TUB CLEiRFIELD REPUBLICAN," rir isiiio avanr wnDiiiint, it C(0 ULAN PER t IIAGERTY, OLEARPIELD, PA. K.TAIIMSIIED IN 18ST. The Urge! Circulation or any Newspaper In North Central Pennsylvania. Tenna of Subscription, .H in advance, or within months.,. .11 CM) If ji.id nftor 1 and before 6 months 9 flO jf fii I sttcr h, expiration of S months... 3 M Rates ot Advertising. Innnrnl advertisements, per square of 10 llnnor je,, 3 tiini-s or less $1 60 fur riirh subsequent insertion 60 jUmini'irniort' ami Executors' notice 1 JO imhlorj' iwlieea .. J 60 r.nii ia Mid Kstrays 1 60 JlKiJiition notices I (10 prnf0jifinal Cards, 1 year ... 6 00 Vucal notice, per line SO YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS. incure., ,..8 00 I 1 column 3S 00 ...16 00 , column 46 00 ,..20 00 1 oolumn..... 80 00 . fiqnarcs Job Work. BLANKS. jsinjle quire t'l 50 I ( quires, pr. quire, tl J J j quires, pr, quire, t 00 Over A, per quire. 1 60 MANDRILL'S, x j .tret, 23 or less,$J 00 1 sheot,!J or less,$S 00 i ihd-t, 2"i or less, I 00 I I sheet, 55 or less,10 00 .Over 2 5 of each of above at proportionate ratci. ORORGK II. GOODLANDER, UEORUE 1IAUERTY, PuhKshfr. Cards. ' " T. H. MURRAY, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW. Prompt attention given to all logal business entrusted to hi, oare in Clenrflold and adjoining eountip!'. Office on Market It., opposite Nnugl.'. Jt.i-lry Store, Clcarnold, Pa. JelOl wu.iiAa t. WAi.nca. FRASK nr.LDl.1Q, WALLACE Su FIELDING, ATTOEN EY8 AT - LAW, Clearfield, Pa. . $-eT-Legal buiinoii of all kinds attended to wi'h promptness and fidelity. Office in rc.idcnc. of William A. Walloon, Janl2:i0 A. W. WALTERS, ATTORN EY AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. "' t-uOfrlo. In tho Court Ilouse. . ' (decl-ly H. W. SMITH, ATTORNE Y-AT-LA1V, Clearfield, Pa. ly "Israel test, ATTOKNKV AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. .gSrOffiee In the Court Home. JyltM "John h. fuTford, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. Offle on Market St., otr Joiepb Showers' Grocery tore. 9-Prompt attention glren to the leourlnj? of B )ontr, Glftimi, Ac. and to til legal biuineii. March 28, 1397-1. tiioh. j. nVi LiouaH. w. tr. h'ci llouob. T. J. McCULLOUGH & BE0THEE, ATTOltNKYS AT LAW, Clearfield. Pa. Office on Market street one door ent of the Clear Held County Dank. 2:1:71 J. B. McENALLY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. JUrM.cg.il bunincss attended to promptly with f l. lily. uffiee on Second street, above Hi. First V-.:. T, l. l.e.M.lvn.l ROBERT WALLACE, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, Mallareton, Cleartteld County, Pemi'a. .All legal businrss promptly attended to. . r. iimn . L. brib. IEVIN & KEEBS, Successors to II. B. Swoope, Law and Coixectiox Office, nW70 CLEARFIELD, PA. W ALT E RrTr E T fT ATTORNEY AT LAW. 01-. on Second St., Cleartleld, Pa. nov2l,t JOHN L. CUTTLE, . ATTORNEY AT LAW. And Real Rxtate Agent, Clearfield, Pa. Office on Third street, bet. Cherrj A Walnut. Sir-Respectfully offers bis services In selling end buying lands In Clearfield and adjoining counties ; and with an experience of ovsr twentv y.ars as a surveyor, flatters himself that b. oaa rsndor satisfaction. Feb. 283:tf, j T jT LTn g l"e ATTOJINEY-AT - LAW, 114 Osreola, Clearfield Co., Pa. y:pd J. BLAKE WALTERS, HEAL ESTATE BHOKER, AXD MiALCIl in Kaw Ijos aiul liiimber, CLEARFIELD. PA. Real Estate houffht and iold, titlri examined, incn pft'l, end oonTeynncea prnpared. Offlee In Manniiio Building, Kooin No. I. 1:26:71 John !!. Orvifl. C. T. Alexander. ORVIS & ALEXANDER, ATTOHN EYS AT LA W, llcllelonte. Pa. icpl3,'5 y DR. T. J. BOYER, PHYSICIAN AND SUKQEON, Office on Market Street, Clearfield, Pa. r-0flio. hours : 8 to 11 a. m , and 1 to 8 p. m DR. W. A. MEANS, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, ' LUTIinilSIICRO, PA. Will attend professional calls promptly. auglO'70 DR. Al THORN, PHYSICIAN & SURGFOX, II AVINO loeiitiM at Kylertown, Clrarfield eo. P.. orTnPi hit nrofensiontil frrvi(M!H to the l-Ie of the turroanding ooantry. Hpt. fltf6d-y DR. J. F. WOODS, 1MIY81CIAN 4 SUnaEON. ll.ivint; rpmored to AnBonvllIt, Pa., offprt bli Tnrtpioniil prviflee to the people of that place '" I ih mirroundinf; country. All rnlli promptly t (.j. Jed to. Dro. S Oin pd. J. H. KLINeTm. D., PHYSICIAN 4 SURGEON, TTAVINfl lorated at PennfleM, P.., od'rs bis 1 L profi'MHinsI .ervioes to the people of that place and surrounding oountry. All calls promptly Mended to. Oct. 13 tf. DR. J. P. BURCHFIELD, mi Surgeon of the ;:d Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers, having returned front the Army, offer, his profssslonal services to Ih.aitisens f Closrfleld county. 'N'rufesslonal calls promptly atlenledlo. OTma en Second street, foriuerlyoeonpi.d by Wod. apr4,' tl JEFFERSON LITZ, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, HU'INO located at Osoeola, Pa., offers his professional services to th. people of that Vl-'e and surrounding anuntrv. 4fa.AH calls promptly attended to. OfUc. ' r.ai lene. on Curtln st, formerly occupied k' Ur. Kline. Uy, l:ly. Fishing Tacklo! j I PT rrceiTed, a complete assortment, .on. 1st ins of Trcml lio I., l itli llasksls, Lilies and Hook., of .11 nnripfinne, at UAIUT P. HIOLPR t C0I. '""riwd, iaHi i, uri-tr. CLEAR GOODLANDER & HAGERTY, "Publishers. VOL. 41-WH0LE NO. 2211. F. K. ARNOLD & Co., HAN K bUS. I.utlier.burp, Clearfleld county, Pa Money loanrd at roi.ioiiul.To rntri; exchange bought and aMi deponitu rraeWrcl, and a gen carl banking buiinesi will be oarrlod on at the abort plnco. 4: 1 2:7 l:tf JOHN D. THOMPSON, Juttloe of tho Pease and Scrivener, Curweiiavllle, Pa. IL. Collection made and money promptly paid over. reiiiZ 7ltr JAMES 0. BAEEETT, Juatlee of the l'enoe and Lioemed Conveyancer, I.uthersburR, Clearfield Co., Pa. Colloetioni remittance, promptly made, and all kinds of legal inetruinenti executed on Ihort notice. tna;v4,70tf GEORGE C. KIRK, Juitloe of the Peace, Surveyor and Conveyancer, J.utlieraburfj, Pa. All buincm Intruded to him will be promptly attonded to. Pereona wi.hin.; to employ a 8ur rever will do well to fix him a call, as he flatters himself that be ean render satisfaction. Deeds of conveyance, articles of agreement, and all leg-al papers, promptly and neatly executed. . marSOyp . : HENRY RIBLING, II0USK, SION t ORNAMENTAL PAINTER Clearfield, Pemi'a. Th. frescoing and painting of churches and oilier public buildings will receive particular allrntion, as well as the painting of carriage, and sleighs, (lilding don. in the neatest styles. All work warranted. Short on Fourth street, formerly occupied by Enquire Shugart. octH'70 G. H. HALL, i PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, NEAR CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. aparPumns alwars on band and made to order on short notice. Pipes bored on reasonable terms. All work warranted to render satisfartion, ana delivered If desired. aiyffclypd DAN IEL M. DOHERTY. BAEBEE & HAIE DEESSEE, SECOND 8TRKET, jy2.1 CLEARFIELD, PA. (ti DAVID R-EAMS, SCRIVENER & SURVEYOR, I.utlieraburp;, Pa. rpilE rubscriher offers his services to the publie JL in tho eap:vcity of Scrivener end Surveyor. All calls for surveying promptly attended to, and the making or drafts, deeds and other legal Instru ments of writing, executed without delay, and warranted to be correct or no charge. olJ:70 SURVEYOR. THE undersigned offers his services as a Sur veyor, and may be iound at his residence, in Lawrence township. Letters will reach him di rected to Clearfield, Pa. may T-tf. JAMES MITCHELL. J. A. BLATTENBEEGEE, Claim and Collection Office, OSCEOLA, Clearfield Co., Pa. Mr-Conveyancing and all legal papers drawn with accuracy and dispatch. Dtalls on and pas sage tickets to and from any point in Europe procured. " oct6'70 0m CHARLES SCHAFER, LAGER BEER R HEWER, Clearfield, Pa. HAVING rented Mr. Entree' Brewery he hopes by striot attention to busine.s and tho manufacture of a superior article of UEKR to receive the patronage of all lb. old and many new oustomera. Aug. 25, tf. THOMAS H. FORCEE, DIAI.lt Iff GENERAL MhKCIIANDISE, CRAIl AMTON, Pa. Also, extensive manufacturer and d.nler in Square Timber and Sawed Lumber of all kinds. WOrders solicited and all bills promptly mfed. Jyio-iy oso. alb.kt nawnr albrrt. w. ai.irrt W. ALBERT iVBROS., Manufacturers A extonslr. Densors in Sawed Lumber, Square Timber, Slo., WOODLAND, PENN'A. -Orders solicited. Bills filled on short notice and reasonable terms. Addres. Woodland P. 0., Clearfleld Co., Pa. je2i-ly W ALUERT A llltOB. FRANCIS COUTRIET, MERCHANT, Preurhvlllc. Clearfleld County, Pa. Keeps constantly on hand a full assortment of irry uooas, naroware, urooencn, n.nnll knni in rtil Store. Which Wilt be Sold. for cash, as cheap as elsewhere in th. oounty. rrencnvllle, Jun. it, icof-ij. REUBEN HACKMAN, House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, Clearfleld, Penn'a. VluWill execute Jobs la bis line promptly and In a workmanlike manner. er r4,07 " J. K. BOTTORF'S PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY, Market Street, ClearlleluV Pa. -CR0MOS MADE A SPKClALTT.-tfc. NEQATIVES made ia cloudy as well as In olear weather. Constantly on band a good assortment of FRAMES, STEIIKOHUOPF.S and STEREOSCOPIC VIEWS. Frames, from any style of uiuuldlug, wailo to uidti. anilOtf J. MILES KRATZER, MERCHANT, naALRR t Dry Ooods, Clothing, Hardware, Cutlery, Queen. ware, Grocer!.., Provisions and Shlngl.e, Clearfleld, Penn'a. !-At their new store room, on Soeopd street, near H. F. Bigl.r to's Hardware stor. JsnU j. nouovtai'sit a. nivis canir. ATTATiTTinfln s nT5TT BOOKSELLERS, Blank Hook Manufacturers, AND STATIONERS, 219 Jlarktt SI., Vhtladtlphla. fcs,raper Flour Sacks and Dags, Fool-enp, Leller, Note, Wrapping, Curtain and Wall Paper.. f.b24.70Jypd A Notorious Fact! THERE are mora pwpl. trouhl.d with Lung Diseases In this town than any olherplae. o It. sis. In th. Stat., pne of the gret causes of this Is, the use of an impure article of t oal, wf"J mixed with sulphur. Now, why not avo.d all this, .nd nres.rvc your lives, by using only llumiihrcj'. Crlebrnted tool, free rrom .1 impurities. Orders left at th. store, of Kiehyd MoVsop and .lamas D. Graham I Sons will rectlv. prompt .'"""" ArBAHAM nrMrREY. Cl..rll.ld, November 0, IH70 -If. DREXEL & CO., No. 31 Houtlt Third Street, Philadelphia And Dealers In Government Securities. Application by mall will rec.iv. prompt atten tion; and all l.rrv.ti.n .hMrfully furn .bed. Order, selletcd, April 1 If. 01 IELD THE HEPUBLICAN. CLEAU FIELD, PA. WEDNK.SDAY MOHNfNO, NOV. 1. 1871. 6 hake the lent dead bluaiHin From the thorny buugh j - - Royal roae or thtitle Which it fuirer now t Wortt of weodt and queen of flowers. Pride and mouk of tummcr hours t I)ry and nhrircllfd. old and brown ' Iu the wet graai tread thuta down. Ponpice, with the morning's " It timing beauty fluihedj Little care for daitiee t'ned to be brunl.cd ; . .. ' Lovi'lc", tot'Dtlcis, tide by tide Which hat now moit eauie for pride t " Dry and shrivelled, old and bnwn Iu the wet grots troad them down. JUnkly growing nightthade. Child of gloom And death; Lilies, white and saintly, With eelottial breath, t'tolutt now to bless or harm, Vain their poison, vain their balm i Pry and shrlvcllrd, old and brown In the wet grew tread them down. ' Amaranths, we fancied n i-'lowers that ooutd aot die Morning glorirs, fading Kre their dew was dry Which has now the nobler claim? Which has now the prouder name? lry and shrirsllcd, old and bruwn In the wet grass tread them down. Aconite and nettle, Myrtle wreutb and rose, All, all fall together When the north wind Mows. Summer honors will not last ' Artersummor time bat pasted; lry and shriveled, old mid brown In the wet grass tread them down. THE EDUCATED MAN IN AMEE- ICAN SOCIETY. ( fThe following is from th. vslclictory address ofurvillej. Bliss before the class of 1871 of Vale College, and may be taken a. a fair expression uf Westurn idea. 00 American menial development. There is real "grit" in it, and the ring of true elo quence.) What U society t When wo turn our thoughts to tho study of man, we find Lis wholo lifo mndo up of two parts, tho individual part mid the no ciul part. Not that he ceases to be an individual wlierf in contact with othors, nor on tho othor hand that he loses his sociul nature, when withdrawn from such contact ; but thai in so far as lie is individual find isolated ho is without the palo of society, and in so far, on the other hand, ns ho deals in any manner with bis fellow-men, bo ceuscs to be u sopuriito, self contained personality; and that somowliat in definite substance which wo call socie ty is simply tho nggregato of these social parts of individual lives. When, therefore, I speak of society, I do not mean merely what the world of fnuh ion means, but tho wholo sphere of ao tivitios and rentilt wier sy ersstss by the incessant pluy und interplay of these composite atoms of socioty. llow multiform nro tboso activities! how mysterious nro those results ! The most stupendous war the world has ovor seen, and the subtlest clance of recognition that over lighted!, hu man eye, equally proclaim that man is s partuliur of bis fellow-man's oxist teneo. Now, it is tho destiny of man in all relulions to movo under tho sway of luw. Ho is not permitted to follow his nature wherever it may lead ; he must guido and control it according to certain fixed conditions, and from those conditions some mysterious and active power which wo cnll sin impels him ever to depart. 15 n t so long as he violates them only as an individual, lli o law and its penalty is between himself, bis consciunco, and his God. Others may exhort him from bonovo lonco; but no man may lay upon him a command or inflict upon him a pun ishment. It is only when ho begins to tread within tho provinco of another's oxislcncc, that that other acquires a voieo in his government, and may lay upon bim curtain roHlrictions. Thus wo see that the wholo structure of human law, with its splendid array of servants and interpreters, rests upon tho eiinplo fact of human socioty. Tho nmcnitios of intercourse, the smile or tho tear cf sympathy, the longings of affection, and tlio power of public opinion all these aro but varia tions of tho simple luw of association, as much as all the phenomena of tia luro, great and small, aro but tho at traction and rcpuUion of particlos. N Now, back through the whole exis lonco of tho race, dissatisfied beings havo been struggling, and philanthro pists liavo boen sighing. For what did they strngglo and sigh f Little by little, too, that existence, has taken to itself a brighter aspoot, and wo say that society has boen elevated. To wnrd what has it boen elevated f What, in nhort, is tho key-noto to the march of social progross 1 I answer that it is justice That is a fulso ideal which paints the millennium as a world whoro justice hns paled awny in tho soft sanliirht of charily. It is in justice, and that only, which lias mado benevolence- nocossnry ; and I ronture to think that the reigning virtue of that happy estate will be simplo, un poolio injuatico. Such is tho goul of socioty. What is its prime, comprehensive fault f It socms to me tbnt It is and ever has boon this: it fails to distribute! fairly its labors and rewards. For example, it still does oboisanoo to oncrvnling, usoless wcullh, while upon honest productive toil it bestows ut best littlo moro than pity. Disguiso it as wo may, society at largo has not yet boon taught gonoino respost for labor. Tho communist, with all bis faults, is groping after a truth. For who, when iio see an Intelligent, hard-working, honest man kept in obscurity all bis lifo bocauso he has boon honest, jvhilo a coarse, corrupt, unscrupulous nabob Is giving manners to society like- a law maker, und walking nrm in arm with ('million, intellect., und even learning, because ho has Louri tiiiscra piilous, who, I say, does not sometimes leol as if society itself was wrong sido up 7 It is this griovous purtiality which causes in a groat degree tho tremondotis wasto of human forces In Socioty. 'flint nation will bo vigorous und groat wiloso'bcst find most fruit ful onorgies aro kept in action. What now is bout adapted to call forth th6so PRINCIPLES, . CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER ,4 energios? Is it not a freo market, whoro industry not only physical, but intellectual and moral industry is sure to find its rownrd f What wonder that tho rich man's child idles away tho hours of existence or wastes bis vitality in vice r bociotv doos not cull bim to account for it. . It inquires not what ho is or what be does, but what he possesses. He has wealth ; be may bare also strength, ingenuity, tnlont, gonitis, or boauty, and if ho doos possess them, socioty will treat him, not as its legitimate subject, owing allegiunco and service, but as its leader and pot ; and so those pro cious forces, come forth from a bonovo lont God, go vagabonding through tho world because- they aro not nrraigncd at the bar of an exacting public Senti ment. ...j Turn now to the poor young man. Too often, as we know, he drops a noblo enthusiasm at tbo vory thresh old of active lifo, and forever after lots half his capacities sleep with him. Why is ho not husbanding evory scrap of powor within bitn, to lay it before the insatiato goddess of human want? Bocauso it is of nouso: bo- cause at evory door of society's inner sanctuary stands tho Corborus of fash ion, of titlo, or of monopoly, which ho must grapplo with single-handed, or bribo ut tho prico of his manhood, be fore ho may enter thero. Look at old England. Within her borders social dintinction is hardly belter than accident, for it means there a place in tho poorage, and tbo pcorage with rare exceptions bestows its prizes according to tho simple chances of birth. For all purposes of fuirnoss Ihoy might as well siako their literary honors upon tho throw of the dico, and trust I'rovidonco to turn up nothing but goniusos; lor whon an idiot happens into tho circlo, ho holds tho snmu rank in socioty as if be were Lord Chatham himself. O how this sickly child of feudalism has boen pet ted by kings and bolstered by parlia ments! When it has threatened to expiro by its own inherent rottenness, it lias boen galvanized into lite again by fresh accessions of membors. It is carefully bodged about with tho laws of entail, succession, and primo geniture. The Engliah lord can not, if ho wishes, sell his own estates, not oven to save himself from bankruptcy and meet tho just demands of a crcdi lor, bocauso tho laws aro determined that ho shall bo superior to tho unti tled nobleman, nature to tho contrary notwithstanding; and it is a rani'vo loustribulo to tho groat middle class that it has been ablo to thrust itself through and ovor theso obstaelos to tho influence which it now wields. It is amazing to witness the self com placency of the English lord ; intolli- IEcm.- tiem imsw.iw.ci Wv- W ft.tfmns- phizo as he is, ho nevertheless lives and legislates generation after generation seemingly without ovor a question but . t . i r. : . . i mat uis ucsuiiy is to cui, uiiiih, iuiu be merry in the sweat of other men's brows. But it is more amazing thai men endow )d wilh human nature, and Anirlo-saxon human nuluro too, have como and gono for half a scoro of cen turies, consenting to wage their buttle of lifo under tht-so man-created dis tinctions wilh a complacency utmost equal to that of their masters. t If any one attracted by his lovo of cnlluro would repeat this experiment of aristocracy in America, let mo ro- mind him that that soil, ao lerlilu ot art and refinement, is ulso rank wilh pauperism and crimo. England is a nation of beggars, somo in tho strcols and somo iu paluces ; and tho worst beggars ot all aro thoso samo clogant and graceful aristocrats, for they oitlior directly or through inheritance ro ccivo their wholo living from tho stnto, whilo common paupors receive only a part. Stroll uny day through one of tho slrcots of Manchester or Roclnlalo and enter a tenemont house. You will find tho bens in tho garret, the pigs in tho cellar, and tbo family in habiting tho ground floor along with the vermin, from which they may bo distinguished by a dilloronce in size, You will not stny long to breathe (ho foul odors which play about tho apart ment. Probably you will go oil' say ing, "They might at loast bo neat." You do not consider that that cntiro family, from the gray-haired father to tho lisping child, work all day long in a factory, and cvon thon aro obliged to live on wages which aro hardly worth taking homo, that lather, whoso hair is silvering wilh age, has lived as long and worked as fuilhlully ns tho great proprietor at tho mansion. I hoy moot every day as work man and employor, but soon llioy will meet no more, lor both will retire trom busi ness, ono to luxury, the othor to wnil. for death. Look ut thorn, two men equal, porhapg, in their deserts, but infinitely separated in their rewards, and say if all is well. From ono year's end to another, savo only at Christ mas, the family do not tnslo of meat. Thoy wero born, each und ovory ono, without a destiny, and will dio with out nn ncbiovemont. I wonder, not tlmt thoso noonlo sloal. but that thov sleal so lillfo. Culturo is a most desir able thing. Call it tho chiscltngof tho marblo, tho painting or the dead can vas, or tho clothing of tho skeleton with flesh, and you will not half ex haunt its meaning; but I thank Gud that that stylo of culture which feeds on such misery ns Ibis is fast hastening to doeay. it is oasy to raiso our hands in holy horror at thu excesses of tho Kronen communists ; it is easy to en 1 1 them brutes. Hut who made thorn so f "Oh," yousay, "Ibovnro thochildron of Voltairo, and Volloiro was on infi del." What, thon, mado Voltairo pos sible? lio was nothing but a lurid flame- thrown up against tho durk back ground of priosthood und casto. It would moro bescom us to blush for ourselves than lo cry unclean, when wo reflect' that I'aiis is tlio oleclcd loader of tho modern world, and yet has brought fprlti in its bosom a pro duel like ihis. - Now thinking men liavo observed with anxiety that this labor problem ia bodily trunsferrlngitsolf to America. Twenty years ago, whon our factories and work-shops were filled with tbo ten and Uuughtors of tho Puritans, 'fVJOT MEN. TJ coning frosh from the fumily altsr, lbs problem wns simple. Hut now sll is changed. The squalor of Europe has laid siege to thoso branchos of in ((nstry, and nativo talent has fled be f$re it, as it would flue from the iirch of a postilonoe. It is nocdloss ll'doscribo to you tho muko up of tho efuigrant. He brings not only him self, but certain sociul ideas. He is apt to bo a compound of ignorance, hole,' and despair. And tho worst fell u re is that ambition is dead. Can there be a moro vivid picture of com pltlo moral prostration than a parent who bas no nspiraljons in behalf of bit child? Yet in Massachusetts, wacro a law compels every factory child to attend school throe months in a year, the strongest obstacle to the jeeattem of that rnvr-f-1 ho fuUobood and evasion of parents who take ovory means to escape its provisions. Thus tho child grows up in ignorance; a little more ago reveals to him tho wretchedness of his ostnto ; and it needs but a spark of tho fire which in othors we call solf-rospoct to make him a rebel against society and a trai tor to his race. Tender henrtod wo men rend tho description of a brutal murder, and wonder bow human feel ings can becomo so dead. They do not know that wo ourselves are school ing theso outlaws by neglect. In tho name of civilization wo havo driven the Indian from tho land, and in our cities and towns which we call tlio Inst fruit of civilization, we are rear ing a barbarism worso than theirs, by as much as it stands in a mora splen did era. Now it will never do to lenvo this problem to our freo institutions. They uro glorious and strong, but in stitutions aro nothing except vs they inspire living men. Tbo tiiuo is alivo with omuiotis portents. ' Labor parties tuny not prove that eight hours ought to bo a legal day's work, but they do provo that something is rolten in American society. A cry for relief has gone forth, uAd refuses lo bo hushed. We can not always ignore thoso men. Neither can wo forevor satisfy them by quoting AJam Smilh. Supposo somo wiso individual should stand willi n conv of "The Wealth of Nations" in his hand before a mob of London bread rioters, and begin to read I he chapter on wages; would they nil go off rejoicing in tho benutios of tho science, and convincod that they wero happy ? Political economy bus had ample trial in England. A mill agent reconlly said, "I regard my workpeople just us I regard my ma chinery. So long ns they cun do my work for what 1 chooso lo pay them, I keep them, gutting out of them all I can. Whon my machines tret old and useless, I reject them ar. l Uf now, ami then ponpU or purr, of my machinery. Is not that a stilli ciontly rigorous application of llio law of demand and supply? And it do scribes the wholo i'uetory system in Kngland tin to tho timo w hen tlio ngi tutors took it in band. What it has dono for England I need not repeat. Suflico it to say that political economy, as a solution of this question, is a dis astrous failure. Well, having failed in Ibis, society look) about for somo oilier remedy, and flnully adopts tho charity system. At the risk of a glittering goncrahty, I pronounce this tho ago of poor hous es. Hospitals for the sailor, asylums for tho incbriato, and retreats for tho spinster spring up in a night and open their doors to the unfortunuto. Never wns society so thoroughly nursed ns it is to day. Now, no ono would dis parngo theso onlerpriees. They lion or tlio bend ns much us they do tho Lcnrl of their authors, liul thoy do not meet this great social problem of poverty, and llioy never will. For they nro not philosophical. Tho best gill you could bestow on a cripple would be to sot bim on his feet; und if somo disoaso is crippling socioty, crnlclies will never muko it walk straight. Will it develop into life and vijjor tho self reliance of an able bodied limn to food him liko a child with his da ly bread ? The truth is, thero must appear in society Boine miraclo work er personal or impersonal, which shall bid theso crippled, hulling, and help less thousands to rise up and walk. If, then, our institutions can not bo trusted, if political economy has prov ed itself futile, and if tharity, howev er broad in ils roach or multiplied in ils form, can work no permanent euro, to what shall wo turn? Must wo abandon the question in despair t Must wo accept as a fact the oxlslonce in America of an isolated class? Whilo England is manfully fighting her way to justice in tho face of tradi tion and law. shall we ignobly sin ren der this vory fortress of human rights ? I do not believe it. That samo polili- cat economy fur which so much is cluimod, loaches that man with ins inusclo ulono is uhlo lo produco moro than bo enn consume And if ho cun do this unaided, vihcro is tho boasted beneficoncoof invention if il is to enr ry only physical and moral poverty inilspalh? Given a community of ten persons, with ono hundred bushels of corn, and thoy ought lo enjoy greater mulerial prosperity lhan tbo samo number of persons with fifty bushels; and does uny one doubl Hint wo can produco tho ono hundred bush, els wilh our labor saving appliances whore wo could produco lifiy without them ? If, then, it has been demon strated thai destitution is not a no cessity among a savngo and untutor ed raco, is il inovitablo hero, where nrt bus doubled and trebled nature? Docs not tho contemplation of thoso fuels force us back to tho truths wilh which wo started, viz: Unit society fails lo dinlrihule fairly its labors and ils re wards, ? ! Mr. Phillips would reduce the amount of production, and llius bring capital to terms. There could not be a great er fallacy, Tlio bano of society is not that tho rich livo in pulaecs, but Hint tho poor livo in liuls. Rather, if it wero possible, lncr.M8p production ton, twenty, yea a hundred fold, until tho rich nre fairly surfeited and gorg od with luxury, ond when they can noilhcr oul, drink, nor waste any triors, sohio will overflow and find ils way into tlio hovels of tbo poor, llut REPUBLICAN 1, 1871. that is a chimera. Onoo moro we are coinpollod to ask, what shall be done with tho labor problem ? I began tbo study of this subject with no precon ceived notions, and ultorly uncorlain as to tho conclusion which would be reached. Put truth compels mo to sum up tho nnswor In a word, old in deed, and monotonous in sound, but gnthoring a fresh nicuning from this now connection. Ji iu the wotd Educa tion. Wc must oducate two clusses, llio poor and the not-poor, which you will admit to bo a pretty exhaustive subdivision ef Amorican socioty. Wo must oducate tho laborer, first, for his own work. If knowlodge is power, much more so is skill. In Ibis rospect a lesson may bo learned from franco. For example, drawing is taught in our schools meroly ns an accomplishment, and in most instan ces a very imaginary accomplishment al that in Frunco, on tho contrary, it is an art, and whon tho French peasant-boy leaves tho School for tho workshop, ho Is ablo to sketch llio machine boforo which he stands Hence a certain independonco; and independence broods solf-rospoct. Tho workman should bo taught not only how to work, but also bow to mnn ugo. Of all the blossings w hich the genius of man has bestowed upon la bor, 1 beliovo that co-operation ia tho greatest and host for this reason: It makes tho oinployo his own employer, und thus capital and labor cease to quarrel. It it destined to tlirolllo monopoly, and to be tho lever upon which the working-class will raise itself to power. But hitherto it has been utmost useless lo them because they havo no competent managers. Our duty is, by industrial schools, by insti tutes of technology, by freo commer cial collegos, or by somo other means, to put Ilium in possession of those ac quirements which will meet this de mand. Ed u at to llio workman thor oughly in his own sphere alone, and halt tho charity houses In tho land will bo compelled lo pull down their signs. But, secondly, wo must bestow tip on them that broader intclligeneo which will fit litem for a position in society. Givo a Yankoe boy five years in a district school, and he is ready to do anything trade, shovel, or lecture His self coiiUJcuco may bo absurd, but it contains a great se cret nevertheless. Tho misforluno of tlio foreigners who fill our workshops mid perform ourdrudgory is that they nre able to do but ono kind of work. Tho Irish boy's father dug ditches, bis grandfather did tho samo, and thero is no reason, unless society takes bim in hand, why he should ovor know how to do uny thing but dig ditches him self. Consequently, when tlio ditch digg Ing saina.a hseunio. ovororotvdod,lho boy s one talent goes begging for em ploynient, and he takes lower wnges or starves. This is how capital is able so completely to manipulate cer tain largo classes of artisans. But givo that boy enough uritliinelio to keep his accounts w ith und onough geography to know whoro the prairies tire, and tlio vory day that competi tion presses upon him he is off to the West in search of new fields for his now-born capacities. Thus tlio bul anco of industry, which is moro im portant to tlio world lhan tho balance of power, preserves itself by its own fluidity.. lMvision of labor, when its courso is freo, is n blessing. But it becomes n national ctirso if it takes the form of Hindoo ensto and regu laics industry by arbitrary rules. From tho horrors of Unit syatoin America must bo rescued by n wide spread intelligence. Now society must mnke this ils special work. Tho poor can not help thomselvos. llioy aro tied hand anil foot with nn enslaving destitution penury Ed. Wo sny, "It is a freo country ; lei every man mako ot linn self as much as ho can." Wo dial lengo on nnd ull to nnboundod com netiiion. Hut to theso nconle the seeming fuirnoss is mockery. It rivals tho brave hoy who first takes a good long start, nnd thon turns around and offers to rnoo with yon to tho next cornor. Tho child of tho laborer may lift himself from his degradation nnd become a powor for good. But there must bo somo measure of intelligence to sorvo as a basis upon which lo build. Thoy must be mado to luel thai society is their friend, not an enomy whoso prosperity is llicir do feat. What, then, is llio laying of a cablo or tho spanning of a continent? What beauty do they find in litera ture, what exaltation in scienco, 1 bsd almost said, what solace in ruli gion ? Not in tlio nacio of an endan gered society, imminent as ils peril is ; not in tho interest of great money wielders, plainly ns llioso interests point to educated labor, do I plead tho cause of theso peoplo; but because tliey uro pail of our common humani ty, and havo a riglil to purtuko of our common intellectual, esthetic, and sociul delights. But it is equally important, and fur moro difficult, to educate tho other pari ol society. The nearest duly is lo impress upon employers somo sense of responsibility. Il would seem llint oven wilh tho almighty dollar for a loxt, tho otitwnrd form of humanity might bo preached to thoin with effi cacy; for experiments havo proved that the comfort and intelligence of workmen uro largo fractions in their productive efficiency. A distinguish ed professor in Kngland asserts that hia country is losing her manufactur ing supremacy bocauso llio I'ohtincnt is outstripping her in llio intelligence of its nrtisans" But, not to dwell on dry statistics, let mo lead you to on oasis in this dosert of facts. Not far from tho city of Liverpool a company coninieii','pd business a few years sinco wilh eight hundred operatives from tbo very scum of llio Irish population. In many of their hovels a cupful of bugs could easily no scooped from the nulls. Tho Inanager of tho company resolved lo experiment. At bis own expense n St liool-hotiso wr.s erected, freo instruction provided, festivals ar ranged twico a year and oilier social privileges conferrod. It is superflu ous lo say that they grow to bo betlor workmen, lor "Lvuins sat at tho loom TEEMS $2 per annum, in Advance. NEWSERIES-VOL12,N0.12. and Intelligence stood ut the spinning- whool. It ig ontiallv neodlcaa to stato that the vermin could no longer enduro the light and happiness which went, to uwen in vuoir coltngos. llut main; now wnui lollowod. Tliore came to tho company in tho course of years a lime of depression nnd dungcr. i no niuiinger cuuea logoinor his op eratives, and explained to thorn tho changod stato of affairs. Ho told thoin that short-timo work could not save him. Ilo cumo lo usk if thoy would accept a temporary reduction of ton por cont. in tlioir wages; nnd llioso eight hundred workmen voted with three cheers to return an affirma tive answer. But selfishness Is always narrow, ovon wnen ctiucnicd. Therefore em ployers cun not bo implicitly trusted. Back of thorn is to bo croalod a public sonlimcnt which will not bo bullied. It is in tlio ideas which prevail tlmt these evils tuko root. Sociul tnsto is lo bo educutcd. You will read in tlio newspapers tbnl Jumcs Fisk hits mado himself infamous; but it must be a mistake. Men do not tuko so much fains to' gain nothing but infamy. loos he not know that every journal in the country is busy recording his exploits, and every other schoolboy half wishing himself in his shoes? Let Now York shut its front doors to bim, and how long will ho conlinuo to bo a powor for ovil ? Socioty has itsolfto blame for such a man. It must be tuuglit to oxall intellect abovo fortuno, und vii tuu fur ubovo intollect. Fucli tious helps to advancement, organiza tions which tend to become permanent and exclusive, llio red tape ot party and of sect, and all favoriteism which bestows honor unearned, nnd leaves merit to rust in obscurity theso are the sources of English pauperism, and throuten to do liko sorvioc for us. . Let theso bo swopt away ; let sociul senti ment be first puro, thon strictly im partial, and wo shall scu how quickly pretention will hide its face, nnd worth go up to our high places of trust. I deny to political economy a universal mission. But thero is a so ciul luw, simplo and comprehensive ns that of gravity, which, could it bo but grasped and presented in ils complete ness, is adequulo to tho rcgcnorulion of society. Though choosing for my subject Amcricun society in gcnerul, 1 have spoken thus at length of Hie labor question for three reasons: First: it is unmistakably tho com ing question in Amorican politics. Secondly: it is tho parent evil of society. Ask nn intelligent woman suffragist what is their most grievous complaint, nnd tlio answer will -be, "Low wages und llio unjust laws of proporty ; osk tho outcast who walks our stroois, a sarcasm of civilization, what drove her there, and three times out of four sho will reply ."Starvation." Llkowise, also, tho crimes which peo plo our prison-houses theft, robbery, fraud, bouso breaking, perjury, and frequently murder itself aro but wit nesses to the profound sagacity which pronouneo tho love of money tho root of all evil. Thirdly: whilo other great nnd lasting ovils nro npt to be bill tho just retribution of iniquity, pauperism, especially that which comes to us from England, is not n crime, but, tho out growth of a social system Vhicli it could not escape It is nut the perpe trator, but llio victim of a wrong. Thoreforo society owes to it n moro speedy redress Ilo you say that I nm but picturing n creation of fancy, that htnnnn na ture over rcpoats itself, nnd that this ideal justice will uppcur among men only when darkness outshines the sun ? I can only reply, Hero is the evil; shall wo or shall wo not attempt a remedy ? I am ashamed when I sco Americans ransacking tlio dark pages of European history to justify a wrong. It is tho glory of America 10 solve problems which Europo bas given up in despnir,nnd I am glad that tho slavery question is no sooner out of tho way than this new moral conflict is thrust upon us. Tho moment wo hosilalo, llio moment wo begin to as sume nn evil as necessary, the w holo battle is losl. And 1 will add, if it is inherently necessary that somo should livo such lives ns they do in order that wo may silin these halls of learn ing, then let tbo colleges go down, for what prescriptive right liuvo wo to their unpaid services? But il is not necessary. To say that it"' is, is to blsiepheinongaiiiKt the eternal harmony of God's bcnevolenco, nnd to insult tho creative power of that lavish blind whoso very profusoncss com munds all ils creatures lo freely par tako. It is our privilego, my classmates, to look out upon society from tho high standpoint of thoughtful young men, endowed Willi u deep sense of llio pos sibilities nnd 'ho necessities of our country. Tho materials lie about us; wo must stretch oul our hands and begin to build. Two courses incut us hero, cuch offering ils rewards. Wc may go through tho world living by its rules, but never questioning them, measuring our success by ils Ideas, and satisfied to tako it nnd lenvo it as 11 is; or wo may gather about us our garments of self respocl, and refuse to bow our beads before any corrupt power, bo it ofHco, gonius. or wealth, lo tuko any snob tit bis own estimate, or to join any multitude lo do evil. Thero will bo plenty to toll us that iconoclasts aro fanatics and reformers fools; that an nverage, plastic morality is tho only road to succoss in this crookod world ; but it is tho langiingo of weakness nnd tho argument of a eownrd. Let us not begin with llior-o faithless sentiments, worthy only of blighted, miserable, nnd insipid old ngo. Let us carry somo generous im pulses into life, and if, as wo aro told they must wither, let it be in tho frosls of experience, not in tho mil dews of theoretic cynicism. Gen Kilpnlrick bus abandoned tlio Radical cause in Now Jersey and gonu to Boston to lecture on "Shorman's March to tho Sea." How (.0 miilie a hoi Led Set tho uiullrsss on fire. A ROMANCE OF B,EHi UJ'- ' A corroapondent of tl() Cincinnati Commercial writos from Newonstjo, Kentucky. ' "I write this letter In tho houso of an. old lady who is a nioce of that Ro- boccn llryan who boen mo tho wile ot I)i)nip lioono and concerning whoso eyes (the young hunter is said to bavq mistaken thoin for those of a deor) the prolty backwoods romunpo is told. The lady is herself also tho widow op one or llaniel Boono's own nephews, her second husband who assisted id bringing tlio grout huntor back tq Ky. She wns born fn ono 'of the, chief old pioneer stations, (hor grand fathor'sjnear Lexington, an'd,allhoughi sho is irf hot 'pjgliiy-first your, sho is,' sulivo in body, busying herself wilh bur flowers and garduti, clear sighted and nlort in spirit. Recently sho beard that ono of her middle aged, soiis.abKcntovcr 20 yours in Culiforniu, und prosuniod doad for moro than half of that lime, was yet alive, and hor joy was groat. Ho, too, bud supposed, inn muiiiui IU UU IUHf aillCCJ UUIIU. The old ludy bus a romance con noelcd wilh her second murriugo. It is as follows : When hor mother was a young lufjy, Colonel William Boone, tlio ncphow of Daniel montioncd abovo, was very much in lovo will) her, and asked hor on ono occasion to marry bim. Sho told him sho was engaged to Morg.tn Biyan. and that thoy wero to bo married in a few days. Col. Boono went nwny nnd married unothor young tromai). Afterwards lie, with his wife, visited tbo young married couple when their first child (now in her fifth scoro of years) was but a very few days old, und seeing the buby, he laughed nnd said to her mother: "Now, Milly, as you wouldn't have mo yourself you'll givo mo your girl for my second, wilo, won't you t" Whether any jest ing promise wus mado 1 am not in formed; but tho baby grow up, and ut twenty-seven sho wus married, had, stnron children, becamon widow aftor nine yours, and romuinod ono for a long timo, when Col. Boone's first wife, huving died somo ycurs previously, sho really became, in her own middlo life, tho wifo of her mother's early lover, who had claimed her in bcr, crndlo. Tho good old lady is accus tomed, in reluting this to her sous snd noiccs, to spoak of it us "one of thq most remarkable things that over happened." I think so, too; and it is a true Blory." ' Narrow Guaors. A narrow gunge railroad, four miles long, is now it) successful opcrution iu Armstrong county. It extends from Pino Creek Furnace lo tho A. V. Railroad. The following statistics in rcferenco to this road, wo lake from the lust Kit tanning Sentinel : Tho grading and bridging of this road in estimated to have cost from 8.S0IJ to S'.IUO per milo. The iron used is sixteen pounds to thoy aid, nnd costs SSI) per ton. It is a three foot six inch guago, wilh fivo foot lies laid ubout eighteen inclios from center to center. Tho total cost ol Ibo road, cxclitsivo of ballasting and rolling stock, was about 818,000, nnd the. wholo cost, with the road equipped about 12.-1,000. We are induced to givo theso items, of cost from tho fact that narrow gunge roads uro creating somo sensa tion throughout tho country, und that our friends at Dayton und Punxsutnw noy may form somo idea of what would bo the probable cost per mile of their contemplated road. Thus it will bo seen that Messrs. Brown & Mosgrovo hnvo expended twenty-tivo thousand dollars for tho construction of a Ruilroad simply for the purpose of acting as a feeder for their Furnace and u means of outlet to market for their manufactured iron. Tho locnmotivo used is called "Pino Creek," und is of peculiar construc tion ; and was manufactured and palo'iled by Messrs. Grieo & Long, of Philadelphia. It weighs livo tons gross, and cost 8:1,200. It will draw u load of from eleven to twelve tons up a grade onu hundred nnd sixty eight feel to tho mile, over very .hurt curves, llio radius of some of tvhicli are said lo bo as great ns ninety feci. Clarion Dan. Getting Map. Referring to a re corded saloof real estate in Now Y'ork to n Mr. Lcslio "of South Carolina," the Charleston Nationalists tono of tho two Republican organs in that Statu) expresses itself in llio following pointed language : "When wo find men who came Iq tho Slate with no oilier fortuno lhan tho suitof clotUcs on their backs, and whoso only stock in trado wus tbo namo of Republican, after a long term of office, unmarked by a displuy of either talent, patriotism or publie spirit, cooly depsrt honco with llicir. pockots tilled to repletion wilb tlio blood drawn, drop by drop fiom tho veins of tho poor colored peoplo nnd prostrate nutiro citizens, and invest ing their gains in other Slates, for the benefit of another peoplo, il is timo that tho Republican party set on foot a slorn and' uncompromising inquisi tion into tho character! of llicir ieud org." Radicalism Illustrated Littlo Rhode Island is intensely Radical, ns everybody knows. Sho has just voted on throe proposed amendments to her Constitution. First, to removo tho real-ostato qualification from foreign born citizens ; second, to abolish the registry act , nnd, third, to prohibit llio appropriation of money to secta rian schools. All tbreo wero defeated, tho first nnd second by largo majori ties. Tho vuto on the first was 8,1 14 voles iu favor of, to 0,-UsQ against If. On tho second proposition it Blood 8,014 lor, und i,NS3 nguinst. According lo tlio liudical way of thinking, n (termini or on Irishman in Rhoda Island is not good enough to volo unless ho is a land holder, whilo in tho South they nilo negroes to vnlo without nnv nunlilieuliou what ever not even the pro payment of. taxes, or mo nullity to renu hiiu si uu. Tii Treatment Different. An a tin v contractor in Berlin bas boon conilemned loan imprisonment of fivo years for having defrauded Hie Gov ernment out of Iwo thousand dollars. At this rate, if our official defaulters nnd embezzlers were punished with proportionate severity, tho millonium would bo reached before most of thorn hnd served out half terms. Tom Mur phy, for Instance,' tho particular pot of President Grunt, instead of holding -levees in tho New York Castoni Hottso, would be serving out a term of tbreo hundred nntj eighty fivo year in tlio penitentiary. Long Branch and Presidential favors nro far picas inter. ' ' ' A pretty herd Childhood.