TOE LANCASTER INTELIIGENCER, i ts PUBLISHED E V E RY WED DAY BY U. G. SMITH CO. A. J. BTEIN3fAN. H. G. SMITH TERMS—Two Dollars per annum payable In all eases In auvance. TIDE LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIOENCEB. le published every evening, Sunday excepted, at Si per annum in advance. OFPICE-80IITHWEST CORNER OF CENTRE µQUARE. Voettp. THE BLIND MEN AND THE ELE- PHANT. A lIINDOO FA ISLE. It WAN six men of Indostan, To learnlng much inclined. Who went to see the elephant, ( Though o flf them v. er.• That each by e.e reation alight nattily Ills wind. The First appronelted the elephant And happening to fall Against:his broad and sturdy sld.•. At nisei • began to bawl : "(lod hle.s tae—hut the elephant In very Ince a wall" The Second, feeling of the Lhi< Cried, '• Hn a what 1111 ve we here SO very roam] and shmoth and she'll TO MI. lh :eighty clear 7114 wonder of OM elepheht 14 eery like a spear: " The Thin' approaol2ll the animal, And 1.1411.1,1,0 t to lake 'rho stiolmolott (rook within Iris lots Thus Iroldly op DV spake: I hoe, - hr," the eleplotol airy like a analtu:" Tlio• Fourth r 011 1 .11,1 roil lIIS ruuur but And tilt nhuut Ills It 111.1 . : lllrinv4 ',want Is I Is mighty 111,t It 111., ""1 • Is clear en.sisir In very nice a trus•! 'I Its I'M h, who ellatits.ll In totiell Ilis Salt!, “I•I'sn1,11r1411•Al 1111111 lon Whitt lIIIs r.. 51,11,1 4 ,1111 4 ,51: Ih•tiy (111. fuel ,vllllviin, 'l'ltls t1t5.r%:4 , 1 slsplionl In vo•ry III". Ion! " 1 ' 111 • Nlalll 1101,1110111' lee] I,egell Alemt the bee.l 111 glepe, Thall .0.1,1111.4 gel Ile. ,ellll4lte4 Tlllll 1,11 wit 11111 111. n 1.11111•, " I Nee" ,Ite,lll he, " I lie elephant 111 Spry 11151.11 rep, And t "r I od—ino oimpni...l Iwo! !tn.] lutig, Eitc.ll 111 Ills .V 1111111,1 1 ,11 1'.4.'1 . 1 1 1111144 Sim nod II rlllll, Though 1.114.11 41111 111.. t 1,011 1111 1111 W.', 111 IIII•Iv11111114. Tlii• 41141.111.11, I wllll, tol 1111111,1W...41 111,, 1,111 1/i 111, 111,1 1/, And prltti l SI 1111111 lItIIIIIIII/1 111 Nut 0110 la thrl. li1vt•1.,1•11. I+l63rellanco us. w.•I Talloriana; or Scintillations from the tiluw-board 'rr per l'irnmplseg — neturtilog, ar01•1111111s by 00111 y a grill ilynliregs and s l I'IIIIg I•I",I11I11' 111aIn 01 Inv lave illov iltillt11•1., Mill 11.1, sill 10 main had 1...1•0 101)1 at lima,' Perhaps there was no consideration associated with the tailoring of the old en lime, which yielded so touch pros peetive delight as the idea of becoming " tramper " ; and, free from care, or other speeial responsibility, endowed with the privilege or " tramping" from place to place in search of empl dyment. Forty years ago, no other mechanic was so sure of finding employment in almost any city, town, village or hamlet in the land ; and none required fewer or inure portable tools, none could assume a more genteel appearance at so small a cost, 11111111 who bore hardships more cheerful ly. 'l'lle•*e Neils a romantic fascination in the idea of being a tramper, or, as lie was more fatniliarly and laconically termed, a frump; and many lilt appren tice imbibed a kindred spirit or that peculiar privilege, as fitst its he acquired a knowledge of the profession, that, was to allbrd him the facilities to indulge in tramping; and many, too, becoming restive under the bonds Of an inexorable indent arr, would cut the "I lorditut knot" by a clandestine !light from their nuts ters' custody and service, long before the expiration of its term. How could it be otherwise, When every shop-board in the land, almost, eras crowded—ut least during the Spring and Fall trade—with its "tramping jours!" These were usually nearly all " roving blades," who had tunic in from all points of the com pass ; all full of song, •daliectiOte, of ad venture, 1111,1 of jollity. All they needed as an outfit, 1111 S a thimble, half a dozen needles, a small ',levy of beeswax, It bod kin, a pair of " paring -shears," and " ; and many had not even all these implements, when they first. were " seated," — but were com pelled to "sponge " 011 their neighbors until they " made a raise." In the pres .ent dryciterotr days no man can travel any considerable distance without enough of" greetilatcl:s " in his pocket to pay his fare on a railroad, canal-boat or stage. It was not so in the palmy days of tailoring; for although drao/tcji was a great eon ven iencedt was not a sine qui I non tll the if:Wiping jial9ley111:111. All him fouls he could " pacl:" in his coat pocket; and when he "took to the road" it made little dill'erence—with some of then--whether he had any money iu his pockets or not. 'l'liis was partly owing to the circumstance that lie'expected to find employment in the ne.xt town he would reach—which might be within the journey of a day, or halfdlay—and partly to a careless habit of •' trusting to luck," which he had cultivated through the bulletings of many years. As to a tr/m/:,—it did not belong to the valegory of the tramp- Ing-jour's and the ownership or that kilo' or " furniture," \vas strict ly confined to exceptional cases. A "cotton-trunk," however, was common, but by 1111 means universal. This was usually , composed of a bon-drum, a half yard, or more, square, and Wila bandied and carried under the arm, or a stick run through, under the knot, and car ried on the sin older. But even this mode or baggage-transportation was I with by many, and it was not at all an uncommon thing, to see a jour, when he \Vita seated, pull otr one or two shirts and send them to a wash-woman, While he retained a third on his body. There ; Were some who had not a second shirt, and a few who had no shirt at all, but these were exceptional eases, and never attained to distinction in the " profession," although they may have excited some notoriety. l'ramping be came:ln absolute mania among journey men tailors, and there were vases where Its manifestations wereso excessive that the subjeets 11l it bevaine too discon tented to remain long enough In one place, to even make a pair or breeches ; but, like ale" \Vaud, ing Jew," seem ed to be goaded on by an influence which they,. became unable to resist.— There was, therefore, a normal and an abnormal man ifestatior of the spirit of tramping arming journeymen tailors, but it is to the former condition We 11114 look, for the real or fancied pleas ures which attached to it, as a mode of everyday life. Some tramped, for tile sake of attaining greater proficiency in the art which they had adopted Its a life-culling; others tor the sake of that variety which can only be gratified in ' e raffistinctiiin to, "crooking-shears." width were usually large and unwieldy, and not at !ill adapted to the Maw-board, tolltWe, used exclusively I r "cutting o garments. Of, lill compara ble, however, wlt n 111.1'b•ginit and convenient Instrument now used for that purpose. The term "paring-shears" limy have originated in the circumstance, that tarty years a;,, and itiatitior to that period, as well as sulnequenl ly, nearly everything, that would hear It at all, wits made "raw-edged ;" 1101 reimh ed the edges to be "pared," as the nanhing touch to, the garment. We it", seen satinet nuide raw-edged; and although Chit WiLS never the general pract Ice, yet It exhltoi's the fail that the satinet of that period was very different from the shod Ized ramie, which sells under that name at the present day. 1 - 8/ind/-pond.v.—n pair of scissors, used for cut . Ling button holes, mid other "snipping" ape• rations, iu making up a garment. l'hey were quite unlike the present implements made for the special pull% one of cutting button-holes, and which can be used I'M no other purpose.— Not every Journeyman wits fortunate enough to possei., a pair, and therefore In this respect, he was also compelled to "sponge" on his neighbor. This WOO nut always because he WWI too thoughtless, or penurius. to provide a pule, hut because the places where good points were kept for sale, were not so numerous and accessible its they are at the present day. ..Bcfc'ed—a mantel -tailor always "seats" his Jours—or at least, always did , In the path,. v days of tailoring. Therefore, when a hour had plenty of work, he would nay he had "a good Seat of work." If an employer had sufficient work for 0 half a dozen more laborers in his occupation, he would say he "could .teat half dozen Jours.'"l It is phrase probably originated In the circumstance, thitt thirty-live and forty years ago. all. or nearly all, master-tailors kept a bael.aop of tel own, and did Witerally seat their inure. It Is altogether different now. for the trade Is almost wholly supp . i ed by, whs.; win then called piere-roader4 —that is, opera tives who take their work home, and make It In their own houses. t Money, had many synony hits, some of which were voutined to the 1i nits of the shop-hoard,. and others local, - In different parts of the coun try; such, for Instance, his John Davis, or the Ready-John sometimes sim ply Jobs or Ready; Spondulles; Dooteroomus, or simply foot, "for short;” Picayunes; Bits; Silver; Tin; Tow; Watt; liard-stuff, or simply Hard, or Stuff; Rags; Dirt; shinplasters, or simply Plas ters; Fire-beans, or simply beans; Rhino; Wherewith; Needful; Dollars; Yellow-boys, especially when alluding to Gold, and then also intdrops ; Coppers; Coln; Shad-scales, or simply Scutes; Brass; Chips; Paper; Dye \Charms;stuff; Quarters; and also the mitre modern names of Stamps; Currency; Green „ backs; and others which we cannot recall, or, 'not necessary to enumerate.” Some of these names have a special significancY, some seem nonsensical, and others, it would be hard to tell what possible relation they could have to money, or in what language they are; , bot this last consideration was of little consequence to the shop-hoard, for It knew what It meant, and that was sufficient. olcl i jantaWt slntettigat&r VOLUME 72 seeing different parts of the world; and , others again, merely to satisfy a very vague, and sometimes very vacant cu riosity. There were cases, however, where some were compelled to tramp through necessity. As for instance - , when the number of jours Increased beyond the ratio of population, or where there was a redundancy of advanced apprentices ; and, now and then, when one felt it convenient' to" leave his country for his country's good." Apart from things grossly:objectiona able, It was amusing, and even a pleasure to occupy a +wilt in some well-ordered back-shops. Although the social intercourse was light mid frivolous as a general thing, yet is was jovial, and full of spicy anec dotes and witticisms. Some old stagers had such a:metaphorical and hyperbol ' Ical style of relating their adventures, that a "green-horn " would be in per plexity how, to understand them. One would enter a solemn protest against the LlCColllllloliatiollki On tile lust road he traveled, exhibiting a pair of huge blis ters on his heels, which he would de clare he received rhling in the stage. Another would declare that for thirty days, in the city of London, he had not seen at " patch of blue sky big enough to seat a pair of breeches of the Joel: of Chtlts. One would seriously liver that he knew a restaurant In some special town or city, where he could get coffee strong enough to ty.ar On iron u,/gr, I Another in diseussing the social quail 'ties of his landlady, would (Wedge that ' she could talk the cars oil' rr cmd-iron dog, whilst still another would declare that he knew an Irishman who lay six weeks speechless In the long month of [ August, and ( sit his erg 105 mole'. Although the (romper was the highest type 0f a true manhood to many ap. prem ices, yet to many others, his life 11(01 habits presented a rock which they desired very much to shun, and did succeed In shunning. 'Among them lon, were some gentlemanly and re ' deeming characters, who had only be eon', tr.onpers temporarily, and for the sake ill mechanical improvement. !'Tramping, of course, as a general:thing I I In those days, was rieliy so, for very I few could avail themselves (o• the pub lic conveyanees of those days, even over roads where they existed ; but many I thoroughfares between the towns were ! entirely destitute of them, and there fore trumpery employed "Shank's mare "—that is, ",going it on foot." Hut the generation of grad trumpet's of thirty, forty and fifty years ago, has passed away, perhaps never to be repro duced, and there Is no reason that it should be. A new era ill tailoring and all other occupations has been ushered in, and there is no necessity for such a class of men now. The introduction of the steamboat, canal-boat, railroad-ear, telegraph, and the sewing-machines, have initiated a new order of things; and although these may still he looked upon as undesirable innovations by a few extreme old fogies, yet every year their numbers are growing less, and these are compelled to succumb to the inexorable progress of events. We du not want the Cooper Orams, the Steidle Borants, the Jack Curbys, the Jim Itradys, the Bill O'Stranders, the Joe Donaldsons, the Tutu Sather lands, the Harry Doughertys, the Haw edged \Vallaces and the .lack Campbells revived. These were some of the rep resentative trampers of their " day and generations," and although we are far front saying they possessed no virtues worthy of imitation, yet it is feared that these were marred with many blemish es. Be that its it maY , ours is not the tribunal before which they are to be morally judged, and if it were, we should feel more like throwing over them the mantle of charity, than exer cising its judicial functions. Tramping now is done by steam on "sea !and land," principally, and the foot-trumpets are few and far between. occasionally an antiquated specimen "turns up," and we confess, we always feel a warm side towards them, fur the sake of "Auld Lang Syne," unless they approach us in a state of inexcusable in toxication. I her experience as a "tramp" is very limited, and our peregrinations were along the great thoroughfares, five and thirty years ago. We Banal jour neymen tailors, as a class, :1 genteel or derly set of men, iu all that related to the external. But with some special ex ceptions, they have not attained that in tellectual elevation, as a class, which should be the ratio of their opportuni• ties. It is difficult! to throw off habits which have become ingrained in our moral and social constitutions, and therefore when at length one of our "craft" was elevated to the Presidency talked like a tailor"—and we are not sure, but 7rr natty be doing the same. (IRA NTELI.I.S. The Falr-Crittenden Tragedy [ Ity telegraph from San Francisco, we have the news that Mrs. Laura Fair, was on Wednesday last, convicted of murder in the first degree, for shooting A. P. Crittenden, on the :td of Novem ber last. Her counsel have given no tice of an appeal for a new trial, the hearing of which and the delivery of sentence has been set for the 29th of May.] It may not be improper to say that this verdict, until within the last week, was not generally believed possible, nearly everybody expecting the trial to prove a farce, ending with the acquittal of the prisoner or a disagreement of the jury. Niue•tenths of the community regard the vertihit as just and a proper vindication of the law, and a rebuke to the doctrines put forth by the defence in the case. The San Francisco Ra//din gives the following history of the homicide: On the evening ofThe :41 of Novem ber last, A. P. Crittenden, a prominent lawyer of this city, and a member of the firm of Crittenden & 'Wilson, went to Oakland to meet his wife, daughter and son, who were on their way from the east. lie met them and went on the ferry-boat El Capitan and took a seat between his wife and daughter, on the (leek. The steamer had gone but a short distance when Mrs. Fair, closely veiled stepped up, drew a pistol, anti exclaim ing: '' You have ruined me and my child !" tired at Mr. Crittenden. The ball took effect ill the left breast. Mr. Crittenden leaned back in his scat, and Mrs. Crittenden supported him in her arms, but he gradually slid down to the floor. Mrs. Fair dropped the pistol and ran into the cabin, where she mingled with the rest of the passengers. The wea pon was a four-barreled Sharpe's pistol. Captain Kentzell, of the harbor police, was on board, and In company with . Parker Crittenden went in search of the person who tired the shot. They found Mrs. Fair in the forward part of the cabin, and Parker Crittenden said: "'That is the woman ; 1 accuse you of murdering my hillier." Mrs. Fair re• plied : " Yes, I don't deny it. I admit that 1 shot him; I don't deny it. lie has ruined me and my child. I was looking for the clerk, to give myself up. Take me. Arrest me. I ant ready to go with you." She was then removed to the pilot-house, where she remained until the boat reached the landing, when she was conveyed to the station house. Mr. Crittenden was conveyed to his residence on Ells street, where he lingered in great agony until Sunday, November ti, when he died. Mrs. Fair, in the prison, raved wildly about her mother and child,and talked in a ramb ling way about what she had done.— Her attending physician placed her un der the influence of powerful opiates, but it was a long time before her condi tion was such as to admit of her being removed to the county jail, where she has since remained. Mrs. Fair is about thirty-five years of age. She was the wife of \V. D. Fair, a lawyer of Siskiyou, and married him at Yreka about fifteen years ago. In 1810 he came to this city, and commit ted suicide by blowing his brains out while in Doctor Murphy's office. Mrs Fair, a few years afterward, made her debut on the stage at Sacramento, and subsequently appeared in this city and several other places on the coast. Dur ing the Washoe mining excitement she went to Virginia City, where she kept a boarding-house or hotel. There her partner undertook to run the national flag up over the hotel. She threatened to shoot him, and did wound him. She was tried for the offense, and Mr. Crit tenden was hercounsel for defense. The jury, without leaving their seats, acquit ted her. She afterward came to this city, where she married a man named Snyder, from whom she was soon di vorced on the ground of his adultery. Here, as in the State of Nevada, she 'Was on very intimate terms with Mr. Crittenden. The relations between them were not private. They were fre quently seen together in public and sometimes her child was with them.— i * For several years the Intimacy contin ued; but he, at last, seemed determined to break it oft. The marriage with Sny ' der was a temporary interruption, but the intimacy was renewed after the di vorce. He was advised to repel her at once and forever, but he did not do so, alleging that he feared unpleasant dis closures, and that she would kill herself In the event of his doing so. She threatened to commit suicide if he left her. The approach of his family from the East brought matters to a crisis. On the night before their arrival and the last fatal meeting, they were in each other's company. He is said to have talked seriously with her, she threaten ing to kill herself if he forsook her, and he imploring her not to make such an attempt. For several days after the murder Mrs. Fair was in a condition of apparent delirium, at times calling on her victim to come to her, and saying that he promised to meet her at a cer tain time. She was constantly attend ed by a nurse, and no one was admitted to her presence. A physician attended her, and she was constantly under tin influence of opiates. When removed to the county Jail she was carried in a chair from her cell to the carriage. Mr, Crittenden, at the time of his death, wits about Ilfty-eight years of age. Ile was a nephew or the late Joint .1. Crittenden, United Slates Senator from Kentucky. While Andrew Jack son was President, he received an ap pointment to the \Vest Point Military School, and graduated In the sante class with Beauregard toil Sherman, in 1535. Soon 'trier the discovery of gold In Call ia lie came here, and made this city his residence. Ile was brother-In-law 0.6 the late Toil Robinson, who; at the time of his death, was Supreme Court reporter. lie wa, a very able lawyer, and ranked high in the profession in this State. Here Is one of the letters Which Mre. Fun: wrote to Mr. Crittenden. It was In troduced in Ilie line of evidence ut her triul : . Oh, iny darling! my darling! How can you do lilt' such 1101ISUIT 11/4 to (1011bt my love? ll* my letters have seemed uncommunicative with regard to what ain doing, It Is because I have had nothing to tell, because my life each day is spent In the same monotonous way. You will scarcely believe me when I tell you that I have never since m a y ar rival stepped foot out of the door 01 my room In company with a gentleman ; no one accoin pan ies me to 1113' Meals; have never been at any place of amusement; have never taken a walk with a gentle ; 1111Ve received no attention front one, and when a visitor calls in the evening t I receive none in the day) it is understood between Ina and myself that she remains ill the mom, so that I have never been alone with one. tiod knows! thkought tonal isfy you whoaresleeping, or if not sleeping, lying, by the side of a woman every night. We took lunch one day at the Willows 1, the day that I sent you the flowers,, unaccompanied by any gentleman, and spoke to no one while there except the waiter. 'The only gentlemen who have called upon us are Mr. Tompkins, once only ; l'iltons, sev eral times; Strow bridge, twice tall boarding here ; 1)1'. Rogers, once; Mr. Parma , taut old gentleman who had a room at mother's ill Virginia 1, twice; and i)rut'y .Malone called last night.— Seth Cook 1 have never seen but the once Of Which I have spoken. This is the solemn truth, so help me God! Do you now believe in iny love? Do you now think that my life is hap pier or gayer than yours ? Have you as much of which to complain as I have? Oh, no, no—a thousand times, no!— Heaven help me! my heart seems break ing. I low could I write—what could I write, except that I loved you ? And tlik I always said: this 1 maid say with out letting you see how bitterly I felt at being kept from you by her. You wish to know what I promised myself not to say to you ? Well, you shall hear. I promised myself not to reproach you for my banishment and her presence with you, for you have consented to sleep with her when you know tile bitter, galling feeling it brings to my heart, promised myself to remain away from you without complaining as long as you thought best and until you told me to return ; to never urge /wt. separation till you saw lit to send her, although you have shown a great want of firmness with regard to her. This is not said as a reproach, for I can imagine with what you have to contend, and oh, my darling, my precious darling, it is this thought, this knowledge of what I be lieve you are and have been suffering which makes the dismantling of my house and heart bearable or pardonable. I did not think when I first learned from your letters the fact, that I would never forgive it and declare that 1 would never write again. Feeling thus, I did not write to you mi yesterday, for which I am sorry. Judging from the pain I felt yesterday in not. gettin ga letter from you, I know what Illy silence will cause you ; but,darling,, I am to banish all doubtsand jealousies from my heart. It is very hard to do when I know that night after night you are are sleeping beside another wo man. 1 t seems to me that you might have made her choose between you and the furniture, and then if she insisted upon despoiling 1113' house of almost everything in the shape of furniture which I held sacred, then you ought to have remained mine—all mine. Do you think I could ever wish any portion of the furniture back in these rooms after she had desecrated it with so much wrangling? Never! Now, answer can didly, darling. Do you think your dear body will or can ever seem so pure ly and entirely mine as before it rested upon the same bed with another ? (treat land! Just place yourself in my posi tion, and then answer me. Darling, darling, I will try not to feel this way. Poor,weary darling ! poor head! if 'could only rest it fora moment upon my heart! I know you are suffering. I know you are weary. I will try, oh! I will try not, to grieve you. Arid when you tell me she is gone, and I may come hack, oh ! then how I will try to make my poor darling, happy again ! I low I will make the dear old rooms ring with mu sh. —heart music ! Let her take it Mi— llie dear old bed, the chair in which you held me in your arms—yes, let her take thrm. She ,qtn't take your heart, and shan't take our happiness. We will eon secrate the new furniture. You shall kiss me in every corner of each room, hold me in your arms in each chair, lie by me oil the sofa, and sleep with me in the bed. There, I defy her to prevent it, you darling! (101 l bless you, my darling, don't doubt me again. You must feel that I love you, else I could never so easily forgive your broken promises, but it is because I have faith in the future. I trust you, I believe you. You will never break another promise—will you ? I will write again to-night, my previous one, Yours, forever and ever, The Critical Periods of H ninau 1 ife From the age of forty to that of sixty, a Mall Who properly regulates himself may be considered in the prime of life. His matured strength of constitution renders him almost impervious to the attacks of disease, and all his functions are in the highest order. Having gone a year or two past sixty, however, he arrives at a critical period of exist ence; the river of Death flows before him, and he remains at a standstill. But athwart this river is a viaduct, called 'The Turn of Life," which, if crossed in safety, leads to the valley "Old Age," round which the river winds, and then flows beyond without a boat or cause way to effect its passage. The bridge is, however,constructed of fragile material, and it depends upon how it is trodden whether it bend or break. (lout, Apo plexy, and other bad characters are also iu the vicinity to waylay the traveller, and thrust hint from the pass; but let hint gird up his loins and provide himself with perfect composure. To quote a metaphor, the '"rurn of Life" is a turn either into a prolonged walk or into the grave. The system and powers, having reached their utmost expansion, now begin either to close like flowers at sunset, or break down at once. One in judicious stimulant, a single fatal ex citement, may force it beyond its strength ;' whilst a careful supply of props, and all that tends to force a plant, will sustain it in beauty and in vigor until night has nearly set in: Mr. Snooks was asked the other day how lie could account for nature's form ing him so ugly. " Nature was not to blame," said he. " When I was two months old I was considered the hand somest child in the neighborhood, but my nurse swapped me away for another boy, just to please a friend of hers, whose child was rather homely-look ing." LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING MAY 3, 1811. Speech of Mr. Speaker Wallace On the Free Vole, In the Senate of Penn eylvanlo, March 2N, 1S 1. Mr. Wallace ( speaker ). Mr. Speaker, I have no apology to offer to the Senate for arising to speak to-night, save the gravity of the subject under consideration, in its relations to our government structure and its present importance, in view of the prob able calling of a Convention to revise tho Constitution of the State at an early day. This question of the representation of mi norities through the preferential system and that or the cumulative or free vote has engaged the attention and secured the ap proval, in one form or the other, of many of the most learned theorists. statesmen and scholars of this generation. Not least among these Is the eloquent and logical Senator from Columbia ( Mr. Iluckalew who has drafted and advocates the bill now under consideration. This doctrine has been endorsed and applied within cireu In scribed localities, both in England and In this country, and one of the largest States of the Union has Implanted It in her Con stitution to a moderate extent, by a decided vote of her people at a recent election. llence, I urn not unmindful of the prece dents and of the character, intellect and energy that are thrown Into the scale in favor of the proposition, nor do I fail to recognize the last that, 1/11011 its presen ta don, It commends Itself to that inherent sense of Justice that hinds Its place In the minds of each of us. When called to Het during this session, I have already cast my vote for Its application to ill elections for School Directors within:the Common wvalth and I am willing to test the working of the theory still further by enacting the bill now before us, Inastnn eh as the elections are purely local, and It Is .viler to learn In the school of ox perienee whether the views I now entertain are well-grounded or (ana -1 Omni. The advocates of the measure rout mend their scheme to popular favor by the discretion with which they present It and the thoughtful deliberation they concede to the public for Its examination. They "make haste slowly," either vonscious of the ultimate triumph of their cause, by reason of Its eminent propriety, or content to abide the action of the people in flying from the ills they have to those they know not of. it can w Inle they occupy the avenues to the public mind, and the rostrum, the press, smut the practical tests through stat utory forms are made use of with fairness, but with great power, logic and skill. The libiCUSSiOll upon this bill, Its avowed pur pose of l'ami lionizing the public mind with the details of the system, and its alleged value as a measure of reform, give the sub ject a much wider range than is found in the provisions or the bill itself, a n d these facts, and the importance of the Idea in its application to the theoretical basis soil practical working (dour government, have compelled me to examine the proposed system in the light of its Justice, of its effect upon our institutions, and of its practical work inns. 'the freo vote ( which is the system em bodied in this bill,i as defined by its advo votes, consists In allowing the voter to distribute his votes among candidates as he shall think lit, or to concentrate them upon one candidate ; or, in other words, if there be six persons to be elected, the voter may give six voles to ono, or one vote to six, Or three votes to two, or two votes to three, or four votes to one and two to another, or otherwise combine or cast them as he may prefer. It will be seen, therefore, that any number over one sixth of the electors or a given district by con- • eentrating for plumping as it is called) their votes upon ono candidate can elect him, and thus secure representation of their specific idea in the body to which he is elected. :Practically applied under this bill to a borough containing six hundred electors, one hundred and one thereof can choose a member of the council. This seems just; it accords with our sense of right, and apparently harmonizes with the true theory of a representative government, insomuch as it gives to a larger proportion of the people than under the existing rule, representation in their late-making assemblies. A pure Democ racy is that in which the people meet, and by their own voices enact laws and select rulers, turd as this is impracticable, that Hellenic for representation that will give the nearest approach to the pure idea seems the just sue. In such a government as ours all are equal, and the actual representation of every person is the genuine standard.— lint it is not to be forgotten that even in a pure Democracy majorities rule, nor that in a representative body elected by the whole constituency, the majority rule must still prevail. 11 we go to the basis 01 the do trine, too, we rind no inherent right in any one to east six votes in an assembly- of the people. Nor is there any abstract princi ple that will compel one man to forego his right to vote for six persons, in order to out-vote the supporters of a dangerous can didate. Whilst it is to be admitted that the broad principle of actual personal rep resentation for all is a just idea, and that the scheme proposed tends in the right di rection, when considered in the abstract, yet the pursuit of the idea to its logic con clusion requires us to elect all our members of Congress, Senators and legislators upon a general ticket; for if it be right that the minority in a six constituency district shall have representation, it is equally just that any minority in the whole State equal to the ratio necessary for a member shall in like manner be represented. Indeed, the principle deduced to its inevitable con clusion is, that the minority is one, and the State is only perlect when his represen tation is accomplished and his rights pro tected and vindicated. Tne equality of all and the perlect representation °rum whole people combine the highest idea of repre sentative government. Such an organiza tion would be the embodiment of the in telligence, the sovereignty, the equality and the freedom of the people. No law can make it, no earthly power ordain it. It cannot be hastened save by that policy which tits the people themselves for its ex istence, ibr "man's institutions a' e the re flex of his own attainments." When such a government is obtained it will leave no trace or vestige of our present institutions, and our written frames of government, and our nicely adjusted system of checks and balances, will have vanished like "the baseless fabric of a vision." The perfection of government cannot be attained In com munities like ours. We must combine the expedient with the right, and as practical linen, determine whether we shall incur the hazard of losing that which we possess in the struggle for a greater good. The rule of the majority is a recognized rule of our governmental polity, from the township to the republic. ft is to be changed and subverted by the new system. All of our institutions have been framed on the basis of the law of the greater part, and the wisdom of a change in so vital a matter, without perfect knowledge of its value, may well he doubted. This rule is !simnel written in no Constitution or frame government. It is a component part of every starlet), and is coeval wish the first ntrans or representative government.— When we seek to trace its history we find it hoary with antiquity, and recognized and obeyed in all ages. Paley grounds government on the doctrine that the reso lution of the society is made the act of the individual by setting out with the proposi tion that the unconstrained consent of all is given to be bound by the decision of the majority. Most other writers upon the theory of government base the rule upon the consent of the minority deduced in one form tar another from the aetion of the ma- jority as the act of the State. Let it come from where It will, or deduce it by coer cion, consent or reason, from whatever premises we may ILYSLIIIIP, no one doubts it existence, and all submit to its authority. Mr. Jefferson, in his letter to Baron Hum boldt, under date of .lone 13, 1 , 117, :oust aptly states the rule thus: The first principle of Republicanism is that the fez inajuris pants is the funda• mental law of every society of individuals of equal rights; to consider the will of the society enouuced by the majority of a sin gle vote as sacred as if unanimous, is the first of all lessons in importance, yet the last which is thoroughly learned." "The American Revolution was brought about by a trillinpliant majority against the wishes and resistance of a formidable minority, and although the Declaration of Independence bases government upon the consent of the governed, it is as well-estab lished as any other historical fact that it had not the universal assent of the inhabi tants of the colonies. The dissent of the minority was deemed a crime, and in many cases carried with it confiscation and per • sonal punishment, and to this day that dis sent is held to have been a disregard of the duty of patriotism, and a stigma upon those dissenting." Judge Story succinctly declares the law of this subject thus : "The truth is that the majority of every organized society has always claimed and exercised the right to govern the whole of that society in the manner pointed out by the fundamental laws which have from time to time existed in such society. Every revolution, at least when not produced by positive force, has been founded upon the authority of such majority. And the right results from the very necessities of our na ture, for universal consent can never be practically required or obtained. The mi nority are bound,whether they have assent ed or not; for the plain reason that oppo site wills, in the same society, on the same subjects, cannot prevail at the same time, and as society is instituted for the general safety and happiness, in a conflict of opin ion the majority must have a right to ac complish that object by the means which they deem adequate for the end." This rule of our political society has been of the very essence of our development and progress, The great results we have attained have been worked out by the will and power of the majority assuming to itself the name and the consequent re sponsibility of the State. The robust vigor of the Republic, its energy and its vitality, are the legitimate fruits of power, exer cised by a majority In the name of the whole, and by the consent and acquiescence of the minority. The authority of the neople must have decided and distinct ex cession. It can only be through the representative body, and there must be strength and energy of purpose there.— The very nature of the thing, and our experiences teach us that this can only come through the political majority wield ing the power of the State. Any other form may bring danger, and possibly para lysis, at the decisive moment. Under the present rule, when well-defined issues are presented in a canvass, the people at the polls by their own action definitely settle them, and their representatives have but to meet and register their will, whilst un der the proposed system those questions are still unsettled ; men are elected who represent both sides of the issue from the same locality, and tne subject matter is remitted to the representative body, where it must still be settled by the majority rule. Is it not wiser to accept the result the peo ple give, and continue to recognize their capacity to govern themselves? That con centration of force which results from the recognition of the power of the majority will be lost sight of, and the magnitivent spectacle of an entire nation wrought to the highest point of political agitation, ac quiescing instantaneously and with digni ty in the decision of the majority, will bp merged In the reports of n representative body, in dancing attendance upon their sessions, or In the listless attention coml• quota upon the luck of individual inter est In the contest. Under a government possessed of written constitutions, the questions in regard to Its administration, vitally affecting the people, ;ire necessarily lbw, and id our periodical changes they become sharply defined, and the people are as competent to settle them icy voting for or against them, as embodied in the rempsetive candidates, as they are be veto for the hrdivid nab.. Let um apply 1.115 ;win ciples of lids bill to a Congressional dis trict, created for the election of six mem bers. (live the Democrats it majority of miu•third therein, and submit the single Issue or the repeal of the bill au thorizing the use or troops at elections to the people at the election for Congressmen; four Democrats will be elected' and two Republicans, and the question itself is un settled, and the minority go to Congress to act as a protest against the views or the majority, Under the present system it is definitely settled so far as LllO constituency of these six Congressmen can settle it, yet an far as these men are concerned, the same practical result is reached, for four always out•vote two. If the people are al lowed to settle it primarily, p3rfect ncgui esconce follows. Can we be assured or the sante result under the new system'' Any result is better than no result, and the de• eisive atitlon of the people at the polls Is In tinitelybotterthan the ineffectual movement that remits the ultimate decision to another and inferior tribunal, in which corruption can use Its power with de structive effect. What do we gain by it? Nothing but prolonged debate and con tinued struggle in the representative body, unless it is proposed to compromise upon the basis of four to two. We lose that moral influence and independent action that llow from the recognition of the authority of the majority, and we gain indecision in action and division in Council. l A'e negative the principle that the interests of the many are to be preferred to those or the few. We paralyze the energies or that ever restless, watchful and persistent minority, whose earnest hope it is to become the majority, and convert it into an inert, stolid body, whose very position unfits it for active leadership and energetic movement, and by dividing it into classes, cliques and sects, destroy the unity of its opposition. This will inevitably follow, for when the system shall have been fully initiated, we will oat , urally gravitate toward large districts in which the principle has fuller play. Mr. 1 tare, who may be culled the father of the idea, now advocates the preferential sys I teat, and proposes to elect the entire repre sentation in Parliament upon a general ticket, in a single district. his proposi ; Lion is in effect this: If there be six hun dred and tifty•eight thousand persons en titled to vote for members of Parliament, and there be six hundred and Illty•eight to I elect, one thousand votes choose a member. The voter may lint upon his ticket as many names its lie pleases; the first-naine 1 is deemed his first choice; the second, his sec ond choice, etc. 1 number one have one thousand votes, without the vote or A, his vote is counted for number ten, and Lillis down the list in the order of preference of the vote, until the whole six hundred acid fifty-eight have each received the quota of one Wonsan(' votes from the Whole body of the votes cast. This complicated and widely diffused system is the legitimate deduction of Mr. 'tare's theories, which are presented with force and Ire of the dangers to be feared is that it we Anal apply it to the election of Con gressmen, Senators, Legislators in large districts, that earnest watchfulness, result- ing from au organized opposition, without which we cannot expect fidelity in the ad- I ministration of the government, will no longer exist. Look at it practically. Cp on a ratio of 1-10,000 population, l'ennsyl- ! vania will be entitled to twenty-live men, ! hers of Congress. 'Phis is equal to about 35,000 taxables for each member, and any party clique or set that can command that number of votes can obtain a member. In such a condition of things, how many members of Congress would we have elect. ed front. this State upon specific issues en-' ' tirely distinct from questions growing out of the general theory of govermuent odic i n istration ? M ust not the most prejudiced 'ninth admit that many would be elected upon purely sec tarian grits rids:' Would not the votaries of the rival sects be most earnest in their efforts to obtain representation, for 'imposes that are probably commend able in Inclusel vas yet necessarily an tagonistic to the well-being and harmo nious working of our former government? I can conceive of nothing better calculated to arouse sectarian bitterneSs and engender religious strife than an opportunity such as would be afforded by this system to stator ! innate all other ideas to the single one of power, Mr the purpose of an idolized Christian organization. The represents tire elected under such circumstances would be the possessor of a single idea, and everything would he compelled to yield to the advancement thereof. Like begets like, and year by year more and more of the ! people would be drawn into the vortex created by the most MIKIS° passion that humanity is possessed tit', and party issues and govern mental doctrines would speedily be lost sight of in the absorbing struggle between religious theories. The same re sults to a smaller extent would tollow from any other special interests obtaining representation upon subjects, and with ideas entirely distinct from their legitimate purposes of government ; and these, neg lectful of all else, would combine with others only Mr the advancement of their own object. In such combinations its would inevitably follow, the interests of the public would La; the last objetas pro• I tested. In this co n dition of affairs all ilfganiZed opposition, or a utinerity party bused upon leading doctrines of government and ad ministration, cannot exist, and one of our most valuable safeguards will be gone. It is a necessity in the State and government that political parties based upon broad com prehensive political theories should exist, and not only' inconvenience but danger will follow from the non-existence of well organized and cohered opposition, or from the existence, of lesser parties missed upon special, sectarian or local ideas, and often in a position to coerce obedience to their de - mands. Of course by the term parties 1 mean an " organized body of men who agree on certain leading principles Lt administra tion in opposition to others, and who act in unison for their support." It has been well said that "freedom of thought and action produces ffontention in all spheres, and where great tasks are to be performed and When important interests are at stake, those who agree on the most important prin ci pies will unite, and must do so in order to be sufficiently strong to do their work. With out party administration and party action, it is impossible that the majority,should rule or that a vigorous opposition can rise to a majority and rule in turn. Liberty requires a parliamentary government and no truly parliamentarygovernment can beconceived of without the principle of party administra tion. It became fully developed under Sir Robt. Walpole. tinder the previous govern ments mixed cabinets of Whigsand Tories were common, when court intrigues and individual royal likings and dislikes had necessarily often a greater effect than na tional views and interests to which it is the object of party administration to give the sway." It may be said that partisan rancor has swept away the value of party organization, and that their destruction will be a benefit. Ido not think so.— Many evils necessarily result from them as administered in our country, but they are vitally necessary for a much greater good. They are essential to civil liberty, and their destruction would speedily result in the downfall of Repub lican institutions. One is ever the watch upon the actions of the other. The "outs" jealously guard the people from the mis deeds of the "ins," and even the slight est deviation from the true interest of the people is seized and commented upon by party leaders and a party press, and any departure from the path of duty to the pub lie is quickly occupied as the avenue to power by the antagonist. Important lead ing ideas can only be engrafted upon gov ernment polity by unity of action through party organization, and without it, failure would inevitably result. Closeness of com munication with the people and direct re sponsibility to them enables them to govern by force of public opinion, and the revolu tion it produces is healthful and invigorat ing to the body politic. Through it the majority party of to day may be the minor ity party of to-morrow. It is to be feared that a change of the majority rule will give us a majority continually ruling and a mi nority stagnating, and that the political or ganizations, whose annual, triennial and quadrennial struggles cleanse and invigor- differs vastly from that which English the ate the State will be heard of no more. orists may approve. Yet even there, differ- Our institutions embody the theory or ences of opinion exist upon the value of the equality of persons and of rights, as well new system, for John Bright has said with as those of equality of intellect and educe- great force: "He asked his countrymen to tion, and the power of the majority and reject this device of their opponents, because obedience to its rule have their basis in It wane principle disastrously fatal to every part upon the consequent idea that the ma- thing which we comprehended, and which jority of the people have the major part , our forefathers had comprehended of the of the intellect and education. Whether • true principleofpopular representation. He this be true or not, it is unnecessary to in- • infinitely preferred the practice of the ro quire • but it is Important for us to learn ' bust common-sense of those who had gone whether ibis rule and theory is to he before us, to this new scheme, which was changed, what its change implies, and what offered to us with so many professions for its probable effect will be. The advocates our good. He regarded it as the offspring of the new system all argue that a better and spawn of feeble minds. IL might have class of men wilt be selected if the minority been, for aught he knew, born of eccentric rule prevail, and that by the present rule genius; It [night have, and probably bad those most intelligent and best qualified been, discovered in;nomeof those abysses In are excluded. which the speculative mind oft delights to Mr. Hare, in the preface to his last edi• plunge; but lie preferred, he said honestly, thou. thus puts it: that Which our forefathers understood of "Everything which, in political lite. Its- freedom. of popular representation, of the erates and increases the scope and toile- mode of manulacturinga great Parliament. elite of enlightened judgment and cultiva to any of these new-1 1 / 1 1ilied and miserable ted reason, is of inestimable service nine to schemes w Melt have come to light In our those who occupy thchigher places in sm,al day. rank, and possess, in the greatest inea.sure, Ido not quote this language to endorse the advantages of education and leisure. it, but simply to demonstrate the differ " Rank and wealth set out with the most elites of opinion among statesmen and favorable auspices, and stand upon the theorists as to the value of the new theory. vantage ground of competition. They Let us glance now at the practical work will more certainly retain their position in Ingo or the system, so far as we rosy be able the race, as they themselves eschew and to forces them, or can judge the future by endeavor to purge political life of all that the pant. Is vile and base • put forward their highest 'rite tyranny of the majority rule Is ono order of mintin for public duties and pub- of the arguments in favor of the new pro. lie honors, anddo their utmost to prevent taus., and it Is earnestly assumed that it Is seals in Parliament, or great °Miles or most arbitrary in Its character and in pray• f enc ti nns , front b e i ng made the e pp l u t euge tics. Ido not think IL pOSSII,IO of triflers or weak men." this charge, either by examples from his- So In chapter 5: "In forming the repro- torsi or by our own t•tc porience, We have • tentative body to which Is committed the suffered from the tyranny of minorities, power of government and legislation, It k who, wresting the power of the State from undeniable that It would Ito wise to Invite the majority, have governed its through by every multable Inducement, and to guilt- the forms of law. 'filo very provisions of or with every possible diligence mid care, our form or government, designed to pro- Knelt minds lie are by eonstittillon, raper' test the minority, have, through the th ence of study, the best fitted to deal with skills of the majority, been made most the subjects which at this day come within potent agencies In the }nimbi of a tyranni the range of political action.'' cal :unto! ity. A minority possessed or So in chapter II "The Stale cannot all . •rd great energy nosh vigor of thes .o- to reject the services °Tony class, espeelaily • ted to a single Idea, hy the concentration of °Tony highly Instrneted class, unsung Its their power and the divinionn of their an- eons. It should be a fundamental prima- tattooists, have compelled obedience to pie that all possible facilities should Is, their dogma anti by skillful manipulation given to persons of every class to suffer of the machinery of government, which themselves as vandidates.h they have used with unnerupuloun hand, John Stuart Mill, In hie "Representative even to the ilinfranehisement of the major evernment," chapter 7, affirms [Litt "The ity, have maintained andtiorputuatod th eir natural tendency of representative govern- power. 'The Mar of Mr. Hare seems to lie I went, ate of modern civilization, le toward that through the reformatory tendencies of eolleetire mediocrity; and this tendency is the English people, representation 111051 he increased by all reductions and extensions given to the mass of the people, and that , of the franchise, their effect being to plutuas . when they do obtain it they will tyrannize the principal power lit the hands of °losses over the intelligent, educated and wealthy • more and more below the highest level or classy., and his anxiety is to protect these Instruction In the community. But though ' latter, WllOlllllO always places among the the superior intellects and clutractm, will minorities. In urging his doctrines he re necessarily be outnumbered,it mak es a great fors to our institutions, and quotes Mr. dilreionce whether or not. they are hoard. to Calhoun as his authority fur the charge , the falsedemocracy,which instead orgiving that what he fears is true of our govern- , representation to all, gives it only to the item; but Hr. Calhoun's theory was that , local majorities, the voice of the instructed of the minority representation of States, minority may tiara no organs at all in the out of peon 0, and that doctrine, WO sill representative body, 151 the American know, was carried to the verge of absurdi , tienioeracy, whicht is constructed on this ty Ly giving to eneh One tile power or nen , futility model, the highly cultivated ntentbcrs i tralizing ot• nullifying the action of the re• •of the community except .11,11 or them. as i 111/tinder. In this Republic there is no are willing to sacrifice their own opinions ' room tbr apprehension of 010 result that and modes of judgment, and become the Mr. lI are fears. Thy minority of to-day servile mouth-pieces of their inferiors in is the majority of to-morrow. Obedience knowledge, do not even otter themselves to law and recognition itf binding. °Wiwi , for Congress or the state Legislatures, so tines must over lie the duty of those in certain is it that they would have no chance poWels, Or the verdict of I heir masters will of being returned. The great difficulty of speedily oust them. democratic government has hitherto seem- • lint the charge is made that the majority ed to Ito how to provide in a democratic role is tyrannical, in that it compels the I society asocial support, a point trupput 11111.1.1 who 1111E1 six votes to bestow for six fur individual resistance to the tendencies places in the gift of the people to cast but of the ruling power, a proteetionl, it rally- one vote ror each of the six, and does not Mg point for opinions and interests which allitiv him to vote six votes Mr one man or the ascendant public opinion clews trills dfs three for two, or two for three, or otherwise i favor. The only quarter in which to look dispose of these votes as he pleases; and it fora supplement or completing corrective is aSSlltned that this right to vote his six at to the instincts of a democratic majority is ; pleasure is a plain and manifest right of the the instructed minority, but in the ordinary Suter. Dues such a right. exist? Where dues mode of constituting Democracy this nth it originatel"ro what authority can it be ; uority has no organ.. ' ! traced? It cannot exist as a natural or ab- And the Senator from Columbia, in his street right, for the elector only obtains his report. to the Senate of the Uifited States, power by virtue of the governmental corn in 1565, upon this subject, alli runs that the pact with him. It cannot be his right by system of the free vote " will continue reason or his qualification as an elector, for , Members of merit lon long periods of Inns that implies his aid and assistance in the in the Ilouse, because it will relieve them maintenance of the government of which he ! and those who support them Inuit the is a part; and if six officers be necessary to causes of change above-mentioned. They its prolonged existence, it is compulsory can be re-elected with certainty so long as upon him to vote for all of them. It cannot the party Whose representatives they are be based upon any analogy or fancied re desire their continuance in service, and it semblance to his right as a member of a ' may reasonably he expected thatsome Well pure democracy : fur in such a form of of distinction and intellectual power will government int single individual was al always be found in the House, whose period lowed to east six votes fur one candidate, ,of service counts by twenty or thirty year,. When Six apices eery to be tilled. All • They will be the great representatives of were equal, and each voted for one. In party, and will give lustre and power :mild d ie id utility and I e , Wilily, separate per• • usefulness to the House, while they Will 110 a majority' of voices, were the the objects of profound attachment and of bases of that system anti its mode of ex honest pride in the States they represent. pression. When there are six offices to be Our present, system, admirably calculated tilled, the common critic idea of common to rep?ess merit and lift mediocrity, will sense people at once is, each voter may vote Ibe supplanted by one which will produce one vote for six different people. Plump , precisely the opposite results." ing wtas an undreamed of acquirement in The extract's thusgiven from the writings the lays of the ancient Democracy. When o f t h ree of the leading a d voca t es o f minor- the people met to enact laws and select ity representation, when applied to the their rulers the man who had six ideas was , workings of our institutions, necessarily considered an strong in intellect as he WllO ' iwpiy. was possessed of but a single idea, and it First. That representative govern liana Was loft to the wisdom of modern English under the rule of a majority is a failure. theorists to demonstrate that lie who is Second, That the term of office of our leg wedded to one possibly impracticable doe , islators is too shot t and should be extended. trine, and has no room in his brain for nth- Third. That there is a necessity in our government for an independent power, based upon capacity and intelligence. The perfect answer to the first of these in ferences is found in the character of nntir in stitutions, and in the rapid growth and con tinued progress of the republic. To the second the answer is that in a gov ernment or the people, by the people, a Fre- queut and direct responsibility by the rep resentative to his constituents cannot be dispensed with; that governments with written constitutions do not need either hereditary or life long officials; that in ac tual practice men remain in office quite as long as the good of the people requires; than under a majority rule, if a represen tative be found faithless or corrupt in but a few things, he will not be rotated out; whilst under the new system he may be unfaithful in !natty things, yet if subservi- ' eat to the single idea upon which he came to power, those who deem that idea the es sential in government will continuo to re elect him. To the third, which is in effect an argu ment for the necessity of ant aristocracy of capacity rind intelligence, the words of Madison, in the tiffyffirst number of the Fen/er a / I .r/, is a better answer than I Van make. lie says: "In the extended repu it- I lie of the United States, and among the great variety of interests, parties and sects which it embraces, a coalition of a majority of the Whole society could seldom take place upon any other principles than those ofjus tiee and of the general good ; whilst there being thus less danger to a minor front the will of a major party, there must be less pretext also to provide for the security of I the former by introducing into the govern ! ment a will not dependent on the latter; or, in other words, a will independent of the society itself." It will thee be seen that the theory of in tellectual equality is to be changed, and a new mite of capacity to he introduced ; that the change implies a failure of our institu lions, by reason of the exclusion of those more cultivated and intelligent, and that a will Independent of society (or majority , I ased upon capacity and intellectual worth, is to lie herealter a component part of our institutions. In the actual practice, all recognize the propriety of selecting the best fitted, most intelligent and capable candidate, and it is by no means against this salutary practice I urge my opposition, but it is against the almost direct charge made by these writers that the majority are tin fitted to select this class of men, and the plain implication that the ininohly are superior in capacity anti intelligence. Why is not the majority as well fitted to do this as the minority? Is the implication just referred to a truthful one? If it be not so, why shall we make them a ppwer and a will indepen dent of the society itself? I would have inure respect for the eloquent and learned theories of Mr. Mill, if he were more prac tical than his recent Quixotic arguments in support of women's rights prove hint to be. Abstract theories and isolated propo sitions may be handled with great logic and learning, yet he who argues may be utterly incompetent to reduce his doctrines to practice, or to discern their evil conse quences, when applied to a governmental structure framed as ours is, and hence I view with great suspicion his theory of an instructed minority. In a monarchy in which an hereditary aristocracy exists, and where there are dis tinct classes and divided social interests, such a theory as this latter one may well be advocated, for it is of the very life of their institutions to preserve and perpetuate those classes and interests, as the checks and balances necessary to prolong exist ence. In the elections for the popular branch of Parliament, in which the creative power of their government exists untram meled by written forms, it can easily be understood that it is necessary to yield the fullest measure of representation, for the antagonism of those very classes and social interests can only be subdued by the power of the representative body granting con cessions or enacting reforms. Their Con stitution is plastic, to be moulded by Par 'lament in the light of constantly occurring events4or of the actual necessity of thepo litical situation. Our representative bodies have no such power, and the questions for them to determine are solely those of ad ministration, in which the ruling power is held to rigid accountability by the watchful vigilance of the minority. We have classes, sects and special interests in multitudes; their rights are equal and all are subject to the terms of a written organic law, anti both in theory and in fact they prove a source of strength and power, but if we give to each a separate representation they may prove a source of weakness and of danger. I very much fear that it will not do to condemn our young Republic to the monot ony consequent upon the adoption of the minority rule, but I believe that we must preserve the corrective power of the people, acting in their immediate and direct capac ity. What will serve us and our institutions or necessities of a great government, was entitled to twice as Innen representation as he, who felt that there wero two ideas requiring the attention of the representa tives of the people. Such a proposition negatives the idea of the equality of intel lect. It is not based upon any original 1 right of men entering into society, for in ; that agreement the sphere of action of one 1 being is controlled by the sphere of :moth- 1 et% and two men are not equal if by voting six times for One candidate One of them can compel the other to forego his desire to give two of his votes to a eandi date representing an entirely different idea. It is argued that both men have six votes, and are free to vote :them in antagonism, and thus to equalize themselves; but if this right is not an inherent one, or does nut exist by virtue of the theory Of a pure democracy, is it not a tyrannical and arbi trary exercise of power to require them thus to vote to equalize themselves? The right to cast six votes for six candidates, ire() many are to be elected, is a plain and manifest privilege, may, it is a duty, and any sys tem that constrains the will to vote for a fewer number, or tends to deprive men of the equality that naturally exists, in order to prevent the success of a mischevous 1 1 1 theory, may much more justly be called tyrannical titan that doctrine which makes all men equal, and perpetuates and perfects the original rule: of our government, that the lesser part shall be controlled by the greater. The news.heme assumes that the elected candidate under the present system is not the actual representative of all of his 'con ; stiluents, and that those who vote against him are entirely unrepresented. Outside of I the theory of the majority rule, this may 1 be true as to political questions, bub it is incorrect as to local and special issues.— Parties divide upon governmental ques tions, and Men are voted for or against as representing those ideas, while if it were a question of representation upon a local or ' " " special subject they might cast a vote pre cisely the reverse of that Which their party predilections and ideas of governmental policy require. Very many men of one political party recognize in the candidate of the opposition the most powerful repre sentative 01 their local interests. The per son elected combines In himself both the political and the local representative. His status as to political questions Is definitely settled by the vote at the polls upon the de fined issues of the canvass. The people have there settled those questions for him, and determined his lif.e of action, and it is his duty to obey. Yet upon the multitude of other questions in which his people are interested, no Issue has been made up, no policy is settled ; he has not been voted for or against as their embodiment, and he is upon those the representative of the whole people, and free to act as the best interests of his people demand. In actual practice we recognize this fact every day. No man worthy of the name of representative can take any other view of his duty. Change the rule, and instead of being the represen tative of the whole'lpeoplo upon the vast majority of questions alfecting this locali ty, he will represent special, local and sec tarian ideas, and his people will be divided upon those issues instead of upon the few leading ideas of governmental polity.— Which is better, to have six men represent ing the whole people upon all issues save those of general interest, or to have six men, two of whom represent this church, one that and another the other, whilst the remaining two are equally divided upon the question of whiskey or no whiskey, and no one of them with any defined idea as to his duty in regard to the leading ques tions of governmental administrations. It is argued that the free vote will banish corruption from our elective system. I very much fear the opposite result. I can conceive of no device by which the wiles of corrupt politicians and designing partisans will be more advanced than by a system that will give to the nominating convention the absolute control of the election. To be successful a minority must have a compact organization; their candidate must be agreed upon with unanimity, and all must be harmonious in his support. Undersuch circumstances his nomination is equivalent to an election. Is it not inevitable that the struggle will be for the nomination? Will not every influence that now besets the voter _ at the polls be transferred to the delegate to the nominating convention? At the former the law interposes its strong arm and pun ishes the corrupt and vile; at the latter the pander may pursue his nefarious game with impunity. Instead of separating elections from partisan influences it tends directly in the opposite direction, and professional of fice-seekers will have valuable aid in attain ing their object, No independent voting can be permitted, or the candidate will be 'uteri deed. The secret ballot will exist only in name, for the certain result of concentration of votes, as tail system will necessarily com pel, will destroy the secrecy of every man's vote. Organization of party forces must be carried much more completely into:detall, NUMBER 1S ifs minority in a six constituency (Usti'', t are but little over one-third, or they may lose one of those it is assumed the scheme assures to them, and to perfect such organ ization, management and drill are vitally uecessary. There can be no secrecy exer cised ; noses must be counted, and the poll lists made, and all the machinery by which partisans now control elections will be used more effectually, and will be indis pensable. Direct corruption will certainly not de. crease by reason of this new form. It ex ists in the person and Will crop out in the organization, and so longs. it does exist we will have it to contend with in politics. That system which will purge the body politic from this growing rive as the best ono, and we should sacrifice much to ob tain it; but we must take society as we find it,and contending with human aeprav itydt is plain that we cannot. decrease the vice, or get rid of Its effects, by inereasi fig the temp tations to its perpetration. Can there be any question that such temptations are in creased, If a man now corrupt be given NIX times the strength he has under the majority rule 7 lie could o , llllllllnd a higher price, because his power was in creased, and he would be more sought for, for the same reason. Would not the circle of corrupt influences be widened by the ability of the purchaser to pay a larger price, and the natural cupidity of men be excited to action by such ollYrs, who nmv reject them because too trilling in amount? Bud It Is argued "d e ft the corruption of voters will not ,tango the result of an 010.- 0011; that it will strict no caalidaic and de feat no candidate in wettest,' distriets, - and that, therefore, It will cease to exist IsthisemrroctlTßkoliMiX 00Ilatitilelley111,1 Viet for Congress, with two hundred anti tell thousand electors, divided upon part y Is sues In the proportion Monti hundred ail ten 11101/11111111 to One 111111111,d party lines be maintained, and no local cite diditte, Or candidate for a 11,0eilli. Idea be put In the field, ender the new role, the majority would elect three, the miniirity three. A change of live thousaild and env reverses the result, if sloclms cast but II single ballot, or each votes two yetis. In such a COnditiOn Of things would the mi nority content themselves with represen tation and make no struggle? All our tix- Nahum, proves the It aiwi...tiles. of such a pOilitiOn. Suppose lha elector be vested with the power of "plumping - six votes, and corrupt Inttuonees seek the elect lee of One Mall to whom the minority have ne claim by right, party lines being smelly drawn and all voting two votes each for the canilitlstes regularly nominated, how many votes are necessary to change the 11.• suit and accomplish the purposes of the corrupt faction? instead of live thousand anti one being required eight hundred and thirty-four plumpers two all that are need ed. l'ut the contested field in a dild,irent posution; üblitonte party lines 111,011 gen• oral issues, and give to each clique or lac. lion the opportunity to elect its bowl by the use of money, and I greatly fear t ha t our past experience Open corrupt has been purify 0011tra,1• out with the disgraceful sense ty r world it! ens. The application or thin theory to our in and Calf 0101•LIO system as now constituted, soconit to mu Ito lie premature and complicated. A vast, inns of voters have lately been added to 1.110 electoral ) force, a large proportion of whom dl, not understand the simplest application of the majority rule; a very large number or our people are untitled by education to under stand the workings of a new system, com plicated as this must necessarily be. who, nevertheless, are thoroughly competent to understand the clearly defined issues of a general canvass, when embodied in oppos ing candidates tinder the majority rule. 'rho new system does not come 10 11.1 en dorsed and recommended by practical ex perience and thorough tests of its value.— It is a leap In the 'dark, and its results are inappreciable. Possi lily or some good, probably for much evil. While I admit and recognize the lusthat of the theory of actual personal representa tion for all, I ant compelled to believe that our institutions and our surround ings are twt now fitted to its application in the higter fields thereof; that the rule of a majority is the fundamental law of every society of individuals of equal rights ; that under its workings wo have prospered and made progress; that it is necessary for the decisive results indis pensable in a government of the people ; that the new rule will obliterate parties, destroy a watchful opposition and substi tute therefor factions, cliques and sectarian interests; that it would uproot the (loctriim of the equality of individuals in all their attributes, now an essential theory of the government, and give us in its room if theory of all intellectual aristocracy ; that it would in this weaken the checks and balances of our system, and organize within the society a will independen of the mast or the people; that the new rule is based upon no abstract or Ma yonuisual right of the indi yid sal, but will coerce leen to refrain from the exercise of their manifest privileges as members of the State ; that instead of banishingeorruption it will tend to increase and extend it; that it will give to I clans in the nominating conventions the power now possessed by the people ; that it banishes independent voting and tends to destroy the secret ballot; that it is pi-villa tore, untried and possibly dangerous moor I institutions; and for these reasons, with my present convictions, I should be un willing to introduce it into the machinery of governmental administration ; yet in the local field to which the bill confines the principle, and for the purpose of testing its !value and the actual benefit-4 to be derived from it, I am content to enact it and from experience learn its w urkingn. The Supreme Court of the Unill.4l Slat PM. It is asserted by several Washington cor respondents that the Judges of the Su-I' panne Court of the United States have already met and voted upon the question submitted to thorn on argument last Tut•s• day, whether the Legal tender act of Issi_ is valid under the Constitution in its ap plication to debts contracted before its pas sage; and that the result was a majority ol one for sustaining the act, Justices Swayne, Davis, Bradley and Strong voting in the affirmative, and I notices Chase, Nil son, Clifford and Field, in the negative. The report seems to be true, howe, et' re luctant citizens who have been proud of our highest court and the legal in general may be to believe it. The decision immensely strengthens that growing faction which advocates the grad ual centralization in the General Govern ment or the powers which were jealously withhold from it by its !minders. It iiitro (tures, for the first time, into the pro, is's' of our highest judiciary, the theory of In • terpretation by which all powers not ex pressly forbidden us Congress by the Con stitution are regarded as belonging to Jr ; and by which, therefore, Congress is to iin• made as supreme as the Parliament is in Great Britain over the local laws nod rights or the people. kitchen°, the one great bar ! Her to the usurpations of the Federal Gov ' eminent has been the Supreme Court, which has refused tO fin fOron areas not au thorized by the fundamental law. 'lasts barrier now, iu the moat important case in which it has ever been tested, is with drawn; and tho people have no security whatever that Whenever it political party may' be found reckless enough to attack their local liberties to any extent, under the forma of the General Government, a political court will not be found subservi ent enough to enrolee its decrees. The centralizing faction in Washington began to boast, before the two new judges took their seats, that they would reverse the former judgment, and sustain the claims or Congress to ex traord in stry power. From the time they took their seats there has been a notorious and unconcealed want of harmony in the court upon this q tiestion, and a constant pressure of the new-made numerical majority to compel a re-hearing of the MVO). Having secured a re-argu ment, they have at once, and with scarcely time to read the briefs presented, forced a vote upon it, and if the positive assertions of well-informed men are believed, they have whispered the results before its public announcement, with the humili ating details of the nearly equal divisions of the court; and with the extraordinary purpose of declaring the decision at once, before there is time so much as to write an opinion upon it. In short the whole his tory of the case attracts the attention of the public to the personal constitution of the bench for the time, and the judgment is necessarily regarded, not as the decision of the law upon a question of interpretation, but as the personal opinion of Justices Bradley and Strong, who happen now to be members of the court. Many observers go further, and freely assert that these gentle men, who were well-known long before their appointment to have formed and ex pressed similar opinions in the service of the great corporations to which they be longed, are on the bench for the purpose of changing its judgment; so that the decis ion of the court is really nothing more or lees than the will of the appointing power. We shall not, however, without more con clusive evidence, believe that the judiciary of this country has Rank to the degradation of seeing iLself packed by the General Gov ernment in order to overcome constitu. tional barriers to its will.—N. Y. Ecesiati Post. " How much did he leave inquired a gentleman of a wag on learning the death of a wealthy citizen. "Every thing," responded the wag; " he didn't take a dollar with him." The Rochester Democrat wants Vin nie Ream to make a statue of Ben. Wade, as he appeared in San Domingo mounted on a bull, making a journey into the interior. An old Connecticut lady who was very much troubled by the prospect ot the introduction of gas in her village, and the consequent disuse of whale-oil, asked with much earnestness: " What is to become of the poor whales;?" RATE OF ADVERTIMINO BUSINESS A OVERTISEMENTS, $l2 a year per equare of tell linen; $2 per year for each addi tional square. REAL ESTATE ADVERTISING, 10 cants a for tho,flrst, and 5 cents for each subsequent In- Insertion. UENEILAL AD - ERTISING, 7 cents a line for the and, and 4 cents for ouch aubsequent Iron , lion. SPECIAL. NOTICES Inserted In Local Columns 15 cents per line. SPECIAL NOTICKS preeeding marriages and deaths, JO cents per line fur first insertion, and 5 cents fur every subsequent insertion. LEGAL AND OTTI ER Noncla— Executors' [tattoos =3ll Administrators' notice 2 5 , 1 Assignees' notices 2 50 Auditors' notices 2 0 1 1 Ot her" Notices," ten lines, or less, throe times 1 50 I'O4T•)IO6TFYI MILLINEItY .% Fifteen Hundred Dollar Funernl M rs. Margaret Kit died in this city in I fibber, IStin, leaving over a quarter in a million of dollars, the most of which she hal accumulated in the peddling business. She employed several men with loans to travel through the country selling dry goods. She invited six tenement-houses in this city, in one of which she occupied apartments. In her last illness, she sent for an undertaker, Mr. John Thorn*, to hour she gave minute directions In refer ence to her funeral. After her death, 'Mr. James .1. Poinitilly, the executor named in her will, told Mr. Therry to follow Mrs. I:elloren's instructions as to the manner her burial, Inn when Mr. Therry shortly thereafter presented a bill for about sl,ilno, he refused to pay it. Mr.Therry sued, and the case was tried yesterday before J outgo Sutherland. Si Its. ERA I. EX The following is the bill in detail on which >I r. 'Terry's claim is founded - To one extra size casket, looks and binges, manufactured to order expressly Two silver-plated platen engraved. Mack cloth encoring Silver Mimi mounting, plated Silver-plated diamond mounting . 121 ell Satin upholstering nut trimmings 1)0 no Eight silver-plated linildle4 :22 :ill One load camket l+l/ tilt nn, French plate, oral hoot. Intl len nth glassLllll,opecially to order Mourning decorations for house Preserving body on ice lan la ly's robe Ono wreath and loose natural flowers N ii.tiara no vv fn Ptltcnu pair 111A1 k kill gli.ven St.rving T 11011•., M• hind Intonitent Sealitig vault .... ...... Vffitr•lptp.o 11N :k1 ItrnrMr, 1,111111 t.. F.11.."11t volwhes. Use of,v w." 011 teeth 1111,,1 laud eaNkt , l. Nos en 'wrier., to eonugor)• .. I . llr porter., Box vantile., Ferriage -oil', itlllll , vo‘vlll4 , .. • • (1111 , 111:111 (11NtIIIIIT liki cif real: rl T. , tal amount II Tilt. lirNt ,vi.. ti pWiulill' \I r. .I.llm TliviTY, ‘v I, 111111 OM eirelllll - 6,11, , ,v14 : Question What instruotlons did Nl,s. Morel, give yon shout 1110 funeral ? ,%14- swer --She told too that she had sent for ine to make arrangements for llitr funeral, that silo could not depend till any of her 4nvit family o, carry them 11111. 11111 , 1 . her 111111111; She \4lllllO l l it arranged lonl carried out a., cording 01 her ewewishes OM/ 14110 warn leaving ellotigh behind for her relatives. she sant " you buried my ',cm 111111 husband and I inn not a hit iirritid hill what yell Will carry out lily own wishes." Silo then to'd ine to get her a vyuure built ru 11111 Whit plenty of i,olll 111 it I laughter!, a 111lt fr/11111 , on top, 111111 111.111 this frame It round lid to he put on ,vith hinges and leeks; in this round lid %vas to 44444144.4 an oval French plate glass, and over this glass another round lid to rover it, and also hi be tilted in will, looks and hinges, I told tier this Freliell plate glass was a thing impossible, I thought, ill 110 got ready, d• ir I conk] get It ready the W111)10 thing would hoot nit benefit., I asked her if she would have it !tat; ahu maid "no," she wanted this affair all round, no nuttier what it east ur \dial, titian it took: she would not be buried in anything else. I,aughter. She said also that if she died fiche,, this teas ready they would have to keep her until it teas ready, and the expression she used was to have it triiiiiiiell ill pplailditi inside, and havesiiell a eollin got tip as was never Seen 111 New York before, and pro bably never would be again ; and witness added. " bat knows I think Hilo got it." [1 ;neat laughter.) She said many tittles to spare no expense whatever; that every cent she wade was her awn. 1 made the retnitrk that her children would oppose the idea. She said they dare nut 410 it. " NVlntt right have they , to oppose," she said, "they are simply to 000 that lily wishes lire carried out; go to work and carry thew out." She was to be Ina Into tile leaden casket, and butt Was to he Hoid en'. lit regard to her funeral folio, she told !no that she had four ladies who elllllo up there Icl see her and talk will' her about her idea cut a habit, and that they hubsd tic tonlerdatel her, they were such stupid things. She asked nie if 1 mold get ,1 , 11111. W..teoll 1.11 leak 111.111 , 1 habit novortl my to her idea. 1 said I could ; that I know it hilly in this city that Wits Collipotent to lake any order. She asked Me to get her. lady cattle and w4t.s present at the giving or a part of these orders, Q.—What was the 44441110 made of t' A. - Clad: walnut t.—l ie feu knew what the aetual veal the lilaek walnut wits? Ai — it is nut the actual expeieui el' getting the thing; It is the nieeliankin, the rerun ; the convolving the idea; it is not the hit of wood itself. 14.—W hat were the expenses of her hits band's and ,1111 . 1 fin morals A do trot remember, they worn altogether different. funerals from what she fuel. I Laughter.' 1./. —lnd you about that time bury any other person living in it houseof about that. character;' A.—lf they %yore living I did not want to bury them. In: rout laughter.] In having the plate glass tirade I hat! tin hake the risk their breaking it,. I hail direr lions to wait till oun was uuuls it it took it month. The o,llln and glass worn undo r way, and the ladies' robe before she diem]. AIM,. NI Id I igan testified thatmial wow Malt by her friend M ro. h illeron to Mr. 'Merry to tell hint to come immediately, so that she 1,11111 give instruitliOns 11 to !tor burial, as her chrldreir would trot do it after her death; she told NI r. 'l•horry that It wits no twiner hey halt( it t.ttnk ; tin was to keep her until he was [ - miry, and to spare ten ex pense; she also saint sire was sorry she had not buried her Inislianil differently; ?OW (nid thin to luny better material for trim tiring the lonise than was insert at her bus -11;1.1'4 funeral, :es it would be of mane use to MO tatorwartls; this Was turn, weeks be fore her death. Amelia Itrondhent testified that shu was rm played by 'I r. Therry to make the robe. She went to the house of about three weeks before her death. The or, Mr was peculiar nun the witness did not Want to undertake it. Mrs. rem saint if witness would only make It she did not ware what it runt. Witness told her she couhl lint make it in a week. Mrs. 1:illoren said " will have plenty of time for I might lieu three or lOur weeks vet. You are the first one that would un dertake to make it." The robe WILY made of brawn eloth trimmed with grom grain silk ; Mrs. Nino., furnished samples Of OW riot!, and told to get IL. She said to Therry, "Now. John, I know sou will do it right; just according to my lustrecti,,..... , she betrayed a deal of anslety. she wanted 1110, the witno,,, s.ni, to bring the robe up and let her Cecil. I took it lip the following Monday and told her I should want more silk. She liked what I had done and said it was just what she wanted. Augustus Martin, a wholesale under taker, testified that he manufactured the casket, whirl, was an odd ono. Never made one Isifore ur sinru like it. In the first, place It was Iwo feet two inches wide, rather a small wornan, and about six feet four inches long. It was an expensive one, more so than usual. The cost of the glass plate was $12:,, and witness did 110( think there Wits more percentage of profit in the other news of the bill than there wan in that,- With reference to length of collies, witness said Iliat 110 had sent then, to tleorgia seven feet six inches long; they run Irian twenty inches to six feet four inches, two inches apart all the way up; the width is from Dille to thirty Inches; thought he got e.:',00 far the coffin, and did not think would be touch of a profit. The wittiest was unwilling to tell the profits of his business. The defendants relied on the losti irony of Undertakers 10 AIWA' that the charges wore unreasmiable. Judge Sutherland, In his charge to the jury, said' he thought the plaintiff was entitle:lto a verdict, and they, without leaving their seats, gave the plain tiff his full claim, with interest, amounting in all to I . e.—New York 8/01.. Scharnyl is dead. Ile was the leader of the Caucasians in their frequent revolts against the Russians, and his followers looked upon }dm as a man inspired by God. From Isii4 to Is:t1 he isunnianded the Cau casian army in a war against the Ittissians, which here the character of a holy crusade; but he was ii wally defeated, and at first re ported killed. Ile subsequently organized other revolts. and was for a Little successful, his operations proving particularly annoy ing to the Russians during the Crimean war. In Ih5U, however, he was captured and taken to St. Petersburg. The Russian government thenceforth held him as a prisoner, but supplied him ample means to live in comfort and even in luxury. Ile was recently allowed to go on a pilgrimage to the holy places of the Mo hammedan faith, and while ou the journey died at Medina, in his seventy-third year. Schartlyrs career has served as the theme of a sensational play which had a long run at one of the Paris theatres. His ex perience strongly resembles that of Abd el-Nader, the leader of the Algerian tribes, who for many years after his downfall WIL4 I supported by the French government of Napoleon 111. In Philadelphia, a few days since, Judge Woodward, while making his way into the North Pennsylvania Rail road Depot, was surrounded by pick pockets, who quietly relieved hlm of a pocket-book containing $6OO in cash and a check for $1,700. The Judge soon atter discovered his loss, but in the meantime the thieves had jumped into a carriage and were driven oil.