Transcript
  • THE FEEEMAK.

    BIT WILLIAM COOPER.

    He is the freeman whom the truth raakea'free.And all are slaves beside. There's not a chainThat hellish toes confederate lor Ids barmcm Trtnd around him, but he casts It offWita ai much ease as Samson his irreea wita.He looks abroad Into the i aned fleMof nature; and, rrMlWrejWit U tW whose miSons Flitter in hU eight.Call the scenery alt Wmo.His are the mountains, and valleys hli,And the resplendent rivers. His to enjoyWith a proprietr thatnoae can feel.But ho, h Ollal confldence inspired,.'.in lift to heaven an unprcsumptlous ee, m-- My faiherma'le them all .And emiline say,Are they not his bv a peculiar ri?hr.And bv an emphasis of Interest Ms,

    nose eyea they nil w ith tears of hoi? JoyWhose beart ith and whoso Malted mlnWith worthy taoncht of that er'??a10That planned and mult, and still w orldSo clothed win beautv f.r rebellions man!Ves, ve may ml Ycurjr.rr.

    --3, ye that reapThe loaded soil, and n. th aste much p kuIn senseless riot ; ba1 -- not Andlnfeafctorlnthetfca- - oaff ordauce,AUhertrlitehU, wij wnupeachedOf usurpation, and 10 t :ins wrong.Appropriates nature as hs Father's or! ,And has a richer as..: jvu. than you.He is indeed a freeman. Free by birthOf no mean cttr, planned or e'er the lulUWere built, the fountains opened, or the seaWith all his roartnii mniatudes or waves.His freedom is tie same in every state ;And no condition of this changeful life,so manifold In cares, w hose e ery dajBrings 1U own evil ith it. makes it less.For he has wmps that neither slcltness, pain,Nor penury can cripple or confirm ;No 1100k bo narrow but he spreads them thereWrtU case, and is atlarje. Ihe oppressor holdsHis bodv bound ; but kjjows not what a ranjcHis spirit takes unconscious of a chain ;And that to blind him is a vain attempt.Whom Cod dcllfhrs in, and In whom be dwells.

    inter Hornirg Wall.

    50 K02E.n iw did Love sleep? The sweet mocn saik J

    la TObes of dasiy ROld last night,rotUter tender cloryra'-e-- l

    Before the ruddr dawn ofLove lay enshrined la bridal bon crs.

    And kissed the sweets that come ana cFro in jar-c- flcUi from all the Cowers

    Th.it L!cnr.

    Hjw did Lore wake ? The early beamsHa J pierced the rose leaf w here be slept.

    And, rls Off from his perfumed dreams,Into the dewy world he leapt,

    SiEsiEg soared upward Into light-- For dav is but a little pain.

    And ttcn'U nijrM with sortdcli;!itAsalal"

    S Lore relumed when twilight fell.And fonnd hi- - flowers apte. dead ;

    Tne ijueiJily rose he ot ed so ellLav lu hi anus i ith drooping head ;

    'Ah.'LoreyshecrJed. -- thy ktpws tmtnFat Uralh Las chilled my Lps before,

    1" Live cuce 2ies he may return"o rcore ?

    Tinilctfa X'ajai.'n.-- .

    What a English EadiMl Thlato.CEOEOE JACOB HOLTOAEE OS ITI3 VISIT TO

    AHEEICA.

    F.om the C:mury.AftprnUIhailrcad.orlioarJ.it eocdi

    el to me that there were great features ofsocial mo there nnregarded or

    Sew York itself is a rairnclewhich a large Iwofc would not be sufficientto explain, when I stepped asuore mereI thought I was in a larger Rotterdam;vha I fecti hit war to Broadway, itseemed to ine as though I was in Pans,and Hat Taris had taken to l.usmesa.There were rjuaintness, grace, and gav-et-

    brightness and grimncss all about.Broadtraj I thought a Longway, for niyfirst invitation in xt was to Xo. 1,135. Myfirst days in the city were spent at Xo. 1Broadway, in the Washington hotel, al-lured thither by its English military anddiplomatic associations, going back to thedav3 when an Indian p was possi-ble in Broadwav. At that end yen oredazed bv a forest of tall telegraph poles,and a clatter by night and day that nopathwar of p'andcinonium could rival.Car bells, omnibus tolls, dray-hors- ebelli!, railway bells, and locomotives inthe rir were resounding night and day.An engineer turu3 eft his steam at yourbedroom window. Vhen I got up to seewhat was the matter, I found engine Xo.C9 almost within reach of my arm, andthe other 03 had been there that morningbefore I awoke. When one day at a v

    junction I heard nine train bellsbeing rung by machinery, it rounded asthourrh disestablishment Lad occurredand all the palish churches cf Englandwere being imported.

    A wholesome distinction of America isthat indnstry alone is universally honor-able there, and has good chances. Thereare no common people there, in the En-glish sense, hen speaking in the Coo-per institute, Xcw York, I wa3 remindedthat the audience would repent leing soaddressed. Every laan in America feelsas though he owns the country, becausethe charm cf tecognized equality and thegolden chances of ownership haveentered his mind. He is proud of thestatues and public buildings. The greatrivers, the trackless prairies, the regaluountaius, all seem Lis. Even tho steep

    cUibs tones of New York and Boston,which brought me daily distress, I wasasked to admire for eome reason yet un-known to me. In England nobody saysto the visitor or foreigner when he firstmreta him. What do vou think of England ? Tho pjople do not feel that theyown .t1atp aaTen?ible con,

    rtrol over it Tne country is managed bysomebody else. Xoteven the membersof parliament know when base treaties aremade in the nation's name, and dishon-oring wars are entered into, which thelives and caruingsof their constituents maybe confiscated to sustain. All that our re

    can tell us is that that isan affair cf the crown. In America thereis no crown, and the people are kings, andthey know it I had not landed on theAmerican shores an hour before I becameaware that I was in a new nation, anima-ted by a new life which I had never seen.

    If young Englishmen could be sent acouple of ycar3 to take part in Americanbusiness, they would como back muchimproved. An eminent English professor,whom I lately asked whether it would notdo this country good if we could get ourpeers to emigrate, nnswered : "No doubt,if you could smarten them up a bit first"Everywhere in America you hear thoinjunction, ''Hold on!" In every vesseland car thero are means provided fordoing it; for unless a man fulls upon hisfeet if ho does fall he finds people to to

    isincommoUon. America airFreedom or

    a

    the bewilders therethey

    whitenewcomers,season

    trving eccentricity canri-- n

    as liberty growshabit, by 'espcrimnitcrs

    become .f the duty ofthe precious possesion

    making it repulsive. IVilmps f assertionseems little execan interna-

    tional requirements. "citizens"give stranger impression that they

    themselves equal supe-riors, superior their ; yetall ara monlir thrT Will 1.1be through ambition cacli beequals anybody else.

    effect American inspiration onEnglishmen ftnkingly evident Imet workmen in whom hadknown formcrycars in England. They

    no longer the same men. Theroemployer pitokc to

    them, and v jitm. rather glad,hn i-- f lb. enrmiiimi&itioii Tould

    lelate'to a rt Jueticn of wages. Theythought it hardly prudent to look fore- -man or oeraxr in ine iace.more genial, as rule, these days ; but

    when I visited theseworkmen homes ia Lancashire it

    entered heads to intro-duce me to their employers. Hut whenI met them America pro-posed introduce me the mayor

    city. This mo very ;for when they were in England they

    not havc introduced me to re-lieving officer of their parish, with anyadvantage to me, had I to know hiin.These ehll workman, they

    introduce me as "a friendtheirs"; man-

    ner, as one gentleman would speak toanother, said, "They shouldobliged would showfeatures of the city." The would

    uo.order his carriage, and tbJ,ri-v-c nlfiocint i )av I mo in owwrplace interest this hour I do

    whom I wondered at menor mayor. In somo places the mayorwas himself manufacturer, it apleasure to sec that asproud cf the mayor as they were of

    impetuous Americans be,they have great grace of patience

    listen An Ameri-can audience anywhere gatherc-- togethermake the most court ous listeners 111 theworld. If a speaker ha3 giftmaking himself, nowhere haso complete an opportunity of doing itIf the good fortune to be

    obviouslysome humble way, him,

    to to information, they comoafterward congratulate

    Parimn csurtcsy. At Washington,I spoke at request Musscyand Major Ford, and Cornell Univer-sity, at where the requestthe acting president, Prof. W. O. Rus-sell, I addressed students on

    of Cooperative Commerce," theregentlemen ladies present who

    knew more of than I did aboutanything; yet they conveyed to mo

    I had in some addedto their information.

    lltntTfIftf fit rtfIfVOL. TjTV. ISEW SERIES, VOL. XXVII.

    ADSICULTUSAL.

    EXStLAOC IX VERMONT.

    Mr.Gilbertpiorton, Esses,Vt, writesthe Country Gentleman, on ques

    tion ensilage, as follows :It is amusing skeptics pitch

    Dr. Bailey because he is in ad-vance for reform. I find farmers arequite old fogyish. I have no doubt ofDr. Bailey's success, and I believed inMr. Morris' statement last aboutearthen Bilos or trenches ; I proved itmyself last winter. 1 wrote iaiieyas'soon as I saw his in your paper,and he kindlv sent directions which I amfollowing, and have wall of a silonearly completed, long, 10 feetdeep VI feet wid with partitionwall across in the centre, giving twosilos. I get work douo for 45 centsperch. The masons haul the fetone

    au lue mason piasienug, point-ing excavating,

    I have seven acres of corn planted ;somo it is now tasseling out Some ofmy farmer friends silocrin at what old sea captain is doing :

    I have a little mule sense, nnd, byhaving two small silos, I can fill as mycorn comes to maturity, lou see

    will be a cheap silo. I onlyone, as far as I know, in vicinity thathas commenced ; they all tell mowill watcii mine mis winter, ami 11 i d

    they will try it nest year.In the seven acres corn I have plant

    ed I have all work myself, ex-cept two days plowing. I have a large1,31HJ pound maro mat uoes au re ail

    up. hen the plow would strike astone 1 swear ; now I outGreek testament and read passage.(With all my farm work I have foundtime to little Latin and Greek.)I have thirteen cows, raised eight calves,and sowed five ncrci of oats. I am nowcutting and feeding thein cowscorn is larger.

    1 have inst done Iisvmrr. cutting about35 tons, all the help 1 have had isbov old. I years old ;only four years ashore ; '15 sea ;got health by coming up oldhomestead and going to work ; no head-aches now ; I wa3 as happy in mylife homeward bound. I have some cornprocured of Dr. Bailey, which is bestI Laie seen, and you shall know howmuch it produces the acre.

    r.LIERTi:RRYU!SCTune ithe pride of I'uclith

    housewives, and we have often regrettedsee enormous quantities of berries

    going traste in because peopledo not understand how turn them toaccount Elderberry w ice i muchiu manufacture" or adulteration ofport wine. It is, however, a very whole-some wine, when properly made, whichis more can for other materials used m process of adulteration.

    as the manner in which eldeiber-r- ywine is prepared: To one gallon

    water put two quart. f ripe elderber-ries. Boil for half an hour ; then strainthrough hair sieve or canvas bag, and

    cverv frallou of Honor add three poundscoarse eugar and i ounce of mixed

    cloves, cinnamcn and ginger. Let it beboiled again for fully half an hour, andas the scam rises remove it When cool-ed proper temperature is,when lukewarm fennejjt withyeast on a piece of toast it stand iuthe tub three or four days, covered overwith n cloth : then put into the cask.with one pound of raisins to each gallonof wine. The venting of the cask must

    loose. When fermentation haswholly ceased, rack off the w ine into another cask, taking care to leave out anyseuimeni. in uumg tac caaK into wnicn

    wine is first put, see that wine isnot highertlian three or inches oftop. When fermentation has ceased, putiu the bung ; but do not tighten it, andremove occasionally for a days.Then drive in the bung, cover withbrow n paper pasted over tho bung, tokeep it perfectly air tight Some add aquart brandy the contents ofcask, but this 13 not essentia. JFn two

    U3cu it oe mulled. ouerve,berries must bo perfectly ripe, and shouldbe gathered whn dry. As some ourreaders may wish to elderberrywine when the arrives, we hopethey preserve the foregoing direc-tions, and so save any necessity for re-peating them. Wine is also mado fromelder flowers. Irish Farmer 8 Gazette.

    CA5XTSQ GREEN CORN'.

    following receipts are copied fromthe Country Gentleman :

    I. Boil corn on cars for a fewminutes ; then cut corn off the earswhile as hot as you can ; corn

    ; have the can almostfull, within s of anof top ; then tho can up withboiling water, and have tho can soldered,and put it into a of boiling water, andlet it boil in for six hours.

    II. To every six quarts of corn, takeoue of tartaric acid dissolved inboiling water. Cut the corn from thocob, and put in sufficient quantity of wa-

    01 tartaric acid 111 one half pint of water ;cut com from the cob nnd rook itproperly ; w hen cooked add two table- -spou fills of the acid solution to everyquart 01 com ; can and keenrely,and set in cool, dry place. Whenwented for u, stir half a tea?poouful ofsoda into two quaits com, and let itstand three- hours before cooking.removes all acid from com.

    MAMMOTH BRONZE TLIIKEYS.TI "it t n V r' iv f

    tinkers with those who raihe for market,on account their Urge nizii and hardilit ss. They also chfdlengo the admira-tion of all by theirs cry attractive plnm-age-

    rich and changeable colors. Thcock turkev in full feather is reallv bril- -liant la appenrnnre, and the females areonlv a. little b'H ImhuIiiii). All of theexjTi.-n- our breeders has been jbrought to loar upon thn brouzo turkevwincn naa rcKimcu 1:1 tneir very mgustate of perfection ; for this rc:t.tn auvone purchasing thoroughbred bronzeturkeys may feel confident that certainfiled characteristic qualities re-produced in their offspring. weight13 greater than the common stock, andone Reason's breeding than payfor the increased cost originally. Adultturkeys will average from fiO to 40pounds ; hens from 1 pounds ;young gobblers at eight moutns, from

    3 toi!. pounds ; young hens, from 13 to15 iwund-i- tnvo these aa fair

    weightrf, although they are frequent-ly adult pairs of from 13 COru"us ihjl uucoiminjM. tcbronze are rood layers very hard v.but the hrn, if full grown, for hree-dm-purposes, fhould not weigh over 35pounds. runnera Marasine

    CAN A WOMAN TELL 7

    MB3. IS. 1.llf told me liU lore thH

    With LU lcir hao'l clasping mine;And he Paid, "Oj'1 Bpeed the dawning

    When, 1 iny calltliee mln."lint wy food licart sotUj,

    Though lotlnjr him line and well.Will .m love oullifl all chuwej I

    Alii how can a ntiiuan ti'117When the years Khali hriair thtir

    And the eartrs the luins outweig.tThe Jys in the luile liojseliojd.

    As Uiitrht lirurc t lay.Will the hand that hadlitld mine fou Ky,

    When inald lily 111As earnestly shield fioni fhitowT

    Ah1 how tan a woman tell ?When tin lh cry threads are creeps

    Tliroah my iics-h- one by oueWht-i- line my jontti and beautr,

    As limiiy n v, de hui don ;Will Iih ie mine an truly

    As in nin ry delllie give me his trusted promlnc?

    Aii I how can 4um4ii tell 7I glance at my waiting,

    II111 eyea lit are Icar and true ;'l nlll mte lilm,"mv sayaiiladly,"I will trust Mm the wide world tbrttuifli.'

    I w In to him i'yj ami omfort,I will all other n ivei excel,

    I will keep blrn with love's sweet -Tats may oman tell '

    the trunks of a leading Vicks-bui-belle wero deosited at the wharf of

    that city the other day, a bootblackexclaimed, "Cole's circus done como ntlar.t

    busy to stop and pick up. Th na- - cook, vwienui corn iscooting,tion Life iu is Pt tao acid in. hen done, seala battle and a march. has set tigW in tin cans glass jars. Topre-th- e

    race on dom with the proa--1 P for toUt Pur off B0Ur terit put m enough fresh waterAmericans ;pect of property. ore ati-- of men who have their own way, and to cook it ; for every quatt of adddo very with it It is the only coun- - one small teaapoouf ul of soda ; let ittry where men are men iu this sense, and BtfJ mmut?s beforc cooking;

    nnusualness cf the liberty wlllIc cooking, put m a leaspoonful ofmany who do wrong things in order bo aS. If the turns yellow, is

    are free to do something. This too much Bcda ; pour back soma of theerror is mostlv made bv to WQter until it turns again,whom freedom is a novelty; and it is only When nearly done, with salt,by that they test butter, same asfresn com.

    Vw Iitiimntml r.t iotr nnnor t,f ! HE DlPSOJVP OI1C ftlld a Oliaiter OlinCY'SIlut Into

    a one one thoconscious not

    betraying by

    a in cfMany

    a thedo think to their

    and to equalsr tliAm Hian

    the of tocf

    The ofwas

    many cities Iin

    weietheir t ldom mover

    thr 11 wtre

    aPiasters are

    a inin the days last

    at theirnever into their

    in they instantlyto to of

    the surprised mueh

    could the

    needmen were and

    did to the mayorof and in an ccy, confident

    they beif he me the civic

    mayordo with

    rni nVoof To not

    know most thothe

    a and wastho men wero

    thecity.

    Howeveroue

    they like gentlemen.

    only the ofa fool cf ho

    he has butmoderately interesting, nndtries in natural to

    add their tohim and him with

    whereIhe of Gen.

    inIthaca, at of

    the "Moral-itieswere and

    every thingtheir

    impression that

    of

    to thecf

    to hear thethe

    year

    JJr.letter

    the58 feet

    and amo

    the aand

    do wont,and

    oflook at my and

    thobut

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    thethey

    ofdone tho

    my ning

    used to take mya

    stud' a

    to until

    and a12 years am CI

    years atiay to the

    never

    the

    to

    Eldeiberrv

    to theto Ireland

    toused

    the

    than bothe

    Xow toof

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    to the thata little

    Let

    be tho

    the theour the

    it fewand

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    ofmake

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    The

    the thothe

    put the atonce into the cans

    say inchthe fill

    canthe water

    ounce

    the

    seala

    ofThis

    tho

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    will beTheir

    will inoro

    1 to

    We average

    exceeded, to

    and

    nOW

    KIDDER.

    mornliifr.

    sneft

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    Vihva the

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    magi.much, a

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    said

    Itest

    GZHEBAL SUHHAR7.

    A Clare Morris, Gal way, depatcli mvs :It has been reported that Mr. Lewii., a jus-tice of the peace, lias been fired ut whilereturning houic from Tuam. Three bulletsstruck him in the breast, hut without t.vail,as he wore a coat of mail.

    The Aurora at Rome anocunces tl.e t rmation of anew association for collidingmoney for the necessities of the Pope Theamount of daily tribute demanded firm allCatholics being one centime, or six s ut permouth.

    A mechanics in Paris, aged 2G yean, con-demned to four years' iinprisonn tut atCusano, Italy, has starved himself to deathin thirty da-s- .

    The Cincinnati chamber of commerce liasappointed a committee to investi.t thecensus returns cf the city, the btllef havingbeen expressed that mistakes have beenmade, and that the returns are too small- -

    The official statement of imports and ex-ports of specie shows that lastyear the netimports of cold amounted to 77,153,321, alarger gain than ever before in the history ofthe country. The United States c?.prtcdmuch more silver than gold.

    The marriage of Lady Bunktt-Coutl- s andAshmcad Bartlctt will take place on Tuesdayat the chapel royal. Savoy.

    The Grand Trunk railway receipts for thewct'k ending August 7 show an increase of

    01,000 as compared with last year.A person who formerly stood very near

    to (Jen. Grant says the latter will ulce nonotice of McDonald allegations tn t. Idsconnection with the St. houis whiskey ring.

    Under recent effcrts made by the treasurydepartment a lively demand for standardsilver dollars ha3 sprung up all over thecountry. From the South there is a constantdemand for fractional silver to be used inpaying off the cotton pickers.

    A Paris despatch says : A mass of laithfell Wednesday and crushed two houses atVicuxoort. near Pertiers. Ten bodies havebeen recovered and ten more are said to beunder the ruin. The fall of earth was occa-sioned by an immense landside, which des-troyed some large lime kilns.

    The United States Consul at Guaymas informs the department of State that work onthe Sonora railroad is progressing favorably,and it is expected the line will be opened asfar a3 Ilermasillo by the first 01 next March.The enterprise has so far been cordially sup-ported by the Slate and municipal authori-ties, and the road will probably give animpetus to the mining industries, severalpurchases of mines by United States capital- -isis arc said 10 tie now in contemplation.

    Jack Ince had iust fitted up his saloon atArkana. Texas, with a fine black walnut bar.Tom Doly, a desperado, took a drink at thenew counter an lieau to carve his initialswith a bowie knife mi its polished surface.Ince protested without avail, and then

    Doly to stop. Tm going to cutthis bar or you, and I don't care which," wasthe retort. Vou won't do lither,' saidInce, and shot the bull' dead.

    A large monument wa3 recently erectedover the bodies of the murdered Spencerfamily at Kahoka, Mo. Iu dedication withelaborate ceremonies, drew together 50,000persons, so great had been the excitementover the crime. Bill Voting, a notoriouscriminal, although acquitted by a jury, washung by a mob for the crime. His lastwords were: I am as innocent of thisthing as the angels; "but the leader of thelynchers replied: "You're a good man tohang, anyhow." His wife now sues thecount' for 10,000 damages.

    It is stated that the South Carolina censusreturns, as returned by tho enumerators,show a gun of 184,14?, or more than thirty-fiv- e

    per centum since 1870. The Republi-cans are preparing to maintain that these re-turns are fraudulent. The county of Ker-shaw is returned a having increased eightyper cent in ten jears. The Republicans ofSouth Carolina allege that they will be ableto prove in ten days that the entire census ofthat county is a fraud, and that the growthof the county Ins been backward lor the lastfifteen years. A similar analysis is makingof the returns from other counties.

    A despatch from Paris savs: "BaronHarden Hickcj', editor of Le Trlloutett ex-pelled from France for political offences",though an American by birth, has madeFrance his adopted country, and possessesconsiderable property in and around Paris.He was. however, not naturalized as a citizenof France, and therefore the authorities

    wiTTT

    them to expel any foreigner. Le Tribovlttwill not cease to exist "The French press,except the government organs and a few

    journals, loudly protest against sucha attack on its rights and

    The charge that there can be no free polit-ical discussion at the South receives addi-tional proof if any were needed by theexperience of Mr. J. II. Randall, a Green-back orator, who went to Alabama and Mis-sissippi, for the purpose of making campaignspeeches. Mr. Randall now narrates thestory of h'i3 at the hands of aSouthern mob at a political meeting. At ujoint discussion to which he had been invit-ed, at a place called Shuhuda, Miss., theDemocratic speaker was given the prece-dence, and during the course of his remarks(as Mr. Randal ccrtiflcs) he said

    "The Confederacy still exists, my friend,and Jeff Davis, the best friend we ever had,i3 yet our President and devoted to our in-terests, and if Hancock U elected, and wehave no doubt he will be, jou will be paidfor all the property yon have lost throughRadical rule, and you must stand by thegreat Democratic party, for a solid Southwill now give us entire control of the generalGovernment, and we will redrew all ourwrongs."

    When it came Mr. Randull's turn to speakhe had proceeded but a short time when hewas interrupted, first by shouts, and then bya brass band, which persisted in plajin; di-rectly under Lis nose so long as lie attemptedto continue. lie was obliged to stop, ofcourse, and at the do v of the meeting l.e

    rve.l with the following :August 1, la-J-

    Peu: Mi: -- We will give you and yourpard thirty-fiv- e minutes to pick up your dudsand get out of this town.

    Yours to death.The Bots of SucnriM.

    Mr. Randall and his "pard were there-fore obliged to go. And this is "free speech"in Mississippi ! The thought naturally sug- -

    ,lM- l"'1' 11 uanilieaa ureruutu hitIlut wit!l treatment sosumroary, what wouldhave iieoi tiie laic i a lieyiil.hcuii?

    Thi C::titzti:nal Azicnlnant:.Gen. Hancock in his letter of acceptance

    did ires the thirteenth, fourteenth andiiMetidmenls to the constitution to be

    "inWoIable." This, we suppose, is anotherway of saving that they nnift Bland ; anil thatthereshouldbe no attempt to repeal or reversethem. Hut all or lieu. Hancock's Southernsupport! rj do not agree with him in thisview of the Amendments.

    The Meridian (Miss.) Mtrcury of Satur-day, August 7, commenting upon that partof Hancock's letter, says:

    It would lie doing gross injustice to thegreat mind which conceived and dictatedthis otherwise admirable letter of acceptanceto insinuate that ho does not know and be-lieve that thete amendments are not tc&erethry stand by the free will and content of thepej,le. They teereput there mainly xctUiout

    iy .f the tuUtaneea of the ftrmaldiet pre-ttcriwuit ine intirumenl for us amenament.It is history now that thru iccre tacked andpinned on to the comUtutton by the bayonet,and no man knows that Letter than Gen. Ilan-coe-

    Yet, knowing this, finding them therea part of the constitution and accepted byall the people without regarding how theycame there, Gen. Hancock having leen aUnion aohher is no doubt thoroughly Joyaltothcin,an this tjKeial reference has the ap.jMrnnce ofpandering to that Northern senti'tncnt so prevalent since the close of thewar, embedded in the ant phrase that ihe"results of the war must lie secured."

    We will not say that this rpecial allusionU distasteful to boulhern people to the extentthat they will wt support him heartily ; butit teas not the agreeable thing to haze mid, asit revives diugreeahte recollections of thetime when, prostrate and hdplcss in defeat,it VfU incttrperaUd into the organic la a byforce vf the bayonet that an inferior race,their lute abjeit slaves, are their politicalequ.ils, and that 1 whs done through motivesot revenge to humiliate them.

    The Southern atopic harbor no morethoiurhtof rt billing n'rainsl the thirteenth.fourteenth and fifteenth amendments of theconstitution than Gen. ILmcork, otherwise

    ' they might Lrenk with him upon thlsppeual11 Terence whidi mars his otherwise admir-- Iahle letter of acceptance. What's writ iswrit; the deed and thev feel that theyare not reppoiisihlc for the trrong and theJ Mure trmiWft la evme of it they accept itand arc determined toiro forward and nrikethe most and the Inst of it. They abide theearning of time and iti revenge. If theseamendments urc good and were the best,they will stand unimpaired ns long as the

    15URLIXGTOX, VT., FRIDAY AUGUST 20, 1SS0.

    an impediment in the path of the future pro- -,.t ll..i ,t.nintnice, ine sjayotm. imu jjuhi.ch innmn thtti tn stand fonrcr.

    If this docs not mean that the South, whenit gets contrcl, will repeal the Constitutionalamendments, it La3 no meaning whatever

    Tho aepuSIIcas Holly at St. Attaas.

    a ar.Evr meeiisg an attesdasck of sev-eral THOUSAND AS ESTnUSIASTtC DEMOXSTK ATION.

    iCondensed from Tturstla) Mcsseng?.-.- !

    The Republican mass meeting in the park,

    this afternoon, wa3 one of the most success

    ful of the kind ever held in this vicinity.

    The audience numbered several thousand

    persons, including many representative menot the party, anu a urge numocr or lauics.

    The "fun" began when the Garfield andArthur club of Fairfax, to the number of200nersons. arrived about noon, in a procession of some thirty-fiv- e double and single. 41. fWleams, uccuiupauicu u mvjhv4net Hand rind P.iirfflY fife and drum corns.

    At 2 o'cIock, there was quite a crowdgathered in the park ; and about the sametime large t'elecalicns arrived from Swantonand towns on the lice of the Missisquoiliailroad, and were escorted to the park byIhe IJrigade Dand. I he awautcn delegation

    i .ircininanicd bv the Swunton CornetIltnd Thrm was a considerable number

    I of Republicans from Graud Isle county alsosome troin umicmien nau wrieaua u'muii-u- .

    Smith nrcsided. and &was appointed for each town in Franklinand Grand Isle counties.

    Gov. Smith made a brief introducloryspeech, congratulating the audience on thefavorable auspices under which they hadgathered, lie said it was long sinccan elec-tion had been pending, when the issues weremore momentous than nw. What hascaused this vast unrisms? Trom the coastof Maine to the Pacific slope there is oneunited sentiment among licpubiicans. ineissues of this political campaign are of vastimportance, and arouse a spirit of activity inthe entire party. They are issues that strikeat the vital force and energy of the Govern-ment. After mere remarks of like tenor,he introduced Wheeler as agentleman of hiph character and standing ;who, in all the political conflicts of twentyyears, had stood manfully by the right.

    Wheeler was received withcuthnsiaslic cheering.

    bPEECII Or WIIEEIEit.

    Mr. Chairman and JlfpuHnv.ni if Vir- -tnont:

    With all the boated freedom of the gmidold Green Mountain State, there is one manhere y under duress, and I am that manand the despoiler of my freedom is your wor-thy surnanied Smith. With amerely colorable warrant of authority, hecaused my presence here to day to lc adver-tised, well knowing that I would not dare toturn my back upon tny old boyhood home,just over the eastern hills which skirt yourbeautiful town.

    The Governor called at my house in ea few days bincc, and spoke of this

    meeting. He said he had already engagednil the oratorial ability that was needed;that nothing could U or would be. expectedof me in that line; '" i.i.pl wantedsoim-ihin- in the wa, . -o &aow, and as1 had Ixtn travelling In that capacity withthe administration for the last four year?, hethought I would just fill the bill. A com-plimentary, n man this

    of yiiurs. He forgot that John Adams,our Vice President, in his inaugural addressin 17bi, said, in identical words, that the

    was a "respectable situa-tion;" adding that he was "unaccustomedto refuse any public service, however dan-gerous to his reputation, or disproportionateto his talents." Thee words of Mr. Adamshave been wonderfully comforting to meduring my official term, particularly thosedeclaring the a "respectablesituation." My shrunken and attenuatedliauie shows you how onerous have beenmy official duties, confined mainly tokeeping the obstropererous Senators fromVermont in order in tho Senate ChamUT,Itu the has its trials. Thegreat trial U iu attending church, my life-time habit, learned here in Xcw England. Iought to find consolation, but I go away, toooften, witli my sDirtuahty greatly rolled.To hear the minister pray in turn for thePresident, his cabinet, both Houses of Con- -TTTtr'Erii"i.uiTJouit, Uw COcruora"uuil

    Legislatures of al! the States and every indi-vidual heathen fiom "Greenland's lev mountains to India's coral strand," and to findmj&clf wholly h ft out, gives the man of sinthe advantage ot the upper dog in thetight.

    On one of these occasions in Washington,when just this thing happened, as I passedout of church, my old friend, Shellabargcr,of Ohio, locking arms with me, said:"Wheeler, the minister was pretty hard uponyou this morning." "Yes," said I, "when aman is rated below the untutored savage,who strolls in breech clout along whereAfrlc's sunny fountains roll down theirgolden sands, and is past praying for, he isin a ttjrbt place." Hut I afterwards foundconsolation ; it came from your Senator Edmunds, who said to me,in learning my trial?,"you don't need the prayers and the otherfellow s do, and that probably was the viewthe minister took of it." While I had a lin-gering fear that the congregation did not ac-cept this theory, I concluded to comfort my-self with it and have come to have absolutefaith in it. From that time Mr. Edmundshas crown wonderfully in my estimation,and I regard him as eminent in psychology asin statesmanship. Ana 01 your illustriousSenator in passing I have to say, that withability as towering as his native mountainsand with character as pure as the breeze-which comes from them, n Nation proud ofits imperial statesmen, will not permit Ver-mont alone to monopolize his reputation.

    The is a place of "GreatExpectations," rarely, alaa, reati2?d. It isgelling late now for me to look for the oc-cupation of the mansion, coveted I fear bysome, more than the heavenly iimiMon'Imean the White House. While 1 havewasted away like Tanner, ia my stancd

    the President, with all the caresof his great office, has actually increaaMl hisavoirdupois, and there walks in allthis broad land no sturdier specimen of phy-sical and intellectual manhood than ho. Andho is go'mg into retirement on the ith day ofMarch next, with an eye undiuined in its lus-tre; which can look back upon nearly

    of happy, prosperous people, ateace at home and abroad, whom he has

    led out of the morass of shifting, uncertainvalues to the solid standard ground of theworld; and whom he has lifted out of thedepths of financial depression to the heightsof universal prosperity. He cm look backupon a constitution successfully defendedagainst every assault, open or covert; uponevery prerogative of Ins great office jealouslymaintained; upon a National financial faithimpregnable in its integrity and challengingthe admiration of the world ; upon an ad-ministration untarnished by a single Main andunrivalled in the history ol the Government,for patriotism, good sense and official cleanli-ness. Like Duncan. President Hayes

    4,lUtti tnjrue bid f&ruliiet ince., tiat't Iht:iS rltir lu liW treat offliv,"

    that his fame a a wie, patriotic and suc-cessful ruler is forert r assured. And justwhere he drops the Government reins, theyare to be taken up by another of like pa-triotic, sturdy mould. And let it not beforjeotte n that both of then men came outof New England loins.

    Here, Mr. Chairman, is where the per-formance of the side show naturally ends andwheie Gov. Smith said I must stop. Hut Icannot consent that the Governor n hall alto,gelher deacon off the tune I ting here. Iwant to add a few woidson my own uccountI know it is like carrying coals to Newcastlefor a New Yorker to undertake to enlightenthe of Vermont. They knot.-ful- l

    well what the coming Presidential (lec-tion imjiorts.

    Itisalwajs a mystery to me, how ouidentify the Democratic party iu this State,for we outsiders never hear ot it except in uPresidential year. Asa liltlf humor is par-donable in the show, I will give 3 onmy theory of identification : I Mippose it isby the application of tho Irish te&t. A souof the Emerald isle had been sick a long timeand while in that state would occasionallycease breathing and life 1m apparently ex-tinct for some time, when he would cometo. On one of these occaMon. when he hadjust awakened from Ins long flcep, Patrickasked him : "And how 'I I we know Jemmywhen you'ie dead? je're after waking up

    time." 'Bring me n ghew of grog, nti'say to me, 'here's till 3 011, Jemmy an' iT Jdon't rise an' drink, then bury me." I un-derstand tin re are nmv Democrats fromnbioud traversing jour State, iain to theirparty friends "llcre'i till you, Junntj,"and that the party is arousing ildf for cjujidreniiitd drink, alter which it will teturntoits hibernating life. The Democratic partyof Vermont must be as hopeful as the manwhom Dean Swift's traveller met, who hadfjecn engagetl for fortj' 3 ears in the woik oTcrying; to extract sunbeams from cueuintier?."Have you succeeded? said the traveller."Not yet," replied the man, "but only granttne a 3 ear or two more, and additional fund,and 1 have no doubt shall suc( eed." Givethe Democratic party in Vermont plenty oFtime, anil let it lake nil tho money credulini3outsiders will invest in the footi-- h ventureof catching the Green Mountain boys nap-ping.

    Itepublicaus of Vermont, this is the oldconflict between the old parties, with this

    one variation Ihe Democratic parti hasdressed up in blue elatca, borrowed for theoccasion. Gen. Hancock, who hurled shotand shell at the Democratic party when itsought the life of the Nation 011 the fier- -

    heisrhts ot ucttyshura now leatis that ranyin its assault upon tire ballot bov, throughwhich it proposes to control the Governmentit could not destroy. And thU parly whichin National conventional Chicago, a monthafter the turn of the tide at Gettysburg, de-nounced the war 03 a failure, and said itouiiht to cease and which, during the war,made no concealment ot its joy at everydisaster to the Union anna, now rends theair with its shouts for the man who aided inputting down their rcbeuion. Oh I couldthese shouts have followed the victory atGettysburg, how grateful would they havebeen in the ears of our brave,wear- - armies. They would, as many aSouthern man has told me, have ended thatwar nearly a year sooner. My friends, thereis a great mistake in this business somewhere;and 3"ou, Yankees, who ere in tho habit oflooking cloe, will find no difficulty ia dis--cov ring the 01a uemocraiic cat under allthi? pretentious meal.

    C 1 forbid that I say aught in unjust gion of the gallant soldier, now the nom-

    inee .f the Democratic patty, who, when thefou- - lationsof the Government were rockingin t 2 wild tempest of tbe rebellion, whenwar ploughed its channels deep in our live?,our homes and our hearts and hung its blackban:.er over thousands of our hearth-stone-uusoilcdwith the slaughter of our lovedones ; God forbid, I repeat, that I say aughtin uniust derogation of tVo gallant soldierwho followed the starry banner through thatlone, weary struggle for the Nation's life andsealed his devotion to the Union of ourfathers with the impress of his own blood.But as the stream cannot rise higher than itsfountain, so no President ever did or evercan rise above his party. And the man whoseeks its suffrages and accepts its positlonsoftrust is bound by every conadera'ion to car-ry out its views and principles. The foun-tain of power in the Democratic party is inthe 133 votes furnished by tLc solid South.As 138 is to 47, so is the controlling powerin the Democratic party, as between the

    ortu anti me aoiiiu. in ail xour coroora- -tions, manufacturing and fimncial, a major-ity of the stock controls. Tint, in the eventof success, the South will cortro! the Demo-cratic party absolutely, results 33 well ma-thematically as from its conduct lefore thewar, when it dominated Ihe ttovemment inevery department, as Mr. Stephens provedconclusively in his speech a! Milledireville.as a reason why Georgia had lolhing to gain1,.. : ' i;..t.i: c 'the issue ha3 not changed. The questionwhich confronts us is, What shall be themake-up- , character, political ud moral, andreal purposes of the pirty which shall controlthe Government of this country for Ihe coming four years ? Shall it be the Democraticparti, wliow citadel ol power is manned bythoe who barely fifteen years ago wereclutching at the Nation's life, sa3'ing "Oneof us must die ;' the party ever hostile tofree popular Government; bred in hatredof New England and the Unioo ; w Inch

    to the last the barbarism of slaveryand which, down to this hour, protestsagainst every act of the National Govern-ment in the bouih except the distribution ofits largesses.

    Will you jcrmit this unregenerate Southern Democratic party yet tainted with thearistocratic caste of slavery. State rights andshameless repudiation ; yet smarting underthe bitterness, hatreds and revenges growingout of their fruitless attempt to overthrowthe Government, will ou permit tLis partyto assume power in this country ?

    or do you still cling to the Kepubhcanparty, which now as ever emblazons on itsbanner, "All men up' in the state of freedom, progress, education and equality be-fore the law ?

    I know well your answer. You will followthe banner borne by Girficld and Arthur re-splendent with such triumphs as were neverinscribed on other earthly banner. I haveknown Gen. Garfield intimately for the lastdecade. In daily association with him foryears, upon one of the leading committees ofme iiouse 01 ueprcsentativcs nnd in thewalks of private life, I know well the insand outs of his character. His broad, manly, generous, honest nature lifts him to aplane lar above the arts of the knave or thedemagogue. Like Popes Maa of Ilo?. he

    'Stntpqman. vet frienil tn tmtli nf tnniIn action Idltuful and la honor clea: '

    AVithout the early aids of wealth or station, by the innate forces of his intellect anduiHuiuivwlwluM propelled himself to hispresent nin position, never losing his sym-pathy with the mawes of his countrymen intheir struirslcs for the blessimrs which ihU 'good government of ours Loldsout to all whodiligent- - and honestly seek them, and to thisgreathearted sympathy tic heart of ihUnation is now responding m fullmeasure, and in November next, wewill furnish General Garfield, the schol-ar, the soldier, and the statesman, with sucha patent of nobility as none hut millions ofkings acting in concert at the ballot box canconlcr. I know equally well Gen. Arthur.In fidelity to the principles of the Republi-can party and in action to maintain them heis the peer of any man in the p irty. In ex-ecutive ability he equals. Dilering with thePresident upon modesof administration, thathigh official never by implicit ion rrthctedupon hi3 personal integrity. Gen. Arthur isentitled to the hearty support of even Re-publican in the country, and I only wish theposition which he is to occupy in the Govern-ment was more commensurate with his abil-ity and capacity for high usefulness. But.myfellow Republican, I weary ou. You havehere a New Yorker, whoso fame transcendsthe limits of the great Empire State, who liasnever been struck by the dry rot of the

    and who has locked horns withthe Democratic paity on Southern Iiatllefield, and in many a hard fought politi-cal contest. Ami he is still ready lognrc that party any win re within the limitsof the thirty-eig- States uf the Union uponthe slightest provocation; 1 will 110 longerstay you from fuih viands. On the night ofthe first Tuesday rf September next, mi theother side r.t thi'lahi we shall look for "thestar that ue e r f. Is" a little highe r up in thepolitical than usual, rind don't youdisappoint ui.

    At the ioeeliiion of the ?pre h, wh'uhwas freifi'-iitl- and warmly appl.11.dtd, therewas music by the Hand and Gl.-- Club ; andGeniral Wo.Hirtd wa introduced in irycomplimentary terms I13 Gov. Smith, andmade a splendid addrcM about au hour long,which captivated the aud.ence and producedan excellent impression.

    The Irish Eepublicaa:.

    !i:ci AND KNTIIIMISTIC MEETIM1BY MA'AIOt: EDM I XDS ANU J IMlF.

    MoliKIsON.

    The Irish Republican rally at City Hall,last Friday evening, wasa large and enthusi-astic gathering and even more successful thanhad been anticipated. The hall was crowd-ed, a large number standing throughout theevenin- g- and this iu spite of the Demciratswho, as we are credibly informed, stationedmen at the doors to endeavor lo preventIrishmen from attending and a!-called a meeting of tliiir own !u!at thesame hour. The audit uce was Urge ly madeup of the class for whom Ihemeeling wascalled, and the addresses must have made amost impression. The ShermanMilitary Rand was in attendance and dis-coursed stirring mu-ti- ; and the eamp-ii-glee club gave some effective s.i:g-i- .

    Shoitly after 8 o'clock Chu mi bting wascalled to older hy James II. Scull-- , memberfor Vermont of the Irish National Commit-tee, and organized bv the choice of JohnMclnncruey ascli-t- 111111 and Martin Sey-mour as secretary. On taking the cluir Mr.Mclnneniey ("aid the gathering was the tir?.tIrish Republican inei ting ever lu-- 111 Ver-mont and he wasgl id lo linn nudum epresent. The past record f Iht Democraticpatty furnished MilHcienl justification of miIridi supioit of tin opposite patty. Weshould not foreitr vole with a puity whichignores us as does the Detnocialic. lie then in-troduced ns the first speaker Hon. George V.IMmumW, who wn-- with enthusi-astic apphintc.

    ES.il OK HlM(n-.- I'EMMIKS.

    Senator lZdmuuili said that he hid rinfrom a U'd of illticsH to Iv presenton this inten-bliu- occasion. lain ttyot political opiniou certainly belongs to Irish- -'nun. It used to be caul lint an Irishmanwas born into the Democratic put'. Someof thein, ni glad to see, have got out ofthat way of being Imrn and h lie Met lo es-tablish a lub fount led on tin ir on it opinionand st ly. ll is an omen of lietory i.otonly tnealmuly-asMirc- ihtcr' of Gatfiildand Arthur, hut of t hit teal irtory otdemocratic fori of government often i.tudua sham for the deception of the eople. Ibale often wondered how a man could conicftoni a (Yiiuitry wht n lie was oppressed, midtrodden down and win re ibor wasdt spi'd.Into count l y whtre be finds freedom t

    for all and lalior honored, and cor- -nect hiinsi If wilh a p'lttv allied to the urn- -tot ratie idea, as ii the Dcnunrntic putyAll the power that patty ha-'- and has hudsince llu, is in the Slates

    4

    MORXIXG,

    and nowhere else. What influence has theDemocratic party in this State? It doesn'telected Senators 'or Representatives. TheDemocatic party which governs is made upof ihe old g party. Some of itsmembers, of course, come from the North,but the Southern majority is so large thatthey absolutely control it. Of fort3'-tw- oDemocratic Senators thirty are from theoltl States. They think andact together. The tell us frankly that theystand where they have always stood. WadeHampton says they arc fielding for whatLee and is tone wail Jackson lougut.

    For the last 20 years every law touchingour industries has been a Republican law.The Democrats pronounced at Cincinnati fortnat tarut only which would raise tne largestamount of money in other words theirpolicy would favor the largest possible impor-tation of foreign goods. Were this policy toprevail our money would go abroad. The priceof labor would fall. The bread would be takenfrom the month of the workingman and ourmoney would go, not into the hands offoreign laborers, but solely into the coffersof rich capitalists and manufacturers abroad.How can a foreigner who came here to bet-ter his condition cast his fortunes with aparty w ho favor such a policy ? We havecome here to testify not only our Republi-canism but the liberty of opinion thatIrishmen should think and act as theyplease.

    Senator Edmunds was frequcntlj inter-rupted b- - applause and ns he closed waswarml cheered.

    The next speaker wi3 lion. A. L. Mor-rison of Chicago.

    JfDGE MOERISON'S ADDRESS.

    After a reference to the reluctancehe felt to follow such a speaker asthe one just heard, whom he eulogizedas one of Ihe great leaders ofpublic thought in the Nation, Judge Mor-rison slid the present struggle wa? not oneof recent growth. It is the immemorialstruggle of right against wrong. Which isthe party of wronjr and of intolerance ? TheDemocratic party has opposed the right ofpetition against slavery. It has opposededucation for education nnd its principlesare antagonist ic. The speaker dissented fromthe saying that Irishmen are born into theDemocratic party. The Liberator O'Con-nel- l,

    while seeking for funds to aid him inhis great work, received a letter containing aremittance from Iouisiana. He said: "Liberty is dear to the Irish people. We havegiven her o;ir all. We are now making amighty cJIott and (Jod knows how much weneed assistance. Hut not to achieve libertyin its fullest fruition in one hour should adollar of that money go into tne Irish treas-ury. No money stained with the tears andMood ot lite slave shall lie used in the struggle for Irish li!erty. Sendjt back wc don'twant 11. i.very man in ireianu was in iavorof freeing the colored people in America.The Irish are not bom into the Democraticnartv but are antagonistic to it. Many ofus forget our early leaching and our beliefand Join the part which favored humanslavery. You may say that slavery is gonenow. True: but which party abolishedit ? Mavcrv was introduced into tinscountrj by the Dutch and English, and Eng-land has always favored the South and beenon the side 01 the Democratic party. nathas that parti- - ever done for you or for yourcountry? .Not until the Republican partycompelled it did England abandon its proudclaim, Once an Englishman, always antnghi.li man. iou has given you eyes andbrain3 : co and read for yourselves and ifvou do you will leave the Democratic party.Wherever ignorance is the densest that partis the strongest.

    Juduc Morrison then told, at somelength, the story of General James ShieldsVlife and the shabby treatment of that

    Representatives ; and instanced many othercases where that party nau ismoreei its insnmembers. He continued: The Republicanshave nominated for the Presidency one olthe ablest statesmen la America. Gen. Han- -cock'a record is good; he made it shootingDemocrats undei a Republican administration. He is a good soldier : he ought tobe, cd flailed as he was as the ward of thenation and trained for a soldier at its expense.

    Ic is in the hands of the rebel democracy.The Irish have found here homes free, happyand liberal. I implore you not to cast yoursufTraee for the nartv of the aristocracyfor the party which holds the same nnHnAT uelioios has dose for sew touk.ciples a3 those for which Lee and "Jacksonlougut. in ci"'i)", ne reierreu io attenipsft inttmidati ir--. --said

    the Democrats andlint lush -- n iultl bid defiance to

    tlm ars, Ui ink si they please.Such is an . , icct outline of Judge

    Morrison's address to which any abstractwould do but scanty justice. Judge Mor-rison is a ligorous nnd effective speaker, ofcharacteristically Irish and hu-mor and readiness ; and he held the close at-tention of the throughout, beingfrequently interrupted b hearty applause.At the ch)3 of the address he wa3 giventhree rousing cheers, after which, at his sug-gestion, three cneers were given for our Na-tional candidates.

    Signatures for an Irish Republican clubwere then called for, and twenty-fiv- e ob-

    tained in few minutes a handsome nucleusfor i strong and useful organization.

    The meeting then adjourned

    Ge:r-- o !IiUs.

    THE I'ARRE racksmas "seeks to gun 111s1II1ERTY II V FRO Visa AS AI13I.

    On July (1, lS.i, four men entered thehouse of the enhier of Rarre (Vt.) Nationalbank, bound and gaggt d him and UU family,phuvd a rope around his; neck anil led himlo the bank. 1 lu'y compelled lit 111 to openit, but when thy cached ihe vault theywere foiled, as the bank doors wire proiid-e-

    with : time lock, which was st t for 9 a.ni. ihe net c'ay. They secured 1,1100 inunsigned bii.k bill, which arrived fromWnshingtoii after the ault was close forthe i.ight. 'Ihe ti.tii lid the cashier hackto his house, Mcund him to the tloor andtlfpuiled. The Vermont authorities placedlh." matter in Ihe hands of Detective E. D.WL'gitt, and, after three months1 hard work,he succeeded iu arresting one George Milesopposite hi. lesidence, a hand&omc brown-ston- e

    front on Pifty-tifl- h street, New-- Yoik.

    lie mailt! a stout resistance, but DetectiveWiggiu placet I him a hat k, and he was driven

    to police headquarters upon Mulleny street,where he was placed under lock and hey.

    Then came a hiral fgbl tbat lasted twoweeks Miles M'curing W. A. Beach (of

    Km her trial fame) for his counsel. Mileswas finally released on the habeas anil, hand-cuffed to Detective Wiirgin, was driven in itcarriiiije to Cos Cob bridge, Ihe line betweenNew York and Coiineclicut, and wits takenfrom there to Vermont. He was tried,found c'lilt, ami was sentenced upon March31, 137l, Co fourteen years hi the Stateprison. Vhih' n ait in? trial, Miles plannedan escape, and Cwo of Che boys in the prisonwtre bribed to furnish hcis, and fromanother source revolver was obtained.Arrangements wen fully made for scalingthe walls but

    A miort I'l.ldOXE!: MSCIOSCD THK I'LOT,and the hois were watched and detected inthe net c f 'opening .Miles' cell door. Soonafter Miles conviction his wiremoied toWindsor, Vt., joimdthe church, ami Milespi ofe ved to U' converted. She remainedihtieut.td recently, when, tlm ling Hut she(otild not bnlto the olllcials or deceive theniin atvywav ly elisions professions, she re-turned to New York, and Miles is now

    to make Ooieiner Proctor believehe h uinuch-iujiiie- man; that he is a

    is bout M, anil that the burglar,.Miles is thad, ami tint his is

    a c:ijc of identity. He had a hearin.; on July 23d ltt, and to substantiate thisproduces the tdUdaut tl Tlmman P. Sotner-vill-

    who wai conviclid of forgery in NewJitney mmmi aHer .Milts airct, ami who hasacted" as his counsel for ears. He also at-tempts by "Hid ivits from three parthsinNew York, to piovc an ahbt, but the moUlaughable and "cheeky" pirtof the proceed-ini-- s

    istheatlcmpt tn prove that Miles, theburclar, h thud, and that the man behind thebits iu Vermont is innocent of all guilt, amicotiseimeMlv "l a burglar. The tirst knownof ('torge Miles, alias White, alias Bliss,a'iU3Miirs nlias Willisms etc.. was priorto Ihe y't ar JfUl, when he burned his store atWc.'tnioieland. N. II., for the insurance,lleth.'ii mill tnStomhiuj, .Mass, whetehektpt :i iMtl. It was at this place Chat hemade the ncipuintatit e of Maximilian, alias"Mark" Shiitlmm, the inot nolorious bmkhurghr in tin woild. Iu 1S I. Mites andShiid'uin robbed the sivius bank at Walptte, N II Rodi were captured, but Milesunnamed to ewapc, and returning, aidedShinburn to g nti hii lilnrl It will be

    inherit! tint Miles cut. wpure in the piii-w- tilaid gate, which bhinburn fiom the

    ).nskitl out, ami jumping through,round Miles wailiiii' outside with a buggyand last I.icm1 Miles bad womau'd apparelfor Shinburn lo put on, as siHin as he uol tothe outskirts of ihe lilligc. In lfi-d- , Mile"Rnry" Sinuns, MeUulie and Hurthlt robbetl the Kowduiuham, Me, bank of $00,000. All the gam; except Miles wtre cup-- 1

    turcd, and sentenced to fifteen years, each iaState prison. This was said to be

    T,IS nn3r TYINJ rP JOttlever attempted in the Lastrrn States, and

    Miles U credited with being the inventor ofit, therefore the numerous cashiers that havebeen handcuffed and iragged can thankGeorge 31iles for it. In 1SG9, Miles andShinburn robU'd the Ocean National Bank

    . of New Yoik city of $500,000. The lattergot aw ay to Europe safely and at last ac- -count had bought himself the title of a German baron, and was Jiving in princely style.Miles and Shiaburn were 4pals" ia the 5200,-00- 0

    bank job in Maryland. The '3wag'was taken to the saloon of Sharkey, themurderer, in New York city, and the bankraid $27,000 for a portion of the securities.In the Wolfboro, . II., bank robbery Jlileshad a "par named Campbell ; the latter wascaptured and received a ten years' sentence.Miles as usual escaping. Miles was the leaderin the Rank of Commerce job in New Yorkcity, and in the famous Philadelphia job,where, in company with Shinburn, he droveto the bank in a nice carriage with a pair ofhorses and a servant dressed in livery, inbroad daylight on Sunday,whilc people weregoing to church, and opened the front doorsof the bank. The two went inside, and Milesworked the combination and opened the bankvaults. There was $400,000 in the vaults,but the burglars were looking for a specialdeposit of 51,000,000, which the Pennsyl-vania Railroad was supposed to have madethe day before. The money had not arrived,and the burglars cither overlooked the $400,-00- 0,

    or, as stated on good authority, left it,expecting to secure the larger amount. Theydid not dare make a second attempt in t,

    but "put up" a job with the bankwatchman to "stand in" with them. At thelast moment on the night of the robbery he"weakened" and 'gave them away." Thepolice captured Dick Moore, alias 'Buf-falo

    Dick," and Rrown, alias McCoy.Both were convicted and sentenced to aterm of years. Moore served his term,but McCoy fell heir to a large fortune,and through friends in Troy, N. Y.,was pardoned, and is now living a "square"life. 3Iiles and Shinburn escaped. In thellungerford, N. YM job, Miles and JoeHoward, alias Kingsland. were both captur-ed and sentenced to ten years in Sing Sing.In this job they stole a noted race horse amidrove him till he dropped dead. Whilethere. Miles made the acquaintance of Dr.Cramer, alias 'Long Doctor," who inventeda rubier apparatus resembling a large decoyduck with n tule to breathe through. Milesadjusted this contrivance, and one day,while a gang of convicts weie working alongIhe dock, slipped into the river and drifteddown the Hudson, past the guards, withoutnotice. His pal, Howard, alias Kingsland,escaped through the connivance of the offi-cials, and was captured by Detectives "Wig-gi- n

    and Wood, for his connection withMiles in the Rarre, Vt., j !. Kingslandsent word to Sin.: Sing, the officials came toLud jail, and, identifjing him,

    TOOK HIM BACK TO 6IXG SINO

    to serve hi3 eight and one-ha-lf yeara of un-expired term. Soon after Miles escapedfrom Sing Sing, Colonel Whitley securedhis pardon on the ground that he wanted touse him in some counterfeiting cases. Milesncit exploit was the attempt to rob the safeof District Attorney Columbus Alexander.Washington, D. C. Miles is still under in-dictment for this job, and was Mentitledwhile in Ludlow-stre- jail, New York,awaiting extradition to Vermont, b Rich-ards, chief of police of Washington, whocame to New "iork for that purpose, as theman called Albert Williams who was arrested for the Washington Thisestablished the identity of the man nowiu Vermont as being the burglar Miles.TLis precious rascal was in thetjmncy, iil, rjans jod; aiso, in 1010, in ineMilford, N. II., robbery, where a comprom-ise was m3"Steriously effected between theburglars and the bank officials. Miles habeen the owner of a large amount of proivr-ty- ,

    and one time had $100,000 in real estatein New York cit3. His wife still has an in-terest in the Brcvort House stables, end Mileshas quite a snug little sum Pinker-ton'- s

    detectives were looking for him at thetime Detective Wiggiu arrested him in

    for his participation in the Wtickcrtforgeries in Ptnnsylianio.

    ThurhEJFeei ca Csl. Bob. Injtnall.

    Our citj' furnishes manv examples of thebeneficence of religion, r orty 3eiis ago alocality too well known as the "rive Pointswith u population of several thousands wasthe home of the vilest of the vile, and the re-sort of othcra equals debased. Men, wo-men and children of all nationalities and colors herded together, .differing only in thedegrees of crime and the depths of protligachabitually practiced. Their days were pass-ed In either idleness or dep relations. Theirnights were spent in d.inee house debauch-eries. All healthy or wholesome inlluenceswore excluded. Children grew up to be-come cither street beggirs or inmates of thealmshouse and their parents filled peniten-tiaries and prisons. These orgies continuedyear after 3 ear, defiant an I aggressive, untilthat pandemonium was invaded by Chris-tian men and women who3c patience wouldnot tire, whose courage was indomitable andwhose devotion has been rewarded by a mor-al and religious reformation so complete thatno part of our city is now more tniiet andordei I3 than the once dreaded "Five Points."Thousands of chtldreu then growing upcither vagabonds or culprits arc now attend-ing schools, in which they are stimulated byprecept and example to live industrious andvirtuous lives. Instead, therefore, of send-ing forth idle, ignorant and vicious childrento prc3 upon society, the destitute and or-phan children cf the "Five Poiuts," pre-pared for usefulness by moral and religioustraining, find happy homes in onr rapidldeveloping Western States and territories.

    Again, ei"ht years ago Water street and itssm rounding eastward from Peck lip hada notoriety almost as unenviable as that ofthe "Five Points." That region was rifewith drunkenness burglaries, pugilism amitheir h;ndred Jerr McAuley wasconspicuous iu all that was wicked nnddemoralizing. He had the reputation ofbeing a terror to tne precinct, a reputationwhich, by his own confession, was deserved.But this diturler of the public peac wasconverted, ami then he resolved to devotethe remainder of his life to the service of hisMaster, ami, with a faithful, affectionatewife as a 1k1ht, he has Jdmndanili atonedfor all his offtucTs. For a long time thehisses nntl bowlings of his former associatesseriously dwtutls-- hisniettiuirs. but courage.perseverance ami patience finally prevailed,and his work now progresses without interruption. The general character of the neigh-borhood has been improved ; its social andmoral tone and atmosphcrt; haie lccii purified. Sailors boarding houses have been

    Sailors now carry their Bibles withthem to St a. Moody and Sankc3 hymn arcsunc in forecastles, iiumlreiisol hilt nakedand hungr wives and children, by the con-version of drunken hushimU ami fathersnow rejoice in comfortable and h ippy homes.The Mission Churth is rowded cvervweek d 11 and evenin ' and thtec times onSit mlj with intelligent Christian men andwomen who, rescii.ti iroui iirrei ami gutters. are now reputable itiz-- cnjoiinsthe fruits of their industry and iclatmg withgrateful hearts ihe mis.-ru--s of their I ast, thejojsol their present ami tne nc.pes 01 uicirtut urc. By all "who went to scoff, butremained lo pray," Jerry McAuley and hiiexemplary wife are regarded wtlh affectionand will lie remembered with gratitude.

    Let us contrast the labors of two promi-nent contemporary teachers one. Mr.Moody, a Christian, and the other, Mr.

    an infidel missionary. Mr. Moodyis e and self educated. Mr. Inger-so- ll

    is a gentleman of education, culture andreti ncmcut. That M r. Mood 1 's l.d ors have lenin the highest degree beneficial to all classeswill not be denied. The highest and thehumblest listened with charmed interest,and all left IhuTalKTuacIe better and hap-pier. The general effect loth of his preach-ing, supplemented by the

    loice of Mr. fcunkty, cleared, braced,and purified the re hjious, moral and socialatmosphere of the city. The labors ofMoody and Sankey were practical. Theynot only asked "What shall the harvest be,'but they obtained hi their Impiiry roomsgratifying responses to their epiestions.Hundreds of drunkards were reclaim-ed, ganJjlers and prize fighters wereconvtitetl. Destitute, wiles and childrenand desolate homes have been made happyand bright b the rescue and return of re-formed husbands ami fathers. Ixmg andgrate-full- will the advent of Moody andS'inke3 be reiiicmbcrciL The city is slillfragrant with TaUrnaele memories. Mr.Moody is turning the results of his lilkirs togood account. The Mood ami Sankeyhtnns to the Christian world,are now sum; by n itive converts in the in-terior of Allien. Tho ssh of these hymnbooks products a handsome fund, which Mr.Mothly tleioles to miionaiy purposes. Athis heme, iu Norlhfield, Jlasn., he has erect-ed a suitable building for u mission achoolnnd home for huh in girls, some fifty ofwhom from the far West have already beenreceived. Mr. Mexly, therefore. Ins takenup ami will carry on ihe good work so au-spiciously commenced by the late FatherDt Suiet And now 1 invite Mr. Ingcrsoll,or liny cd Ids followers to iuforui the publichm. ami to what extent I hey have profiledhi hi mission iry laliors 111 this citi whatKidiitai u'fomis he h is inaugurated or evenstig.;eMftl, or in what manner and to whatextent he has contiibutid lo Ihe general wd-fat- e

    or happiness of hisT. W.

    NUMBER 8.

    That "Full Vcte. Fres Ballet ani FairCount'1 ia Alabama.

    CoL Waudell of North Carolina is in theliabit of declaring, in his speeches on thestump in Vermont that "every negro in theSouth can go to the polls and cast his vote

    that he has every political privilege of tviwhite man. By the side of, and as the best

    comment oa this bold assertion, wc put thenews which ia now coming by every mailfrom Alabama. One gentleman, in a letterto Commissioner Ratun, describes the scene

    at the polls in Huntsvillc, Ala. Processionsof voters who intended to vote the Demo-cratic ticket came to the polls led by brass

    bands and were not molested, of course ; but

    when the colored men came forward ia pro-

    cession, shouting for the candidate of the

    combination ticket, they were attacked anddispersed, some of them being badly hurt.He continues:

    "An election law ia this State whichforbids the numbering of tickets to cor-respond with the tally-lis- t, and in thisway destroys every evidence that tends toestablish a basis for purging the polls of ille- -

    votes, together with the fact that thedemocratic managers took pains to put on

    as one of the Judge3 of Election at each placemen of Republican antecedents w ho couldnot read in many instances, certainly estab-lishes a margin for fraud that it appears can-not be detected and punished. The evilscomplained of by the Republicans weretreated with indifference, and the Demo-crats refused to make any correction. TheState has, perhaps, given a larger Democraticvote than ever before since she has had aRepublican vote,and under the Election lawaandthe means, resortedto with Democrat-ic machinery, it is not any surprise to anyman that is at all informed upon Alabama orSouthern politics."

    One of the leading men of the State sendsthe following to Secretary Snerman :

    "The late election In this State, as most ofus anticipated, was a mere farce Whateverof decency remained in the Democratic partywas on this occasion entirely cast aside, andfrauds the most unblushing and stupendouscommitted. In many counties, where thepopulation was largely colored, the Republi-cans did not vote, knowing that their voteswould swell the Democratic majority. Insome counties where w c had a county ticketin the field we brought out the f nil Repub-lican strength, and it was in such cases thecounting-ou- t was done. In Lowndes county,Judge M. Dufiield got votes actuallyvoted for him anil put into the box, eachvoter showing his ticket openly tn he wentto the polls. The Democratic vote of thecount is not over 1.3C0, and yet they re-turned a majority of 1,309 against him.Iu two beats there was an honest count. Hecarried one by over 400 majority, and theother, which was alw ay3 carried by theDemocrats, he carried by 4 majority. InScott'd beat. Perry county, where tally waskept in like manner, the Republicans openVyvoted over 500 votes and the Democrats 40,and this beat returned a Democratic ma-jority of 230. These are onl- - Specimenbricks. When you apply it lo the Stateyou can sec how the Democrats gottheir .10,000 majority." The writer theninserts the following from a private lettersent to him from Montgomery: Such agrand rally of the Republicans of the countyhas not been seen since 1S0S. Such intelli-gent determination to carr-th- e election onthe part of the colored people was neverknown before. But votes don't count. Theelection was tlie'.bieest fraud ou ever sawor heard of. Tho Democrats themselves ad-mit it. We know it. It is perfectly useless tomake any effort in this State from presentappearances. The real fact is, in this State,that the Democrats intend to hold the Stategovernment at all prices and hazards. Andthis they regard as their imperative duty.Of course they say if wc win in the Nationalcampaign it w ill be so much better, but theylook upon Alabama as their country, andthe United States and the power of the Na-tional Government as a foreign power and adespotism put upon them against their willand consent." He closes his letter to theSecretary as follows : "This is the true keyto the Southern problem. Home rule amiState rights mean that no man elected by thevoles of black men shall be pem"ti tohold office in a Southern S'ate Uiev comsider it a high moral duty to defs uid theb'ack man ot his vote.

    Haa& sot tho lias.Following 13 the conclusion of Emory A.

    Storrs's great campaign speech delivered atBurlington, Iowa :

    Making no criticisms on Gen. Hancock'sevreer as a soldier that he was a gallant oneno one is inclined to dispute that he is aman of personal integrit no one is inclinedor disposed to question, he is a professionalsoldier. I like to preserve the eternal har-mony of things. I like the relation betweenthe bullet and the ballot to hsrmoniousconsistent and confidential. I object to Gen.Hancock, that he shoots one wa and votesanother. Wc want a man who votes againstthe idea that lie fought against. I Applause.We want the bullet and the ballot to lakethe same direction. We want them both tothink, and, when they think, lo think alike.Cheers. Geo. Hancock's bullets and Gen.

    Hancock's ballots have not been in har-monious accord. He unsheathed his swordfor a Nation : he votes for a league ; hepointed his cannon against the sovereigntyof States. He undertook to kill and did killthe enthusiastic advocate of State sovereigntywho guarded his enthusiasm with his gun,but he votes for the survivor of thesame idea. I object to this irrepressibleconflict between the ballot and thebullet of the Union soldier. Moreover, wearea curious people. Wc wish to knowwho will lie the President when our candi-date is elected. When Gen. James A. Gar-field is elected President of the UnitedStates, he will c President : but shouldGen. Winfield Scott Hancock be electedPresident of the United Slates, God, in hisinfinite wisdom, only knows who will bePresident. Gen. llancexk; does not knowand cannot tell The soUt, secondthought of this ureal, solid, practical peo-ple, standing as it does in Ihe midst of greatprosperity, with thriving cities and a vastcommerce, with smiling fields and prosper-ous home's hh a glorious pat, with asplendid present, and with a sublime futurereaching out before it, knowing throughwhat H'rils and at what mighty cost allIhesttf have achieved, will not venturethem upon an experiment. I Applause.The sober second (hou;ht and Ut judg-ment of this people knows that all Ihoeweowe to tlu great loyal masses w hieh havebeen organized into the Republican party cfthe Nation. It honors that parti', and ithonors the great names of its history. It hon-ors Lincoln and Grant and Morton and d

    Logan. Long continued applause.It honors the great patriots living andthe great patriots dead. It has blessings forthe latter, and lasting and endearing honorsfor the fint. The past is very dear to us.As good citizens ami as good menwe cherishit. Our natiou is very dear to us, anil wcknow that only through the agencies of thisgreat of which we are members and inwhose iuterest 1 speak can thisgreat Nation, the custodian of the pricelesstreasure's of free Government for all the peo-ple, Iw carried forw ard to those high summitsof renow n which Proiidencc has detigned itskill reach? The t mine nee toward which it&t rives is clear above the clouds and glitter-ing in the tterral sunshine of the purestfame. The old music of the Union fids theair. I hear it, anil 1 keep step to it. Theblessed old banner floats above us. I hadand I dule it. The old hosts are gathering;the old spirit animates them. Th memoriesof the past and glories of the present cometogether to inspire us. The word goes out,''Forward." Ihe result is victory. flnand continued applause and cheering.

    Is view of the asseverations of the Democratlc platform and of Gen. Hancock as tothe invioI.il1lit3- - of thu constitutional amend-

    ment 9, it is f.i'r to show what is the ri'al senti-ment of the Djmocr wy of the States particu-larly affecteel by lliemiiid upon whom Hancock relies wholly for success. Ileio is theSouthern record oa the fourteenth amend-ment :

    Alabama -- Senate, 2 for and '27 against ;House, S for ami (') against.

    Atkansns Sen ite, 1 for and M agiotIIeme, 2 for ami GS against.

    Florida Sen it ii nnd House lwth unani-mous acuiiist it.

    Georgia Senite un luinnni-l- aninsi ;House, - for and 131

    Iuisian-- i Senate ami Ilemse belli un mi-llions against it.

    Mississippi Sen Ue ami House both unani-mous against it.

    North Carolina Senate, t for amendment, 44 against ; House, 10 for amendment.uj n gainst.

    South Carolina Senate, unanimousagainst ; House, 1 for and !o against.

    lexas llctite, 0 lor ami against: noaction in the Senate.

    Viannia Sen ite unanimously reject ;House, 1 for amendment.

    Nor must it be forgotten that the Demo-- tcratic Legislatures of New York ami Indianaattempted to and did repeal, so far as theiraction could do it, the acts of previous Re--puoucau J jciiiiieiri cunt ui" ine auieim- -meiits. Should the Democrats come intopower, they would claim that the repealingacts must stand, and that consequently theamendmantfl are null and Told.

    Which Is the Party cf Hate?Our Democratic friends delight to call the

    Republican party ''the party of hate, yet itis not a Republican, but a Democratic paper,the Charleston (S. CO A'rir and Courier,which says :

    We have no feeling for thoe who threat-en our e list ewe and disturb our peace butbitter liatred. They have chosen to disturbthe armistice that we the victors and thepowerful liave allowed. From now hence-forth let there be no peace or toleration forthe public enemies who have abused ourmagnanimity and spurned our forgivenessof past crimes. They liave declared waragainst us. Ixt them have it as long as thereis one of them. We mean thatthat white skinned man or negro who delib-erately enters the field fcr a radical Stateticket will do so with the understanding thathe will hereafter receive no favors or recog-nition from white men. Let them under-stand tbat there will be no employment forthem where it is possible to avoid it ; thatthere will be no credit for them ; that fromthem the last farthing will be relentlessly ex-acted ; that the kindness of masters willcease.

    These bitter words, it is to te noted, arenot from the Okolona States, or from anypaper notsd for especial malignancy. Onthe contrary, the Charleston Xetrs and Cour-ier has been considered one of the moat tol-

    erant, as it is one of the ablest of the Southera papers. If the Xtvat and Courier feelsand talks in this way, we may be sure thatplenty of South Carolinians are talking iu avein of yet bitterer hatred. It is to Ite notedthat the offence which so stirs up the JYrcand Courier U the attempt by the coloredRepublicans of South Carolina to exercise, ina peaceable and lawful way, their clear polit-ical right the rijht of every Americancitizen to vote for the men of their choice-o- nly

    ihi3 and nothing more Because theyare once more organizing, as arc Ihe Repub-licans of Mississippi, and of other SouthernStates, in a probably hopeless effort to exer-cise the right of suffrage, which CoL Waddellasserts is as frcvly granted to every blackman as to the white, they are informed thatthey (and evciy white friend and ally oftheirs) shall have "war' and hatred and proscription and oppression from their ''mas-ter-

    No man can read theparagraph abovecopied, without seeing that the spirit of theold slaveholder is still strong in the breast ofthis South Caroliaa journalist, and I us brother Democrats. What the condition of theSouth Carolina Republicans is, is ipiite a?plain. They can have their rights on orscondition : that they make no attempt to ex-ercise them. If they will keep awa3 (rotathe polls and from political meetings, andhold their tongues on all political topics, theycau have iruict ; but it Uonlai armistice.The violence and hatred and oppression areonly suspended, and will fall with addedforce on Ihe lit ad of the luckless voter whu

    dares to show an signs of voting a "radical"State ticket. Is or is not South Carolina inthe Union? And is this or is it not a freecountry?

    Cia Siai cf a HaalTr. Ssfishls.When William II. English of Indiana had

    been nominated for on theticket with Hancock, the correspondent oftbe Times telegraphed from Cincinnati thatEnglish was vco unpopular in his own Statoon account of the greed he had shown iu ac-quiring money, and especially for the

    manner in which he had foreclosedmortgages held by him upoa the property ofhis neighbors. To this it was answered thatEnglish was "the poor man's friend. A cor-respondent of the Cincinnati Commercial hafurnished nearly an entire page of testimonyas to his character as a "poor man's friend,'taken mainh from the official records of theCounty Clerk's office. These are in the shapeof a list of 1S5 suits of judgment and fore-

    closure of mortgage entered since Ihe panic;another list of 43 sheriff's deeds from theSheriff of Marion county to William ll. Eng-lish ; 39 deeds issued under foreclosure ; 40tax deeds from tho city of Indianapolis toWilliam II. English ; and 29 tax deeds fromthe Count Auditor of Marion county toWilliam II. English. The records revealthe interesting fact that rarely did Mr. Eng-lish, w hen bt'3'ing under the hammer, bidthe full amount of his mortgage, thus leavingin individual judgment against nearly everyone of his unfortunate creditors. Nearly 800pieces of s real estate have havegathered in b this poor ntan3 friend"through the medium of foreclosures and taxsales.

    The correspondent gives three cases asillustrating the manner in which these oper-ations were performed, the sufferer in thefirst case being a Republican, in the seconda National, ami the third a Democrat. Capt.J. Rieli'r, an employe in the postofficc, said

    "Some si I'ears since I purchased for2,200 two lotsfxoin James Frank, who liad

    laid out an addition on land height from Wil-liam II. English. I knew Frank intimately,and had so much confidence in him that Iwas careless about looking at the abstract oftitle, as he said all was right. I paid parttlown, and altogether paid SI, G00, and theeluul a chance to sell the property to goodadvantage, but the would-L- e purchaserfound lhat English held a first or 'blanketmortgage over the whole addition. I thenwent to him and asked him lo release if, of-fering to pay extra nyypro rati of the mort-gage, when he said he w ould not do it, as thomortgage was not due unlit 1 330,and he w ouldsec about it then. This wa3 in 1376 or 1377In the mean time Frank had turned over tohim my last two notes, audi told Englishthat unless he released the mortgage I wouldnot psy another cent, as he might come onme tor any amount he saw tit in 1330. Hesaid I could do as I liked, and subsequentlyforeclosed ca the lots, bid them in himselfand secured an additional personal judgmentagainst me of il,000. When I learned this1 went to his otHce and asked what I owedil.OOO for : lhat I had paid him Sl.fiOO. andthat he had the lots hack, and what morecould he ak ? He s&Id what he asked waihis money, anil he proposed to have it, andthat right away. I then told htm w lot 1thought of bis roblvr, and he ordered UKout of his office. I had a small harness shopon Delaware street, ami was compelled to gointo bankruptcy.

    Charles W. Moodv, formerly a druggist,said to the correspondent :

    In 1S7; or 1374 I was in business at tin.intent of Indiana avenue and Tetme.see street and owned the building. Wasdoing well, but concluded to add touivbuilding, and, as I had a little extra money,and there was a large amount of buildinggoing on, I thought 1 would bti someground and start a brickyard, and that,thereby,! could make the brick for my houiefree of cost. I accordingly liought ten acrissouth of town, from It. F. Heffgen, lorjtlTH) per acre, and paid on the pro'HTty

    leaving two notes of1,000 each 3d unpaid. These Ileffgen

    sold to En glish, ami on them I paid untilI owed him ci93.4o, according to myliguriug. I also paid the Uses, and this wasthe only incumbranc on the grouncL In themeantime there was no sale for brick, busi-ness was dull, and though I worked nihtand elay I was unable to meet the interest.English then foreclosed, and though I methim at the court Iioum. ami on the stepsasked him to be lenient, that I was doing allmortal man couM do. and that 1 would pahim as soon as possible, he said; and theseare his eiact words : If you don't hurry upandpayme fatter, I will drive you thetland gone f

    ltut this is not all,' continued Mr.Moody, he liought in ihe property andclosed my elrug store ou a personal judgmentof 2,50t. Row he got that I could not dis-cover, until 1 found that the notes weregtIddearincv' and that he had exacted the

    premium. When he closed my store othercreditors of course came, and 1 was ruinoel.At tluit lime I considered myself, and wasw oitli of , $'i,0C0, and RillEugH-.l- ruined me.

    The correspondent ncit vhitel an oldGerman naranl Ucorje Schrittr, who hasalso felt the grip of the iron hand :

    He was formerly in the ssloon business,and owned a time-stor- y brick building onWashington stiett, opposite the court house,and is au honest, hard working man. Ho isnow epiile fevMe, Had when talking of hisbusiness with 1'nglNh gnms er edited.According to his statement, he ir.ded h:sproperlv with the Octopus for to r boiwsami fix lots in Lngliiri addition, ioh! u,itpicnily tiinrtg'.g.tt the property, w:.ci i1alue.1l by Eiigh-- h pi Ihe trade it! i t'him for l.Siiti lei pay a d U 'I iirtineiittble foieclsure followed", nud uh nfrieuds helped to redeem tLe proper!" on theIat day there was an item of 5I11O for attor-ney's I its Tor his n. who attended the case.The man's trieud" also exacted thefull (Ti.a!tyou the la certificate whichSchriter was limbic to take up on itccounter fickness.

    The Grani List zi Versuat.Wc arc indebted 10 Secretary of SutJ

    Niche! f for tlu following statement of the

    Grand List vt Vermont for 1SS0:Mmimt uf IWaX Iil itf (3,lCi,43S acreO. ;t.m TIAmount 'I IVrxvul Ktaie IS lK;,i'2

    Tout .. . $S,t3i,0W(ue pen-ra- t of vMch 1.... S sai.E.0 nlllJ folU (W.Ol V I1W.9W (MLaiauedJdiaai 9,081 00 141,0.M

    Lilt Iur9iitliXl . ,.titfivi,i,a.v.


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