r '- . V" ;.. a-. P - - t- & 1 ' r -' CICERO W. ITAHRIS. ) . : wizMmGToir;ir: v.i 'Tuesday Evening, j Sept. i g, 1876. EVENING! EDITION. Democratic Eeform Ticketi ! V ' ' 'FOR PRESIDENT : SAMUEL J. TILBEF, f OP NEW, YORK IP NEW FOR VICE PRESIDENT : g I f THOMAS A. HENDRI01 OF INDIANA, Proldentlal Electors t 1-OB STATJ AT LABOK : DANIEL G. FOWLE, of Wake, JAMES M. LEACH', of Davidson., DISTRICT ELEGTOB3 . f 18T DISTRICT LEWIS C. LATIIA5 to 3d 4th "6th" 7th' 8tb ' WOHN F. -JOHN D, WOOTEN 8TANFOKPJ F. 'n. BUSBKE. -FRAKK Cv ROBE K.ri WAKINOif . W jf, B. GLENN a'c! AVERTw STATE iTICID ! I QOVEBSOB, j IZEBULON l5. : ' op meickIiENBtjrgJ ! - IJETJT. THOMAS , OF ?ITT. ATTORN E THOMAS ', OP 8EC11ETA TA1 JOSEPH.' A. ENGE !ARD, OF KEWI IIANOVER. ' TREASURERj JOHN M .'- i w OF RASDOLP AUDITOR, SAMFE Ll itOiVE, OF HAYWOOD. I STJP'T rUBXIO INSTRt i ;" TF 1 hi I i pCTION,! JOHN Cr-frt?ARBpKpTJGH, OFj JOHNSTON. - i ill -I F OR CO NGR B 8 St PIKST DISTEIGT I JESSE J. Y.EATES, . ' v OB!HER' 03D. Third district ALFRED M. WAD DELL, OP NEW HAKOyEB. POURTn DiSTItlCT, JOSEPH JO i?A!yis, 6F FRANKLIN, I. FIFTH DISTRICT, ALFRE disth vV A L OF R1C11M0N SEVKNa dl - v ..-in tt 1.1 .Vfll 1- V A WW tnrnuTit man (lOIimiTM ViANC 1 s U V U V BUNCpMB.K. A; : Private Dalzeli i' Writing leVters to Hayes and Wheeler To Wh4eler -LIB I II .Ilk , n puts me startling . - - . . . . .4 ! V I inn 4- you netm your sons,- 4iepnews au snephews . I'll. II , ,1 i .- , i i ..y iYm iii- i ; tiuMguuors into ine unfon army, an y bid them God-speed las Uhey, wept, ffS nieiWT ' oiiejjr MrJ beeij( heardlfrdm ? i - and follow them Wheeler has not yet in response. j - The Courier-Journal as Dr. 1. 1. Arctic naye4 soohding hi . hyperborean trumpet in InidianaL arid i' William ' Winter stamping; the peo- 1 t post- reme " pie's letters in a! New York Qi(r,rwhere isj the need of ex measares on .the part of the Adrhims . tratiou; to perpetuate, its; system ? . WtK winter and the Arotic '.rigiohs ;"' ' "lioth at woTTTor it, what is there lift to stimulate its rascally fears ? do nor BE 1NTI aiDATEb. ; , . lhe elaborate instructions of 'Mr. . Attorney General Taft, tQ the mar- M ahals in the South -should excjte noj . alarm among the people here. i 'Lefi ; every.citizen feel tbat he cannot be deprived of his right lo vote!J J tA ..fo-'-Wm determine to vote, quietly if i be ;: an, bat in spite ;of all oppositioi lhat raay be offered. Tbere is n t GENEK .1; L. BY OK D Ml SC SCALES,, I I'M OH GUILFORP. Sr. 1 . " 1 V.' ' BlVTW, D, WW V 1 1 1 U 1ft I .. A !VA mnp Ai l v 1 1 R dW V ' U V, I tv 1 lie IV 9 W:. 1 same for any. forebodings if every nam is resolved to Jo his duly. . , JUDGE FOWtB his gentleman is making a" fine caiivass. Ilis speecnes nave j oeen w a , . m : . T I llifphed'to evervwhere with close at- tention, and bave elicited the warm- Tii ' 1 ; . , , iA efet commendation. The "Charlotte- bemocrat savsof Judge Fowle that He "has always been a uonservauve AIT.' enD f t or mine miviw. v "" V'" - l ib has ever acted with what has ucen itg sailed the "moderate" WinC?: of the Bemocraiicbartv and itiis efatify- fc'th.vfaV nf to know that the 1 prudent coun rr -cd,- t . 1 . i . i - els of such men are now be y the people of Nbrth.Qarolina, and that the day has at last come when such; men will lead the (Democratic pariy 01. ine oluih auutuauou .w . uyi torv." ' Judge J pwle does not resort to personal abuse, but; relies facts and close argumentation. WATCH1 WORDS-SOUND PRINCI The platform adopted, by the De mocratic Conservative; Con vent ion of the State at Raleigh, on June 14th, is one of the most coroprehensiyo po litiatjilatfprniserm Its pre amble gives the history -of the lie .,1;. J " 1 - publican . party 1:1 i a few istvnricr I sil.okes. That "i; V, , J,,'- that ."the .Republican party, forhhe mail , M'v . iMspuuiHjau y .'' jt .'ir' "last sixtten years, has had the- com- "plete control of the Government in ..... . f ' l , , L ' 'all its Departments and, by its dis "regard of constitutional limitations; "oy us, unequal auu opprebsive a- .ion;jby its extravagant ana waste- . . ' - I I . , I ' - I 'ful expenditures;! by its unwise ana "miscnievous nnanciai policy ; oy us "unexampled official corruption per- "vadmg all branches of its adrainis- "tration has brought disgrace upon "our government and unparalleled "distress upon our people." word ! and shading of a letter true. ' In in this declaration isr . ... ; . . . t. . - - sixteeu (years theH Rad icals have broken the Constitution 1 oppressed the people by levym high taxes to support their profligate and dishonest office-holders, upset the country's financial equilibrium, and performed jiumberless acts that have brought disgrace upon tliem selves,! and deep, perhaps permanent, 'iniury ba the country, After-Sll Urn ought the Republican party to be longer trusted with the admihistra- J,km? Does not the burnt child dread the fire ? The first resolution iri the platform gives the thundering " lie" to the bloody shirt calumnv. The Demo- crats of North Carolina in this reso lution invite all patriots to ignore " all dead issues, to disregard the " prejudices engendered by past " events, and to unite with us in the "effort to restore a constitutional, " honest, 'economical and pure ad ministration ' of the Government " and thus promote the general wel " fare and happiness of the country." The second resolution endorses the Amendments adopted by the late j i IZ J T Constitutional Convention. Thebene- fit80 the proposed changes in the I fundamental law are tersely but comr prehensively referred to. We1 print the resolution in full: " Resolved, 2. That we earnestly and cor dially i recommend-the adoption, by the people, of the Amendments to tlie Consti tution proposed by the Convention of 1875, and thus largely reduce the expenditqre of our State and county governments and simplify their administration, so that we may.be enabled to establish a thorough and enlarged 8) item of public schools for the benent of all the citizens qf the Slate." The thiid resolution is a pledge to the Stite that the great plan for a btate liauroad svstem shall ho nw. fected and carried out faithfully. It reads: l Resolved, Z. That 'notwithstanding our repeated disappointment and impoverished condition, we Mill cherish the North Caro lina project so long labored for by More bead,, Saunders, Fisher, Wm. Thomas,' and others, of uniting the harbors of Beaufort; and' Wilmington with the great West, and for tlie completion of the Western North Carolina Hail road to Paint Rock and Duck- town,' and of our unfinished railroads. " We pledge the continued use of the convict libor of the State, and of such other ludi clous vegi8lative aid as will secure the c m iletiori, of tliese - great State works 'at the earlie4 practicablelperiod." ; Y Thelcandidate;on the Republicai ticket for Lieutenant Governor is th ican e et foes to these great improvement. esides, he is a notoriouB corrupt iohist and could not be relied upon nlaaist in varrvin ni ,w0 rrt o assist in carrying out the pro- gramme of western iroproyement, :TWU T..I.i:-,..a-. : :i j : uv.u wuiuonouiiiig r . vne conservative West,' That section must look to the n y Democrats for1 aid: - . ' i The 'last two planks in the. plat. lorrnueciare me power or the people- 1-' .1 . ' , tii i. . . . i t . . to relieve the fetale of (Repubhcao el , with : people from Ihia city At misrule, extravagance i and ycorr u pT';Kns landiffg, TybeeslandCsome .houesty as the, first and hi lgliebt qua i- i i hcation for- jofhee. vr:Jolm gtnart -Mill .MOrshipped't his wile for her creat mental Dowers 6wn thoughistliat he had previously, told to her,' -Hig death was hastened by his mourning for ber. anune ascnoea to her woncUrful ge njui seVeral of : ihe best "hections of his philosophical work8;The., truth la.thaf she tbld Jo- bim: hi echo ' h'is . - , - , . . -Tile State CailVaSS. - . -k - -, " "Freneh Creek iBIaden.? Fbskcr's CETSEK.Bladenbor, N. C, : . V J . V -a n i eeptemDer. 4 id, 100 A large number of. Democrats as- semowa nere on paiurqay, ias . y ur township was largely represented and from evVry portion, Vhilo adjoining townshiDs- oured in' their reinforce- meuis 31m sweuKu our iau. tu tniee iou? nuimreu. 1 nu mt.l YllnW ejng an(j added . thirty-four nnmoaitri ita mpmlwshm wllifih HOW I numbers eighty-four after two meet- flaS was raised, and floated gracetully seventy-seven teet aDQve ine neaas OI ine eniuusiasuo crowaf .opeecnes were raaae oy x. 1 ! .-. . 1 1 T I A. jSte'dnian, ; Jr., D. C. Allen and Dri J.IS. Devanc. More than usual pnirmsiaam ipaa shiiwn. The teoble ar'ej fully, aroused, and will show in upon rjNovemuer greater sinaes inau oe- f ore. T - ; " : ' ' ' . After the speeclies a- Convention was held for appointing delegates to County and District , Conventions. D. iO'Hanlon was called to the Chair, ana i"aniei liConaru was maue S -r. .T 1 J tJ retarvi I The following are the" dele- gates:'; : "".' " "-"V ;V -J ' "!; I Queen" through all the luxurious in trica For County Convention F. j J. cies of his matchless fancy and ineffable Anjders, Kobert Smith, J. II. Corbett, JJ. iU 'flan loo, A. J, quires ana: jv. ' ' I , , 1 1 1 , ThJ day passed off pleasantly, and liuay pa pan f the was ckrried t( 1 hi-crops 1 enthusiasm or tne aay ,.K if ,nmp 1 to each ana every nome. 1 Tli nrnns in i Vi w snot inn am crood. I f "Y " " ? I ' tU I Cumberland and Harnett. ; Star Special Correspondence. :. ' H . J ' t j ( Fayetteyille, Sept. 3. ,t Tfij Senatorial Convention for this Senatorial District, composed of, the coties of Cumberland and Harnett, meW here on vesterdav. The utmost harmbny and good feeling prevailed.! enatpr W. C. Troy was nomi nated on Hie secondr ballot. JVlr. Troy! has lead the party to victory twice already in this district, and. it is useless to say "that1 he will do so a train on the 7th or JNovember. f i -'f i -v,u,.lJf t-u Seuatonal Conventions on jlhe same ,Tlve liads held their Uounty.ami and nominated a full ticket, with the exception of, Sheriff. They knew there was no possible' chance to beat llard'e, so they thought ! the best .jthing they could do would be to endorse him. They might, however, have! thought the same thing for their whole ticket, for, there never j has been! a .time when old Cumberland so thoroughly aroused a? ; at was present, and when the people vere so determined to defeat the whole Radical ticket as the present. Their nominees are: For the Senate, . A. Guthrie; and for the Legislature, T. S. Lutterloh and John C. Blocker. The 'balance of the ticket I am not reliably informed about. The Demo cratic party is wide .awake, and in- tend to do . more than their whole duty in November, j jj Clarendon. '1! ' ; .Yellow Fever In Savannah. Savannah News.tof Monday. 'he official reports for Saturday show fourteen interments, of which nine- were yellow fever- cases, and for Sunday twelve interments, of which seven were yellow fever cases. ln ifh? Jatter report however, one; n-iad infant-. TJrnmillftt. 19 roivnrfpd interred, but this is a . mistake, as the funeral invitation in another column shows that he will not be buried un til to-day. 'I : . ;' . health officers report. Office Health Officer; ) Savannah, Sept. 2, 8 p. m. y New cases since laet ronnrt oi l I last repjru I Deaths 6. J. B. McFarland, M. D.i i- ' Health Officer. . Office Health Officer A ) Savannah, Sept. 3, 8 p. m. ( Consolidated report of yellow fef vers for last twenty-four hours; 24 new cases. JJeatns 5. J. T. McFarland, M. D., Health Officer. The weather yesterday was more moderate, and. in the afternoon there was a heavy rain, which cooled the atmosphere and also cleansed the streets and sewers. - JTHE BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION held their daily meeting at o'clock yesterday, and the reports shqwed that many cases Of - distress and destitution- had .been relieved;,- and that th ip sanitary condition of improving. The meet- the citv was ing thi afternoon .will be held at 5 o clock, r SOUP HOUSES, Jn view of establishing soup houses fo the relief the hrdigeht, the Be- neyoient Association solicit aona- tionsof beef, and; bread, to be prt, -j e(1 nd distributed under the aus- pices of the Association. T All con- a lnA vn n t' , . , , M U W.KU' w vF.ti.n " TT a. coiucm, ui iieo..J. f reeman, jtJiPq.j aecretary. ; i' i r t -; - ' . REFUGEES., , i ' ' Thunderbolt, White . Bluff,' Montr gomery 1 Jen lieu, Jsfe oflHope, and a. seUlemPntson the sarts' are crowd camping, U'tie outward 'tra ns still I r i r or !. . - - -v. ' 1 y.. , carry - numbers ot refugees.. lhe number wha have left tbe 'city.is esti- mated as high as, 7,000; but 5,000 is piuuituiy iicjaier me miiuuer. opeciai ?v. '. .. . . . . r ... irin. tne morningi giving those who desire Uo .sleep away from, the city and do business hero a chance to do tv OUR JLITI2RART LETTEKl. y ! . :- - 4 K New pnbllcatlone or'JTauies Oaftood & V1 .' a Co,, ' Boston.' M ' (l),fiwn wy Bffdka" (2nd series), by James Russell Lowell. (2) "Letters and Social Aims,"' by Ralph .Waldo Emerson. (3) 416tfi "PiZuma bfLttOe Classics;" (with lives of autlion.) -4' Vest Pocket Series," c- ! ; Georgia, Sept. 1. i As a poet and literary critic, Mr.! Lowell occupies a rank. And never nave his critical powera and well-digested learn inor hppn lr.hrfi rrmsnimmielw illustrated than iu the series of articles f collected un-; der the general title of "Among my Books," which treat of the five great poets, J)ante, Snencer. Milton. Wordsworth arid Keats. . ' - ' 7 - The most; original, no less, than the most elaborate and exhaustive of these essays, is the initial essay upon Dante; but the paper succeeding it, on Spencer, is, to our taste, the more charming of the two,; in some respects, indeed, the masterpiece of the en tire volume. ' . ' 4 ' ; . Lowell's own rich, delicate imagination, and fine sense of rythmic grace, harmony and beauty, especially; enable him to ap- preciate the noble subtleties of Spencer's muse to follow the creator of ""The Fairy musiCt doting now upon ' some far-awy thought, made immortal id ;a single! preg naui. liue, tcrsts ua uuy ui Viinuvci r, nuu suous or spiritual loveliness., 1 c, , h . , , J:H,,-. 1 ,i "WBat more felicity can ran ta creature j L f n. t fie,ihf Jth ih.rtv , And to be Lord of all the works of Nature? T.vrn In the air. from earth to hipheBt Bkv. O : T , Lowell remarks "No German analyser of tC3thftics has given us, so convincing a dtfl nilion of the artistic nature as these radiaDt verses. 'To reign in the air' was certainly Spencer's function. And yet the commen tators, who seem never willing to let their poet be a poet pure and simple, though had he not been so they would have lost their only bold upon life try to make out from 'Mother Hubbard's Tale' that he might have been a very sensible, matte r-of fact man if he would. For' my own part. I am quite willing to confess ' that I like him none the 'less for being -unpractical and that my reading has convinced me t,vuuws.Hy wu pueuuwuu rurjuuuoj r ..PrftJirftl m,n aPfi nnt 'onT onft -Practical men are pot would thin kT and I am no ,Vuuiaui 'Uui eurc maw 111c . . .... . I . L. n Tree was a gainer when the j Hamadryad flitted, and left it nothing but; Ship timber. Such men as iSpeucer are not sent into the world to be a part of its motive power. The blind old engine would not know the difference, though we got up its steam with attar of roses, ; nor - make one revolution more the minute for it. Yet, what practi cal maa ever left such an heir-loom to his countrymen as 'The Fairy Queen ?"' " We have extracted ibis paragraph as characteristic of its author's style, of the singular felicity with which he j turns his phrases making an? inherently bright fancy, simile, or illustration, brighter still by the rarest appropiiateness of expresr sion.. f.i.v;;- -7: . :; : -.; j.'.-, j J Unconsciously repeating Leigh JIunt, Lowell says of Spencei's CTces allegorized, that "he has made them so . beautiful, we should not be very much afraid of them if we chanced to meet them; ; for who can escape from the Poet's genius, which, if it led him as a. Philosopher to the abstract contemplation of the Beautiful, left him as ft poet open to every "impression of sensu ous delight" j - ; !, ".- i ! j ..; We are amused by an idiosyecracy of the ciitic, who must needs maintain that Spencer was a Puritan! ''When he wrote 'The Shepherd's Calendar,'" fays he, 'he was certainly a Puritan, probably by con viction, rather than from any social in fluences(!!)" - -! ; ; j. l ' i ; Nor is this belief shaken by the famous line to be found in "Mutability," viz: "Like that ungracious crew, I which feigns demurest grace" a line '.'supposed," he admits, "toglance at the straighter religion- lata "i 1 j . ''Supposed to glance!" We should rather iuiu& au, iur in nuuui uuuiu iuc piaiu, straightforward words have been directed just then, but these Precisians, who "af fected a demurer grace," with numberless other virtues, their -.possession, whereof might be reasonably doubted ? r - V Again, when Ben. Jonson visited Drum- mond of Hawthornden, he expressly in- formed him that! 1'in a paper Walter t-i-w lia1 of thft iieirorieK of lh Falr Raleigh had of the allegories of the 'Fairy Queen,' by the Blatant ; Beast the Puritans were meant.' "But, no I" exclaims Lowell, with amaz ing "cheek," apropos of Jonson's assertion : "Tliis is certainly wrong, because, forsooth, there were different shades of Puritanism, according to individual; temperament,' and it was with the more generous side of Puri tanism that Spencer sympathized." If this be nut "whipping the devil round a stump," we have never seen that adroit little opera tion attempted yeL'iA i.;;i. ;,i .i ; ; i Sir Waller Raleigh was Spencer's bosom friend, with whom; the poet conversed con-, lidentially in regard to. the cantos of his immortal work, and therefore, if any man mi.' lit claim to speak dogmatically of Spen cer's meaning, it was he. What right; par consequence, had a scholar of the nineteenth century to contradict an assertion: so direct. : from a source so unquestionable ? But who so blind, or mad as j our propounded 4f Un tenable Hit-ones r '. ' , . i ' Such errors, liwevef. in an essay' like that under, consideration are as spots on the bun ! Macaulay in his ."diary;": or- one nf his leiler. commenting upon, Emerson, iays, in t-ffect, lhat the . Concord ipliilosbptier'a style is- sure to damn ? him with nbsteritv. Nothing radically obscure 'can j live long in ' any Liiieraiuce. l uere. we aereci a oeseios I of the question, or, at all events, a summa- ? raStt contrary, whatever obscurity may be found in his writings, is merely the result Of too creat condensation of ideas; and a too ha- biiual terseness of expresstorw The thoughts 4 luemseives are oneu otiiu qiear ana arand. But the 1 result of a whole year's , study is being continually epitomized in a sin trie page, and, possibly, it a fjrst peiUsal we feel; more. 'confused than edified. Let! the reader, however, exercise a jmodicum of patience,; ana tne cosceptions, : images. thoughts come out, gradually, like words on a. "palimpsest when exposed. to the ac lion or neai always lorceim ana sugces- tive, not unfrequently of ihe highest order of originality! Iv '.a.i p 'yU& a;,d tion of beat always forceful and sugges v".c Hu uv i"8" oi.am- I mine tlioncht into the smallest nonhpivnhi ppaceef taking a solitary w-ordor-phiase perform therdufv of . .score:, or for that J matter, of an hundred .ordinary: words or i . -v , I a p.ertain oracular Bir imnresaintf onft vi-irh 3 language value, as the fY?YYY-'.'::Y ms iasi. woir . - .ueiierg aauociaivims" Pents Joiersoa at bis Jjeswat'conUiog op0n "Poetry and Imagination 'Socia Aims," "Eloquence," f Resources," 'The Comic," "Quotation and; Originality, " "Progress Of Cultuie," "rersian jfoeiry,-r "Tnsnlrntion;" "Greatness." "Immortalitvi' The concludins: treatise on "Immortality'? is almost a library in uselr.. Its language is wmgea witnt enmusiasm; us lmagiaauoo seeks the empyrean; its conclusions are cqualVy sublime and comforting. f -, i.: ' as a uini oi enciess ueiug, u oujpa, "we raay rank that novelty which always attends life. ' The soul does not age with ihs hndv' ffln thp. hordftrft of the crravcthc w lew - man - looks lor ward,Witu..equai eiaSi, -j- . . r. : . . " . i tieity of; mind or hope; and why not? tor it is the naturej of intelligent beings to be 'forever1 new to life. Most men are insolvent, for promise' by their countenance, and conversation, i and j by their earJv endeavor, much more tuau iqey ever perform suggesting a design still to be carried out.- The man must have new . i . .... motives new comDanions new conuuion. and another term.. Franklin said, 'Life is rather a state of embryo. & preparation! for life. A man is not completely born until be has passed through death.' Now, every really able man, in whatever .uirecuon ne work a man of large affairs, an inventor, a statesman, orator, poet, painter, if you talk sincerelv with him. considers his work, however much - admired, as far short of what, it should bel .What is this Better,ltha flvino- Tfonl hnt the nernetunl nromiso of his Creator?'T : j.-. . "... I . ; i " Words as elevating, as philosophically true.' Moreover, they show how nnjust and absurd is the charge every now and then brought airainst Emerson, that he beneves in nothing save a dreary species of Panthe ism, which ignores the individuality o tue human soul, and of course, a conscious im mortality! V" . - 'f - ! The beautiful series of " The . Little Classics" concludes with a volume called " Authors," embracing compendious biog raphies of all the writefs which the editor thought; proper to include m Ins collection These ' iives," as farlas the; exceedingly umueu space aumns, seem laniy -enougn presented when Mr. Johnson deals with European and Northern American) writers. but whe-n he touches upon one of the very few powliern waters, from whom a single poem had been quoted (we mean Henry Timrod'L! ha ! nernetMlea some blunders Timrod). ; he ; perpetrates some blunders which strike us as characteristic ; Firstly,; we are tofd that Wm. H. Timrod advocated the Union cause in South Caro lina during the Nullification contest of 1831-2, ;" as heartily as his son advocated secession thirty years later!" This asser tion shows that Mr. Rossiter Johnson is thoroughly ignorant of Southern politics and parties in the ante-bellum, days, down to the very period when the! States weie divided, so ignorant that we marvel he! has not,; after the fashion of his Northern con- feres, written an elaborate book upon' the subject! j .. : I ' 'I J. I 1. -! Because, -j when the entire South ijhad separated herself from t the t Union, sand formed one compact Confederation, Tim rod celebrated her victories and mourned her defeats, Mr. Johnson affirms, without qualification, that he 'heartily advocated secession!".1.' I ' -r t :! .1 ' He did no such thing. . On the contrary, Timrod was to the last possible moment a sincere Unionist, in the sense that be depre cated the policy if not the right of seces sion, wnile maintaining; with his whole heart and soul that the South bad been grossly wronged!' Like Mr. Stephens! of Georgia, and many others, ; he would have preferred a longer Constitutional struggle in'fhe Union, but after the issue had been irrevocably decided by the majority of his people, he acted as Stephens did, as Lee flirt nrirf. mhpre nf riiiallv lti(rl 1nna.: in o werd, he refused to become a traitor to his fState ant! Rentinn. It is. thprpforp. nlear that the New England compiler's haste to sneer at j iimrod s political backsliding (as he viewed it) has committed him to an as sertion that is false. Again' Mr. Johnson cives us his estimate of the Southerner's writings iu the follow- ing Sanguase: ("Timrod," ; says he "during the first years or the rebellion. composed numerous martial lyrics, in which the usual cant of Southern chivalry wa relieved by a con siderable' tinge (!!) of poetic thought and OlCtlOn." : ! i! -' ';.! !:- Charming condescehsipn! Whatever the elegant phrase, "a considerable tinge of poetic tnougnt ana aiction,':may mean,; we perceive tnat tuis "great unknown" among critics (who is Mr. Rossiter. Johnsonf ?) is disposed, in the main, to merciful conces sions. 1! -. 1 I . ;: I' !' Yu ' 'ill' No "cant" of any sort, as, for " example, the"cant" of sectionalism, the "cant", of narrow-minded intellectual bigotry, ! the "caDt" whose first maxim, touching peoples Anrl lnilivirtnnla ita blf fiQ nmiia nnrcnlvoa acd underrate all others;" the "cant"; of self-sufficiency and self-stultification, is. to be traced in: the serene ipse dixit we have quoted. Certainly not. Or, even if some trivial wrong has been: committed, 'tis only lipon a literary pariah; arid outcast, and be has; been dead for nearly' a decade! What does it signify? :!t V-.M- I ... ' r- i V. Hi Dr. Johnson U3ed tjo say, that "books voti mav Carrv to the fire, and hold readilv in Vour hand, arc the most useful after all." l ue trutn or tnis is proved anew . by the marked success which : has attended the publication of "The Little Classics;" a pop ularity; 'indeed.1 which has encouraged Osgood &Go.v to issue; another series of tiny Volumes, entitled the "Vest Pocket Series.'! so very small! that they can actual ly be carried in any- vest pocket of moder ate dimensions. Their Lilliputian s,zl, leg ible-type, and flexible cloth bindings. adapt them for the beguiling of short jour-' neys, while the high excellence of their contents makes them desirable always and everywhere. r v , Twelve volumes of this unique collection "we have already received. They embrace two volumes ot essays by J&merson, IJick- ena' "Utinstmas Uarol;" "Harry Cornwall,' and "Hawthorne," by Jas. T. Field; if 'A Day's ' Pleasure," by Howells; while in roetry iwe tnave riJiVangeline.1: TMiles 'Enoch Arden;" "Lady Geraldine,) and me iieserted Village."! r ;i; ... -The wood-eneraving8 which illustrate the poems are almost' all eood. but those in Snow Bounds"' 'jEvangeline,'f and 'JxHes Standish" strike us as simply and purely exquisite. On p. 55, of VMiles Standish," J a Coast scene occurs, wqicu, ror correctness of drawing, aad' fineness of detail, could hardly be surpassed, in its way. Lillipu tian 'as the figures are. they all stand out in bold relief, and the perspective of -windy say ana me aarKiy aennea duiows is cap itally managed. ! i T". ' ; ii j By the way, the price of each of tbeie iairy volumes is only 50 cents. s i Ii . ri i i J i I'aul a. Hayne. - ReinarkLs nle Speecn. The most remarkable , speech : ever made by a presiding officer has just whoade It is a bember of the L gislatare; and he Was ; called to the Chair unexpectedly at convention of!hisooh8iitaentsHere it is iri fiill 'Oftfltnew lfcah'iY jnakeii ai speech.. We camerhere forsomethina else. I hope you will jnoiRake) asses ot your selves apd brcjaklup -the party.?! ft is safe to say; that more good was never crowded into so short a space. ..1 : t:k3 L l,Jl uy"fci 1 k l Lavender "wenfTThorue some time after jf midnightari4i:qpjpUiiied ibf his tight!' boots. J yjir. Jboots are, as light as ya : sre' said 'Javendry w.ifet" "theV ought tosle'ep with' ybul' A LavenderH stagged up stairs ihe muttered: ?Shes'- hicj- keen ? ooeV She -knows where them - bootsh;coin ter suieep." a a i . . t - i - BY TELEGRAPH,! AFTUUSOOX IlEPORTS. - FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. Tle Eastern War The ; Situation A ronnd Alexlnaiz-Peace EflTdrUjof ilio Powers Deatb of Georere Smltu, tue Assyrian Explorer l,C 'I : -- - LoTrD05rrSept. 5. 'A specialTfrom Belgrade'lb' thopaily News, states that Geu. i Harvatovich ' occuA pies Alexicatz with ten battalions. Tclier- uayeu s neaaquarters are at ueiegraul r The Minister of War basj declared that au attack on the Turks must be made im-i mediately. . , i . H i I - If the llank movement or itne 'l uras is not; checked Alexinatz and Delegrad will haye to be abandoned. ' The decisive bttT tie bf the war would theft be fought in the open valley, where the Turks would have the advantage. " ' I. 'f !"v ".' . ! .' says Tchernayeff has ordered! civilians to I leave Alexinatz, andith town is now quite deserted. The Servians Hold the northern redoubts with a snoail force, . rrhe, mam body has gone to Uehgrad. . i be lurks are preparing to ford the Maraya the bridges. I over wmca nave Deen. pestrqyea. . , Tt A Vienna dispatcty to the, limes says he representatives of each Power 'baa . presen tedla note similar, but uotf identical,i to Turkey, that the Princes' of Servia and Montenegro desire peace ana oner a mecti ator. , i . , , 'y. M'Y-'Jy Jt-' A dispatch from Constantiodple says the British Ambassador has presented a1 de mand for an armisliie to be .'followed by peace negotiations, i I 1 w I IF. J i England's declarajtion thatj'If Turkey's refusal should lead tjo armed foreign inter vention, the Jforte must not reckon on llie British government caused ; surprise and disappointment.'. No secret Was made that Kussia was the power likely to interfere, but! in spite of the English -declaration, Turkey - may t thiols that in the . decisive moment of an impendingone-sideduussian I intervention, England's national interests I will have weiffht. ' ; .' J i ; ' - t i A telegram has been received -reporting the death of George SmlthJ the Assyrian explorer. M ' ' HIE INDIAN WAH. '.-1 The Campaign Co nslder red a Wild Goose Cbaie-N Indians found Terry to eo lutol TV Inker Qnarters. I jj '; -,'!; j Chicago September 4. The Inter-Ocean's Bismarck special says the latest by a 'courier, arraying to day from the exnedition.is as follows: ! 1 l l I ! "!Tbe general feeling among both officers; and men is that the campaign has been and is likely to prove an immense wild goose chase. JNo Indians nave been seen or late,1 with the exception of occasional small bands making their appearance for the pur pose of stealing or barrassing small parties engaged in the: movement, of supplies on the lYeUowstone. ,: . iThe main column has not Succeeded in : overtaking Sitting Bull! Orders have been rebeiyd by-Terry for the establishment of 4 cantonment , at the mouth of Tongue river for winter quarf tersL September 5J Advices from the north hank of the Ye; lowstone say Gen.j Terry! has divided the command, Gen. Crook moving eastward of Little Missouri. Terry crossed Yellowstone and' marched north and east. 1 The gteame; Yellowstone ' was fijred into going , up the I cr auu uuc &mcu SITTING :1 , Confidentl ly Asserie Battle of mat ne Fell in tue Bis: Horn. i . S New York. Sept. 5. special dispatch from Terry's head quarters, dated Auust;27th, says it is con fidently asserted that bitting Bull fell in the battle of Big llonj. His brother, it ap pears, came into Fqrt Berthold and gave a fulliaccount of his death. From a descrip- lion oi me maa who Kiiieuuim, voi. xieao says! it is certain he fell by the hand jo.f CapL KeogV., underwhom the last desperate fight was made, as shown by the disposition of h s battalion. FIASSAIICSKTTS Hepabllcan State Convention Reso lotion Admlttlus.Womea to Party 31eetlns. i j, . 1.. n ... :; . :1i;; Orcester, Sept. 5Li L The Republican (State Convention met . . - at 11:30 this morning, when an organiza tion; was effected, and, Committees on Cre dentials, Resolutions and Permanent or ganization appointed.' ! 'Y 1 ; ! (I Mr. W. Blackwell offered the following resolution : . . J . ; ; . 1 lieso.ved, That herealter women who are known to be Republicans in principleJacd whci possess qualifications of age.residchce and education requjired of male voters,1 are invited tp.tak"erpart in the primary meet ings of our partyyitn an equal voice vote in the norabtajtion of, candidates the transaction of .blusinessl j . knd had i i - i . - i Threatenlns Jtttltode of ' IndlanB-- i ttlea fllnen. Alarmed. (. ..' ; - , : Sa? Franciscp Sept i5. A dieratch from I Portland. Oregon. 1 night, says, the' Nz . Perces ;Ihdtans ave maae a iormai oemana i upon the com mandant at Fort Walla Walla for: the f sur render of two men who killed an! Indian near there last spring, and. threaten to burn every house in the walley within wo weeks in the event of relfusal. IThe settlersj are much alarmed, and, a company of cavalry nas oeen sent to prptecr them, t ' f- f -sJ Dlatrlet Conrt J Clerk Waylaid land . Killed A'egro.4Shoptlne Untt a ij . -j . ., 'V f New Orleans; Sept. sJ'h Actins Governor Antoine. of Louis ana has a dispatch' from Ked River parish. statin that Z. Ti Webster. Clerk oi the District Court, was waylaid and shotJ but not killed., ?.! ' V 1 i f ?-: b - i y uJ a , . m If : Accounts from : Bastrop state .that the negroes are prowlitog about in that section shooting white .mep, several of whom .have Deen Killed. -. : , r ,,x A K K, AN MAS. Tbe State lileatloiii-.Overtvbelmlnir Democratic msjorltr' 1 " I Little Rock: SentembeJ 5.t The election was ouiet-here and tbroueh- out me cjiai&.-r Aii wm. require- ine omcial . 4-1.-.. V.'t -11 . : l Ji ; ! - m.J - j, Thermometer Record. The following will show the state of the thermometer, at the stations mention eil, at 7.35 this morning, fWashlngton mean Bmev as ascertained fromihedaif blletinssued Charleston, . . .. .i76 Cincinnati,;. . ,. ,C'd -NeW Orleans, il, .81 New York... K . 58 Coreicana. ... ..-IT4 Norfolk, ."....rJLl.; 78 P;usbure,,;.;5!3 PuotaRa.asa.V, . t.77 Savannah, JL?. .78 LFortQibson.VffrC Ualvestoo. .. .&u Indianola, . l...,;1T9 Jacksonville,.!, . .?3 blireveportt...78 KeytWest,. .,51 t btv Louia,. . , " 'j. ;68 a,uua v uie, .., , w, 1 ow iaras, . . , i :. . a Lynchburg, . 4; .70 I Vicksburg, . .76 Memphis, . . .i . . . .73 f Washington,. 1 1 . . 63 d from the Signal Office in '.this ty : l' ' Auguslai.:.1.:'.'.'.-! Mo'ntgoinery;:.1!,1. Cairo;1. .V, . V-.W! Nashville, . ; A.'. ,71 Mobile, .... 1 ... ,75 j WUmington, .LL. .74 COMMEllCiAU W T LM I N GjT O; N MA 1 W T STAR OFFICE, Sep!. 5-5 p. j1 at o tenia, per gauon lor Southern ares.' ' Sales of 250 Casks t'ftn J:L ROSIN. Market firra ' at si on trained rand.4 $ 1 55' for' Good I Stra or '!t(l. j. . t j-ffww uuia uuu Dirained at 4 n- per bbr. TAK- -larket firra 100 bbls at quotations. , ids of PTJTTm TTTTiPIS'WTT'V'i.- xt i 1 . r rkct stoadv at $1 00( for Hard, and $1 C5 'for Dip .and Virgin bbb A tations. COTTON. Market oui(t u a b;i 11 cents per lb.' for ' Middling 1 s,il I . bales Middling ab 11 ;Cents, 4 llo stnU r ' juiaaimg at lot Cents, and 7 do y L. ug,oi vcuia per l;U. t , ? j WU' "!"v"i: aore' . iMj, CT .Et' IK- ,-iim. Sent! ft III-4 i" Tbe arrivals were a2drfit0r0;;L . It' tine and lOOabhlr?" 8 !'!PeD. sales of spirits turpentine 'hava ini-i'T," in' this nist "iwn Movo r fce 27c: forifegulapackagesi; UkiX ffradesi sales i 1 hnn.r,Wo- Z ZT, LH'm nAPfi in . nurlr.arirl Ii -L. ' - .i' ot.V r-t -w -. , v w iwao Ub Ai: S r:. 1 . for strained to good strained; $1 40 for. tra No. 3; $1 65 fori lovv ;No 1 jepoitagpf ;considfirable tTari8aeii2t .a : x iuu m iairni niiiuinn n mm ft k P-;erms, but .; tbe odm ; nnn nri rod nova rrt i. vt"-i hentine was Vrtlrtwt , . t i . Virgin sUrl VrfW 'uf'i"?. W -Jr". domestic I ! au kg riJ 4;:i;.4r-flr ..NewYorit, September 5-X(i .IL'Y AVaiamAinl "Siocka unsettled. Vn uour openea ai'iuui, and closed at1 .ouuuS.fcuaDgr4ong 4t(j ; ,ort 141 r?2l"Vr. TUVp ancl etter- Stal uvuuj -juuuiomuaa ueiierr rpst oinn,i.i ja avuA, uuii, auu uiii.iiHiiirHii u. i i' . vyiMUUllSHU UUUOanM Purl 'firm at $16 75 Lard firm quiei at ft ooi eo for stralued. Fr . .i.- i prm: S' : H fY vY44YsiY I Y':'Y t CottOfl quiet,! with sales of 880 kfc upianas i ii l-ioc; uneans 1UC. Fni opened easier, as follows: September Im' m r uvptVUIUCl J I J II 17 336; October 1 1 1 13-32(11 7-lCd-i verober! filled January 117-1611 15 82c; jiiio(amfc; uecemoerll 11 :ii IVIh fuaryi-aiijiwec. I r.'i;t-il-- k .Y l: -' .Cotton firmer and ' m!is liQno.riLL . t-a Traction ; middljng uplands 6 1-1 6d-1 mid- aiing yneans 3 16d; Sales 12,000 baks taciuuing a,ww wnicn were taken. for sine- umiiou jauuexpprii, receipts 5U0 bulfes. cn Aiucntau. f utures ueavy and 1-lOU elieai- er,- a. jouqws: Miopung uplands, I, "September and October delivery,' 6dj to.;C., 0Cl.v per ana in oy em Der; delivery, (J.132t cember and January delivery, G 1-lGd new uuii uuuHHUg ! upjailUS, 1. in. C, SUlI'DWl November and December, 6 l-16d. Cotton Middling nnlands 1 m tember delivery, 6 l-32d; October aiicl N- yeuiuM uenvery, o woa. Jn Cotton--new crop middling upU ?, 1 mi a, snipped November and Uecember per sail, b 3Sd. ( kl - I'- k .Later. ft Cotton new crop middling upliiiiUf, m. c:r shipped October and KovemWiL per fsau, o Jj-iou.14 p'-K-r-rH ' R V,-:"lJt'L LATEST. Cotton Sales of American; to-day 8.2C0 .Dales. kt'ii iMi- -.il; v k;. ,, . j m i i4.t., i .. .. - i J. B. LippinGoii; & Go ). -.M tJ I HAVE I JTJST PUBLISHED : Life of : Geni T. J, i Jackson1 ("STONEWALL-i JACKSON.") ' i;..u iii -I t- h i it Bv Sarah Nicholas IKaitdslph. author "The Domestic Life 6t Thomns jBSenaA.'" etc. Hand- somel.r illnstrated with PortTait fijom S eel, ami Kigbt rail page wood engraving. Crpwn Svp Jiae. clota, ja,oo. , H(r,...j i ., ,, --i, . t -1 "The naere before us r a r.ontritiiti8n to oir li terature for which all Virginiaa elMnid be grtifn!, era household." Eichmontd Enmnren I i ana wnica suouia he in the lihrarv or very; sniiu- ..( . ; i. ... - -. i ; - r 1 "It is the record of a farmer in the hisfcese desnc interestihe.fr The simDle narrativei ofliii lift; hi all the charm of romance. "-Baltimore Gazette. THE crtEAM MM) ATforeL; Jty lIrW.is.iTMir Liktos, aiitor ot "VPatiicU Kemball,V etfc , With illiutrtioL. 8vo. Cloth; $i:GQ;)aper, $1.0(1 Ul " ,f ' ': A : I 1 Mafrs; Lyaa Linton' 1 one of the most brt-W aad.aoatci tbiakert of the day, tad writes not only fearlessly, but with remarkable rigor. Chicago Jn, Ur-Octanit it yv-.k , A: v--.- Y- v -i iXhat very engrossing aoYtL-FMladWiaM. 4 , ?4An eieeedinsrl y iatereatinfir novel." Boston Oaz. ..J ... : . Zl-Z l. . i.i.. ll' H7 V iV. Uml !'!. I'rl ..l..'-'. : o ;J Kill. SECRET, 7&:."-9 j ? AanVeriSjveLt ByVannyndrewMElf j fBayK8to.i:j!hieclota$l 80.: lper cowrj i . ; j -iiia s vigorous. 'racirive ana picMou o.j. Chkago,z&ing JournatY- Y 1 ! i v&entlefoikp 'othjes '.T w t mtw n. waanAw. uiuv v. . x . The excelteatse aad varoe of these es.-aj icow la their hting the gwklt f a ttmng nilud ting on 'i'e. tnthetpirit of ph loBophy,lm;tnaturrii audearefolly sVfed, anl the air nf pleasing iranqV lty w hich pervade tbm,thronhour. i - ; ,. ."For satnme-Tending, and ei-vecial y fo? K '"z aload among people letement ai d coll r- w ' are fe more desirable books ihau XhU '-t'niWf i pAta Evening Bulletin. -Y,-r fpFE'SpoHisE m-nt ' A Novel. B CLARA Coswat. Unia dotb, $160. - -:.- ,1 H T , X.aa , A novel of more than common ;rneritwi0 deal of admirabl distinctive portraiiurejau . MI TT nr inrllllntf lnt.frArtt . - . 4 I UK lUIr-QHb. . .-!(: i J. i I lift- by all BookaelterBand Period'.c-il ' sent by mall on reeeiut of WFi -,'Forsaie lera,orwulhe J. B.UPPINC0TT & Co., Publishers, t 15and 71T Market Street, :. ' ii rhiladslp? aug 4-tf ! KXCBL AXL! OTHSRS IN AOCU AND -AlfAJ( ITo PrematTAreUis&arge Eve Occur shooter. Calibre . w, m ana w-iuv oi.an inca, ana 01 fuj u7 m t :tUs froni mtoHl grains, i Stbok, :plW -Pistol grip and. checied., j Sighta: plain; j Peep highta; .Vernier with interchangeable alghts. andiWfcd-ginge.EYT.ry varietlr W manltion fofaboye gaae,-conaUmtly i j Prices, from $30 to 5- i eptM-DWt?-,, j t . - : Hartford. T inn nnnainr. inri U RAOK l1 ... rv. ones-' KBY is complete in all au i ftc U in charse of one of the meet "iUtlff and i if. at; si an e..i . "i r, ! r - p j. uaj i- - i n 0 ; ii 1(191 cheaply aad expeditionely 1 i