Lancaster 2ntellt gentry. WEDNESDAYJ APRIL 20, 1870 To Oar Subscribers. To every subscriber to the lerrELLl - or old—who sends us $2.25 ire will send a copy of the paper for one year, and aro a copy of the book called " The Horse" neatly bound in cloth, which treats of the diseases of that animal and contains many valua ble recipes; retail price $l.OO. If the book is sent by mail, 10 cts. additional must be remitted to us to pay the post age. The Projected braslon of Canada Canada is again in a tumult because of an apprehended Fenian raid. The Governor General says that he has In formation from different and reliable sources to the effect that the Fenians under General O'Neil have been for some tAmevery quietly making prepara tions for the invasion of Canada. The story we think Is quite likely to be true ; if the Fenian leaders do seriously con template tin attack upon our northern neighborS, it would seem to be their manifest policy to make their prepura for it L 1 .9 quietly as possible. This policy too has been roughly impressed upon them by the complete failure of their invasion project of a few years ago, which they loudly announced and her alded with a great flourish of trumpets; but then on the other hand it is difficult to believe that any movement could have been inaugurated fur any length of time among so large a body of men— and they,lrishmen—without theknowl edge of it reaching the public and all the particulars being detailed in full in the coluninsof ourenterprising newspapers. If the invasion of Canada is contem plated by the Fenians, it is probably pro jected at this time because of the trouble in which the Canadian government is now involved with the settlers iu the country which has recently been con veyed to it by the defunct Hudson Bay Company. Our readers know that these settlers in the valleys of the Asslne boine, Saskatchewan and Winnipeg, close to our Northern frontier, west !of the great Lakes, are now In avowed re sistance to the Canadian authorities. They have refused to receive the Gov ernor sent to them from Ottawa, and have placed themselves under the com mand of one of their own number, named Biel. The trouble originated in the sale of the country by the Hudson Bay Company ; the agents and em ployees of that Company derived 110 heneflt from that sale, receiving none of the money realized, but on the con trary losing the employment and the salary which they had enjoyed under the Company. They demanded com pensation in the way of grants of land. The difficulty has been further contem plated by national and religious jeal ousies and bitterness. The old quarrel be tween the French Catholies and the ling lish Protestants of Canada, has sprung up here and added fuel to the iame. The English Protestant faction being greatly in the minority, seem to have. fled the country, and the other party under Itiel, at present holds over it un dispnted sway ; but the Canadian gov ernment is about taking vigorous meas ures to suppress the rebellion in their outlying province, mid we are likely to have, ere long, a Winnipeg war of no mean dimensions. The Fenians proliailly think that this is their opportunity, and that now is their accepted time for wreaking upon 'anada the vengeance they have vowed against England. We are quite ready to believe therefore that a Fenian inva sion is on the cards in the near future. 'lime will develop the plans of General O'Neill and show Whether he purposes going into the Winnepeg country with Isis forces and taking the direction of the war out of the hands of Riot ; or whether lie purposes a distinct assault °fills own upon a more eastern point in Canada, trusting to the operations of ltiel in the west to distract the attention, and di vide the forces of the Canadian authori ties. For ourselves we never could see any sense in these Fenian invasions of Cana da. We appreciate the hatred which our Irish fellow-citizens have of Eng land, :old we tldnk that there is abund and cause for it, inasmuch as their compatriots in Ireland have been and are being„shaniefully and cruelly ill- I coaled liy England. The blood of Rob ert Bonnet calls aloud for vengeance; and were we an Irishman we doubt whether we would rest well in the grave, if we had not done all that lay in our Boner to avenge his death. But how is any satisfaction gained by trying to take Canada from England? England as all her actions show, is extremely anxious to get rid of Canada, as an ex pensive dependency which adds nothing to her strength but is to her a source of weakness. a few years Canada by natural causes will become a part of our country and England will be glad to get rid of her. Why then should the Fenians seek to aid their mortal enemy in her desire? No! let Fenian attacks be devoted to the disenthrullment of Ireland; let them sail to the Green Is land in a thousand ships, a million strong, and wresting their fatherland from its oppressors, avenge in a day the wrongs of a thousand years. The Way It Works Last Spring the Republicans carried Morristown, New Jersey, by an average majority orseventy-nine. At the elec tion which took place the other day Ii fly-four negroes voted with the Repub linaus, and the Democrats carried the town by an average majority °lone hun dred and seventy. The negroes came to the polls in the morning in procession, headed by a pnanincut Republican politician, who marched arm-in-arm with a prominent negro. The result was such a feeling of disgust, such a re vulsion of sentiment, that many Re publicans voted the Democratic ticket. As it was in Morristown, SO it will he elsewhere. Tim - National House of Representa tives, yesterday, by a vote of 66 to G 4, fixed the duty on pig iron at five dol lars a ton. It is now nine:dollars, but the Committee of Ways and Means had recommended its reduction to seven dollars ; a proposition to reduce the duty to three dollars a Lou was defeated, and the rate of live dollars fixed by the I louse amid considerable excitement. This Will not be agreeable !Jews to our furnace men, who declare that they are losing money now under a duty of nine dollars. If they have been telling the whole truth, we may expect to see them all blow out should the Senate concur with the House in reducing the duty. PII I LADELPI I IA has finally heard the negro Senator lecture. The refusal of the Radictil Board of Directors of the Academy of Music did not prevent the Union League from paying homage to the Hever:id Bevels. Horticultural Hall was procured and he held forth on the subject of "The Press," not Forney's Press, but newspapers in general. He (lid not explain the statement which has been so widely published to the effect that he stole the funds of a church in Kan saS. Is Rhode Island it has been the law for years that no loan could vote who did tint own real estate to the value of $l3l. Under that provision many poor Men were disfranchised. Since the adoption of the Fifteenth Amendment i)er of white men have resolved to test the validity of the proscriptive prop erty how. They want to see whether a poor white 1111111 in Rhode Island is not ..as good as a negro Is elsewhere. TM': N. Y. Leader remarks that the persons, who, at the Army of the Po tomac re-union dinner, hissed at the mention of General McClellan's name, ure believed to he the mune Indtvhinals who rccently stole the plate from Pea body's tomb In Massuchnsetts. 11. 4 _ TER WEEKLY INTELLIGEN CER, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1870. The High Tariff Swindle. When manufactures were in their in fancy in this country) certain theorists conceived the '&4'o:met ** could eobn be made self-sustaining by be , t*les con ferred through thengency of a protee tive tariff. H,entytlayi-in-02 2 '.,0*s mated that a period of in4l4.years would suffice to enable our manufactur ers of iron, woolen and cotton goods, and other taxed articles, to compete successfully with foreign producers.— From that time until the present we have had tariffs; arid, to-day, our man ufacturers are before Congress demand ling higher duties than were ever before imposed at any former period. Half a century has not sufficed to substantiate the claims put forward by the advocates of a protective tariff in favor of their policy. The merchant, the farmer, the mechanic and the laborer, were told that they would be compensated for the increased price of goods by higher wages and better home markets. The plea I l was a specious one, and it has been con tinually h;rped upon by all advocates of a prote tive tariff, until there are many wile accept it for a truism, sim ply because they have heard it repeated so often. That it is false can be easily shown by a comparison of the number of the consumers in the country, with those who are engaged in manufactur ing. During O 6 debate on the Tariff, which has been going on in Congress, statis tics were produced by the opponents of the present high rates of duties, that ought to be sufficient to satisfy the masses, that they are being robbed for the benefit of a few interested parties. The whole number of persons engaged in active industries in the United States is distributed as follows: agricultural ists, 6,435,000; unskilled laborers, do mestic servants and all distributors, 4,705,000 ; skilled mechanics, such as blacksmiths, carpenters, masons, &c., 1,000,000; manufacturer's of c0tt0n,125,- 000 ; manufacturers of woolens, 90,000; manufacturers of iron, 115,000; manu facturers of boots and shoes, 180,333 ; manufacturers of paper,2s,ooo ; fisheries and other industrial pursuits, 194,007. Total number of persons engaged in ac tive Industry, in the United States, 12,- 870,000. Of this number only three hundred and thirty thousand are employed in the "protected" industries of iron, cotton and woolen goods, while more than ten millions of working people depend for their daily bread upon the cultivation of the soil. To make the statement in another manner ; it has been estimated that the whole population of the United States is now about forty millions; and of these forty millions only about two millions are interested in manufactures. Thus nineteen-twentieths of the people are taxed for the benefit of the remain ing one-twentieth. And of the two millions engaged in manufactures, the mass receive only a scanty subsistence a. 9 the price of their daily toll. A few favored capitalists reap the enormous profits which are derived from the bur thens imposed upon the people. To the people of this country the great necessaries of life, next to food, are cot ton, wool and iron, in some of the shapes these commodities assume. Only three hundred and thirty thousand, all told, are engaged in the " protected" indus tries which we have named, while more than ten millions depend for their daily bread upon the cultivation of the soil. They work early and late, In sunshine and ill rain, to wrest from the earth an uncertain, and in many instances a bare subsistence. Yet they are taxed on every yard of woolen or cotton cloth worn by them, and on e;relr.plilw, hoe or nail used by them—in sonic instances more than a hundred per cent, the bulk of which goes into the pockets of the man ufacturer, and not into the Treasury of the United States. There was it time in this country when the collector of revenue by means of a tari ir was regarded as a necessity. Prior to the war the tariff men told us that the people would not submit to direct taxa tion. The war has taught us that the people will submit patiently to such taxation in its most odious forms, and it has also taught thinking men that a system can be devised by which taxes call be more justly apportioned than by a tarifll which always transfers the bulk of taxation to the shoulders of the labor ing classes, who are the chief consumers of taxed goods. Under our internal revenue system the taxes may be so ad justed as to bear heavily upon capital and lightly upon labor and the agricul tural interests. Such a policy won hi reverse the present order of things, and accomplish a sort of poeticaljustice. This idea may take root and bear fruit, and long years of wrong and injustice be thus avenged. Under the leadership of Schenck, a tariff bill more iniquitous and oppres sive than any which has preceded it is heingsteadily pushed through Congress. The work is being accomplished by a powerful combination of manufacturers, who care for nothing but their own in terests. The tux on coffee, and sugar, and tea, may be reduced, but on salt, iron, cottons, woolens and all the principal articles which enter into the general consumption of the masses it will be kept at exces sively high figures. The tariff on sugar is being reduced because the re finers of that article wish to import raw Muscorado sugar at cheap rates. The slight reduction on coffee and tea will he offered as a sop to the thoughtless, but it will not be felt as a relief by the masses; while the burthens imposed by the high duties retained on all clothing and other articles of prime necessity will press upon them heavily. The present members of Congress may refuse to grant relief, they may implicitly obey the mandates of the Ring, but the great West and the South will speak out very plainly at the Congressional elections next fall. High tariffs cannot be main tained much longer. The decree against them has gone forth, and the men who have combined to lobby the pending bill through Congress, will find that they have lost by extreme rapacity what they might have saved by moderation. In the revulsion which is sure to come, they will fare worse than they would have done if they had not been so inor dinately greedy of gain. - What Is Said of I's The Wayne County Herald gives us the following very handsome editorial notice, which we appreciate very h ighly, as an unsolicited testimonial of its strong approVal of the manner in which we have endeavored to inert our responsi bilities as journalists ; we trust that we may continue to merit the approval of the herald and of the other influential Democratic journals of the State which have lately spoken so kindly of us. "Any of our readers who desire to take all able, first class, sound Democratic daily paper may find what they are looking for in the Lancaster Intelligenecr. It is not so large as the Harrisburg Patriot or Phila delphia Age, but it is not small enough to endorse any attempt of the corruptionists at the capital to despoil the State Treasury. (DONS[I , E RA 13 LE excitement seems to exist at present among the working people in the country. In various sec tions of the country farm hands seem to be in a state of unrest and perplexity concerning their wages. There is no doubt that their wages must come down before very . long in view of decline in farm products. It is not, however, sur prising that as many of the necessaries I of life still remain at nearly war prices, on account of the high tariff imposed by a Radical Congress, that the laboring classes should feel disturbed about It. THE Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs proposes to appropriate $lOO,OOO to defray the expense of another expe dition In search of the North pole, and to furnish a ship of war for the satne. Money is so plenty with the Govern ment, its debt so small,and the people's taxes so light, that sueh expenses are nothing. Private Legislation. . ~.. Over fifteen hundred acts of assembly Were:Pigised by Inat Legiklature ' ot : all thise, tie o*mill --. . 1 - forms utaj that; 04 flr i w .. ge ' law. All the rest wiia a :de sQf piivatiklel :iialstip . , M. ~...*NOS:, used, niStioadsYMinWAli m .t.faa - '' turing companies were44l:o3hed, and corporations of every conceivable char acter brought into being. A number of divorces were granted, the propriety of which was more than doubtful. The names of several persons were changed to appellations better suited to their tastes. Private roads were laid:out by solemn legislative enactment, which could not have been engineered through a court of quarter rsessietts, and which ought not to have had an existence.— Parties who saw a . chance to make money by taxing the travelling public In rural districts were authorized to build and keep " a pike." There is scarcely any conceivable device for making money without honest labor that did not receive a lift from the late Legislature. Anybody who wanted special and exclusive privileges could easily secure them by paying a compar atively moderate fee to the manipula tors of the ring. Bills were passed by the dozen without ever being printed or even read In either House. A member wou Id se n d up a piece of manuscript to the clerks' table, the title of the proposed act would be read, the question would be asked, "shall the bill pass," the gen tleman who offered It would call out aye, and a law which might seriously affect the interests of a large class of people in some section of the Commonwealth would be straighwny put through. No body pretended to interfere with the private legislation of any body else. There was an agreement all round to the effect that each member should have full swing in the business of local leg islation ; but it happened very frequent ly that bills were put through under the head of local business, that had no ref erence to the section of the member offering it. Sometimes "snakes" were detected, but In a majority of cases the slimy creatures managed to wriggle their way through without molestation. Not one in a dozen of the private bills passed was prepared by any member of the Legislature. They were manufac tured in lawyers offices, in the back rooms of country taverns, in the haunts of unscrupulous speculators. Crude, illy digested, sometimes ungrammatical in language, they were mailed to mem bers, or handed to them by interested constituents. The man who could rush most of such business through was con sidered the best legislator, and won most plaudits from brawling fellows who were interested. It is in such work that the days of our Legislature are annually passed. Not one in ten of those who represented this great State in the last Legislature were fit to frame or discuss intelligently any measure of public importance. The House was especially weak and a majori- ty of the Senators very far from being adapted to the position into which they had managed to climb by the low arts of the demagogue. We want a better set of men in our Legislature, and we want a complete reform in the mode of making laws. This great source of corruption and fruitful nurse of evil, unrestrained pri vate legislation, must be cut up at the root by stringent constitutional restric tions. The powers of the courts must be enlarged if necessary, and there must be an absolute prohibition of legislation upon subjects which come within the cognizance of our judicial tribunals. In that way, and in no other way, can our Legislature be redeemed from the corruption which makes it a stench in the nostrils of the people. Then will legislation cease to be a mere money making business, and the "roost ers" and "pincheisi," the fellows who are always ready and anxious to lie bought, will be forced to find some other sphere for the exercise of their peculiar talents. Let the people demand the immediate assembling of a constitutional conven tion, and let reform II rimgh that agency be made one of the rallying crys at the election next full. And where such an assemblage is authorized to convene, let none but the very best and purest, the ablest and most honest men of the dif ferent counties be allowed a seat in the body chosen to revise the fundamental law of the State. Taking Especial Care of the Negro Voters. The Jndicary Committee of Congress has reported a bill for the protection of negro voters which embraces some ex ceedingly stringent provisions, all of which are to be enforced under the se verest pains and penalties. The bill provides that: Any officer of the United States, or of any State, Territory or District, and every offi cer of any city, county, town, township, borough, ward", parish or hundred, in any State, Territory or District, who shall, by any official act whatever, or by the omis sion, neglect or refusal to perform any offi cial act or duty whatever, whether under color or pretext of any provision of any State constitution, or any law of any State, Territory, or District whatever, or of any local, municipal or other law, rule or ordi nance, deny or abridge the right of any cit izen of the United States to vote, on account of race, color or previous condition of ser vitude, at any federal, State, county, muni cipal or other election, shall, on conviction thereof, be adjudged guilty of a misde meanor, and shall be punished by impris onment of notices than one year and not ex ceeding three years, or by a tine not I essthan five hundred dollars, nor exceeding five thousand dollars, or both such tine and im prisonment, at the discretion of the court. All colored citizens of the United States, resident in the several States of the United States, shall be entitled to vote at all elec tions in the State, county, parish, town, township, ward or hundred of their resi dence, subject only to the same conditions which now are or may hereafter be required to qualify white citizens to vote therein, and any ono who attempts to prevent them shall be liable to fine and imprisonment.— Provision is made for bringing suit also against any official who refuses to receive taxes, or to register or to do any other act which will prevent colored persons from exercising the elective franchise. Tho Cir cuit Courts of the United States have juris diction of the fines and forfeitures imposed and causes of action created by this act, and the Circuit and District Courts of the United States have jurisdiction of the mis demeanors. It will be seen at a glance that the provisions of this act are much more than any law in relation to Strin , s•ent elections which ever had an existence in Pennsylvania or any of the States.— The omission to register a negro voter is punishable by a tine of not less than five hundred dollars, and imprisonment of not less than one year. It will be equal ly perilous for any election officer to re fuse to receive the vote of a negro ; and any white man who may stand in the way of a negro when he is approaching the polls would be liable to similar harsh penalties. This law is to be enforced, not in the County Courts, before a jury of the vicinage, but in the Courts of the United States, where . Federal officials have entire control, and where the jurors are selected by a United Stales Marshal from the ranks of the party in power.— There hits been no opposition to the Fifteenth amendment. The negro has voted without molestation wherever an election has occurred since the promul gation of the President's proclamation. Why then should such a law be pass ed'. TILE Legislature of Ohio may be on a par with that of Pennsylvania in some respects, but in others it is unquestion ably more reputable. It has passed but few local bills and a number of import ant and judicious general laws Among them is a law for the selection of elec tion officers,which renders it impossible for the board of any district to be entire ly of one party, if the minority express a desire by their ballots to be repre sented. That is a law which ought to be adopted in this State. Then we should have less complaint about elu tion frauds. It would do more to pre vent them than way_ registration act with its costly machixiery. Tire Philadelphia Evening Herald, lately purchased by D. F. Denly, has put on a new and handsome dress. r" 'j ',l ligliterprise in Newspapers. livt.: Theaiist of the divenireports concern in the clipaidkis that,whenshe went down lefthipr fttittikbeilind4.! -- , -..•- ~ , 1- e clip the i r ve fitnto. t4.l"P*on , " of' the iv Yal4 Fred. i", The it ~ ,ny t inan ii.Othat3ourrapap eon tlteit\huSiiis--dalt.eiled*raselelaf a very witty paragraph, but we are quite sure that nobody else will. And were it ever so brilliant, how execrable is the taste, how unfeeling must be the heart, of the man who can be tempted to joke about so sad and ,mournful an event as the foundering. of the , Oneida and the death of her brave crew ! A disposition to be jocose in the contemplation of such an event is unutterably contemptible and its manifestation would disgrace even the Police Gazette . oi the . pays' Doingt Our newspapers in general are not yet prepared to laugh at the dying and joke at the dead ; but we do not feel quite sure that the time will not soon arrive When " enterprising" journals will be conducted upon the belief that no event can be too solemn to be made fun of, and that no occasion can be so private that it should not be made public.— The tendency of newspaper editing is towards the assumption of a lower tone as a guide in the selection of news; the editor con no longer ask-himself, " will the publication of this item be in good taste?" But his question rather is, "will it be read with avidity ?" and if he thinks it will, if it is not too bad, he will publish it. Competition Is too great to enable newspapers to be as genteel and high toned in the mutter of news as their pre decessors could be, in the days wizen the steam engine and the electric telegraph were not. Then enterprise could be shown in the collection of legitimate news; but now Associated Presses flood the newspapers by means of the tele graph with the news of the day, giving them all the same matter, chronicling events of various degrees of importance, from the result ofan election to the death of a ward politician In Mtumptown. Now, therefore, newspapers must seek new fields in which to evince sukrlor en terprise to their neighbors. Their Wash ington correspondents to forward special news, must manufacture it. The local reporter must needs embellish his items of news, clothing the little of fact which he has at command, with an abundant creation of his im agination, and covering up a grain of truth with a large measure of fiction ; thus he produces a "spicy" report. He opens up, too, new mince of matter, and fills up columns with what in slow er times would have been considered illegitimate for publication. He peers into private houses and tells us what the guests wore And how they looked at private parties; he describes with great minuthe the incidents of a wedding ; he tells us who are going to get married and who to be divorced. Family jars are `nuts' to a reporter and nothing gives him greater pleasure than to publish private and confidential letters, which concern the public in no possible manner, but which he knows will nevertheless be eagerly read. Nothing nowadays seems to be sacred from the newspaper man, for the more scandal he publishes, the better will his paper sell, the greater will be his reputation for enterprise and en ergy, and the larger will be his bank ac count. Hite is not so decent as his old fogy neighbor, he at least makes more money, and money in our day, he finds, can buy reputation and position and almost everything else except Heaven. No Amnesty Some time has elapsed since the adop tion of the Fifteenth Amendment, and negroes have been peaceably permitted to vote wherever they have offered to do so; but the general amnesty, which Greeley and the rest assured us was to accompany the new order of things is not forthcoming. Perhaps Grant is waiting for some one to pen him a proc lamation which shall be couched in grammatical English. It would be charitable to suppose that nothing else causes the delay. But Forney insisis upon it that the President does not in tend to be in any hurry about the mat ter, and it looks much as if that appen dage to the kitchen cabinet had the car of the Executive since he and Canner- on made up their quarrel. If Gen eral Grant intends to issue an am nesty proclamation lie ought to do it at once and he ought to do it gracefully. Every day that it Is delayed only in creases the feeling of bitterness and dis content which naturally arises in the mind of the Southern people,when they see every ignorant negro in the country admitted to the full rights of citizenship, and the best white men of their section excluded. In West Virginia and other States of the South nearly all the prop erty holders are still disfranchised. The people who have the greatest stake in the government, who bear the burthens thereof, who pay the taxes and possess nearly all the intelligence, dare not ap proach the ballot-box which is free to every ignorant and degraded negro. Such a policy is utter inconsonant with the true principles of government. The ancient Romans were wiser in their day and generation. They pursued a conciliatory policy which laid the foun dations of the Empire:sure and strong, wherever the Roman eagle advanced. We hope Forney only speaks for him self, that he merely gives utterance to his own malignant feelings and mean passions. If a proclamation of general amnesty is delayed much longer it will lose its graciousness and not be esteemed as it would be if freely and ungrudigngly sent forth at once. Let the President thrust aside those who would persuade him to keep the embers of sectional hatred still smouldering. Let him rise to the dig nity that becomes the ruler of a great people, and add value to a wise act by doing it in a manner becoming his ex alted position. Let him take the advice of Horace Greeley and issue a general amnesty proclamation at once. Greeley knows that the country will be injured by delay, and has sense enough to see that the Republican party will not be benefitted thereby. He is trying to beat a little sense into the head of Grant, and we hope he may succeed. The Superintendent of Soldiers' Orphan Col. George W. McFarland, the Su perintendent of the Soldiers' Orphan Schools, is catching it from Radical newspapers all round the State. The condi' i (tee a ppoi nted by the State Senate to investigate certain ugly charges against him presented a report declaring that the allegations were not proven ; but when the. Senate came to vote for his confirmation, after Governor Geary had reappointed him, he was rejected by a very decided majority. As the Governor made no other nomination Col. McFarland can hold on to the office until Geary sees lit to supersede him. That the Governor ought to do so we have no doubt from the evidence pro duced by our Radical cotemporaries.— The Chester County Republican alleges that McFarland has purchased and now holds a large interest in the Chester Springs School property, contrary to law, and charges that he is also pecuni arily interested in the control of the school. Under such circumstances it is the duty of Governor Geary to super sede him at once. The schools must be seriously affected by being left in his hands, and the next Legislature will be apt to deal harshly with these costly institutions if a suspicion that they are run for the benefit of a set of greedy officials Is allowed to gain currency. They ought to be put far above suspicion. That can not be while Col. McFarland remains at the head of them. THE 'Harrisburg Topic states that a mistake occurred In the proof of an editorial, by which it was made to say that " only four" general laws bad been passed by the late Legislature. It meant to say " only a few." How many there were weatudl not know watt] the pamph let laws are published. . aftirged Record for the Roosters. '; - ' 5 : , .:131e editor of Father Abraham comes i r d...12. I 40' :„' .. Yeecue of theritcreant_l„ be memrs, '..., . ly from this Mi - istiarf , Helms' 1 ii gileiti*ord to say for Herilind Wiley, eio2crittempts to whitewaslilheir ugly Acoiii cm ! , `the big steal," *1 insiutud iiig "..tititthe statement of.their s;ateias published 'was not correct. He inti mates that they have been harshly dealt with, and!apologizes for the sup port of the Sinking Fund swindle in a manner that leads us to suppose he in tendsto support them for renomination, , . Here is what hO hits to say: ' .. ' The members of the House from this county have also made for - themselves a very good record. On various other ques tions they were for the best Interests of the State, and against the public robbers and plunderers who seemed to have almost un limited sway at the State Capitol. In regard to the great swindle, known as the Jersey Shore, Pine Creek and Buffalo Railroad bill, several of our Representa tives—all in fact, except Mr. Reinoehl, we believe, have been accused of duplicity and service in the interest of the parties having charge of the bill. We are assured, how ever, that the statement recently published in a paper of this city, purporting tobe their record on said bill, is lase in several im portant respects, except as to the vote of Capt. Godshalk, who acted with the friends of the bill throughout, by which course ho made a grave mistake. Not having seen the official Journal of the House, we are unable to say which is true. We shall en deavor to find out hereafter, and lay the truth before our readers just as It is, without tn regr e di m Co o. o . r t r n art ie, ill e li t ty ;i tOlr ie i o t r 7 in h i fl o t n it b4 7 l } Z. t ' i p l7ll notlitnme‘a• ry be r ti s a p t the i r ,v l i zc i l t rd ou on i t i l t r w hi be ; but even if this should be so, judging the gentlemen by their conduct throughout the session, upon various other questions of great importance, we cannot, and do not believe that any one of them has been influ enced by other than proper motives. But let us wait and see what the official record does say. That, and that only will toll the truth as it is. We were at Harrisburg a day or two before the adjournment of the Legisla ture, and were informed by a Republi can member, one who had examined the Journal of the House just after the passage of the bill, that it had been af terwards altered so as not to show cor rectly the vote of Messrs. Herr and Wiley on the great railroad robbery. If the Journal shall now be found to dis agree with the vote published in the Inquirer, it will be because a forgery has been committed. Messrs. Herr and Wiley had better not attempt to set themselves right before the people of Lancaster county, by producing a fraudulent and forged record. There is no lack of evi dence to prove the entire correctness of the statement of the votes which was published in the Inquirer, and it will be forthcoming, if an attempt is made to play the game which is hinted at in the Father Abraham. The senior edi tor of that paper would no doubt be willing to lend his countenance to such a scheme of villainy, but he may as well understand first as last, that no forged record call be palmed off upon this com munity. Let Messrs. Herr and Wiley go before the voters of the Republican party with their real record, as it ap peared in the Inquirer. It is the only true ono, made by themselves fur them selves, and they can never succeed in altering a line or a letter. Any attempt to contradict it by the production of a forged and altered journal, will only siuk those roosters deeper in infamy. They can not explain away the record, and can offer no good excuse for the votes they cast in favor of the dispersion of the Sinking Fund. Time belief pre vails that members in localities beyond the sections directly interested in the bill were paid to vote for it. Messrs. Herr and Wiley were in the corrupt ring as certainly as Godschalk was; and they should hold their peace and suffer the condemnation which awaits them in silence. Who Are Responsible for the Corruptio of the Legislature? Since the adjournment of the Legisla ture the Republican newspaper press of the State has denounced it without stint. No term has been too harsh to be em ployed. The whole vocabulary has been ransacked for terms of opprobrium. This wholesale denunciation of a body in which the majority was largely Re hiLs a show of honesty, but the virus indignation of our Radical co temporaries seems to be somewhat out of place. It certainly does sound strangely to hear them abusing so vilely the men whom they pronounced to be all that was virtuous and wise during the can vass of last fall. The Philadelphia Day, a paper published by a Republican, but not professedly a partisan organ, takes the proper view of the matter. It says: It was just such a Legislature as the press of the State elected. It was the crea ture of the Republican press. The winkle tors of that press know what they were about. They knew that many of the can didates were not good men, nor honest, nor able. They knew that the nominations were made through corrupt bargaining in some cases, and barefaced lying in others. They did not, generally, urge the people to put forward their best men. The Republi can press deliberately furnished an unre liable majority; and its conductors are estopped from complaint of the acts of that majority. In attacking it after adjourn ment they publish their own shame, and emphasize their infidelity to the common interest. To defend a corrupt agent while you are using him, and curse hint for a knave when you can use him no longer, may be human nature, but it is notdooont. There is an abundance of bitter truth in that paragraph. The Radical news paper press of this State failed to ex pose corrupt men when they were re nominated for the Legislature. They choose to risk the best interests of the State rather than endanger the success of their party. Let the words of the Day be laid to heart by the Radical press and by the people. Hey. Horace Cooke The Rev. Horace Cooke, who created so much scandal by his escapade with a Miss Johnson, of New York city, has been allowed to withdraw from the ministry and from membership in the Methodist Church. When the case was up before the Conference, certain old-fashioned brethren Insisted that the scamp should be summarily expelled but a majority seemed to think that the body had not the power to expel withopt trial. We think the advocates of expul sion were in the right. The fellow con fessed his unfitness formembership, and no trial was needed. He ought to have been ejected with scorn and loathing, and not tenderly dropped from the rolls. There has been entirely too much sym pathy exhibited for clergymen who have offended in this peculiar way. No mercy ought to be shown to them. The follow ing is the resolution which was finally adopted ; It being understood by this Oinference that Horace Cooke, having resigned his parchments, thereby confessing his crimi nal unfitness to remain in the Church or the ministry, therefore ' Resolved, That his request to withdraw be granted. Slightly severe, but not half enoug ArrtnimNu negro meetings is the chief occupation of Radical office-hold ers in Philadelphia at the present time. Not a night passes without an assem blage of blacks in some part of the city, and these gatherings are invariably managed by Republican officials. They are making a desperate effort to show their devotion to the African, and the manner in which they fraternize with the newly made citizens shows very plainly that they they are possessed of olfactory nerves equal to the demands of the occasion. CONGRESS last week turned two more Democratic Representatives out of their seats, upon the most flimsy pretexts, to make room for Radicals, whom the peo ple elected to stay at home. The major ity in Congress can easily extend this practice, so as to make the House of Re presentatives unanimous, and, if they keep on violating all law andprecedent, they may attempt to: expel every Dem ocratic Congressman some of these days. VICE-PRESIDENT COLFAX has added a Republican voter to the census—one who being now only a few days old will be qualified to vote about the time Col fax has a chance of running for the Presidency. The Truth about High Tariff. ,The Easton Argus is unquestionably coca of the ablest papers in. .P.sennsylva 'taw: Its editor hits . a. Way-tiLputti t ug. many things thaFis ugexcelletif by apy wilt* in'` Ihe Coptry.,. Though ptib. - lisititig a paper lathe Midst of;the lir tiest inatninnUfitetorifiatif tlmEitate, is opposed toThe iniquitlous and unjust tariff system which the radicals have de vised for robbing the masses. In speak ing of the way in which their thefts are accomplished, he says : It is not because of the policy of protec tion.ls not vulnerable to the extremity of weakness that it has sUrvived and prosper ed with so little united and determined op position from the people on whom it preys. It is because its enormities are not so pal pable to the general eye as some other ex tbrtlons of the State—because it plunders by stealth—nibbles, like a mouse, at the contents of the poor man's cupboard—takes toll of everything that enters his mouth or goes upon his back—ravages his coal heap —brushes the nap from his hat and licks the blacking from his boots—slices an inch or two from the tall of his Sunday coat and a yard or two from his wife's best calico with noiseless scissors—in short, because it curtails all his necessaries and comforts by multiplying their cost, yet takes from each so little at a time that he does not feel the felonious lingers when they are about their business. The so called "policypf protec tion" Is safe only so long as it is not under stood. Teach men what-it means and it will die a shameful death after which there will come no resurrection, If, as a substitute for the tariff laws un der which the capitalists of Now England have grown fabulously rich, the beneficent Congress which they control had frankly voted to them, in the shape of a direct ap propriation from the treasury, the millions which they have realized at the expense of the people through the agency of protection, the Radical party could not have withstood the storm of Cho popular wrath which would have followed this legislation for a single day. It would have been hurled from power Just as soon as the multitude could have given their indignation potent expression at the polls. Yet the robbery of the masses would have been not a whit more ruthless in the one case than in the other. It would only have been done in the daylight instead of the dark. Items of Interest The debt of the United States amounts to $65 per head of population. Twenty Newport cottages were rent ed last week. The now Mayor of Dayton, Ohio weighs over four hundred pounds. The Bible question is settled for some time to come iu Cincinnati and St. Louis. The Boston clergymen are soon to have an overland trip to San Francisco. Hudson E. Bridge is the new presi dent of the Missouri Pacific Railroad. The shad, in their journey northward, have reached the New England rivers. The completion of the Michigan Cen tral Railroad is being pushed with vigor. The whole negro vote in Dubuque, lowa, went Democratic. A manufactuiing company of Colum bus, Ga., turns out 1,000 stoves per year. Agricultural reports from all parts of Tennessee are encouraging. Robert Toombs is to deliver an address at a floral fair next month at Augusta, Georgia. There is more wild game in Texas at this time than has been known for ten 'cars. The Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Minnesota Railroad is being rapidly urged forward In Its three divisions. The free letter delivery system goes into operation In New Orleans on the Ist of May. A Virginian editor, sojourning in Flor ida, has sent a friend in Richmond a brace of alligators. The graves of the Confederate dead in New Orleans, were decorated with flow ers on the 6th. Hudson, Wisconsin, officially offers $25,000 for the location of a Normal School- there. A survivor of Wyoming massacre ii 788 has just died in New York State aged 97. A Boat Club has been organized at St. Paul, Minn., and has a goodly number of members already. Two hundred and fifty persons joined the Methodist church in Findlay, Ohio, during a recent revival. The English National Lifeboat Insti tution is doing great work ; 871 lives and 33 vessels were saved du ritig the last year. The New England school authorities are all agreed that flogging is essential to the proper rearing of pupils. The U. S. Senate yesterday confirm ed John Titus as Chief Justice, and Charles A. Tweed as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Arizona. It is a well established geological to that the Straits of Dover, betwee France and England, were at a forms epoch bridged over by dry land. The abstract of the condition of the Philadelphia National Banks on March tlth, shows resources and liabilities ag gregating $80,:230,536. The Fenian Congress, In session at Chicago, has changed the constitution of the Brotherhood, substituting for the President and Senate an Executive Committee of Nine. The majority of O'Neill ( DUIII offal.) for Mayor of the consolidated Jersey City, is 3830. The Board of Aldermen consists of 21 Democrats, and 11 Repub licans. The late Judge B. H. Warren, of Au gusto, Ga., left an estate valued at $.22.' 000. Among the legacies was one $5,000 to the Presbyterian Church, w Augusta. Minute diamonds, in a piece of plati num from Oregon, have just been dis covered by the chemist Wohler, the eminent professor at the great German university of Gottingen. The Mechanics' and Agricultural Fair Association, of Louisiana is to hold its fourth grand State fair at New Or leans, commencing April '2,3d and end ing May Ist. The Illinois Central Railroad rom pany, by a unanimous vote of the di rectors, have directed the payment of interest in gold, in conformity with the legal-tender decision. Since the recent rains and the plea sant weather which followed them, the crop reports from the southern part of Illinois have been much more favorable than before. The borings made through the im mense salt mine discovered two years ago near Berlin, have disclosed a single layer of:pure rock salt over twenty-three feet in thickness. A speculator from Indianapolis re cently took a wagon load of stomach bitters through the State of Arkansas, and returned with an empty wagon and 1,000 sheep as the results. The worst sold man in the county is said to liveln Rochester N. Y. For seven teen years he has been regularly wind ing his clock every night before retiring, and, to his utter astonishinent, he dis covered, last week, that it was an rigid day clock. A volcano has within recent years raised itself front the bottom of the sea in the neighborhood of the Philipine Islands. It was first noticed by the agitation of the water and emission of clouds of steam in 1856. In 1560 the crater had attained a height of seven hundred feet above the sea level. The ninth anniversary of the arrival of Pennsylvania troops in Washington, on April 18th, 1801, was celebrated by the survivors at a banquet in Pottsville, last evening. Col. Forney and others spoke, and letters were read from Sena tor Cameron, and Representatives Cake and Slocum. At a late printers' festival the follow ing toast wasgiven. "The printer— master of all trades ; he beats the farm er with the Hoe, the carpenter with his rules, and the mason with tall columns ; he surpasses the lawyer and the doctor in attending to his cases, and beats the parson in the management of the devil." President Grant and Secretary Robe son visited Georgetown, D. C., yester day to examine an invention for the ultiiization of petroleum for fuel. The President discussed the questions of our future fuel supply, and said he believed the suttees of such an invention would put us far on our way towards compet ing with the cheaper labor of Europe in the production of Iron!and other like in dustries. There is a sour lake in Texas, about sixty miles from the Gulf of Mexico, in the south-eastern corner of the State. It covers about five acres, and the water Is quite sour, with a most unpleasant fetid odor; yet invalids resort to the lake, in considerable numbers, to,bathe in it. There are six acid springs on the shores, from some of which water is taken for consumption in Galveston and other Texan cities. It was recently reported that Judges Strong and Bradley would not sit in the rehearing of the Legal Tender question, because they were stock holders in rail road companies,owning bonds issued be fore the passage of the Legal Tender act, andwhich, under the recent decision of the Supreme Court, are payable, principal and interest, in gold. Judge Bradley has stated that he transferred all his interest in such stocks immedi ately after his confirmation, and Judge Strong has said that he would dispose of his railroad shares before the case would be re=heard.' suite ISpers, _, A foot of snow fell fit "A, Mon dayTU night, April 4. ,--A .‘ Exle opynty "is t i e 'iitt4 Indiana nqptttaqiitid it e he , .rephusiness. ,A oaf- - r ntly iiilleir In Centre cotintySirei gilld ifisl.l,o96.o94lfids. Alt"Nria. ding, au* O . Nm Associa tions Rid lif4vprospefliAtir ti on. The Postoffice at Shawmut, tlk coun ty, is discontinued. The Post-office at Cedaiiille, Chester county, is to be called North Coventry. Enoch Gatchell has been appointed Street Commissioner of Coatesville. R. A. F. Ankeny, has been elected Treasurer of tho Somerset Branch Rail road. . . _ Two hundr6d tracts of land are adver tised for sale In Someniet county fin taxes. Ono hundred and sixty-nine tracts of land in Westmoreland county aro ad vertised for sale as unseated lands. The Pennsylvania Reserve Associa tion will meet at Lock Haven on the 7th of May. A little brother and sister in Lewis town have laid by nearly $2OO by saving their pennies and small change. The Masonic fraternity are discussing the feasibility of erecting a hotel in Monongahela city, Washington county. Lewis Perkins of Concord, Delaware co., recently trapped seven opossums, young and old, in his chicken yard. Some cowardly villain in Somerset county recently poisoned four fine hogs belonging to Mr. Henry Hecket. George Everard, of Northumberland, had an eye knocked out, not long since, by being struck with an iron spike. Peter Douty, a soldier of the Mexican war, sergeant in,Co. 8., let Penna. Vols., died at Janesville ou April 4th. Jessie Strickland, of Perry twp., Fay ette co., with the assistance of his dog, caught 32 coons (luring last fall and win ter. Henry Koontz, of Bedford township, Bedford county, caught nearly five hun dred wild pigeons in a net a few days ago. A survey is now being made with a view of extending the Shenango and Allegheny Railroad to Harrisville, dur ing the coming summer. The Reading Eagle chronicles the ar rival of the first Martin of the Adler family colony at precisely twenty mln utespastelght on the morning of the 9th. Joseph Towner has been appointed postmaster at Hornhrook, Jefferson county, vice David Hornton, Jr., re sigma. The whole number of accessions to all the churches in Greenville, Mercer county, since December 1, is not far (ruin four hundred. Mr. David Dick, the second white child born in Meadville, died In his na tive city on the 12th inst. In the 74th year of his age. A large buck deer, attempting to cross the railroad near Cameron, was struck by a locomotive, and injured so much that it was captured. A few days ago Richard McPherson, near Parkesburg, was attacked by a party of negroes and badly beaten. It is said the injured man has since died. Some tire hose, sent from Philadel phia to Pittsburgh, way tried on the 11th inst. A steam engine was used, and the hose bursted at a pressureof 210 pounds. Andrew Alexanding aged 79 years, a resident of Ayr township, Fulton coun t•, was fatally injured by a limb of a tree falling upon him while felling tim ber. Foxes, it is said, are unusually plenty this season. Messrs. 'Walker, Sutton, and Myers, residing in York county, killed during the past whiter, twenty live red foxes. The Pennsylvania House of Repre sentatives. has passed a bill exempting sewing machines in families from levy and sale on execution or distress for rent. On the 9th inst., a farm situate in Mo nongahela county, West Virginia, con taining 129 acres of land, was sold, at the Keystone House, in Reading,to_lu gustus Leopold, for $625. Within the past four years over 200 persons have united themselves with the Fourth Baptist church Philadelphia. Twenty-five new members were added during the last month. The new Court House at Franklin, had a narrow escape recently. About ten o'clock at night it was discovered to be on tire, but the names were extinguished before much damage was done. The Mercer Mining and Manufactur ing Company have one hundred men employed at their coal mines at Par doe s, and are taking out about one hun dred toils of coal per day.: The mountains adjacent to the Penn sylvania railroad along the Juniata river have been on lire. The scene at night is described as having been pie turesqueand grand in the extreme. The Erie city iron works have put three thousand dollars' worth of new machinery in their shops within the past month. In one week the company manufactured and shipped nine engines. The Chester county Prison, at this time, contains thirty-two prisoners, twenty-one of whom are under sentence and, ten are awaiting trial, mostly for trivial offences. At Timmonsville, S. (2., is the grave of Mrs. Florence Bodwin, of Philadel phia. She was a member of the federal regiment, and as she was dressed as a soldier her sex was not discovered till after her death. EM===ME tell into the Pennsylvania Hospital, on the IGt.h., with a hand terribly lacerated by being bitten, in Chester, Delaware county, by a dog supposed to have hy drophobia. A family passed through Erie lately that numbered twenty-four persons.— The man and wife had been married eleven years and had twenty-two chil dren. They were on their way west to buy a territory to settle on. Mr. Maxwell, a young man living near Linesville, Crawford county, while shooting pigeons, overloaded his gun so that in discharging the piece it burst, badly mangling his hand and fore-arm. His arm was subsequently amputated below the elbow. The coal tonnage of the Lehigh Val ley Railroad for the week ending on the 9th inst., was 73,165 tons, against 62,669 tons in corresponding week last year, and for the year 977,769 tons, against 769,779 tons to same time in 1869—show ing an increase of 207,900 tons. On the 9th inst., a son of Mr. Thomas Mclntyre, residing in Reading, fell Into a tub of scalding water, and was so badly injured that he died on the night following. The child who was about 3 years old, was playing around the tub, while his mother was engaged in wash ing, and losing his balance, fell into the water. Wm. Gracf, a German, was met at West Philadelphia Depot, on Thursday night, on his arrival from New York, by a stranger, Who offered his services to show time( a hotel. On their arrival at what was culled the hotel, the Getman was robbed of his trunk, which contain ed all his money and clothing. There is a laudable efThrt hieing made to extend the Chartiers Railroad from Washington, Washington county, to Wheeling West Vu., by way of Brush Run, Bunk" Creek, Bethany and Wellsburgh. A series of meetings have been held along the line, and the people are In earnest. Bloomsburg,Columbiacounty, having been incorporated, a practical test of Senator Buckalew's cumulative voting system will be tested in the election of its city officers. By cumulative voting a minority may secure a share of the of ficers to tie elected. The election in Bloomsburg will tell if there is any ad vantage in this system of voting. The Lewisburg Chroniek says that a little boy baby corpse was discoverod floating down the West Branch a few days ago, abouta mileabove Lewisburg. It was takenl on shore, an Inquest held, and then it IV IL4 laid away " under the daisies." What inhuman wretch placed it in the turpid waters is not known to the humane public ; but a mother who could commit such an atrocity must possess a cloven foot and smell strongly of brimstone. The Bellefonte National learns that on the Bth inst. a man named John Mc- Dougall, a lumberman In the employ of John Ardell, while rafting on Forge run, between Moshannon and Phillips burg, slipped from a log and went through the chute. He was seen to rise once or twice, and made desperate efforts to reach the shore, but the current each time baffled his efforts, and at last he went under. His body was recovered a mile or more below the scene of his death. The little girl of Samuel C. Conrad, postmaster at Jenkintown , Montgomery Co., who fell from her chair, some time since, and ran a slate-pencil into her ear, appears to have perfectly recovered from the injury, with the exception of a discharge from the ear, which for a time brought small pieces of the pencil with it. It was two days before the. pencil could be extracted when the i child was put under the influence. of ether, and the pencil was taken out by Dr. Levis, of Philadelphia; assisted by two physicians of the neighborhood. SKETCHES OF TRAVEL NORTHHAILD. No. I—The HodooHlHvor. A recent wzogr tuis remaiirocrika, "if theiitter on route *Well; . isotikrogt! utp SUperiM . lgt : ' its si ij rn wild! ..:utr4.o all martinet* cinarmtgit is the Edidao At 7 o:cht W4r loam* New Yor nrkble . l4irithoats, which from o size and E.4 - kiffc and the convenience, ilegance and - luxury of all their apartments, have been most appro priately styled "floating palaces." After passing along the wharves of the city, we come in sight of the beautiful country villas that skirt the. banks of the Hudson. The Palisades eland along the west-bank of the river for n distance of twenty miles. They are perpendicular rocks, about five hundred feet high, and lend much beauty to the landscape. Fort Leo, a relic of the Revolution, is situated upon the brow of the Puliw , tag. Directly opposite is Fort Washington. Wo pass Yonkers, a favorite summer resort of the "Merchant Princes" of Now York; the Catholic School of Mount St. Vincent, un der the care of tile 'Sisters of Charity, a most beautiful and charuiing place; and Dobb's Ferry, where some stirring scones of the Revolution took place, and whore the remains of the military works still oxist. Upon our right is IRunny,si le, once the home of Washington Irving. The little cottage is barely visible through the denso growth of trees and shubbery. Irving's grave is near by. Tarrytown is the next place that attracts our attention. It is a prosperous little town upon the cast bank of the river. Close nt hand is the spot where Major Andre was captured. Sing-Sing, the scat of the State prison of New York is a short distance above. NVo now enter the most beautiful, romantic and interesting portion of the Hudson. Verplanck's Point upon the east is whore Ilendriek Iludson's ship,tho Hat/ Moon, first came to anchor after leaving the mouth of the river; opposite is the ever memorable Stony Point. .1 light house is now placed amidst the ruins of the old fort. The story of Stony Point is 100 well known to need repetition. Thu fort fell into the hands of the Itritish,June Ist, 1779 and was recaptured by the Americans under the command of General Anthony Wayne--- familiarly known as "Mail Anthony"—on ! the night of July 15th, 1779. Dunderburg Mountain is on the loft; on the right the village of Peekskill ascends from the shore, and Wore us is the grand base of Anthony's Nose and other mountains. Tho foot of Dunderburg Mountain is pallor:t able for the search made for the treasure of Captain Kidd, and the remains of the ap paratus used are still to be seen. "By wooded bluff we steal, by Irnv leg laws By palace, village, cut Li sweet surprise, At every term the vision breaks upon, Till to our wondering and uplifted eyes The Highland rocks in solemn grandeur rise. At this point the rivor, which is quite narrow, is darkened by the high moun tains upon either side, the music of our Landis echoed and re-echoed In tones softer and sweeter, awl the scone presented Is one of indeseribidile magnificence and gran deur. Anthony's Nose is I,lff.S feet high, Sugar Imaf Mountain is two miles above and rises to an elevation of SOO feet. Nearly and reaching far out into the river is the Sandy Bluff, upon which Fort Independence °nee stood. Further on in Beverage Island, Bear Mountain, Forts Clinton anti Mont gomery, about which much might be writ ten had wo the time and space. Approach ing West Point the Buttermilk Falls are seen descending over inclined ledges, a distanco of 100 feet. They form a pleasing passage in the river landscape, although in themselves they are not remarkably pic turesque. Cocoon's Hotel, of which wo have a litre view from the river, is near the falls. The Robinson, or Beverly Ilouse, occupied by Arnold at the time of his med itated treason, and where he received the news of Andre's capture, is opposito at the foot of Sugar Loaf Mountain. The unrivalled charms of its scenery, it s rich Revolutionary memories,and Its posi .tion as the military school of our country, all combine to make West Point one of the most attra•tive spots on the II udson. Con- stitution Island is nearby. The crumbling remains of the fort are still to lie seen. Just above West Point is Cro . nost, 1,4214 feet high and one of the grandest mountains In the whole Highland group. It is the Menne of Drake's poem of The Culprit Fit y. "Where Hudson's em Vett o'er silvery sands Wind through the hills afar, .And Cro'nest, !Ike a monarch stands, crowned with a single star!" Above Cro'nest is /ilteizii/i/, the roliiint home of the late N. I'. Willis, while hull 11111 upon our right rising to the height of 1,581) feet overshadows Iradrer/i/r, for many years the residence of the poet, lleorge Morris. Nowburg has about 12,000 inhabitants and is one of the most delightful ,Covens upon the river. It possesses many Revolutionary memories and the house in which Wash ington made his headquarters is now the chief boast of the town. I here the American army has finally disbanded at the close of the war. Further On we pass Breakneck Hill 1,107 feet high,upon the extremity of which so many tourists have imagined the profile of a human:face,and Bea.con 11111 the last of the Ifighland range upon the eastern shore, 1,68.5 feet high. Butler Hill closes the range on the west. This ends the mag nificent scenery of the Highlands! Fishk ill, opposite Newburg, is the scene of many of the incidents narrated in Cooper's *Vv. Two miles north-east of Fishk ill is the celebrated Verplanck 1 louse in which Baron Steubon once made his head quarters, and where the •S'oc let y of the Cincinnati was organized in 1783. Pough keepsie, Roudout, Kingston, and Hudson, are all thriving towns. We have already written more than we intended to. The legends of the Hudson, are alone sufficient ly numerous to fill niftily columns of the INTELLrokrtcstt. We have spoken of the most beautiful portion of the river and must be content to ppm the rest in silence. In our next wo shall speak at length of West Point, its scenery, etc. About 5 o'clock in the evening we reach Albany, having spent the entire day amid some of the most charming river scenery in the world. At the close of a day thus spent the tourist may well quote the words of the poet: "Tell me—where 'or thy silver bark be steering By brhrht Italian or soft Persian land, Or o'er those Island-studded seas careering, Whose pearl-charged waves dissolved In cora strands; Tell, If thou visltest, thou heavenly rover, A lovelier scene than this the wide world WASIIINOTON, April 13.—Judge Kelley introduced in the 110000 to-day an Impor tant bill to promote the establishment aft metrical system of international coinage, by enacting that the gold hereafter coined by the United States shall contain for each dollar .'of denominational value one and one-half grammes of pure gold, and shall weigh for each dollar one and two thirds grammes, the proportion of alloy to the entire weight being thus kept as one to ton. The bill also provides that such reins shall have stamped upon them, in addition to other devices, their weight in grammes, and the Inscription nine-tents tine. Mr. Kelley called attention to the Ihet that the bill proposed a reduction from the existing value of our standard gold coins of less than one-third of one per rent, and consequently requiring no recofnage.— lie also stated that the gold coinage of a large number of countries, representing a population of 200,000,000, was already very nearly metricsd, specifying the countries and the degree of deviation in each case from the metric standard, lie also read extracts from several late pamphlets pub lished by distinguished writers in Germany and France, warmly commending the system which he advocated. The bill now reported was in accordance with resolutions and memorials from leading meientific bodies in the United States, and which had been referred to his Committee. At the conclusion of Ills remarks ho moved to recommit the bill to the Committee on Coinage, which was accordingly done, and it will be reported hack at an early day. A Wife and her Alleged Paramour Shol In Res/Ulna.. Rk:ADINCI, April I7.—About noon yester day, John Lutz shot his wile and a German named Joseph Spayd, at the house of the former, In Neversink street, where Spayd was employed at the limo in making some repairs. The woman's Injuries are not serious, but Spayd is dangerously, though probably not fatally wounded, the ball taking effect behind the left ear and lodg ing under the right eye. Lutz surrender ed himself, and was committed. Ho alleges undue familiarity with his wife on the part of Spayd as the motive for the act. Lutz is said to have been in liquor at the thno of the occurrence. What "Port Wine" Is Made of. Some parties in Stonington, Conn., have recently been prosecuted for selling adul terated wines and liquors. Samples of their "stuff" were submitted to Professor Sint man, of Yale College, the State chemist, and the following is the result of his analysis of what was sold for port wine : The liquor was turbid, heavily laden with sugar or molasses and some coloring matter; con taining 21 per cent. of alcohol; over 10 per cent. of swat or molasses ; about 100 grains of sulphuric acid to the gallon, part of it free, as ell of vitriol, and part combined In alum; oxide of load; or litharge, In poison ous quantities, of about 45 gralne to. the gallon. The alcohol had an acid Mate, and ihe'coloring matter an offensive odor; The liquor was stronger of lead than moat waters poisoned by it. Protest of tho Hon. John R. Reading oi the Flfth . Dhitrlert Against the Adoption of the Report Giving ills Neat In the 'Hons. of Repreitentativos to Caleb N. Taylor. ' • . ' In the United States House of Represen tatives on last Wednesday, Mr. Cessna called up the election case of Taylor against Reading, the majority case being that Read ing, the altting member, was not entitlod to the seat, and Taylor, contestant, was—the minority report taking tho opposito ground. In the courso of the debate, Dr. Reading made tho following able protastagainst the adoption• of the majority report: Mr.' SPEAK an: Prompted by no motives of a personal character and with no design to occupy the time of tho House by an ar gument upon the law and facts arising in the case now undor consideration, and with all deference to the decision of the honora ble and learned gentlemen who have re ported adversely to my right to a seat In this House, yet, sir, honestly believing that Caleb N. Taylor has no more - right to a seat heroes the Representative of the Fifth Con gressional tiletrlot of Pennsylvania than ou or I, sir, have to tho possession of his road acres and stately mansion, so homin id for situation, in the old Democratic county of Bucks, and rooognizing ours to bo a government of the people and for the people, I deem it my duty to rise in my place, and in the name of the pooplo, of constitutional law and civil liberty, to caller my solemn protest against the wiliption of the report submitted by the honorable gentlemen representing the majority. That report, ill my humble opinion, (111111 I here diselaini all design of repenting upon any member of the committeo) proposes to abandon the settled principles of law, jus tice and arithmetic, to take away Irian the topple Lilo right to "choose" their own Representatives, and by the novel muck a . „ proved' and throwing litildli the so mil ; woo l ' of the proper officers Of the eleethoi districts; to appoint or admit to 3 meal ill tills I louse ono iii ',oilfield Witty with 1110 Majority, but not the choke by ballot or the legal voters of the distriet, as has b ore eloarly shown by my honorable friend representing die minority' of the etuiliiiilloo lit the following. IIIiI'APITVI.SO lON. Colonized Vote wrongly 03.3341 to 311.LIng member Pauper vot, Member Soldier vote wrongly deducted !non sit LIN, member Legal votes 111 the Fourth 111 elsion, TWVII i N . it (ili ward, wrongly,idedueted from sill IM.; member Vole 111 Ilens3l,•in wrongly given 111 coo tehlalll Add the careened general return by 1111 , tall) lists Illegal 11,111 1 Muni voles which 55451111 154% 4' been eliargctl to emilemlaill vote wrougly charged L. mitt lug hulnet tho a11t.g..,1 legal nsajnrity rtptirt od by IL majority of thominintl.loolitecept- Ing their Illtures nn,l 44 , nclunlotvi without tiny examination). rnrrrt•t he sitting moralwr by 11 Vie/11 Legal majority at lint that I am to pit,. upon the "roll or honor" made memorable by tute niones or Brooks, Voorhees unit Morgan, Moitet, Foster and Greene is 10 1110 110 chagrin. 1 L was h ihhiy 111.01ared in various 11111 . 1. s of my district, previous to the election or mem ber of Congress, "That nu matter if Rend ing was elected he would never take his seat, or it he did be would not retain it and I have not supposed that I would be an exception to the uniform rule governing this 'louse in disposing of contested seats. Indeed, my Republican friends here tell me I have lawn much favored in being al lowed to retain my seat for morn than hail the term of the present Congress. I f so, I am profoundly grateful for the thvor, pre ferring to think, however, that I gun a member of this house by virtue ofthe right vested in nu) by the "sovereig n people." My brief iissociation with t honorable body has Mien most pleasant, and for the uniMrin kindness and courtesy manifesmil to nue, without distinetion of party, Mae remembrance of which shall go with me until I lie down to that sleep that knows no waking.) I beg, sir, to otter my sincere tick no w lodgments. And now, sir, while the Denweratio party Witness With regret the apparent de termination of the majority to treat elee lions as if they Intl trot been held, they It-el assured that a party which by virtue of its strength perpetrates a wrong overleaps itself, and such action will prisluee inevi table disintegration. Such a fate scents to await the party re l. resented, by a majority on this tioer. Tin", who sow the wind will surely reap the whirlwind. No party, however strong, chip afford to waste Its strength by defying the popular will. The popular will was clear ly and legally expressed in tietober, when it declared that Caleb N. Taylor should no longer represent the Fifth l'ori gressiontil District of Pennsylvania. The eholeo fell upon myself.if by your action to-day you unseat me and give my plaeo to the etintestant, you over_ tine the people's expressed wish, and force upon that betrayed people as their Representative the very Ilion lhey repudiated at the polls. Is this right? Is it Just.? You should be Just be, fore you are generous; just to the people who Sent too here, and not generous to rho gentlenien whom they rel s used In send- Surh a course would strengthen the llM jOritV On this floor, add to their character in the district, and show by the tseilitry that they can rise above the traininels of party, tutu phielng themselves Upon ;lie rock of impartial Justice, do what they know to be right. In conclusion, Mr. Speaker, while I re affirm toy right to a seat in this liens° as the legally elected representative, I Hive, fully submit to the thwision of the major ity, predieting that an appeal to the people in vinditiation of their o wn rights will re turn me to the Forty•stssind Cmigremm by a majority beyond the possibility of a tsintest. linpnralleled Onirnire on n Linly Vlrnala Asleep. 'rho 01111111 unity were shocked yesterday morning by the report of an outrage upon the person of Mrs. Fir. Bailey, which seemed ineredihle until confirmed by the testimony of her husband. Dr. Bailey end his w occupy rooms on the setqlint 1100 r 01 . a building on Pine street. On TUO•ida%. 4•Ve fling, Mrs. Bailey, who had been 111 illirtinz the day, retired to lied at eiite ii'elock, and soon tell leileop, and while in this m 1.111.1011, 501110 unknown pertioll entered tile foollt and cut taller hair. :qrs. Bailey wore hid hair ill tresses, falling upon her shouldom It was long, dark and luxuriant, and she Was in the habit of throwing it Intek upon the pillow. In tills position the hair wa, cut very near to the head, and so des ternlini: I y that she was not awakened. 'rho door or the °thee wag (as nsurd in the absence of the Doctor) unlocked, and whoever perpetrated the outrage wits doubtless huniliar with, this circumstance. Dr. Bailey rein r ilei home about ii o'clocke end at once mail. the discovery. Ills wife, who had been undisturbed, could' give no avcrinnt of the transaction, and thus far the Investigations have failed to throw ally light upon it. Dr. Bailey offers a reward of $l5O for the detec tion and oonvletion of the person wile cont. flatted the outrage. Tennessee Negroes Give a White Mon Nis Hundred Lashes. 'rho Mooresburg correspondence , of the Knoxville Presd and Jerald has the fol lowing: A most degrading and diabolical act was committed in this vicinity by six mgrs., on last Sunday evening. It appears that a negro named (teorgo Kyle charged a young man in the emplovittent it (Vilet James Simpson with bewitching hint. Kyle insisted that his hat would nut re main on his head, but was continually being knocked off by an invisible hand. On Sunday evening, Kyle burned his but In presence of other negroes, and by his frenzied appeals induced live of them to accompany him to the house of the 'young man. They , seized him, carried hint to the woods, and tied him to a tree with his feet above ground. Each negro then gave the unfortmate victim of their rage me Inshes, in all 000 stripes. The blood ran In streams front his body. They their knocked out his front teeth and turned him loose. The family of then young man la respectable and industrious, tur d have done more work for Colonel James SIMI,- son, in clearing land, than I ever saw per formed, in the same time :mil by the canto number of hands. The outrage is about to be Investigated. The Negro Frengy The nigger fever still rages. All sorts of fevers rage at different times, but the great er part run out in a few months or two or three years. None was over before known so tenacious AN the nigger fever. The lieu fever, the shorthorn fever, the California fever, with other fevers too numerous In mention, have burned out a certain amount of human vitality and displayed human weakness in various ways, but the}' are mere sparkles in these respects to the great blaze of this nigger fever that sot the mon try on fire more than a dozen years ago, and has apparently abated none of its violence. yet. Dow long ago it seems shire we heard the pitiful appeals as to whether or not this nigger was not "a man and a brother," and what a wonderfully different attitude Ito assumes now ! COMpuro the time when the fanatic Garrison was barely saved iron, hanging at the hands of a Boston !nob be muse of his nigger notions, with the time when the House of Representatives of the United States votes the use of its hall for a rhetorical breakdown to celebrate Sambo's accession to citizenship--for only by a coin parison of these periods can any one right ly judge of the extravaganeeof the delirium induced by this nigger fever. The fever must burn out soon; fur surely it is at its height, with a nigger in the Senate and oye terman Downing installed its one of the po litical magnates of the Capitol. In Grant's inaugural we had a happy piece of political philosophy to the effect that the best way to Insure the repeal of an obnoxious law was to rigidly enforce it. This applies general ly as well as in law, and there Is mid more certain way to tllsgunt the country and awaken a reaction against the nigger than the glorifying course assumed by his fa natic admirers.—.N. Y. Herald. Ohio Leglxlature COLUMIII,4, April 19—A bill to prohibit the reading of the Bible iu the sehoola, Lv on the calendar of the House tar lhu firht Tuesday in January next. PECILSKILL, N. Y., April 19.—A yomig man named James Gerity,.wes killed ut Slag Sing, yesterday, while endeavurlirg to cross the truck In front of a`train. Cmhed to Death FTSUICILL, N. Y., April vagrant. —wane not known—was crushed to. death between a ferry boat and the dock, at this place, last night.