Receipts at the First Anniversary, May 9 and 10, 1867.

Elizabeth B. Chace$25 00Lydia Mott25 00
Parker Pillsbury25 00Mrs. P. H. and M. Jones25 00
Mrs. Luther Marsh20 00Susan B. Anthony50 00
Cora A. Syme10 00A. Noble, Sr.1 00
Two Ladies, $5 each10 00C. B. Halsart1 00
Frances D. Gage13 00E. Underhill1 00
Samuel J. May10 00A. M. Powell1 00
L. Francis10 00J. E. Snodgrass1 00
Westchester E. R. Association (per Mrs. Hibbard1 00
E. A. Studwell)15 00Nellie Lord1 00
Jane Clegg15 00D. B. and A. Morey1 00
Joseph and Mary Post10 00R. Salmon1 00
Charlotte D. Lozier, M.D.5 00Adolphus O. Johnson1 00
Elizabeth W. Brown5 00Levi K. Joslin1 00
Oliver Johnson5 00Mary F. Davis1 00
A. O. Willcox5 00Wm. P. Bolles1 00
J. K. H. Wilcox5 00Cash1 00
E. Cummings5 00E. Ostrander1 00
Mary C. Sawyer5 00Esther Titus1 00
J. C. Fergusson5 00L. B. Humphrey1 00
Fred. H. Hernan5 00Martha Hudson1 00
Harry H. Hall5 00Susan M. Davis1 00
Charles P. Somerby5 00Sojourner Truth1 00
Robert J. Johnston5 00T. M. Newbold1 00
Mrs. S. M. Chickering5 00M. E. Woodson50
J. Miller McKim5 00Mrs. M. Johnson50
Sarah E. Wall3 00Ann Ellsworth Hunt50
R. F. Hudson2 00L. Blake50
Mrs. Gayno2 00J. L. Langworthy50
Mrs. Dodge2 00T. B. Pierce50
Mrs. L. Francis2 00Esther C. Pierce50
Mrs. Elmer Stone2 00E. Campbell50
Hannah W. Bell2 00M. H. McKinnon50
S. S. Foster1 00Mrs. J. B. Mix, M.D.50
Mrs. Brown5 00Samuel D. Moore25
T. W. Higginson1 00M. P. Allen25
S. D. White1 00R. Williams25
Cash1 00P. E. Kipp25

Pledges.

Anna E. Dickinson$100 00Mrs. C. E. Collins5 00
Margaret E. Winchester100 00Euphemia Cochrane5 00
A. O. Wilcox55 00Melissa Johnson5 00
C. and M. H. Prince25 00W. F. Douley2 00
Gillis, Harney & Co.25 00Mrs. H. P. Baldwin1 00
H. Hart20 00Dr. Chavau1 00
D. B. and A. B. Morey20 00S. A. Turner1 00
John Smith10 00Dio Lewis, M.D.50 00
C. F. Wallace5 00R. C. Browning30 00
C. E. Reason5 00George H. Taylor, M.D.5 00

SOJOURNER TRUTH ON THE PRESS.

To the Editor of the World:—We have had the pleasure of entertaining Mrs. Stowe's "Lybian Sybil" at our home for the last week, and can bear our testimony to the marvelous wisdom and goodness of this remarkable woman. She was a slave in this State for forty years, and has devoted forty years of freedom to the best interests of her race. Though eighty years of age, she is as active and clear-sighted as ever, and "understands the whole question of reconstruction, all its 'quagmires and pitfalls,' as she says, as well as any man does."

The morning after the Equal Rights Convention, as the daily journals one by one made their appearance, turning to the youngsters of the household, she said: "Children, as there is no school to-day, will you read Sojourner the reports of the Convention? I want to see whether these young sprigs of the press do me justice. You know, children, I don't read such small stuff as letters, I read men and nations. I can see through a millstone, though I can't see through a spelling-book. What a narrow idea a reading qualification is for a voter! I know and do what is right better than many big men who read. And there's that property qualification! just as bad. As if men and women themselves, who made money, were not of more value than the thing they made. If I were a delegate to the Constitutional Convention I could make suffrage as clear as daylight; but I am afraid these Republicans will 'purty, purty' about all manner of small things week out and week in, and never settle this foundation question after all." Sojourner then gathered up her bag and shawl, and walked into the parlor in a stately manner, and there, surrounded by the children, the papers were duly read and considered. The Express, the Post, the Commercial Advertiser, the World, the Times, the Herald, the Tribune, and the Sun, all passed in review. The World seemed to please Sojourner more than any other journal. She said she liked the wit of the World's reporter; all the little texts running through the speeches, such as "Sojourner on Popping Up," "No Grumbling," "Digging Stumps," "Biz," to show what is coming, so that one can get ready to cry or laugh, as the case may be—a kind of sign-board, a milestone, to tell where we are going, and how fast we go. The readers then call her attention to the solid columns of the other papers, and the versification of the World. She said she did not like the dead calm. She liked the breaking up into verses, like her songs. That is a good thing; it gives the reporter time to take breath and sharpen his pen, and think of some witty thing to say; for life is a hard battle anyway, and if we can laugh and sing a little as we fight the good fight of freedom, it makes it all go easier. "But, children, why did you not send for some of those wicked Democratic papers that abuse all good people and good things." "They are all here," said the readers in chorus. "We have read you all the Republicans and the Democrats say." "Why, children, I can't tell one from the other. The millennium must be here, when one can't tell saints from sinners, Republicans from Democrats. Is the World Horace Greeley's paper?" "Oh, no; the World is Democratic!" "Democratic! Why, children, the World does move! But there is one thing I don't exactly see; if the Democrats are all ready to give equal rights to all, what are the Republicans making such a fuss about? Mr. Greeley was ready for this twenty years ago; if he had gone on as fast as the Democrats he should have been on the platform, at the conventions, making speeches, and writing resolutions, long ago." "Oh," said some one of larger growth, "Mr. Greeley is busy with tariffs and protective duties. What do you think, Sojourner, of free trade? Do you not think if England and France have more dry-goods than they want that they had better send them to us, and we in turn send them our fruits and flowers and grains; our timber, iron, fish, and ice?" "Yes, I go for everything free. Let nature, like individuals, make the most of what God has given them, have their neighbors to do the same, and then do all they can to serve each other. There is no use in one man, or one nation, to try to do or be everything. It is a good thing to be dependent on each other for something, it makes us civil and peaceable. But," said Sojourner, "where is Theodore Tilton's paper?" "Oh, the Independent is a weekly, it came out before the Convention." "But Theodore is not a weekly; why did he not come to the Convention and tell us what he thought?" "Well, here is his last paper, with a grand editorial," and Sojourner listened to the end with interest. "That's good," said she, "but he don't say woman." "Oh, he is talking about sectarianism, not suffrage; the Church, not the State." "No matter, the Church wrongs woman as much as the State. 'Wives, obey your husbands,' is as bad as the common law. 'The husband and wife are one, and that one the husband.' I am afraid Theodore and Horace are playing bo-peep with their shadows. Did you tell me that Mr. Greeley is a delegate to the Constitutional Convention?" Yes, and I hope that he will soon wake up to the fact that the Democrats are going ahead of him, and instead of writing articles on 'Democracy run mad,' on tariffs and mining interests, it behooves him to be studying what genuine republicanism is, and whether we are to realize it in the Empire State this very year or not. "Speaking of shadows," said Sojourner, "I wish the World to know that when I go among fashionable people in the Church of the Puritans, I do not carry 'rations' in my bag; I keep my shadow there. I have good friends enough to give me clothes and rations. I stand on principle, always in one place, so everybody knows where to find Sojourner, and I don't want my shadow even to be dogging about here and there and everywhere, so I keep it in this bag." "I think," said one of the group, "the press should hereafter speak of you as Mrs. Stowe's Lybian Sybil, and not as 'old church woman.'" "Oh, child, that's good enough. The Herald used to call me 'old black nigger,' so this sounds respectable. Have you read the Herald too, children? Is that born again? Well, we are all walking the right way together. I'll tell you what I'm thinking. My speeches in the Convention read well. I should like to have the substance put together, improved a little, and published in tract form, headed 'Sojourner Truth on Suffrage;' for if these timid men, like Greeley, knew that Sojourner was out for 'universal suffrage,' they would not be so afraid to handle the question. Yes, children, I am going to rouse the people on equality. I must sojourn once to the ballot-box before I die. I hear the ballot-box is a beautiful glass globe, so you can see all the votes as they go in. Now, the first time I vote I'll see if a woman's vote looks any different from the rest—if it makes any stir or commotion. If it don't inside, it need not outside. That good speech of Henry Ward Beecher's made my heart leap for joy; he just hit the nail right on the head when he said you never lost anything by asking everything; if you bait the suffrage-hook with a woman you will certainly catch a black man. There is a great deal in that philosophy, children. Now I must go and take a smoke!" I tell you in confidence, Mr. Editor, Sojourner smokes!

E. C. S.

Yours respectfully,