped* passed off with a degree of aucei - oevei before att.um d i?) any graduating class of tin- old and bonon ?f Mi-tunic. The stage was occupied bj tin lion. John K. Winslow, Pr?sident of the Board of Inn ( tors, and his col? leagues of that nod v. Mr. Director Litarle* Drowne,Principal of the Faculty, and the various pro fi ?Bora of the school, le chevalier D*Agnlar, Cvnaut-Qen 4 i .ii of Brasil, Mavin i'lagg, Becortler .Moran, tin asem in i< of tie ( oiniiion Council, and othei distinguished citi/cti- Prayer waa said bj tin Rev. Dr. Kennedy, In full i .nun ii-ui-. and the salutatory given by Mr. Charlea Il Mo--of New Berlin, Conn OratTous were then deliv? ered bj Palmer 11 It.nim.um of Troy, and Pom] s?.u io! of Puerto Principe, Cuba, followed by the Valedictory, whleh honor vis conferred bj the members of the graduating (lass upon Mr Freeh J. Hearne of Hannibal, Mo. All ?>f tin-? younggentlo Im li a? pii'leil ti: in-elvi- Well; ?lull i ?I, Considering the fact that tin course of Instruction al tbe Institut) ;-,ii voti ib i iitiri l.\ to practical and m lentille auhlccts, but little attention being pani to literary and rhetorical ac? complishments, I maj mj thi addresses in point of eloca tlon were far superior to menj I have beard pronounced a ii.i bigbei and more pretentious rollege* of our conn i in i ration of Mr. h.u i m: m n. upon Theory and Prao t u < .va is a master! j production, In which be showed the re? lation of Udukers and workera one to Uie other juid pointed out bril tl> . bul 11 ii,tu i In ludVl !v. w hat i ai li had done lo .idv.uni the world In the practical results of life ii - t.itlni is a Profesaoi In tie Institute ami a prominent Ki ; al li sn orator, and the ion, In his oratmn, in matter anil ?h livery, more than sustained the reputation <>f the -o. bs b perece <>f clear andcomprebenalTi viewa, a scholar of wide and varied culture, and a graceful and polished apt iker Tbe young maa, apon rettring, w.i ahne*l ?li ow u? ?t m a show i i i f i u m.'| m tis. Mr. Harlot's ora imii i M: .- labored under the disadvan? tage ol s? i .iku-k' m a foi? Igu tengui, but pronoun? ed lu lion with entire dlstluctness, snd that sounds re bli h bia ? ountrj mi u are not? ?l the world over The demands of science upon the attention of all were tborougblj enforced, and the results already accomplished, as w< Ila* tin mysteriesof nature awaiting solution, and sooner or utter io be unfolded to the coin pn inn-ion of in iiikiml, w? re ?I? -< rlbed In eloquent and glowing linn-. Mr. Heere*'* valed le tory was full of kindly mdtdtloa to lu- chftss. and In- fan well winds to tli?-iii ami to ih? Faculty were moel irracefullj and tenderly ex pressed ? ? es, Mr. Pn aident "a Inslow ? ouf? nui til?, den i of ( iv ii Engineer open the gradaat tute i lass, 28 In number, na folio* - l?.u.rii Ki m . Althea !i.?ni?i?-T. Psaghkaseata,fi. V .', iii I !l ? ..-rr. Vallar, V. t. ? S w > ? li lk ir. A. M, H ? t ? ?r j Ctatre, li. ? I M n I ?. u li t,iHstsml Cubai Alii.rt M Isrsir, ? - Ms.; Jii?e linninili-f, Iii. , A it St. I- . M l.ncr. a i< c.?-.?:.. Pria , ? ? -. - v. tri I i ds uF Mai bill I li, PltUli .?. Ka Albert II .M I., I.e.k1 Moan Ki ?l..rk,l-' ' o ?? U V'.... Ms? n. s i ii? , hs Ballar, jr . IVniii? rt..u. M J. ; Hi - .li. v I ?- |,l vi lilias B B1 Di Kalb v i This is the largest i i : itltute ever graduated In an j ow real Hie Senior Class for 186a now nun m1 the next eotiiiiii in i tneiit will probably tend fulb u- large a graduutli g > lass a- hut of 1861 into ih? wwId, locjw to it., mechanical, scientific mining, and other labor and thought the hem tit of that practical Instrurtlon afforded ?Imoal exclusively In thia countrj bj thi Renasclsei Institute of Troj tin Delta Pul Fraternltj have been In session in thia ? |ty for two days and tblsi ri nlng i lo** their eonvi i vi u h pal'li, exerelaea ard a auppei Mea ra i bal ? I Whit. In ni und I.?I w ,u d .1 nu i u of New-York I :tv will ilcliiei orations Cap? 0 l Michaella, United States Ai m.. will preside Then are ?? large number of deh> ^..it? a pn -? nt Inna all part-of th? I OUUtrj . ((iMviNciMiM- Of i.ii'ia.i.mwx fn.r.) ridiii.r. \s ttUDtOTOVf,, .inly ?!. '1 lie annual oomntrgirjnetsni of i no: -.-? tow n Coll?ge, which begnn u* aareei of mi fui l:. - t ? .? -? at of !? al lulu; Ju-t hi i Baft Hi?o, w BttltalgMEtl ?n a ( oil. gi In li ?- ai a* relaed te the rank at* a Datveeatty l?y lui arett Bl WS, t""k pi.ne to day Tin- BtV. Ii? rnaril ? aftgnirt, S. J., is now rrc-idetit of the ( '? liege, and the i nully ? omprha I ?nilli1 ?vf the beti talent In the country. I u ml, is ,ii. from all patt- Of the {forth and the Ho lill, and liunili? ii d,during tin- t? nu |iist i lo.-cd : >? hi p i m.11 it, . . .lum' i lb pai um m. ' -. l'ii paratoi \ i ? p.utimi.t, ii.ii. Me.ii. a Department,IM; Total,414. The i nli i i i, (erases to day waa varied with music .it prom r nil. n ii.- Iij Hu baud of the nth lii?.iidn, and VM as follows : l .ruten top (' Ljlas, Gas I> Lylai ? -Mn i ?i i l.n.ici San iel II Sastra?! Mu. I II ni ii > I ? ? ftl I r.illrinf I ??,,!. I .,i II .,, II. tri Hfl llltj.l!.-. S|r|,l,rl, A Dim Milln F. Dm Fr.. ? uf Roath, 0 ? , t?s Lilts ft? Btsra?Nl ei Btssi PoW -I.? * ? ?taaaaa; i, .,.,. sitora ?j KraadaJ Mckinn it.-, Jsbsm v.. W??i. \ ,|.,l llof) l.oijrit M lie:: i in di -ni - vu re iiu n conferred, and medals and pre? miums distributed bj tia-l'n-ali m ot the United States sa follows: The degree of Msslerof Arts in Course was coull tied on Edward s Kiley, a. li. Pennsylvania ; lit iir> M. Brent, a. El. Neat ^>ik. Francis x. Ward, A. It., Maryland; Edwin MoCablU, A. li. New \mk; Noble B. iloilhir, A. B., and Julius M. Loper, a. n, District of Columbia. The lume?srj degree of Master of Aits was conferred on .i.nnes p. Pye,Texas; J.must Noraillle, Karawa; Jena t? Dln?try, Louisiana; Cbas P. Dimitry, Louisiana; Joseph M .loins. .M. D., District of Columbia. The de greeof Bachelor ol \its waa conferred on the following students Samuel M Anderson, Msryland; Koben M. Dougls i, Illinois ; lilader I'orrest, Dlatrlct oi Columbia ; i,,o ii Pox,Nee york; Chat, <. Uomer and Arthv Lee, Min i I.uni. ihe grand ?reunion of the Phllodemlc Society of Georgetown College to?'k pl.ue yesterday, commencing in tin pallin- II.ill of tim (',.1 cn- luiildliig, at IO oi lock. After opening with prayer, Mr. Daniel A. Csttelly, eat. . of New-York u? !t??l a very beautiful poem, a Memoir of tin- late i at i;< i n? orgi KeawlckWM delivered bj Jiu>:h r ( ai ?unii r of Ueorgetown, D. C, and the exercisea closed with an oration hy the lion. Alexander nimm v of Louisiana, after which the Som tv repaired to aiiotiiii room, where tbej were received by the Alumni ?,rih. ? ollegi Hu party ben partook of t miinptuous repMt.fia which occasion ? arfttj ami noetieal lull of fare, a la Shakespeare, was prepared Tiieatt.ur waa a v, 11 sgrei aide one. Auuuig those pr?sent were the Rev. i .ith? i M. Carty, of I oyolal ollege.tha Rev. PatbersStone -tiict.i larde, McKerhany; the venerable P. Curley, and Mi iiodii o, nt tin Kii.-sian BMbeaay, loMMIMI'MIM III' Mill NT SI. VIM I'M AiAPfViy. MiNlvKliti. Krom (Ja .s| Btal ( 'urrripoodiBt. Mr. Ht. Vim i nt, Wcduc-day, July :i, IMT, The Twcnty-liitst Annual Coinun nceiiuiii ol the Ai.idiiii> of Mt. St. Vincent waa held yesterday Bl the Academy on the Hudsoa near Tontera. A bargt number of visitors were present from ?lithi.ii pallM of the I'llltcd ?tates to Wttiii'MS the pel rormancee of the puplbj. ArcbhUboi? McCloskey .m4 i i u-ge nniiihi r <?f ? lergymen were also preaent; ?SO pu? pils receive iiistimtmii at thiaAesdemyfrom not the hi-icrs of Charity who have iIuikc of the young bullea, under Mother Jerome, the Burstnoreaa of the Academy. The exercisea commenced at ii o'clock, lu the foll?n iug i,,-,, ?jsaaaa M I aHaaa* a^a*e>ia*Lfj*a?tr*a.KaliM* BUiii?.' T, PvUu. M. Mmulj, M. .s?iai?u1j?3i?, Wail*ea| U??ucj, l*. WAU? Atti,??, K ?Whim M <lr*?.|1 BaSHS ??????I, B>?,in, l-'L1"1',""" ' < *tW H?-U., i. l?n). ,?.. ... . "?? '??'"/. "o " 4?'h"rr' " II?."?, ?V.U..., H., j ? M .. ,? Kerumi a x1 I l? ! . ?,.,.? ??V : ' v ? ? MU? M ?.???? l-l.T?e??l, ?li ..inna Kit/p?li ck, K ! mir? V'T'.'.'''"'''./'^"1'","*' *J"*;" ' "l""1 ' ?le*' Hiilluit.- ?fi Inn lu, K .. ,lfrp (i i Kgaa, riii-i??, Ki-"u?n. I,. Hoiaa, ? Hu?ale. Il fd-i^ln. |)?ni?.-lti- Sol?, um ( nur l)i?ni!,.iti..ii i,f l'i.i,,. .m. Hdr.ii I: Im .u ?,..,,,. y I',., ?s -.giaeeelf ?Wa?. M. I li. Ur, < . >ui ..ii. o liu.l Mn?r. M. (-.lai. Iwv.l. t'urn.i. I).,?gbl/, K*?fi.M, I', ? ?j 4f?k Hu sold ?sedal for the b*-t orhrtnaCsa ?v m. ?? i>om. Ile Ki uunay " wnirtvea te Mire Kate Itsechamef Raaaw N i A crown of laurel ??"*? f ipr'if medal ana giren ts asen o/fhe following young ladies win? madiiat. ?I und re CCI i ? i dlpll ma- : ?Inn, tit pa: I. '.I'. . V-? I.-., !!.,?, .11? Cj?,,, ?'.i|,?r .Vu,Khil or- I ,. n.i.l.,..,: I. I Mi'.'.,.I. turk.-. Ni? l.-ri, K.?t?'llcaakaai, Homr, ii I Man I '.'?,1 I- .U-.lMI.ii. I.. I. ' ' The An hbwhop delivered an adiirem? at thecloac of tho enrolan, _ -j._ SOCIAL Sen:ME. Tlie follow inii ?ire ilic matann of the lion. Thomas J. Durant of Loulalaa?, at the bot?n! Science ?'oiiventioa at Cooper Institute, lui/ 4: 1 think that it iso* the MataSBl import.nice, that here,. In tala peal remniarolsl nuiliepulla of America, Hum aaavuld be a aociety binned for the purple of Invi ?tige ting tee truths of soolat nanni I do not think that at w10 be .?ultu ?cut for tin geutasaian on obi right (Mr. ?9ki*> ton),and everj hvty and geutleman lu th!.- room to nx amin? thon truths nparatetv ni finir own ebambera, ;>.u?l rest content with ahn they Bare done there, it i? 'o*:.? m ci?iii \ that al tho-i-ciipiiotc of ??x.iiuiiiimi truth?.'?ml hnvtag the great interests of hunaaltyat heart, should minn tnip Hu i mid iioeipaaa thah ?teals a? laag u? a mau tin? ? m t Institute a Comparison bet?? cn ins awn opinions and then of his fellow men, he esanet he sure that h?- iseometii hesaaawtbTths baw ?.f gehtta sgMaal he not the OUeiSTillg test, it I? C1 ltutnh the I? ?t ? ? call get: snd the onlytest we hive of truth. Theretore i thmk n aeofwsary for u te (onie togethn und compare our, views, and fron lae ann of tena endeavor to sresrtata what truth and right mils av U there such a thine n progresa In aociety I Is therceurh a thing as i i/oo?l ami holy Providence pint?-? ting?ie march ol hiuuanitj on this globe I It wi dt nat admit both of thc-u thlnga to be trae, wc han- not commci ? < ?t the stud) Of Social science, and v.e do not I'm? that hum.muy lia-, any de.-tuiy at all. I believe that humanity on this Mint,tient is tending toward the highest indi \ ulna I happiness, and I bellev? thal aoctoty ?ml Ita nu in hers slieii|..l bang do? n tin a he o'? in -halm- I In n- thi n ison? mii??!,- indu uluai m it f hat ii unhappy. Applau?e|. (.ml nuii' ii.-, -m-lally, to happ?ic.-?. ami to Lappim-s iii thi- world; and though we are to enjoy happiness In Hit? ?mid. no mutter with what piohatmn, ii is mt. mled, no doubt, to preparen for another, that the practical duties aie -.t before ns. Min lias teed ?;f bat I fellow-beings, either to liles? him or to do bim good. \\c haie m i i of our hilo? Ik injrs. a> we fumliv and firmly belbin to do theo good, Tia- first Qoealloa Huit sti iki i j nu in society is the condition of the laborer, teennn in sll aoeietiea nlne-tentba mnat be laborers. I? Hie Ninth, with which I aiii so familiar, and another ?it whose eil, /i -ii.? Iain happy to set lui?' to dal , We ?-?ut that iaiioi mnat be the slave of capital; that the indi luina) m.in must in- owned bj l is fellow-man; that by ila ordination of God and the i ara of aoclet) thewhsn mau during his whole life beloogc?! to tome othes niau. who took all the work of his hands during his whole life. All that he took from him wx? Um produce ?t bin labor: Ilia blood Be dad no1 sind; his Boah BO did not want In i'oimi, ?n,d the eaaentlal idea of slavery, as it exbjtcd la the Booth, and a? ii baa had i \i?'i d wherever tt baa? vi-t eon, was that tim pimblee of the labor of the Itali vu.uni ('ililli/ the ?hole Ililli ol lilslifi' belonged to Ililli, whom the Law and ouatom had pronounced lo b? bia msstec and owner. Then W11 an ???.titi.d ide? on which Slavery ?a? haeeaL u wn not the fetter, hnaan the fetter wa? not universally worn; it wa*, not the lash, 11,., anne the Uah ?a.? not universally ii[i|ili?-?l?thal made Slavery odious to the iinn.il ?amas of luankiml ; but it wn heoansa that asen ?1 thin? railed bu? ll?an labor, by which this planet ui to be n ni ?j rand, w i?, m the can of the s!a\c, owned by another man. That MM ndi .-ht and duty DI labor which man holds from bia Creator alone, and winch he is to excretes for his own bein tit .Uni the lielicllt of humanity teal relation to hu? manity and to Moil wjstakt ii ti oin him anti pi m lamil d to behana; to another. That, in mj ludgment, always wn the essential crime of Slavery. Therein constated its t Minmai cliiintctt-r against humanity ut lain?-, aaalnat the imliviiiiuii mau, and against God. Thal wn Hie greet error, the ruin and the crime of Slavery; nml when ry waaabotlsbed, it wa.- a prcat step in the proitreas Of Aim nea and of hinnaiilly ; Isaause w. did not und. i Htai.d tin Hue method of aboliabing it ; hccaueelta oppo nenta, pn the one hand, were only ??tnplitU,ttl msj lie piiiiiit?i-d to coin a word, and hei aii-e ihose who mai). aged snd controlled It,on tee oUm i hsnd, would not Ustea to reason : end on ?u count ot tin i mu-of both we bad te ko through w.u. ? i.~ti:i>r u- three thousand millions of bensure snd COMM lives to get rid ?)f that error Ami aurel) all who bear me will aay thal it was net the nug one that ought to be abolished in the Inten ita of human iiviimi to d'? this without the expenditure of thin vast tn nure and thteblood, to do It peacefully, b* tue ?ml of human mt? lligean. U what bl nu.mt l.\ bo? ...... ace -to lain thal ead point It out to man, so that they ?ran come to a bur and pi a? eful aolutton of thi qui ition which will meet with general aciiuieaceiici In my judgment, Mr Iii aident, as fal a? I am able to examine tue aubjei f. telang the eoudltlen of the uvborn as the great tent of -.i> at every epo? h of nuw'i progress, the principle of o?-i;uit' I linn of one man being compelled,either by duty, or I iw. or custom, or conti ict, to ?oik for another tnall, who ?ill gel the plollt-ol Ills l.uioi. ? hellier that labor he bj law. to be k'im n for a whole lifetime, or for ?i \i.ir, or a month, or a day, oran boni then la eaaentlal priuciple of Slaverj .uni. therefore, the sisti-ni of wages,althongb differing in degree,aad not bo great an outrage on bumsuitj as the ayatem of chattel ahiverj , la a prodm t of the .?.nue eaaentlal evil; li, ut iii?, handbag earn of ths sacred right of labor, which man recel vea from (lojl. to be controlled by strain other man ; and while in Blaverj It exuded for the whole life of ?otc!", ami under tim s> ?n in of wages it t \is;.s but forth? inn? of tin- contract, wln-tlu-rforB?lay, a week. OT a li.oiith. Its ?ss? tit lal pim? ipi?- is the .suhle, and will -m nu to the ?ami reaulta Bomehavi dignified It ni other names, bat ii la olear to tuo-c who atedy the iiuretlon of Human labor under the wagoe -. ?tem, thal a Will in? \ itably ? onie to the same re-tilt?. < apltal S iii CO on en?lai inkr labor, until tee svab m of Indlreet aen ituoa will h? a.? oppte?ivi alni as iliohiaide to mankind im vis. [f yon h.ne iiotluini bal nMahnen la th? ? apitallat, ami ?uiital brnorsni ?? iii the bin d l ?borer, >??u must have a renewal o? the same frightful and oxhaast ina; atruggle through which we have Jual passed, i I for til? reason, bavbig lived In the Boutti,andhavteg ., ?lan ?nillir, that I have colin to the coticlilsioii that the eaaentlal principle is the asme under both ?ya. terna; and it la the absolute need of humanity teal Nth sho.iid be abolished. Baw is this te be doini i am not ?m pan d te any. hit um ina> I)?'. or you; mid for that nason ii is ueeesaury th it we should have mom mean ol examl Ung and oona pariag opinions, and propainitlug truth, ai d for the mhi.. 1 -lui d tin call for thin lneetm?. Mr. Durant i : I aft? r bril n> presalng theadvbi ibUity of founding the pro posed Bockty, M1I.KAI. SO? li TI t> AMI 1 l.M AU. IBMBEMk r. Mi t Mae?/ rkr lyttmnt. Bb: In ?iii editorial of the '>th Of .Tune you iii?i lii.uhcrt IBM the action of the Aim i ...ni In-titufe of Homeopathy in tab ir r? jeitl? n of au sppli? a?tien bj) Mi-a M H. Jacten, M. D? to be sduutted a member of that body. Will you permit me to bmuirewbj r?m eosadatn it pam. ulau-lyinounibi ut upon that Institution to receive femalea ?i> associntn win!, they are excluded by th. A.'.'.'h in v of Mt dit na and the I OUUtV in. di. al ?ot letica ol New-York, and try every stile ami county medical so? ciety in the Union, Mi.tu. i -. ['?Mitliius"is inform^. |nfc Tho nason why we spok?' Ol the Hoin.'op.ithi.s-;? ami not if the Allopa tlnsts vsas, that tim IIouie?>puthista wtic the sub? ject of our urtieiV. Thev had ju-t ictus, d to miinil VMuneii members of their Institute, and WB took the? to task Cot it. VVben the Allopaths r. fuse women admission to the Academy of Medicine v?e will take them to task, and teal I'oiinty Societies, if th?v ?Irt scrve it, shall raeelvB the same icluikc. lhit, if ".Med ii us" pleat*'*-, as the weatlnr is a tulle ?arm. and w< have a ?and deal on our hands. w<- w ill conl'uic our Hi-lf to ?>ru* tiling at a time. Second: "Mcilicus'' it M ruin.'. We bellew, With lei{;ll?l to the I'ollUU BOt ties, 'lliey have no UgBj riiiht to c\?-hide wiumii 1 iniii lncnihcrsliip any more than tiicu. If a woman presents herself for admission, armed with the necessary diploma, ami lecoiiiincmlav tionsas to the character ?if tin County Societies aro coinpi lied to admit ht r, for they are State, and not private. Societies, and ali- BBVBfaaaal hy law. and not by pivjiulire. \\c ?lo not know that a ?nae has coota up to test this matter, hut ?ve In lieve there has, and that the woman was admitted as she in list be, ac ??olding to the plain law. Third: '1 he haik-a?'tioD party in the Institute of Homeopathy hase theil i.tusal to admit women on the ground that the Insti? tute is a private club, rather than u public institution! hut the party of progress anil reform r? fuses to looh at it la this tight, and axserts that women who have bim legally a?lnnttt?l to practice ought to have a legal ri.irht to all the privileges that ?ne enjoyed by the profession, and that inciiiliership ?>1 the Institute!, as of the county som ins, is ?mc of those privil? ges. _ IKd. 1i;iii. AKT CHITKISM. To tht Kdttor of Tht Irifc???. BOH Your aide Art critic, ia hil notice di me anti my work in la-f Friday's paper, makes the following statement: "If he had been possessed of loftier artiatlo ??uulitit s, we Btaa?i not, after ten yenni of ItlUggle? aeas him stamllliK Beatty m the sume spot, and cierthie; lfHn r lesit uitiiuiici' than when he Began ann ann." Now. Sir, ten j ears ago 1 could not paint 0T draw a Stagta tree, bird, stone or Bower accurately, and bad not even made an attempt to natat from natur?'. Late in the season of 1X59 I made my flrat effort te pam' mit of .lours? Even so late as the Hummer of UM (?>nly live year? ajrol. I had made but one tluish? ?I oil study from nature mut three or four small l>< munumi?, and I think that if v?>ur ? title ?mild examine tin i?. he would hesitate ni making Hie lash statement that as] work ?tarni* today just v,hero it did '? ten years aga." . . . I ioiii Lue Winter of 1961 to the Spring of IMS-four hard ?. n? aiinn best energy sad thought were throws away In the vain ?it'ort tu teach jieople what they did not wiah to learu ; ao that suite I comment<-d to learn to work at UUldsnne.ua to the present time. I have hud but two venn of nnlntsrruptea w?m* nml study. I hoi* ten you will not Io.iW upon this ?a I ?imf, lu any s.-ns?. a pro teat Rguinat erltlclena. Thatlaverj fai Horn my purpose as I most heui uly be lie v o lu crluusau-tho xuoiu se\crt