Newt from all Nttiots. -- I BriglioU la singing in Omaha. -1t coats $5O apiece to blrindians .Aristina. --Paper 'petticoats are sold in Lon don at six pence each. —The new Post-office Co of New 'fork cannot agree. —New Haven harbor is very shal low, and is constancy Ming up • operations are suspended ticks kern Oregon for want of 7ater. —A. new.tin minti.has been opened lip sari Bernandino county, Cal - —Boston is exhibiting a double headed girl, who sings -and eats with both lamb. —Cotton is Blooming in Georgia: —Trenton is to have a peclestiain Congress. —A western paper advertises for a cook to vault herselL —Eugenie is to take a "historian" her on her easiterti trip Victoria book - iiettpa her $1.2; ron, an of whiel hhAss giocu sway., —A boy died. in • Dayton, Obio,.a t•o days sincv, from ogling too much ttlippery —Lynch law -is raging in Virginia, sewn prisoners bating been taken from jail and MIE —Mrs. Dr. Mary Walker . is bound. to gt, abroad, if it is only in the eipscity oflit.dy's —A cpok on a river steamboat kieled a min overlx , avd.lwpanse he icfnaod to eat hit vinands. --Au English actor recently played ih. Isamu evening ;at London and at Dover ; ninety miles distant. —Florida has abundance of ripe Ix :tau_ s. '—The cable 'does a business of 1645 per day -11 . . 7ini, it is said, lives on. soup niul hash. Sailor collars is the new fashion for indict+ —There are two more bank defal ca•ione in France. —Bridgeport, Ct., employs misty ti school teachers. - munher of dead bodies have 'wen-found in the bay at New Yorh. —Young Bennett has built a new yacht, wiach is Eaid - to be cry fast. —Tw6-Jaila in Seneca, N. T.. have entirely empty for grime time. —The village of Dtuikirk pioposCs a •Gip canal across the State or New York. —La.ng,alli is to be premiere clan- F, t 1 at the grand seas.a. —Mayor Hall, of New York, raises strawberries four inclipAin circumference. . —The New York Sorosis are taking un asnres to establish a national foundling hos pital. —The iron moulders of Troy have MO in aid of the strike of the coilsr girls of that city. —ln Salt Lake persons are fined sca dollars for being drunk, and twenty dollars f‘w protardtY. —Twenty-four .persons have disap ',wed toygterionly front New York in the last two necks. • --Joseph Ferguson, colored, has twen wale a doctor of rntilicitie by the Detroit Me.hcal College. Lua'ingw•ell, an old lady , 4 1,ty-two yenta of age, of 'Norwich. Ct., hung Ii rr.t. , ..f on Friday morning. —Switzerland has about 900,000 worth 52,000,030 ; cowl yieltl f 3 11. 00 0 . 0 00 ol milk a -Mr. Sumner has been invited to 0.,e Pacific-coast by Senator Nye, in 'behalf •crople of thF far west. —Patti has told Miss Jarnarrett, a ieriia rl tato wing in Paris, that she is tlestin ,l to be the queen of the opera. --The authoritie of Dresden and have set free a large number of eingink Ilrb. -.Melt have been brought to market for A Voodoo doctor in Augusta, a patient a prescription for chills and er which made him mad, and caused him to himself. - .1 couple of girls in Cincinnati t• 1 -bad a :lite 4:twat a young man entered tomn during. his absence and soaked his sulphuric arid. —Bishop Ilosecrans offers to have l •. t nal MARS Staid to the end of the world for all 1 who contribute $25 for St. Jo ph Cathedral,:trohunbux, Ohio. has been sold to Mr. Giorize, of Newburg. N. L. for thirty tic+• dollars. - il. :ite-size marble bust of Ad no• executed by W. H. Philips. is ni in N Yolk. Reading is making' a great cry 2,6.111 a v.liite rutin was talen fntu a ~! a imtuber the itsnal color. —Mary Scott, of Cairo, who waa aid to haw been the original Mary who "had s Itttl.• lanai - died last seek, aged 95 years. -. A fanner in Scott county, lowa, acres of Vl‘rn destroyed be the and he wratts a bounty offeica for the e,•alpa-ilthe animals. Edmonia Len-is, a colored 410 has been four ;cars in lkime, is now rl,:idiKkfcin New Turk. where she is practis ing - 1n r 'art, in'which 'he is said to excel. —A Virginian has been imitating the boy Hercules. lle found two minket+, a rat tlesnake and a blaektakke, caught each by the throat and killed them by !pitting tobacco juice in thi it niontliet. , —ln divorce case in Indiana, the wongtn,; who teas the plaintiff, being the owner of a farm, and the man poseAsed of noth ing, the defendant's attorney asked for alimony for the hush:mil. He didn't get it. --A Roman Catholic priest who had b en m elia'rge u the pastorate at Circle ville, Ohio, was marriel to a :Miss Sullivan. of that city, on the 5t t of last 'month. Be had previonAy.l4.en eirranunicatell by Bishop llov^(Tant:. —A Join.* called the Point of IL.nor published in Florence' to advocate hbolitton of dneling, and the establishment of ornrrs of honor . to settle disputes that would t•thermise he submitted to the arbitrament (TT the trtr , Td or pistol. ' -11st:coons arc borilg holes through t:u cuter dam or the Waterbury' reservoir, and it is proposed to alivatli the inniile with sans of 1.1, and shret-iron to cut their snouts. ' —A colored wan in .Quincy, ha, brought a snit to recovert2ooo from a steamy at company for having been refused the reivih g e of eating dinner pith I the white folks. . —lt is stated that the Pope has ut .rders to the physicians of Paris,forbidddig• them to continue their attendance upon patients ho, after three days dangerous Illness, refuse t. e,,nfess. - —Santis Anna i$ living. in ,a small ontage in Port Platte,-Wo4 Idies, and is enjoy nig guod health. Efeia constantly occupied in writing the history of Wife, never stirring out on the t.trcets. ' —The Boston Post,hasißeen mulch iin :50,7i damages 'in a mitfar hbeL The offensive paragraph , Ira/ "copied in good faith &tin She-erkirans oft conteteporitry. The wit seeing to-tare been a , hamlet - , enterprise. ktradford Xteportier. IDITORS E. O. GOODRICH Towanda, Thursday, June 24,18¢9. THE rIPTEENTE AMEIVDMEST. The ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution by New Hampshire makes, including In diana, twenty-four States, whipb hive given it their approval. The votes of twenty-eight are required for the com pletion of, the work. 'Vermont is sure to ratify it so soon as its Legislature . assembles nest fall. The act provid- ing for the reconstruction of Virginia, migsißsippi, and Texas demands its ratification by those States as a pre- to their full restoration to the Union. This . will mike up the sum total . of twenty-eight ; but we presume that Georgia will also be re quired to ratify , the amendment ere ahe is admitted to representation in 'Congress, while there is little doubt that Rhode Island qi give her voice in favor of the measure when her Leg islature meets in 3ennary. Early in the coming yeat; then, we may expect that a sufficient number of States will have ratified the, pro posed article, and that it will be incor porated as a part of the Constitution. This will dispose of all the questions brought forward by the Rebellion of the Slaveholders so far as legislative, enactments can Settle' them. Will they remain settled ; or willthere be an effort on the . part of the Democra cy to undo what has been'ilone, and bring the " nigger question " -once more into the arena of polities ?_ Ana if these measures are acquiesced in, North and South, what will be the relative position of parties, and what their antagonism ? Will party lines be looened, or entirely broken, and will there be a. reconstruction of po- litical eleruents into new organiza tions ? These are subjects for seriOns t.on 7 sideration, and address themselves particularly to the leaders of the Re publican party. We do not imagine that any one proposes to disturb the existing acts of CongresS, or to over- turn the Constitutional amendments which have, or may be adopted. The cry of " negro equality " has served its . purpose, and has become a bugbear so feeble in its effects, as io be unservice able. The emancipation of the blacks is recognized, even in the South, as a wise, just and beneficent measure, which, though bringing present incon venience and distress, eventually is ,ko be the great source of prosperity rind wealth to that section, securing an in fusion of :capital and energy which will take the place of previous un thrift - and indolence. The breaking up of the former relations and condi tions of society, and the change in business, \lccasioned by the substitu tion of paid labor for involuntnry ser vitude, has disarranged the social and financial condition of the South ; but already the people are learning to adapt themselves to the new situa— tion, and discerning and acknoWledg ing that out of the confusion is dawn ing a state of society and a condition of business which is infinitely prefer able to the .old. The colored population having been secured in all th 4 rights which legiti mately belong / 6:i them ; the preju dices and fens of the whites having been broken down, by experience and the . workings of the Congressional enactments, there is nothing* remain ing to be done, but to quietly wait for the reorganization of society•and ness, upon a basis adapted to the new order of things. This will come in time ; not, perhaps, without occasion al disturbance ; but eventually all these social and business problems will settle themselves, without further intervention on the part of Congress. This having been accomplished, the -duty of the RepubliCan party ends, and many wiseacres - are predicting that the party itself will . suffer disin tegration and dissolution. Such is a very narrow view of the subject. In too many cases " the wish is father to the thought." The conclution is b:lsed upon a very lim ited and errobcous conception of the causes and - principles which under laid and occasioned the mighty up rising 6f the people, finally crystal lizing as a political movement in the organization of the Republican party. ' The great pinciples which underlie that drganizatiOn are immutable as Truth itself. They are the practical shape which years of discussion and teaching have wrought out of the de mand for equal and exact justice to all men. The Republican party of to-day, is the conservator of public morals ; the advocate of religious and political toleration ; the champion of the oppressed of all nations and all climes ; a progressive, radical party,- ,boldly attacking all abuses, 101 ' claiming for the people the largest measure of justice and liberty. . The mission. of the party will never be accomplished, while a public wrong remains to be righted ; or while the people demand at the hands of gov ernment a single concession. To guide the party aright, requires wis dom,. integrity and discretiOn on the part cif its leaders. •_ II may fail for a . season, to be successful, but the end • cannot be doubtful, so long as it shall Conturne to bb the part• of Freedom, Justice and Humanity. IM.The Washington Typographic al , Union hai done itself credit in the election of young pouglas § , the colored printer, as a member. The impertinent meddling of the National tTnion has thus recieved deserved censure. •tgli.. We have nothing from the State CoFVention, we have no doubt hoWever; that Gov. GEAlir was nomi nated on the first ballot, LWIISLATVU Bsla~*Y► . The New York Legislature which latektadjoiiii:itad, , if we 1* - btlialt Orr At-4 4' ' - —3 - - • •,`" .4. k : 't. 1 f ,-:' r * :;i: 4 11 Pi''' ' aalluili 44l 4 l AV - '' . ' ' tOtit ..,. * pill vi....,:,, . ~,2 •:, ' ,•- ti t re [:: " fi e e ' it 41 '''' ' ''''' l , 4t.lt ic .., '- - ----,. ' • against ntteMpts: to influence Q votes of members, by illegiteinit'a means. The provisions of the bill • are iretio - speetive, - , SO — thfififliiiigliiii any gatkinan who found it necessaz ry to invest his money to induce the passage of a measure in which he luid an interest, can now come forward and oblige the -members - to - disgorge' the spoils: There . are some :good features itilbis bill; which will tend to niale it effective. For instance; if an kotie ,jobl;er has tipitio4lied ii . member improperly . to secure his vote; -and-the bribe is ;r • fnsed, the member, on . his Oath, - cart Convict the person Who made the prOptiStil to ):44. th r c....yote ;. or, if the bribe is takei,the person paying it,: though he was the direct cause of the offence, may testis fly splint-t the purchased voter;.and be held blameless. . ~. ~ . ' H. W. ALVOBA New Jersey, at a recent session, passed some such a law, but the Leg islature found it to work so wellAliat the members - gettinguo : dividends, were redaced- to, honesty. perforce, 'and obliged to !- live upon their sala 'ries. This they .could, not stand, and consequently they, repealed the lair; so that _one may, say legislative car: ruption has. really - official sanction New Jersey. It is suggested that the Netiork statute be adopted at the / nekt ses sion-of the Pe assembly, I EL' I a measure wl eserre the ft purity of that •estore its ancient and li Tutation, We doubt the such e.uactrne z in _.e mistake not,' there is a la* already upon our eta t a to books,%hicb makes the offering, 0 ' receivid , of a legislative'. brib( ' pe.l' offence, punishable by heavy pdalties. There are too ninny-ways 4' evading such a law, to make- it of any account, anti it rethains a dead letter, while votes are daily bought and sold. The proper remedy lies with the• people. Their voice is more poten tial and efficacious than legal enact- . ments. They can make and unmake legislators. If they will - carefully se lect fur thierltepresentatives honest and upright men, the brokers in votes will starve from want of occupation; and the lobby at Harrisburg.will be deserted. , The evil cannot be reach ed by legiSlative enactment,but if the voters wilt sternly rebuke every ,ap pearaile: e corruption, the practice will become less common, and the post of legislator be once More a' place of lionor and dignity: • • Tat: stream of emigration to this country is at preasant unprecedented. Three vessels, the Minnesota, from Liverpool, the City of London, also from Liverpool, and the Caledonia,' - from ti. (}lassgow, have ' 1 Ted at New York with over three t onsand pas sengers. the. total . emigration for the month of May was 27,080,against 19,784 during the corresponding month of last year, an increase of 7,332. The returns of the emigation agents at Live cool for- the . same month correspond with .the above The number of ships sailing is put down at 37, with 20,312 passengers, of whom 7,796 were English,- 679 Sotch, 4,237 Irish,and 13,600 foreign ers, chiefly Cfermans.- : Of _the whole number, 28 ships,With 21,195 passen gers, were for the United -States ; the _remainder were . for Canada. There dig.) : sailed -19 "short" ships, with 768 passengers, of whom 426 were for the United States, 160 for Victoria, andll4 for South America A. very large proportion of all these ' arrivals go to the West. This is the stream the South "should catch. Har dihood, industry, small capital, these are what is needed in the Southern States, and these are found in abun dance amok fliti - 'class of emigrants now coming to our shores. If rebels , would lay aside the n animosities and allow righteous laws to triumph, so that life might become safe, , property rights respected, and industry digni fied, then would the Western tide he deflected, and the worn out fields of the South begin to, blossom. STATE Ii rLF,CTIONS.—The following State elections will come off during the Summcr and fall of 1869: July 6, Virginia—State officers and Congressmen. August 2, Kentucky—State Treas urer and LegislatUre. August 2, Alabama—Members of Congress. • Aunmst 5, Teunessee—State officers and Legislature. August 10, Montana 'Territory -Delegate to Congress. September 7, Vermont—State offi cers and Legislature SepteMber 13, Maine—State offi cers and Legislature. October 5, Colerndo--Delegate to Congress. October [l2, Pennsylvania—State officers and Legislature. October 12, Ohio—State officers and Legislature. October 12, lowa Stateofficers and Legislature.. October 20, California--4ndges of the Supreme Cotut November 2, New York—Secretary of State, Legislature, dc. November 2, New jersey—Legisk hue. November 2, Ifavnehusetts,--State officers and Legislatitie.- A November 2, Minnesota-,Stato of ficers and Legislature. • . - • November 2, Wisconsitt- 7 -State of fivers and Legislature. THE Republicans of Vermont have nominated a soldier for Govenior--, General Washbnrn, n prominent and, successful laWyer of Iroodstock. He served in the war as colonel of a Ver mont regiment, and 4terWards was elected,by thejiegishitiirelo the poet, of Adjutant and Insp?ctor cle.nerid of the State. legislator he hes. had . experience in both_, houses, He will of c ourse, be elected. 'fficacy. of - LEttkit,Pitett.iLitliOki. ' •-:,... • • - We arc .., . .- ‘ . lito following ex- . .; _a ''., ..,'• ~ Capt. G. W v jainv , 7. . W ' 1 , . I r ". ) ; ' : • • :Jot= F. Caen .• . , i.: . - . ; .. - ,,,, : f, . • of the mormon fitnple N-. 2, : : 4 . i ;,:""r be read with interest, A : , of Capt. J. • z., --%''' . -t- ''',- • . ' - 15 miles stove : • . .• • •••• , • . i ton Monday &ening, it is bioutilldraltow*l on an eminianee . . : doing west, rtozeilrizKlind southwest, cord manding a vie* for many miles of the litissii -1414 bothll7llwldosiZthe riven --The niinsof the Old Mormon Tonga are yet there in 'plain Sight from , ihe river. ievieph smith), veldt:o' still lives Otero and occupies the old mansion of the prophet. she has married one Lewis Sidle man, but owns the 11a1n.:,.-T,oung 4:o. 4:wiihlii preaching mormouirin out West. -- The - temple waliVrinkillifilloo - Lyl2oTiie" ' on the ground; the main..buitiling was 100 feet high with an observatory7s feet above tke roof, giving'the visitor the grandest view of Illinois, lowa and Missouri Imaginable, and all AR twen ty-five cents. It was built of polished limestoisk with projecting corners and eacbcoruer hadone large stone slab 30 feet from the ground with the sun, moon and stars chiseled into it and painted with bronze, gnu* to the bviddirid grand imposing heathenidtiappeanince., . e basement was a fount ior!inmerrion,ihe fonrit was of marble blocks cemented. so' a ' hold' water, 12 feet in , diameter, 25 feet P t and it stood on the backs of 12 oxen . from solid stone as large as life, and Cdwith horns, - ... --.......ithntrie oironerwotAd tnimala. Each stand one luindred by orte hundred and twenty.feet, On each aide was partitioned off into rooms just six feet square, running the whole length of the largeroom, making 30 in all, They were lettered annotating rooms, where each convert we annointelfor the work ordiscipling the world..l-In the centre of one end was a small room ttere the Prophet alone took the sinners to the confessional and there in secret pardoned their mina whatcyer they were. 'The balance of.the room 86 by 112 feet was used for amusements,ni gimies,,chief ly for dancitig which was their chief amusement. Fr The temple wag dedicated in 1810, according to my informant, and burred ,wn in 1816,_ two years after the death of Jo. Smith and the tight and the flight of the Mormons. , The history of Slormonisea in. Hauctick epun ty, El., is short but attracted attention while it lasted. May God send ii a short history in its new entrenchment, Myinformationfs from two intelligent citizens of Hancock comity, that saw it aIL ' - EDITORIAL There are people iho contend that our diplomatic service abroad might be dispens._ ed with; and a great saving made to the nation in the way of expense. Foreign embassies anti consulships are sought, now-i-flayeg for, the so cial status they give the occupant, rather than for the purpose of discharging the duties. The chief business of our foreign inhtisterii and their attaches, is to secure to the shoddy-American travelers a presentation at Court, and a sight at 'royalty. General Dm, at the public dinner ten deredhim in Paris, before he left for 'America, %In-his remarks; dwelt particularly npon the irn , prtantfact, that "during tho two years and a-half of his service there, he had presented to their Imperial Majesties more than three hum deed of our fellow-citizens of both sexes." Gen. Dix is a very worthy man, and no chAubt made an excellent Minister, but the sum total of his services to the country seems to be embraced-in the above statement. i do not believe that the dignity or honor of the country requires such an -expensive establishment for the gratification of the snobs who may desire to make their bow before Napoleon. The death of Hen. if. ray J. RAl mon), editor 'of the N.Y.,Times, which took place on Friday morning last, deprives the profession of °tie of its brightest ornaments. While we did not admire the, political career of Mr. R., yet as an editor, we consider him superior to any man' to the country. Him writings were always read -able in style and conciseness, direct and to the point. Ho was ono of the few men who could' make up a newspaper in all its particulars. His death cast a gloom (o'er New York ; and his sud den and unexpected demise is the subject of universal regrpt. • t Chief Justice CHASE has been mak ing a Southern tour, with: an eye: to -the Presi dential election of 1872. liis object seems to be to secure the Rebel vote. A part of his plan was his recent-letter in which he would hive us hon or'" the heroism of our countr•ncen who fell lin . the other side," by decorating their graves, and awarding them the sane tegdmonials of our rns pkt wo give to the patriotic dead. As if hero isin could sanctify a bad cautmt or bravery ri cnso the crimes of treason and rebellion: Bra very and endurance are only worthy.whou put forward in u good cause ; else some of the wick edest and cruelest pirates and asmelsins ever known,' would deserve a hero's crown. The Chief Justice it a lamentable 'instance of that ambi.‘ tion which " overleaps itself, and falls on t'other side." His weakness and disappointed pride; have precipitated him into follies which have dis gusted the conntry, and damaged his reputation With tho Cigar dealers, and smokers gener ally, are interested in knowing that Ctimmiiisinn er Dln.ttico has recently decided that it is illegal to retail cigars from glass.case or glass slides in tobacco stores. They must be sold from the boxes stamped as prescribed by law. Whether this is to protect the pip -dimmer or the ,govern moot, is not stated. Hereafter. when a smoker purchases a cigar, it - ahould be from the "mitil nal paclrage," or the ilreceeding is illegal The Gnual Musical Hubbub, at Boston, is over. The big drum, the brass in struments, the anvils, the artillery, are vexed no more. The Rub rests from sheer musical exhaustion. If any of bur people have listened in iho vain Lope of hearing the musical_ strains' wafted from Down 'East, they hare Probably been dis . appointed, but they may console them selves with the fact that the disappointment would have been greater bad they been within sight of the Coliseum, and within the sound of the mighty discord of the vast chorus and its noisy accompanimr nts. The Bostonians vall it a success. Perhaps it was—with PAILEPA ROSA and ADELAIDE Pittman; and Gen. Gn.ticr, and all the other celebrities, vocal and political. It may servo as an example of what enterprise and money can accomplish', and gratify the pride of. ir the Wail • ' but as a limiest treat, we. im agine that •ml thousand people wire hugely humbuggt . ` . The people will certainly be grati fied with the quiet and unostentatious manner in which the Preiddent travels throogh the coon try. His antipathy is specch-maldng and repel ,. tions; and to the credit of the'pcople he is not intruded hpon or bored to death. At Boston, even, they could not contrive to extort a speech from him. His example will bo productive of good, ifit Teaches other public men the value and 'virtue of silence. • FORI2GIi AND HOME TILADEIEL the matter of foreign . trade in breadkituth it may surprise many persons to Imow what a sthall proportion it bears to the production of the coml. try, or to the amount distributed through the great internal lines of communication to all parts of the, country. The prodnction of corn and wheet, in the `,United States in the year. 1868, is estimated at 980,000,000 bushels, or about twenty-eight . bush-, els Per‘head to the population: - Rye, oats, barley and buclrwheet carry the aggregate' crop to about . 1,400,000 000 . of. bushels The total,, export last year 'of wheat, corri, mall flour ( maiming, --barrels , to TiuSheliY,-..„ Was only 18,000,000 of bushels. It will be seen; therefore, how very impor r tint internal commerce, (31` country is, compared with, its is!eligs, traffic., crol im meni nuinber from o ,erp :: :o ; ;, e. coun try, : were p :• , while _the Times of • fice was repre • ntedlky nearly all , the attechees of , : establidtment.: ~, , jTlie • • ceremo , 'es at - the. chtuich opened with a v • buitaryou, the organ. Rev: Dr. Stev n.,H. . Tyng read the Episcopal se .- .forthe dead.' :Rev. Henry. Vard t,• her delivered-. • a touching : enlo! on • Mr. Raymond. Rev. Mr. :K t_ .t ; , pastor of the ;church. Where the serN 'ees wertheld, folloW ed _ with, a . • : yer, and Rev,. Prof. Shedd prong , : • the benedietion. , The coffin -aa ~ a Very ; liamulsonie est rosewood . 't, silver ~ mounted, and. was insc d simply .with the. name and age of . the . deceased, 'and covered with - vend beautiful wreaths of immortelle After the services the lid was op ned, and the whole au dience passed in procession - around the coffin, eac member taking. a last look upon the mains of one. of New York's most ,spected, and deeply loved sons. the lid was again. closed and the con,„ :gallon slowly divers- At three thertirand, according to (Ace idltighe4 seat for Ihe right was the :twelve Apostles, %ta for the twelve tll' several fact of itself r curios- The remain qe left in the and will be p row at Green', Mrs. , Rayruon present iu the emonies TUE Pi OTES EEC& Chien ference met at ing, - and the s Prayer Book up. The Rt had read in se l ing means This he den and he belie. come when tl trines subver the Church sl ing: Resolved, faith, worshi p established ' adhere to the tant Episcop States of , the mind of propose to from the pur ..Re.yotred, t t ?gence in eve eoxmtitutiona bring before our , Church from our pt worship; an. .our mutual f and to stand evil and goo, of faith and The Chair out of order. The Rev. I on an. elabot is conscience posed alterat vice. The opted: tßeeolved, Conference, the Book of ful to•the Episco ' ' • Bewixed, seeming to ministry is Lord's Sup veneration i tism, houl Prayer 800 . The Conf acljourned.sili Tiffs REP cent "Oc • nu, discuss says:— What, iu, to rely on their old re They will. turned upon There has a consequen( in the South. No inilitay dictatorship set up by General Grant. No extra public mon These we 4111868. How weri By such ed people former own ever: . 'By a ste and capital • By . a ctire ; can admin meat. Horatio we were the $300,000,00 in' subjecti ministering of the , Uni $120,000,001 This is y to-the Dem THE STA dqP I 4 II P facts abou Few clang: new Secre with.hinv the reor ministratio act as "tin to die org. exceptions who has be bnsineas is treated ; ac In order to the,. Stab? pioven Ilia any gnat& Every new deystand fr , are Pick'Ni, eaIITAKI Newspaper . .. /., it is understood, will hiirch during to-night, t vately interred to-mor ood by the .faunly: and daughters Were church during the cer- ANT EPISCOPAL CONFER o, June 17.—The Con ; nine o'clock this morn abject of revision of the *as again again taken v. Mr. Cowgill said he ie papers that this meet- Lession from the Church. Lied / It meant reform; ed that, the time had Men who teach doc live of the principles of pult he actively oppsed. ►liver offered the follow- I at .in all _matters 'of , and doctrine, the long • • and ceremonies, we decision of the. Prote st Church in the United eriea, as expressive of hrist, and by them we st all the departures faith. at we shall use all dili available, legal and Teams, in order to . e -proper tribunals of all those • who •depart . faith or .doctrine and 1 that - we hereby pledge 1 ith to teach each other, by each other throligh I T,report in this our. work 1 Tibor of love, tided the tesolntions ) r. Andrews entered up te discussion as to what with respect to the pro on in the Baptismsl ser- . llig, resolutions were ad- s the opinion of this hat a careful revision of ,ominon Prayer is need .t interests of the Protes -1 Church. hat all words or phrases at& that- the Christian a priesthood, or the eCa sacrifice, or that re • inseperable from bap • be remora from the i•renee soon afterwards NM TIECORD.-lii a re 'onal" letter, Colonel For ! ng the politpal situation, i ced, have the Democracy lLs there anything Unt el record ? start with all their guns them. been no war of races as e of negro suffrage in ant expenditures of the e their chief prophecies they met ? dustry amonn. ° the color f the South that their I , Ars are getting rieh9r than y stream of emigration to the South. 1,. 'frugal, anti Rtifulati tuition of the Govern eymour said last fall that paying at the 'rate of a year to keep the South I,n, and now we are ad- the whole Govermnen , d States - at the rate o I a year. ur answer,. Republicans talk prophets. DEPARTNIXT.-- , A PhiLi 1 : gives some interesting, the State - Department. . s tase place there: . Every • is expected to hornig 'S irit assistant. This is Alen of each new ad-_, Sometimes men , who. : tors" haze been ImoWn away, but theseare the . not the rule. .A. man, • n only thirty years in the considered a boy, and a tdingly, , by, his eligihle to, a 'Clerk in Department , must be the man is exempt. from tious of a leaky nature. Leeretacy gin to = 7 !Pra thP first that his ereii 'a the , i,stoutest, 'the stronger = :storm: imien in search of neics te* umny sqire .as ritory east of th u e Miss issipp i River, 14 0 twit;htitanilklg con*nees en southont, all of the so-,ct,4ll4'esst7: ern'Ond 'central' states, andUll'of the old 'North:west.' The couipleti°n: of theTapifia Ibiilwity . has . 4mingsikthe former ,wesn into , ~e ast anal and Moved the. wit ! ' 1000 to-. ward the .e . ettinglgu, al/e, aCtival west q#61144,3 PalifeXl!ik Oregon .4 1 zeri4 trtah, Montana,.,Wyomiug, lu ,Ond.tho !tiel7 1":1401 Colera4o aridsew iw r luird i to' realize : the truth *at ehlOgo,is,an eastern ; city, 'and that. Illinois is not even a central, but .is an eastern state. Omilm,