I , TUB "CLEARFIELD REPUBLICAN," pbiusbbb Rvaav widmiid&t, ar QOODLANDER & LEE, CLEARFIELD, PA. ' . ! . Tli largest ClrcwlatlMi ruiy Nwapper la Krth Ctutrvi Ftniujlvaufau W a- : Terw of Sub.wript.on, ' tr paid Id advaaoe, or within I aontha....)9 (W If paid aftr ud before monthe 9 60 If paid nftnr the eipirMtoa. of month,,. B 1M ,i Jtatys ot Advertising, ., . , Traneient advertieetnenta, par auanf loUneaor a, S timea or last 60 For eaeh aujbiequent loaertion 60 Alminiitralon'and Kxoentors' notices t 50 A adit on' nottoea J (0 Caetione and Katraya ....,. 1 60 ltiaaolation notieea 00 Profeeeionai Carda, II di or leia.l year...., A OA Leal aotloee, par lino 10 YKARI.Y ADVKRTISKMKNT8. I ijiiar 18 00 eotnnn b 00 lauaraaw 15 00 I oolomn.... 70 00 liuara. JO 00 I 1 eolnmn 120 00 t NOETl B.-LKB, - 1 1'ubliabera. Card.. s. T. BROCK BANK, ATTORNEY AT LAW, i CLEARFIELD, PA. Office In Court llotieet 1 ' ) ,fMy rT".r. ; --r WW. M. MOCCLLut-gM, PROD. o'L. IVCK. McClLLOlClI & BICK. W ATTORN EY8-AT-LAW,. ,. Clearfield. Pa. All legal buinra protnptlf attended to. Office on Second arrest, ia thw afuonlo building. J.'. ' "" - jeaia.'rt W. C. ARNOLD, LAW & COLLECTION OFFICE, 2 ft Clearfield Counu. Pi-Dn'a. T5y SV. WILSON , ATTORNKt AT LAW, Olrea aec tan eeet 'it Veiteia Hotel luilding, oppoaiw Court jloues. 'tt, eept-V77. CLKAKFIh'Lb, PA. TBOf. R. RUBHAT. craci eoatioR. MURRAY & GORDON, ATTOtfNEie ATvl4 W- CLEARFIELD, PA. profile ia Pio't Opera Iluuja. aeeuBd toon FRANK. FIELDING, ATTORNMrA X I' A W , I leal Held, d'a. Will attend to all bueinora eutroated io hia promptly and faithfully. Janl'7 I WILMAR A. WALLACB. lAYIP L. IRtta Bianr r. wali.acb. John w. waioLar. WALLACE 4, KREBS, (SuAoreaore to Wallace A Fielding,) ATTORN EYS-AT-L AW jaol'Tt Clearfield, Pa. ..... r, toaara a. H'BNAtLT. btRt w. 'ctRitr. MoENALLY & MoCDEDY, ATTOUNEYS-AT-LA W, : . laartioU. Ha. Laffal bBtloeia attandrd to prowpttf wtthj aialil. umoe or Bood fftreori anaro to rtrsi Natioaal Bank. jan:l:7 4.-.: f -rf- a -r - :.G.,R.J BARRETT, Attornky and Counmelor at Law, ci.harfikld, pa. - Hiring raaifrnad hia Jmlftaahip, hiu raumad lha Draet 00 of tua Ur tn Ala old omco ai iviear- Aeld, Pa- Will alt and the nuarU of J0raon and Klk eoDtiHei when artactall; retaimd in oonnation vttb raaidant ooni4. jam 1 1 ' - A. G. KRAMER, ATTORN EY-AT-LAW, Real Eitata and Collectloa Aarnt, H.lCAKI'IKl.l), PA., Will proaiplly attcad tu all leaal boalocM aa truitrd to hia ear. -0Saa ia Pla'a Opura Houw. Janl'7. - H. W. SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, ' Clearfield, Pa. WALTER BARRETT, ATTORNEY AT LAW. , , Clearflfld, Pa. pfOKM la Old tt'.it. rn llotal Lulldiof, ornffr of tfaaoltd and Ifarkat VU. I.bot2I,Ab. ISRAEL TEST, ATTORN KY AT LAW. Clearfield, Pa. ej-Ofjra la the Caart Uoaia. Jyl 1 ,'7 I) k IIAGEHTY, ItKALKKR III HARDWARE, FARM IMPLEMENTS, Tinware. Nnlla, aVc aagl,77 PfeiBd Strrtt, rirarflplj, Pa. JOHN L-CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Vnd Real iMata Afreut, ClearHeld. Pa. 00a, aa Taird .traat, bot.Chorrj A Walnut. erUtp,lfull offara bl aarvloeaia olllni iBd aajiaf land, io Clearfield aod BdJolaloR leaatlM ; and witb aa aiporieneaot overtwent? feara aa a eareayo, fjattara aiaiealf that be aaa reader aatlafaettoa. . Feb. l;'3:t(. J. BLAKfi WALTER8, REAL ESTATE BROKER. AND nRALBR IB Saw Ifog und Jdmiibor, ' ( ' ' ". CLKAKFtELP, PA. orel drabaai'l Row. fj r ' l:J5:71 ..J. J . L I NQ L E, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, I II Oaeeola, Clearfield Ca., Pa. y:pd drJQT. mSan'sT PHYSICIAN A SURGEON, LUTIIERSnt'RU, PA. Will attend profeaaional ealla promptly. augl0'70 , dr: t;j. boyer, PHYSICIAN AND SUKOKttN, .1 OOna aa Market Street, Ctrarneld. Pa. ' VOAee beam to IS a. ai , aad 1 to I p. b. K. M. SCUEURER, hoMflsorATHio HfYtrttiiAN, " Olfioo la realdcReo oa Market at. April 14, IMJ. "t . Clrarliold, Pa. DR. J. P. BUROH FIELD, Ute flarg eon of the Sfld Heglmmi , Penntjltanln VohBteert, having returned fron th Amy, effara hit profaeatonal aerleea to theoltlaena I L'learBeld OouolJ. . aaPr.rAfei,Udkllf nroraHl attoofleo tf Ofliea on dteond alreel, former Ijoeoupied lj Dr. Woodi. larVM DR. k B. VAN VALZAH, CI.KAftKIKLI), PENN'A. OKKICKIN MAOSI,V'UIW'( " pm- OBr houra-From U to I P. M. n ..Jd.l,l7o.r V7ILLIA1 kvireyftt,'JuTic M ortaa Poacb ARBirwiTaaaa, LUalllER CITY. oaaHaae aaada aad aioaoy praaaptly Hid ever, Artielca of ajtreeraoot and deed, o I Mreyanoe BeaUy aaaane aad aarraated oor. rait or ao akaaa l J"-"'1 HJj'" JAMES. H. LYTLE, l Kratter's llulldlna;, ClraiBeld, Pa. heeler la oierllel, rolalai, , Vejoteblea, Frail.. Fl.r.r, Feed, eta., etc. eprlOa.tf . f ' ' HARRY SNYDER, 1 BAHIKK AKP HAIRDRKSflER. Ilhop oa Market 81. . oppn.lt. Co.rt lloaaa. A idaaa towel toe awey eaeMraar. . . - . t ' , !. . I " Alao maaafaelarer of all Klnda af Ariklaa an Maaaan Hair. ClaarieK, Pa. may l, la. .- . r i .1 f, TOUN-A. STADLKR., ' . ; ,, 0 tAXKR, hartal 1. tleaattavi, H. Freak Dread, Ruek, Rolla, Ploa aad Cakae a hand or made to order. A (eoeral aeaortmoal X CaaleeUaaarlea, PraMa aaa MaU ra eto.k ae Creaea and Oyatar, ia are ana. Ralooa aeerly Ppuoila Ike poatoBea. Prleee aoolerata. alarck I0 7J. ' d1 T . , art sir r VI i.. GEO. B. GOODLASDEIVPrepiietoT VOL.. Vl-VnW NO, Cards. JOHN D. THOMPSON, Juatioe of lha Peace and Scrivener, ' Car.wenetille Pn. Be. Collections auaja and money promptly paid over. Mill'Tltr RICHARD. HUGHES,: JI STICR OF TIIK PEACE roa Ittratur Toirnthlp, 3 ' 4 . Owla WlUa P. O. All offleia! boalnoia antraated to bim will bo proenptly attended to. . nich?. '7fl, THOMAS H. FORCEE, ; 1 V ! i ' Alaa l ' ' OE5BKAL ilfclWilANDIHE. S RKAHAWToy, Pa.1.' AIo, eiteaaiva aranufecturor and dealer In Biaar Timber and Baaed Lumber of all kinde. ' Jaar-Order, aalielted and all bllla pmrntitf REUBEN HACKMAN, H out e and " Sign I Painter !. ?nd . Paper Hanger, i " IttarU-lil, Peuu'a. fcev W HI exwute Jobe In hia line promptly end In 'Workmanlike nianu,r. - . afr4,47'' L i ..,; c;d U. ti. h ALL, PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, ( ' NftAM CL.KARVIKLD, PRNN'A. aI'umpi ajwftra on band ad mad tn ordal n abort nottoa Piroi btmdaa nocaaWr (rnai. All war wrnutad to rafidar JitliioU,.a. mJ delivered irdeatrtd. my25:lyi)d E.WBIGLER & CO. DKA1.RBB IK S Q,U AR ET IMBER, aBd manulaolurora of ' ALL KIMMIOVHAWl l) 1,1 Mltl.H. I 7'7i CLEARFIELD, PKNN'A. - JAS. B. GRAHAM. Vl -1 . a dealer it) 1 Real Estate, Square Timber, Boards, SlllNilLE)!, LATH, A PICKETS, :I0'73 Clearfield, Pa, WARREN THORN, HOOT AND SJ10E MAKER," Market !., Clearfield, Pa. Id the ahop lately oooupied by Frank b'bort, ana door weal ol Allegaany uouae. ASHLEY THORN, 7 ARCHITECT. CONTRACTOR and BUILDER Plana and Fpeifteati'ina forulalicd fir all kimla 01 auililtnira. All wora tirai oiaaa. BiaiP'OHnia- ina a apeeielty. f. O. addreaa, Clearfield, Pa. Jao.l7-77tf.- R. M. NEIMAN, SADDLE and HARNESS MAKES, . Rumbargar, Clearfltld Co., Pa.i Koepa on hand all kind of flnraeai, Saddlee, Bridlei, and Hone Kuruikfaipg Uooda. Kepairing priuptlj at ten tied to. Knuibarger, Jan. 10, IS77-tf. ) JAMES MITCHELL, nr.ALan ia Square Timber & Timber Land, jell'7J CLEARFIELD. PA J. li. M'MUllHAY WILL SUPPLY YOll WITH ANY ARTICLE OF MERCHANDISE AT THE VERY LOW KHT PRICK. COMK AND BEE. ,, l:o:7Sy:l NEW WASHINGTON. Livery Ntable; 1 H THE anderaigned bega leave to Iniorm the pub lie that he la now full; prepar-' to aoeouiiiio date all In the way of fumiehinr H..aea, Uaggiea, liaddlea and llarneaa, on the aborteat notice and en reasonable term. Heatdenot on I.ocuit street. Wet ween Third and Fourth. (JKO. W. flEAttilART. T1ear6eld. Feb. 4. 174 SN YDE R, PRACTICAL WATCIIMAKKR; ARD PRAI.KR t ' -L Watclies, Clock and Jewelry, Oroloel'e (, Jforiaf Aef, ) (-i.karivii:li. pa. - All kind, of repairing In oiy line rrnmptly'-at. Hided to. - April 3.JH KEW BOOT ANDSH0E SHOP. The underaixned would (nfurm the public tMat ha haa removed hia Root and Hboe Sliop in the room letrlj or e pied be J. Dearlng, in Hbaw'a How, Market it reel, where ha U prepared to at tend to the tfitnu of all who nee-l anvthiitg in Ms line. All work dona by bin will be of the bert aiaterlat, and gaarantaed 1 be Iree-alaM In vry rea(eet, Kepatriiif prompt lj attaiid''4 to. .aAII. kind of Lenther and hbue Finding" ftiraaie. - JOHN SClilliKKIU -Claarueld. Pa.. Jul 18, IK7T Km. 1 ' ) - Clearfield Nursery. ; ENCOURAGE JIOMK INDUSTRY.: anderrlicned, Laving oatabli-hod a Kerr , errj en the 'Pike, a'ub half we; betwseq Clew fit-Id and Curwi naeille, ia prepared to fur nub all klnda of FKlilT lltLKb, (itandard and dwarf,) KverKreons. fihruliberv. Urapa Vines, Uooieherre, UwUm Ulacliberr, titrawljcrrr, and Katpberrr Vinaa. A ao. Kilwrittn Crab Treea, Qalnea, and early aearlet Kkabarb, aio. Orders promptly attended to. Addrear, 7 J. l. WtfIHT, leplO AS-) Curwenwllle, Pa ANDREW . HARWICK, Market Hti-eet, I leorflold. Pa., BANtlACTI'BKR Aitn't'tALRR IB HARNESS, FADDLES, BRIDLES, COLLARS, aad all hlada of hors rvMitftmiia coons. A full atoak of rjeddlere' lUrJw.ro, Hru.hc bHni Combe, lilaakata, Rnbea, ale4 alwaye on and for Bale at lha loweat eaab prioca. All klnda of repairing promptly attauiled io, All kiada of bulea taken in aaohanga f n har. aaaa and repairlag. All kiada of barnee, leatbar kept oa baud, aad for aale at a aaueli prolll. . ClearaeM, Wan,. IB, lain. E. WARING'S LAW BLANKS For Rare tl tke ClrerffebJ Rkirat.ira . t ' -. .A . The mo ad C'wtv;rf hi'rUt of iai'ia aWNaifldaVef. - Tbeae Illenka are aotlea op la eaprrior alyli. ara af uailora aira, aad frxi:sH at rary low garoa far eaab. . i Calf at Ike Rafrlrlli'aaJ raW'ariJ teiiiaj then. Ordrt kr ail promptly tiled. ' i A od re.., lltrgDl.ANDEReVIiKRl iafy IS, IUTT M. ; ; BtowUH Pa. JOHN 'TROUTMAW;' DEALER IN . . ' FURNITURE, Jl ATTltKNSKM, . .. . AND ' Improved Spring Beds, MARKET STREET, NEAR P. O. 'J " fbe uaileraign Bega laaro to laform lha ellle aaae al t'learBoKi, ana e p-... B ha kaa aa band a er eeaertaieel of r uruUare, ,k aa Walaal, Ckaaloal aad I'aiatod Ckambei o..,im. P.rlot Balua. RMllning aaa fcataaaioa Cbalre, ladiel'aod tleau' Ewy Ckalra, tba Per forated Dra'ag aad Parlor Cbaire. Cana Baale aad WVadaor Okaira, Clolbaa Rara, Btep aad ta. Ilaa Uddara, Hat ftaaka, Rerabbiag Iraabea, Aa M0ULDINO A MB PICTPm rnMKs, eoblng (lla.eee, Caromoe, la., wklok woald "i'fr '"T.'liN TRO-.TI.Ar.. S. I. 2,517. NOVEMBCfl, Wbrn thlrtte blnwa do light float About tba fianttira belUl, And abrilla (be bawk in a parting note, And creep ( the froit at ugtt. Then billv bo 1 tbtiuj(h I aing m( And whlitla aa I mar, There eomta R-.ln the old heart pain ' Tbraagh all tbo llielutig Juv, . Ia bif h wind oreaka Ike leafleaa treat . And node the fading fern j The knot la are dan aa inow-e)oBla b, 1 And ootd tba auo duna burn. Thn hu, hullo! Ihouffh calling io, i eannot keep It d:iwn j Tbo lean arla unto inr ejrpa, And tliougbu ara abill and brown. Par in tbe neilara Juaky atulea, Whet lha er ifround-rine wearp. ' The artrid;e drum! funereal rolla Alioretlie iallrn IctTci. i And blp, hip, bo t though c bearing ao, It ililli on nhlt the puin ; Pit drip, drip, drip, (turn bare hratioh tip, . , 1 tear lha iwal year'i rain. So ditv the ebtd eows ft-on the hill. Ami cull tluj rt e)irt in f 1 And let their ftampinf etatter M ' ' Jlie harn with waiwing dia. An.) ho, lijlk. bo 1 tlinu)b it is o. That wa no more niay roan, . ' We mill will find a cheerful mind Anutid the Are at home ! -(! L- f Vieefino1, in Atlantic ionlitg. Till-: KLEVTOUAL. FRA UD I Jl'!M;l? III.At'K'H HI.PI.V TO ti. VI. F-TIIIKillTOy. AIM. TIIKBTOIMIIITOJI AKT1C1.R IN TUB " NOIITI1 AMERICAN REVIEW " FOR 0CTO11F.R PI.A1NI.T DEALT WITH. To tin Hon. K II'. Utoughlvn : It 1 do not reply to your arliclu in tlio lust nuiiiiwr -ul'iUa Xrlk American HeeU ic, you will remain under llio de lusion Hint your urnini'iit in itrtHinli-bit-. 1 will try to correct llmt ininutlio L'T Hhowinj; Hull if thure be a defense iiir lite fji'uut Fraud, you decidedly aro not the puibon to make it. Doni thin niuinly lor your own edification, 1 ad tlrcnn you directly. 1 Kcimruto your peraonul invectivo Itiimyiiiirilmt iii-HiiMiol' lhocnHe,tlii)iii'h lliey ui'D so mixed aa to make separa tion difficult, and 1 will consider your objections to my view ot the rubjuctas il tliev uiiu Deeii expressed in becoming auo necent lantniai'C. You think, as your political friends in rreneial think, thul utter tlio tletii-ion ol'lbe electoral cominiasioii DL'uiiist us. we oii"lit to submit in silence and not vex the victorious party with an appeal to the tribunal of public opinion. Wo hum submitted. Tin proper repre sentutivcs of both parlies agreed to leave the dispute to a body which they constituted tor tbo purpose of settling it. v would not reluao to abide by the uwnrd without being guilty of bad faith. We do not nowassertthoinjuxtico of it with any view to roverse or modify it. Ion need not tear the stability ot that award however iniquitous you may know it to be. You can enjoy its fruits in perfect security, and wo tho people will on our part "perform tbe vowa wlucb wo nave vowed Ix loro Hie l.onl, however much it may bu " to our own hurt." But to acquiesce without u protest to conlcss tacitly that tho wrong is right, and the evil a good that is out ol Ihcqnoslion. In discussing the whole subject with gloat plainness ol speech wo not only obey an impulse, but per furin a duty. For this 1 will give some reasons, and lake tho chances ot malt ing you comprehend tbem. In tl)0 first place, it concerns the reputations ol ueurlr nil the public men ol the present dny. Yon and I aro too obscure to bo noticed by history, but the great cbarnctersol our time on both sides will go down to posterity clothed with honor or covered with ifllamy, ac cording as they liavo been trying to rurther tho lraud or slop it. itciuum bcr there mis a fraud, and a very gross one, committed by ono party or tho other.' If tho State of Louisiana chose Kellogg and the other candidates on Ue jiuyos ticket for I'resideulial elec tors, and tho Jlcmocratio politicians, knowing this, did, nevertheless, deny thi) triilh und lubricated a fulso return for Tilden,' whieh they persisted to the lust in trying to pass tor a true one. tbey were a combination of most ro deuiptioiiless rogues; end it will bo re corded, as un aggravation of their crime, that when tho righteous ma jority of tho electoral commission crushed out their lulsehood they turned about and, with ralttinnintts accusations, charged their own guilt upon innocent opponents. The conrerso of these propositions is also true, 1 f tho Tilden electors were duly chosen by the peo ple, and the Republican leaders in and out of the Htalo allured the returns, falsified tho records and constituted a counterfeit electoral college, wboroby thu people ot tho htate ami union were cheated out of tlio 1'rcsidcnt whom they had legally elected by a largo majority, then It la only anticipating liistory to say that all who aided, abet ted and encouraged that ollense ought to be "classed among the worst male factors of the age." Keeing tho grout inturest that bangs on this question, is it not ftiirly worth our while to give it n full examination .while the fuels aro yot fresh in tbe memory Of men V I Another consideration there Is which makes a publio appeal upon tbosubject not only pro) tor out absolutely neces sary, if our convictions are not loo tided in total mistake, lue candidate to whom yon are opposed was; as wo un derstand thu case, elected by any over whelming popular vote, and by a ma jority ol at least twenty' throo in tho elcclorul colleges. 'Hut yon ilcfcitled tho legally expressed will of tbo people aad tho .States, by means of false tokens and (liver oovinptta practices, contrary to' the law nod against the moral sense of all lionost men. Tbo decision of the .electoral commission, by making tho franH- pcirtertly ucecMsful, Invites n nrpelillon of it) und J oli undoubtedly icii.repeat it, unless, you aro in some way deterred, Now, the Nation will not submit to another such outrage. Wo 'promote Viinr true Interests as well us ours II WoT prevent jon from' endan gerirlg tlio peso of tho country by try. ing this kind- tit font piny over again. To that otid th boat, as Well as tho kindest, means I know of ia A complete exposure ol tho fraud Itself, and a frco Icrllicirjm of the commission, which should have rebuked it, but did not. : 1 You deprecate ercry expression from any quarter Whieh is calculated to kiosta tbo coufldenue of the puldie in iheiidiciul authorities, find Ihink.there fore, llmt the .electoral commission should ho Vcr tcnoVrlV dealt with. Mr. Jefferson snid thai jealousy of rulers, not cntilidenoe, "'us tho rirtne of all true ciur.ena of Itopublir. Without slopping to consider whetbor this ap plies to Judges, as utlier ollieors, I an sweryou by paying that the electoral cotimiisiiion -was iiot judicial tnbanal, and did not behave hkoone.i. It we a poUicul body nrgiiniriod lor a special occasion, to ueiormiiw. purmuiai quuslion, "acoordiag to tlio oesi oi its prejudices;", and it performed tho functions assigned to it by disregarding the law of tho case and shutting its eves to the JttoU. iTho loss conftdonoe . I I- , L - t.n. t . wo hsve in snrn inminaia toe f CLEARFIELD, PA., indued, a reasonable regard for tho safety of our most important rights re. quires that wo should hnvo nono at all, You aro welcomo to tho admission (if yon think it will do you any good) that 1 look not only with contempt, but witu abborronce, upon tbo special tri bunals which liavo disgraced tbo his tory of oisr race on both sides ot tho Atluutio, including the star chamber, tlio court ot high commission, all mili tary and occlostuHtical commissions, and all commissions for political nurnoscs. If 1 could rovivo in this generation tho stern hntrod which our fathers fell for thoso dnngorous enemies of liberty and jusiice, l would bo a great Dcnolactor, ana you would never get another com mission of any kind to uphold fraud, to sanctify persecution, or to oppress mo innocent. Yon tako violent exception to my use of the word "conspiracy ,"asnpplied to thoso unlawful proceedings which resulted in defeating .Mr. Tiden's largo majority. Ofcoursoyou prefer your own ciiphemistio phraso, and call it taking " a political advnntago." Hut 1 cannot sco wherein my term is wrong. Your objection is like that of ancient I'istol to tbo word steal, lor which bo wishes to substitute convey. To say conspiracy, fraud, or any thing else which implies that your friends in Louisiana and their allies were guilty of crime, is in your opinion coarse and brutal. Your refined tusto lias been deeply offended in this way, not only by nio, but by tho wholo De mocracy wherever they have written or spoken on tho subject, either in Con gress, before the commission, or olrso- whore. Tho impoliteness, of making tho accusation has been uniformly heightened by tho rough boldness with which it was proved to bo truo, and by tho " blistering words " with which it was denounced, rerbupsali the Dem ocrats wero wrong to some extent. It may be that wo ought not to have spoken out in harsh terms of censuro, or said anything to disturb tho serenity of tho knaves who did us this terrible injustico. But if you aro not altogether blind you must seo that ibis was, in our situation, simply impossiblo. Hero was A great Nation which had siifl'ercd by misgovcrnmont more than any other under tho sun hor property taxed almost to confiscation her industry crushed to the earth her public do main squandered away her best citi zens starving by tbo hundred thousand in tho midst of plenty whieh their own labor had produced, while corruption was revelling in high places and fatten ing on tho general distress. Tho peo ple determined to retorm tho adminis tration of their publio afijirs, and re store thuirown prosperity, by choosing rulers whom they could trust for thul purpose They expressed their will to that effect legally, constitutionally, and peacefully, and they wero defeated by an impudent swindle. Is it any won der that tho great heart of tho Dcmoo racy swelled with indignation ? Even if their feelings found vent In langungo too passionuto, you ought to remember, with Burke, that "something must bo pardoned to tbe spirit ol' liberty." 1 concede, howevor, that no feeling ot resentment will excuse us for charg ing a conspiracy where nono existed, or fraud where nono was committed. Eten If wo wero wronged, that does uot give ns llio privilege of applying terms which do not express the real nature ol tho unury. We can justify our words only by showing that wo uso them truly, in a souso authorized by the law and the common spcocb ol the country. OlhorwiBe our language is, like aomo of yours, more vitupera tion, disgraceful only to thoso who utter it. Accepting, therefore, tho omt ito- bantli, let mo bring your attention to certain facts well and puniiciy Known. It is proved, if human testimony can provo anything, that the people of Louisiana did, on tho 7th of November past (1870), duly, and by regular bal lots, make an appointment of l'resi dential electors known to be in favor of Tilden and llondticks, and author ized them to cast the voto of the .Stale It is just as clear that tho appointment made by tho people was set at naught by a kioss falsification of tho records and returns of the election. This was effected by tho corrupt agency of cer tain local officers, combined with oilier persons in and out ot tho btuto, who incited them to it, abetted them iu it, and helped tbem to clothe tho cheat in what they said wero tho "forms of law." Is it a misnomer to call ims a conspiracy 1 That offence is defined as a combination of several persons to accomplish an iinlnwlul purpose, by concerted action. How con you get your friends outsitlo of this definition 1 Persons acting in this way aro always treated us conspirntors. ami by tbo law of every civilised country in tho world they aro severely pnnish.ed Tuko one simnlo and actual caso oulot thou sands that mielit bo given. Divers dishonest men at St. Imis combined to defraud tho United Stales of their rovenuo Irom distilled spirits, and they diil it by a preconcerted series of (also and deceptive returns which certain publio officers confederated with them pusscd oil' as true. This was held, and justly held, to bo a conspiracy, and somo ol tbo parties to it wero sent to mo ponitentiury. Perhaps you do not seo the parallel, but the analogue is perfect, except in this : that in tbo caso which you de fend tho object of tbo combination wus to cheat tho people out of their right of eell governmeiit, while tho purposo of the St. iouis conspiracy wus to rob tbem of their money. If this makes any difference, it is greatly against yon, for liberty ia more precious than gold. In the judgment of tbo virtuous and wise men who won tho Independence and built up the institutions of this country, the privilege of choosing our own rulers was infinitely tho richest part of the groat inheritance they left us. With a lull prico in blood and treasure they bought this freedom for tholr children, antf I do not know one tolerably decent American who would sell oven his singlo right on any torms whutuver. At the critical period in the history ol Louisiana whieh occur red lust year it was especially valuable to hor people, for it furnished them tho only legal, peaceable, and safo measure of relief from the exactions of a most corrupt and oppressive government. The successful scheme to cheat those people out of their votes for Slato ofll cera and Presidential electors is, tliero loro, a crimo of the greatest magnitude, and one which require a cheek of solid brass to defend it without blushing. Il is far worso than a conspiracy to steal any amount of publio money. Run ning erooked whisky for a life time would be an act of white-robed inno oenco in comparison. Tho ultimato object ol this crime gives it a general aspect revolting in tho last degree ; but its features, when soon In detail, aro hideous beyond ex pression. Some returns wero entirely suppressed, and othera wero altered ; vote actually cast wore thrown out, and others put In and counted which PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1877. wero known not to have been polled. Thu whole proceeding was full of liilse pretences. Forgery of tho most im portant documents wus a part of il; perjury and subornation of perjury at tended it at every Btep. Shul'l theso things bo lorgotten or abandoned ? Do you expect tho cheated people of tho .Milion io say, nue tlio eight commis sioners, thul this is as good a way as any to elect a 1'resiuent t Ono of your allegations is that I in tended " to convey the lalso impression that tho formation, of tho commission was tho result of a Republican con spiracy to fraiidultntly elect a Presi dent and Vico President ;" and Judge Bradley, taking yOtir word for it, has made himself interesting by a publio coinpiuini ot uiu uglily to Himself, l Hid uot say this or anything like it. Un the contrary, 1 relurred to tho commis sion as being proposed in certain difil- enl. cirrumMaml'S io avoW the-ttnrrgrrm winch miibt spring Irom a continued and final disaireument between tho two 1 louses, and as being accepted by the Democrats in tlio belief that justice would bo done, and an Honest decision rendered against tbo fraud. In all this there is nothing about a conspiracy in tlio formation ol the commission. 1 do not know that you misrepresented this point wilfully. It is one of your characteristic inaccuracies liko that which charges Dante with tho inde cencies of the Doeameron. No; the conspiracy was not in tlio formation ot the commission, but in the frauds which fabricated and returned thoso bogus voles. Tho commission ref used to verily the votu and ascertain whether the electors that sent them up wero duly appointed or not, and in this it bitterly disappointed tho friends ol truth, and grossly violated tho wholo spirit as well as tho letter of tho law which gave it being. Whether this was mere error or something worse is not for mo or you to determine ; but tho general judgment will, no doubt, adoj t the ehuritableviewwhich 1 have given, and suy that the faculties of thu majority were too much benumbed by party passion to sco the facts or under stand tho luw. You claim that the certificate of the returning board gave you " a political advantage." In this you lire certainly right. A party sued for an honest debt bus a great advantage over his creditor if ho can produce u f ruinliilont or forged receipt upon the trial. The ailrantnge becomes dacisivo it tho tri bunal trying tho causa is willing to ac cept tho fnlso paper, givo it the effect of a truo one, and permit tho plaintiff to bo cheated out of bis debt. But would it bo right, legally or morally, for the debtor to take, such an advnn tago ? S'our technical argument in favor ot the fraud deserves notice, because it is almost your only attempt at rcuooning, and becauso your conclusion would bo lair if your premises wero Bound. You declare, in broad and unquali fied terms, that too American people have "no right to elect their own Chief Magistrate " that no such right is im beililed in tliot'unotilulion or ulsowhere that, on the contrary, " tho trainers of the Constitution wero careful to ex clude from tho people the right to elect tbcirown Chief Magistrate." 1 admit thai Ibis, if tiuo, ends tho controversy in your favor ; for it cannot have been legally wrong to defeat tho attempt which tbo people mudo to excrciso a right from which they wero carefully excluded by tho Constitution. But this opinion of yours is a total miscon ception, and will not bo adopted by any human being who has tbe faintest idea of our institutions. You put your proposition with even more directness and speuk with un wonted precision when you say, as you do on the sumo page, that the people of Louisiana and Floridatiavo not tbo power to appoint electors of President and Vice President. This goes to tho root of tho matter. It proves logically enough that the election nt which the Tilden candidates wero fixed upon, chosen, appointed and named as elec tors, was a Micro abortion a vain effort to perforin a function ultra virsx and merely void. Tho returning hoard and tho electoral commission wero justified in treating it with contempt. Ot such un election il was no harm to falsily tho records ; for in thoir best estate they had no value or validity. To forgo them was no crime, for it prejudiced no right. But is it true that the people ol Lou isiana and Florida have no power to appoint electors 1 i'otl deny the pow er of the people to appoint becauso that power " Is by tho supreme law ol tho bind (meaning tho federal consti tution) vested in tin) Stales to bo exer cised in sin h manner ns the legisla tures thereof may direct." Now tlio legislatures of two States hnvo direct ed that tho power shall be exercised by tho people, on J this makes their right as clear as if tho legislative en actment had been textually inserted in llio Constitution ol the United SlUcs. No argument is necessary to make this intelligihlo to a man of ordinary senso. There is the Constitution ami there uro the laws ot thu Stales; "he that runs may read," though, untL'r tbo circum stances, I suppose 1 must not allow my self to puy that "a fool cunnot err therein." It is hardly possible to imngino any thing moro "preposterous tliuii your notion that these laws which givo llio power of appcintiner t so dihtinctly, and so exclusively to tho people do lint givo it to them becauso a returning board is authorized to collate the voles, add them together and nscertain what choice the people liavo made ; that tho power to inspect mo record oi mo election nntl certify tlio result is the power elect; that tlio right ol the peo plo to choose their Slate officers und presidential electors is only tbo power to scntl up names to tho returning of- ncer wno may cnooso inem or i-cjcci them at his pleasure; Hint when the people have mndo ono appointment anil tho returning board unother, tbo latter is tho duo appointment, and tlio former no appointment at all I will not troublo you with judicial decision on this point, or with argu ments derived from tho established canons of construction, for tbey would mnko no impression on your mind. I lilt, A think 1 can singger you ny cu ing tho authority oi loose migiiiy jur ists and statesmen who until recently ran the government of Louisiana so much to your admiration. Allofthem, without exception, and "without dis tinction of race, color or former condi tion of servitude," conceded tho exclu sive right and tho unqualified power of the pcoplo to appoint elector, of President and Yice President for ihoir Slate. This concession was not only mado in words, it was avowed in ovory not they performed, from the begin ning to llio end of their domination. Whi n Kellogg and his asncistes wan ted the appointment of eleotors, they acknowledged in a thousand forms that tho people alone could givo it. The returning officers I hemselves never de nied tbo power of tbo ponplo to choose and appoint whom thoy pleased for electors as well us for Governor, Lieu tenant tiovernor and other State ofll cers. Their certificates, whether fulso or truo, did not protend loproprio vigore an appointment, htcry one ot theso papers purported on Us lace to bo a niero declaration of llio appointment previously made by the people. Nocnn- didato who obtained one of them over undertook to uso it except ns evidenco ot a pro existing right derived from a populur voto in bis favor. Tho mon strous doctrine that tho returning board could Creole title to an elective ofllco wus never oven broached, unless to bo univorsully condemned as unten able.' Il is a pity that in your long, frequent and ullcclinnuto intercourse wilh the negrocBand carpet-baggers nt Xow Orleans you did not pick up a lil tlo knowledge of constitutional law. --Katlrrrrr t -HaneV awy.yuatiliaaxia ita tbo luw fur those who did this deed, you must leave thorn without an oxeuso or Und ono in the fuels of tlio caso. Your demurror is a preposterous sham, and you must answer over, Wns tho truo voto of Louisiana counted or not? The great fundumoiitul fact which undorlies all others in regurd to Louis iana is that tho Stale, by her qualified voters, choso and appointed tho Tilden electors in due and legal form. Tit s is proved by evidenco clear and decisive enough to strike all contradiction dumb. In lebs than two dat's after the elec tion it was known nil over tho country that in Louisiana thero bad been a full poll und a heavy majority for Tilden. Very soon alturwurds tho ofliciul count mudo and recorded in tbo several par ishes by Republican officers of tho elec tion wero brought together, and tho oxact voto ol each candidate wus ascer tained. Tho figures could not ho made to lio, and all panics agroed that tbe majority for llio Tilden electors aver aged nearly eight thousand. Now, re member, this was a public act not done in a corner, but transacted in tlio face of the world; and the uncontradicted report of il carried perfect conviction along with il. Upon evidenco of this kind tho most important fact in llio history of tho uiiii erso wus accepted true in all parts of tho earth immedi ately alter it happened, and lor more than eighteen centuries tlio moc pow erful minds in Christendom Ituve stak ed upon II lliuir highest interests in Ibis worltl mid their salvation in the next. But tliero was other evidence. Committees of Congress wero sent down, charged wilh tbo special duly of inquiring into tho matter on tho ground, and they reported tho Iruo re sult of tho election to bo us previouslj staled, that ia to say, 7,Gi9 majority lor Tilden. Even that is not all. The original documents and records show ing what the voto was, as actually counted by Republican commissioners of election, authenticated by their sworn certificates and verified by the oaths of many credible persons, wero produced bcloro Congress nnd boforo tho electoral commission. Theso wero conclusive Drools : they wero submit ted to your inspection, and, if you do not know Irom them that a large ma jority of the peoplo at that election voted for Tilden electors and the Dem ocratic htuto ollieers, you nro wholly unfit for your business, lint you do know il, nnd cannot deny il without totally destroying your chnrnctor for common veracity. Forced by tbe ir resislihlo strength of the proofs, yon admit, or (to uso your own words) ns sumo that the mnjoriiy for the Tilden electors was 1 ,f!!!l. So, therefore, that is setllod. ' Thero is another point of fact that is also established. The majority for tho Tilden electors was mado up by tho voles of legally quitli lied citizens. 1 do not suy this merely because the reception of tho votes by the proper election officers was prr ee an adjudica tion in favor id tho voter's right, but for the further reason that tho election nt all tho polling place was in the hands and under tbe complete control of the opposing party, who would cer tainly not permit any Democratic voto to go in if they could legally keep it out. Besides, tlio llouso committee, when they went to Louisiana with power to send for persons and papers, could not find anybody not a carpet bagger or a Custom House officer hardly enough to assert that the Dent crate had polled illegal voles. You have not denied, and I supposo will not, that tlio majority of 7,ll,"iH, whi-h you admit was east for tho Tilden electors, was cast by properly qualified citizens. Another thing: tho election was frco and peaceable. Tho officers re ported no disturbance. Every polling pluco was maimed by policemen, deputy-marshals und soldiers in tho inter est of the carpet-baggers, and all of them testily that there was no vio lence of any kind which culled for their interference. Tbo same is truo wilh regard to the registration. That there could liavo been no force or intimida tion at other places, or limes, which kept peoplo away from the election is proved by tbe large number that came. The voto was the heaviest ever polled in theStnlc; and Inrgeriii proportion to llio whole population, us ascertained by tho census, than in most other Slates where all tho exertions of both parties wore used to bring out their last mini. : Tho necessary result, briefly stated, of all facts known and proved is this : lliitt the people of Louisiana, having the undoubted ptfwcr to choose their own electors, did regularly, duly and legally apM)int the Tildcu candidates upon a full poll, nt a freo election and by a largo majority ; anil tho persons thus duly appointed by tho peoplo wero exclusively capable of cssting tho presidential voto of the State. It followed, as the day follows tho night, that the count ot tho eight electoral votes Irom Lotiiiaiia for llnycs wits a litlso count. Hut you fiy that tho officers of tho returning board, by Virtue ol certain judicial power contbrred on it, could dislrnncbiso me majority, nunoy mmr act ot appointment, and virtually take tbo power of i boosing electors Into their own linnds. This brings its to another distuned jucstion of law: Is tho returning board' law valid nnd binding, or a moro nullity btouuse of it direct and palpal'1. iwhiv with tlio Constitution. Jrel us look. Of course neither you nor anybody will deny that dislr'.nthisement ol a (Veo cllir.cn is a severe punishment re served by tho penal law fur tho most inlamous crimes. To inflict it is an cxerciso of the highest legal authority. Tho judicial power in Louisiana I ex clusively confined by the Slato Con stitution to certain cuunicratod courts, nnd tlio returning board i not one of litem. Therefore, un net of the liegis latum which givo to snch a board dy judicial power to punish rny per son for iiiy offence, is clearly void. But in addition to this, It is provided by tho fundamental law of all free NEW Suites, including Louisiana, that oven tho courts or magistrates capable of holding this power shall never exer cise it except upon formal accusation and duo conviction, after a regular trial before an Impartial jury. Now the legislative act which you assert to bo constitutional gives tbo power to punish by disfranchisement to the re turning board, which is not a court, nnd authorizes it to pronounce sen tenco of disfranchisement upon all tbo citizens of a parish at onco, for un uet of violence not committed by them selves or by nnyot them, but by some body else whom tbey may never hnvo seen or heard of. liven tho fact that violence was committed by other par ties is to bo ascertained, not by a trial, but by inquiry conducted in secret, behind the backs of tho parties, on cx- parte statements of their political cno mica. 1 ho sentenco is to bo corned WBuaiastlaaaly aul.lhouKlk.it huvo lho eltect ol remanding tho w hole people ol tho btuto back to a hopeless bond ago from which they nro struggling to bo Ireo. Such a law you declaro to bo con stitutional and valid I Thora is not a ball-grown boy iu tho country of uv- erugo understanding that docs not know better. I cunnot help but be lieve that a littlo reflection would have saved even you from tbo shame and folly ot making un assertion so desti tute of all sense and reason. But you go further. Yim not only aver thul tho power of the Legisla ture to puss such a law cannot be doubted, but you declare that tho Su premo Conn of Louisiana bus adjudg ed il lo bo vulid, that is to sav, con Bistent with the Constitution. This is extremely injurious to that court, and il believed, it would destroy all conn- deuce in tho integrity of its judgments. Knowing something of its members, I tuko leave to say thai they are utter ly incuptthlu of making u decision ul once so falsely and so absurd. In fact they did not. No caso ever came be fore them involving tbo question, and no dictum over fell from either of ibcm which could givo the returning board matter of fact; to wit : Whether Kel or ils owners iho least hope of being : logg and his seven associates bnd been sustained ns a constitutional body. This falsification of a judicial decis ion to uphold llio power of tho return ing board in fabricating election re turns has a curious history. In No vember lust, -Mr. Stanley Matthews, in a letter, said that tho Supremo Court of the State bail decided tho returning : limir.l hi tit nt n In ltd it na.t il n I in m.l II..! wus immediately picked up by nine i Louisiana lawveis who told him in a! printed pamphlet that it wus not true, I und asked bim with crest politeness j to correct the error. Ho wns silent, but tho visiting committee reasserted in its report substantially the sumo : thing. Again it wits met w ith loud nnd emphatic contradiction. Never- tiiciesa, -nr. niicrman in tho oenato ui- terward reaffirmed it and had tho temerity to hold up a book of Louisi ana reports in which ho snid llio de cision would bo found. Thoso who for want of lime or interest in tbe sub ject did not exumino tho report were in somo sort compelled to believowhat wns affirmed about it by a Senator who professed to hot'e carefully mid it, and in consequence tlio reputation of tho Louisiana Court suflcrcd se verely for a while. But the misrepre sentation Boon became known for what it really wns, nnd it was again thor ongbly exposed as you very well know. Now, after all this, hero you are nt tho samo work again, parading anew tho citation proven to bo false half a dor.cn times. Tho patient pertinacity of Pope's spider, reconstructing its web as often as it was swept away, is tbo figure that tils your case; 1 will not quoto the lines lest they offend you by their coarseness. You transcribe a passage in which you tell us that tbo court has decided the validity ol tbo statute ; butyoti aro careful not to mention tho caso or tho book from which you tako it ; it is found, howover, in the caso of Bonner vs. Lynch, on pngo 2t! of the 25th annual. There is not in that passage, or in that case, or in that book, one word that alludes in the remotest man ner to the constitutional question or tho power ol tho Legislature lo pass such a law. Tho case, being examin ed, shows thut no such point wns rais ed by tbo record or discussed by coun sel or adjudicated by tho court. Tho aitln nnosliitti was whether thn f-nnrl. ' bad authority to reviso tho proceed ings of tho returning board and cor rect its errors'. Four Judges concur red in tho opinion that, inasmuch its no slotuto expressly gave them that power, thoy could tako no cognizance of thu subject, Iiir wunl of jurisdiction ratione materia: You might just as well cite thut case to prove the consti tutionality pf Iho reconstruction law. You claim that this sumo case nol only establishes tho tuiHiliti of tho uct creating tho returning board, but tho conclusive effect of its action ; wbere- as, ill liulli and in fact, the court holds tho direct contrary, and savs that a certifleato of the board is merely prima facie evidence in lavor ol tho person wiio gets it. How, indeed, could too court havo done otherwise, see ing that that statute, itself declares, totiilnn vrrlis, that the certifleato shall be, not conclusive, but prima facie merely ? And hero it ought to bo noted that where you profess to set forth, tho prevision of the hgislutivo net which makes tho ccrliticutu ol the hoard evidence, you garble it shame fully and alter it lo muke it fit your assertion that It is conclusive by cut ting out tho wortls which declaro it to bo only nri'mit facie. I am not sure that you have made these misstatements with malice pro iensu. 11 Tlal wrong la wrought fb: want of thought, Aa wrll aa want of heart." You utter whatever comes upper most if il seems to servo your purpose, without stopping to consider whether it Is right or wrong. Added to this you havo Iho dangerous gill of talk ing on a subject yon Know nothing about just ns well as if you under stood it. This combination of mental qualitL's gives yon a matchless skill st blundering: "Aa expert dlrera to tho bottom fall Booaer thaa tboea who eaaaot awlm at as. fo, by Ibia art ol writing witbont tfatnaing, Yoa have a atrange alaerlty ia ainklng." Besides this, tlio obliquity ol your moral vision prevents you from seeing either facts or principle a thoy are seen by others. You havo no doubt that Vt ells, Anderson and tho two mil- lutlocs, when they corruptly altered and fulsified tbo election returns, "ex ercised a Wise discretion.'' Tho man ifest sincerity with which you make your confession of this singular faith marks you out lor tlio niiesi man mat could havo been found to servo the Oreal Fraud by blaspheming llio Con stitution of s tree Blalo, mtitiiatmg her statutes, and imputing to her judge absurd decisions which they never mado. Hut let that pass. Wo will now as sume that the roturnlnn hoard was a TERMS-S2 per onnut: ia Advance. SERIES - VOL. 18, NO. 10. , constitutional body vested with all the j power you claim for it, and also that its certificate is conclusive. Does il follow that its action Is binding, if it bo fraudulent? No: a tribunal with jurisdiction ha no moro power to com mit fraud than a private cilizen. A judgment, of the Supreme Court of the 1,'niteil KlfltcR tinnrt n mailer fdclil'lv within its nthority is utterly void it tainted with corruption. No papor of any kind, no ofliciul certificate, no deed, no record, cun weigh a feather in tbo scale of justice, if it has been concocted in willful lulsehood or pro cured by actual deception. Such a pa per or record when produced in cvi dence has precisely tho same proba tive forco as a forgory ; neither moro nor less, in saying tins wo aro back cd bv the good" senso nnd honesty of all mankind, and by rules of luw that aro universally urccpted. Nobody !, ,-, ,!,., i , ,i.. .i,; ...;..i.. No Republican counsellor met it in ur.rctid-what yon probably never look ' gumontwhon tho Democratic counsel 1110 troublo lo look at tho reports set it forth; nono of tho eight respond- ""Kioto Congress by Messrs. Potter, ed when all the seven presented it. t'0"tcr, H heeler, Pholps and others, I'.vfn vnu with nil vniir "stinmrn i,b,n. I which establish tbo facts incontostibly. rity iu sinking," cunnot get down low enough to contradict it. Any court, any legislative body, any commissioner or arbitrator, who re ceives a paper known to havo been fraudulently mudo, and gives it tho enect ol a truo ono, or adopts it as tho foundation of a judgment, or allows it to prejudice any opposing right, com mits a most scandalous outrage upon luw and justice. Tho principle which excludes a document tainted with that kind of iniquity is fundamental, axio matic and necessary to tho safety of all rights, publio ns well as private II j is of universal application, imprcgnu- oie, unavailable, without variableness, or shallow of turning. It stands now as it has stood sinco tho beginning ot . . " 3 tho world "Wli'.le aa tie marble, fountlird aa tbo rock, Aa broil and general aa tlie easing air." The electoral commission was con stituted with authority clearly defined to determine a certain controverted July appointed electors by tho peo plo ot Louisiana or not. lo main tain tlio nllirinutive side of that issue the certificate of tbo return ing board was uloiio relied upon, Tho iglil comniisioners, oguinst ' : the solemn protest of their seven , brethren, accepted that certificate and , held it to bu food, nnv conclusive ! proof of Iho fact averred, although it wus. and llitv knew it to he. not oiilv tainted, but saturated through and through with the most atrocious lraud, and therefore as corrupt in morals und I Is void in luw ns tho nakerlrst lorgcry that ever was. made. Thus it enmo to pass that this great cause, involving the litlo to the high- est oflico in tho republic, was deler- mined falsely upon evidenco which no justice of tho peace would receivo in a suit for tbo price of two sheep. In ono of tho regular courts ot tho coun try upon a trittl for land or money, the moro offer of such evidenco by counsel knowing ils real character would be extremely dangerous. It would not only bo rejected, but the guilty counsellor would bo punished, not in tho sumo way (for thero is a technieul difference), but on tbe same principle, that courts punish Iho titter anco of counterfeit money. To pol Into tho administration of justice by passing talso and fraudulent docu ments upon a court is indeed very much worso thun "shoving the queer" upon a shopkeeper. Of courso tho wickedness of all this depends on tho scienter. Involuntary ignorance would bo an excuse. But tho corrupt character oftbis certificate . . - - was known to ull tho world, and be- ing a public fact, tho commissioners as well as every body clso wero hound Id know it; besides that, tbo evidence was exhibited to their eyes ; their re jection of it assumed it to be true; and tbey expressly ruled, Hint no proof ol fraud, however clear, would diminish tho valno of tho fubo paper in their estimation. So lar as 1 am informed tbey have never pretended lo bo ignorant of tho fact that this voto wus tho offspring of a fraudulent conspiracy, nor hnvo they denied the luw which makes it void for that rea son. Thero is, thcrcloie, nothing for it but to leave their reputation for ju dicial integrity, ns Bacon left his, "to foreign countries, to future ages, and to men's charitetlle. speeches" Tho eight commissioners and the counsel on their side tried to Irnmo n weak excuse for this dereliction of duty by reasoning thus: Congress gave tho commission no power but what the two houses might hureexercised them selves; tho two bouses had no author ity lo reviso election returns from any Slute; ergo tho commission must re ceive a fuise, fraudulent and void cer tificate us it il wero a real return, true nnd vnlid. In this syllogism the pre mises, major and minor, are unsound, and the conclusion is a non sequ, ,r (.iflucil.nn mnrd,r stories of Sher Congress has power, clear nnd tin-1 ,un ftmJ lShrmn my d.inution 0f qiiestiotiablo, not to revise tbo action , lhoM, i( n , lrntl, cmn. o the State authorities lor the purposo ; mitu,( n(1 of n.fjnn,,. whi(.,, of correcting their moro errors, but to !coul(, iulli(lh tll HnJ dld uolmy ascertain whether a paper pretending i lll)cum' , exnreaaion of these sonti- lo be n return is a real return or a i fraud. If tho two houses nro tocoiinl tho votes, they havo tlio verifying power which enable them tu dolor- mine wliul are voles and what aro i not. A lraud or a lorgcry is not a vote. This verifying power wns dele gated lo the commission with diree. lions to ascertain by it who were duly appointed. The majority did not de cline to exercise tho power; they as sumed it, took it and executed it, but they misused nod nbtised it so ns not to verily hut to falsity tbo vote. Y'ou invoke tho namo ol Judge Church, tbo present Chief Juslico of the Stnlo of New York. If that dis tinguished, upright nnd learned gen tleman is on your side of this contro versy, I admit that tho (ircnt Fraud has a most poworful friend. But your claim that lie Incurs your doctrine is priuni facie evidence that bo is against you ; for, iu citing authorities you aro nothing, il lint deceptive Yoiigiveusa singlo sentence, which yon say is his ; but yon do nol tell us whether it is Irom a judicial opinion, a published letler, or the report of nn oral conver sation. Knowing "tho sin that doth so easily besot you," 1 venture to sny thut Ibis quotation is in some way fulse: cither you havo made jt out of whole cloth, or torn it from its con text, or clso mado an application ot it which tho author never intended. Let us look nl it. . ion makothethicf Juslico say that "tho aulhoiiticalion ol the election ol presidential electors, according to llio laws of each Slato, is final and conclu- m.v, i.ii-i iiiii. n.viu vi!-m uu lo go behind them." This sentence, wilh it badgrnmmarandopaqiienessnf expression, is not like Judgo Church's clear and accurate style. But he may havo Raid that the results ol an election honestly authenticated by the ' proper authorities ol tho State, accord- ing to its luw nnd the act of Con- I ,,tua l.t I ti Iim aw.rwntAtl aa final and dVisivo of all antecedent dispute about it. Thul is no doubt hi opinion und 1 firmly buliovo bim to bo right on this as on other questions of law. But does it follow thul a fraud or a forge ry may bo regarded as a proper au thentication? liavo the two House f.f f 'oriirreee wlirrt thev enmo to count twecn a true paper aim a papor vom tor manifest corruption? Ask Judgo t liurcu tosny for your comlort and as sistance that Congress or any other tribunal may lawfully receivo, and treat us truu a false paper, known to ttive been concocted in willful fraud. Jlnsleud of grutilying your wish, (io will muke the tunderesl vein in your heart ache with his contempt. Many poisons aro ot opinion that you did not writo llio article to which your name is appended. There is in trinsic evidence that certain parts of it wero not produced by you ; lor in stance, the defence of tho carpet baggers, whieh certainly nobody but one of their number would make now, sinco tbo administration at Washing- j t,,n deserted them, and Prom tbrlr ruined furlunre tlielr familiar, allok away." But you aro made lo appear us a be liever in tho virtue of the knaves who almost desolated Louisiana by their exactions, tajed properly to a point that made it almost worthless, issued innumerable millions of fraudulent bonds, reduced public securities to for ty per cent., patronized larceny all ovor tlin Kll,t0 4ml lu,t 11,0 P00!''0 10 I"10 protection of no law but lynch 'l'l,a w'nlt'r coulJ not 'Kn0r6 these enormities, for ho manifestly had express admiration and respect for theso unmitigated scamps, and, fncilo as you are, I wonder that you submit ted lo it. They might havo spared '"a degredation. Vn il not enough for you to bare said that tho rascality of tho returning board was ' tho exercise of a wise discretion ?" You, or somebody for you, have un dertaken lo repent tho amazing argu ment that the returning board and tho electoral commission wore right in disregarding the popular vote and set ting usido tho election in Louisiana (freo, full nnd fair though it wus), be cause numerous murders bad boon com mitted in tho Htuto during tho period of carpet bag rule. It wasollogod that ll.ni.n,.,.,!,, 1,1,1 luian nl n. An ulna A ily for years at tho awful average of about four every day, und though tho perpetrators of them were well known, tbe publio authorities hud not taken measures to punish a single one. No body was bung, or tried, or oven ar rested. I did not bclievo this story. Il wus denied on good authority and supported by no crediblo ovidenco. But I insisted that if it was true tho peoplo wero right in turning out offi cers who suffered such a Btuto of things to exist, twid electing others who would protect life by a luitlitul execution ol "'o laws. It did seem to molikoa new species of moral insanity lo sny that lh0 law-abiding nnd honest citizens of tho Slato should bo disfranchised bo- euuso tbey bad cast their votes against officers who, besidos being public plun derers, bad taken nwuy all security lor life by permitting four thousand mur ders in threo years to go ontirely un punished. Upon this you assert, or at toast sign your namo to an asBorlion and publish it in a magazino as yours, that 1 admit ted tho perpetration of the murders re ferred lo; that 1 justified '.hem, alleg ing Hint the Mate dovernmcnt teas too weak to punish or prevent them. This represents me as tho most inhuman monster on earth. A man who would justify tho unprovoked assassination ot tour thousand peaceable and help less persons, including women and children, on tho moreground that tho government was unable to prevent it, would not hesitate to commit murder himself whenever ho could do il with impunity. This odious charge is press ed upon me explicitly, and ropoalcd in many forms through several pages of violent denunciation. Now, mark my answer well. Tho man who wroto this part of tho articlo which passes lor yours is a buso impostor. Evory opinion, thought and sentiment ex presfed by mo is prtvisely the reverse of what ho imputes to mo. I pronounced the Btory of the four thousand murders what I did then, nnd do still believe it to bo, a sheer fabrication, got up to order for partisan purposes. So -far from justifying those murders, I de clared that if such outrages had really been committed, the carpel-bag author ities of tbo Sluto bad mado themselves infamous by thoir failure to punish them. Furthermore, I averred as mat ter of fact, and showed it very conclu sively to bo truo, that the Slate Gov ernment was armed with physical pow er amply sufficient to enforce tbe law, preserve tho lcuco and protoct life. All ibis I snid, not in doubtful or ob scure langungo, but so plainly that no man wilh intelligence one degree above that of nn iJiut could misunderstand me. Tbo direct, straightforward menda city of this effort to defame me it lit erally wonderful. I speak soberly and without passion w hen I sny that I think there is nothing liko it on record. No reader will bo able lo conccivo tho grossness of it without comparing your article at pages 225-0 7, with mine at pages II In 11. Even then he will not understand it unless ho looks narrow ly ul the passages which tlio writer pretends lo copy from mo. They are all fraudulently changed and altered. My ,,.,.. ., ,..j .,,i -.;, from the passagesqnoted Diseonnec- ted sentences are picked oul from dif lorcnt places, inutiluU'd, tiansposed and then joined together as il 1 had writ ten tbem continuously in that order, whereby llio whole senso and mean ing of my words is perverted. I am mndo out to bo an apologist lor mur der und mob violence, just as you might prove from tho Bible Hint thero is no Cod. This is uot an indictable forgery, but many a man has served out his term at Sing Sing, who would scorn an attempt to ruin bis noighbor by the Iraudiilenlmukingorallerulion ui a paper wriling lo tho prcjudico of his character. Conei'inf next trri A. A lady who consultod hor physician al most daily, aliont somo imaginary , ailment, and who liked to talk with him on a great many subjects, becauso he wus a witty and charming man, on ono occasion asked to ho excused an interview. Tho doctor, thinking tho servant misunderstood tho message, requested his arrival to be announced a second timo, but tho lady said that "alio was grieved at being obliged to deny herself tbo pleasure of his com pany, fifW7ii.v A. kyi eery ill." j ..jr.. d(!ir , .... MjJ a mt,er lo hc. , 10 .1(t., nunii pBto , Tor some tnrkey, "this is tbe fourth j.jmoyou have been helped." I know, ,notlt.ri" nplni the boy, "but that ! turkoy me once, sod I want to square with him." Ho got his i,UrkCV. The truest help we can render to nn afflicted man is not to tako hi burden from him, but to call out hi boat strength, that ho may bo ablo lo bear the burden.