Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 21, Number 47, Jasper, Dubois County, 21 November 1879 — Page 3

WEBKLTjDOURIiai C. BOAXS, FseUibw. JASPKK INDIANA.

Bennty-MHrtdtal Lhhh Ih CHrt. It has been expected that the validity of the Federal Election laws would speedily bo tested iii tlio Supremo Court of thu United States. Out of livo Baltimore cases kihI oho Cincinnati case, it HntloIitel the discussion of the Constitutionality of tho Federal statutes known as the Deputy-Marshal laws might arise hvUm tlio Supremo Court mill reach a decision in that tribunal. It is of tlio highest importance that tho Supremo Court pronounce upon tho Constitutionality of. these laws at an early day, and since tlio heat of tlio latu election is over this gravo question can, or should, be impartially and candidly discussed. It is the question of foremost importance. These laws arc applicable to all cities of twenty thousand inhabitants, and. they number not far from eighty. The next census will show a larger number than that. These cities will elect, or control the election, of about one hundred members of Congress, one-third of tho House of Representatives. It is important to know whether the election of so large a fraction of the members of the House is to bo placed entirely in the hands of agents selected by thu Executive Department of tlio Federal Government, or whether these elections shall bo conducted by tho people of the States, as they have been till recently, since the adoption of the Constitution. Those laws give to tho party in control of the Executive unlimited authority to hire men at fifty dollars a head to vote and work for said party. This is hideously inequitable. Is it Constitutional? The Attorncj'-General of tho United Stated has made known his brief upon tlte validity of these Deputy-Marshal Election laws, and alleges their constitutionality "1. Ik-cause Conicross has full ami unqualified power to rCK-ulHte tho iHHiiner of holding elections for member thereof. "X llectUMte tlie power of CnfrfM to regulate the manner of hoMImr election fur its winter Include authority to adopt whatever inpuMiros may iw doomed necessary or expedient tn conducting: such flections and detertnlntmr tlio renult thereof. "."J, IKvauaetionirrcsscan punish any violation of the 1:ih com'tfil under this power, and alo any Interference with tho officer charged with the execution of such laws. "4. ltcvmise the ttatutory provisions under which the convictions were hud are upproprlate for esrrylHK into effect tho power granted toCiHitrrcH tn rrjrulHte the mminerof hokllnff elections for lteprcseiitattVeV Of these, tho first and second arc tho essential claims of the Executive Department of the Government in defense of tho power ot the Executive Department of the Government, under the Constitution, to stalk into the various States and conduct elections. Should the Supreme Court alllrm these projvosittofM, it would be hi opposition to the histeiie mt recorded opinions of that highYtrhHm!, ami in yW ef the interpr4ioH8 placed upon the Coastitution by that Court in the past, we are not presumptuous in saying that the., assertions of tlie Attorney-General are In direct conflict with the Constitution. Tlie clause of the Constitution upon which the Attorney-General liases the validity of these statutes (Article 1, Sect. 4) is as follows; "Tho times, j1stce and manner of holding elections for Senators and Kepwiuitntlves Khali be proscribed in each State by the I.ecidutpre thereof but theConjrrrsi nmy at any tltw) bylaw make or alter Much regulation', except us to the places of choosing Senators.'.' When those laws were r.tssed thoy were not grounded at till upon the claim of the Constitution. They were deemed a part of Southern legislation, and were doubtless supposed to be, somehow acts enforcing tlie late Amendments to tho Constitution. But perhaps this doesn't matter. It is clear that even if 44 Congress has full ami unqualified power to regulate the maimer of holding elections for members thereof," it does not follow that Congress has full and unqualified power to hold these elections itself, or through its agents. The clectiousinust be held by tlio proper parties to hold elect ions the voters created by tho State. . because Congress may alter or make regulations as to the "manner of holding election for Senators and Ilepreseiilatives," it by no means follows, as Mr. Devens assert, that Congress can walk into tlio States and itself "conduct sttch elections and determine the result thereof." What it does by its agents It 'does itself. Because Congress may prescribe the manner in which a thing shall he done by those competent to do the tiling, Congress may not, therefore, do tho thing itself. Mr. Carlisle, in an admirable speech, made tho unanswerable point that if tho. Federal Government can take control of the election of members of tho House, determine the cpmlilicntions of voters, put its ullicersat the polls to engineer the suffrages, it can also place thorn in tlio Legislative halls of tho States to pronounce upon the credentials of members, rule out and rule In votes for United States Senators, ami arrest members without warrant. Tlio Gctieral Government has tho samo power to elect United States Senators that it has to elect members of tho House, and baa tho same power over the elections in either case. All this is an enormous stretch of the meaning of the word manner;" and a still more enormous stretch of alleged Federal pewer over suffrage. Why did not tho Constitution say explicitly, if it meant that, that Congress shall have power to conduct Congressional elections, instead of saying that tho Congress could make regulations as to tlio manner of conducting elections? Why does not tlio Constitution read: The Congress shall hare powder-

To lay ami collect taxee, etc. To lwrrow money on the oretlit. ate. To regulate oommeroe, eto. To establish a uniform rule of naturalhwtioii, etc. To coin money, eto. To declare war, eto. To elect mendier of Congress, or to take entire control of said elections? Why did not the Constitution direct that Congress should have power to carry on these elections, and not merely that it should have power to indicate the manner in which they should bo carried on? About thirty-live years ago such men as John P. Hale, Hannibal Hamlin and Stephen A. Douglas maintained, and tho then House with them, that Congress could only alter State regulations or make new ones in the event that the States should refuse to act in tho premises, or should legislate in such a manner as to subvert the rights of the pco1lo to a free and fair representation, hit this was long ago. Mr. Devens bunds the validity of these Deputy-Marshal laws upon tho Constitutional power to do precisely what these laws do not. The clause of tho Constitution which he quotes says Congress may "mako or alter such regulations." These Deputy-Marshal laws make no new regulations and alter no old ones, in the strict and fair sense

of this Constitutional phrase. Without dwelling further upon Mr. Devens' amazing enlargement of the word "manner," we can judge what the decision of the Supremo Court will be upon this question from what it has been on kindred questions. In tho Crtiikshank case ('J Otto, 642) tlio Court decided that "Sovereignty, for the protection of the rights ot life and personal liberty within the respective States, rests alone with the States," that the United States "can neither grant nor secure to its citizens rights or privileges which arc not expressly or by implication placed under its jurisdiction; all that cannot be so granted or secured are left to the exclusive protection of the States;" and (referring to Minor vs. Hoppcrsctt) that "the" Constitution of tlte United States has not conferred the right of suffrage upon any one, and that the United States have no voters of their own creation in the States;" that "the right to vote in the States comes from the States," and that "to bring a case within the operation of that statute (sixth section of Enforcement act of May 31, 1870,) it must appear that the right the enjoyment of which the conspirators intended to hinder or prevent was one granted or secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States. If it does not so appear, the alleged offense is not indictable under any act of Congress." Do not these decisions entirely cover these Federal Election laws? CinctHmti Enquirer, JIIhiIh Care of Life. Ia tlte early dawn next nwrakif w drove UTKah-H, pkwest 12,000 inhabitants, along a ftjte road with shetoering trees. The town stands on the high bank of a river. From the top of the Collector's house there is an extensive view over a rich, well-timlered country. There are many monkeys, some very large, and though they injure the crorw, no one mohwts them. This care of life in regard to tho lower creation is a principle of Hindu religion more strictly observed titan that of care of their fellowcreatures outside tho circle of their own family connections. Within that circle ' they are wonderfully kind, Hindus of high easto never take life. Some are strict vegeta riiiitrf, ami in order to preserve life will frighten away fish from parts of a river where they have reason to expect English ollioers to come in quest of them, liven the much-abused money-lender refuses all advaneestoiishermen. On one oeciLstou 1 came upon an extensive inclosed nark with shelter sheds, maintained by a native banker, into which horses no longer tit for ne were charitably received and fed, that I hoy might wear out their lives In quietness. And yet female infanticide is undoubtedly too common, fll females to 1U0 males being not an unusual proportion in the population. A ontiro Judge explained this to nie by the great desire among the lower class to intermarry with the higher, a lower man being ready to pay a needy man of tho higher order a large sum of money to induce the son of the higher rank to marry his daughter. Hut when the lower man has no money , as is too often the ease, the female infant is apt to ho neglected and allowed to tlie. - 77ic Xittdcoilh Century. mK. H. Wai.kkk, Statistician of the New York Produce Exchange, after a careful estimate from "authoritative reports, places the wheat crop of the Imbed States for 1870 at about 4&W)UU,OO0 bushels, The spring wheat crop will not be so large as was at first expected, that ot Minnesota being no more than tS,(MJU,000 bushels, instead of -10,000,000 as estimated early in the season. The amount consumed hy -18,000,000 pofsons phis the amount required for seed nod other purposes, is placed at 2o0,000,000 bushels, leaving 1 7o,000,)00 bushels for export, 160,000,000 for Europe, ami lfc.OOO.OOO for other ports. ' " A young school-mistress who peeped has lost her certificate, and tho Supreme Court of Iowa will give Inn no redress. She had applied for a certificate, and during the examination was caught glancing oyer the shoulder of another applicant ami getting answers to questions propounded in arithmetic. Tho Superintendent refund to issue tlie certificate, and the young lady brought suit in the Circuit Court to compel him to do so. She carried her joint in the lower court, but tho decision has been reversed by the Supremo Court.

IKDIANA STATE NEWS,

rtthktace of Kdard .MrUm))!, KtUtH of Lofrmwport, wm burned oh Umc ulf bt i 1 3d. Lo .yy, , oiuiMiw. i,omkj,w,'. i i m a. Thomas Jtwxw. the WMhiHKtott CouMtv i

tiiHnlrcr, hm been wnt to the gMte prlsoa i posed to the nomination of Cornell; for life, rimI the militia, who kwl hen or- ' nevertheless, he was nominated. Tlie tiered totklem to prevent nob violence, coe-! machino portion of tlie Democratie ducted the prisoner to hit tkatlnaUou. party was opposed to Robinson; yet Lakavettb brewers stW during tlte prt , liobmson was nominated. The AdminebM months 10,777 lmrre! of beer. I istration, which had turned Cornell out MiciixcIte!iithalcc'ncaHtt'ilatl.ai)(rte j of a local Federal oflice as untrustworby tlw dkapparam: of Fred Fischer, a thy, put forth, in spite of Civil-Service wealthy farmer, taking all be could collect, rules, unusual exertions to elect liim and l,SO0 Insurance, money received for farm Governor. The Democracy, on the buildings recently destroyed by an Incendiary j other hand, as a party stood by Robinflre' i son on account of his honest and eoSi'ikkk & IfAKKtsox's wajjon factory at Lo- nomlcal management of the State's afKansportwa lairntd on Ukj Hfelit of the M. fairs, prcfurrinir to eo down with such

Los rin.OOQ; Insured forl,000. Fifty mn are thrown (ait of employment by the lire. Tiik paw: riirer trata on the Cincinnati, i

nalwlidsMfclitxttilunrDMl,ilHeat fiashen )m,i offended. The Republicans preat noon on the 8d, ran Into a farmer's waon J tended to be reformers; the Democrats iK-arFaIrmoimt,klllinr Mra. C, CI upper and practiced reform. The Republicans dangerously Injuring her husband. - bohlly claimed, through Blaine and Thk residence of S. II. Mallock, three ' other leaders, that party fealty was miles aouth of llushvllle, was totally de- above all other considerations. The stroyed by Are on the nltfit of the 1st. Low Democrats sought to affix party fealty 8'500 to honorable behavior, with accounta1 hk last course of stone to be lakl on the bility to the opinions of good men. It State-House foundations this year has been WR8 a noblc Hnd bravo action on the completed, and work will be practically sus- mrl 0 tl,e New York Dcmocracv to dis-

pended until the spring. The dressing of stone for the superstructure will, however, be. continued throughout the entire winter, and tbe contractors say they will have an unlimited quantity of material hi readiness for the commencement of operations at the earliest possible opportunity. General Thomas A. Morris says that nothing like as much work had been done this year as the hoard bad expected, but there was one thing they could congratulate themselves upon that what had been done was well done. No better foundation bad ever been lakl than that upon which the Iudkna State-House would rest Thk Supreme Court has rendered a decision favorable to the whistling la'.v of the last Legislature. The old English axiom that 'the King can do no wrong" Is In this decision applied to tbe Indiana Legislature, the Court holding substantially that, although the continuous whistling of locomotives might, under ordinary circumstances, be a nuisance, when it is done by virtue of the act of tbe General Assembly ho nuisance scoaunltted 1,111.0 eye of j the law, and that! ie law cannot, therefore, be set aside upon - that ground. OrriciAt. inquiry is being made tn regard to toll, free gravel and common roads throughout tbe State for each year from 1S75 to the present time. O.v the Ctb E. 0, Fox, a brakeman on Michigan Central freight train No. 23, going east, when alntut two miles cast of Porter Station, fell from the cars to the track, aad was instantly killed, two or three trains imeslng over him before he was mttrsed. His body was frightfully mangled. A most horrible casualty occurred at Millersbun: on the night of the 4th. Three children of a family named Vance were playing near the kitchen stove, when the stove fell over, throwing a wasli-beikr full o( hot water mr. MetMeal aM wa sammonod, bat of He avail. Atl ttted. At Sta. Srecii, ea the siM, the eastward bound express train on the Fort Wayne road

etruck and instantly killed Mrs. James Fisher, t heads, his insurgent campaign has try was only the North, and his people who was walking on the track and paid no at- . taken him, to all intents and pumoses, i only his party. Always a Radical Retention to the alarm tlgnals s;lven by the en- ; completely over to tho enemy, it will publican, in 1861 he did not want peace glneer, who made every effort to stop tlie ; be the Republicans in whose mouths st any price. The remark then attrib-

train in time. Her remains were taken to her residence nearby. M uir Waksui, an Inmate ot the Marlon County 1W House, and wife of a negro named Itiley louse, committed suicide on the morning ot the Cth. DanIei. Hassmui, aged 71 years, a prominent (acrtnan citizen of EvansvJIle, w;h found dead in his bel, at the European Hotel in that city, on the morning of the Ctb, of heart disease. At Rising Sun on the night of the 0th, 0. B. Gibson's hardware store and an adjoining drygoods store were entered by burglars and despoiled of ii00 worth of merchandise. TiUi retail store of Klngan fc Co" packing bouse at Indianapolis was damaged by lire to the extent of 10.0CO on the Ctb. ().. the afternoon of the Oth, Jacob Ilurkc, employed in an Indlntiaitolls fertilizing renderlnt; establbhinent, fell Into a vat ot boiling material and had ltb legs thoroughly cooked. William Miller drew him ont, and, after landing hint on a plank, lost bis own balance nmUoll Into another tank, receiving severe scalds. Barke will probably die. Ilnxnr Aumantkaut, a fireman on the ImUiutapolls, Peru it Chicago I!allrd, was run over and instantly killed on tho night of intoxicating Honor, whU h'he got drunk. Win un engaged In building a new bridge oti the Northwestern Grand Trunk Hattroad near Valparaiso on the Sth, F. A, Clark, fore- i tnan of the work, was fatally Injarcd by a tree I falling; on him. j Arinnat Cnrpcntcrsville oa the night of the it b destroyed 0. "W. Comln'a dry-goods store t A. II. Picket' frtW-tnUl and lumbcrvanl, nnd tbe building occupied by tbe ......'.. 1 Cir.lLWl 'III, tlr., At'trrln Imtn Mtark from bundmt saw-dost. ,1. u twos' plmilng-mlll at Senear ivji burued on the night of the Sth. Loss, 13,000. Tun Trustees of the Stale University, at liloonilngton, have It under consideration to revive the law and medical departments thereof. Tun managers ot a church fair la Iivd.auapoH" advertise that thirteen oysters to tlte dozen wilt be given in the soup. Is,ue U,.hni:V barn, near Spencer, was binned a few nlshU ago, Involving a loss of Tun following are tbe carrent prices for leading sUrles In Indianapolis! Wheat, Xo. 2 Ited, l.ai)iI.2:l; Corn, 3$Kc;Oats, 31K QiWc; Lard, fitlsifc; Hofis, f2.7590. The ClnetHHatl notatlom are; Wlieat, 1.'J6 vtl .'M; Corn, 4:k.(14c; Oats, miVc Itye, i0jSle; Barley Noi 2, 0,ie; Pork, ?10.00 if.10.lO; Lard, u,V(4Xc; Uegs, Ht0.0.

J IU1I MlflUHIMJ nMV V riv V l - j .

tlie Otlt fcomesnmes, my son, you win warn io ; w,tn i1JS ijones," wo (to not unuenaKo . AT Noblesvltlc, on the evening of the Oth, wliistlo. Do nt entirely repress this ; t0 say. But wo have no hesitation in ' .Mrs. L.m..cv cowhlded Mr. Wilder Totter, '" to aspirate your feelings in sihbi- ; declaring that, if stirring up sectional i an.UVitter knocked her down rorlwr trottide.lant Stratus of wheezy music; mere V prejudice and passion, generhting Mrs. Hlney cbnrged Potter with harlng fur-1 modulate and regulate it. do off into hatred, niahco and all unehatitablencse i.u'h.hi wi.tihthui.! ithrttnnt!ii iiiiimr. with i the Woods live or six miles from any between Northern and Southern peo-

CerfteU's Election lit Sew Terk.

The difference in the Republican, sad Democratic ticket in yesterday's New York election was this: The better porxorit election wae mw: me wrtter nor. tion of the KeiHiblieaa nartv waa ona man at the helm than to make con . . . . r7. ' . cessions to the men of Tammany, whom tlnlif regard the autocratic threats and dictation of the Tammany ringsters. Better than winning, they deserved to win. They leaned on a broken reed when they expected that Republicans of high pretensions would discard party subserviency under these circumstances and boldly sustain tho right. All that the Republicans could see in this struggle between honesty and corruption was the opportunity to score a partisan triumph, and they do not seem to have paused or cared for the consequencos. The defeat of Robinson naturally will have a depressing effect upon the prospects of Mr. Tilden for the Presidency -tho result aimed at, more than any other, by John" Kelly and his bolting crowd. Governor "Robinson's candidacy at the time was accented everywhere as a tost of Tilden s strength, ... .. . ...

and although Governor R.'s votci as ' greatest of politicians; Thomas Jefforcompared with Kelly's, shows that the . son one of the greatest of statesmen. If New York Democracy are overwhelm-1 Chandler deserves a place among the

mgiy ior moon, vne result can not out llRvS tendency to lead to doubts of Tiiden's being aide to carry the Empire State in the event of Ins nomination neSt year. No question but that Tilj den could have the delegation almost I solid in the National Democratic Con- ! vention; yet as long as It can be argued

that lie could not carry tnc Electoral ; A man ot indomitable encrgyanu uiiervote of the State, his chances would s ly unscrupulous as to his means, he benot be llattering for tho Presidency. In longed to that class which always comes such case names like those of McClol- j to the surface when revolution line cut lan, Hancock or even Bayard would ' the popular mind loose from its probably come to tho front for we moorings; and when, consequenthave no idea that the loss of New York ! lv. leadership depends much mort

iow will discourage the Democracy from making a strong and hopeful ef fort next year. Asfor&r. John Kelly, we have no expectation that another opportunity wro be awnrdeaMm to d the flswpasja to the Democracy he serine to have ceoHiiilished by his twite and obstinacy t at this election. Leading a lot of sorethis morning Kelly a praxes will be suiif. Tnmmau v has struck at the power which, daring to be honest, disreran led her menaces, and Tammany has indicted a venomous wound; but tho transient victory means to herself death as well as dishonor. Thus goes on the work of purification. Out of the nettle danger wo pluck flu t!mwr s.ifctv. Perhiliw. had tho elections of this year gone Democratic, mnnv mistakes and blunders mirrht

have endangered the Congressional and tion was simply an arrangement by State contests of I 80. Perhaps the ! which Republican dominaucy could be Hush of victory will develop tho real j indefinitely perpetuated.. Even tho antagonisms, the real purposes of the , wings of a lively imagination were Republietm party. Perhaps the people nWor able to lift him above party conwill at last, and in time, see the dan-; sidorations. He could not conceive of . ..... . ... . . 1 L ' 1 . . . I. ...... .1

gers into which tne nopuoncan party is rsationai prosperity u.cupt iu pumcarrving the country. At all events, ut of Republican rule, and probably the duty of all patriots, which term in- j wondered how that prosperity could lAmhtt nil honest Democrats, is to iicht hnvo existed before Republicanism was

M,-aa f-ari1 nmllnaen nntllitur nndone to wrest the Government from the hands that now direct and control it. St. Louis licmbUwH. Advice te n Whistler. habitation, if tho desire comes upon you during business hours, and whistle there until tho birds mako you ashamed of

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your poor accompiisumcnt. mjij nut , as mueil oi u as any man nioriust n vield to the lomptation too readily, lest proluecd. And wo have no more heslyott become addicted to the habit and ; tat'mn in declaring that tho chief good become a slave to it, and go whistling he has done, in a public capacity, is by around even as a man who has lost a ( setting an exaniplo which public men dog. There are men, my son, who can should avoid. If that example were whistle musically; once in awhile you ; generally imitated, with the vigor and find men whose whistle is pleannt to . persistence of the original, the de-

i utikM u hitcii tlik,llk ,1 Ifl'l cr III li the ear and soothini? to the soul, butvou only Hnd one of these men even three or four thousand vears. and tiiev uo young, son; they die very young. Yon ...Ml .II.--. . 1. .. . II... !...,, ...1.I,-,4I..M L. Will OOSITVU lllnb lllu W. niiiatiui is nu who whistles least, and practices in soli-; tude. The jKwr whistler, who tlats on tlio high notes and g;isps on the lower , ones, and wheezes in the middle registor, ti the man who whistles at all! times and in all places. Whistle i all you will in solitary places, ! son, if it pleases vou, whistle in tlm nitrbt. hs vnn rc liome. if vott will. for it cheery whistle in tho dark is a 1UI il Vl;iil TIIIJil III lliu id n pleasant sound unto the listening soul of j your heart. Ami if evertke temptation

tlie iMjiatetl passenger, out. wuen you j siuuy mai oianvu, mm iwm conic into the assemblages and thelHisi- i jwllcd lwr in consepienco. If this eness haunts ot men, unpucker vour mu cision stands, the studies ntrange! by sleal lins and slittt un vour whistle in the Hoard" will not lw conitwhory upon

comee to you to whistle afainet the edge of a card, crush it out, oTtke effort kill yoe. WMotliHic is not a lofty nor vet a UMful, aHhouipt it if a HnfVnrstu, aecsnnplfslunent. Tkoch you pnwjtk'e a hunuretl years, a:id thoag n yoe whistle never so whlstley, n.y yon, yet the commonest switch-engine that ever sesired a human being deaf, can beat you at it. The great and good were never jpeet whistlers, son. George Washington never sat in a friend's office, with hU feet on the window sill, whistling 44 Grandfather's Clock" against the edge of a card. Strive to emulate George Washington, and although you may never le first Jn war, first in peace, and first in the heart of your countrymen, yet fame will not forgot you if they can write upon your tombstone that von never whistled your countrymen fnto convulsions of intemperate but fruitlew profanity . JJnnieWc, in the lUwkeye. t The Beni Senator. From ene of the leaet fulsome eule gies of the late Senator Chandler we take the following: "That he vtm a etRtesmanof tbe htfasat order many will question, and yet, If the de (rree of etatMinansblp be tseaMlred by tbe amount of wlloin brought to tear in the illrectlou of public affairs, it will be hard to deay him r phtce amonfr the rreteet men of the jMrl.xl in which he lived. he bad done little evil to live after him. In the stem dictum of the poet, and be has done mueh good which will not, in spite of the dlctH, be iterred with hla bones. A public man is public property, hying or doad; and if, while living, he has done ill, death should no more shield him from blame than rob him from praise if ho has done well. If the grave is not permitted to hide the right, neither should it conceal the wrong. Character cannot plead the statute of limitations as soon as the breath is out of tho body anymore in one cose than in tho other. Zachariah Chandler was not a statesman of tho lowest order, much less of the highest. He was a very able politician, but between politician and statesman there is a vast difference, and distance. Aaron Burr was one of the

greatest men oi me period m wmcn ne fived," then that period certainly wa not fruitful in greatness. AVe have only to imagine him in the senate when Clay, Webster, Calhoun and Douglas : Were there, in order to form a correct ; estimate of his intellectual stature. He ' would have been a pigmy among giants. upon resolute purpose and rockupon it fanaticism than upon either wisdom or patriotism. He was an. American oombtnatien of Dantoa ami Marat; kteking nntch of the genme and X f tike gnerotT of the former, and some of the blocdUrirsttaeM of t&e let ter. That he loved hie country ana 1 people, we do not doubt, but his coun1 tiled to him, that 44 the Union never ' would bo worth anvthinir without a lit- ' tie blood-letting," is a key not only to his principles then, but to all his policy since, lie never couiu, or ramer never would, understand that the war was over. The collapse of the Confedera 1 t L cy was not to nun a restoration or tue Union, but a signal to renew hostilities in another arena. The Federal family j was not to be reunited, but to ' constructed: and his idea of reco oe rereconstruc- ! Iinm. As a TMirtlSail. PlirQ ami Simple. 1 ho has never had a superior; and a long and patient search would be necessary to Jind his equal. , jjow much evil Chandler has done f that will "live after him," or how much good that 44 will not be interred pie, and as far as practicable rendering genuine and permanent union of the Slates impossible, bo evil he has done uif. stntotion of our Govenmient would bo accomplished before the corttse oi tne dead benaior nau none duck io tiusu ; And if, in tho judgment of impartial 1.X..I.... II... .i.....l I.,,J I1I9LU1, W1U SV"J 1 miw dune balances the ovil, Chandler maj congratulate himself upon the verdict. Louis Jlcuublicau. . At Pomeroy, O., Wm. Tucker Mied the lhard of Education and recovered $:tf damages for depriving Ins daughter of tlie privileges of the public schools, The Hoard had decided that all pupils should study drawing. Tucker notified i srii.i... - - - the teacher that his daughter must not tbo pupils.

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