Senator Bayard's Opinions I'pon late Political Events.' Interview in tli* Now York World. I was opposed to the extra session and much regretted that it was called ; And yet history will say that the event was unavoidable, for in the at titude which the Democratic party, representing the public sentiment of the country in the two Houses of Con gress, and Mr. Haves, representing the Republican party and having posses sion of the Executive Department re spectively, took the collision was bound to occur, and this extra session may prove of great use in defining the re lations that must he expected to exi.-t during the remainder of Mr. Hayes' I term between liini and the dominant majorities in the two House*. Urged on hy the "stalwart" cabal of his own party, Mr. Hayes has been led to make claims of power and to take a position j wholly untenable. The issues which 1 he has thus uuwiscly raised are funda mental in their character, ami it is ! well for the American jieoplc to Is- re- i called to the true nature of their Gov ernment, and to the principle* upon j which hopes lor its maintenance arc to < he based. The Democrats have de- j ruanded nothing at the extra se.-sion j that was not just, fair ami timely. Thev I promptly passed the appropriation hill supplying the army with 827,000,- j 000, and simply proposed to repeal a 1 provision of law, which, according to its author, Jacob Howard, of Michi gan, was confessedly a war measure only, and which permitted troops to he brought to the polls of election to keep the pace. It is difficult to see how 1 any man friendly to a government of laws should desire to continue such a measure in tinieof p-aee. in fact, the question of the necessity of holding elections without the presence of armed force does not bear discussion ; nod it was a lamentable illustration of the intensity and blindness of party feeling when not a single member ot the Re publican party in either House ven tured to record hi* Vote in favor ol the rcpal of so un-American ami inde fensible a law. No more forcible ar guments nor vigorous condemnation of such uses of the army are needed than are supplied by public speeches and opinions of two members of Mr. Hays' Cabinet —Mr. Evartsand Mi. Sehurz. But it seems that Mr. Hayes could not withstand the threats and growls of the "stalwart" leaders of his party and sutiered himself to he depressed In-low the proper level of the duties of his place. To the demand for broad and iiigh statesmanship thai the situation made he responded in the tone of a mere pnrtv politician. The hill which promptly ami fully supplied the army he returned with a statement of hi* ob jections which took the form of a run ning debate in reply to certain mem ber* of the Senate and House. He had been referred to as "I think un wisely and improperly in the course of this debate in terms of scant respect, • but it was clearly a most exceptionable and unprecedented thing for a Presi dent, under the cover of a veto mes sage, to enter iuto purely |icr-onal de hate with the two Houses. Rut one thing he has succeeded in and that is to show that he has the will and power to obstruct the passage of laws ty an arbitrary veto power based upon party dictation, and thus throw the Govern ment into confusion ami fill the public mind with apprehensions by prevent ing Congressional supplies. There is nothing substantially vetoed by Mr. Hayes in the army hill as first pre sented that lie lias not approved in the army bill which he signed. To the jMirsistencc, therefore, of the Demo- 1 eratic Houses of Congress the country owe* the affirmation of the great j>rin ciple that our popular elections shall l>e free from military force. "What is your judgment upon the new doctrine which the Republican organs take—that the President is a co-ordinate and equal part of legisla tion u|s)n all question* of ylicy, ex jicdieney and necessity ?" "That is another question that has liccn raised by the preteusion* of Mr. Hayes in his collision with the Con gress. The result of his claim of |s>w er over legislation, would, in effect, convert the Executive Department into a third House of Congress. This is a fundamentally close nnd dangerous position, and arises from either a total misconception or a partisan distortion of the true functions of his office. The first article of the (Constitution pro vide* that all legislative power* then in granted shall be vested in a Con gress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate ami House of Rej>- rescntativcs —the adjective 'all,' the verb 'vested' and the noun 'Congress' have unmiMakuble meanings. The * law is explicit. No false interpreta tion of the subsequent provisions of the Constitution which vest in the President a qualified veto jsiwer can destroy the effect of thnt reading. This veto power is expressly subject to a two-thirds vote of the two Houses, and the object* for which it wa dele gated are stated hy Alexander Ham ilton to be the protection of the Con stitution from overthrow to prevent invasion of the just prerogative* of the other departments of the Government hy tho legislative branch, and gen erally to remedy and check inadver tent and hasty legislation. Hut the construction given by the President in his veto messages at the extra session would necessarily involve not only the assumption of legislative power hy the Executive branch, but the practical absorption of all the powers of the Clovcrnment to bis bands. If such reasoning is to be maintained, the American people must contemplate an Executive branch of the Government armed with power* ample for its own indefinite |>crpetuution, and which will inevitably be used for Mich purpose*, in the face of an eh an issue, so rained and emphasized by the President and lI'IH counsellors at the late extra session, I deem it of the utmost importance that the people of thin country should comprehend his meaning and the effect of the powers for which he contends,; and .which, if allowed, w ill he fatal to that distribution of powers which our forefathers decided to be essential for the preservation of liberty. The Pros- j ident intimates, although not clearly, ; in his last veto message, that he has the rightful power to convene Congress J and to keep it in session until appro- ; priatiyns sufficient in his arbitrary judgment are made for the enforce ment of any law. This claim, if ex amined, will be found to contain an assumption of legislative power ami discretion which it is not unfair to call usurpation. By the unvaried custom of our Government from its commence ment all appropriations for its support under its laws are made annually. In the case of the army the Constitution expressly inhibits any appropriation for more than two years. Vet, if the power be conceded which has now been claimed by the President, no re trcnehinciit will ever become jios-ible until lie shall consent to the repeal of the law whose execution he claim* to be necessary, and of tlm expenses of executing which lie constitutes him - It sole judge. That is what I mean hy saving that the doctrine eoutended for by Mr. Hayes would lead virtually to the absorption of entire legislative power in the Executive branch, tr it would in edict make all appropriations perpetual and destroy the power of tioogress to exercise any discretion over the amount or the u*-s to which they should la- applied." "The President having taken this position, what is likely to result "He ha* taken it in his veto of the legislative and judicial appropriation Inil, and if he is sutfercd to maintain it by the popular voice, that which Hamilton termed 'a dishonorable -tag nation of public affairs' must occur. . "What is your opinion of the veto of the bill for marshals'expenca ?" "An examination of the llevised Statutes will disclose how little justi fication Mr. Hayes hud for his veto of the separate bill providing si'>< >O,OOO for the expenses, fees, etc., of I nited States Marshals, He -ays in substance that because the bill sent liini excluded the applications of any moneys there by appropriated to pay deputy mar shals for political services at the jsills of election and because it forbade any • officer of any department 'to incur any liability' for such services that then* fore his power to execute election laws was interfered with and preveuted; whereforo for that sole reason he re fused to a**cut to th- legislation. Sec tion 3,67* of the Revised Statutes rep rcseuts and adopts law* pa*cd in I*o9 and in 180*, and these and the section expressly prohibit the application of any money except to the objects for which it wa- c.-js-cially appropriated. Section 3,679, which was the act of •iuly, I*7o, forbade any Department of the Government to expend any sum in excess of the appropriation made bv Congress—and 1 beg you to itali cize these words —or to involve the Govtrnm' nt in nirh appropriation*. It would puzzle a Court, lunch leas plain citizens, to , sec why a bill should lie vetoed which forbade an officer to 'incur any liabil ity' fur the Government when an ex isting statute plainly forbade him from involving the Government in any contract fur the same object. Yet the law of July, 1870, w£ pa-.-'d by a Congress having a two-thirds Re puhlican majority in both branches, and was approved by Grant, a Rcpuli- I lienn President." "Would not all the reasons which Mr. Hayes presents for vetoing the ' hills passed hy the Democracy at the I last Congress apply with equal force to the existing provisions of the law T" "Certainly, and in some case* with greater force." "Was enough good done nt the ex tra session to pay for the trouble of convening Congress ?" "Yc* ; I think the repeal of the test oath and the formntion of the improv ed system of obtaining impartial juries were alone a sufficient recompense to the country and to Congress for all the ex|ense and harassment of the session. It is evident that these most jHiwerful and necessary reforms found little favor with the President, who vetoed the appropriation hills with wffiich they were at first combined without a word of intimation that he approved of any fenlurr* of the bill. I" or the reasons I have given I eon lider the result* of the extra session to have been valuable to the country. They have wiped out a feature of war legislation permitting the use of troop as police at the polls. They have re moved a test oath disgraceful to our ago and country. They have made a step toward the abolition of the radical system of parking juries lu political cases. They have exposed to the peo ple schemes for the centralization of power, and for the people to be fore warned is to be forearmed. Ho I con sider the results of the extra session to have been favorable to the good gov ernment of the country, and creditable to the Democratic majorities, by whose exertions these valuable reforms have been achieved despite the obstructive ticss of a Republican Executive." "How long do you cx|iect to lie ab sent?" "About three months, and most of the time nt Carlsbad, where t IM- phy sicians have ordered Mrs. Bayard nnd on whose uccouut I undertake tlie trip." ■ ■■■ ■ ' ♦ A Sensible Northern lirltrailler. FIKIII tin* CiiH'iiitinti Kinjutfcr. GCIJ. Chamberlain, ex-Governor <>f, Maine, made an address uu Decoration day, in which lie referred to the "Reb el Brigadiers in Congress," in away not eoiniiliuientary to the wavers of the bloody-shirt. He asked : "Is it not folly, is it not babyish weakness to complain that the States are back again in tVii:gr*-ss, ami that they have sent there such representa tive* a* they must naturally choose ? Wo send our best mind* to Congress, of course, to manage tho vital interests of our country. Why should they not send their best minds? If, gen tlemen, we diil not want the rebel generals there, what did we remove their disabilities for ? If we did not want the South to have UII increased majority in the electoral vote or in Congress, why did we not think of that when, hv giving the enfranchised slave the ballot, we thereby added to the Southern strength thirty-live elec toral nnd Representative votes? Who ever ilid that should not stultify him sclfliy uliining about it, or setting up a jiow-woiv over it, and trying Ui ruak*' the people think that tli*' great war ha* not settled something." That is the way a soldier -p< ,ik- who participated in twentv-four battl* * dur ing the late war, amf was wounded si\ time*. There is no hnhyish w nknc-- alvait him in r*-gar*l to tin* return to Congr*-** of the hading m*-n of ihc Smth. They are needed tlie re. Says Gen. Chamberlain : "There are great question* that mu*t he ni< t —must lie dieti--< d. It i- the task of statesmanship ami manhood to deal with existing * vils, to take thing* a* they are and make them what tlicv ought to In-, ami this should Is- done under the Constitution nnd through the Inw*, ami by all the machinery of of Government connected, expressly to avoid the appeal to brute pa**ioii ami brute force. That's what constitution* and laws ami courts and Congr* --* - ami bnllot-lmxc* are for. 1st us not be afraid to discuss questions fairly and vote ujsin them squarely." Such sentiments elevate a contest lictween partie* to the plane of reason, sense ami patriotism where the talk alsmt "n is i Brigadiers in Congress" lieeomew petty and contemptible. ♦ Iteueral llunrork fur President. From th# S*w York tan. It is rather surprising that Gen. Winfield H. IlaiKisk is not brought forwanl more conspicuously a* a dem ocratic caudidate lor j>r*-,-i- fore the nomination he will lie a po*sl ileal more talked about than be is at present. A Woman of 112 In the liny Kirhl. Fnm th# R** illrl •!'* Hu'l tonti At liMt lit** ifiinituri' p(|H* *ll*l nil, TIM HI IK* TOOT'S >TOIII LIFGNII. li*i. n tlm to ln| n mom* tit hl#W Aililn tin' frnKiaot Our l.fli-itocod* mIM-il toiiliio our ?!•%* A lltllll It IA I* 1•' It ttlMHl, A tiny fot of nit or m tm, I *• in lin -i'l ' friuli toll* w'titM, Iff lli I. ill 11* out ill In to< it OIK* to-Idler ofti o ilnmiiiil.) Ami MM mi star ml, on<> 1111 !• linnd nl to lirr i in I> li*ul In Kim* "AIHJ HIIO Mro )#r At length Hit* N„iit krtlU , •'Altai HIIMI 'I your H lur!" IK gf *>to L *1 AGAIN. Him out: "Wli l Inn ? W ! ( i, iloii't )oii know 1 lin liitti' Julio, Tin- I'ilile of !tatt*ry •11/ "M) home * Hliy ( flint ** |jilim- 1 li'tc tli* gun* ''"J Along toltli f. ig*ant N* I ' Ami I'll* • ilruiii flint's not M !*•)-, A *4(l toltli fiitilnt*. too, Ami I iimr< li In-stale tin- ilrutntiK-r l**y Ou huii'ltt)s M( r* tli w, •'lint in m our Uutto'i bit Ki?e ''"l* fli<* in* li mo t |tu%r t}*• r •look* . An I •*• Hi**) I*! * I"** h?. • on New! \V.*n t |*Uy with rn- it ml joke. "Ami I lie |.|g "•lotK-l *iit, t -Ito) - - I liate to It ur lit in *II ll* I Kli< ii I• g f.r a Kjmi |,i|4* l.lke tli*- Vutik* hud wtil t!•*• *. "Ami F tl)ou|*lit M lien liwtot tli" ilruui, • Ami tlie 1.1/ , mis Mi r* still, I'l i le* |i I . rit atli the tent nn*l tli* ti W. tot. I• i . m ft. till fi ...i night I le | tO totoif li t. An i* ,uli* I I ■? t -tails t f sight,— or else t Mas leaf? li d lti'l ll*-? t' * f rut i r fniti*>< nl** tit T is bit* to !*, > * •.■ .t, I*l-u tit* lad * hear*! \Vi to*tit It 1•* k 'hot *t mm! I I*oll tl* w . i." antoun I. At > • I,At, it. It- 1., \ the tie That t r 1. r. lm>l !* n 1 Tlat' toll >*" *v-n tli* N*;IU:iATKIi 111 l ltF- Hf-e*.A. .July 11 Saratr.pt i a fixi-iMar in tli<- roiittcllation >( Mali-r -ing plan-*. Other rtxirt*- may have their to fall out of favor, ami wither under the w.ight of public runt*i, I.u 1 Saratoga ha* all Max.ii* for it." own. irauti' for pub lic favor mav In- tnuch talke*! of ami much run nltt r for a eeu-'ou, hut they arc tolerably certain to have their dull tinn- and IK-UPOH.* wlien they ar*' oil * f the National Science a*--o ciation in St. Ix.ui* la*t RUtnmcr, wan received with more appluui-c than the in*tion to hold the uext meeting at Saratoga. The st-icnti*t* will IM; here in full force next month. The hotel register* chow the names of a number of people whom 1 have quoted above a* iK'ing habitue* of Saratoga, and among them are lh**o of I'etier ( eop!e who come to stay amuse themselves in the old wars. They drink, or are popularly supposed to drink the min eral waters; tlicv walk and drive and go down in full dinner dross to tho mammoth dining room*. They do not dance very much in the eveuinga as yet, the regular hotel hops not be ing fully inaugurated. They will cot Is- until the races begin next Sntur day. For tbo present, people seem ' 'jUitc satisfied to sit around in tlie i parks ami listen to music, of which ili*n- i* abundance. We*have music at 10 o'clock in tlie morning ami at * o'clock in the evening ; ami afternoon ' concerts and evening concerts, the lat- , ter accompanied by electric lights. We have grown familiar enough with tin intense "high liglils" and correspond ingly dense shadows of the electric light, hut here tln-v have given IMi j son's discovery with variations. The | liglits are colored, ami when they full lon (lie shimim-ring fountains in the park, the fountains are iridisecnt, and the whole cfleet is charming. It is a series of brilliant "cficeli,'' if I may drop into th< art slang of the day, and to look ut th* Hashing fountains and j the brightly dressed people, and have I all that color set to the music of "I'in : afore" ami "Pinafore's" new rival, ! "I'atinitza," makes one feel exactly a* it docs to 1 *>Jc at one of tho-e "impr*--- 1 -ionist" canvasses (lint look as though they had IM-I-H struck by lightning. Perhaps the uoveltv will wear off, hut at present the electric light i* the lat ■ -t ciithu-iusiii, ami people do not seem t<> tire of it. It i- safe to say that Saratoga was never so well dressed before. No j doubt there have been seasons where toil* ts were richer ami the (Jueeii *-f ~-li< i i arrayed h*i-* ll with mori- mag nificence than tlii- summer, hut never la-fore hit* si,,- di-plnvcd Costumes s*> artistie, >r gotten lu-rself up t-< look so much lik - - a ] i -tur* l*-t, strayetl or *toh n out of tin- tiame. "Co-turn**!" flat i- tin- word. Site us*-*l to war *- facts of personal <-r family lii*t*>ry, clairvoyant* do not alwav • a-k ilirect *ju*-tioiis, but rath* r make -tuU'inent- with a:i imjilied in t* rr >gatir give uie any facts in their ea<-*, but to l*-t me tell them : and then I would proceed t< indieat*', after the manner of a clair voyant, the locality of their maladies, ami the history of their trouble*. In the majority of *•>< - I was successful, iin*l innile out the diagnosis to tire sat isfaction of those who sought my ad vice, and with good reason, for nothing that I could do prevented them from telling me, although I a*k***l them no pie-tion*; unintentionally and uncon sciously, they would guide me at every *fage of the interview. By n little practice any otic could easily acquire thi* art; ami long study, such a* pro fessional clairvoyants l>tow upon thi* subject, develops groat skill in thus managing ami deluding the unwary and non-export. Kinperor William'* Men* on Iteligion. At the, commemoration festival of a religious society connected with the Cathedral in Berlin the Kiuperor,after the service ami ceremony were over, sjMike to the following effect: "Ifthere i anything capable of acting as a stay to ux in the life nnd turmoil of the pres ent time it i* the support alone to be found in J-su Christ. I*rt not yoursel ves, therefore, he misled, gentlemen, by the tendencies prevailing in the world, especially in our days, and do not join a the great multitude who either leave the Bibbs out of account, as the only source of truth, or falsely interpret it in their own sense. You all know, gentlemen, that 1, of free and full con viction, lulling to the jstsitive (not positivist j union founded by my de ceased father. The ground and nick to which 1 ami nil of ua must cling is tlie unadulterated faith as taught by the Bible. There are many who do not pursue the same path ; every one does as lust he can, according to his kuowledge and his conscience, shaping in conformity therewith all his acts and his ways. I esteem, honor ami tolerate them, but whoever also wishes to enter the society will always lie n'- ! reived with open arms. * * * Each one can act as his conscience dictates, hut all must, nevertheless. ; build oil thcgniund of the Bil4r and the Gospel." It would appear that the Emperor William jmssesses the spirit of toleration which prompted the nem of the Seven Years' War to inaugurate his reign hv proclaiming that "every one should get to heaven in his own way." WHAT did the young lady mean when she said to her lover: " You may be too late for the car, but you can take a bus." ({tilt h wit Wilis. front Til*# oi)Ntt< i mm ago, into a wTiolcsale grocery store in Boston, walked a tall, touscu lar-looking man, evidently a fresh coiner Iroui Mime liaekwtodx town in .Maine or New Hampshire. Accost ing the first jsc-on he met, who hap |M netl to he the inerchiuit himself, he aked : "}<>u tlon't want to hire a man in your store, do you?" "Well," Mtiti the merchant, "I don't know ; what can you do?" "Jto?" said the man; "1 rather gu*s J can turn my hand to aluce-t anything —what do you want done?" "Well, if I wan to hire a man, it would be one that could lift well, a strong, wiry fellow; one, lor instance, that could shoulder u sack of coflbe like tliat yonder, and carrv it across the ft oor and never lay it down." " 1 here, now, ('u|it'in," -uioii"-, i-aid the stranger,and by this time every < lerk in the store had "gath ered around and waited to join in the laugh against the man, who, walking Up to the sack, threw it across his shoulder with jw rfcct eae, though ex treiiif ly hwavv, and walking with it twin aero-- the store, went quietly to a large hook which was fastened to the wall, and hanging it tip turned to the mereliant and said : "There, now, it may hang there till d mi-day. I shall never lay it down. W hat shall Igo about, mister? .lust give me plenty to do and fl(Kt]*cr month, and it's all right." I lie clerks broke into a laugh, ami the merchant, discomfit' 1 yet satisfied, kejii his agreement, and to-day the green countryman i* the senior part ner of the firm, and i- worth a million dollars. Scolding. K ohling is mostly a habit. Th< ro i not much meaning to it. It is often the result of nervousness, ami an irrit able condition of both mind and body. A person is tired, or annoyed at some trivial < and forthwith commence* finding fault with everything ami i veryiwslv in reach. Scolding is a habit very easily furrn ed. It is astonishing how soon one who indulges in it at all becomes addicted to it am) confirmed in it. It is an unrea soning and unreasonable habit- Per -oiis who once get in the way of scold ing always find something to scold n I suit. It there was nothing else, they would fall a scolding at the mere ab sence of anything to scold at. It is an extremely disagreeable habit. Tbeeon stant rumbling of a distant thuuder, catcrwaulingff, or a hand organ under one's window, would be less uoplcas* ant. The habit is contageous. Once in troduccd into a family, it is pretty cer tain, in a hort time, to atfeet all the member*. If one of them begin* al ways finding fault about something, or nothing, the other* are apt very soon to take it up, and a very unnecessary lied lam i* created. People in the country more readily fall into the habit of scolding than |>eople in town. We suppose it is le -<-ause they have less to occupy and di vert their attention. Wonicu contract the hahit more frequently than* men. This may be Iwoausc they live more in the hou*f, in n confined ami heated at mosphere, very trying to the nervous system ami the health in general; and |it may be, partly, that their na i turc* are more susceptible, and their sensitiveness more easily wounded. Women are sometimes called divine. But we will say no more on this sub ject. or some pretty creature may feel inclined to scold us for what wc say about scolding. \ lirlght Hupp) 1 houtc lit. The Hartford correspondent of the Springfield Republican hay*: That a>a bright thought of one of the Batterson*, who, when employed fonie year* since in an office in New- York, was cent to prawnt a hill to a shaky concern, with order* to collect it at all hazard*. After much urging the head of the debtor bouse gave him a check for #lOO, the amount of the hill. Hurrying to (he Imnk at which it wo* paxable the lad presented the cheek only to be told, "Not enough fund* to meet it." "How muck i* the account *hort?" was the bov'i quick retort. "Seven dollar*," said the teller. It lacked but a minute or two of .1 o'clock, and the teller wa* alwmt to cloee the door on the hoy, when the latter mddenly pulled seven dollar* from hi* own pocket, ami, pushing it over with a dc|>o*it check, said: "Put that to tin- credit of dt C 0.." the parties who had given the check. The teller did so, when the lad at once presented the check for llOtt, and, drawing the full amount thereof, went bark to his employer* in triumph. But, a* be put it, **—— & Co., who failed the vcrv neat day, were hopping mad when they found they bad no fund* in the batik." ■' HATHKD it like fire—it make* even i light rubbish deadly.