SThc CmhT r fi fin curat. BELLEPONTE, PA. Thu Lnrgeit, Cheapoit unil Boat Paper PUHLMHID IN (UNTKK COUNTY. Thurlow Weed ou INttl. lIIS INTERESTING REMINISCENCES 0V THE WAV IN WHICH MR. KVARTS 11111 NOT IIECOME A SENATOR FROM NEW VORK. Calling by instructions at the resi dence of Mr. Thurlow Weed just after tho breakfast hour one morning last week, a reporter for the World found the veteran politician sealed at a large open window in the dining room, on tho second floor, overlooking the beau tiful grounds surrounding Ur. l'uxtoii's church on Fifth avenue. A refreshing breeze was blowing in at the windows, and a very lively little mite of a Scotch terrier was playing with Mr. Weed's slippers. The venerable journalist was in the best of spirits, and liis eyes had not lost their peculiar brightness. "Air. Weed, hero is a clipping from the •Saraloyian about which iho World would wo be glad to have your views," said the reporter—while Mr. Weed, lis tening, bent his head forward in his well-known listening attitude. "Its purport is that 'Mr. Hugh Hastings, of the Commercial Advertiser, bus contribu ted a spicy chapter to the political his tory of twenty years ago, telling what hi- knows about the ylection of Ira Har ris as United-States Senator over Win. M, Kvarts.' it also says that Mr. Hast ings alleges that 'Mr, Kvarts was de feated because he was a conservative \\ hig and uiude pto-slavery speeches before the organization of tho Republi can party.'" "Well?" said Mr. Weed, interroga tively. "1 would like to ask whether it is really true that the present Secretary ot State was once a pro-slavery man," said the reporter. "This 'spicy chapter' referred to is a long article published in the Commercial Advertiser over the editor's own initial letter. It is nomi nally a review of an interesting paper recently published in the North Am,-r> can Review entitled 'The l>iary of a I'ub lic Man.' Roth ' i'lie Diary of a i'ublic Man' and Mr. Hasting'" 'spicy chapter' about it have been the subjects of a good deal of talk in political circles, and it is ireely asserted that Mr. Kvarts never made pro-slavery speeches. Now, did he or did he not?" "Mr. Hastings was right in saying that Mr. Kvarts made pro-slavery speeches before the organization of the Republican party. Mr. Kvarla was a Conservative Whig." "When and where did Mr. Kvarts make pro-slavery speeches ?" "I don't remember just now when or where it was, but I think it was at Castle Garden, and it must have been during the Fillmore Presidential campaign. Yes, now that I come to think of it, i am sure that lam right. 1 don't recol leet the year, but that is easily found out. At that time most of the large public meetings were held at Castle Garden." "That disjKjses of that matter. Now, will you lie so good as to let tn® call your attention to some other statements in Mr. Hasting's article. Mr. Hastings says that the author of 'The Diary of a Public Man' must he either an impostor or an ignoramus for as-erting that Wib li*m If. .Seward, President Lincoln's Secretary of State, accepted an invita tion to dinner in Richmond. What do you think of that ?" "When this article of Mr. Hasting's came out my daughter read it to me, so that I am not unfamiliar with it* gen eral features. But that part aliout Mr. Seward leaving Washington at such a time to dine with prominent citizens of Richmond struck me as particularly in teresting. I have been thinking about it a good deal. Ono of Mr. Seward's sons wo* here at breakfast the other day and I was going to mention it to him, hut I forgot all about it. I ran say. however, that no man was more inti mate with Mr. Seward in those times than I was, and if he accepted such on invitation to go to Richmond I am sure 1 never knew of it. I can think of no occasion for hi* visiting Richmond for such a purpose at that time. I wo* in almost constant communication with iiim, and I am inclined to think that the story is not true, although I cannot jiosiiively deny it." "You have seen that the subject dealt with particularly by Mr. Hasting* was that part of a 'Diary of a Public Man' which concerned the inside history of the memorable Senatorial rontest be tween Horace Greeley and William M. Kvarts which took place in this State just before the breaking out of the war. The 'Public Man' says that you slaugh tered Kvarts at -Seward's instigation and that you claimed to have 'invented' Judge Harris, of Albany, who ws* final ly nominated and elected, while Mr. Hasting* say* both statement.* are in correct." Mr. Weed's eye* twinkled brightly, a* if he wo* amused by old recollections. After a little he said : "Mr. Hastings perhaps come* nearest .the truth. Mr. Seward had no hand in slaughtering Mr. Kvart*. Here is just the way the matter stood. Tho na tion wa* threatened with civil war and New York wa* on the eve of an election of a United State* Senator. In those time* I had a good deal to say about Republican nomination*. My own choice would have been Gen. Jamea M. Cook, of Saratoga, but 1 concluded that the peculiar exigencies of the case demand ed that we should tend lo tho United States Senate a man who wa* well known to the people and who would be a [lower in debating vital nationaf ques tion*. I wa* opposed to Mr. Greeley on account of his iiersiatent advocacy of the aliolition of slavery. Mr. Greeley and hi* friend* went into the contest with this principle a* the main issue and 1 thought it wouldn't do, a* it would only tend to make the South more deter mined and more de*iterate. Mr. Kvart* wa* just aa thorough a Republican a* Mr. Greeley waa, but he had ahown by hi* speeches that he didn't believe the anti slavery question worth going to war about. JThe South, which had been divided by political partiea up to that time, became United against the North, anil I wanted tho Nortli to bo tinit<>< 1 A I NO. 1 wax in communication with Mr. Liliroln all the tilno that tho Senatorial contest win going on. He and 1 agreed that tho only hope of dealing succes*- fully with the South and preserving the Union was in a united North. Most of tho Democrat* were opposed to Heees sion, hut if tve had not been very care ful tve might have caused a great many people to declare openly in favor of the South. Ah it was, you see what waa done. Kven Tammany Hall rained a regiment of Union soldiers." "How dit] Mr. Harris finally come to be nominated instead of cither Kvarts or Greeley ?" "Hero tho 'Public Man' is right and Mr. Hastings wrong. It was done at the last moment. The Republican mem bers of tho Legislature had been in cau cus for some liuie. Mr. Greeley's friends were working very hard, and we found it very difficult to advance Mr. Kvart'* interest. Mr. Kvarts, Gov ernor Morgan and myself were in the Kxeculive Chamber, and Mr. Hastings and Mr. Littlejohn, the Speaker of the Assembly, were coming in and going out frequently, keeping us posted as to what was going on. At lost they came in and said it was no use to try to hold out any longer, as if they did Mr. Gree ley would surely be nominated. After a short consultation we agreed to com promise on Mr. Harris. As soon as the *fcrd was given it carried thu caucus, only two members opposing. So, you see, Mr. Kvarts was not slaughtered by Secretary Seward. In fact Secretary s.-wurd was very anxious indeed to have Mr. Kvarts sent to the Senate, and so was Mr. Lincoln. It is hard to imagine what might have been the result if we hud held out for Kvarts until Greeley had got the nomination. It might have resulted in dividing the North and thus making it much mote difficult to save the Union than it was. Hut I have al ways believed that if we had put Gen. Couk forward at the outset we could have got him nominated and elected over Mr. Greeley." "How about that remark credited fo you. that when asked whether you knew Harris personally, just us the votes were piling up for him, you replied, '1 think i I ought to; 1 invented him'?" "1 remember making use of that ex i pro-don some time," said Mr. I, laughing, "hut I don't think it was at that time. 1 might have made it with reference to Mr. Harris, but on some other occasion. Mr. Harris was a mem ber of the firm of Harris A Dutchcr, who were considered to be very smart law yers, of the kind of Dobson .V Fogg in Dickens' work. Luring the anti rent times in Albany 1 wanted to select a gpod smart lawyer for member of As sembly, I mentioned it to two lawyers and they both declined. Then Mr. Harris ofl'errd himself, was accepted and elected. He made very good mem ber and in the following year he came up for State Senator and was elected. He was subsequently elected to tho bench of the Supreme Court. Mr. Hast ings is wrong nlout his being elected to the Court of Appeals, and if he was I ever on that bench it must have l hat was the chief issue in the con ; test over Greeley and Kvarts?" "Why, we thought that Greeley was too prominent as an abolitionist, and that to elect him to the Senate at such a time, would only have a tendency to incite the slaveholders of the South to more desperate measures. Mr. Greeley belonged to the same class of Republi cans as Sumner, Wade and others then in I 'ongress, while Kvarts was ranked with Seward and Republicans of that stamp." Mr. Weed said that the Senatorial contest of ISbO was one of the most ex ' citing he had ever seen. He was afraid that if Horace Greeley was elected to tho United States Senate at such a criti cal period it would hare the effect to irritate ami stir up the South and divide the North st the same time. Mr (free ley's one great aim was to abolish slavery first and take the consequences after wards. Rut the friends of Mr. Kvarts took tho gound that if there was going to he a war the question of slavery would take care of iuclf, as in fact it did. Ilow we are Rooming Ahead. Fr<.m th IWilUroor# The withdrawal of $250,000 of double eagles, or twenty-dollar gold pieces, from the Rank of Kngland, on Wed nesday last, for shipment to the Unit nil States, marks what is probably the beginning of extensive ini|>orinttons of gold. The low rates of sterling ex change have brought the market to the "hipping point, and there seems to tie nothing to prevent payment of our heavy cxportations ol merchandise in gold. In addition to the enormous bal ence of trade already in our favor, our axports continue large without prece dent. The shipments from Baltimore last week were two millions, from New York seven millions, and yet the out flow of grain to supply the Kuropean scarcity, from scant harvesU, is hardly begun. The receipt* of cotton at the shipping ports indicate that the new crop of cotton is coming in and the ex portation* in this staple will greatly swell the balance of trade In our favor. There i* no corresponding increase in our imnortafions, and the difference must, therefore, lie made up in pay ments of gold. It is reported that the Rank of Kngland has large accumu lations of American double eagles in its bullion reserves, and these will prob ably lie the first to return to this coun ,rJr - A uorxi.Bss person is one who deserts himself. Whrn the moon get* full it keeps late hours. Tn* oldest verse in existence—the Uni- verse. lonorancb hoe no light; error follows a false one. lis wno blackens others does not whiten himself. Thirb is no grief like the grief which does not speek. lIH mining. Jlrimping! S,i the (leriimn |ie,ipln Whisper when tlicy hear the bell, Telling from some gray old steeple Heath's familiar tula to tell ; When they hear the organ"dirg ft " Swelling out from ehn|>el *t of the | cavalry, and ,had retired to hi* tent to wait the issue* of the clay. The stream ■ of fugitives puring in told too surely , what the issue had been. He sprang ! ujwin his horse and road off in dispair. Ill* legion* were rushing back in cunfu sion. t'n-inr, swift always at the right moment, gave the enemy no leiaure to reform, and fell at once upon the camp. It woa noon and the morning hod l-een sultry, but the heat and weariness were : forgotten in the enthusiasm of a triumph which all then lielieved must conclude (he war. A few companies of Thra cians, who had l>een left on guard, made a brief resistance, but tbey were soon ! borne down. The beaten army, which a few hour* before were *h*ring, in 'imagination, the lands and office* of their conquerors, tVd out through the opposite gate*, throwing awny their arms, flinging down their standards, and racing, officers and men, for the rocky hill* which at a mile's distance, prom ised them shelter. 'F he cainp Hself was a singular picture. House* of turf had been built for the luxurious patricians, with ivy trained over the entrance to shade their delicate (ace* from the summer sun; couches had been laid out for them to rej>o*e on after their expected victory ; tables were spread with plate and wine* and the daintiest preparations of Roman cookery. Ciesar commented on t)*> scene with mournful irony. "And these men," he said, "accused my patient, suffering army, which had not even common necessities, of dissoluteness and profligacy 1" Two hundred of Causer's men had fallen. The officers had suf fered most. The gallant Crostinus, who had nobly fulfilled hi* promise, had been killed, among many others, in opening away for his comrade*. The I'nmpeians after the first shock, had been cut down unresisting. Ffteen thousand of them lay scattered dead about the ground. There were few wounded in theae battle*. The short sword of the Roman* seldom left iu work unfinished. Cot. McCi.ras. of the Philadelphia 7Wj, ho.* been seeking for information of Joe. .Smith, in Susquehanna county, I a., where the father of Mormonism planned and first preached the new religion. Smith we* a lumberman, but was too lasy to work steadily. He pre ferred to get money a* a "peeper," or man who pretended to possess the gift of telling where minerals and water could be found. He had a green stone that was regarded hy the superstitious people oa a wonderful talisman, and credence was generally given to his storiea of supernaturalism. Deep pita still mark a spot where, under his di rection, a man spent thousand* of dol lars digging for mythical treasures. Smith married a girl against her father's wishea, and went away to become a farmer, but was too shift lees, and oon returned to be supported by his father in-law. Hi* Mormon scheme waa laid there, and the Book of Mormon written, but hardly any converts were made in the region where he wae well known. The New t oxide## of Liberty. ►'ruin lII* Wuslilintuli I'int. Ihe silver dollar ho* suddenly uo quired a now interest. It I,as a value that enn no longer he measured hy it* mere buying rapacity. It has a history an well, the truth of which ha# hern ex cavated |,y a reportorial Hchliemnnii on the Philadelphia Itironl, after eighteen months ol persistent hard work. When the new dollar came out it was immediately noticed that something was tlio matter with tlio eagle. Its broad and sweeping wing was not so broad and sweeping us usual, and it had somehow missed it# customary attitude. But the reverse side of the coin fully made up for all ornithological short coinings. The liguro there engraved wit* not the Hoddes# of Liberty. Thero was a public sense of relief. First and last, we have had a good deal of the Hod (less of Liberty, and as she i* not a creature of infinite variety, we were ready for a change. The now woman who looked across our standard silver dollar, was of the ox eyed, idi-al sort, with a generous mouth and chin, whose firm, sweet curve* quite cast into the shade the achievements of the Hoddes* of Liberty in that locality. The coin of the original design, when one come* to look at it, i# rather a slipshod affair, which seems to he beating a retreat from tlio rest of the face. In the new face, the liberty cup is pushed back from the brow, and' her hair, guiltless j of crimping pins, escape* in gn at, lux j uriant wave* ; whereas the (Joddei* of Liberty b is'drxwn her cap down *o low | over her laultle-s p:utile that only the . faintest suspicion of idiot fringe is vii -j hie. Iler hair looks like scroll-work, and i* heavy beside the exquisite draw i ing of the latter coin. But the interest !of the design does not lie so much in the artistic workmanship, as in the fact that it i* the portrait of •• red liv wo j man, with a loeal habitation and a i given name. She livi-s in Philadelphia Her name i- Mi-* Anna Williams, and ! -he was induced I y Mr. I. ,kins, the nr ti-t, to pose for Mr. Morgan, the • X] < rt designer and engraver, who w, im- I ort d to thi country by the Treasury ja< partment to do thi- work. He came t.Vir in 1*76, find immediate!)- began to .bunt up ad- ign. Hi* artistic instincts ! rc-oiied from a mere reproduction of j the monotonous Hrc-k profile With | which we are so familiar. He wonted hi* work to l>e American. Art, of , course, speak* the univei-.,1 bnig . . but he was dctcrmin- d that hi* design should talk in dialect. Toiling to pro duce something that should startle the nation, he went on a still hunt through the school* of design* and the galleries ol Philadelphia for a typical American ; face. The trail of the antique was over them all. Not one of those plaster women would answer, neither would j the models of the life class. He made ideal head* and threw th<-rn aside in ! despair. In thi* emergency Mia* Wil | liam* conent-e drowned j„ printer's ink. She shrink*, it i said, from the pub l licity which ha* befallen her. There is no special reason why she should shrink. It wa* not n matter of j-rson a! vanity, but simply a praisewo thy willingness to help an arlit in hi* work hy lending her delicate 'ireek profile to the service of her country. She will not-bc recognized %nd annoyed by the i attention of young men who buy photo graph* of celebrities, because Mr. Mor gan has taken certain artistic liberties which change the expression somewhat. And then dres is a great transformer, and Mis* William* probably does not go down on Chestnut street with a fold ed liberty est, on her head, and typical fruits ami flowers in ber hair. The Hrecian brow and lip* are Mis# Wil liams', and with these her admirers may fall in love. Beyond that they must draw the dead line. For there i* a mortgage on the chin. It is in fact the chin ol Mr. Morgan's wife, and in jus tire be ought to account for thi# break j in the utter Americanism of the face fhe young lady whose features have thus Ixwrnr a subject of public inter est, is a teacher in a refoim school, is winning and wise, and it is eminently fit that this graven image on the dollar of the people should bo a daughter of the people. And as the silver dollar tell* no tale# in regard to complexion, wo will add that this American cousin of the Hoddes* of Liberty is a blonde of the purest typo. Nun Spot*. from lA* PftitlWt A large group of sun spots ha* re cently appeared upon the *olar dik. It i* derril>ed a* long and very deep, with uiiihta anil penumbra dark and well defined. These *|mt* are prohahly j the forerunner of a change in the nolar condition tola* anticipated shout these day*. The sun ha* been quiescent for year* ; (ew spot* have vsrieif the monot ony of hi* surface, and lew flaming (ire* have hurst beyond the bounds of his photosphere. He has been passing through the minimum ej>och of *uu spots, and is now approaching the maxi mum of the same phase. No astrono mer pretend# to explain the exact na ture and mission of sun spots, hut the most reliable observers agree that they appear in the greatest magnitude and abundance after an interval of about eleven yeiws. at a period coincident with the perihelion of the planet Jupi ter, whose near approach to the sun stir# up an intense commotion among the solar fires. A* the perihelion of our brother planet occurs in September of next year, and the three outer planets, hy a very unusual combination of force*, are doing their beat to help on hia ma lignant purpose, it is natural to expect unusual commotion among celestial power* for two or three years to come. Juat auoh a condition of afTairs occurred about two thousand years ago, but the earth safely weathered the gale and has passed unharmed through many an ele mental experience since. Therefore sun spots by the hundreds, tongue* of firo darling in rosy protuberances, bril liant auroras flashing in response to solar electricity, and every form of warring elements which can agitate the terre* trial atmosphere are naturally to be ex pected about these times. A wise phil osophy will bear up under atortn* oa well aa rejoice in sunshine, and a firm faith will trust in the power that holds tbeaolarsystemin harmonious equipoise. llati'hct. TIIK MAN Will# IN VfcNTfcJ' IT ASI# r.T IT AOOIJCG. Jmtmm l'rt"ti In fli *IUIll . but siiey acre such a. gave pleasure to the simple childhood of j a>t generation*, hhe comic paragraphia! has now appear e 1 m the world, and this story, on< iw edifying, has fallen him as awl easy prey. It wa- tie- pc idler Wl nevertheless, who created the tradition al Washington, "the sunbeam in coun | oil, and the storm in war;" Washing ton. the gre.test of the great, in whose overj-owering presence no mortal oould stand unabashed ; Washington, wl oe a; hlirne serenity nothing was ever kno rn to distnrb, one of those majestic •>omniander w|,o in no stress of circum stance* could ever use "a big, big I!" ! The lying little book had the more j weight with rustic readers of the earlier time from a fiction which the author i lioldly placed upon his title pagp. where he styles himself, "M. 1.. Weems, form | erly itector of Mount Vernon I'arish." It may be that the term rector was not very accurately defined in old Virginia, but at a later dav, as remarked above, the ltishop of Virginia regarded this claim to the rectorship as something ridiculous. "His name," adds ltishop M.-ade, "never apjears on the journals •if any of our conventions." If Weems ver officiated at Mount Vernon. it must have lieen because there was no other clergyman to perform the duty, ♦ The Diocese of IVnn-jHunla. The proceeding* of the ninety-fifth convention of the Protestant I'.piscopal • 'hurch of Pennsylvania have just been issued and contain some interesting , statistics. They show that the number of clergy is 201, priests I*7. and deacons 13. There are 124 parishes, containing 113 churches, at which the average at tendance on Sundays was 11,931 and 8.681. The Sunday-schools contain 26,- \ 231 scholars taught hy 2.683 teachers. In the miscellaneous societies, guilds, etc., there are 5.200 meml-era and ITH oflkors. The receipt* from pew rents amounted to $313,620.78 • church col lections $139,411 .98, and from Sunday -1 school collections $6,824.34. The aver age value of the parish properties is $6,- ■*•60,000, upon which there are mortgages amounting to $206,005. The aggregate j salary of the clergy is placed at $lBl,- 065. The current expenses, including rectors' salaries, were $328,396.43 ; sup |>ort of Sunday achool*. $14,556.76 ; sup port of the poor. $24.223 64; foreign missions,sl4,i'.l7.9s; Kpiscopal Hospital, $14,330.89; church buildings, $.*>1,162.46. The Florida Ship ( anal Scheme. Lloyd Aspinwall has been in Wash i ington in consultation with Senator I .lones, of Florida, in regard to the con struction of a canal to connect tbcUulf of Mexico with the Atlantic. Mr. As pinwall showed that he has money enough subscribed to construct the ca nal, and only asks a special charter from Florida. Senator Jones it going in a few day* to Florida to urge a special session of the Legislature to grant a charter. He ia convinced that a com pany ia ready to begin work and haa money to complete it. The estimate is that it will take $20,000,000 and three years' time to complete the canal. There ia no doubt now that the Florida legislature will be convened within aixty day* to grant a charter, and that work will be liegun by the first of Be oe tuber. Fame* Pktib of Oldenburg is at the head of the Imperial Russian college* for fjirl* afid ia very diligent in per forming his dutiea. He lately decided to see for himaelf whether there were any grounds for the numerous com plaints of the poor food furniahed at the Hmollng Convent, where $OO girl* are educated. Proceeding to the institu lion junt before the u*u*l dinner hour, ho avoided Uie main entrance and walk* ed straight towards the kitchen. At the door he met two soldiers oarrying a huge Hte-arning cauldron. "Halt!"' le called out, "put that kettle down." The sddicre, of course, obeyed. "firing mo a HjK.on," added the I'rince. The spoon wax at once produced, hut one of the soldiers ventured to begin a stammer i*• K remonstrance. "Hold your tongue," ci led the I'rince j take ell' the lid. I insist on lasting it." No further objec tion wan rained, and hix Highness took a largo spoonful. "You call this roup," be exclaimed ! "why, it is dirty water!" "It is, your Highness," replied the sol dier; "we have just been cleaning out the laundry." Tilr. |>en, says the Ho* ton Cwrier, may be mightier than the sword, but it does not rattle around the heels of a militia Colonel so vigorously or trip him so gracefully as the sword does. JURY AKD TRIAL LUST. —The follow ing is a complete list of the Crarid and Traverse Jurors and Trial List for Au gust Court, commencing Monday, August 26, 1H79: OKA SO J I holt-. W. W. Lm,li, Harris ( Jiftstlan I'oller •' A llufit' . Half M R, U< H illUii. Hh'ci, IV rjc. It >l>rrt WJVtrr j..1.0 ka . I'ufts .i. \ |. FC ART/ V% A*LK• R J • (*h (illllUf'il, Potior. Joliti Pot or PU*-|r f|< vsf I>. bf/iLf. I- *>• ll'*. H llllJMii Tut''. Ik-Li r •I II Rli"tl#\ Ih lli-fofllk, h *mu-l Pit < limt, BnKir.>. llllAtn Ihiwaoii. Haling. lU'tijuruifi Iti'Mi, Mart 'M I'-Uia l.ili. 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