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../tfrW ; 7 • r>TW SPECIAL JIQHCE •wfii M AKHOOJD-IN THE rOWNG and rising ffcnra- Mon. the vc-gotstivo powers of li/o are btrone tout in a fowyoarsTww often t he pallid hue, the lack lnatnre eye and oroaciaiod form- and the impossi- bility of mental efion, eimw its banefnl inflnences. Itsooa becomes evident that eoinc depressing influ- \ ences are chocKinc the dcveloparaent of the body. consumption is talUed of and perhaps the yonta is removed from school and sent Into the country. This is one of tea wont movements. Kemoved from the orciDflry diversion of the ever chansons scenes of the city the powers of the body too much enfebjed to give aest to lioalthful and rural exercios, tbdStfita are turned inward upon themselves. If the patltpt baa female theapproacho! the mea- ses is looked fdr with anxiety, and the first symp- tom in which nature is to 8uOw her saving power in difitaetSKtb-e oiiculatioaanci vfaiting the cheek with tneblooni of health, Aiaalpiucreaee ol appetite baa crown by what it feel on; tbe g&ersles of the system are prostrated, and the whole economy is deranged. Tbe beautiful and wondeiftO-periol In which body and mindjutdergQ eo fumating a.change from «MU 0»«lf !Slpoke|f<H in vain; the parent's; heart .MMfliiln tnkltiaf. ard fanrleathB.graye-bot H«u«oU>'B BXTBACT Btrem/, for Weakness arls- g baa. exceasee or early indiscretion, attended ta the followlne Bynptons. Indisposttioi. Xxertion, Lots of Power, LOBS of Memory, DV scatty Of Breathing, General •Weakness, Horror 01 JXaeaie, Weak Nerve*. Trembling, Dreaifol Horror of Deatb, Nbrht Sweats, ColoTFeet, Wakefnlness, Dlmlaeaaot Vision, Lanranr, Universal Lassitude of tits Hosculat System, Oftea Bnonnoni Appetite •wlttDrepepUC Symptomj, Hot Hindi, Flushing of •be Body, Dryness of the Skin, Pallid Countenance and Bropttona on the Face, Fain In the Back, Heave nets of tbe Eyelid*, Frequently Black Hpots Flying befotfthe Eyes, with Temporary Suffusion and Loss of Sisbt. Want or Attention. Great Mobility, Rest- letsness. with Horror of Society Nothing is more edclrabte to such patients than Solitude, and nothing they more dread, forffearof Taemselvee: no Repose of Manner, r.p EarcestneBB. no Speculation, bnt a harried Transition froin one question to another. These Symptoms, If allowed to goon—which this MedlcineSuvirlably removes—soon loliow Loss 01 Power, Fatuity, and Epileptic Fits, in one of which the patient may expire. During the 804«rUitendoDce o( Dr. Wilson at the BloomtMCdale Asylum, this ead result .occurred to wo patients; reason had for a time left them, and both died of epilepsy. ?hey were of both sexes, aadaboot twenty years of age, Who can ciy that these excesses are not frequent- ly followed by those direlal diseases Insanity and Consumption f The records of tbe Insane Asylums, and the melancholy death! by Consumption, bear ample witness to the truth of these assertions. In Lunatic .Asylums tbe moat melancholy exhibition appears. Its countenance la actually sodden and quite destitute—neither Mirth or Urief ever visit* it Should* sound of the voice recur, it is rarelr articulate. ** With woetai measare wan Despair LAW sullen aoondfl tbetr grief beguiled.\ Whilst we regret the existence of the above diseases and symptoms, wo are prepared to offer an invaluable gift of chemistry for the removal of the consequence. HXLMBOLD'BRISHI-YCONCINTBATKD FlinsBxTBJLor or Bucnro. There Is no tonic like it. It U an anchor of hope to the turgeon and patient, and this Is the testimony o! all who have used or prescribed it. Sold by Druggists and Dealers everywhere. Price $1.50 per bottle, or six bottles for $i£fiO. Delivered to anv address. Describe symptoms In all com- munications. Address B. T. HKLMBOLD, Drug and Chemical Warehouse, 641 Broadway, N. T, KONB ABB GffNTJINB UNLESS DONE UP IN BLBKL RNGBAVBD WHAPPKK. w.ta (ac simile of m» chemical warehooBe, antd tedSlob&weowSm A sign' H.T.I ed BSLUB3LD TrntLMBOLDsi HXTRACT BU CHI 1 eoid by JO. TBSO. A- PUCK Druggist A PACIFIC flaUWal Golden Loan, ffi6.5O0.OO0 WATERTOWN, N. Y. NX)VEMBJSR. 6. 1669. Editorial Correspondence from New t Voriu. ['iviversaHst Cente?iarij meeting at Dr. CJuipin's ( hvrch—^peechai of Qreeley Lollcs, Dr. Miner, I'. T. Barnum and Dr. Chapin—The limilt. ZS'EW YOKK,'NOvernier 4, lbGO. The first oi a series of Centenary meet- ings was inaugurated atE>r.Chapin's Church on the corner of 45th St. and 5th Ave., on last Thursday cveniBg. The meeting had beea.ftrrangftd-hy the ftev-. B.C; TomliBBeay We big. 1\ nonoaoce that agency of the we isvc accrp'el tbe 4aw Btorfsrwotrld repel theitt\1f«iB^*Bie\iGrba who could be so savage and inhuman. I say thea we are to be measured as a sect by the progress which our thought is making in modifying the religion that Jesus held. Itisseenm the tottering to its foil of the gallows , in the hunianer sentiment which now dictates morcy to the defeated and in- surgent. Rebels against the Government, and in everything which indicates thegoing out of vergeancoas apartofthe machinery ofGoveranient. We are advooates of this truth, hoping that the time will cornewlien all Christians will have embraced them, and when we no longer pointed out as Universalists, shall be simply so many Cbristians among others, and shall be making war upon heathenism and darkness, cruelt j, idolatry and iniquity and no longer rnftklag-waj-npoD each othoi KANSAS PACLF10 RAILWAY Co. -For the sjle o ' Its New Sovoc X*ar Cent Thirty Tear Oold Loan, Tree of Tax. Thi^oanamoonts to $o,60O,Ccu. FHrtt Mortqa{if L Land-Qrant and Sinking fond Bench. Becured upon the extension of the Rallviy from near Sheridan, in Kansas, to Denver. Colorado, a distance o f K7 miles, ot which U miles arc comple- te* 1 , and tbo rcit o f the road Is under construction f£tt is also a Mortgage upon the Rolling Stock and ITranchli* of this first-clasi Railway besides, now rasnlng t*jtoajh tha Bute of Kansas, •nd in ancceaafbl operation 470 mile* west of the Mlisburt Rivo, and eamtne enough to meet all Ita expeosas and ctiattng ob'.l^ations, be- sides m#x#,than the Interest upon this new Loan. InaddlUoo to thu I tie Bonds are also secured by a first Mortgage of tbe GoTommeat Ladd-Brant of Three BKillion Acres. extending In alternate sections on either side of the track, from the 894th mile posx la Kansas to Denver, Th« proceeds of the sale ot lt>e*e laeds are to be in- Tested by the Trustee* In I he T p« r cent Bonds them- selves up to 131), or In U. S. Bonds, as A Sinking: Tntad fortue Hodomption of The Boad^. The lands embrace some of the finest portions of the mtgnillceht Territory of Comrade including a coal fieid aid pinery. Tbo Coropaay al*o holds a* an asset another tract of Threo millions of Acres in Kansas, andaltlioagh not pltdged a>a se<uti:y ionhis Loan the.lr possession adds larjery to lte Company's wealth and credit. We ettlmare tbe value of the Compan^e property, covered by this mortgage, at Twastjothree JSlilion Dollars, net. wnile'^e llam Is merely 1^,560,000. The Botedt^wqUilB'rt rEARSt TO HON, from May 1,1863, t'nd -wfllpay Seven POT Oeat In. terect in Odtld, seml-snnnaiiy, on May 1. and Nov. 1. and are Tree &omlOojrarament Taxation. tbe Company paying tbe tax. The Principal ol the L( an is made payable In Qold in the city Df Sew Xork, but each cotroon will be payab'P ,B Frankfort, London or New York at option ot the holder, wl'hoot notke, at thefol lo-wiBjg rotes: On (1,000 Bond in N. Vork, f33 (golojeacfa half yrar. London, £7 S«. 10 \ Frankfort 87 fir. SOIrrtzs The Aeon ta of the Loan, before accepting the Iras', had the conditlsn of tbe road, and the country thro' which it rons, carefully examined. They are happy to civ e tb« loan an emphatic endorsement st a ; F1IZST CLASS INVESTMENT. in eveir rjetotjctjjprecUy sure, and la ecmeesseD- flale even Bolter than S-ovornment Se- ic Bi ' CuritieS* 'iticBords will l>e ?ud tor too present At 96, and Accrued Interest, both in currency, tne Asents reserving the rijbt to advance toe rate. %9 The attention of lnvfitors is invited to these well-secured bonds, which wo recommend as one of the most profitable Investments in the market. Oold and Government securities taken in payment at their market value, without ctrmmitelons. Pamphlets, -with maps elvii e icll Information, sent on ppplicatian. OABIfSY, jaOBOAK & Co. No. 68 Kschange Plae?, N. Y. S M.K. jnssTjr, atCo. No, 12 Pine Street, riev? YntU. J. F. MO¥H55T, B;Eq. Cathier Merchants Bank Watertown.'li. Y. - AH2.SdwS^t ,\.. Hair Dye has been proved poitonlose. Frof«»sor Chilton, wboao reputation asaji ana'vtical chemist gives his statements tbe weight of authority, an Bounces I bit JfrKtadoro's Excehicn Hair Dye, has been snbjected to the proper i csts in his labors, toey, and that the results show it to bo ABSOX.TJTZ2X.Y HAXUS1VX3S8, i tawellM admirably adapted to the purposes lor Wnchlt la doalgned. This li itBpcrwnt, SB tbe pnb- lie has lost been warned, by two leading ecientiac - otsams, against a.cuarm oa the ba'.r after Dyeing. late of our city, and the purpose was to raise money for a large fond, which is in- tended to be secured during the centenary year of tJniversalism in Imerica. Altho' it was the night after election there was a large audience, and the meeting was a gratifying success. We shall make no mention of the officers of the meeting, but simply sketch the speakers. After tlio prayer by Rev. Richmond Fisk, D. D„ President of St Lawrence University, and some excellent music by the choir, Horace Greeley was in- troduced and made a characteristic speech. He was neatly dressed, but his neckerchief had slipped its bow knot under his left ear—while his loDg, tlin/white whiskers were kept in by one section of his stand- ing collar, and let ou t on the other, so it gave him a kind of one-sided appearance, which symbolizes the funt that he can nev- er be on both sides of any quostion. The gas light shone britjhtlyoji his bald head, and the reflection encircled it with a kind of aureo'.e that gavo him the appearance of a modern apostle. la his colloquial and peculiar manner he spoke as lollows: I always protested and always shall protest against any conception of Univer- salism or of the Universulist people, which regards them as a sect; for a sect is a body ofpeople, who, by making themselves a 8ect,proclaim themselves &s holier than other christians, and as holding a faith wich en- ables them to say, o;justifies them in saying, to others, \Stand by thyself. You are not worthy to come Into c ur association.'' Now,then, theUniveraalistsnever said that. Tney never desirod to be separate ftom the great body of christians. It they are stand- ing to day, as they did not formerly, out- side of that communion, it is the pleasure ol the adversaries that they shall do BO, and in no respect a result of their own cnolce. There eertainly was a t;me in the history of the christian church when the greatest and most honored apostles'of that faith were open and avowed in their proclamation of their conviction, as wel 1 as their hope, that in the providence of God. oil souls should be reconciled unto their Father and Judge. There came a darker day to Christianity in which this sentiment wns condemned, and its preaching :is a christian doctrine forbid den. What then: The light, though smothered was not entirely hid. Excom municattd, denounced, anathematized by Popes and bishops, the faith was still cher- ished, and hope was 6tillan anchor to the soo.1. But the reformation came in due time, and then came a fresh proclamation of this truth. As it becane more distinct- ly proclaimed churches law fit to cut us off and condemn the proclamation ot this truth. Therefore we are outside of their organization by their choico wholly. There i9 to-day a great deal of talk about Christian Union. Oar croanent friend Hen ry Ward Beecher, has become the editor of a journal which advocates Chnstian union. Oa what basis f Our idea is that every Christian has a nght t o read the Bible for himself, and believe its sayings as he under- stands them, if he should lose his faith in Christ, no longer regwi him as a teach- er sent from God: why, ot course, he comes outside of Christian organization ; but s o long as be beJieres in Jesus of Xazereth as the Son of God, and testiSes that he was sent to l>'j the Saviour cf the world, so long be is h. Christian, and -wo know no reason for shutting him off from the communion of Christians. If the world has an idea that we make belief innur view of the Christian scheme of salvation essential to membership of our chnrcb, the world then is mistaken, and ought to be corrected. W e never had any such Darner or limitation of fellowship, and never shall have The speaker then gave an instance of a Sunday school that was established in this city a year ago ; that many young men and wo- men of that neighborhood came into the school as t8aeher>r-Art-first; tinLhitig wsTS said about sect or view*, hat after a while it was deemed expedient lo circulate a creed of declarabon. Each teacher was required to sign a pledge that he believed if people did not repent and become members of the church they would be eternally lost. So the Universalist teachers were tamed out of the Sunday school which tliey had aid- ed to buildup. They didn't complain,but simply went out It must be understood that tt:e exclusivencss was not on our Bide, but on the other. Now, then, the faith by which we are distinguished was not first proclaimed on this continent a hundred years ago, as our anniversary might seem to indicate. It had been previously made known, if not in the intimations ol Robin- son, leader of the Mayflower party, certain- ly in the writings of Doctors Chauncey and Maybew, orthodox Congregational clergy -men in Boston before, a s also by Hunting ton an Episcopal clergyman, who resided at Norwich. Hut in tbe year 1770, Mr. Murray came her, the first distinct, uniqiiivocal, special, absolute proclaimcr of the truth whereby we are distinctly known ;at*d consequently, we dale the foundation of our body from his preaching in the year 177f>,and tbe year 1870. consequently, is regarded as\our cen- tenary. t.r>d we hope to make it memorable by some effort, some sacriflce.some achieve menfSron the part ot this body to make the truth which ihey declared more geuernlly known. But we do not measure the pro- gress of this truth by the number of our churches or preachers, or the number of pereons who formally adhere to our sect. Not at all. Our progress is seen in the en- largement of Christan HbcroJity, and in the are\~essenfiaT€6 tfie success of any cause- ideas and Machinery. Tho ideas which characterize'a cause constitute, of course, its very reason tor being. Those who grasp and nssimilato-thc truths ot a cause like ours aro stirred up to oppose abuses, and to attempt to enlighten ami redeem mankind and there cunKi a time when these ideas must be organized into institutions, and must avail themselves of all possible means for their difusion. An abstraction has very little effect in the world. Christ ex- pressly declared that he came only to bear witness to tha truth and when the blood- drops ot the cross had watered.it-thea tho I what h e thought to be the truth with per- apostles were appointed to go abroad as the! feet conviction, with perhaps as much ef- foundersof the churches. The power of feet as it he had been deep in Hebrew and dote •which will remind the reader of a some- what similar passago in the early life- of George Fox. Mr. Cartwright told the au- dience that \ he had preached as many ger- mous,\ aiding modestly • '-it migh^ take a dozen ot them to make a good oae, for what I know, hut they cost rae physical la- bor as well-as mental labor.\ Hero then, we, may say, is a veritable clerical phenomenon. For li nl l ti cen tury, in all weathers, under the open sky, with long intervals of lonely and Difficult travel, is a man who has never for ouo moment faltered, has kept himself in a sound physical condition.and has dispensed v W fcHBIST. , ^%e4a,in£,4H:i The Rev. E. C. Bolles, of Brookly, -was the next speaker, and his remarks were per- tinent, forcible and eloquent. He has great fluency in speech, and a happy use of fig- ures, which serves to illustrate and not con- ceal his ideas. Rev. Dr. A. A. Miner, President of Tufts College, Boston, was then introduced and made a very vigorous and practical speech. He is a tall, bony man, bald, with a nose like an eagle's beak, and eye that has the fire of an enthusiastic leader. \We could see in him that rigorous sense of justice and determined will, which causied him to give the late Governor Andrews such a merciless excoriation for provixig recreant to the cause of temperance. In spite of bis belief in the impartial scheme of salvation, we doubt if he can feel much mercy for the man who knowingly does wrong. P. T. Barnum, \Th e (Jreat American Showman,\ was next brought forward and did the comedy for tho evening. As a speaker he shows a delicious sense of hu- mor, which is really delicious. He is witty, genial and practical. Mr. Barnum has humbugged the public, but be has given it infinite pleasure in doing so, while the dif- ference between him and many ot the sol- emn humbuggers o f tho age is that they are hypocrites and he i s not. He has grat- ified the popular taste for the marvelous at a very cheap rate, and now that he iB weal- thy he uses his money freely for philan thropic, educational, and religious uses. — He is a large hearted, generous gentleman. He made his speech practically eloquent, by climaxing it with a subscription of $7^O00 r the largest of the evening. Al though it does not do justice to his pungefht style, we give the following synopsis of Mr. Barnum's speech. He said: Lest his hearers should t>e reminded ot the saying that fools rush in wbtre angels tear to tread, that he wan not at all aware that he was to bo called ou t o speak, until about dusk, and it is not expected, Batd he , but only to say ''money.\ I am Rl.id that I, am permitted lo see this centenary arrive. It is a glorious privilege to sec it, and I am specially thankful when I look back forty years to the timo when I attended somo of the churches where fire and brimstone wesre poured out in such immense waves, that I went home and prayed to t>e taken out of existence if I could only be saved. I think it is a great thing to see the triumph of a cause that advocates tho parental government of G-od; and I am very glad to be able to be hero eand contribute one word or one penny In furtherance ot this glorious object In general, wo aay that supply and demand axe equal, but there is an exception with relereace t o preachers that aro to go out to preach this gospel. This is doubtless because preach- ing iB not as it usod to bo—just going out and crying brimstone, or putting on certain robes and holding rap a wax can.lle and saying something. There are still peoplo all over the christian world who are satisfied with such rigmarole, but we aro living in an ago when men think, especially in our branch ot Coristianity. We have got t o educate and prepare men who shall be able to instruct this thinking people, and we need money to doit. The people demand this kind of preaching. Five hundred able preachers of the doctxineof universal salva- tion might find employment in this vexy State, and thousands are needed through the country. If this denomination don't supply this demand, it will be supplied some other way, and it is boin^ supplied al l through the orthodox churches. People won't Bit and hear of tho terrible sufferings of souls, as they did forty years ago, and therefore if they cannot get a better gospel from Untversafist preachers, they will get it somewhere elsa YOM find the doctrine o f universal salvatiou all through the writings of the orthodox, not only of the Beecher family, (and especially in'Oldtown Folks,') bat all the denominations, where people are saying ngbt out that they don't believe in hell fire. I t is the business of this denomi- nation to havo men who can preach its dis- tinctive doctrines, and tho only way to jret them is to call for money. When I sa w the circular proposing a centenary fund o f $200,000 I knew there was a mistake about it. When I see how large this denomina tion is, and how rich, and how willing, for it is peculiar to this branch ot Cbristians to be benevolent, I know that there is some mistake. Two hundred thousand dollars isn'nt anything—the thing is preposterous ! Two million dollars is what ies wan'ed, [ap- plause j and it must be raised ! [Applause.] Just let every person do what they are able to do, and there will be no trouble about it. If every man, woman ami child will only give what they can without feeling it , and then just give enough t» feel it—and feel i t gloriously. For my part I am ready to Miy, very quietly, that I contribute $7,000 toward tbefund. Prolonged ap - plause.j Small cards wero circulated among the audience, and the following additional sub scriptions were obtained: Silas C. Herring, $J,000; J. W. Clowes, $5,000: C. P. Hunt- ington, $3,O00; Horace Greeley, $l,O00; B. F. Iloroaine, $1,000; Monroe Crane, $500, besides a number of smaller contributions, making a total ot about $25,000. The Rev. D. C. TomlinsoD, State Agent for the cen- tenary funds, stated that it was desired to raise this year for fit. Lawrence University, Christianity is in its machinery, after all, and not in its abstract statements, and the great WQrlr nf t)uflf.«nt«nat:yJiLaEganiyAtioa 1 Let us advance the standard, then, for, however assured w e may be of the final triumph ot our ideas, that triumph will be gained by bending ourselves earnestly, faithfully, and diligently to work with machinery. At the close of Dr. Chapin's address, and after some excellent singing by the choir, the Doxology was sung, and the audienco was dismissed with the benediction. The next mass-meeting of the centenary series will be held at Auburn, November 25, on which occasion Horace Greeley, Dr. Miner, Dr. Ohapin, and others are expected to speak. PETKll (IHTWHIUHT. a master of theological dialectics. No one, whatever hi s religious views, ox^rbfoiTdTy\ rationalistic, can. doubt tho real good, apart from his fine personal example, which in all these years Tr Oartwright must havo ac- complished. This is not the place nor is ours the pen to discuss the whole value of what is called conversion. In th e violent manifestations, the convulsive phenomena of the camp meeting which were once so common, but which are common no longer, there may have been much to repel the man of taste and cultivation ; but if we re- gard only the increased morality which must havo followed Dr. Cartwright's?prea- ching and the sounder schemes of life to which he must have directed many errant uaturcs, we fceh that he is entitled to every honor which has dignified his old age. Sixty five Years in the Ministry — llmorstu a Good and Faithful Servant. From the New York Tribune. Apart from all sectarian, and even all | THE ASSEMBLY. It is still in doubt which party will have a majority in the Assembly .but we regard Y A I?INGTO CEB TUB OBLEUHATED £a»u2ia Family* U.AlMKNt'INcioN- IVIonday Evening, Nov.8, 1869 1,^1.^',,!:' ,jroc,,iro \\\ ii, * i! \ >****« Orphan of Geneva, OR THE TRIUMPH OP INNOCENCE mi^HAN.v.. .-.Miss -c&dssssia- Supported by the whole company. After whirh . favorite ynix by Mrs Harry Town^nri er wWc * a If! r/iriflli r»i» tnlt h Iharniixio.'..... \To couqiuao with tho'rbariDgfarce,, entitled Deaf as a Post. ' Boors open 7-15;Commences at 8. Admlss I on, 3J ceat s. Reserved Seats, 50 coma. An entire change of Programme each evening NovMSt it of no practical importance. The Demo- religious considerations, the recent honors j crata having the Executive and Senate paid to the Rev, Dr. Cartwright, a t Lincoln, | might as well, and better have tbe Assem- I1L, by his brethren in the ministry, have | bly also, and so take tho entire reaponaibil- an interes 1 : for all t o whom tbe spectacle of a life devoted to duty is beautiful. Dr. Cartwright, who is aoweghty five years of age, has been for sixty-five of those in the ministry—a fact in this day of shifting aims and vacilating exertion in itself sufficiently remarkable. The fine old man. after half a century of toilsome travel, of self sacrifice, ot genuine apostolic devotion, stood before his brethren to receive the tueed ot their admiration and gratitude. Such a career, such a man must have recalled to those who listened to him the beginning of the Meth- odist Church, when its founder with hm little band of devoted adherents, with his saint like minstrel brother by his side, went to no holiday task, and weeping ovor the lukewarm condition of the church to which he still adhered, sought among paupers and outcasts in the highways and byways of England for the witnesses of a faithful uiin istry. Dr. Cartwnsjht iB a living represen tative of the genuine, primitivo disciple ol Wesley—of tho men who thought no jour- ney too long, no danger tuj imminent, iJ<> Bullcrinn too acute, it only they might carry glad tidings Lo tin; t-intul aud de-graded.— He is on;> oi the la>t as he is i>ne of tho greatest of the travi'.:ny preachers of tho old sell->o'. H\ W one wtiumJuLin Wesley would have t^Leu to u bosnm wlnc'i rarely glowcl with emotional affection, ami wlm would have moved tbo twetic nature ol that extraordinajy man l<> word.'ol approv- al, perhaps even of unaccustomed praise. The speech in which Dr. Oartwright re mm: m&s good will to all men into the generl body ol Christanity. Our views have modified alL sects. There is no such preaching heard even so late as the time of Jonathan Ed- 'WarcK Such sermons as he preached—-and he was probably the ablest Calvinistic Di- vine thatAmericaever saw—'would not be lnhision ol a deeper concept ion of love and •$ 5,000; tor the Murray Centenary Fund _^_j „:,,.„ .„._._ ,__ ., , . § 5O) Q O0 . For Clinton Liberal Institute, $20,000; an d for the State Convention o f New York, $10,000; and that it was hoped that every woman and girl would give a dollar to the Woman's Centenary Associa- tion, the sum of $1,000 hiving - been already raised in this manner. She concluding address was delivered by »«. iLU»_ ity of Legislation and administration for the year to come. They will find no trou- ble of course in securing the absence ol enough Republicans to carry through all their corrupt schemes, and wo had much rather they should have a complete majori- ty and s o do their shameless work entirely on their own responsibility. ELECTION FUALUS.— That gigantic Irauds are perpetrated in the city ol New York by the Tammany ring there is no manner of doubt, poh, about it as much as leading Democrats may. Tbe Sixth ward for example, has a pop- ulation of lfl.OO'i inhabitants, men, women and children, and aliens unnaturalized. Yet there were 5,'374 votes cast in that' ward at the late election. This is ono voter to every three people, a percentage of voters higher thnn was ever known to exist in any old community. Oiu voter to /•<•( inhab- itants, is a very larire percentage. .V thou- sand !•'•• Ii'itiilrcl tinil »c.fnt-.j\'\ At*. would bo a good poll in a cily ot 1 >rty thousand inhabitant.-. Vet the Sixth ward of New York, with a popnlatii n of less than 10.O00, people out tha-t numl^er oi vo'es at the reoen' election, nearly all of which were democratic voles. Against su,gh-palpable and unblushing frauds it is sponded to the congratulations of his breth ,^fell-nigh idle for honest people to conten ren was remarkable for a rare simplicity, air engaging candor, and a rude strength alu» getber refreshing m these days of sha)j£w pulpit rhetoric. There was indeed nr/ab sence of sectarian technicalitiesand ofcauip meeting phrases, for which the refined rea- der might have no relish; for Dr, Cart wnght adheres (as he has a right to do) to the dialect of his youth and may not have kept pace with td3 associates in the march of refinement. But nothing in the whole range of domestic poetry could be more beautiful or touching than the allusion of the aged octogenary to Ins ag'd wile. Ho had not been soeaking live iniuutes lief ire his thoughts went back to her She had been his \worthy companion- one who had never hindered him from traveling and preaching, had never scolded him forleav ing her destitute and lones.>r.io, but had al ways urged him t>> do what lie thought to be his duty.\ ' I have,' said lie \I expert, the oldest Methodist preacher's wifi: in the world.\ And then, not siropy with par donable, but just complacency, the patn arch spoke ol his fifty grandchildren and his twenty great grand children. He had been sot only a preacher of the gospel, but the founder of a tribe. Nor could anything be more entertaining than the reminiscences in which, upon this occasion, Dr. Cartwright indulged. All au- tobiogmplryisiirterestfng'.ftnd fbe si upufest man could hardly write in good faith the story ol his lite so stupidly a* to fail utter ly of readers. But whether bcausn it ap peals to wants which we always feel, to as- pirations which we never lose, there is in religious autobiography a peculiar charm. It may be, it often is, rudely written, but the most fistidions reader will pardon this, if the pages which record a spiritual expe- rience bear upon their face the stamp of sim- ple sincerity. Weconfess to have read with pleasure, if not with profit, the narratives of many preachers who could hardly spell correctly, and who had but lutle fame out- side their own connections. As we have perused the journals of tho early Quakers - a distinct literature hardly known outside \ the meeting \—wo have lei t bow priceless i in such writings is that ungrudging verac- I ity, which conceals nothing because it is ' small, and extenuates nothing because it ! may appear to the eyes of the world ridic- ulous. Dr Cartwright rambled through | the story of bis lift: with something ol ttie I minuteness of De Foe—here stopping for an ! anecdote, there pausing to detail s imo hu- ' morons rircumsbnirr, t,ut always gi VIDT ev- idence of an earnest and kiudiy rmlure. He had \sufTerd a gond deal in bodvund mind and oircumstanre \ Ho had bein ••caught five hundred miles from his lather's house with but severty-rive cents In bis pocket in a strange land, as a Methodist traveling! preacher, on horseback, and with not a gar- I ment but what was brought to the patch.\ ' Ho had been taken to task by an older I brother in the ministry \for wearing suspen-, ders,\ and was only consoled when he' found that Bishop McHenry wore \suspen- j ders \ also. He had been made a \D. I).,\ I and \the very day he got his Certificate he ! wa3 taken ill with a pain in his back.\ His father \ wanted to make an educated The Election*. From the beet estitnato we can make from the fow returns at hand, wo judge that Nelsons majority over Sigel while that ol most the candidates on the Democratic ticket will considerably exceed that figure. The Senate wul probably stand 1 \i Repub licans to 1? Democrats. Our list of As- semblymen sb'-w a tie in that body, but there are several meml>crs ot whose elec- tion we have grave douV. . and w e there- fore think t: aliN>ge'lier probable tha! there will be a Democratic majority in both branches ol the Legislature. Tbe few scattering returns received Irom Wisconsin indicate the re-election of (iov. Fairch'.ld, and the Uepuldioan State tiekot, l>v from'5,000 to l'l.OOu maiority. From Minm>it<i we have nothing later than the brief dipatch, published yesterday morning ; but we presume there can be no reasonable doubt that tho rotate has Ueen true to b«r- selt and the Republican party, notwith- stadiag tho efforts of n, few misclieivous persons, heretofore honored by the people ot that 8tate, to lead her astray. Maryland, as was to havo been expected, has elected Wool ford* Jo£. Jlemocratie eandrdate-itrr controller, by a very large majority, with a Legislature to match. Massachusetts has re-elected her (rovernor. State officers and Councelors, and has a large majority in each »brar.oh of the Legislature. It is understood that the party in favor of licensing the sale of spirituous liquors have a considerable majority ol the Legislature.—New York Tribuoe. •• v Wooster Sherman's Bank, WATEIiTOWS, S. Y. iBiTiumnr.D 1SU) iShl l Pii Jl.onr »J BdDRIrg B-OOlDCM, aid COO- 'l\!nuri> lt» n-\.al Ul'.ml Tcims toCuitoHMT*. tail-Road County & Gov't Bonds, Bought ard Sod at m»rkot rate\. r«ewi by rnornlnc'B Mall. I —Th? anniuersary of emancipation was j celebrated by the colored people at Balti- ) more on thc5th, by a largo and imposing procexdnn and a public address, with other I suitable acrompalnmcnfs. 'Bishop Wyman I delivered the address. —Oold has undergone another decline. Thursday at the close of the day it stood at 126?. — While Nathan Dowry and wife, of Harwich, Mass., were visiting a neighbor on tbe eueningof the 3d, their house took (ire and their two only children, little girls aged six and four, are consumed. Married TOWN»BNU_BOSWOKTll-On thj 3d ln»t. Uev J. H. R'cwart, Mr. Henry E. TownBend, of Uay, to MUB allco L. Bosworth of Pamella. POR SiLECafiAI', ~ \ TWO UEA VY HORSES, In Uood Condition and u»oii to Horse Power Ma- chines J. FAIBBANKS, Nov5a«twl 22 Artenal Street, A H0U8H AMD DOT FOH SALB. c . . . , , of fruit of all klnaa; woll nader-dratiud with large manot turn, but missed it tremendously.\ i stone drain mnntni through the centre, and tiio When he was converted, his conversion was , lM<,lD « \» u - -ni 0 \* °» ^ P^g'veirHBKBT not \ one of your tin-top fashionable silvar- j Nov. 5, aw»w» ' \ slippered, best bib and.tucker conversions i T7.01* SAfc*, bit WILL BXCBAKGB for honso —it was a backwoods confersioi), so extra-1 r and lot, * VMaaWe Water tot. Utoated on tne ordinary in its physical manifestations that JSug',,!^,*^,.\ th * 8AW \\\'\Won\'* the Doctoi; wanted to shave U* hemd. and .MM$o.>M mnta street, Wajertqwn,». y. This well-known remedy does aot (far op • Coturn uj leatr thecaoaebehind.*»u UiecuewltomostDreniS atlooa; tmt It loosens and cleanses Uhe langr r *uii aiUrJ Irritation, thus rmoving the cauu of thT eonDUhftJ KKTIT W. rOWLE.A 80N, Proprietors, BoitSn SokP by druggist* and dealers In modiclaej BenenJlj Nov 5 deod&wly fiHEAPER THAN BVX1H. EXTRA rXDUCEMENTS! American Agriculturist, &i<l Harper 3 1 Monthly, Weekly At Bazaar. Ai»T'.,'a'iliirlet from Oct. I. 'rti, lo Dec. '70, ....|] QQ Agriculturist and any one of Harpert for \70 (8) and all of llarpers lor 18\il vj fjg lUrp?i8 alono £3 50 each: all three XO00 Packard a Montli'v & Asrieulltii i*t to Dec TO J 00 andnt\ 1 ne of Harpers TO 8 00 HnbsrrlDtlonj tere'.ved liy C\ '». BIOHUV Oct iMxit • A t tho Port Office. | r inrTr.n wonxnwr TboSJcl edition of One Ihoasmd cop'.os of thin work 1- t.nw Itp-ii-d. A uow snoplyli iutre- c»-;\edby HTKRI.ING AMOSHBB. XEH PI liLICA TIOXS.OF THE AMERICAS SOCIETY FAMILY CIIKIsTIAN AL .MANAC fur 1ST0. LOKD IlAtt'N b| TUOlUMTh t omp'id bv B«T. Jr. Li. 1. 11a LOITIE I.ANS u 'll.ih.lr.r u jc iliall Iraow ifc.rr. ' BEI'TIS'S H;I;T:' TA\ 1'I1KM:>T U PIUSHM It. \v.ir It < Bi.ANi UK 1 .A\U».\?>. 1 itt-ro ;r ; r.-'i ,-. I . Mt-r.c I) Atr Iti.r. . CKCFJ . w.ia H1K UAH- AVt'M; T11K All K(.flAME> loK 3AI.K 11V Nc,v. 1, ;•«.\ -TKHLlSt. &S10SHSE. IJIonoy Hecoivod on Deposit, sod Ccrtii- ca*' B Issued txnrina\ Intent\ Money Loaned, Booo#. If ort :.•!£«» an«3 Bust- nee» Pop-r N-rcMiit-d Exchange on Now Vork, S<>'d a; Uoirert •Vet Sccor.llc* ixd \ a.unb i'i of oary kind rcceuM lew M«fo Keep DS. on f»«-or» M <! terms. Ar<*--i;,-« t t, |w-n . rt •*.!.< I'.M EST W,.a'*<. jay mj».l. Cold ard M'.vtr Cola, Cuaida Moi/cy and all Ictere#t Coupon* ucUtod wr» IMPOHTED WINES. A i'ULL ASSORTMENT OP OHOIOE BOTTLE© IMPORTED WTNBS AND J.IQTJOE81 Jnst received by A. BMKBNYOW' n2d»w, 1776 FOER ££ -.3$H vr. a. CotnMnallcn oi iron. PhospoorM, I**} 1 \ 0 *» d 2jj' cerlnc. A Blood. Bone. Brain ana Skin Henower. GLYCERINE JELLY A Perfect Snbitltnte tor Cod Liver Oil. INSTANT EASE The host remedy in Use forCofdl-Co-ughs and Pain. WllOLBSAtffAGBT, N M. SMITH, Orn^rtst, Wntertown. N.K. Oct-'MSm B READ, BRB*», «JOOD BBEAD. L Ure>it Fia>,\at the (ruil 0/ Cook Stwet had at Troy. Tho America Cook Stove baked 8jj Umvci ofBr.'ad, in 3 tours rind 33 minutes, a- e'l dope, wl-h 15 lbs. t'oal only. Tho Empire, baked 72 Loa™. ;n 3 hom 15 mlnutec, with 15 lbs.Ooal. THE AMSH1CA Cook KIOVP is^or ^'^Vfi Walortowi', Oct.15.18R0 . ^^^^w«diW_ MANHOOD: How Lost, How Regained I Jtut l'ubllahed in a sealed envelope. ^ leoBl * *°L, A LEOT1RK ON TBE NATURAL THBAT«UW^ and radial cure of Hpermatonhttia, ^'Jt^m- Weo4ne»s, Involuntary -SmlBgloM.pexsnaiw\^ ty, and tin pediments tomftrrisgcKeMraliy, \•\ fl ne«s, conmmptlon, epilepsy, and «*. ««™* &C, physical Incpacity.reEnrtliiKl'rom « e 'f°J ft a !.%2m hylloiiT J.lnlverwell,At h. aaihor of the l»™w Book.'' «c. lamps, to CHAB J. U. li.LLisa «.*\\•• ._«, 187 Botfery, New York, Port BBH»»» :*» Also, Dr. CnTverwell's wEarrMgft'aiH*^^*