The Recent COUVL ' A No 'true Democrat cairbedishekt , ened by the result of tae recut livsi dential contest. Our: failuiehoi d et i i i Seymour and Blair bymo tons 1— cates that the principles of the eat National Democratic party of the coun try will not eventually so recommend themselves to the sense of right and justice of the people as to win for us ultimate success. In fact the recent fight has not been barren of favorable results; the veteran legions . of the brave Democracy have sorely pressed the Radical hosts and have in many places wrested from their corrupt grasp positions of power and influence. In I the midst of their rejoicings over the election of Gen. Grunt our opponents feel and know that the Democracy have in the late election developed a 1 strength formidable In its character, and of such a nature as to very materially. ' Interfere with any designs which the incoming administration may contem- I plate upon the liberties of the people I and the reservefl rights of the States. The great State of New York, the Em— pire State of the Union, le with us; and I besides this we have made great gains In our Congressional representation, i many of the most prominent Radical I members of the present Cougresehaving failed of re•election. Our strength in the Southern States is shown to be great for even us reconstructed by a Radical Congress several of them give large Democratic majorities. The bad state of our National finances, which the Radicals have sed ulonelyconcealed from the people, during the late political campaign, can not much longer be hid ' den ; the great increase of taxes, incident to the extreme measures which the ultra The National Democratic Committee. 1 Radical meridiem of the next Congress There is such a thing its a Democatie , will endeovor to force upon the people, National Committee. We art•rerni tided ' will surely open the eyes of the masses of its existence about truce in four years. to the iii rattly of these reckless repre- I t issues a call Mr the assembling of it sent ati ves of deceived cmistitheueles. N a ti ons ; C o n vemion when a can did a t e I the rapid advance In price of all the for President is to be nominated, and , common necessaries of life will further the Chairman calls the delegates to : aid in preparing the people for the re order. If It has done anything more ception of sound Democratic principles. than that during the eight eventful Our party will be the party of the years which have just passed away, it , workingmen against the Bondholders has done It so very quietly and so ex- anti all those Banking institutions which ecedingly unobtrusively that it has thrive and fatten off of the labor of escaped the notice of the sharpest news. 1 the toiling oppressed poor ; and paper reporters, , we propose to combat and defeat in the Is there no work for such a body ..' , future that privileged and gigantic There certainly ought to lie. The Dem. ' moneyed pnwer whose baneful and cor ocratic National Committee ought to he rapt influences have just caused our de a power in the land. It is only reason- : feat. We therefore saydo the I tadleals able to suppose that the different rejoice, enjoy while you can a victory States •seleet one of their stil=t a nd won by a political eiTartnershipol New must sagacious men lo repri,ent iiihg,ittnii mantifacturerg, foreign bond them in this body. Can they find holders, and Southern negroes. Rejoice no work to do': We think they timid, , and trample beneath your feet the poor if the right kind of a man ure Chair- and oppressed white workingman. But man, and the body made PR; of :telly', I remember the boastings of Insolence are and sagacious Democratic politicians. ' not arguments, and a free people will It ought to be emphatically a working tire of paying bounties to manufacturers hotly. Its meetings should be frequent and taxes for bondholders. Legislation and full, and from it should go forth, in favor of the rich and against the poor from time to time, the word of coin- must ultimately meet with the disap mated to the Democratic hosts through- proleltkm and detestation of the people. oat the nation. Without attempting to l,et the I hmmeratic party, the party of interfere obtrusively with the local or - ' the people, therefore preserve haunt ganization in any -4:au, it enroll tin, its rirganiztitien, and, under its revered much to effect such unity of offset as name bearing aloft the national flag would conduce largely to 1 4 111sITSS. It with the motto "The 'Union and the ought to be In fact what it is in name, ' Constitution" inscribed thereon, march the head of the Demovratic party, di forward in the future to certain victory. resting its movements, and mar:dialing . -- Its millions. "My Organ." ganatoto guttilligenza. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 18, 1868 To Oampalgn Subscrlbors With this issue the term of our Cam palgn subscribers expires, but, to ena bleu many of them, as desire to do so, to receive the INTELLIGENCER perma nently, and without intermission, we have concluded to send to each of them two more numbers. This we do, with the expectation that a large proportion of them will become yearly subscribers. To all such we hereby offer to send the INTELLIGENCER until January:l6oSW, for the sum of two dollars. We hope all will continue with 11H. They can not invest two dollars more profitably. This paper Is just what they need in their ' families, and they know It. It will be more varied in its contents, but none the less soundly Democratic during the lull In the political excitement. On the 4th of next March the Democratic can• didate will be nominated for Governor. The political contest still goes on, and there can be no abatement of the strug• gle untilcorrect principles shall prevail. In the fight the INTEL,LinmccEtt will always be found doing vigorous battle. Then let every campaign subscriber at tach his name to our permanent list, and we promise to give them a paper which will not be surpassed in the vari ety or Interest of the mutter it contains by any Journal indhe country. All such campaign subscriber 4 as do not renew their subscriptions by Dec. let will be regarded as desiring to dis continue the paper and will be dropped. Money can be sent to us by mail, with perfect safety. We hope to see a change in I ho niot holt of notion pursued by tiiis hody. 1( con be tnalle potent, for good. :\ !cot i ngs of the different inernliers Cron] time In time NVO111(1 O1110,11!thi. cuunuin , v• to review the I . olldOloll Of the tinily iii every Stilt(' Of the Union, In :ill direct concert or questions, and to mould tool ?diape the policy of the party. Were the orz.ani zation suet' as it it., words Would lie ho.y to the parr', its adviee would Le heeded, and its ditertitins obeyed us implicitly to, the iirilers of a . comtuanding general. Organiz.dion is the only thing which the liemocratie party NvailtA. berever its organization is elo, perical, then it resi,lN all and lain4latit ly ittereuhes in miniber.,, The head of the organization 1. the Naliiiaal mit:et , . If that pr., utterly us it has done for years, hoiv !..tll . ll an example fall to lu 11n11111,•[Ive tal•V i I, Let the I , eniocratie roin• mitten show that it Ilulu e after. Let it do the worl: which lies before it. I.,et if, moinhers meet and consult. Amrtlijin letvigorotisal•tion 1 . 1.1- low close upon judicious deliberation. .Let,us haves. working. N 'ottimit• tee. To taco this we 11111. i 11:1Vis:t Cliairmaii, The 1,0,1 y ~f the pi, Conitnitiee ,o far tPe k nnw• it, i,1,111. posed of good men who are :dde and Willing 10 (10 eln,live ,ervick , 1,111. greatly fe , . need:, a het ter lwa(I I r have in t h e future a Chair man of the National I'otmoitter who Call find smnutiiin g . 1..0,, To till important eris,e~ in the hir.t,i of tho party, and iltiring the see,iiiiiv of its National ( vstiiiou , than to drive out with four in hand t the rA(.,, at Jerome Park. Exolimallons The F.rpn.sp explaitH ti fraud ❑t Ila Fourth Ward pull in this city as ful lows : Au Dernoei at in the .Ith \\ and Mat, heavy 1,, lit favor of 1130 111•11111,1- Cllll t 11•1( 01, :11111 it it Very 1,1111111 to Mr, either tout It, persuaded Iv, Ivtt ty riviak 111 the ward h, help him tutu 1110 inonvy, or that it there wu, Hoy, ,Iveeiaum of 11, viter , in alt• 11110[1,, 110 or Out u• 1./ernoerlit Most have (haw it, us nn Itvplihnrllll Wll, in IL pOSiti“ll to fIVI•ig,TIII Mich a trot , ..V.•11 if hp had been at. ' ilk will btrike our readers as a some what extraordinary explanation. We are asked to believe that the Democracy of the ward desired to beat themselves; and that they roust have done the work, its no Republican was in a posi tion" to do it. Our neighbor goes on to ray that as it has tbus given us oil explanation of the 4th Ward fraud, it would like us to explain the Sth Ward basins- iu Phil adeiphia. Philadelphia is a little too far Mr to warrant us in supposing that we are fully posted in its but we beg leave to oll'er at a venture the samegexplanntion for the vote there tte has been vouchsafed to us for the vote here, viz : If there was any wrung done to the Republicans they must have done it themselves, as no Demo. •crat "was In a position to perform the feat." This way of stating the Gist', as it is its own, should be more sat isfac lory to the ExprcsB than it has been to Os. But who is the Democratic Lie in the 4th Ward? Let us know; for we are greatly inclined to believe him to he a myth. The Teachers' Institute The Institute is well attended and we aro glad to see the interest which the teachers of our county take in their an nual gathering. It is undoubtedly agood Institution ; while it alll,rds relaxation to the teacher, it at the same time fur nishes him a fund of instruction in the. various branches of education. It like wiss promotes the coped du corps, and tends to make the teacher eel that his profession is an honorable one in which he should strive with all his powers to excel. The standard of teaching is constadtly becoming higher and we are glad to notice that the material of each Institute is visibly better than that of its predecessor. , There is ample room for improvement in the average of in telligence among the population of Lan caster county, and we believe our com mon schools are proving an efficient in strument in performing the abundant work which they find at their hand to do. GENERAL MCCLELLAN has been elect ed President of the University of Cali tan's. The election is probably simply ['tended as a compliment to the Gen eral as it is not likely that he can accept -the position. 'THE LANCASTER WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER, WEDNESDAY, NOVRIVEII - F)R 18, 1868. Prof. Wickersham authoritatively an nounced On Wednesday that the Lan- / easter l ' .ry,rr.,n NV as his organ. Says the Professor earnestly, "If there be any ! ; friends of my organ nr the paper which has become ins organ, I call them to 1 , witness," Oztt. The learned gentleman / was evidently very solicitous about his "organ ;" he 11 . 110 very desirous that It should have :onto friends, hut very doubtful at the same time whether it lint any ; and his doubts were appar ently justified, and were warranted by Iris own experience of the utter ineill cieney of his "organ" as an aid to the attainment. of Congressional honors. , Tho great Superintendent felt sore no doubt at his want of success in the at- I tain went of this object of his ambition ; but then, my dear fellow, is it entirely / fair to put all the blame on your poor little organ Perhaps the air it was ealled upon to exeente was a little too 1i t ; it may have been too 00/1 and too!',/, or too loud and screechy. The'! Wigan itself may also have been at fault; there was nothing the matter with the I bellows' eertainly, for you know you were at Mold, Professor, to blow it; but t "stops" may have been insufficient or improperly arranged, and the instru went was probably generally defective; I lo fact we think it /me a very poor con- cern from what we know of it. There is hope nw you in the future though, I Profe,sor, and you should not desert ! your ally too soon. The .Exprr. , :s has got ho :igeney of the "Temple" Organ now, which Prof. Gletrer says blows first rate, the combination of the stops being admirable ; giye it another trial, Professor, and perlaps some of these days the -Tjulple" may play you through, Hone of you don't get "played out" too ',fully in the meantime. We are glad to be informed, on uthority, that our Illustrious friend Wickersham has honored the Exprcsa by making it his "organ." We had ' heard of this coalition some time since, and informed the public of it about the time \Viet:. was running for Con gress, running hard, too, for the space of an hour and a half, by the aid of a strong feed upon a fir from Ilru baker's mill, but he hail nut stamina enough and " went to pieces " after a very short " spurt." At that time our cotemporary denied the soft impeach ment, and that it enjoyed the honor of the distinguished alliance. But itseems this was only another of its fins, for the great man now announces the fact him self and throws open to the full light of day the great deeds of our neighbor in his behalf which it seems to have de sired should h ve been kept in the chit- Illyrian darkness in which they were done. Let it now hear its blushing honors meekly ; but we have a word or two cif advice to give it as to its future conduct ; we advise it not to allow itself to be again caught ribbing about its con nection with distinguished men and to ' strive in the future that its conneaions shall not be so barren of result us bas been this one, so far. To be sure of this, let it keep clear hereafter of a Jackass, or the issue of its labors wiil surely be a mule ; and mules aren't, nice. Ver bum Sat. Sap. Getting Decent There is hope for the Readers of the Exp•cBB. It has taken to copying the Editorials of the INTELmuENCER. We trust that It will not weary In well-do ing and will continue the practice. We are perfectly willing to edit both papers, and we feel confident that we can in a short time beat into the heads of our Republican fellow citizens, some idea of the true principles or government and wean them from those abominable hab its of falsehood and fraud which have been taught to them by thyir public journals and by their members of f on gress. The publishers of the Exprnis, as good business men, can adopt no bet— ter plan to make their newspaper sell than to make it interesting, instructive and valuable to its readers by copying the matter published in the I NTEMI OENCER of the previous day. We de sire to see them succeed in their enter prise, and will redouble our exertions to publish a paper which they may profitably copy word for word. THE Great Wickersham says we can't hurt a hair of his head; if we try from January to December. We don't want to hurt the Professor's hair; it is sacred to us what he has left of it. We would not spoil his beauty ; for if he lost that, what would he have. Let those grace ful locks wave fearlessly, and that au burn beard. "s. - Stand Firm. The Presidential election being over end Gen. Grant elected, it is now in- Aimbent upon the brave Democracy' to Aand firm and await with patience the fliture'attacks which the ultra Radicals will be certain to make upon the estab lished laws of the States and the time- honored Constitution of the Nation. The recent triumph secured by the I Republican party will undoubtedly only induce the more desperate and revolu tionary of Its leaders, to attempt the inauguration of such measures, as will tend to destroy whatever of Constitu tional liberty may now remain to ren der our country worthy of the name of Republic. The course which General Grant will pursue' in discharging his duties as President is unknown. If he should prove true like his predecessor to the Constitution and the Union hey will re ceive theardent and generous support of every Democrat.; but,on the other hand, if he should lend himself a willing tool for such fanatics and notorious dema gogues as Beast Butler and Sumner of Massachusetts the gravest consequences are to be feared. What then must the noble band of nearly two and a half millions of Democratic and Conserva tive voters do under these circum- stances ? We reply that they must preserve their party organization ; there must be no , time serving and cowardly abandon. men t of party name ; nosacrifice of great and just principles for the purpose of gaining any local or temporary sue cess. But shoulder to shoulder, I! , an unbroken phalanx, let the Deraoc• racy battle the sectional and destruo• tive principles advocated by their, and the nation's unscrupulous foes. Let the seekers for offices and spoils now desert, if they wish, to the enemy. We can well spare them for sueh trim mers and time•servers are adead weight to any political organization, and In coming political contests for the perpet uation of the Union and the Constitu tion, the army of the Democracy do not wish to be encumbered with mercenary camp-followers and plunderers. The adversaries of the Democratic party must not expect front it any concession of principles, hut, on the contrary, they will find it ever true to its traditional policy of the supremacy of the Cousti tution and the maintenance of the Union ; it will continue to be in the future, as it has been In the past, the persistent and unflinching advocate of the rights of the poor workingman ; it will vigorously oppose all laws which tend to exempt certain classes from the burden's of taxation. While the De mocracy, therefore, should yield ready obedience to the will of a majority of the people, fairly and constitutionally expressed, they should not, through indifMrence or apathy, permit their opponeuts to wrest from them any van tage-ground gained iu the recent presi dential campaign, but, during the pres ent remission from active service, they should reorganize and consolidate their forces and, confidently relying on the I commendable and imperishable charac ter of the truths they advocate, stand firm and be ready, when the time ar rives, to again do earnest and successful battle for truly beneficial and patriotic National principles. Phillips on limit Wendell Phillips, the great light of Radicalism, has very little faith in Gen eral Grant, judging from his recent , utterances. In a late speech to the Anti- Slavery Society, he said : " There are many who believe that the Republican party have caught the biggest Tartar this time that credulous mortals were over doomed to carry, and that in less than one year the incoming President's foes will be they of hid own household." We trust this prediction may be cor rect. There is one thing certain that, at the close of the rebellion, General Grant's policy wad liberal toward the submissive South, and subsequently, as the result of his observation in a visit to that region of country, he expressed the opinion to President Johnson that the Southern people accepted the situation in good faith, and desired to live, for the future, in fellowship and harmony with the NOrth. if he was sincere in these declarations iu ISBJ, it is scarcely prob- I able that now, in and when he is on the eve of assuming the highest functions of the government, he has so . far changed his opinion as to be willing to carry out the vindictive policy of the Radicals in Congress, and malcea Poland I of the South to gratify their hellish malignity. IC is difficult to believe that I the leaders iu the Chicago (invention would have nominated General Grant without having some pledge from him iu advance,that he endorsed their policy and would, in the event of his election, carry out the unconstitutional measures of Congress to their fullest extent; yet in their desperation they seem to have done so. A few mouths will determine whether Wendell Phillips is right or wrong in his conjecture. In the mean time, all the material interests of the country are suffering from the uncertainty which broods over the future, and honest peo— ple are hoping almost against hope for some ray of light to penetrate the gross darkness which envelops the business interests of the nation, through the gross mismanagement and extravagance of the Radicals. Master and Man The coalition has been formed. The great Superintendent has an "Organ." I;ut let him beware; for though he is no doubt a great man and one of infi nite penetration and resources, a very Cassius Indeed, of whom Cesar said— " 'loud Cassius has a lean and hungry look; I-10 (100 k, too ;ouch ; such men are dangerous Would he were latter:—out I fear him not: name were lieble to leer =I=nEMUMBMIZI Ho sous a 8 that. spare Cassels. He reads much He Is 41. Ureal. observer and be look s ' quite through tho deeds of men; ho loves no ploys As thou do.d Antony; he hears no musle: • Seldom he sinlleh; and smiles In such a sf , rt, As It he mocked himnelf, and scorned ids spirit That could he moved to smile at anything. TTvau.n_jfl M=E=n= W h Iles they beneold a greater then thetth•elvee Aud Iherefore are they very dangerous." Yet Wick. may liad his present ally such a servant as was Ingo to Othello: follow him to serve my turn upon 'lnn We cannot all be misters, nor alt masters I'a num be truly lollow'd. You Omll mark Many a dul O , IIS and knee crook Int: knave, That, dotn.g on his own obsequious b.aulago, Wears out his trine,tnueb master's For naught but provender; and when he's oat, eashim 'd; Whip toe such houPstknaves; others th ,, reare, Who trlnun'd In forms and visages of duty, Keep yet their nearly attending on thern,elves; And throwing but shows of service on their - - On well tirivo by them, and when they have Iln'tl their coals, IM themselves homage; those fellows have some sent; And suet) a one do f profess myself. . - - In following Mtn, I follow but mysolf ; vnven Is my Judge, not I for love and duty lint seeming so, for ms reenlist end. THE last election of the year will be that for Mayor of New York, in place of John T. Hoffman, who goes into office as Ciovernor of the State on the first of January. Other city officers will also be elected. Cloy. Hoffman has not yet resigned the Mayoralty, and possibly may not do so iu time to have the place filled at the charter election iu December, In which case the Presi dent of the Board of Aldermen will act as Mayor for the ensuing year. Tilt: lesson we taught Prof. Wicker. sham a year ago has been beneficial to him. We instructed him then that it was not proper for him to make a po litical speech at the Teachers' Institute. He has taken the hint. He informed the Institute last night that while he declined to express an opinion before that audience upon the propriety of universal suffrage, he thought that the negro, if he is to have a vote, should be educated; with which opinion weeoln cide. THE effort to unseat Mr. Seuter, the President of the Tennessee Senate, be cause of his having held an office under the Confederacy has failed, and he will be the Governor of the State on the resignation of Brownlow, who was elected U. S. Senator last summer. An Honest Newspaper The editors of the F3presB have re cently had much to say respecting the general management of the intention cer. They have devoted auy amount of time to a critical examination of our editorial and news matter; they have consulted Webster's Unabridged Dic tionary, Kerl's Series of English Gram mars, and several works on Rhetoric ; they have analyzed, criticised, and anathematized ; they have even referred to Brooks' arithmetic and have most diligently compiled, selected and art ranged sundry statistics " in regard to the election returns of two divisions of the Fourth Ward of Philadelphia." They have succeeded, by great indus try, in enlarging their vocabulary of adjectives and have introduced into their editorials at certain intervals the terms "palpable," "bungling," " im• pudent," "howling," "infernal" and a few other epithets of an equally expres sive character. But while our cotemporary has been thus engaged it has sadly neglected some little home matters which require, or at least should require from it a pass. hag notice. It has had nothing to say respecting the election frauds in the Fourth Ward of this city. Nor has It seen proper to comment on the wholesale disfranchise merit by Justice Read of 0,000 natural ized foreigners in Philadelphia. It dilates ut length in its issue of yester day upon the barbarous and cruel treat went of the Hebrews of Romania in Tun i but, during the recent Presidential campaign, had nothing to say respect ing a certain barbarous and cruel mili tary order expelling the Hebrews from a military department In the United States. Under the sensational heading of "A Band of Monsters in Texas," this moral and model paper of Tuesday states for the delectation of its Radicaireaders that in Texas "there are forty (!) cap tains of companies, whose names are j known, and the rolls of whose com panies are in many cases In the hands of the military authorities," whose avowed object "Is that of rising in guerrilla warfare against the govern• ment, etc. ;" but it has not found space to record the brutal and fiendish out rage committed by a negro from Chester county on a young white girl aged 13 years, in Dauphin county, near Har risburg, an account of which was jpublished from the Harrisburg SYalc Guard (Radical) newspaper of Tuesday morning, in Wednesday's INTELLIG EN CEIt. No, a Negro was concerned in this most criminal of acts, and the Ex press therefore makes no'inention of It, although every paper in Harrisburg, regardless of party, published an ac count of the act and in the strongest terms condemned it. Had this same act been committed by a white man, how quickly would our enterprising co temporary have published lt. If by a foreigner it would have been published with a heading like this : "Horrible Outrage 1.1/ a Furcigncr ;" but as it was committed by a stalwart Negro, thirty five or forty years or age, hailing from radical and progressive Chester county, of course the negro organ suppresses its • publication. Other and numerous instances of dishonesty au the part of these edi tors might be cited, but, let these ex amples only a day or two old suffice, although a large crop of splendid specimens of very original lies may be culled from the fertile columns of this radical organ and all published since the first leaf fell with this Au- Winn's winds. In mendacity, whether• as sagfic4io fn/6i or truppressio veri, no Journal has In this campaign surpassed our quondam temperance organ; In truth, Indeed, its •editor•ln•chlef seems to have got so used to "blowing," that now, the campaign being over, he has taken to blowing the "Temple organ," the sweet strains of which ne doubtless finds very soothing to his excited nerves. President Grant There is a great deal of speculation at' the present time In reference to the ! policy likely to lie pursued by General GRANT upon his accession to the Presi dency. And it is not confined to the Democrats, but is indulgeffin to a still greater extent by the Radical press and po'''lcians. The General himself, even since his arrival at Washington on Sat urday last, Is as reticent as ever, and every effort to commit him to any dis tinctive line of policy has thus far proved abortive. Nor is he willing that any public demonstration shall be made in his favor. He seems to keep the leading politicians of his party at arms-length, and as to the office-hunters he appears to be utterly callous to their claims. So far lie keeps his own counsel, and this, of itself, causes disquietude and alarm among his followers. We are not much given to specula tion, and are therefore willing to wait, Micawber-like, for something to turn up. At least we shall not pretend to foreshadow the policy of the new ad ministration until we see the materials from which the Cabinet will be formed. Then, and not till then, can any sensi ble or safe opinion be indulged iu as to the course things will take for the next four years. President GRANT cannot please both factions of his party—Con servative and Radical. He must take one or the other to his confidence, and be governed in his actions accordingly. If he takes Conservative ground, he displeases the Radical extremists—and, vice vcrsa. Which of the two courses he will adopt remains to be seen, and the composition of the Cabinet will, to some extent, solve the mystery that now seems to cloud the public mind. In the meantime the country is stag gering along, as best it can, under a mountain load of debt, created by the party that has elevated General GRANT to power, with scarcely a probability that the leaders have the financial skill, much less the stern integrity necessary to grapple in a statesmanlike manner with the gigantic questions which must be met boldly and fearlessly, or the Government will be precipitated into hopeless bankruptcy before the next Presidential term is half round. We hope for the best; but, in reality, the Prospect for the future is gloomy in the extreme. The President elect may be able to stem the torrent that is rushing the country to destruction with fearful rapidity ; but, so far, scarcely a gleam of hope shoots athwart the political sky. The majority of the people willed it so, however, and we must tie content to take things as they come, with the ! . pleasant consciousness that the respon sibility for the extrication of the Country from the impending evils, does not rest I upon us. Too Modest by Malt. The Exprcss gives a long report of the great Wickersham's speech on Wed nesday evening, but utterly fails to re cord the Professor's proclamation about "my organ." Our neighbor should not be so retiring and modest. We have given publicity to the announcement of the proud position which it occupies as the "organ " of the State Superinten dent of Common Schools and would-be member of Congress. Let it not hide Its light under a bushel nor be reluctant to enjoy its glory. Let it publish the omitted portion of the Professor's speech ; it is a duty which it owes to its readers to give them all the news of the day. Profound Observations.—Wick. is au thentically reported to have announced before the Teachers' Institute as fol lows : All of our children must be instructed, because all can be instructed. All of them must be instructed, because all of them need Instruction. Dfusic bath charms to soothe the savage ear.—Wherefore a cotemporary goes into the organ business. "My Organ" is Troahle. The, Whiskey Frauds. "If there be any frieldeid my organ, 1 - - , --The more, the whiskey frauds are or the paper which has become r!ny, investigated" the more obscure they organ, I hope they will take special appear to get, and things' are so much I notice," &c. Such is our report of the muddled that thd poor innocent public language of the Great Professor Wick- are puzzled to knew who are the "in ersham, which the "Organ" says is a vestigato . rs" and whb the " investi gross perversion of his remarks, but gated." No sooner does some one, who which our reporter, Mr. Pyott, declares has been commissioned to examine into is literally correct. We are not able to these dark mysteries, come forward compare our report in this particular with plenty of affidavits to sustain his with that of the "Organ," because it, announcent of the discovery of gross through shamefacedness probably at frauds, than immediately some other being so publicly promoted, failed to official of the government springs up make any report of it at all, with counter charges plentifully sup- But wonders will never cease. What ported by sworn testimony, which think you, reader, that the organ says? make it appear that the " discoverer" Why, it covers us with confusion and himself ..14 deeply implicated In a with blushes, by declaring that the whiskey ring; and this, no matter how Great Professor alluded to us as his or- fair a character he may have earned gun Now we confess that this idea during all his previous life for honesty and integrity. So that it appears that had never occurred to us ; so wild a hope had never animated our breast. it is only necessary fora man to attempt On first-blush it seems difficult to con- Ito expose the doings of the whiskey ceive that we have unconsciously been I thieves, to earn for himself a tarnished the organ of the Superintendent of reputation ; for each party denounces Common Schools. Butonamoment'e re- the other so strongly that it is impossi flection we are satisfied that we should ble for the public to judge between properly enjoy this great honor. Prof. them, and the belief is apt to be enter- Wickersham, as we have heretofore ob- tamed that it 'is only another case of served is a gentleman of great penetra• the pof calling the kettle black. Lion and sagacity, and he is not so I Solicitor of the Treasury Binckley blinded by partisan feeling, as to fall to recognize our immense superiority over our cotemporary in ability and influ ence. We have shown him our greater enterprise as Journalists by publishing for two successive years the most accu rate reports of hls profound,eloquent and highly finished speeches. And we have always been recognized as the warm friend and advocate of the Common Schools of the State, over which be pre sides with such unsurpassed ability, in telligence and tact. In our news de partment we pay especial attention to ' School matters, and keep our readers fully posted upon all the educational intelligence of the day. We have taken great pains with the present Superin tendent of Schools and have sir:yen earnestly to keep him on the straight path of duty. As his watchful guardian we have reproved him for allowing him self to indulge in political speeches in the School room, and have cautioned I him against the bad habit which he has contracted of scattering capital I's in great profusion through his speeches. Now we propose to redouble our ex ertions in the great Professors behalf, especially if it is true that we havebeen declared to be his official organ ; and !we expect in time to eliminate from him all his faults, foibles and vices, and present him to the world purified and regenerated, a man sans peter ci sans rc procltc, the Great Educator of the day, and a possible aspirant for the Presi dency; for may he not hope, since Old Abe and Hiram Ulysses have gained that giddy elevation? And then the Penny Trumpet will have cause to regret the day when it sought to escape from its alliance with the Professor and tried to evade its I duties and responsibilities us his organ, by advancing the astounding proposi tion that it was us that he meant to honor and not it. And it will need all the music which it can extract from the organ with the wonderful combine ! tion stops, to relieve it from its unutter able woe. Crant's Polley The following, which we clip from the New York Journal of Commerce, a conservative journal, which is usually very careful in its statements, allbrds more direct evidence of Grants senti ments and foreshadows his probable course more distintly than anything which we have yet seen. It states that General Grant " has privately promised to treat the south kindly and justly," and that It lies " the Vet y highest au thority " fur saying that " he purposes to separate himself from the extrem— ists" and to lead the country to Peace. If this be so, It accounts for the fear and trembling which has seized the Radicals since the election and gives them good ground for thels' apprehen sion that they have won at great cost and trouble, a blank— But the greater problem remains to be solved. Who dare attempt to outline the history 01 the next four years? If the Re publican party were united and consolida ted there would be absolutely no limit to its exercise of power. But it is made up of the most incongruous elements, without cohesion, and is held together by niece external pressure. As soon as the rewards of victory are to be distributed the divis ions will be evident. Gen. Grant is not a radical, and ire have the very highest authority for saying that it is his purpose to separate himself from the extreunist.q, and to rally around him a strong body of the better class of citizens, who shall drew unto them congenial allies . from all quarters, and become, as they would de serve to be, the party of the country. He is also extremely anxious to verify his party watchword, and to lead the country to peace and renewed prosperity. This is his pur -1 Pose, and no one can deny that it is a noble ambition. Not himself a politician, and ' with but little experience or skill in civil life, he does not, as we think, at all realize the difficulties in the way of such success as he covets. We do not say that he will tail, for he has undoubted pluck, and, be sides four years of patronage at command, he will also have the advice and practical aid of some strong friends who do not usually intermeddle with public affairs. He will, of course, be first flattered and then roundly abused by those whose alli ance he disdains. If Sumner is left out in the cold, according to the present pro gramme, there will be heard at Washington a howl of rage every time the wind is in the East. If the South is treated kindly and justly, as Gen. Grant has privately gem med, and the measures of reconstruction he has indicated as his choice aro adopted, he will soon be classed by the Radicals of his party as "a rebel sympathizer," bent on throwing away all the fruits of the great national victory. There is a large class of politicians whose sole test of ”righteous peace" is some form of security for the per manent ascendency of their party at the South. There can be no rest to the land until that idea is abandoned ; and if this concession is now made by their chosen leader, he will be stigmatized most unspar ingly as a traitor to their cause. Negro Suffrage This is the hobby that the Radical press have mounted since the Presi dential election, and Greeley, Forney and the rest of the malignant tribe, are strenuous ;tia their advocacy of univer sal negro suffrage in the North as well as the South. Having obtained a new lease of power from the people, the Radicals no longer attempt any con cealment of their real sentiments, and we suppose one of the first acts of Con gress, at its ensuing session In Decem ber, will be to pass a law making it compulsory on all the States to give negroes the right of suffrage. To be sure Congress has no power under the Federal Constitution to inflict such an outrage upon the people ; but the Con stitution is no longer considered of any moment or binding efficacy, since, ac cording to the candid admission of the late Mr. Stevens, they have for several years been legislating outside of that instrument. The white men of the North may as well, therefore, make up their minds to meet Sambo hereafter at the polls. THE Radicals are great sticklers for retrenchment—at least they let on to be so before the election. One of their methods of demonstrating it, Binee the election, is the proposition of the New York 71.711C8 to make the President's salary one hundred thousand dollars per annum, instead of twenty-thousand as heretofore! And we have no doubt it will be done, provided Gen. GRA_NT succumbs to the Radical Congress and does its bidding. Eguer. rights, according to the Ex press, is taking away the right of voting from white men and giving it to ne• groes. This is what the fanatical editors of that newspaper term the "advance of civilization.' It is stated and can be proven that the Radical manufacturers of Pittsburg at the recent election marked the tickets of their workmen, and then marched them to the polls in gangs, with over seers to watch how they voted. the Express has no word of condemnation for this outrage. Down with the poor white man, and up 'with the negro is the object and chief aim of that organ of the Radical bondholders and capital ists. first put on the gloves against this gi gantic whiskey interest. He appears to have been actuated by perfectly honest motives, and he strove earnestly to un earth the frauds; but he was not prop. erly supported by the Hecretary of the Treasury and the Attorney General, and he had not weight enough in himself to make his efforts successful. He there fore soon fell before the assaults of the "Ring" and retired to the rear in con siderable disorder, after a pugilistic en• counter with District Attorney Courtney of New York, in which he got a black eye and Courtney a broken finger; the cause of the row being a question put by B. to C. as to whether the latter was "for the Government or the frauds" in the case then being investigated against Commissioner Rollins and other whis• key thieves. The next champion against the Ring was Judge Fullerton, a lawyer of New York city, and a former Judge, who has hitherto born a high character not only for integrity but for ability. He is said to have been employed by Presi dent Johnson to bring to light these frauds, after Binckley's discomfiture, I and he very soon discovered enough to bring to grief District Attorney Court ney and Collector of Internal Revenue I Bailey, who were summoned and ap. I peered last week before President John son and Attorney General Evarts, to I make their defence against the charges brought against them. The result of the trial is not yet announced, but they have meanwhile turned round on Judge Fullerton and charge him with acting I in the interest of the Whiskey Ring, I in his prosecution of them, and allege among other things that he took a bribe of $30,0110 to let off a Collector of In , ternal Revenue darned Smith, who I acknowledged himself to be guilty by fleeing to Canada; Smith it is likewise I alleged compelled Fullerton to refund I $d3,000 of this motley by threatening to expose him. We are inclined to think that this accusation against Fullerton is bogus, although we cannot feel sure of it, as it is made with so much partic ularity. It seems certain, however, that it will not be long before the truth is fully de veloped, as there are too many reputa tions at stake now, for the inquiry to be allowed to die out. The whiskey men me thoroughly alarmed and they have good cause to be. There is no doubt in the public mind that the United States Revenue officers from Commissioner boffins down have been interested with the owners of whiskey In robbing the Government, as it Is Impossible for the thieving to be carried on without their connivance. It needs no argument to prove this, and the desperate struggle which these officials are making to pre vent an investigation only makes it more apparent. In our own District, charges have been made and investiza tions demanded time and again, but I they have always been battled. It looks I however now, as though the day of reckoning had at last come. Read's Rascality Our evening cotemporary had better read Read's opinion ,before it undertakes to deny that he sought to disfranchise all the 6000 foreign irs who were natur alized in the supreme Court before Judge Sharswood. Read says in his opinion, "I can only come to one con clusion—that the whole issue is illegal, contrary to the act of Congress, contrary to the act of Assembly AND stteui.n NE REJECTED AT THE POLLS." The Republican party of Philadelphia acted on - his advice, and threw out all these votes, where they had the Election Officers ; and now forsooth they attempt to deny that he said what he meant or meant what he said. Speaking of the above clause in his opinion, the Phila delphia Post, which is Radical but can not endorse this outrage, says very pointedly : Did Judge Read mean that he meant nothing? If he did not direct election offi• cers to refuso all these papers, where is his service to the Republican party, for which, according to The Telegraph, we should be forever grateful? fine day see are told that he saved the election by throwing out six thousand Democratic votes; the next we are informed that he did not throw out one vote. Here is where the muddle ends. All the . analogies and principles of the law are opposed by Judge Read's opinion. Suppose a man to be tried for murder; the weight of testimony is to the effect that he is guilty, and actually he is guilty. Nevertheless he is acquitted, though all the world correctly believes him to be a murderer. Now, the Sheriff might as well take that man and hang him, by authority of the world's opinion, as Judge Read declare illegal and fraudulent—not separately, but in the gross—all the certifi cates of citizenship issued and sanctioned by the Supreme Court. The suspicions and rumors of fraud lie in the back-ground, and to reach them an investigation is required in each case; but the face of the sealed eer tilicate is its own evidence of citizenship ; the man who holds it, whether a rascal or a saint, is a legal voter till the contrary is proved, and Judge Read has no more right than the Emperor of Russia to take away his ballot The Whiskey Frauds President Johnson seems to be after the whiskey ring in earnest. He has caused Judge Fullerton, an able lawyer of New York, to be employed in the investigation of these frauds, and sev eral of the accused parties have been summoned to Washington to answer the charges against them. A Wash ington correspondent telegraphs as fol lows : Fullerton charges Courtney and Murray with corruption in office, especially in re ceiving bribes for the settlement of cases of fraud on the internal revenue. These charges are very roll' m i nous. and are sworn to by a number of persons, of whom Messrs Depuy, 131aisdell, and Hess are the most prominent. The charges were pre sented to the President and Attorney-Gen eral Evarts yesterday, and the former sent for Courtney and Murray to come on at once. They first visited Mr. Evarts this Morning, and were by him taken to the White House. -Courtney was the first sum moned before his Excellency. Ile was ushered into the presence at 1 o'clock, and three hours elapsed before he got through. The President acted as Judge, Mr. Evarts as Clerk, and Mr. Fullerton as Prosecuting Attorney, Ile read the charges against Courtney in full, and Courtney, ;answered each and all in detail. Fullerton and Courtney then examined and cross-ex amined each other, the latter closing with an argument in his own behalf and the former with an argument against the ac cused. Mr. Evarts took copious notes, and President Johnson, acting Judge for the time being, reserved his decision for the present. Mr. Courtney was then discharged from custody, and Marshal Murray was brought before his Excellency. The pro ceedings in his - case were similar to those in the case of Courtney, and at 5 o'clock he was dismissed. Wbat the result of the in vestigation may be Is not known ; but the opponents of Courtney and Murray assert positively that the President will suspend them both to-morrow, and submit their cases to the Senate for settlement. It is understood that Mr. Evarts does not favor hasty action in the premises, and he, it is thought, will influence the President to await a thorough investigation. TIE Cecil Whig, which was burned out a week or two ago, reappears in a new and handsome dress. TIM LICTIONB PENLNIA W 4 give p bet° every ,x).nty in nil official voto of iCaUNTIES Adams. ......... Allegheny Armstrong......... Beaver Bedford Berke Blair Bradford Bucks Butler Cambria. Cameron . ....... Carbon Centre ...... Chester Clarion Clinton.. Columbia.. Crawford Cumberland Dauphin ........... Delaware .......... ............. Erie Fayette Forest Frank1in............ Fulton Greene . Huntingdon Indiana Jefferson Juniata Lancaster Lawrence Lebanon ....... .... Lehigh Luzern° Lycoming M'Kean Mercer Mifflin Monroe Montgomery•.... Montour Northampton__ Northumberla'd Perry Philadelphia Pike Potter Schuylkill ... Snyder Somerset Sullivan . ....... Stnquchauna T Legit Union Venan go ........... Warren Washington Wayne Westmoreland._ Wyoming York ......... Majorities We do not give the figures for Philadel phia made by the Republican majority of the Board of Return Judges, but w•e state the aggregate of the official returns from all the precincts. TERRIBLE CALA Ina Y Collision nt the Fulton Ferry New York The most serious ferry-bbat accident that has happened for many years, involving the loss of one life and the maiming of a number of male and female passengers, oc curred on Saturday morning. The follow ing statements' were made soon after the occurrence: Gco. W. Broach, who was a witness to the occurrence, makes the following state ment: About 71 o'clock this morning I went on board the Union ferry-boat, at the Fulton Ferry, New York side, for the pur pose of cornming to Brooklyn; when I got on board the bout I went to the front, where there were about a dozen persons standing beside myself; shortly after I got there 1 saw the other boat, which I believe was the Hamilton, coming from Brooklyn toward the slip; the bout on which I Was was in the slip nearest the South Ferry, end the coming in boat would naturally lake the slip on the other side; when I first saw her she was about 200 feet oft, and was headed directly for the boat on which I was stand ing; she was crowded with passengers, so much so that her forward part was depress ed considerably below the usual level ; she kept advancing in the same straight line toward the boat on which I was, until she came so near that I saw that a collision Was inevitable, end with the others who were standing on front of the boat I stepped back some paces to avoid the shock. At the Flame time the passengers on the approach ing boat were seized with a panic and at tempted to get back out of the way, but so great was the crowdof people and wagons behind them that they could not move very far. In a few seconds, and during the con fusion of the victims trying to save them selves, the approaching boat came up to the boat on which I was with such force that, owing to the depression of her forward part, she ran under the guards, and, striking the under bow, was veered to one side, so that, with the force at which she was moving, the forward portion of the ladies' cabin was en tirely torn away. While the Hamilton was approaching toward the slip at a high rate of speed, and in such a direction as made it apparent to every one that a collision must occur, there was not the slightest percepti ble diminution of her epeed, and, tome, the accident appeared as the result of the most reckless carelessness on the part of the pilot in charge of the boat. J. W. Albertson, pilot of the Hamilton, makes the following statement: Our boat, the Hamilton, runs on a line with the Clin ton. This boat bad the sametrouble on the New York side the trip before, and so we got a load of over a thousand people, and were weighed down in the water pretty low before we started. Just now it's flood tide at this time in the morning, and beside there is a pretty heavy freshet in the North River, so that the tide runs very strong from Governor's Island to the foot of Beek man. A sort of eddy is so pushed down stream very strong from Beekman st., close in by the piers. Just as we rounded and came up near the ferry houses a Southern propeller (this was the Gulf City), two piers below, that they were hauling into her slip, let go her stern ropes and clewed round on her bows close bp our pier, so as to cut off our sight of it, We had to sheer off so as to keep out of hitting the propeller, and this took the Hamilton right straight Into the slip where the Union was lying, chained to the ferry bridge; just as we went by the propeller the down stream eddy caught our bow and took us right into the 'Union, smashing up our rail and cabin. I was eating my breakfast in the wheel house, and White had the wheel ; he's been let do this by the company for two years back, and has often had the wheel before; I don't blame him any, nor the engineer; ho did the best he could; the trouble was the propeller threw us off the course, and when the eddy struck us we were so low in the water that we couldn't manage to keep clear; I have been employed by the Union Ferry Company 18 years, and have been steering ferryboatslor NI years. illiam L. McGrew testified that the bout was crowded with passengers and vehicles; at the start I stood on the forward main deck, and had my attention attracted par , ticularly to the objects in the river and the ferry-slip on the Now York side; we were detained at the Brooklyn side a few minutes beyond the usual time, at least as it ap peared to me; we came across without meeting with any obstructions, except that I thought the boat made an unusual detour toward the Battery; shortly after leaving Brooklyn my attention was fixed particu larly on a black propellor tug-boat ; it ap peared to me to be lying partly across the New York ferry-slip, with her bow beading down stream ; she was backing at the time, apparently endeavoring to get clear of the entrance to the slip; long before we arrived at the entrance ehe was entirelyclear, tier bow being several feet above the north side of the slip; as the Hamilton entered the slip, ' she was pointing directly for the Union, which was lying in the slip toward the Battery; the Hamilton was under consid erable headway; could not say that the Union was moving at the time of collision ; I observed before the boat struck that the signals to stop and back weregiven in rapid succession; I was in a position where I could look over the boat's side and see the water and from its non-agitation I was im pres4ed with the idea that the engine Wba not backed, and that there was no hacking until after the collision; in fact, I am post. live on that point, for the motion of the boat was not checked, and not feeling theeudden jar which always accompanies the backing of the engine, it seemed to me, from the rapid succession of the signals, that the engineer might have been mdmentarily frightened from his post, or have been bewildered ; I am quite positive that the bow of the boat had entered the slip before the signals were given to stop and reverse; the passengers were panic-stricken; after the signal had been given those fn the after part of the boat crowded on those who were already for , ward, and pushed them toward the point of danger ; scene of the male passengers tried ' to get the others to fall back, but it was of no avail the boat careened toward the , Union so much so that our guards were be , low the Union's; I saw the boy just after the collision had occurred, and that the crowd had been forced back ; his body was lying on the deck just forward of the ladies' cabin ; I observed that hie face was purphi, and his head crushed and one of his legs off; some one told me that he had been sit ting on the railing just before the collision; I I did not see him before the collision. [ln answer to a question by a juror the witness ,stated that he was in the habit of crossing !the ferry two or three times daily, and from I 'general observation he believed the signal ! to slow is given about 15 to 30 yards from the bulkhead, and to efop at about the eril I trance.] He could not say whether the signal to slow was given oriaturday morn ! ing ; the signals to atop and reverse were given at the time when I thought a collision imminent;after the collision I was forced back against a wagon, and to extricate my self was compelled to mount on the roof of the cabin, from which place I saw the boy. Gov. Baker, of Indiana, denies being a candidate for the United States senate Saw President* are Elected The modus operandi of electing a Presi dent after the Presidential electors have been chosen may not be familiar to all, so we condense from the Philadelphia Ledger an account of the process. The Constitu tion provides that the electors, chosen in such manner as the Legislature of each State may prescribe, shall meet In their re spective States and vote by ballot for Presi dent and Vice President. At the meetings, known as "electoral colleges," the electors aro required to make lists of the persons they vote for, and the number of votes cast for each, which lists they aro required to sign and certify, and transmit sealed to the Prmident of the Senate of the United States, at the seat of Government. That Milner is required to open these certificates in the presence of the Senate and House of Repre sentatives and the votes are then to be counted, and the, person'haviniphe greatest number of electoral votes for resident, if such a number be a majority of the whole number of electors appointed, Le declared to be the President ; and so of the Vice Presi dent. An actor congress of March 1,171 U which fixed a uniform tiros for the holding of the Presidential election throughout the coun try, also provides for further details. It re quires the Executive authority oteach State to cause three certified lists of the electors chosen by said State to be made °tumid de livered to the electors on or before the first Wednesday of December next after the election, and that said electors shall meet and give their votes on the said first Wed nesday in December, at such place as the Legislature of the State shall direct. The electors vote by . ballot end ars required to make three certified lists, which shall be signed by all the electors, with it certified list of the electors attached to *melt ; then to be sealed up In three separate packages, and a further certificate endorsed on the envelope of each, signed by all the electors, stating that the packages contain a list of the votes of such State for President and Vice President. The electors aro then I required to appoint and commission a per son to take charge of and deliver one of the I said certified packages to the President of the Senate at the seat of Government, on or before the first Wednesday in January next ensuing; they are further required to forth with forward another of said certitleatea.by the Post Office to the President* of the Sen ate, and the third is to be delivered to the judge of the district in which the electors aro assembled. These and other minute provisions are made to guard against the possible loss or failure of a certificate. In order to have certainty as tothQ counting of votes so forwarded, Congress is required to be in session on the second Wednesday of February succeeding every meeting of the electors, on which day the certitivates are to be opened in the proactive or both Houses, and the result declared as already stated, It is high time for Judge Read to t esign. He has long been an object of pity from the Members of the Bar of this Suite. None of them have any faith in his knowledge of the law or confidence in-the soundness of his Judgment. His brother Judges, out of charity for his failing intellect, have lately been giving him the lightest possible work todo The opinions which have been entrust ed him fut. preparation, would only require a single paragraph. It was merely Intended that he should announce the Judgment of the Court in certain rears In which the questions involved had been clearly decided before. Wherever there was a necessity for the exercise of legal acumen or the delivery of a clear, argumentative opinion, the work was given to one of the learned judges who retain their mental faculties. But even in this there was trouble. For Judge Read's ambition increased In intensity Just in pro ', portion to the rapid weakening of his Intel lect, His mind has become BO much im- I paired that it is impossible to present his ! thoughts in a concise manner, and hence he i has burdened our State Reports with page upon nage of ridiculous twaddle about mat ' tors of no interest or importance whatever. When Judge Strong resigned a short time ago, the thought that flashed across every lawyer's mind was, " if it hind only been Judge Read."— ,Spirit. Gen. Grant'a View* of the Republican Platform. A statement made last evening by a gen tleman in whom may be placed implicit re liance and who enjoys excellent opportu nities to enable him to speak intelligently on the subject, may give some indication of Gen. Grunt's position In relation to the Re publican party. Ile states that after the General was nominated he sat for quite a long time carefully reading and pondering upon the platform adopted by the Conven tion ; that tie finally expressed to his con. fitiontial friends that he did not like It, and was in great doubt whether lie would ac cept the nomination ou that platform. This coming to the ears of certain leaders of the party they hastened to call upon the Gen eral, who stated to them his objections to the platform. This Intelligence was re ceived with no little consternation by his visitors, who feared that Grant entertained the intention of declining the nomination. They at once opened upon him with every concolvable argument they could bring for ward to induce him to accept, one of which arguments was that the platform need not be regarded by him in so serious u light—it was simply en enunciation of the general principles of the party, necessary only to make up the Issues of the campaign. They urged him to accept at all events, and to say nothing more about the platform. Many other arguments of a similar chant° ter were used, It is said, which gave Grunt to understand that they wanted him to ac , cept the notninatiou, h . even it had to be on a platform of his own adoption.— fl'a,h fug tun Cor. ilerald, Nor. 11. A n Extraordinary Case of Bigamy An extraordinary case of bigamy was before the court yesterday evening. The prisoner was a handsome and fashionably attired young man named Albert A, WhOe• head, about 21 years of age, uud the cir cumstances of his case are as follows: Ou the 17th of June, 1509, Whitehead, who is a real " lady-killer," married a young lady named Emma Doubleday—the daughter of Mr. My. Doubleday, a well-known citizen of Brooklyn-the ceremony being performed by the Rev. Mr. Adams, of the Fleet Street M. E. Church. On the fourth of July last, young White head asked his father-in-law, Mr. Double day, for the' loan of 3500, iu order to go into business. Mr. Doubleday advanced him $220. Just at this time, however a young Whitehead thatbrought the news to Mrs. that her husband was court Ing a Miss Em ma (,able, and wag to be married to her at an early date, and that " Alberta" wedding suit was then being made. The wife in formed her father, who, by skill and activ ity, actually found the tailor making the wedding suit, and obtained other informa tion leading him to the conviction that the money borrowed was for the purpose of paying for his wedding expenses and a flight to Nashville, Tennessee. Mr. Double. day, therefore, had Whitehead arrested for obtaining money tinder false pretenses, and also obtained information of his former marriage with Mary Mies Jane Tallman, of Buffalo, by the Rector of St. James' Church there. On his complaint indict ments were found in June by the Grand Jury for both bigamy and obtaining money under false pretenses. The case coming up yesterday, Mr. Doubleday procured the attendance of the first wife from Buffalo, who confronted the prisoner in court, much to his surprise. Whitehead seeing that the "jig was up," plead guilty to the indictment of bigamy. When conducted' before the bar of the court, the two young wives were provided with seats near him, while in the rear, among the spectators, were two sweet bets who had been expecting marriage. The prosecuting personage, the father of tire last wife, bound to see the thing out, was near by, one arm upon the bar or the court, and watching the proceedings with notch interest. The prisoner stood up welly be• fore the court, but had nothing to say. Ho was attired in a fashionable black suit, with white necktie and immaculate linen. lie was sentenced to the State Prison for three years, and then stated, with the air of an old libertine, that he had a third wife in Washington. The first wife has burled one child born in wedlock with the prisoner, and the sec ond is soon to be confined. One of the sweethearts, who still clings to Albert, waited till all others had departed, ale a flout interview with him, on hi: • , handcuffed, to jail. The other women wept " copiously " In the court room, and the spectators looked on with Interest.—N. Y. Democrat. If Genera' Urant has that respect for " the will of the people" which beexpreaned in his letter accepting the Chicago nomination, it will scarcely be satisfactory to him to know, as he mint know, that he is not the choice of the people of the United' States us their President. The Democracy have curried Oregon, and if the electoral Vote were justly counted it would stand as follows • New York New Jersey Oregon All the Southeria,.Stutes Whole number electoral votes,... 917 On the popular vote as It is, or WWI per mitted, Grant has a majority of only about 300,000, end, to secure this, a Radical Con gress by force prevented three States, sure lot Seymour, from voting, disfranchised more than 000,000 Democrats in all the Southern States, and enfranchised 751,000 negroes fresh from slavery and the swamps. —N. Y. World. Bow rt Broker Got Glt A very good story is told on Well street in regard to the recent telegraphic corre spondence between the secretary and Mr. Yon Dyck, which shows how messages are sometimes interpreted, and are firslknown by other than the intended parties., The New York 'Evening ii,.presq says "It appears that Mr. McCulloch tele graphed to Mr. Van Dyck on Efaturday to relieve the money market !rumor says) by the purchase of bonds with greenbacks or three per cent. certificates. A New York and Philadelphia brokers , firm is said to have intercepted the message in some way. , and immediately swept the bond market of .18117 s, the price belpg run np to 119,4 before Mr. Yan Dyck received his message. This, of course, changed the government bopd market from depression to buoyancy and put an entirely different face on aff i tirs ip Wall street generhify, which *as' 1 the Treasury Department could have hoped to accomplifon, it it bad entered the market as h buyer. The firm in question is said to have the bonds on hand still, while Mr. Van Dyck has four millichas of new certificates, which might possibly otherwise be 1n cir culation instead of being locked up in the treasury vaults. The Marquis of Hastlows. We are informed by cable telegram this morning that the Marquis of Hastings, at once of the most noble, Most unprincipled, and most dissipated patrons of the British turf, has gone to his fathers. Dying in his twenty-sixth year, having worn himself out with debauchery, wine, women and horses, ho was a fair but advanced example of the model modern young British noble- With an incomeof one hundred thousand pounds a year, this man's total ussete will not prob ably buy Lis executor a gold suutr-box. Ile was a nrat-class blackleg. At the age when young men of moderate means are about to enter college and prepare themselves for the battle (ABM, this scapegrace had thirteen mistresses; filename was known and remit lar in the coulisaesof thearand Opera, In the most degraded and gilded quarters of Perim; Equally stliomo lu theiockey Club, the Fun bourg St. Germain, the Hue Medee, the Toil. eries, or the Mabille. At eighteen the mar quis owned the fastest and most luxurious yacht In England and bad penetrated every nook in the Mediterranean and Baltic Seas, and astonishing stories have been told of the almost Belshazzar-like orgies that have taken place on board of this maguilicent vessel. Coryphees and tigurantee outnam bored the able seamemand riot and luxury was the rule and not the exception. Of an old and noble line, the Inheritor of a kingly fortune, his rent-roll befog almost 'neaten table, this man, now dead at an age when 110 might have boon the ornament of the forum or senate, teaches a lesson. Strange stories are lulu of the madcap and eipentlthrllt lord. At nineteen ho bud a very hund.ottie and distinguished presence, and his betting book was the wonder of the Brltsh nic irrPolls. One day hn would be 1m the French capital watching lila Prix do Peria, and making hits betting-book, taking great odds ; twenty-four hours after and he was en route fur the Scottish Moorlands to knock nil' grouse; at the end of the week ho would be found in the Mole of Naples with a pretty ballet girl, watching the limit ing of his pleasure yacht with choice lin' tau wines and the fragrant fruits of It, South; then he would make n dash at the Carpathians; n look nt the beam tc,. promenading the Preter of Vienna, and again on the great Derby Day at Epsom Downs, atanding before the Grand Stand, the observed of till observers, his book good for twenty or thirty thou , - and pounds, sometimes all wagered on one horse. Three days later the keel of h, yacht would be cleaving the cold waters of the Baltic In search of advi•nture, and thou back again to enjoy the rout and riot and perfumed uproar of the great Landon hash enable world. A lite of purple unit line linen, he had a merry time among the princes of the earth, to flash, dicker, and tinnily to smoulder in the ashes of forgot tco L. jury. Toward the close of his shin t, Luc merry life, the Martinis of Hastings became involved In difficulties, and at one time he betting and other debts amounted to a quarter of a million of pounds. Summed - ed by a •Frang of unprincipled blacklegs and hrok en-clown men on Im had tit ..I,l' time held fair positions, him course wry downward, and his career brief and bad. At the lost, Derby, Hastings was "short some .LSO,UOU It, his betting book, lotv log backed his own horse Lady' Elizabeth; and the Derby being mini by Blue Gown, the Marquis had to cut and rim for It. It more than hinted that the Prince of Wales and the late Marquis were on terms of Intl macy, and were occasionally boon compan ions in many a dissolute land. It is noire than probable that the decease of the lg., quls of Llastings resulted from a tiOVOril and long protracted oourse of dissipation. Ili, vital energy had long ago been terribly sap ped, and those who witnessed his hist hour , and exit must liava found his cal cc titti Tic climax to his eventful life. Trouble In wllllanle College A letter from the Secretnry of Willi:me. College )1115.9., in which the stinlente nro now in revolt, explainv the C111.1511i 'am - 10w9 : Many students, On slight aud insulll,•leot grounds, have been repeatedly and pm tractedly absent from college duties, loci thus from recitations, much of the value of which depends upon consecutive attend • once The following law was passed by • s to abate this evil : " Each absence from any recitimoo, whether at the beginning of or during the term, whether excused or unexcused, will count as zero In the record of standing. lit cases, however, in which attendance shall be shown by the student to have been im possible, each officer shall have the option of allowing the recitation to he made up at sucictime as he Rhilir appoint; and no marls shall be given to such recitation utiles:. It shall amount to a substantial performance of the work omitted." Thereupon this paper Wes presented by the students : " lb the Authorities of Williams Colley,. "At a int:Ming of the students ot . Wil liams College, ..Nov. 10, 180/1, tho fullutving resolution was unanimously adopted : " Whereas, 'rho Faculty of Williams Col lege have imposed upon mg students of sail College, a rule that (quoting the rule), 1111 , 1 " Whereas, We, students of sate College, regard the imposition of this rule us a blow aimed at our porsonal honor and own hood ; and " Whereas, Our petition promoted to the Faculty of Mild College, Nov. ti, !SUS ' for the repeal of the above mentioned rule ban been disregarded therefore "Resolved, That we, ntudentn of mad Williams College, declare tmir routine with said College to cense from thin date, until the autboritlen of mild College nittill repeal the above mentioned rule." Thin paper bore the signatures of 111111 :y all the student/4 In the College. The action of the Faculty in thin mut e r has' been unanimous, and believing that more important tenure lu the government of the College are involved than Mono re lating eirnply to the maintennme and Win dom of a mingle law, wo nubmit thin mate meet to the public. FRANK LIN CA WM.: It, Secretary of the Faculty. All but throe or four of the etudeutm Lug loft the College. Horrible Negro Outrage in Georgbn !Mill Retribution Dollop■ We have the particulars of a horriblemit • rage committed near Summerville, iii Emanuel county, on Tuesday last. A young lady, coventeen oreighteen pairs old, daughter of a respectable citizen of that county, who Is a pupil in the Nutntnervitle school, was met in the outskirts of the VII - lago while on her way to school, early Tues. day morning by a negro named Pearce, w hit attacked her with a lightwood knot i: , sulk log her on the back of the head, and felling her to the earth. Ile thou attempted to commit further outrage upon her person, which Rile resisted to the utmost of her strength and ability. In the scuttle which ensued he bent her severely over the heed and face, seriously Injuring tier eyes, and tilling her mouth with sand to prevent her cries from being heard. Front the ailed of this terrible tree ttnent she became inset • Bible, and the fiend accomplished his hellish purpose, and left her apparently dead In the road. Some time after she was discovered in this pliable condition, and taken to 11 bookie near by, when, Dr. Bouchello being called to see, administered to her relief, and she recovered go far as to be able to ilesig nate the demon who had committed the outrage. , Pursuit was then made for the wretch, ' and lnc little while be was found concealed upon the premises of Nfra. Harris, when he was arrested and taken to Swainsboro' and committed to Jail. A largo crowd wits as sembled at the latter place—the election de -1 ing held there—and greet excitement wits produced when the facto became known. There wen, however, no attempt made to interfere with the criminal, who was .afely lodged in jail. That night, about 11 or 12 o'clock a eiowd of persons, numbering some forty er tins, I went to the house of 111r.J. J. I:doorsing, Jailor, and demanded of Min the Jail keys. This demand he refused to comply with, when they threatened his life if the keys were not produced. Under tills alternative I the keys were presented to the party, who immediately proceeded to the fail, took the negro out, and carrying him to a tree just outside the town, swung him up to a limb, , In which pouition ho was found next morn- Accident on tee Harlem Railroad—A leo clon■ Attempi• to Throw 1 /MON Wel" Within a month three ties have been placed on the track of the Harlem railroad, all at the same point, which Is between Mount Vernon and Ilranxville, about a half mile from the last named station. The first obstruction was thrown off by the cow catcher of the morning express ; the seeoud was found and removed by the track wed ko, just before the night down express passed ; the third was an old tie of about half the usual thickness, thus elbowing a design to present an obstruction to the train which the cowcatcher would not touch. This was Placed before the down express, duo in New York at nine o'clock Monday night. Owing to the evident malice evinced by these ob structions,ran;off the track diagonally a dis tance of over one hundred feet, and their stopped east otthe up track, badly damaged but not exploded. The engineer add tire men were thrown off—the former about thirty feet. He, however, was not Injured enough to prevent his being on duty yes terday, and the firemen were Unhurt. The express freight and baggage cars ran off diagonally westward for about 160 feet, and then went down an embankment about eight feet high. The express freight car was completely smashom-and its contents well distributed in the vicinity; the baggage cur bad one corner jammed In and the trucks torn from beneath it. Some of the trunks inside were smashed equally as were the packages In the express car, Was slightly injured, but was able to walk home. None of the passengers wore hurt and none of the passenger cars were damaged. This was partially owing to the patent brake which is attached to all the cars on the Harlem railroad. On the engine breaking connec tion with the passenger cars, the brake was applied and their motion quickly chocked. The down track was torn up for about ir,,o feet. Tho company has offered a reward of 51,00 q for the• apprehension and conviction of the pertain or persona who placed the ob atructioos on the track, and It Is hoped thin measure will have the intended result.— N. 1% stn. EZZMII It has been discovered that Benjamin publLstaid the first Matildalet book in thls'country, In 1740. • It `wall Wesley's; sermon upon Free Grace, and Franklin printed many editions of It. • • A Chicago- butcher was detected at the Union EitocK Yards, In that - city, trying to get away a.dead hog which he had propped up among some live ones in such a man ner as to make It appear to be alive. He evidently intended to make pork of it.