Eancister Sintelligencer. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1870 Trouble Among the Radicals of Lancas• ler County. We do not know a more inharmoni ous crew than the Radicals of Lancaster county. Their newspapers fill whole columns with abuse of each other. If we should believe one-half the charges thus made, in black on white, we would be forced to conclude that a majority of the Radical editors in this county ought to be picking oakum in the Eastern Penitentiary, or learning the artof shoe making in the County Jail. But these foul-mouthed fellows de not confine their talent for vituperation to round abuse of each other. They are the rep resentatives of distinct and warring fac tions of equally selfish political adven turers. One party charges the other with all manlier of wickedness, and no primary election can be held without a geueral expectation that frauds of the grossest character will be perpe trated. After these annual contests arc over the allegation is uniformly made that sonic candidates have been counted out and others counted in. So complete is the corruption and so universal the venality which prevails that no system can be devised to cure it. It is confess edly as bad, If not: worse, under the Crawford County System than it was under the old delegate plan of making Dominations. The war over the spoils of this great and rich county becomes fiercer and more disgraceful every year. Men utterly unfit to discharge the du ties devolving upon them are repented elected, and corruption of the grossest 'character stalks abroad In open day light. The County Commissioners have been charged with the most nefarious transactions; the Prison is known to have been run so as to make fortunes for a favored few, and the office of loun ty Treasurer has been made the means for securing immense illegal gains. Heretofore the warring factions have managed to compose their quarrels, and the belligerent editors who have been busy for weeks in reviling each other and in spattering the adherents of op posing cliques with filth, have found it to their Interest to unite just prior to each succeeding election. The battle clubs are laid aside for a brief period, and pens dipped in gall are put away, while the dear people are urged to vote the ticket, the whole ticket, and nothieg but the ticket. The truth is the leaders of the Republican party, the men who control the organization are utterly des titute of principle. They 'MOW no higher object than gain, and are only held together by the cohesive power of public plunder. They do not agree on any great principle, and are even divid ed upon the tura question. So mark ed is this lark of principle, and so com pletely has every thing else been swal lowed up in the constantly recurring squabble over the spoils, that the Exam iner deems it necessary that a County Conveutiou should be at once called to put forth a declaration of cardinal prin ciples of political belief. It calls atten tion to the divisions of sentiment which are creeping into the ranks of the organization, and strikes a blow at what it considers the greatest of mod ern heresies, the I I,,etrine of free trade. This has called forth a blast of defiance front the Ed' 111,,H. That paper hoots at the idea of aOm itty Convention. Itches not believe tliat the Radicals of Lancas ter county are capable of defining their own political faith, and insist that they must wait for a National Convention to lay down the creed of the party. It plainly gives the it'dwittiitcr to under stand that it would not he bound by the action of any such I 'unvtnliou 111.11 t h e subject of a Out of these contitintim dissensions some good titit;,i yet onne. II (hose who have voted the It:elle:it lithe( without question from year tmyear, simply be cause it wail (Ili. Radical Si, a \Vaki•lllal ilia( they may he induced to examine the important questions now:agitating the country, we may con fidently to stiegrent chatigeseyell iu Lancaster county. The dirty guar rt•ls which are being so hotly waged be tween the contending factions must eventually disgust itOarge number of in telligent, and independent voters. They will get tired or being marched to the polls from year to year, like "Mind), drivel cattle," and will learn to think and aid for themselves. When that day conies:lJancaster county will no longer boast of its Mtge Radical majority. Grant's Insult to Hancock The death of Major General George 11. Thomas left a vacancy in the list of Major Generals, Thomas being the third on the list, I lancock fourth, and Seim richt fifth. According to army usage, which is not departed from except in extraordinary- Cues and for good reit s,tos, (ten. Hancock was entitled tAI 511C veeti to the by the death of ( ten. Thomas. A ncr waiting a rea sonable time, tt itlmut hearing, from headquarters, Gen. Ilancock addressed polite note to ( ;cu. Sherman, inquir ing why the customory order had not been issued appointing him to the place made vacant by the death of General Thomas. llis note was shown by Gen eral SherllMll to General Ibt . ant, and the President dictated an insulting reply couched in the following exceedingly uncourteous language: " lam requested by the President In in form you that there is 1101 h trig in you• per sonal relations to ;GCII. Giant, or in your official relations to his administrat ion, that Mull! justify your promo, 1011, 11011', 111, LEM. YOU TO OX rIOT IT ❑OllOO Fr un." If General Grant had merely desired to inform General Hancock that he de clined to promote him to the position which he was entitled to fill, good man ners, common decency, and the cour tesy that is customary between gentle men would have restrained him from the offer of a gratuitous insult. The President took pains, however, to insult Ilaneork, and the country will so un derstand his gross and ungentlemanly language. In this Grant exhibited that littleness and meanness of soul for which lie is distinguished. The only offences Hancock ever conunitted were his act ing with moderation and Witidolll in Louisiana, and his appearing as a prom inent candidate for the Presidency be-. fore the Donmeratic National Conven tion. From this act of the President it is made manifest Ihal no military ofthw need expect the promotion which is his due, unless he holds certain "official relations" to the administration —which means that he must toady to (Anita ;UPI endorse all the :tuts of the Radical tarty. Distinguished services,wounds received, merits displayed, gallantry exhibited, patriotism proven on a hundred battle fields, all amount to nothing unless the soldier is ready to become a servile adu lator of the man who has disgraced the highest position in the nation by selling out the hest offices at his command and making merchandise of the public pa tronage. The people have 11 right to expect that th President of the United States will be a gentleman, if he is nothing more; but Grant's treatment of Hancock proves that the man who was kicked out of the army for drunk enness and disgraceful conduct has cur ried his brutal instincts into the White House. There are forty thousand soldiers ill Pennsylvania who will resent the insult thus corsely and gratuitously . put upon aeneral Hancock. They know what a brave and chivalrous hero he proved to be in the bloodiest battles of the war. They followed where he led, and idol ized him as they (lid noother chieftain. He was the man they saw leading gal lantly when they went into battle, even where Grant commanded. Their devo tion to him who shared their danger in person is of that ardent nature which soldiers always feel for the leader whom they follow into the thickest of the fight. These men will judge between Grant and the nobler soldier whom he insult d so gratuitously and so grossly. Shirking Negro Equality The Express, a paper which used to boast of being the organ of Thaddeus Stevens, cannot stomach Sumner's bill for enforcing the Fifteenth Amendment. It has been a persistent advocate of ne gro equality for years, and has support ed every measure devised for that pur pose up to the present time. It approv ed the Civil Rights Bill, and pronounced it to be right and just ; but now, when it is proposed to enforce that act, it sud denly becomes alarmed. It protests against Sumner's bill as unwise and un timely, and declares that the negroes do not demand it. There it is entirely mis taken. The blacks do insist upon the right to equal privileges. They demand admission to schools, to churches, to railroad cars, to steamboats, to hotels, to places of public amusements, to the jury box an, to all other public institutions on a perfect equality with white men. In Washington city the public schools have been almost completely broken up by the enforced admission of negroes, the theatres, churches and hotels have been opened to them, they sit on juries, ride in the street cars and enjoy all the privileges of white men. This has all been accomplished at the National Capitol by a diligent and unrelenting enforcement of the Civil Rights Bill, which was passed in 1866. The Express must remember that Mr. Sumner does not propose to enact any new law. The bill to which it objects is only designed to enforce an act which the Republican party has approved and sanctioned It is too late now for any Radical to object to the enforcement of complete negro equality. The Civil Rights Bill must either be repealed, or its provisions must be honestly curried out. Mr. Sumner proposes to carry them out in good faith, and for so doing he is taken to task by the Express. Our neighbor is thin-skinned, and decidedly illogical. It ought to be ashamed to set up ally opposition to complete negro equality, after having gone so far as it tins already done. It would show more consistency if it marched squarely up to the position taken by the leaders of its party. Lancaster county is not the place, and the paper which so long boasted of being the organ of Thaddeus Stevens, is not the journal to object to the enforcement of the ('ivil Bights Bill. The Express is evidently scared. It sees that the Republicans of Lancaster county are not prepared to endorse what has been done by the leaders of the party. Hence its wail of agony. It professes to believe that Congress will not attempt to enforce the odious statute now in ex istence, and concludes its most lugubri ous article as follows : We have no fear that Congress will lend ,iny countenance to a measure which no body would have so much reason to depre cate as the colored people themselves, and which would give unalloyed pleasure to none but their enemies and the enemies of the political party which would be rospon siWe fur its adoption. Why should the negroes "deprecate" the enactment of a law providing for the_ enforcement of a statute already on the books, and why should Stunner's bill "give unalloyed pleasure to none but their enemies and the enemies of the political party which would be respon sible for its adoption?" If the Civil Rights Bill, which the Express hailed as "one of the grandest advances of modern civilization," is right in princi ple, why nut enforce it? Do the Radi cals still desire to shirk the issues they have raised? Does the Express suppose its party can continue to deceive the men who followed blindly in its wake until the hideous reality of negro equal ity was suddenly brought face to face with them by the declared adoption of the Fifteenth Amendment? Our neighbor will speedily learn that the day for such trickery has gone by. The Republican 'tarty can not allbrd to deny the negro a single privilege enjoyed by the white man. It 'mist stand or fall by the doc trine of perfect equality. Sumner is right and he is in earnest ; so are his while followers who embrace in their ranks the brains of the party, ands,' are the• negroes, upon whom the party must rely for SLICCVSS in all future elections. When the Expo,.s undertakes to kick against the pricks in this way, it only makes itself ridiculous. Let it march squarely in the ranks of its party, and stand by the doctrines which distin guish it. There is room for dill'erence lin the taritlquestion inside the Itepub, lican organization, but no room for a dispute about the en foreement of negro equality. Sumner is right and the Ex press is stupidly illogical :mil hopelessly - NV rOll g. The Cuban question During the present session of Congress many speeches have been made in favor of extending a helping hand to Cuba, but not until this week has any serious effect been produced. Now a sudden spirit tf indignation against the tyrannical action of the Spanish of ficials who lo . rd it over "the ever faithful isle" has been aroused.— Mr. Voorhees, of Indiana, made an appeal in favor of taking prompt measures to avenge the outrages com mitted upon citizens of the United States by the Spanish authorities, and he was followed in a similar strain of lofty in dignation by a itumber of the ablest Re publicans in the House. So profound was the sensation that it is believed, that resolutions of the most positive charac ter would have been adopted, almost without a dissenting voice,had they been promptly proposed. The subject is now in the hands of the Committee on For eign Affairs, of which (:eneral Banks is Chairman, and he is known to be in favor of reeogn icing the belligerent rights of the insurgents, and of extending to them substantial aid. Both sides of the House now stand strongly committed to the cause of Cuba against Spain, and the probabilities are that very decided action will at once be taken. The de cided sympathy of the administration with Spain, and its prompt interference to prevent any species of aid front being ex tended to the insurgents is not likely to. control the action of Republican members of the House any longer. It is not unlikely that we shall speedily witness a complete change of action, awl leneral Grant may go to the oppo site extreme when he breaks loose front the fetters with which Secretary Fish has bound him. Judge Black's Reply to Senator Judge Black's reply to Senator Wil son's article on Stanton is such a strong and scathing document that we have concluded to publish it entire. ft con tributes much that is valuable in a historical point of view, and gives a clear conception of events which occur red during the close of Mr. Buchanan's administration, and in the beginning of that of Mr. Lincoln. Radical news papers may rail about the pungent style of Judge Black, but they can not thus avert the overwhelming force of the statements which he makes on the best, possible authority. lie completely vin dicates the fame of Mr. Buchanan, and covers the Massachusetts Senator with shame. More Democratic Thunder Important elections have just been held in Richmond, Norfolk and Mem phis, and in every one of these cities the Radicals have been defeated. If they cannot control the negro vote in such localities, it is all up with them in the South. The Democracy have generally conceded that their opponents might win in the Southern cities, but it seems that even there the carpet-baggers and scalawags have thus early come to grief. Count the whole South solid for the next Democratic candidate for the Presi dency! GE AST has signed the Northern Pa cific railroad swindle. It would be In teresting to know whether he finds sign big such bills as profitable as the dispensation of offices. He promised to give the country au economical ad ministration, and this is a specimen of it, we suppose. THE LANCASTER WEE -‘ ' 4l " P a V , JUNE 1, 1870. Sumner's Supplement The Express persists in its opposition to Sumner's bill for enforcing the pro visions of the Civil Rights Bill. The original law met with its hearty appro val, and when Andrew Johnson vetoed it our neighbor denounced him for that act. In his able veto message the Presi dent stated, as one of his objections to the Civil Rights Bill, that it was design ed to enforce equality between the races by congressional enactment, and in de fiance of all State laws. The Radicals did not deny that such was the meaning and design of the act at the time it wris passed by a two-third vote of Congress over the President's veto. It became a law in spite of the Democratic mi nority in Congress, and in spite of the opposition of the President. Under that act numerous suits have been brought by negroes against railroad companies in the South and elsewhere, for refusing to permit them to enter the cars set apart for white ladies and their male companions ; and such suits have been uniformly decided by Judges of United States Courts in favor of the negro com plainants, and that on the ground that the Civil Rights Bill prohibits any dis tinctions from being made nn account of color. On the same plea, boldly set up under the same bill, negroeshave forced their children into the public schools of Washington City, side by side with the whites. This was done when no neces sity for such action existed, there being ample provision made for the instruc tion of all colored children in schools set apart for them. In view of these examples it will not do for the Express to undertake to deny that the bill recently introduced by Mr. Sumner is what it purports to be, a sup plementary aet designed to enforce the provisions of a former enactment. It is true that the Civil Rights Bill was pur posely made very general in its terms. I fad the Radicals used plainer language to indicate what the courts lhave since decided to be the meaning of the law, many Republicans would have revolted against its passage, anti it is even possible that the Express might have opposed it, instead of ap proving all its provisions. The uncer tainty of the language employed, its designed obscurity, was part and parcel of the trick played upon the people in It gave Radical newspapers and stump orators an opportunity to misrep resent the meaning of the Civil Rights Bill, which was afterward so clearly de fended by the courts; but the Radical Leg islature of this State understood the true intent of the bill when they passed a law prohibiting ally railroad company from setting apart cars for negroes, or from denying them the right to select such seats as might suit their sable dignities. The operation of that law may be wit nessed by any one who has occasion to ride on any of our railroads. We have seen a huge, greasy, buck negro fore ;his way right into the car set apart for the aceommodation of ladies, while white men traveling Without female company were denied admittance. This attempt of the Erprom to deny the meaning of the Civil Rights 13ill goes beyond that hypocracy for which it to so much distinguished. Its bold assertions and baseless declarations are all met and answered by repeated de cress of the Federal Courts. Radical Judges have over and again interpreted that act to mean exactly what Sun finer claims that it does; and the pains and penalties of his new bill are only designed to enforce what a Radical Congress made the law of the land by a two-third vote over the veto of Andrew Johnson. If the Express desires the repeal of the Civil Rights Bill, let it say so. It is unmanly for it to cry out against the• en forcment of an act which net its unqualified approval at the time of its passage. If the Civil Rights Bill was right, then is Sumner's bill of pains and penalties perfectly proper. The latter is only a logi cal. and I ivces,try sequenisc of the former. No one who approved the original enactment uuglet to object to such supplementary legisla tion as is necessary to secure its perfect enforcement. Let the Erpress come nut and advocate the repeal of the Civil Rights Bill, if it is not prepared to see it fully carried into elli•el. Its present at titude is ()tie which is calculated to dis gust every negro member afire Repub lican party, while it can nut possibly deceive a single one of the thousands of dissatisfied white men * who have here tofore acted with it. Pensions for Old Soldiers The bill grunting a pension to indi gent and dependent soldiers of the war Of 1812., (and to widows of the saine,) has finally passed the lower House of Congress ,and we hope will soon become a law. It is only just to the aged survi vors that such of them as stand in need of aid should receive the pittance of eight dollars a month. There was con siderable opposition to the bill, owing to the fact that the annual pension list is now thirty millions of dollars, or more than all the revenue derived from the in come tax. The bill was sent to the Senate and referred to the Pension Committee. A proviso of the bill, which the House, by a vote of a 0 to 111, refused to strike out, directs that none shall receive a pension without first taking the iron-clad oath. Ben. Butler op posed the proviso as there had been no general confiscation, and for onee Butler was right. The soldiers of 181'2, who survive, must all heat least seven ty five years of age, and it is not likely that any of them lent any material aid to the rebellion. It was ungracious to tack such a proviso to the bill. WM.:NEVER the Express desires to frame an excuse for some rascally act of a Radical Legislature or Congress, it points to certain instances in which it has condemned other acts, or other members of the Republican party. A careful scrutiny of the course of the Ex press will show that it has seldom spoken out against corruption or outrage unless there was a chance of making money by such conduct. It has been well paid for its opposition to certain politicians in this county, and there is every reason to believe that its course on the State Treasury business last winter proved to be pecuniarily profitable. It finds it easy to condemn the Northern Pacific Railroad swindle, while defending Dickey for supporting it. Such plia bility is really wonderful. Tit A'rgrand-con ti nen tal-cotubi nation land-grabbing-swindle, the Northern Pacific Railroad Bill, the greatest fraud of the nineteenth century, was put through the lower house of Congress yesterday, Hon. 0. J. Dickey voting for it. Rumor says that immaculate patriot, Thaddeus Stevens, died with two hun dred thousand dollars of Central Pacific railroad bonds in his possession. How many thousand dollars worth of North ern Pacific bonds did his executor and successor get, is a question which we have heard people asking. Who will an swer the important query? We hope the postmasters and revenue officials wont all speak at once. THE Express tries to excuse its defense of Dickey and the Northern Pacific land robbery by intimating that the IN TELLIGENCEI2 never condemns the acts of derelict Democrats. That is resorting to falsehood for an apology, and doubles the guilt of our neighbor. The INTEL LIOENCER has persistently condemned corrupt members of the State Legisla ture, and has not hesitated to denounce such by name. It stamped with disap proval the ten recreant Democratic Con gressmen who united with ten times that many Radicals in support of what an honest Republican denounced on the floor of the House as "a gigantic swin dle." We have charity enough to be lieve that the Express would not have resorted to such a pitiful falsehood If it had not been acting as a hired mercen ary in the employ of 0. J. Dickey. The Northern Patine Railroad Swindle. The most gigantic and unmitigated swindle ever put through any legislative body is the Northern Pacific Railroad bill, which has just been finally passed, under the previous question, by the lower House of Congress. An almost limitless domain, nearly fifty millions of acres, a territory vastly greater than the whole area of Pen nsylvania,has been given to a set of corporators who had no shadow of right to demand such unexampled generosity from the Federal Government. That it was a set-up job, skillfully manipulated and prop ped-up by all the corrupt appliances known in the most venal circles of leg islation, there can be no doubt. Wash ington correspondents of leading news papers do not hesitate to declare openly, that the bill was " bought through." In vain did the more honest members of both political parties protest against this infamous measure, in vain did they endeavor to secure the • adop tion of such restraints upon the corporators as would protect the government and secure the rights of actual settlers. Under the drill of a powerful lobby, under the operation of the previous question, without debate, an empire was carved out of the heritage of the people.and summarily transferred to a set of greedy speculators. One amendment after another was promptly voted down, and the rascally scheme I was relentlessly forced through in the I precise shape dictated by those who were to profit by the transaction. The great bulk of the people of the United States are becoming thoroughly indignant at the manlier in which the public lands are being parcelled out among corrupt Congressmen and grasp ing corporations. Republicans have not forgotten the outcry which was raised during the Fremont campaign about the possible introduction of sla very into the territory of the great west. They recall with marked distinctness the appeals which were then so art fully made, the earnest exhortations to preserve the boundless forests and fertile prairies as a sacred heri tage for their children and thier chil drens' children. The men who heard the oratory of that day and read Radical newspapers cannot witness with pleasure the course Congressmen elected by them are now pursuing. The masses of all parties very properly consider that they have an interest in the public do main. The farmersof Lancaster county expect it to furnish cheap lands and pleas ant homes for their descendents, the me chanic in the crowded city hopes to see his children comfortably located where they will enjoy a fuller and more vigor ous life than has fallen to his lot, and many a laboring man looks forward to the time when he may be able to sit under his own vine and fig-tree in the generous West,with his little ones grow ing up in independence to wealth and honorable positions. It is agai list these people that Congressmen sin grievously when they sell themselves to railroad corporations and barter away the sacred inheritance of the poor man. A few interested and recreant _Demo crats, among them Van Auk en, of this State, voted to give away this vast slice of the public domain, but the Radical majority are responsible for the passage of the bill ; and no man is more to blame than 0. J. Dickey. He knew, as well as he could possibly know anything that the people of Lancaster County, without respect to party, would fail to countenance any such transaction, if submitted to them for approval or rejec tion. He had sufficient warniv, and can not plead ignorance of public entiment. We presume (Mr. Dickey's record on this and similar questions will be thoroughly ventilated during the coming contest for the Congression al nomination, and we can assure ()or recreant Congressman that he may yet lied his vote on the Northern l'acith• Railroad swindle a load too heavy to carry. Large as the puldic domain is it will soon be exhausted if the present policy is persisted in. It might all be given away to actual settlers without disadvantage, but to transfer it to large and wealthy corporations is to lay the finindations of a powerful landed aris tocracy which will grievously oppress the masses. It is against this gigantic evil that we earnestly protest. Serious Charges Against the Postmaster- General, A serious charge of maladministra tion, if not of corruption, is made against Postmaster-General Creswell, by some of the leading envelope manu facturers of the United States. They allege that the contract for furnishing stamped envelopes to the ( lovernment, for which bids were publicly solicited, was recently awarded to the highest, and not, as required by law, to the low est bidder, the quality of goods offered by the former being no better than those offered by his competitors; and that when the contract came to be executed, provisions were inserted in it for other sizes than were mentioned in the adver tisement, and for extra compensation for lined envelopes and ruling. The manufacturers say that the Government will lose by this action of the Post master-General from $200,000 to $lOO,- O 0). They also contend that the whole system of furnishing stamped envelopes at present prices is wrong in principle, interfering with the regular trade, and costing the nation $1,000,000 annually. We take it for granted that the Post master-General will be quietly white washed by a Congressional Committee. It would not do to convict a member of the administration, you know. Against Philadelphia Under the above caption the Philadel phia Ledger has all article complaining of the conduct of the managers of the Pen nsy 1 van ia Railroad. It seems that under the schedule of fast line travel between New York and Chicago, which has been adopted the mail arrange ments provided for Philadelphia are so imperfect that letters sent from that city arrive at Pittsburgh one whole (lay be hind letters carried over the same road from NeW York. That is such a dis crimination against Philadelphia, as is calculated to cause On outburst of right eous indignation. Lancaster is not the only point, it seems, which is being slighted and injured by the mammoth corporation wlhic•h liastiecti so 101511 fos tered by the State. THE Elpro. underUkkes to dofcnd Mr. Dickey's vine ILr the pas,ag, of ti o . North,. puoifio I,:id-(:rab. That was to be expected. It is the paid supporter and hired tool of the present. Congress man, as it WaS of 'Thaddeus Stevens be fore him. It has all the qualities of a Swiss mercenary. 11. tights for the party that pays for its services, and is ready to defend any act of the public loan in whose employment it limy Le. Such is the character which this pretendedly moral newspaper bears among the best infornivd it,publivan:, of Lancaster county. The charge has been repeated ly made by its own party friends, and it has never been successfully refuted. Of course the ErpticBB dttnds Mr. Dickey. Massachusetts Giving Way on the Liquor Question. Our last accounts from the Massachu setts Legislature say they have modified their liquor bill so as to permit not only some indulgence in lager beer, but like wise in porter, ale, strong beer and wines. Is this a small matter for the descendants of those pious Puritans who used to shut up their hives of bees on Saturday night to keep the thoughtless bees from working on Sunday? JOHN CESSNA voted against the N orth ern-Pacific-Laud-G rabbing-Swin dle.— He feels that he has a very insecure footing In his district. In spite of the negro vote he will have a mighty hard road to travel. He knows that, and is lightening up for the race. When Cess na misses a chance to make money the danger of exposure must be great in deed, and the chances of getting offsafe ly with the booty perfectly desperate. How White Men Arc Disfranchised in Rhode Island. The attention of Congress was some time since called by a numerously signed petition to the fact that in spite of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, between ten and fifteen thousand white Citizens of Rhode Island were dis franchised. The committee to 'whom the petition was referred found, on ex amination of the election laws of that insignificant Yankee State, that its Con stitution prescribes alternative classes of qualification for voting. The first gives to all male citizens of the United States over twenty-one years of age the right to vote, if they own real estate of the value of $134. The second gives to every native citizen the right to vote, though he may own no real estate, on the pay ment of an annual tax of $l. Foreign born citizens, who do not own real es tate, are thus excluded from the right to vote in Rhode Island. Every houseless and homeless negro vagabond can go to the ballot-box, but no Irishman, Ger man or other white man who may have been born on foreign soil dare approach it unless he holds a fee simple title to real estate in Rhode Island. The Radi cal Congressional Committee, after due deliberation, reported that there is noth ing in the Constitution of the United States, and no existing law of Congress to prevent Rhode Island from thus dis criminating against foreign-born white citizens. The report concludes as follows: The committee is unanimously of the opinion that by the Fourteenth and Fif teenth Amendments natives of foreign countries, who have become citizens of the United States, are not entitled to vote in Rhode Island without regard to the quali fication imposed by her Constitution. The privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, mentioned in the petition as secured by the Fourteenth Amendment, do not include the right of suffrage. If they did, the right must necessarily exist in an citizens of the United States, from the mere fact of citizenship, without the power in any State, or in Congress, to abridge the same in any degree, and in such ease. It is enough to say that the rights se cured by this amendment to the Con stitution are of an altogether differ ent character. The Fifteenth Amendment does apply to rights ofsutirage, and to them only. By if the State of Rhode Island, in common with every other State, is forbid den to deny or abridge the right of citizens of the United States to vote on account of race, color or previous condition of servi tude. No fact of race, or color,or previous servitude prevents any citizen from voting in Rhode Island, neither of those qualities depends in degree upon the plate of his nativity. When the Fifteenth Amend ment was under consideration by Congress it proposed to embrace in it a proposition of any denial on account of nativity, that this proposition was not agreed to for the reason that Congress did not think it ex pedient to restrict the ancient powers of the States in this respect any further than ap peared to be needful to secure to the whole people the great results of the overthrow of the rebellion. The committee are, there fore, of the opinion that there is nothing in the provisions of the Constitution of the State of Rhode Island referred to, as in con flict with the Constitution of the United States. Here we have an exhibition of the manner in wllich foreign-born citizens are cared fof by the party in power.— They are left to the tender mercies of proscription and narrow-mined State Legislatures. The doctrine of State Rights is not annulled so far as it relates to naturalized citizens. Being white, they may be deprived of the ballot with impunity. it is only negroes \who are protected In the right of franchise by the Radicals of Congress. This is only of a piece with other leg islation of a similar character. A new naturalization bill has been introduced into the Senate, which proposes to take away from the State Courts all power to grant naturalization, and to vest the authority exclusively in the Federal Courts and Federal Registers' of Bank ruptcy. This would leave many coun ties of Pennsylvania without a tribunal before which foreigners could appear to be naturalized. The proposed law pro vides that no naturalized citizen shall be entitled to vote for six months after naturalization, and imposes other disa bilites upon them, of which we will speak more at large hereafter. If the naturalized citizens of the United States would not be thus discriminated against, if they would maintain the rights here tofore freely conceded to them, if they would not voluntarilysink below the ne gro in the scale of citizenship, they must unite in an effort to strike down the ty rannical and unscrupulous party which has secured its hold upon power by the use of fraud and force, and which is ready to resort to the vilest moans to perpetuate its rule. The Fenian Fiasco A m a dder enterprise than all assault upon ( 'anada, such as has just been made by the Fenians,can not well beconceived of. IL seems to have had not a single one of the qualifications necessary to se cure success. The men who led in it displayed neither military skill nor the ordinary courage of soldiers; and it is not surprising that all the actions of the rank and file should be weak, wavering, purposeless and futile under the circum stances. The hostility which rankles in the heart of every true Irishman against England is natural, and we can not help sympathizing with it; but with such "wild goose chases" as that which has just come to a ridiculous end we can have no sympathy. When the Sons of the Emerald Isle are prepared to deliver an enctive blow for the freedom of their native land from foreign domination we shall be ready to back up those who bear the Sunburst banner with all the moral force at our command; but we do earnestly protest against such ventures as that which has come to so farcical a conclusion. Let the Irishmen of this country see to it that such palpable frauds as General O'Neill are not again permitted to plunge hundreds of patri otic and impulsive men into a ridicu lous and unfortunate dilemma. Ireland may yet be freed and enthroned among the nations of the earth in sovereign state, but it cannot be done by sueli foolish ventures as that which has re sulted in nothing wore serious than the frightening of a few scattered Canadian fa e rs. A Suit Under the Civil Rights Bill Charles Caldwell, an employee of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad has just been tried, at Washington, on the charge of ejecting a son of Fred. Douglas front a seat in a ear on that road for the right of riding in which extra charges were made. The seat taken by Douglass had been previously engaged and the proper price paid for it by a white man, but the ambitious son of the great negro orator W:LS deteo•mined to show that he bad a right to ride where he pleased under the Civil Rights Bill. The Judge charged that under the law Douglass Mid a right to recover, but there being a couple of obstreperous whites on the jury, they failed to agree. Wait till Sumner's bill for transferring 2111 such suits to the Fed eral Courts is passed, and the picked out by the I. S. Marshals will all be soundly Radieal and always ready to convict. Then the Civil Rights Bill will be rigidly enforced ; and woe to the railroad conductor, the church warden, the school director, the hotel keeper, or any other man who undertakes to deny perfect equality to any negro in the land. This is the first instance where such a suit Into failed in Washington since the Civil Rights Bill was passed, and there have been several of a similar charac ter tried. THE Er . prcs grew wonderfully indig nant over the Jersey Shore and Pine Creek Railroad Bill, and was very vig orous in its virtuous denunciation there of. It now countenances the transfer of a territory nearly twice as large as Penn sylvania to Jay Cooke & Co., corpora tors of the Northern Pacific Railroad swindle; beside which the proposed dis persion of the bonds in the Sinking Fund of this State was a mere trifle Circumstances alter cases. 0. J. Dickey was a chief supporter of the great land grab, and he owns the columns of the Express That accounts for its obliquity of 16810E4 For a highly moral paper commend us to the Express. Just Like John Cessna. John Cessna is well known,where he is best known, as a very tricky lawyer. He is a sort of embodiment of the mem bers of the celebrated firm of Quirk, Gammon & Snap. He has all the bad qualities of the three, but lacks the lit tle of latent manliness that would now and then break through the profession al rascality of Oily Gammon. His pro fessional brethren can not trust to him, and have long ago found out that his word is not to be relied upon. He has not a particle of principle, and is ready to resort to any sort of sharp practice to carry a point. He is utterly destitute of honor, and completely lacking in all those high qualities which mark the gentleman. He was a Democrat up to the end of the war, and only turned Radical for the sake of securing of fice. Since he has been in Congress he has done an immense amountof dirty work as a member of the Committee on Elections. Being an:adept in trickery and utterly unscrupulous, he has champion ed the case of everyßadical claimant with a zeal that paid not the slightest regard to the oath lie had taken. He has been instrumental in securing more than one unrighteous decision, and lie glories in his brazen rascality. His latest display of the peculiar qualities fur which lie is distinguished,surpasses anything which has yet occurred. The following tele gram, which was publicly sent from Washington to the press of the country, and published in Radical as well as Democratic papers, tells the story : WASHINGTON, May 17.—A sharp dodge was practiced in the House to-day, by Mr. Cessna, a member of the Committee on Elections, whereby Mr. Wallace, who was the contestant fur the seat of Mr. Simpson, from South Carolina, was declared entitled to his seat, and accordingly sworn in. As soon as the reading or the journal was fin ished, Mr. Cessna sent to the Clerk's desk resolution declaring Mr. allaco entitled to .his seat. But few members were pres ent—nut to exceed forty, all told. The Clerk read the resolution in such a low voice that the members did not seem to notice what the nature of it was, or at least to consider that it was all election case. The Speaker then put the question of adoption to the House, and there being no response in the negative, it was declared adopted. The motion to reconsider was then made, and to lay that motion on the table, winch was adopted, with no dissenting voices. This sealed the whole matter. The calling of Mr. Wallace to the bar, by the Speaker, to be sworn in, was the first knowledge that the majority of the members present had 'as to the natur6 of the resolution passed a moment previously. Objections wore made by a score of voices to swearing Wal lace in, hut the Speaker decided that there was no way in which the House could re consider their action unless by unanimous consent, which, of course, could nut be ob tained. After several members had made a protest, Republicans as well as Demo crats, Mr. Wallace was sworn in. The whole transaction is a g' oildeal comment ed upon. Such a piece of unblushing rascality was never perpetrated in any legislative body, and it ought to prove amply suffi cient to damn its author to eternal in famy. Many of the more decent Re publicansof the Sixteenth District voted for John Cessna very reluctantly at the last election. They felt ashamed of the 111011 who had succeeded in securing a nomination by means which were far from reputable. That he will force himself upon the party again there is said to be no doubt, but that he will be re elected we can not believe. His only hope is in manipulating the negro vote, anti he has been very busy among that class since the Fifteenth Amendment was declared to be adopted. Cessna ex pects to poll a solid black vote, but we do not see how any respectable negro eon support him. We are sure no repu table white man can do so Without blushing to own it forever after. No General Amnesty A Washington telegram announces that not half a dozen Republican Sena tors would vote for a General Amnesty bill, and that there is a similar unani ' 'idly in the House against it. It is also stated with positiveness that Grant will not recommend the passage of such a hill. It is so manifest that the whole action of Congress and of Grant's ad ministration is controlled by the single purpose of continuing power in the liands of those who now possess it, that no ono can wonder that an immense number of whites are to be kept from the polls, while the ballot-box is thrown open to every negro in the land. Grant and the Radical Congressmen are con vinced that a fair election would put an end to their misrule, and they do not in tend to retire until they have stolen the last acre of the public lands, and made away with all the plunder of every des cription, that they can lay hands upon. When there is nothing left to steal we may perchance have restrictions remov ed, :01d be allowed to see free and fair elections again throughout the country, Meantime let ex-rebels submit to negro rule, and Northern taxpayers submit to being mercilessly fleeced without mur muring. Cessna's Dirtiest Trick Republican newspapers are in the habit of making a loud outcry about frauds every time an election occurs in New York City. The assertions in I which they abound are principally false ; hoods, designed to account for the over whelming defeats they repeatedly suf fer; but, if all that the roost unscrupulous of them have ever said were true, every reported outrage of the kind would be Made to appear respectable when coin ! pared to the action of the House upon the ease of Wallace against Simpson. Mr. Simpson was elected by a ma jority of over five thousand, but lie I was summarily ejected from his seat by a sudden movement made at an unexpected hour when the House was almost empty, made with the concur rence of the clerk who read Cessna's resolution in so to a tone of voice that members could not hear it, and with the knowledgeaml approval of all those who voted for it. If that decision is permit ted to stand, the Republican party will he forever estopped from complaining of any frauds which Illay be perpetrated upon the ballot box. When compared with Cessna, and those who stood by him in this disgraeuful transaction, the lowest repeater who violates the election laws, and perjures himself for a price, becomes respectable. The Republican majority in the House must du one of two things--they must either repudiate the action taken under the lead of Cess na, or they roust stand branded as the supporters of the most disreputable fraud that was ever perpetrated. In either case this act must doom Cessna to certain defeat.. We cannot contrive iY possible that he can be renominated after such an rxltibilion of his utter baseness and, should Inc succeed in forcing him self upon the ticket all decent Republi utms would be compelli,l to refuse to vote for him. John has done a great many mean things, but this is, 'unities- Lionably, a little the dirtiest trick of which he has ever been known to be guilty —jud a //Mr. Is our criticism of the official c.iurse of I ton. 0. J. Dickey we are actuated by no feeling of personal hostility toward him. Our relations with him have al ways been perfectly pleasant. We are compelled, however, to make a distinc tion between the man and the Congress man. We are sure he was in company with a very corrupt crew when he lent Ids support to the Northern Pacific Rail road bill. He may possibly have been actuated by pure motives alone, but he would have stood much higher in the estimation of honest men if he had boldly taking a stand against this un blushing robbery. A Mew Child's Paper A monthly paper, to be called "The Children's Argus," will be issued from the (Mice of the Easton Argus, on the third Thursday of June. An able corps of contributors has been engaged to fur nish original matter, and it will be got ten up in handsome style. Mrs. Re bekah B. Shunk 'will have editorial control of it. Mrs. Shunk is a lady of brilliantintellect, - and possesses the very qualities of mind which are calculated to fit her for the task she proposes to undertake. We predict that " The Chit dren's Argus," will be a complete suc cess. The Enforcement Bill The bill for the enforcement of the Fifteenth Amendment has been finally put through, in shape and substance al most exactly as it originally passed the Senate. We publish elsewhere the amendments and alterations which were made by the Committee of Con ference. This infamous force bill, with all its long list of pains and penalties, will prove to be a mere brutum julmcn, a law so odious that its enforcement will never be attempted. An attempt to en force it would make those who should engage in it as infamous in the eyes of the community as ever a volunteer champion of the fugitive slave law was in Massachusetts. In fact the features of the Enforcement Bill are similar to the most objectionable parts of that measure which called forth such loud outbursts of indignation from New End . - land. It is designed to scare timid peo ple, but its authors will find that they have roared at the wrong party. The Democracy will obey the laws while they exist, but they will see to it that' negroes are not allowed any privileges at the polls which white men may not claim. Every woolly-head that comes up to vote will be subjected to a close scrutiny, and men will employ whom they please and discharge them when they see proper, without assigning any reasons therefore to the spies and in formers of an inquisitorial government. This odious law will only tend to injure the negro without adding any - strength to the Republican party. It will open the eyes of white inqp and cause a re vulsion of feeling which will largely aid in restoring to power that political or ganization which successfully adminis tered the government of the United States for three-quarter.-1 of a century without having recourse to any such Napoleonic appliances for the control of elections. Facts For Taxpa}ers Mr. Dawes, Chairman of the Committee on Appropriations, and, therefore, post ed on all such matters, said in debate that "the United States navy, which consist ed of only 9,500 men, cost 528205,671 ; while the estimate of the British navy last year, which consisted of 93,000 men, was only $49,000,000. Every vessel in the United States navy cost an average annually of $135,944, and in the British navy $09,000. Every ton in the tonnage of the United States navy cost $151.10 per annum, and in the British navy $7i2.60. To keep the American navy afloat—to keep it in repair—cost $OOO a man, while the British navy cost but $6O a man to keep it up to the standard. The United States Navy Department had estimated for $0,075,000 for repairs, while the estimate of the British navy for the year ending March 31, 11)70, for new machinery and repairs, was but $3,000,749." And following up the same line of remarks, Mr. Logan, Chairman of the Military Committee, said that "there were in the United States navy 51,409 officers and but 8,500 men—one officer to every six men, and a fraction over. The pay of the navy was a little over $7,000,000, and of that over $5,000,- 000 was paid to the officers. There were on the active list of the navy 759 officers at sea, and on shore 050. Why should this swarm of officers be kept without any necessity for them 9" And further, that "there were now in the Treasury Department sixteen hundred employees more titan were authorized by law, and six hundred more than were employed last year." Such is the "economical" and "honest" administration of Grant which has been so much lauded by Radical newspapers. That Misplaced Switch Thu Philadelphia Ledgrr says " It is by the mercy or Providence that twenty lives were not lost instead of two, by the accident near Leaman Pelee, on the Pennsylvania Railroad on Tuesday morn ing. Through the misplacing of a switeh the Philailelphia Express, coming east, ran into :In Emigrant train standing on another track. The brakesman killed (Thomas Swayne, of this city,) was at his post and faithfully doing his duty. Whether the switch,was left misplaced by negligence or by design is not clear, lint in either ease the occurrence affords another illustration of the necessity of using the style of switeh that, cannot he misplaced by either negli gene°, stupidity or malice, but which, Un der all circumstances, keep s the main track unbroken. It has been demonstrated be yond all doubt that the Wharton Safety Switch does this, It is approved by the most experienced railway mechanics. We can imagine no reason why it is not gener ally adopted, unless it may be on account of some difference about expense—and that ought not to lie Weighed when the question in safety to human life." The Wharton Safety Switch may be a good thing and probably is, but we think a still more useful invention, and one which would tend to a far greater degree to lessen railway accidents, would be that of an independent Coroner and an intelligent Coroner's jury, who would not through ignorance or a fete• of rail roads, fail to thoroughly examine into the causes of the numerous railway ac cidents that spread mourning and deso lation throughout the land. How Carpet• Baggers Electioneer A letter from Florence, South Caro lina, to the New York Sun, says: " The disreputable Whittemore is very busy visiting the negroes in their cabins, eating and drinking with them, and other wise successfully conducting the political campaign, which will terminate probably with his re-election to Congress. Mrs, Whittemore is also active. Standing and campaigning for her husband on the plat form of the railroad station in Darlington, she kisses the negro wenches whom she meets there, and the dramatic effect is pow erful. The wenches are very grateful, and quickly balance the condescention of Mrs. Whittemore, by reciprocating the favor in kind. This lip service also helps Mrs. Whittemore's school along, where she gen erously teaches the young negroes for 2.5 (puts a head per month. The pupils are very numerous, and the ineome which she accumulates is highly advantageous to her self and husband." We may expect to see the rival Radi cal candidates for Congressional honors going through a similar process among the negrues of Tow Hill, as the time for the primary election draws 'high. (to it Dickey!—(.o it Wickey ! A Female Negro Office-Holder A white woman, the wife of a deceas ed soldier, has been turned out of the Fourth Auditor's Office of the 1.. S. Treasury, to inake room for K:tle V. Jennings, a mulatto, whose frillier is reported to hate• great influence with the negro voters of Washhighin (11. y. 'fills is the first appointment of an African female among the lady clerks in the Treasury Department. It is such concession to the negro . vote as the ltadir•als will be eiimpidled to make it they expert to hold it. That they are wady to make the sat•rilices demanded of them their conduct shows. CZ= Th. New York San says: When Gen eral Grant was told that the Puma,bean party in New York was dead, he would have made the same reply that A naxagor as did when informed that his son had this], "I never supposed I had begotten an im mortal," if he had studied Greek. lint in his unelassical wa y he answered quite as the Stoic lloshut one eye and blew a mouthful of cigar smoke in a thin stream tip to the ceiling. Translated, said: "Par ties aro dreadfully short lived. There is nothing enduring but Havana cigars.' Let us smoke." Fatal Accident ton Reporter About twelve o'clock on Saturday night, John F. Meeser, aged thirty-nine years, a brother of Mr. William Meoser, the pro prietor of the Sunday Mercury, mot his death instantaneously under the following circumstances: During the tiro at the Philadelphia skating park, Thirty-first and Walnut streets, on Saturday night,: the illumination was very great, and the de ceased seeing the light went to an upper room of his place of residence, the house of Mr. Joseph .Mountain, at Poplar and Sar tain streets, in order to get a better view of the fire from a window. lie pushed open the window and throw back the shutters, when unfortunately he lost his balance, and before he could recover himself ho pitched head foremost to the ground and struck his head against the curbstone, killing him almost instantly. The deceased was well known, and was much respected by his acquaintances. A thriving young town which has lately sprung up on the Lyman Smith and Mcßride farms, on the Warren and Franklin turnpike, sonic two miles south of Pleasantville, has been christened " Tip Top." Mrs. Josephine Simpson, of Toledo, has accumulated a fortune of Sai . ,(X) o . She is the owner of a canal boat, which she commands in person. In the Morris County (N. J.) Court, yesterday, Thomas Halloran was sen tenced to 17 years' imprisonment, at hard labor, for murdering his wife. A train was thrown from the track of the Newark and New York Railroad yesterday, by a misplaced switch. The cars were badly damaged, and four per sons were injured. The receipt of the internal revenue thus far—s•2o,ooo,ooo being expected fur June—indicate that the total amount for the fiscal year, eliding June 30, will be $175,000,000. According to a letter from St. Domin go, the Cuban insurgents recently cap tured Sagal, agent of Ueneral Valmase da, and forty men, at Cautillo, and all the prisoners were shot. A bridge on the Pittsburgh, Cincin nati and St. Louis Railroad, at Rich mond, Ind., was destroyed on Friday night by an incendiary tire. The loss is $lOO,OOO. A despatch from Richmond, Va., re ports an atrray thereyesterday afternoon "in which Congressman Porter and Collector Humphrey were roughly han dled." A still exploded in Peter Schwatz's distillery at Hamilton, Ohio, yesterday, killing Mr. Kline, beer runner, and Au gust Frederick, mash hand. The cause of the explosion is not known. At St. Paul, Minn., W. nay, printer, fell from the third story of the Pioneer newspaper office, on Saturday night while drunk, and W ILY Instantly killed. At Dayton, Ohio, yesterday morning, Mrs. Moeller and live children were suf located, and an infant was badly burned, by a tire resulting from carelessness.— Particulars are not given. In the Massachussetts blouse of Rep resentatives, on Saturday, the Senate Liquor bill was amended so 11:4 to exempt ale, porter, beer, arid all wines, and ordered to a third reading. John G. Barry, a printer, eighty-four years of age, who, in taxi, setup the an nouncement of the death of George Washington, took part in a funeral at Holly Springs, Mississippi, week before last. At Liberty Corners, N. J., on Tues day night, an old man, named Franklin Hope, hanged himself in a barn. On Wednesday,a boy,named Maurice Con k ng, went to the same barn and hanged himself front the same beam. Captain 'Matthew Hunt, the oldest pilot of Boston, died 011 Saturday morn ing, aged 71 years. He was a pilot in the war of Isl 2, and witnessed the fa mous engagement in Boston Bay be tween the Chesapeake and Shannon. Figaro says that Prince l'icrre Bon aparte has a startling way of calling his servants. lie tires his pistol once fur John, twice for James, and three times for Francis. When they don't vome di rectly, he keeps up a running tire with his musket. In - Wyoming Territory the Indians raided on the stage route between I tryan and South Pass on Sunday, carried ill' stage horses, and wounded a man, named John ('oneness. All the stuck between Bryan and Smith Pass is supposed to be gone. The vicinity swarms with Ara pahoes and Sioux. Hon. Horatio Seymour, president of the American Dairymen's Association, late Dentocralie candidate for President of the United States, is complimented in the Ikurth am! Home with a portrait of himself and a diagram of his farm. Mr. Seymour, as an intelligent country gentleman is hospitable and is esteemed by his neighbors. How the Money Goes The Public ',Word, the new penny paper in Philadelphia, while maintain ing complete independence !of parties deals some telling blows at existing abuses. Ceder the above caption it has the following editorial remarks: Some French Minister,ltichelieu, if we re member right; used to give directions Whim tax-gatherers, when they [went out among the people to gather the revenues, "not pluck the goose so closely as to make it squeak." Apparently there is no Annl iean financier, who has sense enough, or, if he has sense, who has strength enough, to 0n force such instructions on our tax-gath erers. That patient goose, our good pit hlic, does "squeak” most plaintively under its taxes, and without relief. Yet, it is not so much the closeness of the plucking as the nu:inner of it, that makes the Amerioan public dissatisfied with the operation of the revenue system. We have a groat debt, contracted in a long and desperate war. The people are commit to pay that 11011 t, iu any just find proper wily, and will make reasonable sacrifices to that ; but when they see, as they have seen for years, an USI;nSiVn machinery For collection on the One hand, and a multitude of "itching palms," in those who run the machinery, on the other hand, it is no wonder that. the people complain. The case may be likened to sonic of those foreign charitable societies, whose purpose is highly commendable, and whose money, it it ever roaches the beneficiaries, does a great deal of good, but who yet lose in Ow trims mission so great a part of the charity through the percentages and salaries of agents as to make the affair a doubly expensive ono to the charitable givers. Nor is this all. other elements besides expensive ma chinery come in to diminish the amount of the taxes wrung out of the hard earnings of the people. If any class of officers should lie nut only above the charge of corruption, but above suspicion of it, surely it should be those who /155055 and collect the revenues. Even the judicial officers of the government ought not to he more upright, or ineapable of dishonesty. And yet we habitually Lind revenue offices distributed as the spoils of party triumph to men whose chief re(mminendation is their past party set vice. If our readers think we overstate the evil, they have only to glance through the following official table of moneys due from a few of the ex collectors of the single State of New York. This table is taken from the statement of the Secretary of the Treasury, made pursu ant to the house resolution demanding a return of the annum nls dile from collectors of internal revenue not now in office: A. M. Wood $443,169 SI 1 :( K. Pratt 115,019 oil T. C, Callicott 52,738 05 11. McLaughlin (acting) 73,615 85 J. 1.% Bailey 785,869 So Jos. I lox ie 44,067 62 Lewis J. Kirk 107,210 GO M. B. 'Field: 529,661 05 ! M. B. Blake (first terno 22,2.54 09 ! Wm. Boardman 16,597 07 Alex. Spaulding 4"455 39 T. O'Callagen 07,524 74 W. Masten 91,508 8.4 Jas. Forsyth 109,227 .53 S. T. Richards 32,310 50 T. R. Walker 122,001 67 R. IL Avery 26,723 57 Samuel P. Allen 1'27,067 49 J. B. Halstead 15,933 98 11. W. llaseall . 72,0111 90 Milton Smith 19,503 30 S. Shook 1,0-12.303 71 Here. then, wo have the amounts still due from gentlemen no longer in office, in a single State; and we have struck out, simply for the purpose of condensation mid convenienee, all sums below $lO,OOO, thus materially reducing the size of the list. In some cases explanation is easy and satis factory; but, in many others, the govern ment will never see a dollar of the money wrung out of the people. Wo all know that Callicott is in the Albany Penitentiary serv ing out his term fur del r rauding the govern ment, and that Bailey isa fugitive from j us tice. The New York Sun, from whose col hi inns we condense this list, adds: "Thegov ern:Tient has instituted legal proceedings against Collectors Masten, Halstead and Van Voorhis, fur the recovery of the amounLs set opposite their names. Others I ave, since their retirement front office, engaged in many unlucky speculations, and therefore lost all their money." Read the whole system of tax-gathering in the light of these official revelations, and say if it is any wonder that the taxed public (s)lll plains of the rough " plucking" it receives from the hands of the tax-gatherers ? Pay ing taxes to decrease the debt is one thing, but paying, taxes to line the pockets of po litical adventurers is finite another. Ml= Radical Frauds Unearthed at Riehmond —Ellyslon Probably Elected. RIC II MOND, May 2.5.— . 1110 Conservati yes have been much excited to-day over rumers that the Commissioners of El ectiens, who are now counting the votes, have discover ed enough illegal ballots to insure the elec tion of Ellyson. It is certain that a good man v marked ballots have been thrown out, but the Commissioners decline to give particulars. It is also said that the vote In the precinct where the ballot-box was stolen and where Cbahoon had a large majority, has been thrown out. The Commissioners have adjourned until Monday. NORFOLK, May 28.—011icial returns of the municipal election give John B. Whitehead (('onservative),for Mayor, thirty-eight ma jority. Tho Conservatives have el acted twen ty-eight of the thirty-seven Councilmen, and the whole ticket except Commissioner of Revenue, Keeper of the Almshouse, In mpectorof Street-s, and Clerk of Markets. It is understood that the Itadiuds will make an effort to have the election set aside on the ground of fraud and intimidation. RICITMOND, May 29.—1 t is rumored to night, that the Commissioners of Elections will givecertificates of election Co the whole Conservative city ticket, and that the Con servatives will have nineteen of the twen ty-five Councilmen. New York Eleetlosy 17, 1870--litale 4,=i - Pi.i , The following aro the majorities at the late election In this State: Democratic ma jority on Chief Justice, 87,2 H ; Folger over Andrews, 1,752; Andrews over Mason, 877 ; Andrews over Hale, 2,820. Folger and Andrews, Republicans, are elected as the two minority Associate Judges. Official vote of the city : Church (Demo crat), 82,152; Seldon (Republican), =,187. Church's majority, 59,90. SU ETCHES OF TRA VEL NORTHWARD No. VII.---Montreal Montreal, the largest and most Important city of Canada, is situated upon the Island of Montreal, at the confluence of the St. Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers, and at the foot of Royal Mountan, front which it takes its name. It was formerly surrounded by a wall, but this has long since fallen into decay, and it Is now entirely open. The population which Is now about seventy-five thousand, is largely Catholic, and the city has been called the " Rome of A series." The visitor will not tail to notice the wharves of Montreal. They are built of solid stone, and are unsurpassed by Ihe>o of any city in the country. St. Paul street extends along the river tlio whole length (1 the city, and is the ewer business thorough faro. 'Vito fashlomthle promenades are Groat St. Janes a rOet and Sofro Dalin° street. The Victoria tubular Bridge spans the St. Lawrence At Montroa% It is r e ,t, or almost two miles long, and rests up.ei twenty-four plots. 'rho heavy iron tubes through which the railroad truck is laid are twenty-two feet high and sixteen feet Wide. This elegant structure cost over six mil lions of dollars, and WIIN opened With g r cot pomp and ceremony in the summer or ISt.lO, during the visit of the Prinecol Wales. Montreal is noted for its churches, of which are very handsome :mil ;Oita,- dye ; we shall mention only a few of the.. Tho mo,d ootio.bto is the French Cathedral of Notre Dame, an elegant and costly edi fice of stone, nceonumidathig from oi g io to 10118 thousand persons. It is two Innoln,l and lifty-fgio feet long, and one hundred and thirty-four feel wide, and is surmount ed by two towers, tanth two hundred ;1,1 twenty-live feet high. The windows are handsome stained glass, and the principal ono is sixty-four feet high and thirty- t‘s feet broad. Adjoining is the Seminary iil St. Su 'rho Bishop's Church, in St. Denis ',lnv', is a very elegant strum tire, and St. l'at riek's Chitroli 01 . ClIpil,1 sitiuu ill liagawelietiere street. Aniongtheprotninent l'rotestant Church es aro Christ Church il , t)r,z,. • s Church and St. Andrew's Church, a chi,. imitation of Salisliury C.itheilral, in land. street is the Nunnery ~ 1 tlhet I rey Nuris,Avltielt Order NV:I,I linturlrJ in 1692 for the care of rhiWnm awl lunatic+. The Ilhtek Nuns, fmmile.l themselves to the othivatimi it relll:oochil dren, 111111 !MVO it 11111111,y in N..tri. 11,11 m, street. The Itonsecours Market !louse 1,13 gruel vesting Rut, hundred and eight, thousand dollars. In the 11j1111 1 r story at. the offices of the Corp.,ratilm, the Conned Chamber, 111111 a grand ball or ‘,11.011 root., capable of seating four thou,aini Itt a central part of the city i, 3 111.110 mint erected to the memory of the n a v a l hero, Lord Nelson. The Court 11011 1 40, the ( 1 11.3.111 111111,1' 31.1 the I'ost 1)1110o, are all all radio the latter is situated in I;reat. St. .1311.1, street, opposite St. l.assrenee Hall. hi,, Merchants' Exchange is in St. Sacrament street, and St. l'atrick's I lospital and 1,11- era! Hospital are both ill 1,1,11,31, 13 At the base of Itnvul Nieeet,,i,, is Mei College, anti on the northern shme of 11.• mountain is the totiiit Itoyal Cemetery. The Water Works are about a 11111. 11.., thu iiityi British ar tii Si!,ll in all pal of tlio city, guarding lint etc. In tic iivoniug wo parade. Many of the privatu residrn ern , e , peci ally 010,111111,0 R 010 suburbs of the,ny. very handsome, UN ct them lasing Mull Of SIMI, VVa worn. author disappointed with Montreal. It is lint Su lOW a city WI) expected. Many of Lilo streets :re liar row and poorly paved. During the sum Inner months it is visited by thousands of tourists I'l,lll Ail parts of the annum - . paratively fess por,ulk4 N: kit Niagara Quebec, the Whitt) Mountains, or the Sa guenay river, tvilla.oUt eilt,pping . at NI sit trial. I:= 1n...11y • . //tvindy L, iiirroltsing, .111.1 rm,. Iv dying 1.11 It inay seem in,insistent, and prrhap inexplicable, to the reader, that. IN, sbouhl 111111111 e such an Do portant .louiction9 as in sanity, in I,or category of iiorthin!,..g. litd WO du not refer to insanity, n.x It ix, inidei the tests of rationality, -hardy and moral right, but ax it appears, is held, or ree,ard ed, us a votivenient legal "1.'31W gust especially by the friends and relati Itlltrtlerces ;by prinwelit,a, for the de fence ," fold often, too often, by consul., tious jurors, in groat criminal trials. In this aspect, if we look abroad into this busy, shifting, and mutating world of ours, citniiet but be visivinced that insanity I fearfully on the increase, and that crime especially what 11.41 10 he generally I'llll sitlered "capital crime - is proportionately on the decrease. The life 4,r it. 111111 is ]nuked Ilpoll ILS So/nr(hOly, quires every duvice, every subterfuge. nil every possible sacrifice that the toilets of men Pllll invent or make, in or der to Nits whilst himt or the Inm - - do:wed Is absolutely mil/tiny, uu matter how much sorrow, suffering, and danger, 11.1.21 been entailed on relatives, un friends, and on society Now, to our mind, this is 1/11 wrong—ratlically wrung—and the only w:ty this wrong elm ever he righted, is to make Insanity,—especially \Olen used as a idea to shield a murderer againstiloserved inin- Islinictit—n penal crime. This least sireril sosis proteisiiiii to soeiety against murder, and would prevent ilm• murderer from living unceremoniously thrown upon the I.4lintninilty again to re peat his offence. About the insanity nl' nu individual there scarcely lei a ques tion, especially when prunounrcd insane, by tun intelligent jury, in order to relley♦ a criminal from the responsibilities of an ant er murder, The same Jury that we,u bring in a verdict of insanity to fuel ,P, fine prisoner in the inurde. ease, would at the Halllo tins be bringing in him in the insanity easy, mid therefore, all doubt, all expense, aunt all further trial would be obviated. In such eases, juries would have nothing to do with anything but. the "lac• and the facts,'' and to render their verdicts oil thcso alone. It is true, that motive, and prerions provocalion.v, may have their weight, mei may prejudice the cases ben,. them, 05c way or another, but when the plea of ',- sanity is made to relieve a culprit from Ib,• responsibility of his crie s •, these have little to do with the case, because the face is ddfles admitted, and is patent to the jury. A 111:111 is sh o t down apparently in cold blood, in open daylight, and le•fore a hundred Wit lIONSeS, by a brutalized murderer; and al though nothing before was ever heard or seen of his insanity, or that of any of Ilk-, relations, yet now, that plea is resddridsl to - Only bcc:uso Ole !let Wait Lee Upperelll tip adroit of possible denial • to place an :Le knowledged eulprit, in a position, where, from any dulls°, he may repeal his .•ri if an 111S:1110 filth- yea, IL simple 11111141 , L1 inoffensive creature -wile is esb•ewed ill r • orirpeient to administer ills even affairs, dm who is liable to doe dangerotlS to his fawily or the community—must he forcibly im prisoned in an mono,, Asylum, why should not one who has committed a murder, frond sur•h a cause, he also incareerated, if not capitally punished] 7 A hstraetly consider ed, all kinds of crimes, known to the "criminal calender" or m 1,,, aro just so many species of inSaaiiy : and, if robbery, burglary, theft, arson, larceny, adultery, fornication, counterfeiting, fraud, assault and battery, slander, trespass, and many others, are penal offences—as only no many milder forms of insanity—why should the aggravated form of urn otter, enjoy nn im munity from punishment —whatever the punishment of such a crime may legally be 7 The pleas of justifiable homicide, solid defence, protection of property, .be., hilly acquit ono who is arraigned for taking the life of another, with some show of moral and legal right, but, it appears to us, that to prove a Mall i/Vielie , before a jury or twelve Intelligent men— where the cord in would otherwise have been Murder gu one of its degrees—and then to send hint "scot free" out into the world, and to reoeivo him into society again, thus offering him facilities to repeat his offence against law• and morality, proves also that the jury themselves, as well as the court, were not entirely free from insanity. 13ELLE-Vlrn% Nathaniel Willis, who died iu Boston on Thursday, at the venerable age of 90 years, was a son of Nathaniel Willis, a well known publisher during the revo lution, who was an apprentice with Benjamin Franklin. He was the father of Nathaniel P. Willis, the poet, Richard Storrs Willis, and Mrs. James Parton —Fanny Fern.