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jjj O B jresW1Hlm~ o,Prpitr. A Family Pape', Devoted to Science, Art, Inquiry, Industry and Literaturi Trs..a3O prAnm nAvne VOL 11"INBORO, S* C.f, WEDNESDAY MORNING --~ __ONWGINNQ1~1,86.[N.1 FAIRFIELD HERALD -,8 & ,PADL8HED WEMKI . BY 1DF404'ES. WILLIAMS & UO. Term .-i%s 1HRAL I s pubilisied Week ly in tho Tbot e innsboro, at 93.00 in A ra M tortahets to be p I n, ad,V 11"o 11 btryj o06" _ek1dr,butga $1.0O0por square. Sdlected Poetry, ~4TypJ %EBf M H 4ND, The woy Is dark, my Father I Cload on 0 4oud' 16 gatheriuig thiokly o'er my head, and loud I ie Ctlnd6rd roar above nie. 8oe, I "sland Like one bewildered I Fatlier, take iny And th'ougl tho'gl'dk Lead safely home Thy child. S, fifast, My Father? AP4-the Is drawing darkly (town. My faithless sight Sees ghostly visiogAs. Fears a spectral band.,. 4omo fiercely on I Father take py hand, V --Atd-if'ou the nigit Load to 11ht The way is long, my Father! And my soul Longs fo- rest a,nd qqiet of the goal; \hile yet' I Journey through the weary ccme from wAi,er1ig, Father; take imy hand! Quickly and stright Thy chil.d. Thilpath Is rough, my if 'V ny a thbrn d U liats piercod.inj and my weary feet., all torn And b-1*din, niArk the way. Yet, Thy command Diids oe ri;es forward., Ether, ,ake my h$n,'saf'eanblest Lead me to real, The thorn is great, my Fatiher! Many a doubt. And! fear and datiger compass me otbout, And foes press on.mo and I cau.ot stind Or go alone. 0, Father; take my hand! And through tIo throng Lead nf'A1tlongj Thzy-phild. The cross is-heavy. Father! I have borne It loe, and still do bear it: Lot my worn And fainting spirit rise to tia blestlaid? WYhere crowns are gv .rJahr,take ni And, reaohiln d, n, Lead sare to tho crown T'hypohild, Poliiioal News. I NDIAN'A. INDIANXP'O't 46(2.-Gen. CharIe. B evk,' qC lingjIg grpsgdad egnoer,t to meetig t.o-tIght in one ofr the, alest and most eloqtent sp-eches' that hhs been delivered during the canvass in this Tie loi'ccratidAlias neet.iig held rn: NV*#A1baby;fe8(rday was the largept and muost imposing demonstration ever beld in Southerr India WA8HINGTON, Oct.. 2.-The Demto ogC i0eNajjoml,Com-miitkve to;-day,.6: c nl oid intellighe from.Pennsylvania.. The State Voni mittee advis6 them'that the Dpmocrats are thorongbly organised in every town el d byia vict.9ryin Oog ober is, al racy in this city are all ablaime to-niglit. Gov. Swann, of Mar land, is addre'stng t1$ingise.1 geurt(3)Did 4a. o restor,e th'e Union and defind the C)opy agair agvhg .9ptstry by os stip~ Radi cal traitors frm tate Al offices. -' MUFFI,;N SrTolyOdt. 2.-On thec arrival of a 8iece,o1' t,rAn at this statisiti (on the linoft"~he .Pen nsy vania IRitil road, fest.i.n(ne miles west of H-arris' * 9b'urg), yesterday moann, a party of XRadical e callin ttle~e Ivos "Bocb i9) cye e dwn large Armerieay rdtid. om w i4fvstii be ~o Tatnnera" Union, from All. stani4wobiiovant with .hoph, There is not A Deiorat in theooitt:y but, bolJ*,' lialdad, M ~ilt .e * elected . se ~4I d io, ovqr that cf'1. nicu "i Jolin ~oved The I(adie.Albel ve so too Mud cArt despondig dbuntenanoes. Shij Ven~ ty dnetitution, and loathe alt 1e skharp etiek I 'd is the candJto the Workin men as well as oftb P 4 prfe9T 04 ;' C b i~ hat2 etA'. "little" John Oe M6. 'I" -~t g2 a oz good fe publaqti ahoty~ th ie Ih ~Kimmoefl will be elcted. .$Thor is a conservative wiig of the Republi can party in this section of the State who have never heretofore acted with the Doniocratic phrty, that abjtire the Radical party, and are working with all their hearts agaiist tho Radical candi dates. Amongst theu is otir townsman, Geti. Rickard Coulter, familiarly kn.wn| in the army as nFighting Dick." l is a gentleman of education and tower. ing intellect, and his speeches have a, telling effoct I could name fty with: )n tlie citle of n'y acquaintafice, all men of good standing and influenlco, who look ipon this tump Congress as flagrant traitors, who will no longer be swayed by party ties, and who are with us hind and heart. 0111h. UANToN, 0., Oct. 2.-The greatestl mass meeting of the campaign was held here to.day, twenty-two thousand peo. ple bejng present.' The procession was more than eight miles long, and display. ed over one hundred- large flags, with elevensbands of music, from this and ad joining counties. The immense concourse was address ed for two hours byv Gen. Thomnas w. ing in a noble rnview of the reconstruc tion and financial bolicy of the Radical party. He was followed by the on. D. T. Lawson, Democratic Congrossion a1 nominee, ini n able - speech. The meet,ing: will be continued to-night, and will be nddressed by Charles Allen, Esq.. of Washington, D. C. WA1PAIoNiETA, 0., Oct 2 -The city has been in a perfect blaze of e citement to-liiglft. The White Boys in Blue, seveial htldreo strong, paraded through the streets bearing t6rches and trlnspirencies;'Whild thn sireots have been all the evening a: b6"eef fire, and nothing wds ilil,order bt music and bon.ire, whle the,masses made the air rmng with ahotiti for Seymour. and Blair. Tml, SITOArMoN.-We extract the, follovimg itemis of iewafrom a let,er ot a frien-1 in Scarboio, &riven. couty, Ga. He says "The white people here a'd nearly all -Democrat, unless it be wiere Sine per Ron .wanfs to get' cinity offfce, then lie tuirns scallpwag, and what i.4 worse sticks to it. T. Mb,prev4ils froniordina ry to coistable. The iegroehtare :unitton Rt3eWalishf bel ititing you hear .(JtMd it -h wlie was onie Devngera,ic,negr i pt%q 80th- 4iRtrict, G. W..Rlat, %-ek, who wa4s induced to ma a Deniddttio sp eechi'r.id -did .re niarknbly well. H1e lis ''n0o turned Radical, Aid say that he s bouidy to vote for that partV- b0eanie the Rad als ha:ve thiatened ti kill hiin wilpse le did There .irg.uiment tlyat Will prevail w;thi tio, negroeo. Th people of the sont.h have been 1pgrir.raere, negro guard.irq., gangtdeir "pet- wards" are now bemgi tntined "ito an engine f. dtruetion pgwist4thi. I16w long will ttioole$fGedii &IfntnI6, t6 nurture . this' groJRmeal-votig-r<a chine y. gtighn sliel er,.. food and ldthi-g*? ..The pqople. of the South are Imaking o6ead' mistake in addressing alhoi iga.'iltYto the negro's head, for his hitnin buI ally poiking are 19t 'there,. bitt can~ be toun d'abou1t t he Place where h'e but tons the waistbands of hisCbreeches. It :s his stomach, after all, to whi1i'We'niust npvW.P IlWoRs.i1n ise'Froni a private pt tert. writtena t wo weeks before the election in P.faipe, by one of the most, ditihish6d and e@ferIended p'oli@ctans in that Slate, to a friend int >?phite,.the crati foaGovdsnotafor Okiamberlains is a very popular man, tnidath& t6taper. ance and lgeglyq;esti#ns are entering ~rgely,niig~t ghelrI)atgrial election. Iarge3rigg4 e9thMemperats ont promtirnenber e-as thseivarious temna perance societies will vote for Chamtber lain for Gigrngr. .j.tlNnk the State sylll go ,f~rn tw to twentyv fjc It stirar g it npy s orad~&yQti after eu'oh a vietory as this int Septejiber'tiiis. State Will cst"heMidtotoral' Vote 'for:' So trrida tidtBla I~ aiheetibMr,'foil tbpg4u aII aret'of that nefaotiy crew shl Nt ieSkio itate1 thie'Demonjrats of Maihe sh if%dtijind.' ira he SoutiIa ~ ~ o emme Easty -ft ndadafinlNoveafiera6tetheoy will-shov by t,heir votes th&thhli'is a 3vhite ian goverlhmkatf ', itgl o r ~p pose o - a,r ats g,hget'ag eotep. orataiOaffait f p86 tb'or let, as % 41 iiuentabl .faIlurae n n he1na Important Lotter from General Grant, Wo find the following important and intorosting letter from Hirain Ulysses Grant in the Stockton (Cal.) Gazette. It will be road with absorb ing interest, as foreshadowing the policy to be pursued by that profound. est of &morican "statesnen -should he happen to be clected. No charge is made for its insertion in this jour. nal: WAsHtNONoN, May 29. TO Gen. J. R. 1awley, President of the Scetionnl Disunion Repulicau con. vention:--Washburn and Logan-for a wonder-drunker than I ant to-day, I take my pen in hand to go it alone, and inform you offilially that I am your Indian. Informally accepting the sacrifice which has been tendered me by your Convention. It looks to a man up a tree to be proper for me to publish my views In e:rtenso-Sumner tells me this is good Latin-that the world may know how morality and politically unclean I am. The pro 3cedings of the convention were mark ed by what we must try and palm off Dn the people for wisdom, patriotism, %ud things. On the rosotutions you have adopted, I of course go it blind. As matters have turned out, though, I wish that confounded impeachment Dlause had been left out, for I am afraid it will prove a bad ogg. If Dlected to the office of President, it ivill be my endeavor to administer all laws in good faith with the ideas of 2ur Christian friends, Benjamin But lor, Thad Stevens, Beecher, Anna Dickinson, Logan and Kidd, the pi rato ; providing, of course, that Wash buri taiotions it. My first official ict will be to confiscato all tho cotton plantatIons and* whiskey distilleries mi the South. The former I shall parcel out among our loyal African brethrenw and tho, members of our aoble Order, the Grand Army of the Republic, that birds of a feather may ok together. The distilleries will 5e placed in charge of Messrs. Wade, Dhandier and Yates, and run for my )wn private use. Just at this time it.is imlposible to lay down a policy to be adhered to, right or wrong, be manse it is getting nixed whether I 3ver havo qny admninistration. 1H-w vor, if I should ever got my fi.ngers, in, I shall endeavor,,as ha I Tve been. 6ul of i.fif' to do as near Prong as possible. If ever I doany ,hing righ it will bo by uistake, for which yon and the balance of your 3rowd will of course reprimand me. New obstacles to my election not for weon are constantly arising'amid son:e >f our old friends, who are fools nough to be honest, are constantly 'opping over into the ranks of the Democracy. They are mn I have tover rcspcoted, and, never shall ; but if I get into power I'll. smoko 'omi. If we do ot hiold of the government, we will,-witha proper-.administration of iffairs, greatly increase the -inational lobt and the burdon of. taxation, and ,orrespondingly r.oduco- the 'amount )f.018h i the T.rqasury. -utler sola )mnly atissuros n1e, upour his honotr as a 3htistian gentleman;;-%vhiob the woi4 kn6wi is unspotted-that vth a g0od pa0k mule he can in four yors's tino 3toal every dollar in ther country' amnd deposit itin Boston or Lowell and, only work eight; hours &,daY at that-, giving hinm. thte entii-e night to rob ohuroih-yards. Hie offrs t6 do this for eighty per cent, in' doim. I have pr'Qmised himn tho j'ob, en condition, that 1 get elected. Please excuse haste.pnd h1 ad. petn, .I ama getting tolerable . drunk,. and h6ping these finies will fid you enjoyling the sameoaNat.ional Republien blessing, I remain your nmost obsequious -knave, HIRni GAr. P. '8. June .2d.-Ihave: just board froim Qregon. Thte gamne Ia blocked. 7 Why does tl 6 Jacobia press have nothing~ to say ab~out thme unseating ot wite' meibere, bfY the niegto: majority, the. Loini&na Legislat,nre? They ar ralyroubled about th6~ expuldion' of.:ntgroos in Georgia; but for .white men 'Wi'Louisiank th M r dnbthuing. A, hithenmdfinfr ka'v6 been 6x ollbd?here. l,rto id day b6fore f.eater%y Avo w.~reWete oast..out.. T her mapraty. re port:of theoelein' ecmmittoe- showeil that tho white man owhlose, sats1 Twere obnttetd were elected- byi58 manjority, AY:t1' thfti.ht ihgs 'upoltI%*gtih the e$Ate Be ~contt'd afy (gyrot'qM. Nutbe, 6ieriy, .Spor;, mamde by tWo ng%roeP, event t be 'oher .way~. and was sustoimfed. by the' Hlouse, .turuing twlm#ite,men ut;- nd%t:n two negroes in ,thieir place;- ThI~~ all ehgrg deal, of ra whetl er yottr, bakl gores t , 1 ~bt tiu W PrO.TICAh.-Ohio and Peiinsylvania, representing as they do, two of the most important States in the North and in the West., holding their elect ions as they do nearly a month Ib-f)re the Presiden tiltl election, will dictate to the Union who shall he I'resi<lent.. It the DLem1o crit.s carry tisoe two States tle victory is certaini. If thie are %woil ) y the lie. publicans defeat is jist at sure. I, is useless for us to disguise the liect. Tho. States carrv to-day in their hands the fate of the inion.' Hence we nre glad that the .Adtional Intelliencer confirms the opinion which we entertained of the probable result in Pennsvlvaida. All that we can learn from Ohio is equally encouraging. The shrewd common sense and wise statesnanship of Peildle. ton is doing good in that State, and the indications are that Ohio in 1868 will give its aid in the election ofi a Demo cratic President as it, in 1867, gave its aid to constitutional liberty by electing Thurman, a Democrat, to suc.eed Beiij. Wade, a bitter Radic'.l1, to the United States Senate. We are unwilling to believe that the truth can go backwards We cannot think that those two States, which but one year ago defeated Radi calism, will prove false to truth, false to manhood, false td generosity, Calso to sell-interest, false to const.ittt.ional li'or ty. The Intelligenc4ir, in the same art iclo quoted above, says, with regard to Pennsylvania, and the same words may be applied to Ohio: The Conservatives cfr Pennsylvania have now before them the ioblest op portunity offered to men since the days of the A merican Revolition. :The glo rious heritago of liberty then won by t,he valor and sa.riice of the'r revolhi. tionary fathers is now in jeopardy. It is for them to say whetlher we shall en joy the priceless blessings of a free Con. stitutittn, or whether the cotetry 0ball be handed over to tha fonlest, the most corrupt and degrading of iespot.isims, compared with which even that of Ttr key or Russia would be respectable.-. The Radical leaders have basely con. spired against this system of conlstit. tional liberty. nnd they demand the right to perpetity of oflice and plunder by enfranchisig negroes an keepiing hundreds of thousands of white men from the iolls. In the three. States of West Virgia, Missouri and Tieuinisee, .tero,are two-hundred-and-tw4vtr t?irmu. sand white met not allowed to vote in the Presidential election. Let the people of those two great States bear these words in mind at the ap proaching election, and Radical rile will be destroyed and constitutional lib erty regained.- (.harleston Courier. Ti LoyAL LEAou. AT WotR. TusOuMnA, Al.A., Sept. 21.-Last Saturday night wook onr Female Semi flary was burned to the ground, and, evident to every one, it was the work of an incendiary. It seeis the matter has bt n quietly and surely ferreted out dur. ing the past week, and on Sunday morn ing a warrant for the arrest-of six negroes wassworn out, and four of them were found and arrested by the State officers. One of the party gave bail' to appear tbis morni"g, . at 9 o'clock. Sunday night, about half-past 11. a body of cavalry in disguise, variously :stnated to humberfrom o:p hundred and fiftv to three hundred, picketed the town an'd .dre'w np in front of the jail. Fivo or six of themi dlemanded the prisoners of- the costaible, wvho, withI four men, was -guarding theni. He refused to aurren der them, except to ,lawful anthority, when ,all,ael on-ce a 'signal was given and a chai-ge was made in force by .the whole body. The cotnstahle nnd gnards 'were knocked diwn, seared and locked up itn a ro6tti. .Three or four shots were fired in thewmelee by the -guards and were replied to by the lynchers. The cell of. the prisoners was t,ben en. tered, they were seized . and carried ab~out a hulf inile from the towvn and hing tider a' bridge. A placardesfs placedi. on each one, teing his crime and name, a nd giving his confession,, Their naynes were Port im)pson, B3ii Cooper and Jako nell. The confessions gave the names of aif toeni or tWenty others, tienibers~ of' the hfagire,'Who wore swiorn to' buyn every house, kmll all stock, and, if that did not 9tiidt-h'ees to kill a .fewv of thenf. 'Ontommunity is in .a .grett tonis heavily .patrolled with police. Great exoitement and consternation pro oreiat,.tthe o,ther twobhave - borne tby repitsfor yery TWo of the throy fingleaddas whorriigs 64.to All of th!e guilty parties, as fatr as 1noioen, hade . Wit@imfnod to (est U.9 ogait h esflho gye Iaf, tQc Memphi. 4ppeal nel~ Prussians are feNN1ed that r.6. bod ~ eb!qt thle ha-bor:of tel with; Q 9fe'-ftido seu hoWn* I~jself at the harbot D I.:u ' n's i'osi.:-. _ )W IT I 1: 'elogrmnis o SecretarY McCulloeb, n 11011neig Ih ptiblicaiion to-Jay, in Ilos toni aid N,-w York, ofan exipse of lite true condii i- m fI le'rl 'l'rei,iir fromnth lien of Alexinider lni r, t.,i1 Director of lie 1inren im JSalistic., hls iniis--d at grealt,itormin theOi Department., and pw',itieal c:%eles here ire , in a perfeet. foimeat. Who is Mr. Delainr, tint. he Zh1 111,1 111ti8 assu elilt the ta'dk of exposilig the voiditi-m of our resourves? A Ir. Delmar, in reply, fak, why allw the Radical policiainls to bliind the people bv filis.o satem , and Imaki. tlIe believe that tl tIliol debt, is being diminished, whlen, ill ac, thc l i 0ovelr1t iet is not. illet.ig its oxiw dituiires by upwards of one hiudIt1red aiid 'fty ni.ll lions of dollars per anlilui, wleli nimist, be Imlado I p bYf an lerv i lsed talxalio I upon the l pieople ? ()ther suhordinate officials iave ittelnpte.e, by well wriltel, articles, to prove 11he Trei.ll3ry to be ill a inoiat, healthlid condition. Direct.or Delmar has used his thorough knowledge of facts and figures to expose its rolten n1essI, 111141I 111 Rldicai Wire pu !nAlers it. Washington are made to howl over I his 11m1expected blow, which tIloy admit is a a stuiiner. It is understood lie article nilided to Will ailso aippt nr Il Ithe col unis of tho Natirnarl hntellgncer to morrow mornig. The lion, tobiert. .1. Walker, the recognized financier of tle country, has rena this exposilr.%, and pronounces it per'ectly Ioverwhelming. io thinks it will aronse the wh-l counn t.ry to n lively apprecintion of tho reek. less ex1 ravagance of the dominant. part v. and and leAd to tlie ann1ihilation of tio, tadi(i pn ry.- l.Vashington Cur. Cin. cinnali Gazelle. IN(Iffr,Anit y TN---OF A T'nx.x. PIIOTOGuAri-iin uv.o uix PI.:RSON OF A LAIV.-.--The following il.. cide-nt wis related in our presenen at Boisseai I I-tel, on F?riday miorning by a gvnileman from int uler CoIIt. flu statod ilhat dring a severe Ptorm which passed recentmly over t.ie villige of Mor. ga.town, ill that coul Iy, a young lidy I was sandifling at. the willdow ofi a privato residenee, looking olit Iion li1the CoIlilId. ing W110"n.s whelIddenlly *v flalh q,i ligl;tnig passed througll Ilie window, severely shocling t.hii ,yviilig liy, .but. otIi9f.i.o doing no damage, Upon in. vestigation it. vas Ascerainelld tha' thO likeness or photograph of it beuittiful alanthits tre-. which stool in thle imine diate front of the window, by tho el-etric flash had beei improssed upon the los omn of the young lady, whu-ro it sill re llails plainly visible, and wilh lil the indelibletiess of tho nattiral flesh. [ rnln( Ky.)Rnin. For tlo next six w(-(eIcs expect dily accotints of "horrible miassocres" 0. freedien and Union miln tit, the South. They are necessary to the Radicaele for electiunerring purposes, and will bo Air nished to order by Buirean ngents and travelling reporters for such fnpers as the New York 'Wbu.to. The fights at Naslhville between two fdtione of 1110 Republtean party, and the murder of a negro there, will be attributed to the De mocrats as soon as tIe Radical papers receive their letters.-Bosion. Post. SAN FRANC1o, Sept. 23.-The Ja panese Comnissiotera who purehased the StonnwAll, returied to the Rne. publio for safety. They will rentain1 in the United States unitil Japanlese troubles are ended. A tidal wave oceourred at Yokoho meo on the 15th of August, 24 houcrs after itse oeourrence in1 South Ameri ca. AitM FoR CO'rfMEN8 o TUll tNDTAN Fx'Jo?rI.n.-Tt. isi unIde.rsodd that tlion t.enant-Generatl Shermnan hass determined t,o 1ss10 rms and ammunition to the citizenls lhving along the Indian frontier for their protection ngainst further dep rodaltions Of the savnges,4 Two friends were d ining together, one of whom 1-emarked i "As I am going abroad I have miado my wvill, and have bequeathed to 'on my whole stock of Impudonoo.n r10 othier re. pild "You are 'enerotis, as well as kind t you have bequeathed to me by far the largest portion of your estate." KThe. Macon (Ga.) Mesenger . an nounees that Messrs. D.' A ppleton & Co,,.the p ublishersof Now York,. have given bishop B3ook.#ith of' doorgia, the suni of $20,000 for ile conistrito .tiQn.of an. orphatflnasylurp oorl under gthe atulkloos df the Pretesan Yorlr n sajs ti1e watV' as, to ,t for "f6e4eI e"i1i . oV ' prt the gQ000 wlitoC nsoon are disfrp~ebIs tigro4~ppssoe.apd. tijftp t bave Mot ork tshtgwi nu1sion eftogroqs fiotn th ' rd ATTrn:IPr To inAK JAr..-A plot wa discovered on Sunday norning last, saym the Charleston News, wihicl, hid it beer1 succes4ful, would have lot looso to prey itpon ltis comtntiity moro tinn one hun dred of the niost hardened villains who ever graced a jail or felt the halter draw. E.1rly in the morning of Stinday one of (lie prisoners in ('harleston jail skughl atl Interview with (lie jailor, and told him 1ha he prisoners confiued In the tower and n part of the 1minl building woutld endeavor to mnake their escape as soon as tho cus(o tmary church service was over. Ilo said Iitt tile prisotners woro well nrmtted, aind [hilat they intetided to make a rush himno ilately after church, overpower the jailor rand turnkeys, break open the cells of the f her priwoners, and set af. liberly Ihe wholo aig wT1ith themselves free. The jailor, Mr. Philippi, promptly arimed ho (urnkoys and J1ailors, and allowed the wrisoners to go into service 11b IIHual. An !xaniinatlon was then made of tlie rooms )cupied by lite prisoners. It was found hat they had torn down boards from ite -eiling, wit which thoy had made about lIrty clubs, of which (te handles or gripo vero wrapped with strips of blanket. With be0so clubs they had wrenched off thte Ias. ive bolts, bars and hingos of eight hleavy lkors. Some of the bolts they had inado nto sung shots, iho slings being att ips of dlankot. It wias also discoverud that anch irisoner, when ie went into the yard, look ipl a brick or stone, and there was a hgo ille of those missiles itn thie various cells. I'hey, were, therefore, well provided, ani as ie prisoners immediately engnged in tli >lot were sixteen in number, they ootild 1asily have overcome Ithe resistance of te :eepers. All the missiles and nrms woro cleared iut of the cells and when Ithe prisoners ro urned to thei after church, they were arefully scoured. They saw at once that hey hand been found out., atd made no at etmipt at resistance. Th ringleader was a white man, named Villiai Taylor, fromn Williamsburg, who is n jail for burglary and larcony. lie is a Iosporato ruilan, and, although in olahis, leolares that he will soon break out of jail. [ho o(her ringloaders, four colored men, animed Thomas, Slooum, Johuson and llrad. ey. 'I ie whole number of prisoners i the allI:I one hundt'ndsatud flfVyi hnd tli olty ias land a narrow esoapo or boing thorough y burglarised and garroeta. Mr. Ph1ailippi appears to have behaved with oommendable itn tnnoss, and Shot Iff Mackey has tado ar. 'angewentswhtlich will prevent any similar langer In fulture. WH-AT TIY TurIt oF T1 lAICOTION ' OF DENNYL,VAKA.-The following extract from lie letter of a friend in New York to a gen. leman in tis city, gives a most ohooring ccount of tha prospects of the Domooratic iarty in Pennsyl-ania: Nsw Yonx, September 20, 1868 I wrote to a Philadelphia politician fhoso judgment was proved last year to be emarkably good, asking file opinion of eOnInylvaia. I will give yott ils reply wentaising that the e is no one whose pro. liotions would carry more weight, with iae. ' .iPHLAnrIIA, September 24, 1868. My Dear Sir:- am in receipt of yours >f yesterday. Yonuneed have no fears of Pennsylvania. 'I his city Is the Ilopublican libraltar of ho State, and we will carry it, -A over five thaousaand majority. I was last week through Lucerne, Catrben, Lehigh, for'thamnpton, Biucks and Montgomery jotunties. The Domo,rats are full of on. hutsiasm, and tall cotnfdently expeet a large y increased vote. O,4r organir.ation is per 'ot, andl we have ho heart.burning nor calousios of any kind int outr cnmp. Look unt for a Demnooratto majority in Pennsylva ala of at least Ion lthousmand. This will hel in theo Presidential contest. You:s truly, * * * * Chmarleston Gour-ier. owing letter, addressed, to General James )onnor, P'reslden t Central Club, was ro doyed at a late hour last evening a Wasirxoro*, D, 0., October 1, 1808.' bitAn 8in: Yot kind invitation to Judg~e Blair, for his broiter, Gener'al IBlarir, to peak Iq your State, was reeqived here yes. erda, just af(ter the Getneral oinme, 1to mays at~ will beimpossible, as lie has already mngagements-thtewill take the balance of ,he time until the campaign Is ended i4 the sIorthern atad West ern St ates, lie' would, f in hia.power, have been delighted to have ,isited your city. Juge Dlair- is in Penn' ylvanmit, and will be (hero probably until fter the October election. General Blait left here last evening to fill tnga emtent,, in :Ohio. H. de. in. eelluen itoieleotion Qf ouilsdidtistd : Respectully,yybur.Gbedien: sotvst, - 0. , WAILMS, r;vte~porqt.ary Mr. plai. 9JA%~ CjroR Vesident f phab QtiI6bf4 fo5 a~y It )44e dlg a sd bef te feed as7l(A f'94 rela o ( *$Os~ n Vek st~.Lnot b aad respone)l~6 k *fl,se eado.'' BUTLER's THIALs-116 IS TO ExPoSP TIrMl ('onnurIIONS AND CONSP'IfRAoIs OF NoRTn UttN iti,ms.-Boston, October 6.-genoral lutler, In a letter to Iho Boston editors, piblished here this imorning, says, in an swer to (he lion. Baward Atkinson's letter of Fridy, that the telegrain copy which Atkinson states General Butler obtained through bribety are not obtained by him in any such manner. The General slates that the dispatch of Mr. Ward reached him in an anonymous letter, post-marked Wash ingtoin, Sfvtermber 20. In answer to Mr. Atkinson's question as to what excuso the Uer-ol be for printilg tho telegram, ho says: "None whatever. It needs none, save an npology to my constiluionts for making my notico of either tho telegram or its billingi . gato sonder or receiver. I suppose th Iepublicans of the district might beourious to know iow (lie gold spootlators of Wash - itigbon and the brokers and the corporatir treasurers of Sltato street proposed to wan age their politics for them, and so I publish od the evidence of the conspiracy, and I shioulil do it again. I am nlow investigat. ing (the fact of how a prominent. candidalf of (lie bol(ers has been making overtures tl the Donooraoy of tho (istriat not. to nake any nomination, so that. (lie Dentooratic vote might be conceitrated on himself, i-nd should bo ready to publish (Item savo my duIty to the lItepublican party carries mie to l'enusylvania and Ohio to tako part in lho cainpaign there, feeling quite safe to h my case in (lie lannnds of lhe true niad tuntath tepubloanls of fho district. I propose or my return to oxposc all (lie secret meetings all lite arrangements and agreements, bar gains, subscriptions, corruptions, and con spiracis, by which the rebels and their sympathisors propose to break down the Republican party in (lie fifth congressional district, so far as they may come to wy knowledge 1 and I hereby offer a reward of $600 for.any competent evidence, written or oral, which will prove the guilt or coin plioity of any persons engagod in the enter priso of deftrauding (lie peoplo of the fre exercise of the electivo franchise, or by corrupt meansof controlling tlio election." TuHt ErsooraAN Or%nTunt TO TuH SIRInODIAT.-A number of EpiPoopallat clergymen in New Jersey signed a memo. rial to the late Methodist General Confer once, asking for (Ie appointment of com missioners to confer with lie representa. #ives of the Episcopal Church, which aro proposed to be appointed by the General Convention soon to meet In New York. Such commissioners were appointed by the Conference, (Drs. Mclintook. Curry, and others,) and now a corresponding memorial is to go to the ilouso of Bishops, asking for the reconstruction of a commission of Bis. hops appointed many years ago on Chris Ilan Unity, of which Dr. McIlvaino is Lte only survivor. The Convocation of York, In the Church of England, has lately passed a resolution cordially wolooming "any practical attempt to effint a brotherly reoncilition between the Wesloyan body and the Church of England." What is called the 4-British plan" of reunion contemplates (lie admis.. sion of Wesleyan preachers to holy orders in (lie Chlirh of England, by a process called "hypothetloal ordination," like what, now used as "conditional baptism," with a permission to continue the use of oxtemporQ prayer, except for lite sacraments. The mowiment, Is unquestionably prefuature, the members of neither soot being in any do greo prepare<l to make the tecessary con. ocssions. The Episcopalians will not allow oxtempore prayer in church, and the Metho. dist will not. submit, to (lie authority exor. cued by the Anglican bishops. IA Ku-Kr,Ux CATvuas,-Batfreday night. last, three inch, in the garb of what was once known in t his country as (lie Ku Klux-Klan, which organization the people were inolined to lhin k has cased to exist, wvent to the negro quarters en the Porter p lace, a few miles west of town, and b.y Inatimidaling theq negroes by violent Jnkliix threats, forced them to submit 'to a- Whole sale robbery without resistnoce. lat., as they were leaving, anid while :paesing through the promises of Mr. Clato. Aber' nathly, who lives upon the samno plantation, that. gentleman unexpetedly leveld , double-barreled shot gun at lbhet, and or dered them to unmask.- 'T'he argument, was irresistible, and in eomplyheg the .horyible Kuk,inx revealed the faces of t.hieo"itfori one, negro-loving, radical 1 Beownldwhin.. Two of them were name -Yanfe,y 4pd. rho other one Fordrin. Thiolattets has hot boon onaptured, but the Yancey brothers wore bein gprosecuted beforo aitat e Thi s Is the erst ease that hits h'appbned in this county 1o come lunder.the new Ktu klar law, for Brownilow's consideration, "What wiliho do with it,?" Nothing I . ulo (Tenn.) COkisen. PuxansvauzA.-Our Washington corres pondent writes: "Good reJforts continue ol 'ocived from'Pebtisylysniar I saw -and coordrsed will a prominent *teinen frotm that State oui lWohday whbeudgrient laut year Ase Io :the.tosult. in Pennsylvania wde verIdlod to the I1tt1 and wjto now expressas :hizoself thorougiijy angoina that. the U)dmocrats wIll o yy the oledoIon 'oh-Tuu'sday ded.-. .Domnoorgtg Ioto-are tuoiiop -o~iiand confident, and %'~1 ~ eottd,pu iputs att naiveent;' 4n 860 agon figtlb - idg a fy t