THE NEW YORK PRESS. editorial onmot-a or the ifapwo npB CBB.RKNT TOPICS COM.MLKD KVKBT DAT FOB tflt BVBMHO TELEGRAPH An Imbecile Pulpit. 'Vow the Xntlex"9 In germon before the New School Presby terian General Assembly, at Rochester, the Ker. Dr. Samuel II. Hopkins declared that the Episcopal denomination of the United States had "an imbecile pulpit." The remark was made by the retiring moderator of the Assem bly, In his official capacity, and In a city whioh had recently welcomed the Episcopal bishops with the same hospitality whioh the citizens were at that moment showing to the Tresby terian Commissioners. On the Assembly's "sea of upturned faces," this squally remark blew up a general ripple of dissent. The daily papers of hochester urged an official retraction by the Assembly, M due to the dignity of that body. This, however, was awkward and not to be done. Hut the pastor of the church in which the Assembly held its sessions con trived to make a Deat public reference to the offensive remark, and in a semi-official way disavowed it. But it still stands in the offioial repoits, and will not fade from mens memo ries an illustration of the Chinese proverb that "An ill word, once out of the month, cannot be brought back by a coach and six. We refer to the incident, not for its Import ance, but for its suggestiveness. Has the Episcopal Church "an. imbecile iinit f' Is Dr. Tvntr. amid the ruins of St. George's, reduced to "an imbecile pulpit?" Does Bishop Mcllvaine pursue his bishoprio in "an imbecile pulpit?" Has Dr. Schenok come all the way from Baltimore to Brooklyn to fill "an imbecile pulpit ?" Does the Rev. Phillips Brooks shake Philadelphia from "an imbeoile pulpit?" Did Bishop White wear out his long and saintly life in "an imbecile pulpit ?" Did Dr. Milner bequeath his unfor gotten name to be linked with the memory of "an imbeoile pulpit?" ffo. The remark of Dr. Hopkins was a dis tilled drop of the quintessential tincture of sec tarianism. The fact that such a remark fell from the lips of so eminent, able, and noble a clergyman, shows how nncon3oiously, yet how insidiously and irresistibly, a seotarian spirit bewilders the judgment and good taste of men whom the Church would make broad, but whom the seot keeps narrow. It is against such sectarianism that this journal lately uttered its protest in "An Edi torial Soliloquy." It is against such secta rianism that these columns are, if possible, to be made the message-bearers of a better-tempered, more manly, and more catholic Christi anity. It is against such sectarianism that the sects themselves, if they consult their own usefulness, will be glad to see a perpetual pro test male in their behalf by an unsectarian sheet. Christian union between different denomina tions is just now a lively theme with the reli gious press. "The tendencies of the age," Bays Dr. Hopkins (in this same sermon), "are all in the direction of Church unity." But what is theex-moderator's immoderate method of promoting Church unity? He presents us the spectacle of a Presbyterian professor say ing to an Episcopal bishop, "Sir, you are an imbecile ; let us, therefore, twain, be one I" Now, a reason why this journal lately severed its supposed official connection with the noblest of Christian denominations the heritage of the Pilgrims, on which may the God of our Fathers bestow His blessing ! was, that we were constantly goaded to fight a bat tle against Presbyteriauism, by people who foolishly supposed that such a warfare would advance the interests of Congregationalism. But after our act of affectionate excision, the very first spectacle offered to the eyes of the Christian world is the Moderator of the Pres byterian Assembly drawing a glittering sword and striking at Episcopalianism. But is it pleasing, either to angels or to men, to see the Rev. Dr. Hopkins rubbing burrs into the hair of the Episcopal clergy ? Such conduct by one Christian denomination towards another will make it necessary, as Whittier mentions in his lines on Major Stearns, "To put to the Lord's work the sinner. Whoa snlnts lail to do It." But the question arises, What is "an im becile pulpit V It is a pulpit that lacks genius, courage, and firo; a pulpit submissive to follow, instead of bold to lead, public opinion; a pulpit in efficient towards the stirring questions of the time, and hesitant to incur the reproach of holding advanced ideas; a pulpit that is moulded by the very men whom It is sent to mould. There are thousands of such Ameri can pulpits. They belong to all denomina tion. They rustle their silks in every diocesan convention, and utter their platitudes to every synod. They are the sel f-appointed cen sors of nobler raeu who, whether in pulpits or out, are seeking to serve God in their day and generation. Ihey bring the Church at first into weakness and at last into reproach. Against all such pulpits, if the pulpiteer of the General Assembly will uplift his voice, we will join him in the protest. But let him uot attack the Episoopal and shield the Presbyte rian denomination. Let him administer his judgment equally upon all the guilty. What is the present tone aud character of the American pulpit ? There was a tiiuo when the great body of the American churches, of all denominations, and both pulpits and pews lay under the ban of complicity with the hideous crime ef slavery. An eloquent voice in one of the ablest of Presbyterian pulpits Startled the country with the declaration that "the American Church was the chief bulwark of American slavery." It is sorrowfully and nnpardonably true that during the autl-slavery agitation, when the struggling cause first cried aloud for tue ueip 01 an gooa men, the ma jority of ministers and church members, even in the North, were the abettors of human bondage. But in process of tiuw, as the North ern churches were split asunder by the in driving wedge of the all-penetrating ques tiou.'every Church thus cleft in twain let in upon itself a great light. During the war the Northern churches girded the impelriled Government with a stalwart league of de fense. The Northern pulpits "spake as with tongues of fire." Never in the re ligious history of this country did the Ameri can clergy bo nobly fulfil their mission as during the war. Mouths that had for years been dumb towards liberty, then had a voioe. Hearts that never before had beaten for the Blave, then yearned for him in prayer. The ears of this generation never before heard go many good and bo few poor sermons as dur ing the war not merely on public topics, but on the whole range of pulpit topics. Ministers never before stood bo near to God, for the reason that they never before stood bo near to man. The holy oil of consecration with which that struggle anointed the Northern clergy ' still remains on a thousand brows. If "there were giants in those days," there are giants in these next succeeding days. It is our deliberate conviction that the religious THE DAILY bodies of the country its conference, coun cils, and Bemblips--have for 'the last three or four years exerted more influence on lending national questions than has been exert pel by all the politic al caucuses and con ventions of the fame period. For uistanoe (ppeaking of. the. New School General Assem bly), we recall with delight the scene whioh we witnessed in that body when it met in Brooklyn two or three years ago, and gave a unanimous vote for impartial suffrage, before any political convention of equal magnitude had uttered a word on the subject. Withont the help, sympathy, zeal, and cooperation of the Northern churches, the war for the Union would have been a failure. But if the nation had need of her churches then, she has equal need of them now. f What this Government lacks is moral quickening; religious ideas must be made to penetrate political statutes; Christian principle must take the place of party expediency; in short, the Republic, If it is to promote the welfare of its citizens, must be remoulded upon the basis of Chris tianity. A Church that has no influence on the timos in which it stands, might as well have be longed to a former age. It is a happy omen that the American churches, which for twenty years were dead, have arison to newness of life I Nevertheless, God forbid that we should settle down into the easy aud smooth-tongued business of praising these churches or their pulpits. Our religious, like our civil insti tutions our religions, like our civil, leaders are equally full of faults and flaws. Both alike need God's grace and man's forbearanoe. The Church, like the State, ought to be pruned with a busy knife of criticism to keep its branches fruitful and its leaves green. ' "Shall not judgment begin at the house of God ?" Yea, verily. But when one Christian denomina tion congratulates itself and defames its rival, it is generally a sign that both deserve, equally, the same condemnation. , Let every minister, therefore whether In the Episcopal Church or the Presbyterian, whether in the Baptist or the Methodist ask himself the question whether or not he stands in an "imbeoile pulpit." If a man ordained for the ministry is without a sacred passion for his work, certain it is that he makes "an imbecile pulpit." If his heart burns not with love towards all his fellow-creatures, high and low, then no matter what culture may sit upon his lips, he is the weak master ef "an imbe cile pulpit." If he is ashamed or afraid to de clare "the whole counsel of God," he is a poor prisoner in "an Imbecile pulpit." If he is an idolator of his own creed, holding that every man who believes something different is a heretic and infidel, he is the unannointed pro phet of "an imbecile pulpit." If he goes to the General Association only to make an exhi bition of pitiful narrowness, ineannoss, and bigotry, he publicly puts himself iu the pillory of "an imbecile pulpit." If he sheds tears over heresies of others, but publishes volumes of heresies of his own, he shows an amiable foretoken of "an imbecile pulpit." It may be that a Presbyterian moderator, in taking the trouble to slander a single denomi nation, has spoken a measure of truth of all. If so, better then were it for those who felt the scourge of small cords in the Master's hand driving them from the temple, than for those whom His divine indignation at this moment frowns upon, blasts, consumes, and shrivels in "an imbecile pulpit." Arise, John Knox, and preach before the General Assembly t Awake, Martin Luther, aud burn the Pope's bull before the General Association ! Oh, for a stalwart pulpit ! a pulpit musou lar with the strength of strong men I a pulpit to shake the land and be itself unshaken I a pulpit to fight the general enemy, and not to stab its faithful friend ! a pulpit to deliver the bolt of God's wrath, and yet utter the "still, small voice 1" a pulpit to fling down or pick up the gauntlet of defiance to all evil ! a pulpit to keep unrolled the perpetual banner of the Holy war 1 a pulpit clothed with the shadow of the Cross of Christ ! a pulpit covered by the wings of an unseen dove i Negro Suffrage and the Democratle Party. From the Time. The most active of the Southern opponents of reconstruction assail negro suffrage as the obnoxious feature of the Congressional plan. The exclusion of a limited class from the franchise and from office furnishes a certain ground of objection. But the enfranchise ment of the negro is the change which over rides all others, and furnishes the text on which orators and writers appeal to the pas sions and prejudices of the Southern people. Ex-Govornor Perry makes it the chief point of assault in all his letters. "Better military government and even confiscation," he says in substance, "than government resting upon negro votes." The absurdity of this outcry becomes appa rent when it is remembered that in February last certain prominent Southern politicians recommended to their respective States the adoption of impartial suffrage as a measure of compromise. Certainly, ex-Governor Sharkey, who is even more conspicuous than Mr. Perry in the ranks of opponents to the Reconstruc tion law, was a prominent participator in the movement which but four months ago con templated a distinct affirmation of the princi ple of negro suffrage. Parsons, of Alabama, Marvin, of Florida, and Worth, of North Caro lina, were also concerned m the movement, and were thus committed as plainly as Sharkey to the principle objected to as part of the pending scheme. They had as their prompter President Johnson himself, who in 1865, writing to Sharkey, then Military Gov ernor ot Mississippi, recommended the incor poration of the principle of negro enfranchise ment iuio me ottsiuution oi mat state as a preliminary to restoration to the Union. These circumstances show the inconsistency of the noisiest enemies of reconstruction, and the follyperhaps the dishonesty of those who avow their sympathy with the Demo cratic party of the North because of its hos tility to negro suffrage. How little sympathy theso receive at the Sou h may be inferred from the platform of ---- --;--" uuiuu rarty," wnicu was recently christened at Atlanta. The Conser va ive Unionists, so called, reiterated aud indorsed Governor lWy's 1)referenoe for military despotism over government organized under the law. But they avoided his blunier in reference to negro suffrage. Instead of denouncing it, they approved it. And they supplemented an approval of the extension of the homestead principle to freedrnen, with a declaration in favor of exempting them from taxation for ten years. Evidently, the managers of this new party recognize the future voting power of the freedrnen, and the expediency of conciliating them with special immunities as a substitute for the immediate political power conferred by the plan in progress. The attempt will be futile, and the suggested sub stitute cannot weigh against the bait of confis cation; but the fact h noteworthy that the extreme anti-negro position assumed by Messrs. Perry aud Sharkey is, ia effect, repu EVENING TELEGRAPH diated by the organized opponents of the law in Of'orcla, "" - ' " ' The Northern Democrats, meanwhile, have lost no opportunity of proving their title to the confidence of the negronltobists of the South. Atfain and again within the last few months they Lav reaffirmed adherence to the maxim that " this is a white man's Govern ment," and that the black man shall have no lot or part Jn it. The bold and sagacious bid of the t'blcngo Tim, and the prudent prompt ings of the World, have beon systematically disregarded by their party, the great majority of whom are to day as bitterly hostile to tho recognition of tho negro's political equality as though the events of the last six years had not been heard of. The latest evidence has i leen afforded by the Pennsylvania Democratic Convention, which met at Harrisburg on .Tuesday. Not content with a general and most malignant attack upon the policy of Con gress, it adopted a resolution pledging the party to oppose any amendment of tho Consti tution of the State giving to negroes the right of suffrage. In Pennsylvania, therefore, as in Ohio and generally throughout the North, the party at this moment stands committed against the principle of political equality re gardless of color or race, whioh forms the foundation of Southern reconstruction. On this ground, coupled with a denial of the Hght of Congress to meddle with the suffrage at all, the party has hoped to commend Itself to the South, with a view to partisan effect after the States shall have been readmitted to the Union. ! Nothing, however, could more surely seoure the permanent defeat of the Democratic party. It cannot hope to carry the North on an issue adverse to the whole action of Congress. And it cannot by any possibility obtain the future Control of the South by hostility to the race Whose votes will hereafter be an important ele ment in Southern politioal affairs. , With negro suffrage irrevocably established among themselves, the Southern people will naturally affiliate with that party at the North which favors the voluntary adoption by all the States of the principle which is being forced upon the South. General Loncstreet has well stated this aspect of the case, iu these terms: "If I appreciate the principles of tbe Demo cratic party, us prominent, features oppose the enfrunrhlbf ment of tbe colored man, and deny tbe rlht to legislate upon the subject of uf- iruge, except by itie bin tea Individually. These two itniurex nave a tendency to exclude South ern men from that purlt; for the colored niau Is already cuirancbtsed there, and we cannot seek alllar ee with a party that would remriot His right. The exclusive right of the States to legislate upon suffrage will make the eulian elitBementof tbe blacks, whether for better or for woise. a fixture anions us. It aonears. therefore, that those who cry loudest against mis new oruer ot inintts as a public calamity are those whose principles would flx It upon us whim, ui a rnmeuy. ji-iico u oeooines u to in slst tliat sulTruse should he extended to all of the Slate, and fully tested. Too peopled the Kollh should adopt what they have forced upon us; and if 11 be proved to be a mistake, they should remove H by the remedy under republican principles of uniform laws upon sufliane." The Northern Democracy, then, by arraying themselves as a paity against negro suffrage, overshoot the mark. They are fighting against facts and fate. For negro suffrage, as a pow erful political element at the South, is already an established fact. And the neces sity of adapting themselves to the situation, and making the best of events which are not likely to be reversed, is forcing itself upon the minds of the leading men of the South with a rapidity which we are apt to underestimate. Governor Orr is not the only Southern leader who has an account to settle with the party which tempted and then deserted his section. And General Longstreet expresses the convic tion of an influential class, when he refuses to serve under the banner of the Democratic party because its leading ideas and principles are of the past. A party which clings to the prejudices of caste begotten of slavery after slavery has been abolished, cannot hope to regain the direction of national a flairs. The President's Duty to tbe Country, From the Tribune. We have ventured in a quiet but emphatic way to warn the President and his advisers from a policy which can only bring discomfort to the country and additional disaster to his administration. We have entreated him to let well enough alone, and to be content to exe cute the law entrusted to him frankly and without reservation. We tried to 6how that he was, as it were, upon probation, and that the country was watching him with jealous, sensitive eyes. We have been especially anx ious that he would not be led by the Copper heads into another war upon Congress. This warning is misinterpreted by the World, which insists that, because we tell the Presi dent the truth, we are demanding a summer session of Congress, and opening a new line of assault upon his administration. We dismiss from consideration the temper of our contemporary. What is the situation ? Congress adjourned after having assigned to the President a certain duty. It was under stood that he would perform it. Impeach ment was only prevented by President John son's good sense, his conservatism, his gene rous obedience to Congress. He wa3 called upon to execute a very distasteful law. It was gall and wormwood to his Excellency, but still it was law. It meant that all that he had done in the South should be undono that the contrivances ho called "States," and the mobs he called "Congressional delega tions," should be disregarded; because in their creation he had ignored the principle of impartial suffrage. The President wanted the South to come back as it went out with an aristocracy ruling, and the negro neither free nor Blave, but the nondescript "freedman." Congress wanted the South to come back with the people ruling the inte rests of labor recognized, aud no distinction of color. Congress won. The people sus tained Congress in every loyal State; and the President's policy, to use a Hebrew metaphor, was broken as with a rod of iron, and dashed in pieces like a potter's vessel. The law passed was extraordinary, but it was meant to meat an extraordinary case. It was practically a war measure. We sustain it.and insist upon its execution, although we trust that it may never have a parallel in our his tory. It is the only means by whioh the South can be pacified. It is a generous, libe ral measure, certainly more so than auy future measure will probably be if the subject is again before Congress. Its provisions are plain. It means that the Southern States shall be reconstructed on certain principles; that the Generals shall superintend the work; and that the Generals thus in command shall be absolute. To us there is nothing plainer. Take the case of Governor Wells I Does any one suppose that Congress intended that Gov ernor Veils should have an independent, ex clusive control of Louisiana that he should be its chief officer that all the resources of the State should be at his disposal and that with these resources he might or might not aid in the work of reconstruction? Are we to believe that General Sheridan was to have a mere nominal command, like that of Meade in Philadelphia, or lUUeok In San Francisco, and to be at the mercy of auy PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, civilian that a majority of Rebels might, call, -Tjovcmor. , it is uie merest nousenne to suppose such a thing. , We presume a Gover nor, is a convenience In the. States, and In the performance of certain civil functions the office is necessary. But the power to rule the power of compelling obedience was lodged In the hands nf a rone rat nf tha armw It 1 the imperial power of the people, intrusted lur a time w uervaiii BoiumrH, charged 80 to Drift that power that tliA Unix. Rnntli uhu v - M - - " - v v Dinnnji KTJ brought properly reconstructed to the Union. The President had failed to do it. The States tneraseives naa laiiod by disdaining to accept the Constitutional amendment. i The people were apathetio, the -politicians insolent; and Iwtwetm the l'rnai.lptit. lVi Ymnnlu n,l .- , ' W - . VA U7 politicians, the Southern States threatened to .!: J . . .... uecoiua uiseaseu inemuers oi tne ooay politio, to be even worse than Poland, or Irelaud. or Hungary. 10 prevent this tue Military bill was passed. , , i Since the passage of that bill the South has been at peace. The Generals have done well, and the President has done well. Registration progresses tapldly. The farmers are busy. The freedrnen are becoming free men. The Generals have found it necessary to make a few removals, but only a few. While under Johnson's plan we had massacres in Memphis and Alexandria aud New Orleans massacres as bloody as memorable battles under the Military bill we have had only one small riot In Mobile. A New Orleans Convention was murdered in July, 18U6. In Jane, 18G7, a Convention will meet as calmly as it would in Boston. We have in the North and South au era of good feeling. Our statesmen are in the South instructing the poople. Rebel Gonerals like Longstreet are perfectly willing to trust the fortunes of the South with the Republican party. The people are wisely submitting to necessity. We think it not extravagant to say that, if reconstruction is permitted to pro gress calmly, we shall have the Southern States in the next Electoral College. We trust that they will send Republican electors, but that is a secondary matter. That is our concern as Republicans, and we trust to con vince the people. But if the President does not interfere, the South will h In tha I the nation will be reconstructed, the people wiu oe secure in tneir rights, tne South will be a land of liberty, the Military bill will die never tO live Strain in Otir lllinnv ennntro- ar,A o r r s " J t our brigadiers will surrender their power to uie peupie, uiu go uacK to tne army to the performance of mere military duties. With this prospect dawning upon the ooun- try, what is the duty of the President ? It is an easy thing for him to make trouble. He r.an Trnl)A.lilv reneivA tin Advina mm. nrotnntnn f than that given by the World. He has a sub a X J . - . - .uw '"UIU ww c Uri servient Cabinet. A Secretary of State who can maintain confidences with MuCraelrnn In reference to the table talk of Ministers like Motley, will not hesitate to advise the Presi dent to decided measures. Stanbery will write twenty opinions, showing just how the i rebiuent can arive a ooacn ana six turougl any law of Congress. Mr. Stanton will coun tersicn the orders as readilv na liu nnnnb.. signed the orders which sent Terry to the mountains. We entreat the President to be governed by higher influences. If he thinks that an Oliinlnil liv Kluriliprir nr nrhnto X , w m nuvig volume of opinions, will be permitted to stand IUO ' ' 1J VI IUID ViLl, Uq nill UUU bULiV b UtJ llUCl made the most dreadful blunder of his Ad- minirttration. Tim Tin firm lma mnAa nn ifa mind that the provisions of that bill must be executed, and no trick, no subterfuge, no strained construction of a law which is as plain as the high sun at noon, no elaborate i i 1 i .. 1 m . i jiau-r ju.i.iu auu icgui luiu, win peruiivteu iu iiiivj tviu ni.ii 11,0 cADbiibiuu j. uo a 1 031- dent's duty is to end this whole business of reconstruction, by permitting it to end itself. He is walking over the true path now, and he can only step beyond it to bring peril upon himself and the country. Kxtrcme Journalism In tbe South. From the Herald. For many years preceding the war, and during its continuance, the extreme character of opinions expressed by the Southern papers fomented the bitterest feelings of that soction against the North. Tho newspaper medium was, perhaps, the most fertile in propagating sentiments which, by skilfully misrepresenting both sections, led to hostilities between them. Unhappily, there is very little disposition to abandon this mischievous influence noticeable in the present tone of these journals; nor are the fruits of such preachings difficult to dis cover. The extremes of party discussion are now to be found in two classes of papers, each of which is battling for mastery in the South 1 the secession and the radical journals. To the irritating effects of their articles upon the public mind can be traced, in a great measure, the present condition of Tennessee, as illus trated by the petition of a portion of its citi zens to the President, praying for the inter position of regular troops to protect them from the outrages of "Brownlow's militia." To the same cause we may attribute in a great degree the conflicts between our military commanders in Louisiana and Alabama and the civil authorities of the leading cities of those States. We had reason to suppose that the controversy which was ended by the can non and the bayonet was finally concluded as between the North and the South; and bo it was, in bo far as the common sense of the lighting elements on both 6ides was concerned. But the party journals seem disposed to keep the wounds open to gratify their own very small deBires; and hence we find new barriers to the reconstruction of the South raised from day to day, by appeals to the passions of the people, in the columns of the newspapers which are not wholly contemptible only be cause they are conspicuous for mischief. We observe, however, that this evil is correcting itself. Tbe press of the South is evidently last losing hold upon popular opinion. The violence of its partisanship is becoming offensive to the sober second thoughts of the Southern mind, which is now moulding itself to the new condition of things ; and it argues well for the intellignt Southern people that they are ceasing to be guided by the puerilities of the secession organs, which keep barking when they cannot bite, and hissing when they can no longer sting. Some of these journals are already learning a lesson and are changing their tone, while others, like the Richmond Times, are giving up the ghost. ,. . 11 i The spasmodic effort to establish a ralical press in the South does not appear to be crowned with much success. In almost all the leading towns and cities of the Southern States, radical newspapers have been started; but they have met with so little support that they can hardly eke out au existence. The reason of this is apparent. There are not enough radicals in the Southern cities to sup port a party journal decently. This class of newspapers is therefore dependent for its exist ence upon alms from the radical party in the North and that ia no parsimoniously distributed that the radical newspapers fare very badly. Demands of an exorbitant character have been made by suudrv Southern editors and Re publican politicians upon the Congressional JUNE 14, 1867. SpldMiJe WliisMos. 1 1 HE LARGEST AND ! BEKT STOCK OF FIFA! E jO LD " R YE I U HIS K I ES IN THE LAND IS NOW POSSESSED BY ' ' - ; H EEMBY S.;H'AWWIS..:i:: CO., Nos. 218 and 220 SOUTH FRONT STREET, WHO CmBTIIKMMTO TUB TRADC. IN LOTS, OX VERY ADTAWTACtEOtrS Thflr fttock of By WMikhi, IS , BOND, comprliM ll tb ftvtrlU krmj. extant, and tune tfaiongh tha variona months nf 1N6O760, and f tlaU ir il iMiinl data. p Liberal contracts made for lota to arrive at Pennsylvania Railroad niw Errlcaaom Line Mfarf,or at Bonded Warehouses, ns parties may elect. p Carpetings, Canton Mattings, Oil Cloths. Great Variety, Lowest Cash Prices. BKEVE lu KNIGHT & SOIT, XO. 807 cheshut street, (Below tbe Qlrard Hodm). Republican Committee at Washington for means to maintain or start newspapers in the South. But the financial condition of the Committee, it appears, does not warrant the lavish expenditure, and we understand that they have been compelled to refuse the appli cations. All their funds are employed in circulating documents throughout the South, and paying the expenses of propagandists of varied complexions to preach the dootrine of radical republicanism in the cities and on the plantations of the South. Hence we Imagine that newspaper enterprise in that section, as elsewhere, will have to stand upon its own bottom. If radical journalism is popular there it will be sustained; if not, it cannot be bol stered up by contributions from any quarter. A press which is not in harmony with the honest and intelligent sentiment of the community among which it circulates, and is not based upon a sounder foundation than foreign aid, is no better than an excrescence. It has no vitality, and can exercise no substantial in fluence. From these facts we argue that the effort to sustain a class of newspapers in the South upon charitable principles is unhealthy, and will not amount to anything. At the same time it is desirable that the stupid, fire eating secession press, which is struggling for life in Richmond, Mobile, Montgomery, and other cities, should be supplanted by a new class of newspaper literature, as it inevitably will be before long, by the force of circum stances; for there is a wholesome publio opinion in favor of reconstruction growing up in the South, that will not be likely to tolerate the hostile spirit assumed by non-combatant journalists. , Self-Government Individual, City, State, National. From the World. The Union League Club, whioh a few weeks ago denounced the wholesale corruptions of the Albany Legislature, in which their own friends hold a large majority, has just pub lished a report on "Municipal Reform, espe pecially in the city of New York," to per suade the citizens of this metropolis that they have no rights of local self-government worth mentioning, and that they should content edly resign all their municipal affairs to the supreme direction of the Legislature. The report of the Club's Committee is a considerable pamphlet of a hundred and forty four pages, and is an elaborate assault upon that democratic theory of local self-government which has been cherished by nearly every American statesman of eminence from the foundation of the Government, and to which less free Governments than our own are universally tending throughout the civilized world. Whatever De Tocqueville saw to admire in the institutions of the United States, the philosophers of Union Square select for their especial disapprobation. They deem it, for example, no "part of the theory of the Government of the mother coun try that cities were a source of political power, nor was such a theory adopted at the period of our Revolution, nor has it any sanction in our subsequent legislation." That "cities are a source of political power" no American citizen has ever contended, if the phiase be taken to signify insubordination to the sovereignty of the State in all matters per taining to the State, or to the sovereignty of the nation in every matter of national concern. But that cities are a source of political power, each one for itself, in all matters ot purely civic concern, is the doctrine which the argu ments of the Union League Club soaroely touch, which is imbedded in the foundation of our history, lives in the very essence of our national democratic principles, aud whioh can only be successfully overthrown by the same logic which can overthrow the right of every State of this Union, within its sphere, to govern itself, and the right of the people of the Union themselves to govern themselves by the logio, namely, of force. That "cities are a source of political power" no man contends who has the truth of Demo cratic doctrine in him, if the phrase be taken to signify any participation in or control over the local affairs of the citizens of the rural dis tricts, or if it be taken to signify any share in the control of affairs of common oonoern to every citizen of the State, beyond and above that share which is exactly proportioned to their numerical weight in the representation of the entire Commonwealth. But they are "a source of political power" in their own all'uirs, for precisely the same reason that the counties and towns are a source of political power in their county and town affairs namely, because we are a free people and govern ourselves. Indeed, every argument of the Union League Club is as good for an assault upon the self-government of the ooun try as upon the self-government of the crowded town. Now of self-government by any people, free dom itself is the corner-stone, and local self government its foundation walls. Undermine these, and the superstructure falls in crum bling ruin. The people of cities and of towns and of the counties, by virtue of being freemen and not slaves; by virtue of pursuing happiness at their own volition, suflering by their own failures and profitiug by their own successes; by virtue of experience organized into frtoulty iu each man for himself; by virtue of each 1 REMOVED. OUR BEDDING STORE IS BEHOVED riton TUE OLD STAWD TO No. 11 South NINTH Street. 8Z7 . Im knight & SOW. man of them attending to his own private business, acquire competency for union with, their fellow-citizens in those matters which they think fit to confide to the common clvio aim, and behind which they think it fit and necessary to enlist their united civio force. Taught in the town meeting, the supervisors' board, the city rule, these men become com petent to the larger union of cities, towns, and counties in the State, and for successful parts in the administration of the State's affairs, that is, the affairs in which all the peo ple of all the cities, towns, and counties of the State have a common and co-equal concern, and to insure the successful management of which, they think it 4it and necessary to combine their larger and united force. Instructed thua in these eeginuings of local self-government, success in self-government by thirty millions of people becomes possible. The States or the people of the States combine in a Federal union for, and to insure, the successful man agement of those common and universal con cerns which they think fit to guarantee the stability of, and to establish, with their aggre gated national power. ; Any particular State Government may have existed before some city grew to its present size, but to argue thence, as the Union League Club does, that the city can derive its right to be governed, and the measure and kind of its government, solely from the State, is to mis take succession for filiation, and is to forget that self-government, be it local or be it national, is inseparable from freedom, and has no better warrant for a widely dispersed nation of thirty-eight millions- than for a crowded island of eight hundred thousand. These are merely the broad lines of demo cratic doctrine. We draw no nice distinctions here, and stir no controversies that have been concluded by battle or the Courts. The essen tial thing is. that each and all these larger or smaller units shall, as they stand, be free; and, speaking for every lover of a pure demo cracy, without reference to the party lines which here and now divide us, we tell this Union League Club, and the revisers of our Constitution assembled at Albany, that it is insupportably galling to the soul of every instructed freeman whether in those per sonal rights and privileges which he has assigned and surrendered to no Govern ment, his freedom is assailed by city, State, national, or foreign foes; or whether in his freedom and local self-government his liberties are usurped by State, or national, or foreign foes; or whether in his right as a citi zen of any State his freedom is assailed by the citizens of other States united, or by foreign aims; or whether as an American he is op pressed by foreign and dospotio powers. Foreign, alien, and despotic, all power must be which surpasses its own lawful limits, and usurps control from the nation of its national affairs, from the State of its State affairs, from, the city and town of their local affairs, or from the individual freeman of those reserved un aliened liberties which are the core of his man hood, as those are of his civio freedom aud his nafon's sovereignty. 'J'UE BUSINESS NEWSPAPEll I THE WILMINGTON DAILY "COMMERCIAL," PUBLISHED BV JESUIKS A ATKIKSOItr, WILMINGTON, DKLAWAKE. Is the only Daily Pape Published in the Slate I The only t iper lliat recolvee News by Telegraph. The only raper sold iu the eireei or wiluiuitfiou. 1 he only belawaro paper Mold on thelraluvor the Leluwaro Knllruud. Bla de I u very large circulation within th city llinliD, It 18 Kent to all the principal totvui aud VU luKts throughout the Htate. jib adveriibiug columns are patronised by all the beitt bimlDfHS men lu the tstute. As nn AdvertiiiK Medium It la unequalled by auf other paper lu the blato. Philadelphia merchant!), manufacturers, anl busl. DfH wen neuera! , will 11ml the ''COalMkKClAlV' bu unequalled medium through which tnuy may reach the people of Drluware. '1 he -COM M &UCI A C" may be keen ou tile at the Kxchauge, and at the Murcauul LU rary. Mot if. Tha proprietors have purchased the exclu sive privilege ol Belling their puhllealluiia on the lela ware Ki'Hroait, for the puipjueof fclvlag their paner all poalhle prominence. g Ium 3 L A T C MANTEL S. SLATE MAKTEL8 are unsurpassed lor Durability Beauty, trenfth. and Cheapness. J. 13. KJM1SB A CO.. I 6m lSo ivm aud zizt CiithNOi' bit,