ALBANY REGISTER. IT. S. Offlrlnl Pnper for Orrffon. FRIDAY. JANUARY, 34, 1S73. An Improved KyKtcni. Among tlic different systems of voting now in vogue in the differ ent States ot the Union, several features of the Massachusetts tetu are worth' or considering, i This provides for two sets of .lodges, One of these receive the i ballots and determine the qualifica-1 t ion of voters, the other set count; the ballots every hour during the voting, and uote the number for j each candidate at each count. Thus, this system not only gratifies the! ... imnatienee. so characteristic of our i , -.? ;j jieopletoget the election news as speedily as possible, but it also pre vents ballot-box stuffing, so often committed ill our cities after the polls have been closed. It obviates the necessity and fatigue of count ing the votes after night, the results being all summed up immediately, or very soon after the last vote is -east, and the polls closed It strikes us the adoption of something like this, would be a very good improve ment to incorporate into our sys tem. Reiuovnl of Hlsmnrrli. . letter from London to '. 'ew York says the retirement of Bis marck from the Prussian Cabinet is due to a difference between him and the Emperor on the church ques tion. The Kaiser weakened on Ilis marck's course toward the Catho lics, and declined further to follow him. King William owes his pres ent exalted position to the superior statesmanship and extraordinary di plomatic genius of Prince Von Bis marck. He it was who projected tne plans and conducted the meas ures which resulted in the' unifica tion ot the German people, and in the establishment of the German Empire, To his wonderful genius and skill, more than all else, may justly be attributed the present strength, power and glory of the German ieople. His offending must be great indeed, to justify Kmperor William in removing him from the Kisition of Prime Minister. Ho lias been the power behind the throne, the chief agent of its glori fication. With that power re moved its strength may diminish, and its glory wane. The right. The battle of last Friday with the Modocs would indicate that they me not to be wiped out so soon as was supposed and hoped. The Indians occupy a peninsula which is protected on three Bid by Tule Lake. Their position on the open side is a lava bed, cov ered with rocKs and rent with deep vha iiis and rugged places, which afford numerous hiding places to the wary foe. where he can pick off an approaching enemy unseen. The losses sustained by our troops indi cate the bravery with which they fought. The number of Indians en gaged is in excess of what was tip. posed. More troops have been sent forward, and more yet may be re quired ; for the news ot the defeat of our troops, will doubtless induce other Indians to join Jack's band. Having gone thus far, nothing short ot whipping the Indians will secure permanent peace. A right with thr JMocn. The folWiug dispatch is from Gen. Frank Wheaton, commanding the forces against the Modocs, ad dressed to (Jen. Canby : We attacked the Modocs on the 17th inst. with about 400 good men, 225 of them Regulars. We fought the Indians through the lava lieds to their stronghold, which is in the center of miles of? rocky fissures, caves, crevices, gorges and ravines, some of them 100 feet in depth. The Modocs were scarcely ex posed at all to our irsistei it attacks hey left one ledge to gain another equally secure. One ot our men si n was wounded twice during the day, but he did not see an Indian al though we were under tire from 8 o'clock A. M. until dark. No troops . , , ,. , , s.i con a nave rougiit newer man an did in the attack; advancing .1 11 nil promptly ana cneertuiiy against an '.seen enemy, over ine most rug ged com try imaginable. It was utterly impossible to accomplish more than to make a forced recon noisance, developing the Modocs' strength and position. As near as possible it is estimated that 150 In dians opposed the troops. The Pitt river Indians are lielieved to be with them. Our loss in killed and wounded is about 40. Two officers, Bvt. Col. David Perry, Company F, 1st Cav alry was wounded in the left shoul der, and John G. Kyle, 1st Caval ry, Company G, was wounded in the left arm, not seriously. We are indebted to (Jeu. John Ross for the gallant co-operation of the Oregon Volunteers. ('apt. J. A. Fairchilds brought 28 brave California volunteer rifle men who joined in time to partici pate in the attack. .. 11.11 II.- I! ' 1 '" About sixty thousand people were present at Chiselhurst on the day of the funeral of Napoleon. One of the persons who came from France to attend thefuneral brought some soil dug from the garden of the Tuilleries, which he strewed over the coffin after it had lieen deposit ed in the sacristy ot the chapel. Many French spies were present while the services were taking place. Ah the Prince Imperial was returning from the chapel he was saluted by the cry of "Vive la Em peror." The Prince replied, "The Emperor is dead. Vive la France." This reply of the Prince shows a nice discernment in adapting wrds to circumstances, which will oper ate strongly in his favor. Tact, like brass, is a wonderful agent in the race of success. ttood. The mills of the gods may grind slowly, but they grind. Frank P Blair left the Republican party a few years ago to become a 1 )emo cratic Senator from Missouri, and now a Democratic Legislative cau cus for the same position elect Lewis V. Rogy, of St. Louis. We are glad Rlair is beaten. He be longs to a class of politicians whose honesty and patriotism concentrate in the benefit and glorification of self entirely. 4 i Illinois Nenfttorahln. The two Houses of the Illinois Legislature ballotted tor tTnited Mates Senator on the morning of the 21st inst., with the following re sult : Senate Oglesby, 82 ; Trum bull, 16 ; Coalbangh, 2. House Oglesby, 88 ; Trumbull, 6. The two houses were to meet In joint sesion the next day to declare the ' result. So vak 7rumbnll. The Republican caucus of the Missouri Legislature on the night of the 18th inst., nominated Hon. John B. Henderson for the TTnited States Senate; also unanimously passed a lesolution recommending him to President Grant tor a cabi net position, iu case .changes are made. loVd lyttos. Another distinguished man of let ters, in the person of Sir E Bulwer Lytton, of England, is dead. He graduated at Trinity Hall, Cam bridge, in 1825, and at once ap peared as an author. As a writer of novels he achieved brilliant success. He was the author of Pelham, or the Adventures of a Gentleman The Disowned; Devereux; Paul Clifford ; Eugene Aram ; The Last Days of Pompeii ; Rienzi the Last ot'tlie Horaa Tribunals, and many .11 Jl I - a. ; 1 I ! otnei ciassio ana iiisionoiioeis. ne a'so contributed to poetic and dra matic literature. Of the latter, The Lady of Lyons; Richelieu ; ,1 Ar.,., ,.i,, i. . iio i atai -uuircjr, ic w j sides these, he was the lauthor of voluminous critical articles and es- says in the "Quarterly ," "Edin burgh," " Westminister," and "For eign Quarterly Review." I lis nov- els are not only read in England, but in France, Germany, this coun try, and elsewhere. He was raised to the peerage in 1866, as Lord Lyt ton. As a parliamentary speaker, he ranked among the most finished orators. It will be gratifying to Republi cans to know that with the removal of Lyman Trumbull from the Sen ate, the last of the Andrew John son Republicans will have departed. A more treacherous and selfish tac tion of unprincipled demagogues, never occupied Government office. The fight with the Modocs last Friday resulted in killing fourteen and wounding twenty-three of the troops. Our forces were compelled to retire, leaviig their dead on the field. Gen. Grant's policy in the Ala bama and Louisiana matters is thought to be right by enemies as well as by friends. Alexander H. Ste vens has lately commended it. EANTERN NEWS. The Merchants' Rank, Lancaster, Pa., has been robbed of $46,000 in bonds. Two thieves engaged the cashier in conversation while the third stole the bonds. The First Congregational Church, Chicago, burnt on the J6th. The building and organ cost $170,000 ; insurance $100,000. Cause, defec tive flue. Jones' dry goods house burnt in New York city on the 16th. Loss, $150,000 ; insurance $90,000. It is stated that Congressmen consider the Samana scheme im practicable. The Haytien Minister thinks it will be a bad speculation. Dr. Joshua Cavitt, associate edi- tor of the tndepm&i't, died at Brooklyn on the 17th inst., of ap- poplexy, The report of the finding of a bottle of strychnine hi the cell late ly vacated by Stokes is erroneous. It was mix vomica, which had been prescribed. In the House of Representatives on the 17th., the Postoffice Com- mittee unanimously authorized Farnsworth, Chairman, to prepare a bill to reduce letter postage to two cents, and to require prepay ment on all printed matter except weekly papers circulating in coun ties where they are printed. 7'he votes for President were : Grant. 300: Greeley, 3; Gratz Brown, 18; Hendricks, 42; Jenkins of Georgia. 2: Davis of Kentucky, 1. 7'he votes for Vice-IVesident were : Wilson, 300; Gratz Brown, 47 ; Gen. Banks, 1 ; Julian, 5; Cal quit of Georgia, 5 ; Gov. Palmer, 8; Bramlette of Kentucky, 3; Groesbeck, 1 ; Mochen of Louisiana, 1. Grant's popular majority in the recent election was 759487. Several cotton failures have oc curred in Manchester lately. A Catholic priest of Fort Wayne, hid., has lust received as a present from Louis Napoleon, a magnificent gom ann snver enauce to oe usea in the Catholic Church. It is en graved in four colors. The auto graph ot the Emperor accompanied it. 7 lie priest was a personal friend of the Emperor in their early days, in to the tMnte potioti of The will of S. F. Pike, has been ! the Vriliee Imperial, admitted to probate m New iork: . , , . e under date of Nov. 12th, 1866. It ! AMn Deumm,, of tag. was made at Cincinnati and is to I ,n. nas n pelted with stale the amount of 83,000,000. He Uggs by his parishoaers. leave's to his brother, F. M. Pike, ! Recently at a trial ot consider- W"ri!.1?nertisb!eiiiteimin Rome, where the of a deot to his brotlier Henry. The balance of his property goes to his wife and three daughters. The counsel for Stokes are press- j which sailed around the heads of ing for a new trial. They will re- j the audience, attracting their atten ly much upon the fact that two of tion, giving ample time for the pick the jurors went outside of Court for pockets to relieve the pockets of evidence, one having examined the I the audience, ladies' staircase of the Grand Cen- j (), the 2 500 foreigner8 on tlic tral Hotel, and the other examined , . .. a nistl at th cmnsmit.h's to ' Hawaiian Islands, 1,600 are Amer- whether a four-barreled could lie distinguished from a six-barreled pistol. An affidavit will also be embodied in the bill of exceptions that before the trial, one ot the ju- rors said Stokes ought to hang any- j Chiselhurst on the 16th by Empress how, and that another said if he ! Eugenie and Napoleon IV to 10, was on the jury he would hang him j 000 soldiers, statesmen and distin- anyhow The smallpox epidemic is creat ing grave apprehensions in Boston and vicinity. Three thousand cases are reported in the city. 7'he per centage of deaths is much larger than from all other causes combin ed. Nearly all burials are in the night. 7'lie epidemic is said to have had a serious effect upon the com mercial interests. In the Senate on the 17th, Mor ton made a lengthy and elaborate argument against the present sys tem of l'resideutial elections. The bridges on the Harlem ex tension, between Chatham and Nassau, were carried away by the flood of the 17th. In the New York Constitutional Convention on the 17th inst., Op dyke offered an amendment to the Constitution providing tor compul sory education. A dispatch from Albany, N. Y., Jan. 18th, represents a great freshet there. It is stated that a new horse dis ease is prevalent in New York City, i .geou can u spina, uwuuig us. 11 IS moiiiit w IK an wu;iimui ui epizootics. MiVliifran has nut a State Canitnl under contract for the sum of ei,. qe occurred at Soonquhure, In 144,037 20. It is to be of sand-; QI. resulted in killing fit- stone, and a creditable affair for teen hundred persons, in that town Michigan. alone. Matilda Heron was placed in j Madame Catacazy not long since Park Hospital, New York, recently, purchased a large portion of Eu for treatment for dementia. j genie's wardrobe. 7'he purchase of Samana Bay j The Turkish Government has and Peninsula was made iu Decern- j suea the London Times for libel in ber. 7'he capital stock of the new , ,. , . . crtAftAnnnn publishing a communication, alleged company is $20,000,000. .1 II. r , Z, , ,., ... Stockwell is President 10 te slKI,ed bv 1,10 Turkish Minis- The prosecuting counsel in the ter in jUudon, containing untrue Stokes' case thought ii would be statements with reference to the ti very difficult to get a stay of pro- nances of the Government, ceedings, and a new trial would be The number of emigrants who ,mr'1 10 Set ! left Bremen tor the United States The wife of Knoch Jackson, col- ast year wag 80,000; emigration oreu, nvmg near i.iwe isock, Arte., and another woman, killed him with a drag-pin last Saturday, and threw his body into a fire. 7'hev reported that he was drunk and fell in while j that he will leave Italy if the latter asleep. Both women were put in declares his marriage with Countess jail. j Morflori as illegal. At Shelby, Ky., on the 19th a The Right Hon, Edward Bulwer desperado named Billy Wilson kill- Lytton, Baron, the well known ed his fourth victim, James Wil- KugMi author died in Loodon ou ln a the 18th. Ilartranft was maugurated Gov- Workmen . ernorof Pennsylvania, at Hams- tl , . w . burg on the 21st. Ae military;11 m',,s throughout Wales, and civil display were very fine. n8ve 8tnK- 7'he Minister of the Cuban Re- A lar nuMb were public to London, now in New at Chiselhurst on the 19th inst to York, reports the English people hear preached the funeral sermon unanimous for Cuban independence, over Napoleon. 7'he legislative joint session of Baptiste Wrothsley Noel, the Wisconsin re-nominated T. O. Howe well known English theologian, is U. S. Senator on the 21t. 1 dead, FOREIGN MEWS. I The Shah, ot rersia, is to leave The Shah, of Persia, is to . Teheran next April on a Eurojieai tour. It is stated that Prince Napoleon is opposed to the views of the ex- Emperor and extreme Bonapartists Court-room was crowded, the pick- ; pockets let loose a trained bird. icans, who own nearly all the im portant commercial and planting interests of the islands. A grand reception was given at i guished Frenchmen. The Empress and son passed through the rooms, filled with people, all in the deepest mourning, and gave their hands to be kissed. Imperialists expect the speedy restoration of the Empire, and with it the Empress as regent. Reports from the north of Spain represent Carlist insurgents as act ing with terrible cruelty toward in habitants who refuse to join their ranks. Murder and mutilation are reported. Hundreds of young men were forced into the ranks. Bonaparte's address is prohibited from circulation among the French troops in the barracks. The Roman Senate has approved the bill forbidding theological in struction in the public schools. The Pope told some visitors on ,the 16th inst, that the bodies of the Apostles Philip and James had been discovered the Wednesday be fore in the Church of the Apostles. 7'he Romish church is never at a loS8 tor sensations of that kind, and ler people take t,em , A late dispatch from Bombay to London states that a terrible earth- ;fix)m Hamburg, 79,000. Wnce Humburt has declared to the father of King Victor Emanuel