. the. "(LEAHFIKI,I UKPlllLItAV ruii.i.iiiift rnvnn v vimiiMr, Br IJtlDDI.ANIIUH IKUI'.UTV, , '. ; . ChEAHTlKLli, PA. r.STAHMSll Rll IN ItTM. I'll lai-goat I'lreulatloa of any Newspaper " Ih Nnrlli Central Peuneylvoiila. ; ' Tonus of Subscription. If paid in alvanee, or within S months,.,.'! M If tniiL rtr 3 ami before A mo n tin ... 9 50 , f paid after tUo eij.irit.oo of 0 tuontl 3 OO : ' Raton ot Advertising. - transient ad?ertiiOMnt,periu.uof lUllnttor Itfi, BlimMnrlei. JJ Koreauh sulinentiiiaortion .. B Atlmlnlmalor' and Kieouti'ri'noUo .... J Auditor' uotlee J JJ 0 nut ton and K.traos,..,., J prof ion 1 Cards, b lino ur Io,! your...- 5 00 I uinou.,i.r n it, ...... , ... qiiitrc 1 column S0 I ,,, IS (10 autumn 70 00 ; I .ijnare..,. JO 00 1 column 110 00 , , llKOROH 11. UOOIM. A PI P K U. iiKoiiuK II AUK 111 V. Puhll.hcr.. Ciufls. FRANK FIELDING, A TTOllK K V - A T -1. A W, . Clearaeld, Pa. Will ollind to nil bcllnoM enlru.tod 1" him promptly and hltlifull. ""l'" 'L. WIU.1AH i. wau.ai. nAvin i. " uaunr r. wai-LAi-n. '" WALLACE & KREBS, (Rofliori t Wallace A FltMmK, . A T 1'Oli A' BSS-AI-LA W , , II IJ'T.1 OlMillolil, P. V Wiling. H.P. M. . YAH A1.AAH. . H. I. A VA1.IA1I, . , TIUS. WTT.SON ftC VAN VALAn. Cltllliclll, l'a. (iltl- In rwiilmee of U.. WlUon. Orririt HorMt turn 13 to I r. . an. Vlh en '" " "it" " door to llrlwlo A Irnio'i I'rug More, up lair.. .vli DR. JEl'FKHSON I.I I WOOOLAHP, PA. Will promptly alien, all earn. In the liaf kU prof...',-,. ! ioicrn"i. 'i.ur. aim. w. tframar. McENALLY & MoCURDY, ATTOKNKYS-AT-LAW, l-leai-ncld, Pa. f-r.caI hunlnoii attended to promptly with Bilulity. Office 0 Second itroet, Wo the r'irnt' NiUiimal llivuk. Ja..:l:T I G. R. BARRETT, AtTornf.t and Coiinski.ob at Law, ni.i.'ini.'IWI.n. PA. navlnj rc.iltiod hlr Judee.hip, haa reinmod ,oliee or tho law in me oiu - Klk eounile. .nen .peo.au, V .. .... with re.ident enunwl. WM. M. McCULLOUGH, ATTOUNKY AT LAW, t'lenrBflrl, Pa. Mr-Wllce In Court llonte, (SheillT'i Ofllcc). bujincx promptly attended to. It. arh'tate Uoughl and .old. . ' 1 7 .. J. W, BANTZ, AT'l'OltNEY-AT-LAW, C Ic.rllcld, Pa. -OHor in 1'ie'. Opera llou.e, lloom No. i. Ali le-l lio.lne.. enlrueled to !- oar promptly attended to. aj' T. H," MURRAY, AT fO UN BY AND COUNSIiLOIl AT LAW. Prompt attention f;lvon to all IcK'J "Mn .mru.tcd to hit euro In CloarBold an.l adjoining wuatioJ. Ofllco on Mkot .L, oppo.lt Nanjle t Icwclry Store, CliarHeld, Pa. rUJ A. W. WALTERS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Clou Ucld, Pa. tlovOtlcc In tlrthaui'. Row. I''"'1!!' H. W. SMITH, ' A T T 0 K N K Y - A T - L A V , rlcsr!!:! !. Pa. WALTER BARRETT, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Mice on Second St., ClaarHeld, Pa, I'.W ISRAEL TEST, ATTORN BY AT LAW, . Cle.rliuld, WOffieeln Pie Opera Hon.e. Jyll.'M JOHN H. FULFORD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Clearlieiit, Pa. rOea in Pie'. Opera Uoa, Kooui No. S. Jaa. , 174. JOHN XT CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. tnd Haul Katate ARetit, I'laarflcld, Pa. Office on Third .treot, bet.Chorry A Walnnt. &-Rcipectfully olTor. hi. eer.lee. in telling nd haylnf land, la Oletrleld and ailjoining voaltet and with aa oiporloneeot oer twenty lean aa a rorreycr, lattert hlro.flf that he in render .atl.foolion. l"l- FREDERICK O'LEARY BUCK, SCIUVKXEU i CONVKYANCF.lt, . General Life and Fire Ins. Agent. Heed, of Coneeyenoe, Article, of Arnonl and all lel paper, promptly and neatly eie eelcd. Oliioc in 1'ie'. Open. Ilon.c, Hvioui No. 4. . Ulonrlield, I'a., April JU, !". .T B LAK E WALTERS, t UKAL KSTATE liliOKElt, IMP PKALBR IR Saw IiOR) ami liHiiiber, CI.RARFIKT.I), PA. Office in Oinhaiu'. How. 1:25:71 J. J. LINGLE, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, l:H Oorcnln, C'lrarfleld Co., Pa. y:pd '" ROBERT WALLACE, ATTORN EY - AT - LAW, rYallaretou, HcarltcW County, Prim'. 4ta.AH lal bu.iiicot promptly attended to. " CYRUS GORDON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Market .treat, (north .Ide) Clearfield, Pa. Alllcfjal In.llic promptly attended to jaa. 2117:1. DR. T. J. BOYER, PHYSICIAN AND SUUOEON, . Ollloe 00 Market Street, Clcarfleld. Pa. A-OI5ee honrti to 11 . ., and 1 to 8 ft. m. iviC'r m.' sen i:uiu:h, HOMCF.OrATIlIC PHYSICIAN, Office la re.ldcnee oa Market it. ' ! ."April 21, 1871 ". . tlear(leld, ra. , DR. W. A. MEANS, PHYSICMAN A SURGEON, ' . LUTllKRcinURll, PA. Will attend priifeHlonalcalltp.omptly. aoglQ'70 ' J. S. BARN H ART, ATTOUNKY . AT - LAW, llellnolile. Pa. Will practice hi ClearOeld and all of the Coart. of Ine I.)lh Ja.liciai ui.irie. i-n-w ..up.- and eotlectlon nrelalm. mada apeelalllea. nt'f 1 T, : JAMES CLEARY, BARBER 4 HAIR DRESSER, HKrOHD BTHCkT, T. . ri.li . , "" T. A. FLECK & CO., : Agvwtl la Oleorlleld eoanty for the fale of K. IIUTTKIIICK CO.'" Fashionable Pattorns of Garments, A1.1 tTTi.at ann ai.ra. ' 1:11 Market mmi t'learU. Pa. Harness, Saddles and Bridles, CalUrf, Wb)ii, Uruihri, Flj NrU, TrlnnlDf I. Vfttaam, Frank Miller' n& NciliftKri Oil. A'i,t for lUiley n4 WilMin'l UuitRiM. Ordtrt 4 rfttHf trtj.tiT ti4wl to, Pht.f rm MRrhrt rtrwt, Cltfurritltl, Tft., In rnon brititrlj cweupltd by Jt,i. Alt itadrr. IM'T i 1 AMES E. WATSON k CO., 1 , HEAL KSTATI IlROKKHA. Iloa.ec ami OuVat te let, Collection, promptly . I'bHAHriKLU, I'KNN'A. anode, and graVela. Coal and'KirO'Clay Land. anw Taw aroverty for tale. tllBct la Wi e.tera Hotel Uailding (Id r), Second SI. (rayl3'74y CLEARPIEED GOODLANDEE & HAQEETY, VOL. 48-WIIOLE NO. cnv as. A. G. KRAMER., a T T 0 11 N BY - AT-L A W, Hen Kilnle ml Collection Agent, ..,.. . " l.l'..HI'l..l.l, l'A., Will pfoniptly attend to all legal biuliic.t to '' ,prt-Oflt in I'lr'l Oiicra llnuie, MCtinJ floor. nnrtl l-rm Julio II. Unit. O. T. Alclamlor. C. M. llowerl 0EYIS, ALEXANDER & BOWERS, ATTOHNKYS AT LA W, HcililuiiK, jii2.'l7-j J. H KLINE, M. D., PHYSICIAN & BURGH ON , H AVINO looaluil at TennntlJ, Pa offcrl hit nrofsu uual icrvioe. to Hie nettpie hi mm plaua and .urroun Jinj oouulrjr. AH cam proniptij .tlrnj.il to. C,J!-J .- " GEORGE C. KIRK, Ju.tlce of ftie"Plico, 8nrryor il Cnnvayoaew, I.ullicr.liHl'K, Pa All OUini iuiib.iu " i r-- .... - l-i-.......t t. I.i.. uill tin HPIiinlitlV , .n .. .1,. ht, . call. v bn llalt.ra klainir that he ona miliar li'faolioa. Iloc.li of ,nveynoe, artli'le. o( aureom.n., ' papert, .roi.li.r aan aaauj """ JOHN D.THOMPSON, Juitlee er the Poaoo and Bartvencr, Curweinvllla, Pa. kiauCollcetiuni mada and money promptly paidTrer. . '"'''"'"'L aen. ALnMNT nmiir Al.nitnT W. AtlllBT W. ALBERT &. BROS., Mnnuractoren A eitcn.ive Dealer! in Sawod Lumber, Square Timber, &c, WOODLANU, rENN'A. JTOrderi lolicllfd. Dill. HIIoJ on ihorl notice nnu rett.uiiw.piu Ad Ireu Woodland P. 0., OleVflcId Co., Pa. e25.ly L"li'l't '"'"9- " FRANCIS COUTRIET, M KUCHA NT. Prenrltvllle, ienrllclilConiily, Pa. n. V' . . . .tore, which will he .old, : for ea.n, a. clienp a. et.c-ncro ... . Frenohville, J uno u, iooi ij. TH O MA S H. FORCEE, niALea la GENERAL MKIIC1IANDISK, CJKAIIAMTON, Pa. Alio, exten.lre m.nofacliiror and doalor In Rnuare Tiniherand Sawed Luniher ol all kind.. y-Ordori eoiloltcd and all kill" promptly 111.1 l'J,,11 REUBEN HACKMAN, Houso and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, Clearllclil, Penu'a. j,VIII exociito Jobe in hil lino promptly and In a workiannliko manner. art,7 G. H. HALL, PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, NKAB CLEAKKIEI.U, PUNN'A. rJpiiinp. nlway. on hand and made to order on .hurt notice, l'ipe. uoreil on rea.on.iMe All work warranted to rtmier eainiacuon, ...u dollvaredlfdc.lrcd. myJiilypd E. A. BIGLER & CO., DKA1.KHR l!f SQUARE TIMBER, and manufacturer, of AM. klNlmttl'SAWKI) l.UMHI'.B, g-7'71 CI.KAHFIKlil), PKNN'A. JAS. B. GRAHAM, dealur in Real EsUto, Square Tiiubor, Boards, 8llftillI.ES, I.ATII, A riCKBTS, 0:107.1 Clearfield, Pa, JAMES AIITC1IELI., 1111AI.K1 i Stjiiarc Timber k Timber Lands, J.II7J CLEARFIKI.D, PA. DR. J. P. BURCH FIELD, Late Surf eoa or the 8:id Regiment, Penntylrania Volunteer., baring returnod from the Army, offor. hi. profe.ilonal .ervlce. to tbeeill.ini or Ulenrneld eouniy. trprf..lonaloall. promptly attenlodto. Office on Stooad .tret, formerlyocoupled by Dr. Wood.. epr4,' tf H. F. N AUGLE, WATCH MAKER & JEWELER, tnd dealer in Watclics, Clocks, Jewelry, Silver and Plated Ware, &o., j I W'73 C1.EAUPIK1.D, PA., S. I. SNYDER, '& ' u" y MJ Ann lilAi.na It i.t. ihtti'ii v atim! i a 1: ph Wotclic", I'lucks nntl Jowclry, U,,.ii.'. Ju.irl .S'lrccl, f M'-.AIII'ir.M), PA. AM kind, of repairing In my line promptly at- endcJ to. April 2.1, 1A7-1. HKMIIVAI.. REIZENSTEIN 4 BERLINER, wholerftlo dcnlen in GEXTS' FlRMSlinfi (iOOI)S, IUt reinovw. to 1H7 Charoh trot, between Frauklin and Whit it., New lurk. (J) '! Miss E. A. P. Rynder, IflIRT FOR Chlokorlng'i. SUlowrk'akn l Emerson' Plfttioij timlik i, Mmoii A lUmlln'f nd Plubet' Organi sod Weludton, ind Grtrr A llaktr'i NcwitiK Mrkobinef. ALIO TXAtiMatn of Piano, Oultar. Orn, lUrmony and Vocal Ho lie. No pupil tivkuo fur lel than hair a torm. V-Rootnt uimlt (Itilli-li'i Furnitura Stora. CUarflsld, Mny S. 1RH9.tr. J, HOLLOW Itrail . . . . H. UAVII CARKY EOLLOWBUSH & CARET, BOOKSELLERS, Blank Book Manufacturers, ' AND BTATIONBnH, aiS Market f., Philadelphia Paper Floor flack i anil lUffa, FnalfAap, Letter, he to, Wrapping, Curtain and Wall Fapara. faliU4,7lt-ljrpd ir. K. IIHJLKU k CO, bare for sale CARRIAGE & WACOS WOODS, SHAFTS AND TOLE8, 11 U11S, 81'OK ES, FELLOES, io. Carriage and Wagon Maker, thonld mnVe a Bote ef thi. and eall and eaaaiine then. They will be told at fair priott. vay21 72 CTONE'S 8AW GUMMERS AND SAW UPSETS. We hare received the aecnoy for the above and will tell then, at manufacturer prlcoa. Call aud atamlne theen. They are the be.1. j.lO Jl U. r. U1ULKR A CO. Momilain Echo Cornrt Rnnd, Cl'n'EN8VILI.rJ, PA. Mt'SIO fnrnl.heo for Picnic Fe.llr.lr, Cra eerte, lecture., Ac., eo reooonable term.. A.l.lre.a. It. H. 8EII N KK. dcc, nayl-ora Carwen.vllle, Pa. JJOOT ANDSllo: OOTANIJSUOE AIAK1NG. JOSEPH II. DEKHINI), oa Market (treat, la Saaw'i Row, Clearteld, Pa., ka.ja.t received a ine U of Ir.aek Calf Vkla. aad Kip., the beat la the ajarket, and I. aow prepared to raaa- araatare everjieing la an no .rurar. aeeevthlna la hit line. He Will I mat bit work la be aa repretoateeV Tba altlieat ef Ulrarlold aad vlelally are 1 re.peetfelly lavlud te give bin) a eall. wori aoae at tnon nonce. i;ini-. Fublialiers. 2388. THE WHITEWASH BftUIH. Ttia wlillowah bruuli, tlia whitawaali brash, Ii Rreatcr than Allah, xraalar than Joahj In letiara and aoianev, in tomraarea and art, It plajra U wonJoroui, powerful parti Aye ! all ita haufcht.? compeer are hoik Compared ta the nilghtjr whitawaali truah. Comini Dilod by influenaa or gold. It i lha protector of ruuug and old. V.ttry department of modern life Heokliig wllh wirkodneaa and it rife, , Hociat)-, polillea, raligiaa lluah ! TLojr are all tafo 'noutb the whitewaih bruik. ppamlal and giaitp, tba ignt of our time, Petty aln and unheard of crime ( Judge and preaident, prleit and flunk, Maj buldl at piiblio opinion nook U batterer the peril, lot then rub And hide In lha ibade of the whitewaih brneh. With a frw quick atrokea tt eorert ihamei, I'alnta all fairly Ibe blaokiit of naaei t Inreatlgailnn tt render abort, With a friendly eominittaa'a iwlft report 1 And behold, luntead ef the tinner' eruab, A eoat laid on by the whitewash brush. AH other emblems, then, let as lay down, The eroie and the aword, the mitre aad erowa) Nor laaming, wor Juttleo, net faith ahautd mln To take for tbelr ataodard a sign like Oil -Without a aoruplo, without a ilutb, The gil'led ilgn of a wbiUwash bmh t KEY-NOW OP TJIE CAMPAIGN. HPKF.CH OP HON tlEO. II. I'KMII.KTON AT COUJI ltlrj. Tlio Di'titocraU of Ohio liclil their niinmil mtifioitlion mpolinivltlie Stntc Caitul tin tlio 10th. KpoeclieB wore mitdo liy flovuntor A lion, M chats. Hunt, Cnroy mill otltcnt nml n longtliy lrttcr wur) nlo ivml from (lotiorul Kwiiig. The following in the Hpcech of Mr. Pendleton, on tho wension, and hIiouIiI be rend hy every Aniericun, who loves his country anil ilesiren to reseiio it fioiu the limula of the ilcxiioilcr. Air. IVnilelton naiil : Fki.loiv t'nizKNH: ''Let not him (1ml L'inli'lli on his luinuss hoHt hiin- M'lt'tiM he that pilttelh it off." J 1 1 nail lieen in your city last week and attended tho Itopiililican Conven tion, and heard Senator Sherman and fienernl (iatlielil and (iivernor Novell exult in udvante over Ileptililicnn vic torieri, when they had jttut put their nut I In in ttiTtiv, 1 would nuvo remind ed lbm of thin ntndcKt reply of tho ivini'ol mniel to tlio hvnnltnl Uenliailail ai.'d recalled to Ihem thut. aided hy larad'H (jod, th'm Kinif. eit. net of aun ritnotu tlio norsen anil ciianotH, anil nlow the Hy rioiw with wat slatiKhler." Kemiliir Shetiiiati in exiiltinir and defiant Ioikh, recounted the achievo- inentH of the ltcpuhlkan party. Ho told iln that it had rc OTmlnn led the ivhi llimiH States and rentoit'd tx'ttccful civil Kociuly. Ih thin true? If it its then why ilo we Unily hear of ; IIOUKIHI.E HI BUEUH and of IuwIchh violenco and rntlilewi iiioIih, tiHi ritiiin tiir tho inanai'eiiieilt t local civil NiilhontioH hy are Federal Inxiiw Hi nt to tho South Mailer prutetirto of tlicao uiHiiiiluin, hut with tlio ival purpose to overawo coiiHorva tivo volem and to eurry pending elec lioim ? If it in true, then thoso atorioi are, iih it wuh hoaHted they Khould ho, the liuhttnnir lorifed in LoiiiHiatia to niiiko it Ihiiniicr at the North." WHAT K1.HR HIIKItMA TOLD 18. He told tiHthnt the lictitihlicftn party had wisi'lv adminiHtetvil the Hiiaucv and largely paid tho delit and redueoil taxes and so rcmoveii an iitimi'iia tnai production and trade and common njoy nnparaiicicu iniaH.riiy. In" lliin trite ? Then why la biiHineria stagnant and entcqiritw inactive nd lahor-Kiitlerinfr ami men liaukrtiitrd and women starving? Ho told tia that tho taritt wuh ho justly aminired that It hrin(f tho larg est lvvenues to tho liovornmeiit, atitl Htimulateri tho moHt unexampled in crease of all donteslic indiiHtrictt. Ih this true? Then why aro tho lllON Fl'RNACEH A 1.1, lll... and the coalminerHstrikinjrpf'Riiist re duced waRCs, and tho fanner com plaining of high prices of rjhoos and clothes and utensils ? He told iln that the HcpMicnn party indulircd in self examination nml in trospection, but ol what nsu is that II it tho moro i lonely Iiiil'S tlio iluilinir sin anil rewards witli olliees nntl hon ors tho exponents nml tho instruments of ils frailties and its crimes? Ho told Its that it hud elevated the tone and tho ca'uicily of tho civil iKr vico. Js thin true? Why, then, this mil vernal lowering of tlio atandanl of the virtues and decencies of public life ? hy, then, this universal apprehen sion that In mill's nntl dignities aro con nidereil vnliiablo only tiir their emolii- nients? Why this universal belief thut ofllces mo held to ho the lilting reward of lnero personal devotion, to lie given in return for service of flat tery or money, and to Ih' held until a larger bid shall demand a transfer? Why in thu pure while nils) of tho can didate become spoiled ull over on the aliouliicra ot tlio elected I Exulting in his vision of tho pawl history ol tins Jiepulilicin party, air. Sherman called lip a brighter visiou of the lul m e. Turning from his rhapsody, let us rend its own promises, lor the luttiro. Jt tells us In Hs puttlorm mat it is in lavor ol protection, ot contrac tion, of speedy resumption ol specie, puyiuents, ol live banking, of internal improvements by Federal ntttliority, of prohibition. , i .! I'ltoTKCTlON. Incidental protection I Cientlcnicu, you know what that means, you have it now. Tho fanner enjoyn it in tho enhanced price of suit und nugar and blankets and clothes and plows anil harrows and horsenhocs aiiifiiiiils. The manufacturer enjoys it in Ui" enhanced prico ho pays liir every arti cle of raw material which cntern into his coimuiiilitioii. The producer enjoys It in (lie tux ho pays on every urliclc except his own protected specialty, ; The ship builder enjoys it in having American shipping driven Irom tho Labor enjoys il, for labor licing Iho soiirco of ull production and of nil wealth, pays in the end all duties. Poverty onjoyn it, for poverty is labor protind down by exaction until it has neither tho opportunity, the strength nor the heart to earn a live lihood. ' ' ' . " ' ' OWTrJAfTIOH I , ' rientlcinen, you know what (hat means. Earnings diminished ; debts increased ; tho wages of labor reduced; Iho prico of wheat and hogs reduced; the value ol stocks on hand rciluceu; debts increased ; taxes increased ; mon ey made moiv lMiwerful ; industry mudo lesa remunerative; losses and living paid out of the accumulations of the nasi; nanKruiitcy io tno ucnior; uno ncss to the hungry laborer ; stagnation eveiywhcro. (.'ouliiictionhasitsoouh tcrnurt in nature. Tho cold and freci. ing winter contracts. The brecio of September sighs for tho exuberance of rerual bloom anil summer narvesis.aim foretells tho winter from afar. Tho frosts of October rut down fniils and CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, .SEPTEMBER 23, 1871., grass and woods, and strip tho branches ot their lulling leaves, and uip all grow. ing life. .November hardet'ia the cold ground and locks the flowing streams tit its migeii embrace, fruits' ami dowors die, and earth and water, wood and niotnls all Naluro shrink and dwarf, until tierce December enwraps them in ils snowy shroud, and stays thorn, in death-like inertness. Do I overdraw tho picture? Look about you, and in the light of the tacts nee how dim in my coloring. "SiHX'ie pay men la, and when they are attained, and not until then, free banking.". So says lf6 ltcpublicaii platform. Cieutlciucn, do you fully understand that provision? I have shown what contraction is. Immedi ate ivu motion of specie payment will produce the same results. , Every debt will be iiicreaiwd ten nor cent. Every salary )aid by your government will be iiiereaiHMl toil per cent. Kvcry dol lar ol accumulated capital, every nxod income, will be iucroased ton per coat. r.vory article, you have to sell tho cropn on your land, tho cattle in your pastures, tho stock in your stores, the machines In your niaiittluetories will bo diminished in prico ton nor cent. WHAT THE REI'lULK'ANS WILL DO. The lienublicans say they will force this result, and thou they will have free banking. They will stop business, paralyse enterprise- ruin the debtor, keep kilo tho luoorer, in order to reach specie payments, and then they will establish live banking in order that the liauks and bankers may expand the currency at their pleasure. it an cxpunsion ot tho currency is necessary, why flint reduce tho cur rency ? 1 will toll you why. In order that canital may be benefited bv the contraction, and that banking capital maybe benefited by thu expansion: that money may bo made more valuable- by tho contraction, and that the money thus enhanced may at once draw interest on tho bonds dojiotiited and profits on tho circulation. 1 1 hut tho circulating medium may he expanded or conn-acted according to the demands of trade and commerce" Shall tho currency be cxnuiuled or contracted awarding to the will of Congress, responsible to tho people, or according to the will of the bankers? Shall they be intrusted with this migh ty power of hard times or easy times ? Shall they make plethora or panic? I would not huve the ctirroncy the play-thiiigofiMliUosorthefoot-ballnf part ion, 1 would not have its fluctuation ii'ucli there must be subject to the control irf private speculations. I know it is harmful to business. I do not believe it necessary. If I must confide this power somewhere, 1 would choose to contido it to Congress rather than to the banks. I would say with David of old, "Let me fall into the hands of (ind, for Ho is murcifut ; let me not fall into tho bund of man." INTERNAL IMl'rtOVr.MP.NTS BT THU FKtV- KRAL OOVMNMINT. - ' Gentlemen, thut has lsx-n tried by tho Kepttblican party. It tried to aid the' PoririR Iluilroad bv tho era lit of 1 lands and the Indoracnumt ' of hnnrle, and tlio Credit-Mobilicr destroyed the fair fame of an American Congress, and degraded American politics in thceyis of all honorable men. It tried to im prove tho City of Washington, and tho nameless frauds of tho District rings were tho mwewary natural results. It investigated and tried to hnprovo tho Civil Service and itself, and it instituted examination for tho clerks aud double salaries for the oflicors and Congress man. i -i PROHIBITION. Men will become intoxicated, ami, rhereforo, they will prohibit all trade in liquors that intoxicate, and will regu late the tastes and habits of all men by tho iron rule ol a rtirltanlc creed. . Thin is tho licpnblican programme an proclaimed by its accredited Con vention; contrast with it the Demo cratic faith. A sound currency, whose value shall bo regulated neither by the whims of Congressmen nor tho greed of bankers, but by tho necessities of business.' (Irmliackt, vhiek ewe? fic prnysV nof hing, inntffiH of bank sisVs, wAk'A nut tx wf ctnt. justice to ail mans- tries and unequal advantages to none. Tariff for revenue alono, and special burden upon none, t heap transiiortn- tion, light taxation and lands for actual settlers. Equality of all ritixem before the law, and absolute protection in tho enjoyment of aM civil and politicnl rights, f.qiml and exact justice to all men, and SKedy and condign punish ment, according to Inw, of all who break tho law. This is our confession of failh. To this as a party wo aro pledged. It Is broad enough for hon est men anywhere. It Is largo enough for Democrats everywhere. Next to our lovo of trttlh Is our love of tho Whole country. Sectionalism is not patriotic. Sectionalism in not states manship; and the Democratio party seeks to lill evefy question of National policy aliovo the narrow and selfish limits of sect or section to tho loftier piano of National application and pat riotic boneflconeo. It is a grand old party.' For fifty years of almost unin terrupted power it met wilh eonrago and solved with wisdom and consis tency every question of National poli tics ; aud now, wiser still hy experience, purified by adversity, renewed In strength, it comes flirt h again with a tmer courage, a tinner patriotism, a inrtlrr none, to vindicate tho integrity of its principles, and assert its titlo to power in the (iovcrnment. Differences of opinion dnntlcss exist Differences of iinrnono and motive do not exist. In the common pui-posc of rescuing our country from TIH HAND or TIIR SI1lll.tR ;, , , of reinstating wisdom, and virtue, and honor m tho high places ol i.ovum- incut ; tof administering tho law by the law, Democrats everywhere, JSoiih anil South, East and Vi est, stand as one man, and on all questions of policy, teuiH)rary in their character and of chnnging expediency, agree to dtller until linio ahull aolvo the problem, or at least ahull bring tho necessity of de cision aud tho loriti ol aruon. SH-aking for myself, geiitlemcu and 1 believe in this that I may speak for tho Democratic party while 1 ad here to tlio old DciiMHjralio dis-trine, Unit gold and silver com , .. " IS Till BIST BASIS of our currency, In that sense 1 am a hard money man. I would never have departed from it 1 would like to re turn to It. I was In Congress when tho Legal Tender Act was passed. 1 voted against it ; I spoke against It I Irclicvc It was wrong in principle, and Injurious in policy. 1 foretold inflation, the Sacrifice of creditors,' enormous pnooa, enormous indebtedness, the hey day of flush times, tho carnival ofspecu latton And corruption. 1 foretold that a day would come when those steps would be returned, and the people would he dragged over rough ways and miring quicksands, through an guish, distress, through poverty and :. (;. .. -it. . .tf ' ,V(,i 'H'vi ',t .; ! 'i ; ' v..' ,. f y,v ' , "' , '. " ''"v I ' ,..,,.;,- : ,r. , . ". .. ' . . - ' k-, " t . f '. ' . : ,. " ., -a.. lAil.. , J ;-- .L-JjI-ii., 1 , . : PRINCIPLES,, NOT, MEN. bankruptcy, hack to-th, sturtiiigiroint, audi foretold thcij that tho return would be, must bo , , J,,, i ' BLOW ANtf TAIt.rYL, uiidtheniuHtcjiiitiousanl puliciitatnU. mauship would rareelf sulflce to con duct It without tbcuiji of one gener ation and tho paiaslajking economy and constant htbor of another. My prophecies wore dujtaiurt disloyal, thu liepubiican party runM headlong to paper money anil inflation. The timo Las cotno which I predicted, and now they desire to runu ..heidlonir to siHicia payment and nmtrartion. No, gentlemen, "fall cannot 'violate the laws of liealLU anil bo healthful. You cannot plunge, into filth and ho clean. You cannot avoid) tho conse quence of your bJlicti and yourcrimu. "The gate, of hell are Apr light oat day, ' " Smooth Ibe SeoeMc" M reey te the wot r -wv N Bui to Mara, oou ..V ohrerfiil ablet, .' la Ikta toe took, lie oj ijl.tr or lioo-'- , ., 1, too. desiro snecio nunueiits. , I huve never abaiuloned the liun and tho determination. In 1WJ7 and lHtiW 1 kept this point steadily in view. I never advocated the issue of additional greenbacks for the purpose of paying the nve-twenty bonus, l never advo cated tho isauo of greenbacks in un limited amounts or largo amounts lor any purpose. 1 scorrt the Imputation Of : ' ' HKVUblATlON. - 1 resent the implication of broken fiiith. I stood upon tlio Icltor and spirit of tho law. 1 learned early that "he who swears to his own heart, ' and changeth not, sliall never bo moved.'.' I believe this maxim applied Umations as woll as individuals. 1 have sought to apply it in public as well aa in pri vate lite. I sought a policy winch. while it was koenly soiasitlve -to Na tional duty and honor, ahonld also lilt the burden from industry and ' the sufferings from lalmr. 1 was In re sponsible for broken faith to the credi tor; 1 will not bo responsible for bro ken luith to tho debtor. 1 did not rush with mad, nmiocerwary speed to paper money ; 1 will not rush with mau speod to specie resumption. 1 pointed out that the legal tender aotca wore paya ble at no fixed place and no fixed timo, and I was told that was wise and states manlike. For they would always pay debts and taxes, (ientlemcn, I believe that a . ii.- -. . RKTURlf TO SMCIt rAT MINTS - shimld be the aim of our legislation and our action, and tho true statesmanship will seek to attain it at such time and hy such means an will Inflict the least Injury on nil tho' industrial interests involved. The condition of tho coun try is entirely exceptional. The same phenomena havo npprareu elsewhere, hut they have never been so dcvelotied. Tho war liecume Inevitably of impieiisc magnitude. Tho expenses wero enor mous; tho armies were large; dis tances wero great ; tho System of pur chasing, keeping and distributing sup plioa, and of keeping accounts was detective.- Mr. ChiUo'a call for the im mediate payment of fitly uiilliouR to gold, stibschbod by the banks, para lyoexl thom. Tbo jSis-i-ctai-y recom mended, tho AdmiuinlratioH urgoiJ.uiKi (,'ongrosn adopted the legal tender note system. - Four hundred tnilliona were issued, llonds were issued and were sold at par in legal tender notos, but at THIRTY, FOBTY, OR BVSH FTFTT ' per cent, discount in gold. Tho Xa tional Bank system wan devised to muko a market for these bonds, and three hundred and sixty millions of bank paper wero Issued, ntato ranks were taxed out of existence on the one hand, aud were offered every induce ment to become National hanks on tlio other hand. Tho currency was in creased seven hundred and sixty mil lions of dollars. In addition to (hose two sources of Increase, there were also five per cent, notes, senven-thirty notes, fractional currency and certificates of loan, winch, Tor a time, were in com mon circulation. Tho effect was mag ical. Tho experience of England wns repeated. Avith nearly half of the country possessed by the Confederates, with largely more than a million of men in tho North converted from pro ducers to consumers, with taxes touch ing six hundred millions annually, with tho expenditures for a long time more thun two millions of dollars each day, work Was plenty, labor was re wanted, energy ami enterprise were developed, public and private works were carried forward, fortunes were amassed, aud a well-being beyond what wo had over seen before was enjoyed in every con- ution ol me. J lie currency sun con tinued depreciated. Hut it roso and fell, not always according to the quan tity, but according to tho fitfc nf bat tles, in the meantime the bonded Ucnt of the United Slates rose to upward of twenty-live hundred million, the flout ing debt roso to twelve or fourteen hundred millions, and private indebted ness reached a fabulous amount. ' Tho war camo suddenly to an end. Four millions of slaves were iiiala'titly hrotight to tho condition of aclf dcpcnd ent people, and earned and needed money. Ono million of soldiers wefo returned irotn tho condition or con sumers to t ho various avocations oi life, and they, too, earned and neCded money. Iho markela furnished by tlio demands of the (ioveniment were losed. New ninrkilK hail to be opened. Other markets for their commodities had to bo substituted. Other iiulits- tries had to bo developed. ThenWtigts of tli war. tL" 'v 'irbiuicoA ol tlio system of labor, had leaullod in the' . .." desolation or ra SOUTH. !.. Houses, bams, fences! mills risd1 horti iloatrnvcd - hnrra cnttlo horrn?.VArrnrrs. j t -, - - , harness, agricultural implements W"cro greatly diminished. 1 he whole conn try was now thrown open In this con dition, to ho supplier by a curroney which had herctolbrtl been conflncd to the North. These conditions f them selven operated a cAntractkm. "Arti flcinl wmtraction, actual contraction, by calling in the enrrtney was adnptwl as the policy of the kcpnWieen party, and has been contitnmd Wore or loan actively ever since. Th) effect was Instantly VtSibl." ItiHnstry Bnd enter prise were crippled ; prices (ell ; itetsfs, contraeteit on an eioSantlerl Wtrrenoy anil rising priirs, Vcw paid vhile prices wore less and1 still IWltiijri ani their payment '" (''''' " cRiprt,t Alt Utti ' ' !; ''-.. j - enguged in active usincss,. and, in every cose, trotonhed on tin acA.uiuula- Uons of forner years, in ouilit years the payment of the flop tins tlcld, which had servod Ui puriKste of currency and uiid the oxpulnlon of .hank paper find coin, amounted to nvarly 1.&00,00I, 000. Whilo this coulractioB lias been going on, the Adiuinltration claims (n have paid 54il,lHrll.isil or tho pnnci nal of tho debt aniriLIOt.rlV,Ml of !ntrst In goldirt nB t,fl40,Wr.O0 or sum equal alniolst to the entire) wealth of the people' of Kx' UIMd fitt. In - e' ; -u-iriyl io These cnorTnons ntns far the f 4y- mcnt of the hidcbtednest oi the r ed- oral government have bean drawn from tho aceuniulated capital and the gains of 111(11111117.1 Labor, the souroo of all wuitli,i a - w.is i -.o m :, I ,'i . ! . HAS BORNK THIS BVRUtN.' ' i Tho bonus and sinews and muscles and blood 'of men aad women have coined UiCso sums, and all tho while their wugeg havo been dcc,rcaning. It is sain to say that since the panic of last September there has born ft stag' uation of buHinuHS of oven' kind bo yond nil prec wlent f that tbs people, thcmerchuiits.tlicniantithcttirers, flimi ein, luboiors, liicn an J women, boys and girls, from tho millionaire to tlio sewing girl, suffered as they have never suffered lulure, and thut hunbiiiland parwiui have, iu 41m largo oitiea, sougtit voluntary death, ( - - RATHER THAN SEE STARVATION . in the eyea of thoir wives and children. It- is sutirsly-laat'o. U-ay tltat it was easier to nay nix hundred millions of taxes hi 1805 Uinn three hundred mill ions this year', imsiur to pay the high pricoH of that year limn the low prices of this year. It is entirely safe to say that families which wero opulent Ihvn, familira which were i-ulnlorlulilu, are now reduced to tho utmost wane, and, in terror and shame, lead Wretched lives in thwir endeavor to conceal their poverty-stricken condition.- '- ' In I'rjfiS the prlcu of Corn was 8lji0 sjr biinliul; the price of w heat was 82 air bushel. In 173 tho price of corn was' scvcirfy-flve ccnM a bushel ; the price1 of wheat $1.25 a bushel. The bond Temaimt-the same." Tho private debt rcninins the narhe: " Hut it re quires now eighty bushels of wheat to pay a bond or note of 1100, while ft required only forty bushels to pay it in 18U5. Does a bnshel of wheat require lens labor, less' plowing, less land to raise it now? Labor is cheapened; capital in mado- moro valuable, and hence the distress. ' Now, why is tliis? What prompts a policy which thus results? Tore turn immediately to specio payment ? Is the' end " 1 . 11 ' ' WORTH Till SACRiriClf ' " A re Imniediatespecie payments worthy this suffering? this ruin? this stagna tion of business? this depression, of prices? thin oppression of labor? Are they worthy tho tears of hungry chil dren? the groann of despairing parents? the agony of bankrupts? tho losses of debtors? Specie payments I . , Are they the chief end of mail? the perfection of society 7 the ultimate point for which all life is to be sacrificed, and the whole generation to bo ruined ? fioixl they are. ' Desired I huve said (hey arc hut they can he too dearly bought. Tho country was brought not by design, but by'thc logic of this legisla tion to tho condition of lHlili, and true statcMmaiishipconsiHtcd then, a always, not in applying speculative theory and rigid rule, hut ill using , expedients. Tho publict debt of the Country was to he paid. The private indebtedness was to be provided for. The immense ae nnisitfon to tho self-dependent popula tion w as to bo employed. r' Jn order to effect those ends, energy needed to be stimulated .' IndnatiT-'iuvrt"' n twi re warded; production should have been encouraged, to 'the' hist, dcgreo' and markets flir the sale of tho products should .have, been kept active in order io stimulate inner prooneunns ami other markets. Clearly thil could not have been accomplished by contraction. The wiso 'plan, efficient, juRt and honent was (o keep tho volume of the currency as it stood during the war. Industry,. energy and enterprise , .WOULD NOT UAVt 11KEN CBAMl'KD ; businc. would have continued active aisl proliu. wistld have boon realised ; tlio taxes would have been paid, and debts would have houn discharged at the sanio rate at w hich tlioy wereeou tracved., This would have boeu just to tho laborer, just to tho merchant, just to tlio public, creditor, and, above nil, just to the; (lublur. . in the uieauumc, th public iloht, discharged a rapidly aa it matured, .would, by this time, havti irrentlv diiuihishwd: tho Private indchtiilucsH would have been lurgely paid off, and the ton yoam ol active and productive iarlu, try would have so uiereased our rapitul, ts iuvivascd our oxports, that tlw uurrency mould have approached the value of gold, and thus siwoie iiHyiiicnts would iu duo, time I havo been naturally, easily and safely rcaulivd. At all eveiila, with our debt disciiargod, wo ciuiki Jiave butter bonvu tlio shock, and this misery would havo boon avoided,, : i , l a1- Learning uotliing by this exMriouoe, tho licpulilicau part' propose to cou tiuuo tho proaenl contrwtioo, to pay apecio for greenbacks and to pay tho speiriowKli gold-bearing interest riotids, to cancel the greenbacks, to repeal tho legal tenderclatisfv and to make Nat ton al banking Iron. ' That is in one tsnl to ' " -' HARASS TUB PBori 1 I to enrich the capitalist,' to ttiin the debtor, to disable the frivatc creditor, to paralyse Industry, and stimulate the profits of money leuding and stock job bing. . Ami, an if in solemn mockery of every prolwwiou as to tno necessity oi . r.' 1 1. i.. ..... specie pay tncuis, vuiuinig m w vv iia-c ou a basis of bonds, ami, witliout the quality of legal tender notes. Thy oeeuo is vicious in every taunt. ,V Iwia n iff flittv iiurr currency H it If tniil fi-HiiT iri'Cii'xK'is the chrniH.it and bi'A M"i nirreiu y in tlw mirM. , M it UK (40 uuiriirilou H4 (- I (I. re. IO' (info . tv lie nenwsaru. When, tho iiiiliistry and wealth of the country ahalL he snfll- ciciidy ilovclopod they will, be at par with, gold, and .then specio iaymcnis will . Co rusiiiiiel. ',Iu tLo meuntiiue trade kill flourish ; work will bo abun dant ; debts, private and public, will be paid ; Interest will .bo saved, ana. Ut great want of Shi new fxanlra--ar- liaps ot every cittTl1r'-WW'nit(rrCt-- ill hosuntilled. AtS'iitnttlatvtl curiitiil, 1 know,' fnwlucc kvw' interest. '80 ibs'sariundast (Sirrencv. Atall events. shundrMit currency, iwtivelv employe.!, is lha iS'ttl jstrent ot acciimuisteo caji- ital. '"! ' ttN.' mojBlrVAN'S OPlSTrOW r hdNn-riol.n- ..illt'irii I 'i "t '"'.: 1 Hut tho Itepublican party wonld have hone of this poller. Reduce the currency, fitful the deTd, 'reduce the Interest', has been Jhelr nstant etTVtrt. The five-twenty bunds. wero ojiglnally pajnJiw 111 grooiibooatn, hc argnnient is. U0 pkiiufor repelilion.. ,JIr..Pher miiu ih.'4iotiuual ull.wiio thmight other- wise as repudintors, Un thv .nth ot Jlarch,i IHlifl, he wrote this klior to tlioJlop.Maiiii,yrilroc,klyiiv, . iIInitiu States Sr.NAta C'hahru, 1 , a I .Washing to B March 21), lw: w. -i ( I AMr Mr."' 1 waa piemncd U Nooito ymrr letter. Uf psraOinri iptiurawAii aiAl the same aa yours, hut like you 1 o not interriV to be) illflirojnrsjil by tbem. kl v fwehatnicAiim of Lite law it lha ro anVt of tenrnil rxaw&umtioa, and 1 feol ejutta ! na hnrawtial 4Hjetri vradla maftrat tt. if tk ka oxiald W tried Mbro) a aburti I nend: yoa my views as fully stated in a spoexli. l'our idea is that wo proposo to repudiats or vk i ii -i.;i Into a promiso when wo offer to redeem the "principal" in legal tenders. "1 think tbs bondholder violates his promise when he refuses to take the same kind of money ho paid lor tho boiidn, 'If tho case in to he tented by J ay Cooke's advertisements, I am wrong. I huto repudiation, or anything liko it, but we ought not to be deterred njm doing what is right by fear of unde served epithets. If, under Iho law, us it ntandn, tho holders of tho five-twenties can only bo paid in gold, then wo are repndiators if we proixmo to pay olhorwiso. If the bondholder can le gally demand only the kind of money he paid, then he is a rcpmliutor and extortioner to demand money more valuable than ho gives, " "Truly yours, John Siikhnan. ' "To 11 ou. A. Mann, Jr., Brooklyn Heights." . , , t . And, vol, on the lRlh of March, lHnfl, he, with his flennbllean-enllpagua. in both Houses of Congress, ,. PASSED Till LAW . pledging iho faitli of tho Nation that those iHinds sltotild should be paid in coin.'- In my juitjmrnt, a num unjuat, unnrcrMorv, vnjvttiiuMt laic mu nnvr patstd., It m a waitto, wicked tvirrrf- jict of the taj-juiiirt of the country. It ras a Kvimon, prunujiile waste 0 jiuuic money. Without consideration it ad ded largely to the public debt ; witliout consideration, it contracted -to pay whoever should hold it twenty to forty per cent, more than tho luce ot the bond called for. Tho unjust steward reduced the Indebtedness to his Lord. Theso stewards, more unjustly, have iirercasod the indebtedness of their Lord, and, Ibr the same reason that "when I am put out of the stew tuiUliip ill,-, iiiii- rv vi. r mw iu. 11 iiuum-n. ' But, neverthelesH, It in tho law and VTt Ht'ST OBEY IT. "' The terms of that law have now enter ed into the contract and wo mnnt rnnr ply with them. The bonds huve changed hands and the present holders f- . in... 1 1. 1 1 are uiiioceni. j nu isiiion nnvu uvi'ii retuincd on tho faith oi that law and we must sustain our country's plighted faitli. '. W ABHOH HUM pliTiON ; we refuse to break the contract We obey the laWrtis when- we shall attain swer we intend to enloree th law. liy reducing tho currency, by pass ing this law of 18ti!l, by funding the debt, tho Kepttblican party has inado tho wisest and best policy forever im practicable, and the next irtt policy it by tuery mm n to stimulate every productive energy if our country ami our people up to (Ac hiijlicst priifitaMe paint tluit ice may, so far an it y1 powtblr, retrieve the errors nf the past und hopefully rejmir the losses and vfitrigt re have tuMamed. Mr. Shortnan says that it tho. Dem ocrats obtain power they will assume the Confcdrato debt or remunerate tho COnfederatea for their louses in the war. This is the wilful blindness of Iswittcd prejudice, or the vain cry of iinlwile despair...,. , , ,i .,. . .. , i . .. , 'lhcro aro , ' ,., 1 , OTHER Ul'ESTlONS which 1 should like to dlncusa. but 1 huve consumed much timo. aud others will follow me. We hear daily of mur ders and outrages and violence in some of the Southern States, and tho Itopub- licans are aver ready to attribute them ul to hostility to tho negro and tho determination to deprive him of polit ical rights. . 1 uonj know bow much truth thoro may he in the reports. I do know there is groat exaggeration aa to tho cause. It my voice could lie heard In those States, and if I might venture to apeak on this subject, I would say to my fellow citizens there, "Bear and forbear. Treat tho negroes an tho law treats him : treat the white man as the law treats him ; respect the rights of all, enforce the Tights of all; maintain the supremacy of the law ; puiiinh Lawlessness by the law. Private vengeuce is not lawiul punishment. An indiixnant Outburst of wounded sensi bility or of a keen sense of public wrong is pot a la wuh pniusnmcnt. -maintain the law.:. Let it be the shield of the innocent and the terror of tho criminal. Let passion bo governed hy reason. Let tardy jnstico be sweeter than retri butive, wrong-doing. Let social order and exact justice prevail. - Tho excuse will then lie taken away Irom military power, and, iu tho aeU-goveniment of the community, virtue and intelligence will, in the end, surely command 0011-troL-".,i , J, ..-,,!- .,! , COMCM'SHIIt. 1 IVmooratn, arc you ready for the contest ? Tho future licckons you on ward. The seeds ot disintegration arc sown among our adversaries. Corrup tion in office, low view of official duty, jiirring ambitions, third term aspira tions, honest (iitiorenccs ot opinion, have' weakened tho tics which have united them. The cohesive power of Kutilic plunder keejia together the co urt of tba Administration, and hojrrn of preferment attach to it tho hading men of the party. Mitt honest men. who have no aspiration but fir a wise and upright and honorable! iovernntent , are ready to learn them. Let nssliow by our wisduui, by our luiHieration, that itlicy can safely coino to us. When Nasi1con went to Russia, in all tho pomp and pride of a Rticcessfltl conqueror, Kings and Princes crowded kit Court and added their troop, to his anus. boa ho .returned, aud with new levius-dutuudod Jiia frontier at Leipsio aud . Dresden, his allien bad liilleu a ay. Saxony, hud left him ; tho Crown Prince of Sweden was against him : ' Alone, with hemic cour age and resolution, he fought his cam rstign arisjinri Paris. Hut he lost it A year uf exile followed and he renew ed the content. But it was only to reign for a hundred day s and to bury his fortunes at Waterloo. Defeat the ncirWiean party this fall In Ohio, and, it it aiiau again renireraie lonne ngni, it will only be for a hundred days and to fiml Waterloo in 1H70. , ""'A 'TRir'taTHANf TriNk. Saturday morning there eamo over the (ireat Western road, on Its wav est, a truiiE which made tho hair of tho baggago unusiiora stand i-ucht np. ltwaatliir tv-lotir inches long. Ihreo leet wuio. and was made of solid boiler Iron, an eighth of an inch thick. "The handles were of iron, riveted on with groat holts, and the litt -wtrer fastened down with Wi immense Mullock. ' On one end of Uwtnuik viwipa4nted Ui words: She caa stand it ! and on the other. Mora cominir!" .Tho railroad men groaned aloud as they walked around "t liern tvniiK ana vicwen it irom cTery angle, and two omnibus men, who tluMight the ewner was goiug to stop ovug, liVrulu tracks out of tlio depot. . Write H in letters, of gold that the road to 'rtlrlbKcan Victory lies In thor otigh t' rraniatkh.sei Otsv mereial. fU I ' 'f-.l Woulda't aieeiihwitka, Credit Mobil- le attack, some of the Oreorge O. Kvant teal, or tntra salary graha, answer as -well W Wttlwmipon tMH. ' , . .; 1 . I TEBMS $2 per annum in Advance, NEW SERIES-VOL. 15, NO. 38. LITERARY CURIOSITY. A Hungarian exile. Dr. (iulsjr Na- uhegyi, residing at Washington, has just executed a very curious und beau- (II-..1 ..t.w... ,.l'..l.i,v,.-,l,l,p i.,,.t,,l..,l . loiitor nf innilolooon m Mm. Taeh.r. US u relict of Iho late Prenident. The whole '"(. h," there It a duty upon to work wus dono with pen und ink, on a bawo of seventy -five cents a pound, sheet of puiior 5 feet long by 7 hroud. I n,i "l""1 "H n,rly, fo.ur do'l,lr it contains eighteen Kietical nisi -1-1 j ions, in as many different languages, aud a likeness of (loncral Taylor, iu which outlines of the liice and whole is-rsou aro (bnned of written portions of tlio biography and sentiments of the deceased. II in hair is coninscd or tlio words, so disHiscdasat a little distance to appear quite natural: "In the battlo-ficld amidst the sound of cunuon, tlio drums und trumpets, tlio hurrahs ol tho seigu, and tlic sighs of the wound ed, my lis-ks became whitened." . The eyes, via : - "Aly glauco was ever forward to tho Father in Heaven, ml for the Itopublic." ',, . . X ho nose is composed ol the lollow ing wonln: "I breathed the nir o "I breathed tho air of', St. I.oiitn (ilnhe. ono of the most suc lilierty In any other nir I could not exist. ' The mouth is comiiosed from his Inst woriln : "X have always endeavored to do my duly, I am not afraid to lie." The neck: "Not proud, only inbcini; a son of the liepubhe." J ho shoulders: "With plenstiro 1 have borne the great duties with which tho nation has so greatly honored me." 1 lie rest ot the portrait is tilled up 111 a similar manner, and surrounded by likenesses of Wasliinirtoii, Tell, rredcrick Ilurbarossa, Alexander tho Great, Draco, and others. The wholo is signed by tlio President aud mem bers of both House of Congress, and is to be presented ill tho form of a me mento from them to tho widow of (Jen. Taylor. ' . A7.Vff KOFFEE'S UMBRELLA. Among the trophic carried to Eng land from tho recent campaign against tho Ashantecs was King Koflec's gi gantic and gorgeous state umbrella. It is made ol black and crimson velvet, trimmed with broad gold-lace, and was 0110 of the most valued articles iu tho King's treasury. Ho wonld have sac- ritlced a hundred wives to ransom it, and, it is said, felt more humiliated hy its loss than by tho capture mid de struction of his capital. The English comic pajs'rn were mistaken in hcn- ing ndiculo on the nmbrella trophy, though it was, it must Ik conii-ssed, a very tempting subject for the satirist ami tho caricaturists. Thin gorgeous umbrellu is of great Hire, aud naturally utlructs popular curiosity, it has been placed on ex hibition at the South Kensington Mu 1 wibieclcxl rly twenty ii. i..., . jiu ing seum, London, w here il was to tho eager scrutiny ot near thousand visitors In one day. Having been presented to tlio queen as a war trophy, it Is not likely our great show man will be able to secure it for exhi bition in this country, but if he could, it would doubtless draw immensely. TLuneavwIa vrnnM flock to ueo it where ten would visit a noble work of art. it is doubtful whether it is of 'African manufacture, Most probably it was made by souio whito workman who understood tho barbaric lovo ot bril liant colors ; aud King Kofl'ec may yet bo consoled with another of equal splendor and amplitude. The Proposed Anolo-Frknch Fun nel. In a paper on tho Dover-Calais tunnel read before thu London Society of Arts, Mr. William linwes says that a continuous stratum of chalk underlies tho Channel, which is easily accessible for tho purposo of constructing such a tunnel. This bed of chttlk consists. on tho English sido, of 175 feetof while and 205 feet of gray chalk, and on tiie r rench side ot 2i0 1cctol white and 480 of gray chalk, which is quite im pervious to water, and from its plastic nature must nc rrco irom fissures. The lengtli of the tunnel will be twen ty-two miles. By using Brtiuton's tunneling machine, and working from tho Dover and tho Calais side simulta neously, it would require only two years to drive a driftway from sovun to lime leet 111 tiiumcter across tlio channel. Tho action of this machine is twofold. It chips away the material from the face of the chrilk bv an un ceasing ojHMittion, and it collects the debris produced, deositn it 011 a baud, am nnany delivers it into the wugmm which carry it away. Tho most care fill calculations csiimato tho cost of the driftway at 1,000,000. Should tho driftway bo driven successfully one or two miles under tho sea, its enlarge ment to the nizo ol a liillwiiy tunnel !.!.. I.- I :., , f,. - ...:..!. i. 1 :.i nugni irej-iiu niiniMii, uiuuK '"r.ihem. The olive grow us completion across tne ennnnet. 111 ; Oik way tlio entire work may be com plotod 111 five or six years nt a cost of from 8,000,0110 to 1 0,0110,000. PRICES RECEIVED FOR LIT Ell A R Y KOIIK. Probably no goods of any sort are so uncertain in value as literary wares. A work ol genius may bring a lortiiuc to its creator, und it may fail to keep him from starving. One might idler that luck rather than merit decides the siicoessnf an author's adventure. How evcr, at tho present day, the owner tifi an inspired kii and a tolerable degree of shrewdness is more certain of profit iu transmuting his products into cur rent coin than he has lsx'n in any age before. Let us seo how a lew distin guished writers of tho past havo fared in their efliuts to make riches as wull us fume out of their divine gift ol hook nmkinir: Mi ton received from bis publisher J down for "Paradise Lost," 1 .1.- . ... . uno 1 ue iiiuiiuicviii promise n . un in- transient newspapers wero nispatcnea should tho work reach a sale of l,3no from the New York Piwtoffloe, 239,060 copies. Drvdcnwos paid ti,0(IO fnrjtrorn Philadelphia, 195,037 from Bos his translation of Virgil. Po)hj was 1 ton, sl,a 140,942 from Chicago. When occupied tlio greater part of twelve we consider Hint tho great hulk of yearn in translating the Iliad and printed matter is transported to all Odyssey. For the one ho received , pointn by express or as common freight, t-0,000, aud the oilier 114.425 hhsV a i these figures testify eloquently to the mean income considering the time in which ho lived. For his poem, the llniie of Hie Lock, ho received II 10. roldsmit h's Traveler brought him $ 1 05; Tho Deserted Villiagn, toOO; and She Stoops to Conquer, $4,000. Kir Wal ter Scott was paid 15.250 forMunnion, and .10,000 for the tstdy of tlio Lake. Lord Byron gained 821.375 byt hdde Harold, 121,375 tor Don Juan, and 12,025 for Tho Prisoner of ('billon. Campbell received 1100 for Pleasures of Hope ; and and Dr. Johnson receiv ed ISO for the Vanity of Human Wish es, and 102 for lUssclua. 1 - Tho Milwaukee SentinM says: What is wanted in Kansas is more telegraph polos or stronger ones. Tho average polo holds only almtit four horse- thiuvrS comfortably, . ( " 1b the Chicago police court recently two trranken hammers gave their ante1 rowuovtively as Henry Ward Beccher and Theodore Tilton. , SX0KINO KTA T18TIC8. ' ""Wo copy Iho following statement from a flno work entithid, "Smoking und Drinking," by James I'arton : "It is gravely asserted, iu Mcsara. Ilipli-y and Dana's oxcelletit and most fnistworlhy cyclopedia, that the con sumption of ciirnra in Cuba tho uiero cohsttmption uiiiounts to ton cigars Mr dny for every man, woman and child on the island" llosidea this, Cuba exports two billions of cigar a year, which vary 111 price Irom twenty cents each (in gold) to two cents. In the niuntifacluro of Manilla cheroots small item iu tho trade tho labor of seven IhoiiMind men and twelve bun- Ircd women is ubnorbed. Holland, where 'lunch of the tobacco used in smoky (iei uuiny is manufactured, em ploys, It is said, one million palepeoplo 111 tlio biininess. In Bremen t,..-i are tour thousand pallid or yellow iih.nr makers, iu too United -MitU !. weed cl.uiLiih lour hundred tiioi.nand acres of i- ( ileiit land, and employs iirty thotiobu-1 sickly and cadaverous iciL'iir and tol-itcco makers. In Eng- a pound, the government uunvce aoouv six million pounds sterling every year from tobacco. Tho French govern ment get from its monopoly of the to bacco trade uearly two hundred mill ions francs per annum, and Austria, over eighty million fraucs. It is com puted that tho world is now producing 0110 thousand million pounds of Uibacco every yenivat a total cost of five hun dred millions of dollars. THE BUSINESS OF JOUR , N'ALISiC. :,i in commenting upon (he failure of Mr. J. Y. Scaiuinon, of Chicago, as a newspaper fnanuirer. McCullati-h. of tho cessful journalists of the nest, tells a plain 1 111 1 li in the following words: "Tlio business of journalism will con-, tinue to be an inviting field for experi ment to those who have a large amount of money and a largo amount of ego tism. A man who, having edited a uewspaH?r until he was forty, should suddenly announce himself a lawyer, would be regarded as a fool by the legal profession ; and yet, wo often hoar of lawyers of Ibrty nialtingpretr"iong to journalism. There is an idea that tho business of editing requires no ap prenticeship ; that editors come forth from law ofliccs Biid colleges fully armed for tho profession, like Pallas from the tirow of Jove. It is a mis take ; thoro is not in America to-day a single journalist of national reputation who has not devoted mora time and more hard work to his profession than, with equal fitness and application, would havo made him a great lawyer or good doctor. And yet ninety out of every hundred men you meet on the streets will hesitate nnotit carrying n hod or making a pair of shoes, where as there will propubly not bo one in .a i,nnilred who can't accordimr to j, jg ow judgment, edit any newspaper in tbo country bettor than it is edited, no matter in what manner or by whom. TIUnTtY CHURCH, OXFORD. HISTORICAL PHILADELPHIA LANDMARKS. From Frank Lealie't Illnttrated Newrpaper. Thin is one of the oldest landmarks in Philadelphia. A greater part of the present cditico was built in 1711 one hundred and sixty-three years ago but it is well known that there was a church there as early as 1700. Tho ' structure was built of logs, and at first I !t wa" intended to be used as a Quaker nioeting-house. The present building 1 . .7 , ... 1., f . IH UI lines., V llli u rturc onniii, uuiu England, and it is cruciform in shape. Iu 1746 a tine large copy of the Bible, with the Book of Common Prayer bound with it, and a beautiful com munion set, wero presented to tho church by titicen Anno, and they have been iu constant use ever since, and are still in.good condition. The Bev. Edward Y. Buchanan, D. D., the pres ent rector, is a brother of the late Ex President Buchanan. Tho graveyard of this church is full of old-fashioned gravestones bearing quaint inscriptions, and somo of them aro almost illegible. One dated 1708 contains several verses of singular rhyme. The following is an extract: . Hero by tbete liaet it tettify'4 " No Quaker til .be whea tbo etj'tt J . So for wot .be frora Quakaritoi, That aha datlrtd le hate boptiatt. "Sardines in California. A new branch of Industry has been opened in San Francisco. The Hon. Thomas Wand has built a sardine factory at tho end of Treadwcll's wharf, near Long Bridge. - The head of the sar dines aro first cut off, and the fish aro cleaned with tho kuifo, after which they are cleaned hy a stream of water. They aro then salted, packed in per forated cane and put into steam chests on trays. Tlio cooking is done by a volume of dry steam, and occupies about an hour. The next stage of the process is packing them into the regu lar cans in which they are to be tent to market, and I he olive oil is poured in, after which tliry are placed in the steam chests. Here they aro tuorougniy heated, mid a small hole is punched in ,)X tH nl,(iw thc eitc,ni)0 of ,lwtod air. When this in done tho hole is closed by tho soldering iron, and tho sardines are ready for market The fish aro very plentiful, Bounding from Snn Diego to Puget Sound. Mr. Wand has lieen 1 been paying fifty cents a bushel for 11. The olive grows luxuriantly in t'Bi,onii nII(i the sanlino trado wUl oHh a good market lor tlio oil, tne most of which in now imiKirted from Europe. Last year 16,000,000 worth of hiudincs were imported to tho United Stales. Americans as Headers. Oldur and richer nations may sneer at the pov erty of American literature, at the xiv erty in her world of letters, of men of eminent genius and learning who towor head and shoulders above their cotem- poranes ; but that the Americans aro a reading people even their most spito- ful decriers must acknowlodgo. Wit hies in attestation of this fact the fob lowing stntcmcnui : Within a period of thirty dnys there wero sent through tne t-ostntiico, XH,(Hi hookKlrom sew York, ll.:S from Philadelphia, 9,582 from lkmton, and 7,895 from Chicago. In four cities, through tho mail alone, there were sent out to the people 57,- 7I lav,li i ilm nnm nf a month lhiring the same period of timo.319,330 I . . ' ., . , intelligence of tho niasset. , Enolish "Bodies. A spicy writer In the Aldinc, exhibiting some of the differences lictweon the vernacular ot tho Americans and the English, states that thc waist of rrrcwi is by the lat ter denominated a "body." '"' W e were 111 tub startled," alio says, "on receiving our first washing hills, to find that wa Were charged with "low bodies" and "hrme bodies!" Not supposing that there were any such "questionable shapes" in our party, we found they were only high and low-necked undur waisU. AgBin.sherelntcsthatanAmer ichn adv. on a visit to a country house. previously occupied by one of th fam ily, but which had the ancanny repu tation ot being haunted. The- young lady had sitlrduod bar nervousness suf ficiently to lull Into a slight slumber, when there came a gentle tap at the door, and a acpnlchral voice) whisjvoT through tho key hole, "1 wont to tone in and get my tody." . ; .': '2