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ning Star an'd Catholic Messenger SW O.L ANS, SUND DAY, JUNKE 1. 3. From Our Owe Co rsependent. OUR 1RI8 LZmrTR. DuvaNr, May "8173. Callan scandal case reached this week rtant stage. On Wednee·ty-that is y-the Court of Qaeeo's Beach deliv dgment on the legal oolnte submitted and involved in the forthcoming ttial aetions which Fathee Ow'KEs has agalint His Eml n, Cardinal Cut the decislons of the Judgel-oL whom four-are extreaely importoat and t_ , epeeaily to Caholis. But be. SFoe What those -deolisions are I must brief retrospect, Father O'Keeife nuar with his curate and his bishop, and t actions in the Queen courts against For this and for eother ose atsumao hich gave .riervon scandal, he 4as answer for be eoaduot before Cardinal His Eminence having pvriously ob from. the Pope and Sacred College in Spower snd authority to try Nather and PronouneeJudgment in his case. O'eeffe douly appearted, lit I believe ething but proteqt ftainst the consti the tribunal provided and establisheod of the ChLuro which he had biasself to abide by when enterin ..theholy SThe investigaton was journed to day, dooubts to give the uahapy opportunity 9I being better advisd that future day came, he did not ore the Cardinal, and thireupon the suspended hbl and published the e.of spensiol. Prombbly ~eaty-nlne in every hundred, or even a larger , believed the Cardinal could not e otherwise, contderar f ather onduct. ~rhde no Vatbeile priest doubsed the validty of the saopea next thin tlot happened was the f Father OKeefe f6m thbe chaplainoy lon Workhouee at Callan and from hip of the Calis. Nationasl his took plaee on a notifoation by eeffe's bishop to the Poot Law the Nationsal Edeodtten Dod rd- e - Pths ee then broeght the b nat Hie Eminnes, Cardinanl-ollen, Swmm I hve ow tb o nottes l F sor libel, and t lbel was chargede in the publication of the seatal a nason,. Father O'iebefseontendin, bed net been suspended at all. and that he had bes pronouseed i had been thereby injured4 iln pek tion. To this the Cardinal pleadd idefences, the eobi. of whioh wa, it w-s true:>ht atther O'Keafi ad, and that Luas euspended it with the rules of the Catholi: '·of which he was a mlnieter. The Co -ther pleaded that ha himaslf wasjaej -sspedngn Father O'Keeffe byth -brlipt" giving him authbority in th and ales by the fact that Pathe had broken a contract (not to go to any of his fellow-elergsmen) int had voluntarily entered wen joining thood, and tohe f arlt of o m ua S- by him from the be la - S'These defences Fa r Court of Queen's Ben , in which ugt his actioon, to set aside a in untenable. Is fact. whaet be askad - to decide was thi- the contreot h he did not deny iad entered, ntrary to public pol , inoonaistent lawa and wlfare of the State, and, one that ought not to be held bind m- in a cvirl court; and secondly Papal rescript cannot legally be actej countr7 by the ecelseatle or col. which it may be addressed I The to of Queen Elizabeth which, pro= he affrmance or assertion" of any t emanating from the Pope, and Fae effe asked the Court of Qno'e Buench. is statute into force by holding that pt addressed to Cardinal Clleon can dod by the Oardinal as a defence ion for libel l This is a queer thing, say, for a priestof the Catholic Church ho even still professes allogiance in matters to His Holinedd and scknow e binding force of the decrees of the - ouncil; but unfortunately Father has done many other things lust as ud now for the decision of the Queen's these points; but before I mention l n make one more desirable, if not noe digression. I must explain to yo w- member of the Court of Queen's e. They are four in number, as I ready said, and their names are Chief bhiteside, Mr. Justico O'Brien, Mr. Jus gerald, and Mr. Justice Barry. Of e I think . have in previous letters something. If your readers recollect id say about him on wformer occasion, at once perceive the justice of call. a Judge who knows very little about pretends to know a great deal ; who oe loftiest impartiality and the higb Sit for constitutional principles, but is " gros partisan in.any mattealnto Catholic religion or -any kind of ean possibly come. He is a Protestant, ver he can get a rap at the Catholle thlCatholio Cihrob he never nglects uonity. In this O'Keeffe case he habg Jmes trampled on all Judieial decorum ut to bis partizanship. 'Tine aftr has expEassed his horror at what hi pleased to ell " the Iraaneial con Rome" towarda Father O'Keeife Th oe Judges are Catholics; and are at , sadIt believe rightly considered o the superiors as lawyers of the notice. Two of them are absolutely 1 in every case-free from every taint nabip-I allude to Judges O'Brien JoageFitssal d Is impartial, too, political amdIlgious cases. When like a Feoian ease somes before him, eager as Whiteside himself would be a victory per for amt refas for the Govu of England, and he is by no means gilvig a knock to a priest. uhob Judges, what were their.Judgmenta t be expected, Whiteside was on all favor of Father O'Keeffe. He Con at Father O'Keefe had no" power to himself out of his rights-to appeal to of law against his fellow-clergymen contract into which he ontered as ublio policy and inconsistent with macy of British law, and therefore the beginnieg, and could no gainst him by Uardinal Collen that the Cardinal could not resoript giving him authorib od l s to deal with Father O'Kseeffe' oea In fact, he bold the sta4tue of Elisa. these days as binding in this pirtieolar he it was when It was Airt passed. Of his judgment was one of loordinate He likes to hear himself talk and see in print. In some matters, at least, It said thdt his gray hairs coverthe same of common sense as did the oaurl his boyhood. And, of course also, his at was more remarkable for its occa insolence to the Catholic Church and its al flights than for profundity or sound an exposition of legal principles. In nion, it was the weakest and most piti gal argument delivered in recent ys7s e Irish or any other.benoh. Henr le of the nmigled.iusult and rant wsoh ed, and it is the only example wbiebI ve in this letteri " I believe thb attempt here-peesibly from mutives satisfadtory defenudant's mind-is to exempt a nu no ad mI-tlmential clergy from ir.teroourse he civil magiptrate, and to subdue them will of the Church,--o set up,as it were, within the 8tate, and to govern that f, inner State by laws otherthan,.nd in dai~i | position to, the laws of the land; and' Ssame ttoempt, writes Blacketone has b ee in eigab pre by the polftcs of the 2 w rfshef e tla lgu 8a long .aoeesion !of l e; but, notwtht thhe o Ln of pelTr-h Snsi porwer was so deeply id, and t-ou h it ! was pohebed end' plroved'br the" unite.en. a. eave of a bodyof men who engrosstd all the lae Ig of Erop for cent ui.getberso te filed-in t vanisheg Into nothino, wae the I iv- the people were a little enlightened, I c tey ast themnelve wIth right te-. Sit-. 8o vain and ridiculous is te attempt t bia live in sooiety without aqknowledgin p0 •b-. _I- ligatlone which it lays us unnder, -aoteffoect 6 an e tire indepe oene of that- civili"Sute Ii d whie protectseu in all oar ri hts, ad ives a.u every other -liberty-b at only exoeted of o despising the laws of the ommuniny. The C a t other Jdomniral o ar different minad - tr houh they srpo ke befor the Chief Jostiel, - nondty repliedyantiation, efeetdall to hnx o e .. sensoals remros. J 'i h Bunty, Pitsg J i J Bld O°Brit held an Ote Brl ets O ell r contrc•t with- hi. C nl is cot o ahsryl to Spublic aolley, ade I not ddm by t44at. ;r n -that it is a covenant wlica thq ourt. mc Soen and that even o if unuder$ Pather i fo ic e ba wmgfbrd wrongheingrapart ti N SIs own wrong, he cannot oom hatoo it. Of es i Ouorse, Ethey do not at. a.ll I onqure- it t oiI e Snecesary to inquire-whether o e dm suffer.l Z-I Sewr ng. iAll three were emphatic in ezpvesMin wi P their opinion that each a contract coadesed pI 1 e poblio good by preventing spanel 4 h o thby showed that snob. a contract wa&hy no a! Sesaon pecaliarto the Catbolic Churhl Sbidg s + Bary and Fitzgerald, however, did at el w wi . Judge O'Brien in holding that the. Fojp r.e- . arript defence also was valid. Qn th S lpoiut tp r they wire of the same opinion lfftaide. en BNt to my mind thaeir reuasons for. lding to n or thir views on this point, while they eu monte an forcible than Whitesides, re i less so tohan tIe Sthe modern acts o the relief of othe Catholics. ear 7 Thus-to give one of his many illnutratiens- at under the Charitable Bequests and Donations o5 s act, moneyor land, or ol prtoperty lilt to a thc y yof commissiones in trus fir Catholic vies . bi;hop may be, and every year is, piid over b liei the oommileneom to smelt bishop, wh oe ri gt p11 to the property rsasslely on teapst she .that he has been apointed by a apal bull or M-el rescript. I have een no answer to this, ind r tBi can eoneiove one frysl. In this eas, Papat tlo drescript areal gned by the-Btate ntbhori. b Sties; wnhy shold they not be roognied in I. such a matter ad the suspession of • priest for ecr en eeellleiassical eofne But whatis the r- ore suit of all Simply this-that the ease will -at m ge4sjary on the defences held valid by tbe coa majority of the oourt- that -thus Father t O' eee Is beaten. The case will come on snol °Monday next before Chief Justice Whiteside eal and a special jury of the County Dubin, and kill if Jodges Barry, Fitzgerald and O'Brien are will Sright, a verdict most be given for Cardtihl rior unllen. The contract spoken of will be praved; lo the violation of it will be proved; and tbu twa the Jaudge mut direct a verdiot for the Cardi- aga nal. I hear that high ecclesiasltios from Rome this are on their way to give evidence in support doi of His Eminence's ese. wa -I have lef myself no room to-dcy to deal thi ith any other matter, and I don't thinkI gin need apologize for dwelling so long on'this on- te happy Fat or O'Keefe's ease, as it involves . matters and questions of the highest souse- air quoeneo to all Irish Catholics. Imust,how- thin; ever, mention that this week no ]ess than ton betn priestsa of the Deanery of Castlebaor (Arohdt. lo cs of T"um) and nine priests OI the dioese of Aehuonry have joined the Home oale t sdoci- defe ation, cnd in declaring their adhesion to the was National movement have put forth stirring skill mnanifestoes, which are likely to draw lforlth em, similar ones immediately from other Catholic eat a clergymen. J. J. C. was .ay The Character of Lee. m AN ENGLISH OPINION OF THE GREAT COOIEDER bat ATE CAPTAIN. an oe The following review of an article upon Gen, ch R. E. Lee, which appeared in the last number in of the Edinburgh Reriew, is taken from the ' London Standard: ,he der The most interesting, perhaps, of the articles as of an unusually lively number of the Edin n's burgh Review is one reviewing what is, as yet, on about the best life of the great American com Is. mander, and the best account of the war in op Virginia, that has been published, and sketch n's ing the later career and character of Gen. Lee. I That character was, .in a military point of ef- view, so glorious, so full of brilliant achieve Is. ments and of merit more solid than striking, so Of grand a lesson in the art of war and the quali rs ties of soldiership;. that character is, Trorn et every point of view, so admirable in its moral n, grandeur, its perfect implicity, its elose ap II- proach to the highest Ideal of the Christian ut soldier abd gentleman, that it comin ands an ho interest which does not fade with theefading -. memory of s he keen exeitement and often i , donate sympathies of ten yas ago. In'the to story of the Confederate wtr we read lessons of of the highest political moment and of the t, profoundest military signiei eno; in the char aeter of the Virginian leader we have amodel Is of all that a hero of an eulightened and Chris- 1 y tian agebshould be, than whieh nomobler ex ample can be set before thea oath enterisn on the temptations of military life, or the trialq . and perplexities of a great publc career.. i. Wa have also an hstorleal'question of con te siderable-laportanoe prseticaliy selved, tor al i those who are not too prejudiced to aoept.a s, solation which does not sait their forejndged~ e conolusions; by the conduct of such men as y Gen. Lee at the outset of the war. No one man read the story of the soeession movement in - n the doemonts of the time without seeing that; r ,, though slavery was the open sore that kept the passions of North and South ia coesteant irritation, and aforded occsalon for the violent a collisions of Kansas and Harper's Ferry, which precipitated the issue and made its deeision by b any other arbitration than that of the sword a Impossible, it was not the issue itself. Slavery 4 had no plane in the counsels which hurried v I State after State out of the Union; forslavery was the interest of the few, and it was by the many that seceselon was precipitated. The a Southern people reeented Northerd dietation, a Northern assertions of superiority, Northern c i pretensions to an exclusive right i their terri- d toriee, Northern idtermeddliag and Northern invasions, as the meet furious of English dis- a seaters would resent the interposition of flo- b man Catholic Powers in the question of Church O tblishment in England. When thea the in seven Southern States had withdrawn, the a border States which were deeply concerned in the Northern attacks on slavery, still tolon to *4 the Union; Virginia, despite the piratiealin. co vasion of her territory and the miduight rob- to bery and murder passionately sanotioned by o her New England sisters, still refased to soe cade; and only when the trsaehesoes attempt d of the Federal Government to Ainforee the li fort it had promised to evacuate, and surprise vl Charleston with an armed fleet, precipltated " the reluctant sections into war, and when Mr. hi Lincoln forced upon her the choice between tb fighting for Southern freedom and State eights, or Nrttuern ascendancy and Federal despmotisr , did she throw ii her lot with the Coonflerates. O Slavery then was not her deeresisleg otives, la. Slavery made no appearenee in the private on letters of the men who, one after another, went with their States. Its s a remarkable riot, that while'ecores of leading Rirthera I men denounced the war, not astaigle4iether. m er of high otaracter, education aud ufloenoenol deserted the cause of the South. They uni- co versally held that their allegiaune oas dae to eae their native States; and on tbat.groead alose all they threw op career, fortune, fame, ad fee - h- tdoe ' w t e as, p eer of thoer woln un men redshr feuty.' It i absurd to call uol hn- mea rhes ; tney were loyalists tosll that they be/a'd n t- andb tebl to all the prinoipla -f-- gu upi o that " msouet, by threeAmleri t- Gune 4ou o oGen. Rober* 1t. Lee the Pd* it orral atv fee eve tiobn that ambitlio dl aes the dvi4as o(4e0n. Bcots; hem hthava r badehie cmpad the priie of tresuon e to Vitgl. Hiesr feane wreok divided; a d, lrser were on the Federal side; bet as hi so ,eter ow puablished show, hea was onvineed I that his dot war to Virglni. and he decided . *Oconli ugly.. With him went Stonewall Jack t n, the two .bhoalus every Southern soldier Sinlhigh or low command. The cause so a i-s goosed and by sahl mn cannot· have be n f what .lplieh ranters an. i radicals call it. • Good or bed in euenee, it wae so strong in ap i parentJsice that not one man of eharacter S11m. declined to support it. Ita faflure had nothing to do with its alleged I demerit., The louth was erushei by weigS, Sn brke bIws rines, Thre thigp dets. :i naed'tbs e o% e war-the closing of her rlorts6 ~te uv w th, and far above all, s us ov"awbl enig numbers of te seamry. The Wasuthr, o prs-a . waw aR a nannfatetri t -- p, and bd open to hec the mnarkets o | Europe; the bad unlmllted command of all the r soures of the ctvUled world. The South was subject to the disadvantages both of an Sagrionlturalanl non-agrionltral country. She. had no manufawturee, and ydt she lived by manfstre eand not by agriculture; by pro dbeLnaemretin, set byar cimbaogl ood. .er welta wau at oce aMnaihlltCd by the blook | e wwhich preve,ed her from selling her c ot S·,na tobedoo sad sugar; hr supis were and a total want of other necessaries of life andt war. Sheobtained power and arms from th, enemny; boot. and clothe, sad blankets ehe Lhad to waht. Her fnlanes broke down at ;once, for her aexports were her wealth, and ox pests bad ceaed. But, above all, she we crushed by numbers: the North eould reeruit at home four men for one, and eould hire the off-ecouringa o Europe. And it wa this ale I that declded the isue. The edinburgh Re ieeam adds the want of discipline; but we be lieve that IL the essentials of military disi- I pis the Sotherrs were aw eriorto M•cClenrhib:ad bha if the troope of Grant and Mo trtpd asu Lee w -e tried, Shoy woqid have dlike snow t daed like s kott p L won alumst every hattlebe f foruht, nh aginst odds of two to one to four a seone. What destroyed him we. Grant's eeld, cruel pelley-which caly a Fanksq axeifa ora Prussian could have deliberately adopted a 1,rijin men ow ithout stint, whom ne b could replace, mwear out an enemy who could I st morals. Under diaferot eirosastan0es i sucb a process mnight last loougr. But l oral who c afford .to esoriae threeb men to ~ kill one must always end by leaving his enemy withot soldiers; and therefore greaty sups rOr numbers, thus used, must provailin thei long run. It is no longer possible in wars be. ween civilized nations foir proeese to provsil against numerieel odds of great weight. And E this terrible lesson a State liko England would S, do well to lay to heart. This, and this alone, - was the cause of the fall of the Confedere this ie the dark and ainful moral of the Vr se attrin Lee wAgainOt everyiou. bat urest as no weas In war-and surely no cap se- tarn of any age ever accomplished greater ow- things against an enemy of the same race, ten better armed, better provided, and outnmber tie. ug him by two or three to one on every battle s fineld-Ge.. Lee shone greater still in dieseter aoc- defeat ande ruin. Tbhe retreat from Riohmond the wasamse pizeoof moral power and eoldierly ring skill; tie ssurrender wes elevated by its eir nrth cumstanueesnd its spirit intoonsof the grand olic eat and most pathetic seenes i history. Lee c. was srrounded by tenfold numbers; all was lost; but his men were staunch to the la-t, and the temptation "to ride along the lines and give the word and end it all' was stron indeed. He conquered it; he "did his best x for the men who lnra loved and trusted him so long; and he and his soldiers went back to their desolate homes, the ruined citizens of a len, ruined and enslaved country How cruelly hber they were wronged-how shamefully every the pledge given at every stage of the war, on which virtually the Confederates had surren dered, has been violated, our readers know. aes The Republican party clamored for a violation an- of the military capitulations-for the blood of ret, the general who had spared in war to punish I-murder by reprisals sand devasutation byorequi in sitions. Ge. Gral--it is his one title to oh- honor-put down this demand with a high e hand. But he allowed-the Southern people to of be wrourged, oppressed, insulted, pillaged by re- negro voters and Northern adventurers, as so never nation was oppressed and pillagedbe li- fore. Perhaps till hebeame President e had hm little power to prevent it; at all events, he did ant try. Lee saw all this, and yet, with. p- breaking heart, he exerted himself to keep his an people quiet. lie had lost -fortune and home a In the warby.pillage and wanteo destreetion; ne was proscribed; he.declined to draw ven geance on his State by taking open part in her be politics; theoommander-in-ohlefof a national Srmy cendeseended to tbeseontrolof a military e shool, nd to a life of silence antl bsoority. But all Southern eyes were fied on him, and Ihis influence was used to keep them calm and 1 s- patient, and to reattaMh thnm t the Union _- which had conqered and d was crshing them. I Even whfit their wrongs and miseries were were wearing -out his life, he checked eMry a utterance of resentment, every expression of . hope for a future deliverance. We are all 1 A.qrieans now.'" He woult allow no toats Ii a to the Lost Cause, no beones to the Falls , d Banner. He bore its burden with simple, au | affected, patient heroism. Other men may J havp approeched his in war and in achieve u .mens; none capable of deeds like his ever rivaled him in eadurance sad submission adder Shopeless defeat. A Cato would.have fallen on n his sword; a Brutes might have onspire4"; t gHannibal endured only in the hope of revenge and retrieval- But Gen. Lee not oly endured but submitted, and that without suffering hise g country to entertain even the wish to renew the struggle. He had to endure for some a weary years, and then tis release came. The overwrought nerves suddenlyy are way; he esak at once from perfect-se f-8lsession and apparent heaslth into collas and speeohless noes, and died as literally of a broken heart" as ever did despsairig patriot or defeated *el Sdier-more truly far than most "broken heart ed" victims of private grief. So be passed p, Sway from the country he could neither save in by his sword nor restore to happiness by his oouneels, but which he had crowned with glory nc in war and rescued in defeat from useless struggles and deeper Ipisery. He has left be- P bind-him no rivt in her love, no object Pt equal pride and reverenee. Nor is his fame o confined to the South. Wherever the English tb Sonuo Is spoken his name is revered sant a- h ored a name to whioh history furnishes f iw equal in military renown none in moral grn deur; thesaame of one wo realised in actal life the dreams of ideal bchivalry; so grea in victory that none- ever surpassed, so much D greater in defeaft that none ever approaehed an him ; the patriot without a thougla of self, qu theherto WIltlout a-shade of affectation or die- be play; the man who would neither despair of co his country nor conspire against her conq ter ore; Ideal soldier and perfectoltizen, a Christ in with rat pretension, nd agenclteman with, out a flaw. . . . It is Beletet of Mark ?wain that few r mee s'after hieAret baby waes era, he was holding it on his knee: Iits wife said. " Now coufss, S*m-jet, that yen love hse abild'' " " E oaU't do that," replied the humorist," but Klam as willing to admit tlto I respeet t4e little thblg Inu fee is fatker'saake." be. S a. wm .Rll .the Zamer weg3 A y The selleitors of te Empress BEgene Savo e os to the daily pePer fovr publir O tioa o O PJ e e of the i·te Epero 'wpoples Swhi h the following is a traslation: of ,"Tas s 5My Wux.. " I ommend my son and'my wifeih to the n high oesstituted eathberitie of the Slat.(hex " grand orh m ea i'Etat to the people,. od the army. Th mpresurgengoe posseses all the Iqurlite reqalislte foe tmeecting the Reitemy i well,and my son displa a daposit on aa. Judgment which will render him worthy of his r nigh destinlos. Let him never forget the mot to of the hood of onr familly 'l! t: ethe a French people.' Let him fxl in his mind' the writiU of the prisoner of St. Helena, let him etdy o _Emperor' deeds ad orrespond.ee, in order that he may remember that, whea oir oumatanoes so permit, the caumoe of the peoples is the couse of F" os. S"Ponwer is a heavy burde, because we can-. got always do all the good we could wish, and b..esas our eotemporartes seldom render as we must have in ourseelte fith lld the con seloounme of our duty. It is necessary to con sider that, from sheaven above, theoe wnbo you have loved regard and protect you. It is the spirit of my great unle that has always Snsiplred and oetaLhod me. It will be thus with my so, for he will always he worthy of his name. "I lave to the Empress Eugenie all my pri. vate property. It is my desiro that on the ma Jeityi of my son she shall inhalbit the Elysee "' I trout that my memory wjli be dear to help and that after my death she will forget the griefs I may have cauoed her. "; With regad to my son, let him keep. as ta-li.sman the eal I used to weer attached to my watch, and which comes from my mother lt him earefully preserve everythig ai mes tome from the Espesor my uncle, and let him be convinced that my heart and my spirit remain with him. I make so mention of 5y fIithful servants. Ir am n ·nnAL.; a mt I k oe mo metion of my faithful servants. SI a.m convinced that the Empress and my son i will mever abandon them. - !' I shall die in the Cathelto, 4pstole sand I- Rman religion, whigh my son will always oI onor by hin PeL. "h LpOe.y 1" Dome, written and signed with my hand e atthe palace of the Tutleres; the twenty | feouth April, one thousand eight hundred and r sixty-Ave. (Signed) " NAtorzsox." The solieitore state that the estate hae been sworn under £120,000; but thPt this sum ia subject to elaims which will reduce the amount actually reeived.by the ad mitnitratrix to about one-half ef the sain named. The Morning Poet states that " Without penetrating Into the privacy of lives upon which it would be indeeent .to ldtrude, it may be stated, in general terma, that the Empress has a moderate patrimony en SSp in, which, owing to the distracted state of that eeuntry, shares in the terrible de prelcation of all Spanish property. Somea email Italian estates, and the Chateau of Arenberg, which stands in some ecore acres of land, make up the residue of the posses sion of a family which eeas thus deseended from Imperial fortunes to revenues that must be cereflly husbanded to meet the exigeneies of ordinary life and the require ment of personages against whom a thous and olaims are constantly preferred, and who must find it hard to say' No! ' when like the King of Spain of old they hab bhea'leught up ever to say ' ieI' ' At-te time of the Imperial marriage it wan proposed by the Senate, to settle a dowry on the Empress, but this was de clined by the Emperor on the ground of hia ample allowance'; and it will be re membered that when the city of Paris of- p fered a present which would in itaelf have been a dower, the Empress requested that an orphonage might, instead, be founded with the moody. By that institutfon, up. I wards of 409 orphan girls are now provi-| 'WHAT Sn ..L WE Do Wrrl OuR DAUGUTEsR ? We publish these sensible suggestions, clipped from an exchange, for the benefit of the paren tal portion of our readers: Bring them up in the way the should go. e mie them a good, substantial, common eda Teach them how to'cook a good meal of vic tuals. Teach them how to darn stockings and sew on buttons. Teach them how to make their own dresses. Teach them how to make shirts. 3 Teach them how to make bread. Teach them all the mysteries of tine kitchen. the dinng-room and the parlor. b Teach them that the more. onu lives withbi Sbf'income the more he will save. Teach them that the further one If ves beyond his inoome the nearer he gets to the poor-bouse Teach them to wear calico drsee-nd d it likes aseen. STeach them thataround roy rop ep t sioh em 'to wear thick warm shoes. Teach them that-God made them in nie owi image, and that aimount of tight lacing wil Improve the modoe. Temn them, every day, hard, praotieal, coo mon osense. Teach them self-reliance. Teacoh them that a good, steady mechanel ithout a oent, is worth a doses oily-pase loafers in broadcloth. Teach them to have notblg to do with in. tomperate and disolnte young men. Teach them acoomplishmenus- music, paint. ing drawin~-if you have the time and money to do it with. Teaeh them not to paint and powder. Teach them to say no, and stick to it; or yes, and stick to it. Teach them to regtrd the tmorals, not the money of their beasx. Tar Naw CowLopp I$BOUEIT PFo Wars PoerT.-In the Her of yesterday morn ing a telegram from Fortress Mooroe an nounced that Congressman Platt, of Vir ginia, had nominated George Washin~oa Philips, a colored boy, as a cadet for-West Point. Th fasts of the anomisation are as follows ; All the boys who bhad aeeaeed their nloention to ompete for the cadet ship were sammoned to attend the eompe tltive re-ezamination, which was held at Norfolk. The examonation, aWhlch was sompettive, was presided ov* by Judge Dorman. Phillips who was born a lave, and who-has oyl Leets fre years in ,a quiriog bis edteatieo, carried every thieg before him and distanced all the other cqaipetitors. ie got the highest nmarks i spolibng, grammar and history, sad io matshematics acquitted himslef so well that the examiners weee greatly astonished. Mr. Plats had of oarse no-resource bat to give hie the neminatioe; and he did so wtllolgly believang that it was deserved. --Ptorn ll New York Herald. Sincerity id speaking as we think, believing as we premend. acting as we peofels, perform log as we premyre, and belog as we appear to be. S. MIC L 1ADVRTnSEIRTrs. I of the the ot Mn-. PURELY VEGETABLE o-LIVin.L DICIN ha proved to be th .• GREAT UNFAILING SPEIFICO " " YSP te,,, 0--.,.,, J le n 1 `j.{ bu "--esof" l peo nu-r . o THE PREPAi eD. p- a liquid ir of STMMONS LVZR RZUGLATOR enr itor wCirthl ad ~rla pvrorl ONE DOLLAR BOTTLE& 1 her Thwpowd, (prloe as bhelch).......S o per pc e. .....he o o o.at...byma.t............. P CAUTION. O.," .o S J. . I EILIN & CO., y useoa , O., a. Philadelphia. GOLD BY ALL DRIVG@Iua u. -GU.K~ 0BED 12 CINCHO-QUININE' y. aods. aljalblidtarh DtO. Platabe Toie rp a 1ioaietr " wink bmI3 uabg tm ilH. SP nLLM IAN, o ey enel rr aa d Appeer. d .t ooEmD TD CEIR.Pm. [ L Ta * 93.. ........ Bomno. ••e t..........9_ d byGroranoDr madAier.wer Tses w79l heea meo ns hRaee en Tuswt etatD d ie circelar. R0el 73le Giy l s $ARACENA LIPr BITTERS. TRADE WARMA 0K. s1kownT aNrJor LIFE SAERACZNIA LIFE BITTERS o Lalterative sad toalo to Oeoummate thie C alike experteace tert heoaycia Ioasee. 7thounada tigginy tha the flaraeala to the qaimT ieen for purlf og and regulating ihe Sold and sotrengtkh- t C Dl, J08EPH TUCKER, Proprietor, ioldody Grocers aod Druggist. everywhere, SCHMIDT A ZNIOLZE TOR F*ZDEXXCSON & LBTS 87 5 ma 74 y iaDuEsouN a H1BRTW, 0el5 79y )New Orle.as. HARDWARE-STOVES-COOPERAGE. G. PITARD, HARDWARE, GRATES, AI'wr-, O. .T17oPUNTIN R .WAhLL PAPER. WINDOW GLASS, Etc. 349 .......... Commoh Street ............ 4 mpag 73 I V Nm 0saw.,.. Vhe J. 8. AIEN & S • ON 1...... TOsOUtoo7Ls iThrar......... DEALERS IN HARDWARE, ire, Sea. Copppe BrasL. and, Galveale.4 ik rme Lee m aa enm. altsema.e -_sethe vth -,e u. e' ,w.,e,.. ,,,Mraim-A~q aieuver. te head Em thu PROFU SIOrAL CARDS. G. " r8nm1CN, DENTAL SUROGEON., 16..........S t. Charles Street .......... * 73l _1 carore. W.. r&axsrsa, ATI RNEY AT LAW, 0 ..............Camp treet..............0 del 7t ly Ower the Gemnaais lek. A.... o--..... T..... ANDRZW STE'S. OM epetl mestUe to selag eate aam ral 6et. Ar Ase Teeth laeared with r wiEest esaemsmse • Joa r Parc~ . Htarr Ps erUx a, M.. reoe. rese whMla te reskea Pall. . Teeth eae.Tid withe-s ue'. g as'e IF FASHIONABLE HA? AND .CAP ETOPm 1.79...........Poydras Street..._....... iw ee !t. SICharlee and Ceesdele.4, New *kL.. s helale.et sdple. Ae Huk d Rat NiX' M TAN ufACT 5?y SJors PmE. Pmuct rroc n HAri., I.ee...... ..«... H.ARM, eA ..Le ..IwJ ...... arpu Suuti eted, Aso hde.a 7 M a~ ltl gaeude~ Ia alE erdera. Keepe s. ettaa rsmhDep. ewA tuy f h a myuMli £7. hpT~srdy .yss BOOS AND STATIORany. JANUARY 1, .IM3. IVISON, BL.AEuAN, TLILoa & g0. to the following NEW BOOKS. I. swINwosa woa OK oo o@r sara e I. AN XL3E33,AUy Y"»AL hr MA-"A -,,Ad.a born -,t aUin,. 3. sPeCi3tazA BAWIxo Noo.s. 4. ~MBLS AMONGO WORD8. or Lonuta- uokp. A14b.. W n. , •g TIUMTTBY MOBOwv, '' umN. NmeU , Jew I. ii ieisri. ------------ 4 CIITERN MAKERS. * Ta . lsrlir ' ii VARIETY WOOD WOR' · Ou ANDWP~r 104...Bs Jamaph &nwr...b. taw Oa&Usua. ~ mb rur - awl Yye u ri1 Camraut lt l pi1 lains x. 3.-Dams hab, 3ar nabJ OPeml4aiamd ta order. kyle 7333r .3.2. ....8la· Sm... ._ U Dawma. Camp mad aggiºw Odiama.; ,L mmu ok Yý 1li m' ý· " "' p. ta U11ý R IFPL;~ 187 DiZONl gf r. >A. 3PRRAYVs CISTZERN M[AK* - 191 1bagamI A l ,ýlCaaM Mi O a. (Uatwmauaamiaýýýr, A~ll~ ~/K1 U M6 wa wn wa ta . IN~d1Maa l1M11111ý$S ;ý WIDDIRTAKRS-suILDuxm.-.Ppý f A. 8. OULZ., HOUSE AND ULGN PAMnhr, s Shop, lý 3 amSpL, beOL .oS ad e y. er." enUd, Gaeu. e . W.3i. -t; REMOVeS ALL , L fU Ct UIrg an Ureas t nsm" etalUo C..eae med. Ceakeat o mU lab. )seweee. Satanay amd Pltea C Bedim embamed, dat .tear d mad 0fII" pei. Ped.,d bplym P- 05ed dvo M Peswemts ee*_. Maw Odebma CARPENTER AND BUILDER, M1 Caroadelet street, Box eOS Mchatoe lzOaep New Orleans. Jobbing promptly attended to. .. .esl 2I1 JOHN GRTAR PROPf r UTON O o Fielde ettuet, . pe. Cet etrmla .. l e. e. ,M1. aet. U l . .] a, . fP.o _ l .1aeT.. I, 1 dafe lertd t.5t Nest --e TO~nrr r~rr o ~~ STEAMSHIPS. STATE LINE STEAMSHIP COMI[PANY L2L IT D. - lUSANA ISIeS N.lbe 5..~ q A ur~lr.g..........Q5 )Vý+1.01. tt;f........ au ulr rettrord'r shw tt ºr D« '00 l~illp.0. , 1..tt.. (rr.l tr" tm. lt.. aia . .1.... tl-. K 1I -tI1. Lrp OI ~p1 eIP a.1. ir~~til ~hlb as owwd0. N.tw..& fw tk. QU 1 Ov./s M..OL f i.r Ir..atr. ~pCI b1 l"" . W -*Wat oil"brlY r3 ~Y LDrtIONA URNI ALL 5t3A YW sq m sal.4bst t itir 4Zmr 1be Ein W"stpes.* ebt.peb . as Detes k T..kX QUNNUW sd lIYb POOL 1srhb tiuin E~srep --- DinL~ willeI mje be lb Cli Osa.We ases1&.4 lleet sademI p ry1.i 1U..meLaUI Caak .rss .... V55 Z OLDno1.. Tro ESlhLIUw4.. NULLdv ...OuN C:e.: . .I. Nbe l'sbsw xs . IDULLS are~b shie hLw bes mad aesbi ml .btI. bmm1 lu Geesi. tis ~rhu is r. whm.I rd is ssa