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Show THE INTERNATIONAL PRO- 1 CESSION. j The Internationals, having triumph- j ed over the city authorities of New ! York, held their parade on Sunday, j which waff quite a successful affair, j The demonstration passed off with per- j lect ovdor, the streets of course boiag i'reo from their every day business throng, which render such processions ordinarily a great nuisance. The procession pro-cession presented a great variety of classes, and the charge of exclusive-ness exclusive-ness cannot be laid at tho door of tho Internationalists. If they could combine com-bine in one commou political organization organiza-tion tho various oloments represented in their procession, they might become a powerful party, capable, perhaps, of : deciding tho nest presidential election, j But the incongruities of their mako-up are too apparent for the movement to create any sensible impression upou the country. It will pass for a cosmopolitan cosmo-politan exhibition, aud if Barnuui could secure it, negro military, catafalque, cata-falque, Claflin-Woodhull, etcetra, he might make a fortune out of it, but as a political venture it will bo nothing ' "-but a ridiculous failure. The L'all things in common" idea, if carried out, would make nobody happy and everybody every-body miserable. |