She £ nitre §emorrat. BELLEFONTE, PA. Largest, Cheapest and Best Paper PUHLISIIED IN CENTRE COUNTY. The Negro Exodus. THE CONDITION Or LAIIOR AT TIIE SOUTH AND THE CAUSES 01' THE NEURO EXODUS. WASHINGTON, September 25.— LA view of tho attempt to make iolitical capital .out of the negro exodus, it is but fair a statement should be made show ing precisely the relations of labor ami capital in the South. Washington may fairly be considered a Southern city in the sense that it has a largo negio pop ulation. Today 40 nor cent, of the population is colored. Who that has been here will say that the negroes are a class to inspire any sort of respect? They aro indolent, without ambition and ignorant. Yet in proportion to its size there is no city in the world that otl'ers better facilities for improving the condition of its negro residents than this, but instead of profiting by the in ducement* they seem to ignore them and act as though they believed that iiaving worked enough before the war they should be maintained as Govern nient wards now that they aro free. This is a fact that is patent to any one i and that every one has observed. Now, despite their condition, 1 have no hesi tation in saying that the equulity of the negro is recognized in this Southern city more generally than in New York or Boston. How many men in the Northern cities would leave a car or stand up in it rather than take a seat beside a negro ? I venture to say that ten would do it in New York where one would'here. Indeed it may be assumed 1 that many Northern negroes, who are vastly superior in habits, cleanliness and intelligence to those in the South, neglect to avail themselves of all the privileges conceded to them, because they feel that public sentiment is not • yet developed a* fully aa public princi ple. In Washington they are incapa tile of any such delicacy. Theories here i in matters of that kind become practi ces very quickly, and there is not a street-car or chariot that does not carry on every trip a full quota of mixed trav elers. Further South their proclivities are more marked than here. Having been relieved from oppression they think it becoming in them to be audacious and lazy and impudent, naturally enough perhaps, considering their former con dition. Left to themselves the differ ences between them and the whites of the.South would probably have been adjusted as soon as the first effects of non-restraint bad worn off. After that they would have sought to better them selves through the agencies furnished at home for that purpose, and the South would have regained that nro-i -jierity it lost by the war and have held I its population intact. By the time the outlook could have been as encouraging there as in any other part of the country. But meddlesome persons had to interfere, and what would lmvtC de veloped of its own accord into a desire for improvement on the part of the negroes was diverted into general dis affection and restlessness, so that in the South to-day they are no lietter off and not so contented or hopeful as they were in 1865. A period of fifteen years of barbarous agitation has com pletely demoralized them and they really do not know what they want and are ready to take up with anything and to go anywhere at a bidding. A Mis sissippi planter who employ* about 150 negroes and who has been a sugar and cotton raiser for forty year* said to me, "The negroes have been battered about so much that they don't know what they want and will jump at anything Do you know that 1 believe," he went on with more vigor than elegance, "that if all the negroes south of Mon tand Hixon's should be seated quietly in heaven and a steamboat labelled 'For Hell' should come along with a brass hand, every one of them would jump aboard."' The despatch publish ed yesterday said that the wages of farm laborers in the south were larger the year round than those of the same class in any other part of the country. < >ns reason for this is that the land is worked almost continuously from .lanu ary until January, whereas in the north the hands are idle half the year. Wages vary from #lO to $l5 a month. In some cases #2U I* paid. This is ex clusive of board, which consist* of a . weekly allowance of a neck of Indian corn meal, four pounds of salt meat and a pint of molasses. The fare is simple, but it is abundant and the ne groes prefer it to anything else, haying always been accustomed to it. The method of farm-working most common in Louisiana and Mississippi is what is known a* "on shares." A man will take a farm, for instance, of twenty acres on which to grow fifteen acres of cotton and five acres of corn, reserving a small patch for garden vegetables. If he can support himself while cultiva ting the crop he will receive half the product of the yield. Otherwise he will receive the amine amount, less an advance made by the planter in goods and the prices ruling in the neighbor hood. The farm-hand baa no responsi bility and needs no capital, as the plan ter furnishes team, farming implements and lodging house. Along the Missis sippi Valley land will yield a bale of cotton to the acre, and 40 bushels of 0 corn to the acre. At $45 for cotton and 50 cents for corn, $775 can be counted on per year, and the laborer received $.787 out of that. Out of this his family expense* only *re to be de ducted and they need not exceed $5O if be live* on farm band rations, as pork cost* him $lO a barrel and corn meal from 60 to 70 cent* a bushel. ' There is no excuse for fiae-wood, for the planter's team is at his disposal to gath er and haul it. In addition to the amount received from tl e farm the % laborer is privileged to raise |>oultry and is usually furnished free pasturage by the planter foe awine and cattle, the profits being enti.ely his own. Should he choose to be a tenant he can rent land for from sixty to eighty pounds of lint cotton per acre, the price varying between these figures according to lo • cality. Ills expense* tor himself and team need not exceed $lOO annually, and ho can net with twenty acres $5OO. On the Mississippi table lands, which are less productive than the bottom lands, the cotton yield averaging a bale to three acres and corn twenty bushels to an acre, rents are $2 and $2.50 per aero cash or in kind, a bale of cotton for every twenty acres. Vol although less productive these lands aro the healthiest in the State, and properly fertilized could be made to yield as largely as the bottom lands. Mr. Dix on, the Georgia agriculturist, demon strated this with the piney woods lands which ho fertilized until it yielded three and four bales to the acre. Moreover, the possibilities of the tablelands for raising small fruits, pears, poaches, iii"'- ons, Ac., are cxhaustless. It is such lands—bottom and tablelands—thai the negroes nro urged to leave in order to compete with skilled white labor on Western farms. They understand the Southern lands and know how to man age their products. It rests entirely with them to manage them profitably. The new lands are cultivated different ly and for crops about which tho ne groes know little or nothing. Some of the Republican papers have said that wages in North Carolina are often as low as $8 a month. That may he doubt ed, hut if such wages are to be sneered at there why should not equal publicity licity be given to tbo fact that in this highly enlightened city colored men and women are socking work for $6 and $7 a month and not getting it? If it is more culpable to give them work at $8 than to refuse their services at $7 then the North Carolina planters are an overbearing set of people. If it is not, Washington should straightway become the target for Radical criticism. The general impression among sensible neo pie in the South, Republicans aa well ns Democrats, is that the best thing the negroes can do in their present condi t'on ot unrest is to leave the South and learn by hard experience what they have thrown away. Could they be left to themselves without Radical inter ference no doubt the migratory feeling would subside, but as there is no hope of this while Republicanism continues to tlaunt its war doctrines, the sooner they go and learn for themselves, the better it will be for the South and in tho end better also probably for them. Wholesale Vilification. Alluding to the courteous manner in which the ex-Confederate officers in San Francisco joined in the reception of Gen. Grant, an inlluential organ of the Republican faitli suggests that it would be well for the General to visit the South this fall, and in this connec tion remarks : "Gen. Grant has not visited any portion of the South fince the war, and lln-re could be no more appropriate tune for him to do so than the present, when the Southern |A-ople are murdering men because they dure U> express Republican sentiments, and when they ore acquitting the butcher* of whole families of Republicans. The State of the South now is worse than it has been at any time since the war, and it will do the lire-eaters good to look upon tho man who whipped them once and will do it again if they force him to it." It would be impossible to condense, even by hydraulic pressure, n greater amount of satanic malice and infamous falsehood into the same space than has been gotten into the few lines we have quoted. Rut if there were only one, or a dozen, or even a hundred newspapers engaged in the same occupation—revil ing and slandering the Southern people en maut —the fact would not call for such notice as we propose to give it. But it is an undeniable truth that al most the entire Republican press is working, with zeal and industry worthy of a lietter cause, to vilify the people of the Southern States. For a political purpose only, to "fire the Northern heart" solidify the Northern people against the South, this dialiolical busi ness was deliberately planned, was sys tematically entered upon, has been prosecuted without a pause, and is now l>eing pushed with unprecedented vigor. There is not a homicide of any kind committed in any portion of the South, no matter what the occasion may have been, that is not seized on by the Radi cal press and represented as a deliberate 1 political assassination. Crimes that ore execrated by all good citizens in tha. section, as similar deeds of violence and 1 blood would be in any civilized commu nity. are almost invariably represented as being endorsed by all the people. Thus the moral and religious portion of the Southern |>cople are counted by J these vile traducers as no better than the worst class of criminals. Hundreds of Republican journals daily repeat this infernal outrage, never omitting a poasi ! hie opportunity to slander in the gross est manner the honest millions of the ■ South, who have as mnch abhorrence of murder, as much love of order, as much desire for the enforcement of law, as the good citizens of any part of this or any other country. ! We cannot recall a single homicide i occurring in any portion of the States , that constituted the defunct .Southern | <7onfelermcy that has not been treated . by the Republican press as a political as -.awi nation, approved by the whole pop ulation. Any stranger from Europe, visiting this country and reading the Republican papers, would be impressed with the idea that there are but two great industries flourishing below Ma son and Dixon's line—political assassin ation and repudiation. But tho men who edit those papers and seem to glory in their systematic and concerted work of disseminating diabolical calum ny know that, as a rule, the people thus , vilified are honest, industrious and law abiding ; that they have displayed won derful energy in repairing the waste and ruin wrought by the war, and the sup plemental robbery perpetrated by the carpet-bagger and negro alliance, foisted on them by their Northern brethren and held there by Federal bayonets, and that the crimes which occur among , them are as much deplored, as are the : vastly greater number, which are perpe ; trated in the North, regretted by good citizens in the States where they are committed. tine of the insolent and exasperating customs of these journalistics vehicles jof slander is to call on prominent Southern statesmen to rise up and say what they think of every successive homicide reported in the oouth. It is insolent beyond fill excuse or palliation, and we can think o( nothing naif so ex asperating. It assume* that the states men thus called oif may approve of murder. Ihjoa anybody usk Senator Knar what he thinkH of any of tho hor rid tragedies that have startled the people of Massachusetts during the last few months? Are Blaine and Hamlin invited to express their sentiments on Maine murders? Hoes any Southern journal tell Messrs. Anthony and Burn side to stand up and let the peoplo know whether they indorse tho last murder in I'rovidoncc, or tho latest as sassination in Lonsdale? Is Conkling kept at work eighteen hours a day de claring his abhorrence of the infinite series of bloody deeds in his State? Is there any disposition on the part of tho Southern press or people to identify the public men or private citizens of tho North with tho detested authors of bloody deeds? Every one knows that there is not. The Republican press has a monopoly of this species of baseness. Hen. Grant is not responsible for the beastly taste displayed in using his name in connection with this torrent of slander. Thorn were many things in his Administration that were cruelly > unjust and oppressive to the South, and |we don't suppose they are forgotten. | But if ho were to visit that section as a I private citizen, not as a Presidential as :pi rant, there is no question that he would he courteously treated. If, how ever. the friends of General Grant should decide to take him on a Southern tour and parade him before the populace as "the man who has whipped them once, | and will do it again," etc., we would not | guarantee him a cordial welcome. Such an announcement would he too insult ! ing for any people to forgive, and if it ' were made by the heralds of Grant on a | Southern journey we suspect the South j ern whites would simply keep away | from tirant and let the show go quietly on its lonely way. AII Ungrateful Crew. • Fn-m'lh* Mr. Justice Miller, of the Supreme j Oout"t was reported a short while ago as | having said that "Mr. Tildcn was elect j ed in I-ouisiana—that ho got eight or ten thousand more actual votes than j President Hayes. The justice has since declined to be interviewed on the sub- I joet, hut now one of his "intimate | friends," who understands his feelings," : rises to make an explanation. In etfect it is that the mere matter of fact stated was true and that neither John .Sherman nor any of the other visiting statesmen ventured to deny it. Whether, how ever this result, would have been dif ferent had there been no intimidation ; is a question this able person does not j enter into. The State of Louisiana had : created a returning hoard which had ' the power to declare what voti-s should he received and what rejected ami in o doing reduced the popular vote. He then goes on to lay down the extreme State sovereignty doctrine which the counsel of the fraudulent President laid : before the electoral commission. That such authority, they said, "should he | conferred uj>ou a board of five men, alone concerns the State of 1-ouisiana. It might by its legislative enactment have given it to two or to one man, and such an act would have remained un I challenged under the < Constitution and the laws. Having given it to a return ing l-oard their decision wss as final as any act limited in the rights of a State, Whether the trust was honestly or dis honestly discharged, from their deci sion there was no apjwa!, and neither under the Constitution nor tinder the laws of the Slate of I-ouistana was there any remedy for alleged venality. The act of the !,oui*iana returning hoard was a states right act in its supreme sene. The decisions of the electoral commission were based upon the lover ! eign right of a State to legislate as it chooses on all matters expressly declsr ed by the Constitution." Mr. Conkhng has not denied that he said to Mr. Mines, referring to the steal of the Louisiaua vote: "I believe that when j the whole truth is known it will sink this administration, President and all, to the lowest depths of infamy." and yet I Conk ling voted for the I-ouisiana steal | —on .State sovereignty grounds. He j couldn't go behind the returns. Now all the Republican conventions are lay ing down the doctrine that "this is a nation and not a league of States," and rejecting "the damnable heresy of State rights." R. B. Hayes. John Sherman, Garfield and other lieneflciaries of the steal are now going about campaigning ' against State rights. These worthies j should tie frequently reminded that the tie /aelo administration owes its ex istence to the assertion of the extremest State sovereignty doctrine. In the Flo rida case a fraudulent electoral certifi cate was returned. This was made in violation of the order of the court of appeals of the State ; the exact nature of the fraud was exposed and the court of appeals ordered a new certificate correcting the fraad and casting the true vote of the State of Florida. It was held by the electoral commission that the State of Florida wa* sovereign, and that no power existed in Congress to correct even an acknowledge! fraud in its proceeding* as to the electoral vote. The vote was counted for Hayes, and now he and the visiting statesmen who were paid with offices the fee# of fraud are going atmut the country de nonliving "tho damnable heresy of Stales rights." Comparative Strength of Explosive*. The report of the United States board of army engineers, just published, pre sents the following interesting table aa the result of two years thorough trial of the relative efficiency of the various modern explosives, taking ordinary dynamite aa the standard : Dynamite, No. 1,100; gun cotton, 87 j dunlin, 111; rendrock, 94; dynamite, No. 2, 83 j Vulcan powder, 82 i mica powder, 83 j nitroglycerine, 81 ; Hercules fiowder, No I, 100 ; Hercules powder, No 2,83. Samuel Sterrett, a well known cill sen of Baltimore, died on Sunday night, aged forty-six years. He was a son of the late Commodore Sterrett, U.S.N. During the war he waa in the Confed erate service, wa* captured as a spy and condemned to death. President Lin coln commuted the sentence to impris onment during the war. Song of the Fiddler Man. Tim mmi MM old arid gray, Tim fltldlwr tintll vttt* thin ; And lila fiddle* It Imd it K>tl<^>lii a riy k All up and down it* poor old Imi k, And It l l u tlltdofd In. Itut ttlu mver lie wi<,it, or wlnwvrt It# * ttiio*. Tin* W'ldlkr'l M'droitiu MRS HIWNY* L|l MTLIU* ; And til#' llntl In- MR tig lf*d n ' liter; ot|iid A lld.tv n IM- Irttrelml hie wrmty round , •'Tin- "till limy "bin®, and tho rain may full, Itut tho <;,*| mleth o?r nil," HHK lII® fiddler old and Kiy. The fiddler man had to Ithor lands. Nor floclifl, nor horde, nor Kdeople elect. The lh(*rlsßcd Bond*. WHAT THE I EOISI. ATI VE COMMITTEE Al'- IMIXTEW TO INVESTIGATE TIIEM M I 1.1. RRroRT. A member of the committee of the legislature investigating the Vnatter of the alleged overissue of State hoods, states that the committee will report in substance as follows : "We have found that the loan of the 4th day >f May, J s '>2, for #'#.*",a"had been all issued, and s.'ioo,t*Si of the loan of 10th of April, I*.'!.!, bad been signed and placed in the Girard hank. 1400,000 of this loan w negotiated and used in taking up over-due loan* of the com monwealth of that date. The bond* of thi* last loan commenced with number 5,001, and were numbered from that up to .'>.300. fine hundred of these bonds, of $l,OOO each, deposited with the Gir ard hank, were not used, hut left with the bank. The day previous to the expiration of Mr. John M. Birkle'* term as State Treasurer, he called and found the $lO,OOO bond* were in the Girard hank and unused. Subsequently the hank gave a receipt to Joseph Bailey, his successor a* State Treasurer, for these bond#. The receipt was handed by Bailey, at the expiration of his term, to Kli Slifer, hi# successor. These bonds remained at the Girard hank un til Henry S. M'Graw was appointed State Treasurer in 18.WI. It ap|ears that he became anxious to recover these bonds and have a settlement with the Girard bank, and that from an entry in the book* of the treasury department during hi* term and made by him, he had a settlement with the Girard hank on tho Vth of Iecerol>er, IH.V. From an entry it appear# that the Girard hank had used $49,000 of these bond* and was unable to deliver them to M'- Graw. But in lieu of these the hank delivered to M'Graw $28,000 of the 5 per cent, certificate loan and twenty one bonds of $l,OOO each of the loan of the 4th of May, 18.V2, and fifty-one bond* of the 19th of April, 1854, of $l,OOO each. M'Graw received at the same time the interest which had ac crued and a check for the difference be tween the market value of the 5 per cent, certificate loan and the bonds which had been used." IM Sweden tho Government has wrestled successfully with the problem involved in imparting industrial educa tion through the medium of the schools. There are elementary and professional technical schools, and night schools for workmen who can not attend in the day time, There is a Government school, exclusively provided for iron and steel workers. The various communes in general maintain these professions! pri maries, l.ut they are helped by Slate grants. .The School of Arts and Trades at Stockholm in 1877 instructed 2,073 pupils, of whom 810 were women and girls. The elementary technical schools give a higher grade of instruction, in volving a course of three years, and in cluding chemistry, mechanics, mineral ogy, geology, mathematics and work shop practice. At Boras there is a tex tile school for weaving, the course of in struction in whioh is from one sod a half to two rears. These schools are tsrgely attended, are yearly growing in efficiency and have fully vindicated the expectations of their projectors. The America* Way. • n of tho secrets of the variety and success of American manufacture* i the readiness with which the manufac turers receive sugge-tions from their customers. If a buyer from a distance Hays that an article would better meet the wants of his locality if certain alter ations were made, the American maker hastens to supply him with the thing he wants. Not unfrequently he will send a competent man to study the conditions ol the distant region, that the required adaptation may he more , certain or an entirely new contrivance invented to supply tho need. In English and other European shops j the man who wants something new constructed, or an alteration made in some standard article, is very apt to be snubbed. They have no time to waste on such experiments ; ond even if the new device should prove a slight im prove, they think it wouldn't pay to alter patterns and machinery to make it. The result is, American manufacturers are not only monopolizing the home trade by the superior quality and fit ness of their products to meet borne wants, hut by the *at..c tactics they are gaining a permanent footing in foreign markets. A characteristic illustration is fur nished by aco respondent of the !/>n don T\mm, writing from Sidney, New South Wales. lie say* : "it i* a great thing to get control of the market, and the first thing is to get a good footing, and the Americans are certainly pushing for that with an ener gy which at least deserves success. Our railway department is putting together three large locomotives from I'hiladel phia. Their design is the result of close personal observation of our precise wants by ore of the partne.s in the firm of Baldwin A Co. I am not pre | pared to say whether these engines will prove in every re-jxsct better than those which we get from Kngland, Lut I do not remember any Lnglisb firm taking the same pains to study what we want to ileal with most successfully—the steep gradients and sharp curves of our railroads on the Blue Mountains. Per haps it is not worth the while of the English makers to attend to sreli petty detail*, hut the Americans think differ ently." And, we may add, American ninnu ! facturer* do not consider such details i "jwtty." Tools and machinery are I somewhat like animals and plants, in I needing to he thoroughly adapted to | tliear environment. The difference he j iween an organism which thrives in England hut will not in Australia, and i "lie of the same genus which will thrive jin Australia, tnay be inappreciable to ; the unskilled observer ; hut it is vital, ■ and outwr-ign* all the point* of resem j blanee. So a machine, perfect from the standpoint of England or America, j might fail utterly to meet the different j need* of another region, though the alteration required to adapt it to the new condition* might he comparatively slight and easily ja-rccived by an ex|*-rl I on the sfot. - -**■— ♦ A What-I-It. THE r-Eori.R or HERE* norvmr txcivxp OVER A M TSTERIOt'S AMI M At. Quito a large searching party has been organized in eastern Berks for the pur pose of scouring Muhlenberg and Bus- I rotnbmsnor townships to hunt up and capture, if possible, one of the strang est looking beast* ever heard of within the border# of thi# county. What give# emphasis to the sincerity of the ]>eople engaged is the fact that the re -|ensthle and reliable were first to report having seen the so called monster. A son of Prison Inspector Schemhl was the first to bring the intelligence to Topton Station. O. 11. Hmncrshitx, proprietor of the leading hotel there, and a number of other* went in pursuit jof what Mr. Schemhl described. The monster had been reported on previous occasion* and when Mr. Schemhl saw it ' it was lying near a gate entrance to a field through which he wa# about driv ing a lot of cattle. The "what i*-it" is represented to lie al-out four feet tall, long arm*, with but two lallon-hke fin gers on each paw ; fect.without toes, fur rows on it" head, body smooth and | naked, quite yellow, looking as if it hail •>een wallowing in clay. Jared Hismil j ler heard of the animal. It had run - toward Schemhl with extended paws, and then darted into a cornfield and ! was lost to view. The two men then went in search, and discovered the ani mal on the other side of the field lying near the lenee. It reared up it" hind leg* like a man. Itumiller say* it i* yellowish brown in color, ha* no hair, small eyes, and face, arm* about four teen inches long, legs some what longer, the band and feet resembling those of a j human being, and has tiro horns on the , top of the head. The young men I made a raid on the monster, when they ! say it darted toward the forest and was ' oon lost in the foliage. A Mr. Heck- I men, also residing near there, i* report ed to have seen the beast and he is in clined to believe that it is • large sized |-e. that may have "scaped from some travelling menagerie. Every cornfield is to he searched, together with the neighboring swamps, for the pupoee of ascertaining what the young men have really seen. After the recent rain* the farmer# plainly aaw very strange-look ing tracks in the sand on the roadside. They have al*o heard very unusual howls at night and the dog* of the neighborhood have been trying to hunt down the beast without suceesl. At first a large number of people were disposed to view the thing as a joke, but this feeling is gradually changing. No efforts will be spared to solve this matter and to discover all that there is in it. IT is * fact which cannot be gotten rid of by any amount of robust lying, that the Democrat* in Congress through out the war, were far more liberally dis posed to the soldier* than was the dom inant party. Whoever will take the trouble to refer to the Qmgrruioiuil Glnh for that period will find that the De mocracy, in both Senate and House, per slstently strove to make up to the sol diers for the depreciation of the curren cy in which their pittance was paid. This effort was resisted and defeated by the Radical majority. The Republican press miy deny this till doomsday, hut it will (•till remain an immutable fact, attesting the devotion of the Democratic party to the men who fought for the I'nion cause. Dispile ita Intel prnfe-nior.N of regard for the hoy* in blue, the Radical party i* tinctured with u deal of the spirit'that animated the Whig paity toward* the ■oldiera in Mexico thirty-four year* ago. It will never he forgotten that a num ber of leading Whig* in (k>ngrea* stead ily voted against pay and supplies for Scott and 'laylor. The Republican par ty inherits much of that sentiment. Kven when it wanted soldier* to fight .under a Republican Administration it grudged thern their pay. Ami since that time it has had little u-<- for the soldier, except to vote him. ♦ HelM'olored ('holograph*. Many attempts to fix the native hues of object* by photography have been made hitherto, hut all have failed. It is as etching of light and shade, rather than a painting, which the run gives. Nevertheless, the climax to which all photographer* are working is a mean* of producing nun-pictures which shall faithfully represent nature in all her varied livery of color. Toward this goal an important step has recently been made by M. Fro*. who, by combin ing three separate negatives ol the same i object, taken with different components j of solar light, has managed to produce a resultant portrait having all the tints iof the original. One negative is taken with the light reflected from the object deprived of its green rays by Wing fil tered through a solution of nitrate of j nickel, the second is taken with the j light deprived of its orange ray* by be j itig tillered through a solution ol chlo ' ride of cobalt, ann the third is taken ; with the light deprived of its violet rays bv being filtered through a solu j lion of bichromate of potash. The I first negative is therefore not im pressed by the green ravs coming from the object, the second is not impressed by the orange rays, and the third i* un affected by the violet rays. If. then, each of these negative* be illuminated : by the kind of light which it haa been deprived of, the lacking colors will le restored to each, and if the three image* so obtained be blended together by means of total reflecting prism* of glass, a resultant image of the object in its natural colors will be obtained. To Attain Long Life. He who strives after a long and pleasant term of life must seek to attain continual equanimity, and carefully to avoid everything which too violently taxes his feeling". Nothing more quick ly consumes the vigor of life than tho .violence of tho emotion* of the mind. We know that anxiety and care can de j stroy the healthiest body ; we know that fright and fear, yes, excess of joy, j become* deadly. They who are natu rally cool and of a quiet turn of mind, upon whom nothing can make too j powerful an impression, are not want to be excited either by groat sorrow or great joy, have the best chance of liv ing long and happily after their manner. Preserve, therefore, under all circum stances, a composure of mind winch no misfortune, can too much disturb. lx>v® nothing too violently ; hate nothing too passionately; fear nothing too ! strongly. For still, eventually, every ! thing that befnll* thee, the good as well as the had, deserve* neither immoderate j hatred nor love; for already on many I occasions hast thou peroeivod, though often truly too late, that thou hast | placed too high a value on those things j which passionately charmed or pained j thee. -It is.r Jerk S. Ri.ack, of Pennsylvania, ' yields to the Washington Pott his view* j upon national politics, to the effect that the treachery of Tammany i* enough to j make a true I>ciriocrat "curse his belter angel from his side and fall to reproba | tionthat Tilden, in hi* opinion, doesn't want to be the candidate in IHBO, but that he can have the nomina tion if be is willing to lake it: that -hia personal preference is not for Tilden, but for ffeneral Hancock, "because he wa the first officer of hi* rank in the ! regular army that lifted his voice to aay i a good word for constitutional liberty j but he thinks Tilden deserves a vindi j cation as the victim of fraud and slan- J der. -fudge Rlack says the talk to the I effect that Tilden ought to have seised the Presidency and had himself inaug urated at all risk* ia "unmitigated non i sen*e.' - If the House had declared him elected, then he would have been un faithful to hi* duty if he had not taken ■ possession ; but when hi* political sun porters in Congress permitted him and his constituent* to be juggled out of their rights, h# could not remedy tho wrong. The West Point men, who put on so many air* about the appointment* from civil life, and who look upon tboae gen tlemen who obtain commissions except through West Point a* interlopers, will be surprised to know that the officer* from West Point, in point of fact, are in a considerable minority in the army, and that the armv was never command ed by a West Pointer until General McClellan received command. That, however, is the fact. Of the staff corps, the number of graduate* of West Point i* 2.11, while there are 2*9 staff officer* appointed from civil life. Of the line officer* the number of West Point grad uates is 59?, and the number appointed from civil life 637. There is in the Treasury but about sf>, 179.000 in gold in denomination* leaa than twenty dollar*. Thi* amount not being sufficient to meel any active de mand for the small gold coin, it i* un derstood -to be tho intention of tba Treasury Department to recoin at the Philadelphia Mint most of the foreign gold received at the New York Assay Office into #5 and $lO piece*. —♦ - " Just before reaching ber landing at the foot of Oanal street, New Orleans, the cotton on the New Natche* took fire, creating a great excitement among the passenger*. The boat landed and threw overboard three hundred bales of the burning cotton. The boat was •lightly damaged. The damage to car go is estimated at $30,000. The free bath* in New York were patron ited by 50,174 person* last week.