. - - . :h The .Democratic Watchman Another Triumph. , .... — The Democrats haveatgain carried BY P. GRAY MEEK. • New'Yorle. In the election there, •on 1 ..., ----- JOE ar. EtittET,miL 1 , yi.vit EDITOR. Democracy was gallantly borne aloti • .. by the white men of the city and State, Terma,.s2 per• Annum, in Advance. achieving a most glorious victory. ._ _ _.......... . Nit _ - Fifty thousand will le about the ma- BTLLEFONTE, PA: • joritv when' the returns'are all in, which • Friday Morning, May 20, IVO. is a stern and ominous rebuke to the — jitirt'that-would degrade-the franchise g uess, —The darker Senatdr REVELS, MI. and dishonor the white Mall by asso-• • der the Radical dispensation, is 'Oigi :, elating him socially and politically , bte to the Presidency, while Senators with the negro. CASSERLr of California and Scnunz, of From this splendid result in favor of Miiiimuri; being of foivign birth,' are the Democracy; let the Radicals take not. Shall we have another aniend ; warning. It tells them that the white '. ment? ' ' . ; , . people of ,the country intend to lii rtt ‘e ' -4, serve their birth•right•L--that they do iu g —lt is.now pretty generally under- not intend to Mongrelize this people Co' stood that- the Democratieeditorinl or 'this GOvernment. As 11:1.4 •spoken * di " convention is td come off int.i.s I i place the Empire State, so, Mier awhile, will of us I on the 14th of Jinie. • Many of our ex- speak the *Mile country. • The.feeling 1111 t • lies changes have'signified their ass.ont' to in all the Stain is the same. Even look to u that proposition. Mill next week we -away up in New England. the intlig: sanctity i' dlialbissue a regular call for that con- mint protests Of the . people' are heard In", wet, ;vention, signed by a number of the against the shameful. et:milt:et of the I rile old .9 , ini • ivost prominent Democratic editois in Radical pUrty, and Cont*lclicut li R T La tli 0. menni, thg.State. , -' . • - . , pitt hernelf rii-lit on the , i/econl by tri.. day he ever • umphantly and gloriously electing' the m itt him. - —The New York ~stantlard. JOHN noble E.Nuusit. The \Vest and Sollill . puritan - ,RUSSELL Yot - No's paper, nominate : are tinily growing more and more to- i '''' i '' Hon: GALL'SiIA A.- Gnow fin the ''Haiti-' gether in the great resolve'toCrnsh the ind• cal candidate' for next Governor of h y d ra of Raaierd i siii, while the people F Penmisylvania. . GROW is a tolerable of the Middle States are Willa- , over decent man for a Radical, Oil has ! with wrath at the degradation that has more brains than the majority of them, come upon the country.- The signs but then he has grown entirely out of of the flutes indicate a grand Di:lll6am their remembrance. his stock in trade is Jubilee in- IS7". and the bright 'days *as the nigger question, and, since that are yet to One will be Made still that, has been diVdsed of," Gm.csnAls brighter by the contrast with the llok capital has been vastly reduced. ' till 'shadows of the Inuit ten years. OM —Since the close of the McFAR• earnestly in behalf of our country and LAND trial, the ‘roman in dispute haste our principles, and the clad daY'• that published in the Tribune—that escape shall release us from our thraldom will hole for all the filth in the country—a ' came at last, and "give to the people defence of her conduct, and saps some another and we trust a continuous leaie rough things about her first husband. lof liberty and good Government. - • We trust this thing will soon be over. Democrats! •be firm in the right The country has been surfeited with it, eau. i . e , a n d w e will yet leave to our chib and tlk dish begins to be, tap:tele:3s on • dren, as Our filthers left to us, the best the public palate. Mrs. McFARL.O:n institutions th,sun shiues upon alias RtcuAnnsoNowill hardly be able io make the people believe that she was right in engaziiiy. herself to the lat ter before she was divorced, and while vet under her husband's • roof. They judge differently trotn Mrs. -C.-U.1101:N HORACE GREELEY, SCIICYLER. Cut.r.VX and those, other old Indies - • , —That able and faithful Demo-. cratic reptpentative iii Concrete. Hon. RICHARD J. liatmotax, ha:' taken to himself a .wife in the person of 3.lisg' 3Lt6GIE CAIMION, daughter of the great "Winnebago." While we don't like old Soto N politic4ilY. we, f course, are bound to admire thedaugh ! . ter, and especially are we sci4ound now that she has had the eo ritt..«ense to become the wife of it Democratic husband. The wedding came oil' tit the residence of Senator Camtitos on the evening of the ]_'tit instant, and *Was a very brilliant attain Among the . groomsmen, we notice, was,"Cam" Burnside, son of J udge ,lames I".n rn • side, of this place, and grandson of Senator CAMER.ON. --It Seems that dons Dr:xi., the murderer who was executed at Reading the other day, did not go oil' iq a blaze of glory as most of the peoplekdo who commit murder, but expressed‘ some decided apprehensions as to ltis latter end. He didn't :seem to be at all ciLr thin that he tvas destined for the hap. PY la t ud. Wherein We believe JOIIS 'n -as ihoul'half right. What's the use of haying a hell, if the surest way to heaven is by the short cut througlca man's windpipe? . don't believe, as a general thing, that murderers go to Heaven any more than we believe they ought to go there. We d o n't -in sist, though, that they 7 shall all go to hell, but we can't' coax our inrgiva lion iato.anytbing like a pleasurable state by picturing to ourself the beav coly.ociety so wretchedly interlafded with earthly cutthroats.. --.111 view of the fact that .Ga..ustr .contemplates another round of pleas ore attlie watering places this Sum rater, and, in company with Stucor Csuraos, intends coon to leave 11"ach• ington to begin hisamMsenients,'fflial• timore paper says that•ry-bill has been prepared and will ceou tbe . introduced, fixing the pernianent residenee of the floyerninent officials it. Washing)on, and debarring then' from leaving that. city without , first 'having obtained. leave. from Congress. The bill also decrees that the deparmients shall be ppen from. 9 A. M. to 3 P..M., daily, so that people having,,,busitiess shall be . received and heard, and that a coin; plainCiidok'ialiiilt"lie' kept! fn which every citizen maprecorli 1118'031111 rya II t This bill, 'Mould it pass, will prove a serious inconvenience lb our roving President, though he might, perhaps, find a way to evade its provisions,f as easily as he has always'found a W• ay• tto evade his'otilcial duties. Iv let us have faith- - -ohly let us work ---We are glad to perceive. Wire ' cent (decisions, that the United States Stipreme Court is eel true tOlts ancient ,prestige. Notwithstanding the bully ing of the Rump Congress, the Judge's have 'not yet become either frightened ;or corrupted, and render their decisions fearlessly and impartially. We are eratified to be able - to say this. 6ec a us e we' were s ! onteWh.fraid of STRONG and BRADLEY. butklllte'irse ot these gentlemen so far has, been that of Judges, not pai:tians. How thankful should we he that, amidst "the general degeneracy of the times, and the con. ruption ofthelegislatiyeandexccutiye ,lsi*tinelts o 1 'the Government. the tvOpleyet have left to them the jtidi cial department. fearless. free and un corrupted long as this is left 'us -as long our J udges are our protectors —as the . ertnin9loats between us atol„cmr despoilers, we cannot be utieLly ruined. To the Supreme Court, the'n.let us look for the mainteaance of our rights and.liberties. —Gen. Luc:AN, Cum tuander.in- Chief 01 the Grand Artily of the public? has issued his usual hjfauluin about decorating the graves of the soh (tiers on the 20th instant. It is 'is ery pretty custom to decorate the graves of the loved one's fallen in battle, but we suppose, it .could. and would be done just as well , without the dictum. of Jolts A. LOGA. When it is consider ed that LonAs tried to raitiea regiment for'the confederate serilce,.when the war. first broke out, it is not hard to understand hoW ridiculous it is . forrhim nowio„be chief cook and bottle washer in the ceremony of .decorating the graves of the Federandead. John is a tirt.t.clitss hypocrite, but a very rue. cessful one, t • —lt is - proposed to remove the re ; mainsof the late. Senator Douct.ts from their', present burial place . into the I grounds of ,the Chicago University, f which were a gift from 11j. DOUGLAS during his life. Some good reasons are assigned for this, among which are the facts that, the monument to his memory has never been finished for want of thuds--that the masonry r \ eryy laid is suffering from the effects : of the water It the Lake treezing:in its cracks—that the • grounds' are sadly neglected, and that they would sell for fr0m'4.50,000 to $lOO,OOO, a sum guff dent`to-finish the monument, aCcoril ing to iheoriginal design or even more elaborately. For tlifse and other rea— sons, it is proposed•to remove the hon. oral renintiyitilint)logrounds of the rtinii:Creity which the liberalityand I public spirit elite, great Senator pee to Cbicago. —A young lady name IDA tivru, at Omaha; cotnthitted suicide by ehoot ing- herself through the heart. with pistol. She WWI to have been married to a man named BREWER, whom she exceedingly disliked, while at the same time she was deeply in love with anoth- er man. The determination of her • arry Bafrtn, The San Francisco Pulletin prints parents to make her m the following letter, addressed by over was the cause of the bloody tragedy. fifty DemOcratio members of the gali- Here is a little romance in everyday life that some accomplished novelist 'lonia Legislature to a County Clerk who hail Refused to Iregister colored might, weave into a thrilling story, the . . voters under the F ifteenth Amend* moral of which should.be, thht parents, ~,,,,,,. , • in desperate eneeS like the. one above "SAQR. MENTO, April 6, 1870. referred to, eliould mind their own bit- "\V. B. C. Brown, Clerk of County, i* Court of Sacramento County': "We have just learned that, in the "Ye Scheme to Bagge Penne." exercise of yOur official (tut* ' you • have proven faithful to the oath you (Chile there were undoubtedly some took 'to respect, the Constitution of the good melt among the earls' MassaChu. I State of Californin N wltich liMits suf.. to re setts Puritans; there w fra gC ere many great t° ister the names pfyack men arefusings voters g rascals-and the 'meanest kind of cant- ion the great register. • As/ the right to ing hypocrites. :iniong, these was prescribe the qualifications of voters Corrox 31-Arnert, of whom we have line been exercised by the States, each. .often reed end in whose religion most in its so v ereign capacity, .-since the formation,of the government, iris clear of tis have been taught to believe. But tnat toe ower . is not one tha i t,' bas Vet in these days things wear a.different . been `delegated,' and since this State look to us . ..phi instead of believing in the I has refused; in the most emphatic man sanctity and piety of Rev. COTTON ner, tonssent to thaFilteenth • (so.call, ed) Amendment; it is eplally clear dial ru ER, we ean now only behold him as a refusal to 'register as voters the vile old sinner.whoSe avrtricionsnes. and • il: C.j t t ilS - Of Week men is in , strict accord other mennaesscounterbalaneetilhebest with. the : Constitntion of the United kday he ever saw, nil the good that was I States, as all 'men Can satisfy; them him. ite was a Mealt o• g, ' reSpin old selves by reading the tenth amendment c' • • thereto. For ' Your fidelity to your puritanical old son a steers ßelief, as the' fol• steers ditty, amt for your manlines s lowing " .. Schime to bagge Penne" will this time. marked by the degeneraCy indisputably show. The editor of the of so great a . portion of American eole we whos nes arc eunto Easton Argus, in his last •issue, .pub s p ubs p eribed , a 6 •ree e toa sumpil mrt ) h ciit re . with lishes the following bit of history, which all ' the moral, and if need be,' all the 'throws some light upon the. dark side phy - sical force God has given us. - of this reverend hypocrite's character. ("Signed] J. W. MAsor.vird.c, - Ile says: "Anti over fifty others." The Constitution of Ohio also Ihnits utrrtye to while men and must be the "higher law" in this State until the pop/c of the State see proper to. sh it out. The judges of election in Ohio take an oath to support the. constitu tion of the State. These judges of our state and local electiOns are not to be governed • by the laws of the general government in this. And we hope no nail in tiihio, will act as such judge mi; less his mind is made up to stand by the constitution and laws of the State. We like the ring from California.— c a ,th m (O.) ihniocrla. "Mr. Judkins. the librarian. of the .Itissachnsetts Historical Society, in overhauling a chest full of old letters ,le!osited in the Archives of that body by the late Robert Greenleaf, of Mal den has recently made a curious dis covery which has especial interest for the people of f'ennsylVanta. • Among these papers was one of ancient date. Which bore this endorsement “Ye scheme to ba cge - Penne." This curb ous'title attracted the attentionof Mr. JudliinS: and he examined the contents of the document with more than coin- Anon interest. It is in the familiar and quaint handwriting of the Rev. .Cotton Mather,• and is• addressed to -Ye aged and heloVed Mr. llH*itison." It bears date. 'Septemberye 15th. MS'S 'rind read,: tints, the odd spelling of the oricinal being followed to the letter:" There bee witv at sen a shippe ((or our friend. Mr. Esaias Holeraft of London did advise the be the last packebthat it wolde sail come tithe in 4,ncust, called ye Welcome R. Greenaway m..ster,:iviavit has aboard an hundred or more of ye ',relics and malign:tuts called (;Haters with W. Penne who is ye Chief S'eatripe at ye bedde of them. 'Ye-Court has accordlriggely given secret orders to Minster Malachi Iluxett .dye brig to Prriposse to•waylaye ye said Web 4,01f1e slylie as near the coast of Codde as may be at - 141115g, captive ye said Penne and Lis ukodlie crete se that ye Lord mey be glorified rind not melted on ye s , dloCthi e new com mie with ye liethen not-shrive of these people. Inch spoyte ran be made by :telling ye whole lotte in itret - ,a.toes where slaves fetch goo .le prices in rummy and sugar and we shall not only do ye Lord great service Ly punishing ye wicked i.nt tee A3nll make crest Bayne fir kris mini-terst and people. 'Master liuxett end will set down the news he -brings when his sitippe conies ' Yours in ye lo,veils Ch rist„ CibTTON MATHER. The Arpis continues as follows : '3faster Ifuxett missed his reckon ' ing, aid Penh sailed secure within the Capes of the Delaware. But it is cud: our to refltct on the narrow chance by which the tounder of this Common wealth escaped the fate of many,of his teeligious brethren who were cast ashore on the relent less coast of Nassaclutsetts. It is strantze• to fancy the wise law , giver, endearedvto the hearts Of a great 1 people and their posterity by his wis". 1 doni,,sagacity and benevolence, hoeing sugar in Barbadoes under the lash Ora. t Yankee overseer, or.crushing cane into rum' to thaw the granite gizzards which Mather and his theological brethren carded about instead of hearts. Ali l: now the ancient Cotton Must have ilpurned tbr the marketable Quakers aild d 1 retteshing " Ili mme" Which came out. It is delightful to think how , he never got a bit of the "spoyle - I which his deOish'old soul held in de -1 licious antidpation-hdriv brOther llig ginson watched fondly fur his hogs head, mid dreamed of swallowing . his i half score of heretics in pious punches. i They would have made "a runt,cretur" I of the'Great Founder, in a literal sense, I ifthey had got hint, but, thanks to the gond steering of "R. Greenaway, I master," "they didn't gel hint" Late Publications We have received King's Musical Learcs „for May. It consists of abiteen large pages devoted to Choice Litera titre, Music, and Rcimance.. Among the literary contents we nole "Mozart imLoadon," "Love in the!fire," "loan Absent Wife," "Heart's Own Music," etc. There are also four pieces of Mu• sic: "The Angelas,."''"Little niggle May," "Beautiful Nell," and "Blue Bird Echo Polka." All they ask for a subscription is one dollar a ... year: The music during the year conld not be bought for less than $2O. Publish• ed by '1.2. B. King, PhiladelfliM. ' Goner's I..urr Not; for June has al ready reached us. It is a bet - Imila' number, and cloaca the 80th year of ita -existence.-- The —embellishments this Month are "Waiting nt the Fer ry," a steel plate; n six•flgure colored fashion plate; "The ITheipettledt Let ter," "Catching Birds with ka .It literary contents are superb, and its whole 'g'et; us is such as only Goiley 'call import ty a Magazine. Eve ry lady should linselt twon her table. -It is 'the woman's delight,' instructor and companion; Price $3,00 per ar.- ultra. Califoi•niens Refusing to he Fifteenth 'Amended. Railroad Slaughter. Tered/le allision on the Union Pacific Railroad—Sixteen Persons Killed Out right and Twenty Irounded—Misun derstandinfj of Orders Said to , " hai.c been:l/Lc 4 1 , n% 16th/fut. • . - St. -a Louis, May 12.—At six o'clock this morning the night express on the, -Union 'Pacitieltailrutal, which left Aide . icon, Kansas,, evenirw, when.. near Eureka, twenty-eight miles from here, with an extra freight train going west, by which sixteen per sons were killed outright and twenty wounded, \ of Which latter number two will die. Ico ,names are known at present. The wounded are being brought here and further particulars, will be ob tained when they - afirive. The dead will be brought ltere es soon as the cor oner reaches the scene of the disaster and holds an inquest. A special train h;Tt here early this morning with physi cians and all necessary appliances for the relief of the wounded. For the care of the dead another train will leave at noun with the coroner, reporters and another relief pithy. Both of Ole loco motives were comuletelly wrecked, and their trains badly smashed. The colli sion mourn:A through the orders giV'en td the conductors. Hudson E:. Budge, the president, and Thomas M'Kissoek, are on the spottNing-tlye'rything possi ble to relieve tho supfers and clear the track. Cincinnati, May 12.—Mr Geo. Ligh ten, attorney for the 'road, telegraphs the following names from the seem! of the - accident. The train is exliected arrive in this city at three o'clock with the killed and ‘Founded.: Billed-you doctor A. 0. Pixley, of St: Louis; Prank Hall and daughter, of •Ashley, Mercer county % Ohio Jacob Price, Hickory county, Missouri ; A. 11. Steck ney, Patokn, Maryland, and George Washington (colored porter)..,, There are thirteen others dead whose names are not known. It will be difficult to get the Mimes until the coroners investiga thin is concluded: They ore, without. exception, persons returning from Kan sas, destined to points in'Ohio. Indiana and Wounded—A. Starderan, Pekin ; t l. MOlnfr, Sioux City ; C. A. Marsh, Kansas; M. Hall, slightly, and, a number of others. Though some of the wounded are severely injurai;it believed that all will recover. The peo ple and ,physicians of the neighborhood were on the ground promptly and labor ed incessantly, All that human Tower could do has been done to noduS them comfortable. ' . A. Flenimin, chief engineer of the Tube and Nesha railroad, reported killed, hut this needs confirmation. A misunderstanding of orders seenis hat - been made by the engineer of the freight train, and he has not been seen since the accident, ' Another ' train, with coffins for the dead and comforts for the wounded, lies just started for the scene of the disnater: Second Dispatch. St. LOnis, May 12.—The swiftly m'Sv• ing dashed against each other on a curve in a cut and in a second all was and death. Nineteen persOns Oinv o trittintly killed and twenty wound ed;l..several mortally. One man had both his legs and both, of his amp s cut off. ; • , Both engineers escaped.. When they saw that? nothing could save the trains, they Jumped from their enginos and es caped with but few scratches. • At the Lawrence , Kansas, election, there were female Candidates for the school hoard in four of the six *arils, anti Some seienty•five ladies voted, but there was not gallantry enough in town to elect a single. one of them. Mrs. General Lane made the best f race of any, running against an —individual named .Benes, and receivinijl7 gut of 368. ballOte. ' Rebellion In Dickinson College. There jt is just as .we expected! We always knew the "Fifteenth Amend• tnent" would breed troubte, and pow/ here is Dickinson College shaken `from turret to foundation stone," .atid all about the parade of our "colored fel low•citizens" on Tuesday last. Who Will pretend to say, after this, that Sambo is not a power in, the country? The boys wanted to see the parade,and to this 'reasonable request we presume the faculty made no ,opposition. The parade °tided shortly after two o'clock ; but the minds of the young gentlemen became so greatly excited over the abh sorbing question of human rights and political equality that the members of the Junior and Sophomore' classes memoralized the professors to whom they were to recite at five o'clock, to that effect, and repitsted to be reliev ed Irma the atterhoon'sreeitation. This request was not acceded to, and' there fore these classes resolved .to Stay out of the recitation rooms, . The abseil-. .tees were marked accordingly, and a Certain number of demerit marks charged up against them. When this became known, the classes held meet, ings to express iheir pent.'4lp indigna tion at the conduct of the faculty, and resolved to take no part in College ex.. ercises until the wrong was righted. The (why, therefore ' suspended some of the mem b ers of each class, and noti fied the others that unless they resum ed. attendance upon College. duties by 'Mondag,' they would be suspended un• lit the opening of next session; and if after suspension, they did not leave Carlisle for their homes within twenty. four hours, •they would be. expelled. The students declined to comply, and many of them have left for ; their homes. The num b e r dismissed amounts to about. forty.—Carlisle !infect.. . A Prophesy Fulfilled In April, .IS6I, the late Girard lock, editor of the New York , Journal of Commeleii - d, published an editoria - 1 in that paper, in which he declared that one thing Would be demonstrated by a:war upon the Southern States viz ''That we have not, and in tiecEent qf the subjugation qf the Southern Sluice, are not likely to have such a, Govern ment as the Constitution contemplates, or such as our fathers Understood lobe instituted, when the Union was form. ed. •The GOvernaient then established was it Government of equals, in all - the States would perform willing .parts: The one which our warlike friends, represented (it . ,, ; seems) by the Lincoln Administration would prove to exist, is a Government of force, where a majority of States, or or the yepre• sentatives, as the case may, be shall hold the minority in subjugation to their Fbr the expression :of such semi. ments as this Mr. Eicillock was Toned to retire from an editorial career ex• tending over thirty-three yeai, and to abandon his valuable newsy aper pro. perty., Ho* true the above words are, an'examination of the present political condition of the country will tell.— Louisville Sun. THE HOUSE or REMtrsEsrxrivss.— We find in an exchange, without cred it a description of the House of Repre sentatives, which now a-da . s;fireiembles nothing so much as a boy's school du ring in door recces. • The writer , swarming and buzzing among those hundred desks, so many members- pn -promezde around the room, such rising up and silting dOwn without regard-tu time or presence, such awkward positions, and utter get me alone''ease; impresses one with the stirtaing s of a body that can conduct itselnystematically without:Jim ienst regard to rules or ordinary decorum. Li the morning one may see a line of prostrate figures on 'the lounges within the walls,. , members stretched at full length, apparently dozing off a last night's `jamboree; 'tiro o'r 'three on parade, trotting up and ,down in the very hall itself, stholting their segars ms if the air in the ainpitheater were not precious enough without; bold lob byists venturing inside to capture un fortunate Congressmen on the tariff committees; members sorting .letters and papers at their desks or clapping tlkeir hands to Ammon a swift heeled page from the Speaker's rostrum ; men on theiF feet in half a dozen, places at once the one who , has the right to 4peak only distiliguisited by his sono rous tones, for not a wOrd'eanany spec tator hear int this diseord—such is 'the scene 111,01 1 0'011RO at any hour of any week throughout the winter. It must he interest of thrilling power which can lay those eager waves a moment." • IMPORTANT POLITICAL MOVEMENT.- The Ohio Siuteentan says : The cleveland Plain Dealer of Se._ turday evening says: In ISGI, a large number of Democrats Conceived it to be their duty to , abandon the Demo. cratic organization and join he Union party then orgiinized for the avowed purpose of "restoring the Union." A majority of the number who left our organization iii ISO, still remains os. tensibly connected with the Union party, but its aim and objects, and its legislation are now. so directly antago nistical to its name, that many of the old "War Democrats" and consery atives are anxious to 'abandon it, anti' resume their connection with the Dem ocratic party. • The old issue of the re bellion—the question of negro suffrage and .other matters—are now settled, anti our 011de:a battles in the future are to he waged on new issues, particu. larlimpou the questiOns aline:ice and tariff. Out ll:est:questions jhe dissect. era of the union party agree with the . Democracy, anti are willing, we 'under stantl,•to act with tire regularDemo 'cratic organization, unless thee are,, regularly repulsed. ,For the,purpose' of taking into cot:si4cratintltllte mat-' ter, we under:wind that a correapond- . sneer luts beett!etttorstkinto,, it •in view a conference between' some of the;' War Democrats and the leading Dem-' °orate of this stow,— • I Free South Carolina—Soenes Legislature. A correspondent of the N. Y. Worid writes the following in relation to mat. tern in the South Carolina Legislature; "The Legislature has adjourned at. ter spending months in wasting tk e ,„ treasury, ratifying many unw4e and oppressive acts, and tilling the pockets ()Nile trfetnbers at the , expense of the unrepresented fa:Z.:payers of the State. The scenes immediately preceding th e adjournment were of the most disgrace. ful character. The House presented a picture 'of pandemonium, closing up with a vote to the Speaker of a gill of $5OO, in consideration, doubtless, of the - free liquors and cigars furnished by him to thO•inetnbers during the session, The scene in the Senate defies &scrip. Lion. The negro memhers,pronouneed the, carpet baggers thieves,' 'escaped felons,' etc., with the most offe»stre prefixes, one of them charging Leslie (the Senator from Barnwell) wath'keep.' ing a house of ilbfame int/New York city, and saying he had duly escaped the penitentiary by : coming South. Leslie retorted most savagely, telling: A one Senator that the coat he was then wearing had dqeoh stolen, and he (Lee- - lie) could pro e, it. Pointing round to the Senators he declared that they were scoundrels who had ,sold their votes time and again, - and been bribed and bought by the highest bidder. Ifs th'en gave Chapters from•their past his , tory, in . which.he.presented the honer: able Senators, - flying from justice in other States and fetching up at last in Carolina. He •declared the Republican party a stench in the nostrils of deceit. cy',, and as a Republican himself, he • said lie was ashatned,of it. As low as they said Inch, he never thought' he would reach the depths of nn arse. ciation with such rascals and thieves as made up this Legislature. The black Senatore replied in the same strain, swore that the carpet bag reigd was ended, and that the State belonged to the negroes, and that they would rut in the Middle of such a scene then o. tOrions Joe Crews exposed a large pile of greenbacks on a table; Tim Hurley and two negro Senators whispered to• gether with Crews over this. idle Or— money—then Tim. cireidatd amon,, ,, the Member's, whispering to each, and he. mediately the phosphate monopoly bill was. taken up and passed. After such a scene the President of the Senate in his closihg retharks ally congratulated the body on the har— niony which had characterized their courtesy toward the chair and towards each .other. Many really important measures in which the white people of the State were interested, were for this reason alone, probably, laid 'over,': and the mass of the legislation is of no behefit to the State, however important for party:.-- ends, .or the Aggrandizement of partieu• lar " ••• ! The Seven Wondece of the World. . . The ,first of these wonders were the Pyramids of Egyi.t. The second was the MansOledm,,ot tomb, built by,Ar temisia, , for . her husband, MasOlus, King of Curia, in Aida Minor, at Bali. carnassns ' B. C. 35Q. Iris- now in the British MitSettie, where it was, placed in 185 T. .The . ..third was tlfeffemple of Diana,at Ephesus, which was four hum Bred and flity.tive feet long, and two hundred and twenty•five feet broad. It was destroyed. byliie on-the night of the birth of Alexainler the Great, by a man named :Erostratis,.who perpe petrated the repreliensible act in order, it is said,:that his name might be haul ed down_to posterity. The fourth corn , prised the walla of Babylon. These gardens were raised in terraces. one above another, 'on the tiers of arch es, and reached on (lights. of steps. Flat stones were laid on the arches, and these wore cemented • together by bituilien, and covered , by . thick sheets of lead; carob of sufficient .quantity allow trees and shrubs to grow' was spread on the lead. The gardens were 'live in number, and in the form of an amphitheatre. The • fifth *ns .the en ornious brazen image . of Apollo •at Rhodes, .which was erected' B. C. NO, and was thrown down by an earth quake about seventy years afterwards. It stood acr oss the entrance to the harbor, with each loot 'on the extrem• ity . of a male. Thii - sixtli Was Michas' statue of Jupiter Olympus, which was thirtymine'leet high, and was made en tirely of gold and ivory,.' The seventh was (lie Pharos, or lighthouse, ,built by the. PtoleMy Philadelphus, King of Egypt, which was built of white mar ble, at the entrance to the harbor of Alexandria; and a light was kept con• stantly on-top of it to .aid the sailors of the Mediterraneanin steering for the bay. • N i nao SUrviittor..—Flow IT W0R1..."1, —The Lancaster hitellig . encer says that it gentleman of that'city has received a letter from his brother in Evansville, Indiana, where they-have had a munici pal election, telling him how the voting of our colored fellow-citizens affected the German:Republicans ; they could not' stand it and deserted in a body to the white man's party, electing nearly the whole Democratic ticket in a largely Republican town. Like. results will be apt to follow everywhere when the ne gro comes t.o..vote, end our Radical friends willthid that the measure which they intended should . : perpetuate their power, has, caused Its overthrow. IV I3 append an, etrant . from the letter re furred to. ' EvAswirtia.g, 118i0. , DEAIr FRAM." * * Last Mon day welifirrelly Breatorilero and for the first. timelhe neireus-voted. IVe; thought. we Would .ho beat-all to.pleceol as there wae.4 large' negro . VIAC, X ll° reriublieans thought it way all right'til.tho votee -were wonted.; .after,neunt in& the vote theyfogad all the Dople crate cleated, but two or three; seven Dollloor4ll ont . pfddlyt giant:flit-lan wore •eleeted., XsAdoit, iteßublican • Oerinidis,laatf, t i nN ,ihgrde:s.Oilagi they turned archind)ind Vot•cd the IDeinocratie ticket. ' ' '
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