TILDES IIKKOKK TflK COMMITTEE. Home Very Hard Rap* at the Congres. sloiml Inquisitors. MR. TILDKS'S TKHTIMONY. Governor Tilden (in a feeble, al most inaudible voice) spoke a* follow* in reply to the question;: of tbo com mittee: —I have not had an opportun ity to sec tho lithographic copies of tho cipher telegrams (the publications of the trauslation of tho cipher telegrams in the New York Tribune); I mean those relating to South Caroliua to the 6th of October, 1878; those relating to the State of Florida, published on the Bth of October —I read these transla tions; I do not recognize among them a single one 1 had ever seen in cipher or translation, or the contents of which had in any manner lieen made known to me; with reference to those of them that relate to negotiations to induce the members of the canvassing ltnurd* of South Carolina ami Florida, to give to the Democratic electors their cer tificates I swear positively I never saw one of those telegrams, either in ci pher or translation; the contents or purport of any one of them was never communicated" to me in any maimer whatever. I never had any knowledge, no in formation ami no suspicion of this ci pher correspondence or of similiar correspondence, or that any such had existed till it was announced in the Tribune, followed up by the publica tion of the same a few days later; no offers, no negotiation on behalf of any member of the Returning Board of South Carolina, or the Board of State Canvassers of Florida or any other State was ever entertained bv my au thority or with my sanction; no nego tiations with them, no dealings with them, no (Killings with any one of them, were ever authorized or sanc tioned by me in any manner whatso ever; the first information I ever did receive that any such negotiation ever existed between any Democrats or any member of the Board of State Can vassers of South Carolina to obtain their certificate for the Democratic electors happened on the 20th of November, 1870; I am not able to fix that date positively by my own recol lection, but I fix it from other cir cumstances; it was the day I first learned that Colonel I'elton was in Baltimore; I recollect the fact ami fix the date from the circumstances that have appeared during this investiga tion; on the morning of Novemlier 20, 1876, Mrs. Colonel I'ellon men tioned in my presence that her hus band had gone to Philadelphia; it was a casual mention; 1 did not know that he was going to leave the city nnd I did not know that he had left the city till she mentioned it, and her mention of it was not such as to at tract my attention particularly; a lit tle later on the same morning I was called on by the treasurer of tbo Na tional Democratic Committee, Mr. Edward Cooper, apparently on his way down town, who then told me Colonel I'elton was in Baltimore, not Philadelphia; he told me that Mr. Pel ton had received or was receiving an offer on liehalf of somebody represent ing or claiming to represent the Board of State Canvassers of South Carolina to give their certificate to the Dcrno cralic electors for a sum of money MR. TILDEX KMPIIATIC. I immediately said (continued Mr. Tilden with greater force) that no such offer should be entertained ami that no negotiation of that nature should he tolerated; that not a cent should be furnished for any such purpose; that ■Colonel Pelton should lie immediately .telegraphed for to return to New York; I did not at that time know .that Mr. Smith M. Weed had gone to tSouth Carolina —that he was there or bud been there at any time; I had not *een him after the election, and had no knowledge of his wherealoiits at that time; my conversation with Mr. Cooper was very brief —the wholemut k -r was disposed of within from five 14, tcu minutes; 1 made no inquiry with regard to any details, and there was no discussion between us; Mr. Cooper cc tcurred with me entirely as to the men.- ~re" to l *> taken : though I took it for panted that he would make every ne rewary communication on the subject I . not leave it at that; I obtained . h'. m Colooo Pelton'a address iu Baltimore and rauaecl him to be tele graphed to in a perorate *7 manner to return to New \ ork; my dispatch to Colonel Pelton was in ordim T f langu age; I bad no cipher, 1 could . rend a cipher, and I could not transit. *e '" lo cipher; it never occurred to me that there was any reason for concealnu my belief is that the dispateh W* Colonel Pelton to return was scut in my own name; I think I sent it or had it sent within ten minutes aAer Mr. Cooper left the house; Colonel Pelton returned that night to New York; with reference to Florida, I never saw any one of the Florida telegrams, cither in cipher or in translation; the contents of no one of them, so far as I know, was ever communicated to me; I do not think the contents of any one of them relating to the course of ibis controversy thus far was ever commu nicated to me, and in looking over them I am not able to recall any one of them that I had ever seen lcfore; 1 did not know, and was not informed, that there had been any offer from anytiody representing, or claiming to represent, the Florida Board of Can- vassers or any niombor of it to give that vote to the Democratic electors till nftcr the certificate hud l>ecn given and the vote# of the electors dejMisi ted for transmission to Washington; my first information on the subject was subsequent to that and after the fith of December, 187(5; sometime af terward Mr. Manton Marble returned from the South; 1 don't know when, but before I went to England, he call ed ou me one day and inentioucd to me as of a bygone affair tliut the State of Florida was offered, or rather the certificate, which would have yielded UH the vote, but he said the offer had been declined; sometime later in the sum mer, about the time Mr. Marbel's let ter on the Electoral Commission ap peared, I made a remark to Colonel Pelton about this oiler from Florida, and he answered in u single sentence that all offers had la-en declined; that was all the knowledge 1 had on the subject till the publication of the de spatches; with reference to the State of Oregon I saw none of these tele graphic dispatches; 1 now refer to the dispatches contained in the Tribune, No. 44; I never saw one of them in cipher or translation; the substance of no one of them was ever communica ted to me, with the exception of the dispatch from Governor (Jrovor, stat ing that he should give the certificate of the State to the Democratic elector Crouin; the substance of that dispatch was communicated to me by sornelxsly; 1 did not know that it came in cipher till after it np|>curcd ou the examina tion of the Morton committee; in what form that communication wus made to me I cannot now state, but I was made aware of the fact; several of these cipher telegrams ap|>eared to have been addressed to Coloucl Pelton at No. 15 Grantercy Park, my resi dence; 1 asked one of my young men to look them over and tell me how many there were of them; 1 think he told me there were fifteen of the Florida dispatches addressed to Col. l'clton, chiefly sent bv Mr. Manton Marble; as fur as I know and believe no one of those dispatches was deliv ered at mv house; l'elton's habits and hours and mine an- entirely different; I wa still Governor of the State of New York, and had many executive duties to perform; I was burdened by daily receptions of people who came to me from all parts of the l'uitcd •States; 1 think from three to five hours a day was the least time I was com pelled to devote to these duties; Colo nel l'clton seldom came to the house till after I had been long in bed; he was very busy at the committee rooms and I saw very little of him, but I think if any considerable number of tele grams had come to the bouse 1 should have found out the fact some how; I do not believe any of these cipher telegrams ever came to the house —at any rate, they never met my eye nnd they never came within my knowledge. THE VISITING STATESMEN. Only one word as to the gentlemen who were sent Houth to the disputed State* to watch and guard that can vass on behalf of the democratic par ty. That measure originated either with Mr. Hewitt or General Grant. Within a day or two after the election I think General Graul wrote a letter in which he proposed such an expedi ent; Mr. Hewitt had either started it before or embraced it immediately after; 1 did uot select or fend the gentlemen who went to these di*put-d .Slates, and with few exceptions they were not sent after consultation with me. Here Mr. Ti Idea's voice became very feeble again. 1 did aot attempt to supervise their acts; I did ant communicate with them ; in no instance during the whole of the time did I, directly or indirect ly, communicate or correspond with any gentleman that was in the South on that business ; I never received any communications from them or any of them except one communication sent by Mr. llamiall, Mr. atch, except verbally to Mr. Otteudotfer ; after be returned to New York he culled upon me; I was very busy all the time; I look it for grunted that these gentlemen under stood their business and I did not un dertake to direct them ; the idea that they were my jarty,chosen generally by its organization ; no money, so fur as I knew, ever went to one of these States with any commission or autho rity or contemplation to do anything which these gentlemen ought not to do, or to do anything hut defend the in terests of the democratic party —to watch and guard these interests against apprehended fraud ; during the whole i one from the 7th of November, IM7H which was the day of the election— to tbe 6th dav of i>eccmber in the same voar, nmf which was the day on which the electors met. and deposited their vo es, I maintained a uniform at titude; my purpose was that under no circumstau oe* would I enter into com |ietition to obtain tho certificate of the cauvassiug boards in the disputed •States, even those to which I believed we were entitled, except by discussion, argument, reason, truth, justice. Here Governor Tilden's voice rang with ve hemence. There never was a time, a moment, not an instant in which I ever entertained an idea of seeking to obtain these certificates by auy venal inducement, any promise of money or of office to the men who had them to give ami dixjioxo of; my purpose on that subject wax j>erfertly distinct and invariable; tbut wax generally a xumcd by all my friciidx without dis cussion ; it may have been xometinica xo expressed, but certainly whenever the slightest occasion arose for it to be discussed it was expressed; it was never deviated from in word or act. MIT. TILDKN'H PERORATION. To the people who have, I believe, electeil me President of the United Suites, to the four and one-quarter mil lions of citizens who gave mc their suffrages I owed 11 duty and u service and every honoruble sacrifice, but not a surrender of one jot or title of my sense of right or my perxoual self-re spect, whatever the disappointment to those who voted for me, whatever the public consequences of suffering from a subversion of the electoral system, by which alone true self-government can lie carried on ; by whatever ens uis try a different course might be ad vocated or defended, I was resolved that if there was to la; an auction of the Chief Magistracy of mv country I would not lie among the bidders. (Applause.) I wax determined in such nil event, or apprehension of such an event, that I would meet such a degraded condition of public affairs, not by sharing it in any degree, not by acquiescence, not by toleration, but by an unqualified, jH-rpetual protest, ap pealing to the people to re-assert, re establish their great rights, the great est of their rights, the right without wliieh nil others were worthless —their right to elective self-government. WIIONE BOY IS THIS I AN IXqI'IRY FROM ACROSS THE OCEAN FOR A CHILI) TAKEN AYAY BY A TRAVELLING HIIOWMAN. HiiUdalphU Rtcord, Tho , U The strange hixtorv of n boy taken from his home in hnghiml has just IK-CII dcveloj>ed by the Society to I'ro tect children from Cruelty in thi* city. In lHiiif little Hurry (filbert Gratton livet| with his uncle in Loudon. Hi* father and mother were both dead, and Harry, then hut -ix years of age, had no other protector liiau the rela tive mentioned. A showman, known a* "Monsieur D'Atalie, the Man with the Iron .law," and a woman celebrated for her mus cular powers, called "Angelo," pre vailed on the uncle to transfer the cus tody of the orphan to them. K*tii after gaining |fOsse-aiou of the hoy the man and woman came to this country to give exhibitions, and immediately I x'gmi the training of their new charge for acrobatic feats. Not long after their arrival in this country D'Atalie ami "the strong woman" began an en gagement iu this city, exhibiting at such classic retreat* ax the Grand Central Theatre, Fox's Variety Thea tre. ami finally attached themselves to a circus. While exhibiting in this city the man was arrested for brutally beating the little fellow at the instance of the St, George's Hocietv, and was put un der hail. D'Atalie gave a lawyer •*OO to settle the matter, "and bv the advice of his counsel," the woman Au gelo now nap, "D'Atalie left the city." The boy wa* placed in the Northern Home and kindly cared for bv that institution, under whose su|iervision lie ha* since remained. Two years later D'Atalie returned to this city and wax ngain arreted, this time for jumping his hail, ami got out of the clutches of the law officers by paying $2,000. .Subsequently ho died, and "Angelo" married a man named Nat Austin living in Worces ter, Mass., ami thus all former rela tions between the little foreigner ami his recreant guardians were severed, lint, though separated by 3,000 mih* of water from his native land, the orpalui huv ha* not IHS II forgotten during all these long years. A few week* aince the New York Society to Protect Children from Cru elty received a request through the British Consulate General'* office, asking the society to look up the little fellow ami ascertain hi* present condi tion. In the course of their investiga tion*, they ascertained the location of "Angclo, the Strong Woman,'' ami asked the officers of the 8. I'. C. C. at Boston to assist them. The woinnn "Angelo" wa* interviewed, and from her the novel story of the Iniy's expe rience was learned, the woman making the error of locating the hoy at tho House of Refuge in thin city. These fact* were transmitted to Sec retary Crew, of the 8. I'. C. in this city, and on hint devolved the task of disclosing the present location of the hoy. The records of the House of Refuge bore no evidence of tin- littln fellow's commitment at that institu tion. By a fortunate circumstance it was, however, discovered that the lost hoy had lteen placed in the Northern Home, and by that institution given a Siod home with a family residing iu ow Jersey. This information Secre tary Crew at once telegraphed to tho officers of the New York society, and yesterday received in return a hnlf dozen telegrams concerning the case. The officers of the Northern Homo say thai, as the boy was sent to them by a decree of the Court, they will not ferl justified in transferring hiin to any other authority tliau that of the British Consul. Who it is that start ed this inquiry through the British (Consul at New York, what steps will lie taken to recover him, or what for tune is awaiting the young alien, are matters to be developed iu tho future. UENEKAL NHEKMAN ON OKOICOIA. HE THINKH IT IH A KINK COUNTRY FOR No! T..KRNKRB TO EMIGRATE TO. lxMtr to K4U.tr ll.iwell, oflli* AIUnU CoiiMUuUoo. The reason why Georgia hax not kept pace with such States a* Califor nia, lowa, Wisconsin or Kansas ix be yond question that emigration would not go where slavery existed. Now that this cause is removed there is no longer any reason why Georgia, ex pecially the northern part, should not rapidly regain her prominence among the great Htatesof our Union, i know that no flection is more favored in climate, health, soil, minerals, water and everything which man needs for his material wautx and to contribute to his physical and intellectual develop ment. our railroads, Hlreadv finish ed, give your people cheap supplies and the means of sending in every section their surplus products of the soil or of manufactures. You have immense beds of iron and coal, l>esidex inexhaustible quantities of timber, oak, hickory, beech, poplar, pine, etc., so NIT'OSSARY iu lIIIMIUITI factories and which arc becoming scarce in other sections of our busy country. North (ieorgia i.- peculiarly adapted to fruit orchards, to gardens and small farms, and all you need to make it teem with prosja-ritv is more people from that class of Northern farmers and manufacturers and that other large cla*s of Luro|>cuii emigrants, which has converted the great North west from a wilderness into comforta ble home* for it* million* of contented JH-Oplc. I have ero-cd this Continent ninny tinn-s, by almost every possible route, and feel certain that at this time tio single region holds out a* strong inducements tor industrious emigrants as that from Lynchburg, Virginia, to Iluntsv'llc, Alabama, right mid left, e nbr lC ig the moun tain ranges and intervening valleys, •■specially Last Tennessee, Nortli < icor gia and Alabama. I hope I will not give off< n-c iu saying that the present |M>pulation ha* not done full justice to this naturally beautiful and most-fa vored region of our country, and that two or three millions of |xwple could he diverted from the great West to thi* region with profit ami advantage to all concerned. I nrn from my recent visit, that Northern profiuDil men, man ufacturers, tnccbauics and farmers may come to Atlanta. Home and Chat tam>..pi witli a certainty of fair deal ing and fair encouragement. Though I a personally regarded the U-tc noir of the late war in your region, the author of all your woe*, yet I admit that I have jut iiitve i over the very ground desolated by the rivil war. and have received everywhere nothing hut kind and courteous treatment, from the highest to the lowest, ami I heard of no vioY ire to others for oj in ions sake. Borne I'uion men s|M>ke to nie of wx ial ostracism; hut 1 saw nothing of it, and even if it doe* exist it must disa|i|x-nr with the pmwnt genera, on. Our whole fnimcw-nrk of govern treat ami history is loumled on the personal and jxtlitical equality of citizens, and philosophy teaches ihat social distinctions can only rest on |x'n>onal merit and corresponding in telligence, and if any part of a com munity clings to distinctions founded on past conditions, it will grow lex* and lex* with time and finally disap |war. Any attempt to build up an aristocracy or a privileged el a* at the Suith on the fact that their fathers or grandfathers once owned slaves, will result in a ridiculous failure nod sub ject the authors to the laughter of mankind. 1 refer to this subject in cidentally herauxe others have argued the ease with me. hut whether at tempted elsewhere iu the South. I atn certain it will not be attempted in Georgia. ST. V U.KSTINK. HOW TIIK Ct'XTOM or SKXIHXO MIS XIVK* OX llla DAY ORtOIMATBD. According to some accounts Saint Valentine was a Bishop, and to other* a I'resbytci, who suffered martvrdom alter a years imprisonment, A.lj., 2A7. He wax probably canonized at an early js'riixl. There is historical proof that he was regarded a* a Saint about the middle of the sixth century. Whntcly states that St. Valentine was famous for hi* love and charity, and that the custom of sending valentines on his festival txik it* rise from the*e traits of hi* character. Other* affirm that it was derived from the custom at Home during the celebration of the Lunereaiia, which always took place iu February, when young women were placed in conspicuous positions ftum which the opposite sex chose compan ions, a* chance directed. The early Christians finding it impossible to sup prexx this custom modified it, and ax the frativa! of St. Valentine occurred in the same month they amigncd it to the day observed in commemoration of that SaiuL Whatever nmv havo leeu the orign of sending love-breath ing and other missives on that day, it has lieen continued in all Christian countries, and seems not likely to fall into disuse, and anciently articles of clothing, jewelry and even heavier materials wore sent as presents on this occasion. The numlter of letter* annually sent on this occasion in the United Btatiw amounts to several millions. The cus tom of sending valentines impose* con siderable cost on the Post Office Do- Crtment aud additional labor on the tcr carriers. Besides being a means of harmless enjoyment, and in many instances of strengthening the bonus of friendship and affection, the manu facture of these articles affords employ ment to hundreds of women and others who are unable to ohtuin a subsistence by the more severe and toilsome pur suits of life. The Colored Man In Politics. The action of a delegation of the most prominent colored men of the Houtli, iu organizing to investigate the future of their race, hax evolved tin very natural conclusion that the blacks must segregate themselves from the Republican party. To this result they arrived after a calm, deliberate and dispassionate study of the relations now existent between their people and that party ; they find that the Repub lieanx have found that they ran no longer uw- the negro, and so have no further use for him. The truculent will eventually IK; always caught, woodcock like, in their own spring. Oliver Morton, with re. inarkable foresight, saw that the gift of franchise to the negro would eventual ly turn to the Is-iiefit of thcHouth, and op|KHKsl it; hut the rapacity of Radi calism grasped at an immediate gaiu, without thought of future looses, and awarded them suffrage for a few years' brief power. Now they liud that the enfranchised colored (spallation, through its representation in Congress, throws the balance of power into the hands of the South, and through the South locates the Democratic party solidly above the lb-publicans. And now it would, with the same swift di rectness with which it gave suffrage to the colored people, divest them of that privilege, or fearing so to do, would pi< k them up Ixsdily and scatter them, Windom-like, to the northwest winds —d > anything, iu fact, to remove them and tin ir representative JKJWIT from the South. In fact the Republican party would now show up in analogically the same line of trade a* the negro marketers iu slavery days —break up homos and homesteads and scatter families.— and ' that, too. with the difference that in j the slavery day* there was a legal right to the unhappv people who were j traded and battered off; but now they are the equal* of all other men. i The colored people will not have thin w>rt of thing, ami w there dele gations have decided that they are citizens, to -tay where they iihuw, and i not cattle, to In- transported fl ] In connection with thedeathof (Ten* j ersil Cadwalader, of Philadelphia. the more intimate friends of cx-Pn-*idt Buchanan, Friday, mentioned their curiosity to know what would now become of the jmjM-r* of the last | I K-mocralic President, a* they had | Im-n informed that on the death of jW. H. llced they passed into the | batid* of General Cadwalader, and that it was his intention to collate them in connection with a biographical , -ketch of Mr. Hu< hanan. It was in timated that Mrs. Johnson (Harriet I Cane; ha for several years been en deavoring to secure possession of the pnjiers, that they might IK- applied to the purpose originally intended by Mr. Heed. Democrats of the old -chool who have found their way bark to Congress or other }**itit>u* at the •-apital seem to take much interest in having Mr. Buchanan's memnrv vin ' di' au-l from the aspersions heaped u|s>n his character on account of the j want of vigor displayed at the close I of his administration. A Ising Forgotten herd Tarns I p. A special dispatch from Washing ' ton says: "An ancient and long forgotten document ha* nx-entlv come to light in this city, the discovery of which has led to negotiations between the Portu guese minister and the secretary of state. In 17SW) congress passed an act appointing Gustavus .Scott, William Thornton and Alexander White com missioner# to establish the temporary and permanent form of government of the United States at Washington. These commissioners were empowered ;by President Washington to grant a site on the public grounds in this city for erecting buildings for the residence of foreign ministers. The (Chevalier Cyprian Ribcro Friera, minister resi dent of the Queen of Portugal, signi fied to the commissioners hi* authorisa tion to accept a site for buildings to lie erected for the Portuguese Legisla tion. The commissioners, by deed duly executed and signed and approv ed by John Adams, President, and Timothy Pickering, secretary of state, granted to the Queen of Portugal, her heirs and successors, in consideration of one dollar, a trifle over two acres of land situated near the west gate of the executive mansion grounds, south of the White House. The m-ords of the transaction were buried in the files of the state depart meet for years. Some months ago the Portuguese min ister discovered in the files of the lega tion evidences of the grant, and the matter was laid before the department of state. A satisfactory arrangement with the Portuguese government will be made," Kind Inquiries. Oou*in Kale wax u sweet, wide-awake beauty of about leveuteen, and she took it into her head to go down to I>mg Inland to *ec norne relation* of hern who had the misfortune to Jive there. Among these relation* there chanced to IKS a young swain who had seen Kate on a previoun occasion, and seeing, fell deeply in love with ber lie called at the hon*e on the evening of hi* arrival, and *he met him on the piazza where *he wax enjoying the eve ning air in company with two or three of lier friend*. The poor fellow wax *o bashful that he could not find hi* tongue for *ontu time. At length he stammered out: "How'* your mother?" well, thank you." Another nib-nee on the [>art of Josh, during which Kate and her friend* did ! the lx*t they could to relieve the mo ; notony. After waiting about fifteen minute* for him to commence to make himself agreeable, he again broke the xpel I by— "How'* your father?" which wax an*wered in much the *ame manner ax the (irxt one, and then followed au ! other silence like the other. " I low'* your father and mother?" again put in the hadiful lover. "tpiite well, both of them." Thix wax followed by an exchange of glance* ami a suppressed smile. 'i hi* lasted Home ten minute* more, during which Josh wax fidgeting in hi* stroking hi* Hunday bat. Hut at length another •jucxtion came: "How* your parent*?" Thix proen. have the Jovrnat jof Commerce, is an American, and a well-known resident of our city (N. Y.), Mr. Peregrine Williamson. In ' the year 1800, Mr. W., then a work ing jeweler at Baltimore, while attend ing an evening school, finding some difficulty in making a quill pen to suit him. made one of steel. It did not work well, however, for want of flexi bility. After awhile be made an ad ditional slit on each side of the main one, and the pens were so much im proved that Mr. W. was called to make them in such numbers as to eventually occupy his whole time and that of a journeyman. At first the business wa very profitable, and en abled Mr. W. to realise for the labor 'of himself and journeyman a clear profit of $6(10 per month. The Eng lish soon borrowed this invention, and ~omc who first engaged in the business realised immense fortunes. IT was a colored preacher who said to his flock last Christmas day : "We have a collection to take this morning, and for de glory of Ilcabcn, whicheber of you stole Mr. Jones' turkeys, don't put anything on dc plate." One who was there says "KIKTV blessed niggah in de church came down with de rocks." . A LUCKY family ia thai of the Bar ings, The founder of their family was a trader in Exeter, England, a hundred years ago, and now the family holds a baronetcy, a barony, bishopric and an earldom, possesses immense wealth, and haa sixty livings in its gift- > CHURCH at Somerville, Mass., were surprised one Sunday morning to find the trees covered with sausages and lard, but subecqucutiv discovered that a tank had exploded in a pork packing establishment. "What," said an inouiaitive young lady, "is the most popular color for a bride f We may be a little particu lar In such matters, but we should prefer a white one. — Kbmirm Gatttte. WiixiAM Atffltwt*. to sleepy room mate .* "Come, John Henry, why don't you get up with the lark, as I do f John llcnry, : "Been up with him all night,"