Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, November 02, 1876, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    - .•• . .. • : _
' ' - '- - ' 4 fxtivi-4- : ::4::::•::: , :,•••.:1:....7 - •..-.;',. ~ , , . .f 4..,4 ; 4;;,1.46, 4- :. , ; . ;,• ii.L.i::,.:if,;iiiti ,;.i ., :2...;iz.;: . i:.: , .•::. , -.•._ ,- :'!•_ i4.,6;.,.?:•:.:.:..gii.;,.:.i;,:v;:..i;-f.':::•..t..at-.4:::'f•, - ,': ii_c - : - :Vai',;t',-:• - ..',ir•, , •;:;:.':'. 4;,t:: . .,;;;;.:_;:.:;;,,::.4i,.•;:.=,:,,-Jz , . i, - :..i,:.i;;, , ai; . :i:- - A , :•;r':‘c - L4t4iLtif,',u4kAi-U4t..4At - ,AN-_::. - %-•.:
.
-- ; :-.7- 4 -i t ., ...i. 7 ; .,- •: 7-4- % , ,tAT? , :• -2 .: - . , ;•i" ,-. 5. , • * ;1 5! .t.'i,'0 , - - '4 1 : 4 .7 - V'-'4 1 ;• : : - . , ; . -N - eigir•Alg 4t 1.7=' ,11- Vi7 - *1,•••A - .; - . , ._=:..-t -. ; 7 ::.• , :sf4?w , , - ,! , •mi4-.-.•, ,, A'A: - ;•k - :.:;. - -2 ,- ..;.!; -4 !,A 7 , 5 3.ii. , A4144 ., ,17-WINi.g ., A - 4.i•45';:' , +,.k."- --, -. - . - 7•.••••Pp•: , .i:•:=T:._-.,;--; - :'..47.•: , ?•-:•.•2:.- , i'-'.•••:• , " - •*-..--...::..:--.7-'•J=•-..
,'-_ -,- ;: - 1 -1 _ '•'-'" ''' ''' .73, .. , 7 ,, - :: , ::: , "."- - g -. '-'.--•••-:•; - • . :' ,. .-*s - 4:::i, - . - :: - ..-11 , ,,s!,,, , i'z';.•: . ,:•-•:.. -. • . . ,, '_•--- ::' , 't . :f. , •;.;1.:,q -7 ,;f . .4 , 47,, , , , .:',,;, , r . .: - i - ,. - 3, , i1--,; - , - ; • ' - .-: - . ,- 41-- ii:re . ...;as - 4;:t - rf.,-iil-.'',.•f:( , --.'e=.;li n .. , ..--'*., - ..N:i...,2„,• , . , 3,.:',...,q , A:::e,. , 7.: , - - •, -, -• ~. '-- .. - -- ,,•-. . .;;,-:,_- ' 44,NL':-.t. - 1 : - : :::4. - : i.:- , 7 . : -`57,•,•',.!•,T,.0 -- -,...,-.-.:,-;,.;; - 2 - •!,;. - •:, , •:.:;:;:.1. '"." -- •.: - .,i,::::.';_:i::,. - ..,:'...'-',-, - -_ , _'-'_ - :;_ -, ,.':•.. ,- .: , ;.
-' . --- -..i.:T -, ...- - ::-.4. , .._ , T.- -- -..:, -,:-.•;;,::;:,-; - - 1 - •, , ,:,! , _- - -,:: . • , :: , :. ; - .1 , -.: - .1:._-_, , , , : , —...___,.." ~), , •_..._--,-,::, - , -.f.-._,-• ,:- .. ••• --.••,,•_%] ; - . : -... - -J! , : - .'. ; • . --1 -, -J.• ! - - !-, , J ' - '''' ' • .1.-: -' ..< • .=, .
..•,, J . : . ,
.-'',., ,
...J . :: -. '; , . •---; ! -, : -;• .T.,: . - . ,, , F J ; - . J. -.:::::,,,.....:,:. ::?:;:._
..7".. •-•-• ...\\ ' . •:- ,, ,• • •• • :,4--;, , ' , - , .: ''... - JJ:, A, ; • .;':. , •,;; • ', ! ;',1,f;--; , ' ..t , ':, I ti 4',...;,,.;,!:,4,1; , ',;:::,:.,•' : ,!d:
,f,. , ,,• -.. • .17 ~...,•,..,,,,,'...:-.),-:. . ',ii J 7. ! • .-', • '; :•.,•!-';•" '- :;:-..-' ' 7 '':;!7 : -!- '- 1 • 1 i •- !.-,, :' ; ' ~: :J ~: • •:::•- .',..•-:. -::•:', ':-. .!!
• .'•• ; , - . . . _ .
. . ) .. ~..
-.', 1 - ' ',-;•;• ;V- . *-
- '.•:,..'.; : . '-'. -7— "\ \ —'. ..‘ ... 0) 1 :f.. : ! ..• I- ' I 1 1 '
r ' N ~ - 1 1 , !• ) - '- V i '' '' \' \ ''N ,j .: --..-',,
-.-' .-''• -.
- - -!' i: . ; --.•.. •! • -.- ; I .\
-, . . I
4 ! 1. . • ': i !
,:::: L' '' .r
; i ,:- !3 .
~. -,,. i ~ :., , :7 1 _ . 1. • 1:
: 1 ,: :. • '•• • ....)
,) I:: 15',... , ::', 1 , 1 :' ;
!,..
. ~ .
1 Ili . L, •, • : _ ,_'.* „' ''-') --'
I , ' 1
._:: :( '' l( ... .: j L I ''
1 1 . •1 ( . 2.
.. I -•-.! - ' :- ''' ..
'.
• '---
- .
.. 1.. , ; .: . ' , - -
- . ---------..,..
_ - ' l / 4 . 1•' . . .• —\. I
--------
, - .
!„............. ~.
•. 1 --• ' .-:
Li .
11. 1 : L 1 2 .1- ':'' :: • L
.. 1'
.',. + I . . •
-
•
. :... ' .' • - • ..; • . 11
• - . . . _ , . - .. -.
. _
- ,
. .
'.;
.
ES*As r
ppaps ~erdiNigawes atessank So*rip.:
SPECIAL OTlCEEloserts4 - Strts:l4 arts
per this, for the ant: Wirral*, and. sin Clans
.per line for subsequent Insertions.
LOCAL NOTICES, same style as readiag WM-
Iter, TwaWIT CUTS A Liam •
ADVERTIBEEENTE WM be tainted Ilieeerdhsg'
to the renewing table o: rates: -
Time 1 lw 14w 1 2m 1 am lsm I lyr.
LEM
41.50 4.001 5.00 1 6.001 10.00 - 1 14 1 / 4 0p
2W 1 - t:63 - llf — iJiiiii.bo - TzWo 1 so.oo
4 li:title - 1.. - , 14) 25.00
RTici -
,
M column.. 1 5.00 .
00 Marl a I MOO 142.011 .
column.. i 10.00 I nl,OO 120.001 40..00145.001 75.00
1 column... t 20.00 / 50.00 40.00 30.00 I 100. j Igo_
ADMINISTRATOR'S and Executor's Notices,
2.00; Attditcrranotices, L. 50 ; Business Cards, five
Item, (per year) 0.00, additional lines..l.oo each.
YEARLY Advertisements are entitled to guar
' tarty changes.. TRANSlENT' a dvertisementsa must be laid for
•N ADVANCE.
,ALL Resolutions of Associations, Ceinffillnies
ice, of limited or individual Interest, and notices
of Marriages and! Deaths. exceeding live linos, are
charged TEN CENTS PER LINE. -
JOB PRINTING, of every kind, In plain and
fancy cokes, done with neatness and dispatch.
Hai dbilis, Blatxs, Cards, Pamphlets. Blllheads.
Statements kc., of everyiyariety and style, printed
at the shortest notice. ;Van REPORT= office Is
wet: supplied with power presses. a good assort
ment of new type. and everything in the Printing
line can be executed in the most artistic mamier
and at the lowest rates,
TERMS INVARIABLY CASH.
Profecdczug lzut Dulness Card:.
JAMES WOOD,
T-1 _
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
_
TOWANDA,
Inch 9-76
QMITH & MONTANYE, ATTOR
k !CATS AT LAW.-01111ce, corner of Main and
Pine St., opposite Dr.: Porter's Drug Store.
JOIIN F. SANDERSON,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
OFFlCE.—leans Batldlne Vrrerrowell's Store
Rich 9-76 TOW/01DA. PA.
D. SMITH, DENTIST,
-2—F Towanda. Pa.
mr. - ce on Park street, north side Public Square,
I next :4 Elwell House. Dateits4n
& Wm.ILITTLE,*
Ky.
AT TOR:CELT-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA
Office In Patton' s Mock, cor..lialn and Bridge-St.<
_" Towanda, Pa, April 19.1 k 6
OW STREETER.
LAW.OFFICE,
.L
angllo
OVERTON & MERCUR,
AT . TOILNETS AT LAW,
• TOWANDA PA.
•
Office oTer Mentanyes Store. C Cmay67s
D'A. OVERTSN. RODNEY A. MERCER
WM. MAXWELL,
A TTORNE .1"-ArrLAW.
OFFICE °TEE DATTONi STORE, !TOWANDA, PA
April 12, 1876. 1
•
PATRICK & FOYLE,
ATTOR.VEIS-AT-LAW.
Towanda, Pa.
nyl7-73,
Vince, In Metcur•s Block,
E. C. GRIDLEY.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
TOWANDA, PA
Aprll,l, 1.873
G . F. MASON.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
TOWANDA PA.
Office first door south of C. B. Psteh Esp_ sec.
and foor. ', Nov. 18„ 75..
•
L. HILLIS,'
ATTORNEY-AT-L A W,
TOWANDA, PA.
OffiC9 with Smith Ik Monfanye. [novll-75
GEORGE D. STROUD.
ATTORNEY-AT-i.Asr,
Office on Matu-st, two doors ncrth of Ward Ifotte,
TOWANDA, PA
Late of PLHatteiptila.
ANDREW -WILT,
191
ATTORSEF AND COUNSELOR-AT-LAW,
Ofted over C. ' o.s Book" Store, two doors north of
s sevens .% Long Towanda. Pa. May be consulted
n German. Aprtt 12, 76.1
31CPIIERSOM. it KINNEY, •
A TTORNErS-AT-LA sr,
TOWANDA, PA.
.01lice In Tracy k Nobiels Block
Ton - anda. Pa.. Jan. 10.
11. TIIOMPSON, ATTORNEY
•AT LAW, WI - ALL:SING. PA. Will attend
to ail bu , ines% entrusted to his care In.„llradford,
Fnllicau anti Wyoming Counties. Office with EN.
l l nr:e r. [novll.-74.
. _
IA
ELSBREE,.
4.TTORNEr-AT-LAW.
75. TnWANDA, PA
6 - 1 L. LAMB,
ATT4 IRN ET-AT-LAW,
Conections pro:nptly attewld to
.OVERTON & ELSBREL' . , TTOR.-
sievs AT LAW, TOWANDA, Ps. flaring en
tered Into co-partnership. offer their professional
Bervlces to the public. spreial attention given to
tnisin .SS in the Oliitan's nod Registers Courts.
E. 1 1 ‘'E.RTON, J it. 4^ (aprl t-70) S. C. F.L.SWItEL
'.A.TTCRNEYS AT,LAW,
TOti'ANDA. PA.
office tD W.offs Biotc, first door south of the First
hank, up-stairs.
H.J. 31.3 CL. .'[.:3115-731) - 1
JOHN%tMIX
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
AND
U. S. (7031 MISSIONER.
TowAxDA, PA
°Mee—Norio Side Public Square.
DATIES 'CAR-NOCHAN,
, ATIOUNLYS AT LAW..
MBIVCUR BLOCK
TOWA NDA, PA
Dee=44,
TTPEET ; A TTPRNEY-AT-LAW.
0 Is prepare:l to practice alt branches of his
profession. • -,-.
um' ce,' Mtn(' VI: BLOC IC, (entrance' on south .
Side) TowANn.s..PA. I (jan6-76.
'G EORGE W. BRINK; Justic6.4
the P•ace and Conveyancer. Also Insurance
fi.; , ,,..t. I,,ltaysvilie, Pa.
Mardi 7344"
R. S. M. WOODBURN, Physi
j„ and Snrget.n. ()Mei. over 0. A. Black's
Coocfi: it.,re.
Toualida, 3lay 1, 157:13, - ..
- " om its, JOHNSON &NEWTON.
1 1 PhyAdars :and Snrg.son_c. 0111oe over Dr.
Porter .1: Druz Store, Towanda. Pa.
T. B. .1011NSON, 31. D. D. N. NEWTON, 31. D.
janl-77.dr.
Me On . a L nd . aftPr Sep S t. ° ^ N l av E be NT l'c i i S n T d - in the
eleg4Lt new rooms on 2nd floor or Dr. Pratt's new
oflb-e on State Street. business solicited.
Sept. 3-74 tr.
AIT 8. - KELLY,'DEN . TIST.-011ice
4 , over M. E. Ro , ..•nfield's, Towanda. Pa.
Teech ins,:rted on Gold, Silver, Rubber, and
nrunic.in to 'e. Teeth extracted without yain.
Oct. 34-72.
Tr . 0. M. STANLY, DENTIST,.
Having removed hls Dental ollieeintOtracv
it . o:r's new block. over Kent SE Watrons• slum,
noi, prepati,l to do all kinds• of dental work.
He has at m, put In a new gas aparutus.
MEE
114 4};:kLPATT Q N, Agents for
CoNNECTICUT MUTVAL T,IFE INST:ItiNcE
CoMPANY .
Office No. 3 lir - Mit:l & Patton's Block, Bridge Sts.
-
March 24-74.
S. Iti!rs i sELL's
G e
GENERAL '
INSVRJANCE AGENCY,
Nay"-kOtt. TOWANDA, PA.
1864.. 187 Ci.
T OWANDA - INSURANCE AGENCY.
Mgt.+ Street, opiweeite the Coetrt House
NQBLE tt VINCENT,';,
MANAGERS.
. .
M • i a O l
k O i
d p s
1 0 .1 f 1 w B orr In CK IA S s
1101i.,4E-SIIOEING A SPECIALTY.
DisezSett feet treated. Manufactures the cele
orated
CALIFORNIA PICK
Shop on Plank I: ad, near ohl Agr4rult. Works
Towanda, Pa., dan. '
INBIJRANCE AGENCY.
The following
RELIABLE AND FIRE TRIED
, Companies represented :
LANCSHIRE.
' PHIENIN,
ROME,
MERCHANTS.
•
'March 0. A. BLAME.
F REDERICIC TAFT & CO.,
GENERAL PRODUCE ('OMMISSION
MERCHANTS.
NO. 9, Sth - WATER STREET ;
PHIL ADELPIIAL
• lILFERENCLR:
JrIIGE Ta FY. Secretary of 'War.
HENRY SANFORD. Esq.
• •
Sept. Adatcs Express Co.. Now York.
u
JEREMIAH WALKER, Esq.. Philadelphia..T
• 4
HON. D. S. BEN,NETT, , ButraIo, New York,
4 1, ,
J O. J. DATES Coro Nrkwaspe t Mira York.
. .3 • -A•490 .`. •. •, ' 7 ""tz , " . • -•-,"•- • . - • 1
• - • ,5
MEI
DRY GOODS
FALL & WINTER SEASON !
TOWANDA, re
EVERY pEPARTMENT
DESIRABLE GOODS!
LOWER PRICES'!
Dec. 9, 75
OFFERED IN THIS SECTION !
PLEASE CALL AND EXAMINE
WILKES-MAMIE, PA.
July '27,16.^
XTEW GOODS!
.7. N. CALIFF,
J i an. 1, 1875
Have just received =their first invoice of
FAL I L & - WINTER GOODS !
HERETOFORE UNEQUALED!
CALL AND EXAMINE OUR STOCK
=
1
NM
8. W. ALVORD, Pub Hither.
VOLUME XXXVIL
Taylor it Co.
T AYLOR do CO!
Are receiving, this week•, a
LARGE AND ATTRACTIVE
Assortment of
For the
El
IN OUR STORE
WILL BE FILLED WITH
And we propose to sell .them at
THAN HAVE YET BEEN
OUR STOCK.
TAYLOR k' CO.
Towanda. Sept. 2.0, 1876
Zeat,,t
NEW GOODS!!
NEW GOODS!!!
KENT & BLISS '
All the new styles in
1. SS GOODS-DRESS GOODS,
Sc, &c., Sc
We offer Bargnins
And be convinced for yourselves.
KENT lc BLISS;
- ~_~ --
~:~~~.~~
~~ l' j
•x~~.
==l
All ball the day of Freedom's birtb t
It's time be echoed round the earth,
Tlil every State abed learn to praise
Our next President, It. B. Hayes.
Oppression's roarer um sine repelled,
And [remota land the foe expelled.
We'll rally forth to victory
And shout for Hayes and Wheeler!
Our Flag floats proudly ear the seu,
Her stripes and %Mrs on every breeze;
Yet gallant .astis of freemen bold,
Shall In their hands her standard hold,
- And shout for Ilayes and Wheeler,.
I
O I insy cur country lons possess
Contentment, peace and happiness.
And may her sons and daughters hence
Be richly blesSed by Providence
We'll vote for Hayes and Wheeler.
Fair Freetionrlet thy ensign ways
Till stein Oppessscon finds a grave;
And let thy eagle proudly soar
Till Tilden's power Is felt no more—
-1
By electing Mayes and Wheeler.
' • The only road to real prosperity
and business revival lies in thorough
individual economy. In a recent
speech lion. EDWARD 11CPFIERSON,
of this State, shows how the Repub
lican party has practiced economy
,
an how the Democracy never did.
lie said :
i !
. .
's
-further charged against the
Reublicans that they have not kept
the Government within its income.
On the tither hand the official figures
of the Treasury show that, in no sin
gle year within the last eleven has
the Government lived beyond its in,
come. Not only have ordinary re
ceipts paid ordinary expenditures,
but in each year a paytnentliaS been
Made upon the pripcipal of the public
debt, and. in. the last eleven years
over six hundred and fifty-six - million
dollars have been paid upon it; and
in the last fiscal year, which ended
June 30, 18;6, $25,000,000 of .'debt
were paid. These are samples of
Republican keeping of the national
household. What . are the facts re-.
specting the national liousekeepint,.
during the last Administration cho
sen by the Democratic party ? if
these carping critics of us will study
themselves,they will find that - during
the fiscal years 1858. l85: i 1860, and
up to March 4, 1861, when Mr. -Bu
chanan left office, the annual expen
ses of the Government were in excess
of its annual income nearly fifty
eight million dollars, , to meet which
bonds and Treasury notes were issued
to the amon'ut, of $68425,900, and so
bad was the credit, of the United
.zitates in that time of- peace that the
!Treasury-notes were placed at a (Us
:Count uquivalent, as to part of them,
'to twelve per cent.- interest, and a
live per cent. bond of the face value
of $lOO brought only $39 10. Con
trast such facts with the other unde
niable fact that" at this moment the
Administration is engaged in calling
in six per cent. bonds, and replacing
them with four and a half per cents.;
that the money-lenders of the world
arc freely offering us their money at
those rates, and that, by the 4th of
March next, $300,000,000 of six per,'
cents. will be retired to the annual
saving, on interest account, of $4,-
500,000. Bad national.housekeeping!
During the last eleven years, not
only has, Vublie debt payment gone
on, and conversion of bonds Of a
higher into a lower rate of interest-,
with a resulting reduction of annual
interest account from $143,781,591, in
1867 to $100443,2;1 in 1876, but.
there has been, concurrently with,
thiS, a repeal of the wantaxes, until
no citizen now pays a direct tax to'
the United States, unless he con
sumes articles of foreign manufac!
ture, or holds bank stock, or drinks
spirituous or malt liquors,or indulges
in tobacco, or uses a few stamped ar
ticles. Even the income tax has been
abolished, to the relief of such tender
consciences as Gov. Tilden, who need
no longer be distracted between the
duty which they owe the laws of
their country and the "higher allegi
ance "- they may deem due to their
Democratic prejudices and interests
:Meanwhile, the number of civil:offi
cers employed has been gradually re
duced,, except as new -Post Offices
have been created ; ,, chiefly on the
frontiers, and the collection and dis
bursement of the 'public moneys have
been made with less loss than at any
tune within the lasVorty years." L,.,
A CHILD'S CONTRIBUTION . TO THE
CANVASS. ,
Wednesday evening of . last week,
as the Hayes and Wheeler companies
were parading, they were agreeably
surprised to find the lfnuse . of a life
long Democrat brilliantly illumina
ted. .0p the piazza were placed a
number of pitchers, which one 'of the
organizations, the." Molly Pitchers,"
appreciited as a neat complinient.
On inqUiring it was found that, while
the "lifedong Democrat" had not
changed hia politics, he had a little
girl, nine 'years old, an adopted
daughter, whO is as staunch a 'He
publican as he is a Democrat, and it
was in response to her entreaties that
the demonstration was made. As a
sequel to this, on Saturday, Captain
Foster .received the following letter
from the little girl enclosing a fifty
cent piece: J
"To Mollie Pllehfri:
•• I can't parade and carry a torch, but my heart
and I ockethook. are with yon. Inease.accept the
enema:4l stamp to bey powder and oil with to carry
on your good cauz.e. had I more I would give It
7111114;1y. Very kindly,'
"JENNIE 11.vrinii LlinDLEunoow."
The letter was read at the .next
meeting of the Molly Pitchers, and
met with great applause. A silver
Centennial medal was voted to the
young lady, which Captain Foster
sent her with an appropriate reply.
--I-Bridgeport (Conn.) Standard, Oct.
VOTE EARLF !—We desire to im
press upon every Republican the
great importance of voting early.
No matter if you . have to, lose au
hour or two. in 'order'to do this.
The momentous interests ; which hang
upon the result of the contest, de-
Maud any aaiSrillee.: ,Pqn't- neglect
Wit Iffea:
may.
Political.
• [For the itZPOSTZF.)
EL= AND WHEELER.
ECONOMY.
"Democrats object to Republicans
waving the bloody shirt,. If the
Democrats had not , made' It bloody,
Republicanknotild.n4
-
El
TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., MURRAY - MORNING, NOVEMBER 2. 1876.
;EXAMINE YOtU BALLOTS.-
Every voter .should examine his
ballot before depositing it. The ene
my are unscrupulous, and will reso
to all sorts of tricks in order to com
pass buccess. It is especially im
portant that' our Congressional and
Senatorial votes be carefully scruti
nized. See that every liote for Con
gress reads EDWARD OYEELTON, Jr.,
and for Senator WILLIAM T. DAVIE&
HE GOT AE ANISHEEt.
The Cleveland Leadet in a la to is
sue prints the following ,
,
While Gen, Geo. Sheridan, of
Lonisiana, was speaking Monday
night on the West Side he was
iterrupted by an adoptedleitizen with
this question: "What' iS thel matter
with -the Democratic party, any
way ? " Quick as lightning Sheri
dan turned from the line of argu
ment that he was pursuing and gave
an answer to his interrupter which
all
, who heard it. will remember as
long as they live. waS as follows:
‘`.What the matter with the
Democratic party ? I ill 'tell you
my friend. The Dernoeratic party
was born under planets that were in
opposition. -It lives in the objective
case Like a mule, "it has no pride
of ancestry, no hopes of !posterity 1 "
It never originated anything. It
shines by borrowed light.,; It has
never been joined-in honest, wedlock
to a principle, but lived Ifor years' in
open adultery with a harlot called.
Slavery; lived with heritill she died
of corruption, and was truried amid
the sobs and groans of her paramour.
hG atmosphere that sukrounds De
nicaracy is full 4:noxious vapors
that breed : moral pestilence • and
death. The sun never shrugs through
it; Vice seeks its shad?w,. and cor
ruption grows lusty under its Unholy
influence. Springs of purity are
never foutidln Democracy. 'lts wa
ters are torpid, lifeless--eovered• with
the filth and scum with-lwhich stag
nate pools and moveless watersi
ways, °trend the eyes of men. The
soil which Democracy has cultivated'
has failed to yield harvests to the
nation, but has given croirs of worth
less weeds and briars. I Democracy
has no love of country ;LbelieVes in
states instead of a nation ; drives
loyalty from its doorsluid welcomes
treason to ,its habitatioa4; holds the
deeds of our soldiers and sailors :as
naught; strives to blacken the name
of our heroes; weeps oter. the, loSt
cause ; hates the blue and loves the
gray; stabs loyalty inil the back;
binds up the wounds of 'treason and
speaks -words - of -hope and comfort
to its devotees; applauds when help
less blacks are stricken down in the
and caresseS the, hands red
with their innocents bidod ; denies
the rights of Americana citizens to
homes for • themkilves in the
So ith; justifies the- men who shoot
them down or drive them out ; De
mocracy is a curse to the land ; the
source of our bitterest'woes; the ha
ven where vice finds friends, and
crime its apologists and' defenders.
Democracy- is original 'sin let loose
to rend and destroy ; it is the spirit
of evil tilling the swine of the na
tion; the incarnation
,ofj unholiness,
the child of the devil; its home
should be in that outer darkness
where there- is weeping. ailing and
gnashing of teeth. Such, faintly
pictured, my friend, W: what- is . the
matter with the DemoCratic party."
inoliaMasj3li Ott 111 00 301
The address issued by theßepub- i
lican National Committee is in mark-j
ed contrast with the one put forth'
by the Democratic National Com
mittee. The document , written by
Mr.-ILewitt—or rather, lest iv) 'should
do him a gross injustice, let : us say
the dobument to which lijs naive was
signed—was dOuttless intended to
be ringing. It really Was redicu
lons. Anybody who read it -and
whoi was able. to put two and two to
gether so as to make four; 'Could see
that. it derived a victorious coneln
sioa from premises of certain defeat.
It asserted that if the people voted
throughout the country in November
as the people of Ohio, Indiana and-
West Virginia voted! . on the 10tli of
October, the Democratic ticket would
be elected.' On the 10th of October
the people voted : in the prop:A-Mon : of
twenty-two Republican electoral
votes to twenty Democratic. At this,
rate it would take 'as long to elect a
Democratic President as to evolve a
Tammany statesman from an Orohip-
The Reptiblidan address says noth
ing about the "ratification" of "fiats,"
bueneither does it say anything to.
offend the intelligence of the .mem
bers of the party for which it speaks.
It is a straightforward business-like
document,, taking note of grounds,
for encouragement and' urging the
necessity of a "vigorous prosecution
of the canvass." It makes no ex
travagant claims of Republican gains,
It errs indeed on the side of modera
tion when it sap . ; that the Demacr4-
ic majority of 17,000 in Indiana has
been reduced to .a majority of 5,000.'
It should haVe said a plurality of
5,000 ; there was, no Democratic ma
jority in Indiana in October,
The Republican• address treats
Republicans not as,fools or children,
• but as men of sense. Whether the
Democratic address discriminated
nicely and wisely in tre4tinr e . Demo
crats differently it mightnotbe cour
„teous for us to say.—ECening Post.
THE Louisville Courier Journal
(Dem) -says '44 We will have to
mourn for Colorado." If the Democ
racy jus6 delay their mourning for
Colorado one week:, they can mourn
for the, whole country 'at the same
time.
Tim Rochester Chronicle shoots a
hot shot at the Democracy in these
words:
REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER.
Sflechtd_#orbs.
D05..1.0.4.1
When Canlbal savages!, after a fight,
➢fake a feast of the' bodies of those they have
beaten,
The grislyrepast yields a keener delight
From the knowledge that every unfortunate eight
Would have deemed It the deepest disgrace to be
eaten..
Though the custom la feet dying out In FIJI, ;
As tho influence of Western example increaser
In civilized cluntrlea you often allay see
A circle ca friends: in the highest or glee,
All busily picking some neighbor to pieces. .
And tbo best of It is that the neighbor is not.
As in barbaric countries, a person deceased;
ills ticsh has been bated in no cauldron or pot;
They don't even trouble ta serve them up hot;
For the victim still lives in the midst of the feast.
Some good-natured trlotid, reap, may make him
aware
Of the nature of.these hungry monsters' employ.
went;
And, though In reply he may stemtly declare •
That such vivisection wtm*Chert him a hate,
Yet he writhes at the thought of their fiendish
enjoyMent.
Still one comfort remain. In the Isles of FIJI,
N o possible vengeance Is left for the victim.
lie Is cooked and defunct. But In Europe tee's free
To seek satisfaction; and sometimes we see '
That lie wounds In exchange for the sounds which
have pricked him.
Then beware, Mrs, Smith; beware, lovely 31Iss
Brown;
Young Jones, whisper nothing that Isn't quite
true,
Be little more careful of others' renown,
For Thompson In yonder recess has sat down
With Miss Green. and is quietly cutting up your
JjJikellaiieoi:.
1==1519
" A NEW Y I EAWS STORY."
It is the first day of the year—the
.first year of the twentieth century.
;The•scene is opposite New-York har
bor; the parties to this brief story
are a bright boy of sixteen summers
and an old gentleman of perhaps sev
enty winters. 'Their relationship i ts
discovered by their discourse, as they
walk briskly along the Jersey Heights
on aclear mid-winter frosty afternoon.
"Grandpa, tell ine more of the
history of our country which you
were reciting to' us last evening. I
am very much interested in it, and
have really been dreaming of those
eventful days of which you have
been telling me," asked the younger:
"The remembrance is not a pleris
ant one, my grandson. It is a sad
page. Would to God I could recall
my contribution to it," replied the
elder. ,
" But," rejoined the lad, " it can't
lie helped now, you know, and per
haps , the consequences could not have
been prevented." •
"Not so, my ehild ; .they could all
have been presentel To-day youi and
I Might belong to'the proudest,grand
est, greatest nation on the planet if
our people could have seen a few
years ahead ; but to-day what are we?
At thiS moment we tread upon a tor
eign soil, Which twenty years ago
was as much our country as is the
city of New-York where
,you and I
reside. But :for the politicians and
their infernal strifes, in which . they
1
grasped for. the shadow and lost the
substance, a hundred million of peo
ple would be living here to-day under
one flag and under one croVernmento"
" But," asked the " are we
not just -as well oil' as we are ?
Wouldn't it be i'great.deal of trouble
to manage so many people all under
one government ?"
".No more trouble than to manage
the -,Republic of New-York, if the
people lived. at peace with one anoth
er; but a truly difficult task, if di
vided into sectional parties.",
"Well, now come, grandpa, sit
down here behind the shelter of tese
rocks and tell me all about it. I
want you to. commence at the ,Cen
tennial Exhibition; that part - of your
story 1 shall - never tire of."
"NO, nor shall I ever tire of it,
my son ; it is the only bright spot in
the history of this,,eontinent for half
a century. But I. must go back be
yond that just a little."
!"'But I know all about Washing
ton 'and the Declaration of Inde
pendence, you know ; and the origi
nal thirteen States; and; about the
SOutlfern war and the assassination .
of President Lincoln ; and the ele6;
tion of 31r: Ilendrieks, the last Pres
ident of the United States; but I
want to Bear. what you saw
your own eyes, and then I 'shall
know it must be true."
. Well, my boy, I must go back a
few years; but only a few. The
Southern war was brough about iby
a refusal of the Southern people . to
acquiesce in the electimOf !Abraham
Lincoln."
"Oh yes, Ino that." .
" They thought Mr: Lincoln' was
elected by the Abolitionists,, and that
war. was at once to be made upon the
institution of slavery. They were
mistaken in this. 1 lived in Phila
delphia then,., and voted against Mr.
Lincoln. In-Pennsylvania many Re
publicaris voted for Mr. Liricoln sim
ply because they knew him to be op.',
posed to the doctrine of secession.
Well, the war, you know, lasted four
years. During that ; time my syma
thies were always with the North,
for I believed the .war was uncalled
ufor. I Was what was known as a War
Democrat. Your father, then a warm
hearted, het-headed youth,
,espoused
the cause of the North, served in the
ranks, behaved with great gallantry,
and left the war . a brigadier general.
He was slimily afterwards elected
to Congress, :and . re-elected, as you
know."
" Yes, poor, dear father; his was a
glorious but short career," 'sadly
spoke - the boy. •
" Well, I have to take a•share of
the blame for his early death. I re
member well when we both made our
fatal escape, It was during a visit
to the Centennial Exhibition in ,Phil
adelphia."
Now stop just here,' grandpa. I
want to hear all about the Centennial,
as you saw it with your own eyes,"
'and the youngster stareq entreating
ly into the old man's face, as though
he would see reflected the World'a
-Pair in the old man'e eyes.
K.I - .dt)nl lirpnider," yon
wanlir to kiiiiw,alkidxFut;lta --- -It;
*trtil
FMI7:M
=3
1900.
one Centennial for tbe United States .
Thank God I lived to Would
to Heaven, your children weulaliye
to see another," and as the old man
turned his eyes heavenward,: they
filled with tears, he trembled and his
story. faltered.''
"Do I distress you, grandpa? You
wept last night when you spoke of
the Centennial. Why is this?--"
"Why is it, my son ? Do you know,
that all the nations of the earth came
to Philadelphia, with theie,offerings,
to commemorate the hundredth an
niversary of our existence. Great
Britain was there congratulating her
child upon hating taken her position
alongside of her parent. France was
there, glorying in what she had done
for us in the Revolution. Germany
came and shook' hands with the thou
sands of her children who had found
a happy home here: Russia, Siiiden,
Norway, Italy, Spain, Switzerland,
even China and Japan, were there
with their treasures of nature and of
art, all -paying respect andhpmage
to the one idea, of national unity. of
the United States of America. But
to-day where is our national unity ?
These same nations +laugh at and de
ride us. Do you wonder 'that .I am
sad ? Do you not wonder that I am.
not crazed, when I realize that I
helped to disrupt.that nation ?" -
" Well, grandpa, perhaps ought
not to ask you to tell me about the
Centennial. It makes yod too sad."
"It (lees, my son. Some other
time—some other' time—yed shall
hear all; But I will go on- with t the
history since then .you want to hear,
for I am warmed up to it now,and it
will be atrelief to me to tell it." '
"Thank you, dear grandpa; I
have often longed for this opportuni
ty to hear all about it, and you prom ;
ised you would tell me on New-
Year's Day."
Well, my boy, .your !father had
served his country faithfully as a sot=
dier, and honestly in the halls of
Congress, but, he and .1 wearied •of
the eternal sectional strife which ex
isted between the North and South—
the dominant party had in its 'ranks
and among its national leaders men
who were dishonest, men who would
not step aside to mate place for
statesmen and men of culture and
integrity; a financial panic had swept
thepounter, and thousands of skilled
mechanics were without emtiloyment.
There was a demand for a change in
the administration. of public ;advs.
.The Republican party nominated for
President the Governor of Ohio; the
Democrats nominated the Governor
of New-York. One had been a Sol
dier in the Union army ; the Other a
lawyer of ability, who had ac quired
great popularity as a reformerlof po
litical abuses. • Your father and I, in
Philadelphia, iloth. resolved to vote
fur the Govern& of
,New-York. We
were told that if wodid so we would
be turning over.the Government to
the Southern people; but we replied
that any chin - ge would be wholesome,
and .if it resulted disastrously we
otould correct it at the next'election.
Alas! that opportunity never cargo.
Mr. Tilden, the Governor of New-
York', was elected President,. and
from that moment the COnfedefate
army, which had served under Lee,
and 'Johnson; and Hood, ruled the
nation, North and South. I believe'
poor Mr. Tilden did his best to avert
the natural consequences of his elec
tion, but he failed. He was an old
man, unused to the affairs of Gov
ernment; his spirit gave way, and
then he physically broke down and
died. lie was at once succeeded by
Mr. Hendricks, the Governor of In
dimianand then our real troubles
commenced. ~ The post-offices, mints,
an(i custom-houses were filled with
rebels and Northern sympathizers,
who organized a political revolution,
which they carried by fraud.aud force
until both housei, of Congress were,
in the hands of their party, and they
had re-cleated Mr. Henuricks for
four years more.r Then came a suc
cession of enactme is whit 'plunged
the nation into •n.- vency and
aroused, the passions and hatred !of
every Noftherd man •‘‘ - lio was not in
the psy of the General GovernMent.
The Supreme. Court of the United
StateS was reduced to five members,
by pensioning ofr four, and after
wards increased to nine, by appoint
ing four Southern men. The. Consti
tutional amendments abolishing sla
very and enfranchising the negro
were declared by the court :to -be null
and void. biqmuse the , Southern
States had not been permitted to
vote upon.their ratification; the offi
cers or
_the army and navYwho had
resigned in 1;861 were all restored-to
rank; the wounded relief - soldiers
were -placed upbn the pension-list;
the negro man Who committed a pet
ty crime was sentenced to servitude
at the hands of hiS prosecutor; a
loan of two thousand million of dol
lars was created to compensate the
Southern peoplelor the loss of their
slaves; the army „was 'increased to
100,000 men and Placed under com
mand of Getter -1 McClellan; Gener
alS Sherman and Sheridan (who, you
know, were brilliant Generals of the
Union army) having thrownlup their
commissions in disgust ; the old flag
was discarded / and a white one adopt-.
ed Wits stead,• typical of •a white
man's governMent; and many other
things were done, my'son, during the
eight ' years which succeeded Mr.
Tilden's election, which brought
about a condition of anarchy and
ruin.
It is ,nearly twenty years ago that'
the largest meeting I have•ever seen,
was held in Independence Square, in;
Phitadelphia, from! which a message
was bent by an indignant populace
to the Northern nip in Congress im
ploring them topermit the. Southern
States to withdraw from the Confed
eration; but
and
came hack, with
an insolent and tribmphant jeer, the
message front President Hendricks
that " the war of 1831 had established
the • inviolability of the American
Cnion ; if any man hauled down the
American flag, , 'shoot him on the
apotfP! This . : bold and . deflant mes
sago staggered the Northern people
for the moment, and they paused;
but when large bodies of, soldiers
who had served
into
rebel army
were marched into
,our 'Midst under
the. lei - of gfturego.rd., and 'ilVade,
~,E.tiMPODf' 09: o . l */***.k. l /* -' 1.*?!•
;:r417,14W, •'•• - '
34 ,1 k
•
Min
keis aid s4 l ,kught to protect them.
selves. An army , of a quarter of mill
ion of men were organized in the
Southern States and marched into
Maryland,; Pennsylvania was quicik
ly subdued and:placed under martial
law; New-Jersey was seized, and
from the spot on whicli we stand
Ned- York was shelled and forced to
acknowledge her allegiance to the
General Government. Your poor
father fell mortally wounded upon
that occasion." - ,
"And was he a rebel, grandpa f'
"This is what they called us, my
son, and I suppose they ,Were right,
though we always fought under the
old stars and stripes. Your poor
mother's house was 'burned -, to the
ground ; • you were a babe in her
arms, and she and hundreds of. other
woinen..., and children fled, as best
they, COnld, towards the North`erJ
States ;:your mother reached Boston
only to learn that she was a widow;
but she' found her Self only, one of
thousands similarly afflicted.' . ': Well,
by boy, there then followed , five - year's
of bloody war. 'ln Pennsylvania and
,1
New Jersey, in'lllinois and Indiana, ,
the elections were carried by force of
martial law—New-England still stood
firm—New-York became the battle
field ; yonder, once proud metropolis,
for two years was neutral ground,
held alternately by the North and
South—a .few years ago she boasted
of great-blacks of storehouses, insti
tutions of learning, and museums of
art; to-day she is simply the seaport
of a single State; whilst
. once she
had • a greater trade than New-Or
leans orltiehmond or Savannah have
to-day."
"Is that possible, .grandpa?. and
would she have been great as ever if
we had not separated_?";
" Yes, my son ; the greatest sea
port in the •world. But I am losing
the - thread. of 'my Story. As I said,
New-York became the battle-ground,
and for five long years more than
two millions of men had contended
for the mastery; one fighting for the
Union, as they called it; ' the -other
fighting' to be released from a slavery
worse than ilea* Thousands of
Americans emigrafed to other more
peaceful climes ; tlgouSands fled to
the northern extreinity of New-Eng,
land. All home ties ' were severed ;•
society was utterly disorganized, and
anarchy reigned supreme. It was in
the year 1886, just ten years after
the election of Mr. Tilden, that peaCe
was 'declared. And what a peace,
my son ! A peace not prompted by,
fraternity of the two people, but, dic
tated by foreign powers., The -New-
England StateS, glad to Tree them,
selves from tile yoke of the Southern
zovernfnent, became attached to the
/ Kingdom Of Canada, which, though
now an'independent nation, was then
a colony of Great Britain., Pennsyl
nania, New Jersey, Ohio, Illinois,
and Indiana remained with the Unit
ed States, a government which to-clay
owes a billion of debt, and does not
own a dollar of gold to pay it with..
The extreme Southern States, after
driving to .the North every infirm
black man, have reopened the African
slaVe trade, and will, perhaps, soon
beCome involved in a European war
in consequence; the. extreme West
ern States, which in olden times were
called the Pacific States,—after a
bloody strife for possession of the
Uni4n Pacific Railroad, which was
then' the great artery of communica
tion between East and West, but
„which does not exist to-day at all—.
finally broke :up into independent-
States ;, ;and New-York; `where you -
and I reside, remains another inde
pendent State, without trade or com
merce, with her people divided as to
whether Canada or the United States
is her proper place, and'a fit subject
for, another battle-ground when the„
next war comes, as it assuredly will."
LL ‘ And hoW Was all this ruin brought
about ? • Coukt it have been prevent
do you think, grandpa ?" -
" Yes, my son, easily. There was
a time when your father and I, and
every sensible 'man,. could liaie seen
the hand-writing on the wall had we.
not . been blinded by the desire- for
change, and tickled by the deceptive' :
cry of Reform,' which was 'l then so
popular. It was just after the Octo
ber election in the old State of In
diana in 1876, where the:Democratic
party gained a victory. This victory
elated the Southern Democracy to
such a. degree that in the streets of,
Indiarelpolis they cheered lustily'for'
Jefferson Davis."
" Who Was Jefferson Paris, grand
pa ?" asked the boy. , , •. . -
"I'm rejoiced•to hear ion' titik -that
question. There is still tome comfort
in all this desolation tb know =that
such men are forgotten. • He was the
head and front of the Southern re
bellion." -
" 13itt, grandpa, in 1876 there was
no Southern rebellion. "Why did
they cheer for this man P' -
" Because his name best illustrated
the hope that was nearest to their
hearts. The South was a unit against
a divided North. A few 'Northern
States were needed to carry the
Southern element into' power. Indi
ana secured, was a great gain. Things
looked hopeful and the cloven foot
could hide itself no longer.
shout ought to have warned. every
loyal man of the danger ahead ; but
it did not; some were apathetic;
others wanted a change ; others real
ly believed the success of the lf)cmo
cratswould bring. better times. '.God
help' us, hoW woefully were we: de
ceived I Come, my son,,our passport
to cross the river is good only until
sundown; let us leave the `United.
States and return to the. poor old.
Republic of New-York." •
" Well, grandpa, these wonderful
events are Startling enough for a ro
mance. I, 'could not believe them
true had
. you not seen them ,with
your own eyes." '
"My bay, truth )is '.oftentimes
strangerthan fiction. In 1861 - I told •
your poor father that before ten
years had passed four millions of
slaves would be emancipated-and en
franchised. My prophecy was fulfilled
in less than five years." e
,
• - •
A CLOSE-FISTED man invited a fritmd
to dinner, and provided only two mutton
chops. Ulm removing the cover - be said,
“ . 31.Y . friend, we have a Lenten entertain.
went; you 60a Youidinner before." Irak
ingittlCtio ehoos i wpott.
Itwirp :.,,-Toiroo-144114,;-iii
ME
111 per Annum In Advance.
TO A. PINE POINT.
14:ir a Buninas-Like Young Wan Weigh! the
Wales of !iis Two Sweethearts
A young man of ~ b usindss-like
habits and a calculating turn of mind,
worthy descendant of a father of like
proclivities, recently received a visit
from the author of his being. While'
they were sitting together in the
evening the old, man said : •
" Theophilus,i my son, lemme see,
you're getting well-stricken in years,
getting on to 27 next grass ;• time
you was' thinking of - marrying and
settling , down."
" W ell, father," replied the young
man, " I have given the subject con
siderable thought, and, after , mature
deliberation, have concluded to al
low my heart to beat alone for one
o: two estitiable young females of
my acquaintance."
"And who be they ",said the old
man. .
" One is the 'daughter of an ex-•
revenue official.] She is not a girl of
inexperience, but a, woman of solid
sense and mattiredl taste and judg
ment. I should say she was between,
38 and 40 slimmers, arid. she wears
worsted stockings and glasses. She
is not beautiful in the cant of the
poets, but ;'her eye:--she has only
one—beams with the intellectual
beauty of the soul, and on her slop
ing brow is stamped—'.'
I know, I know," said the old
man impatiently, ; "but has she the
stamps? " ' 1
"The author of hef , being was in
dicted for aiding to defraud the gay
erniilent of the (tax on 375,000 gal
lons."
" Then," 1- cried the •father, "she's
the girl fol. you to tie to. YoU hear
me ? . !
"But," continued the son, " there
is another, a t .trembling fawn of 17,
beautiful as - .the, 'aurora - and , fair as
the magnolia blossom of her native
South, her limpid eyes—" '
Shoot her liMpid eyes!" said the
.old man ; " how, is she fixed ? "
" Jler •paternal estate," said the
son, "was small, and.was:eompletely
devastated in 1863.by.the Union sol
diery."
" Then you have no. Inisinesi with
her," said the practical old gent. ,
. "-Pardon me,,-,Sir," said the son re
spectfully. -"The soldiers stole her
only mother's only hen, took all the
tence.rails .for fuel, carried away a
mare wile, and inflicted other out
rages too numerous to mention upon
her father's `prOperty: In fact, he
lost everything.". •
" Wall that is - only prOving my
case ? ".
" Nay, sir; stay one moment. Sup
i)ose Tilden and Hendricks should
be elected, then she could_ come. on
the country with her claim."
" But she would not get
n mtich for
a hen, a mule, and a Tail fence."
• "Ah ! ". said. the young man, " but.
I have • gone into the cAlcillation.
Suppose that lien had' laid thirty
eggs, as, at least, 'she would, and
hatched ten chickens, half of which
would have been roosters, the case
stands for 1863: 1 hen, still in stock:
5 spring chickens sold; 5 pullets
kept ; And 20 eggs sold. Look, I
beg of'you, at, this table that I have
prepared: •1 ---...
'Spring , ':
rectr. • . Hems. chickens, Eggs sold.
1b43 6 5 , . 20
MI : , aa ' 30 ' 120
12;65 ' • - 1 216 . 180 . - 720
CM
!27993fi 231420
1,079,616 1,399.650 5,59i,720
11;4 , 111,895 8,398,080 33.5921320
have thus 1 shown you how val
uable such a claim would be proper
1y carried out. If I were to work it
down do .March 4, 1877, the figures
would go all over the paper and stick
out half way across • the table to
boot."•
-
" Why, my son," said the old man;
" that claim for that hen alone would
bust the United States: There isn't
money enough in the country to pay
for it." • .
" Then they iyill have to increase
the volume of the necessities of trade
that is all,".rejOined the young man
imperturbably. I " Besides, I expect
that legally, I Would be entitled to
charge compound interest l on the
several
. Items. Then, similarly,. as
to that MUle. She would hare had 1
colt in 1863—that's.2; and those two
two more in 1864—that's 4, or 6 in
all, and these 4 would have had 4
more in 1865,—;that's 8, or 10 in all,
and so on like the nails in the prob
lem about the horse's shoes."
" But, Theolihilus," 'said the- old
man, " mire mules can't—have no
colts, and. if they did half of 'em
would be Males; anyhow."
" That -Makea no difference," the
son went•on.. -uongresa,won't stop
to consider that; besides there is one
recorded case Of a hybrid breeding.,
as !to that fence. Sup
pose it was a yard•so yards square,
then 50x.4-200 ; 'call it a•iifile for
round figures, and add on the money
it would have , cost: to repidr it and
whitcwish,ft, and• compound the in
terest—l tell- You,' old man, there's
millions incit:"
" How many ? " • •
" 50n,".1 may have
made a mistake of a few millions of
dollars here and there, but that don't
amount to much. I should say my
claim 'II amount to about $237,396,-
854,268,473,791 1 ,654.1615.: Knocking
off the odd cents' and what it'll cost
to met the claim through, shall at
- -lea7st be assured of a •modest compe- -
teiice. Even 'though my 3vhisome ,
Evaline had nothing but her b'eauty
and 3-irtue and this claim for -her
dowry, I would, gladly take her to
my-Arms."
"Well, I •stippose,: theft; you've
proposed tq her? "--.
No, not ; yet. I've got her and
the es-revenue ofricial's daughter on
a string, and wait till • after the
I
October electiOns—then shall be
free to follow the dictates of my
febtions." •
* " Bless yon; - inzson,". said the fond'
parent, as ' hAppy - tears . bedewed his"
countenance and blindupecti
cies.
i ,
PEAT-lIRADING, as it is called, ought to
be abolished. It -is a nuisance. It , was
once reproved by a certain "mine host"
-on this wiiel A I
.preacher desired 'that it
deduction should be made from his beard
bill ou t account of his "cloth."- , The host
Ntr-"RtiPilki —bieove4 tbee.
aaatAtikkk
Wil
NUMBER_,I9.
13E1
1,296 I,eBo
115:1
C;490
25.920
39,890 155,520
933,129
- ----.:-.---
,-3',`-'
MI
,•••• •
If;
UOTION OP Bo
, 1:4
• - .. ii! .. , _....c;...i.--;..„4 ,
Take the cage of It; ' , Ol-,,11 1, -e,
conscientious and anxious tO l- 100**itj
herself. She rises long leo* Iclo,p-A
light in -the "morning, bekiiiiiie*_.
even the early hour sppeintis44!:*4
struggles with a-feeling:of,
_,,,,0
I 81011:and languor occasioned, by, - ,ii ,'.:ii..o.
in g -in the' same - room With seilieSt '`- - .lq
other girls, and breathing alliniglit,&A
vitiated atniosphere. - .The gaitin3ho6
1 room 'does not improVe'the eitiiWorA
the air, and there - are nit'veii,tilitiii4g,
perhaps even the register oftliiilooo4:',
is shut. In. all probability .there tiel4 4 '
not adequate tubbing arrangemetiteo, , ;;
certainly no hot water is sillOtefetk" : , ; - 4-
The poor victim breaks the. fee.'pn .„',
her jug, and uses as small .a quantity
as pessiblelof the'hard water: -. -It;isr-:z•;"
not improbable she has inflamed chil.
blains which have kept ' , her .inialt*".".Z,
half the night. Hungry, sleeplloin.il
languid, she begins her piano practico-;•
in a room - without a fire. At the enti;,;n
of an hour she is stupid with coldi -- -
and has a violent headache. .There:?;; - -?!
is no use in complaining, , for several..- - -
of her companions are in a similar_ -,--'
condition, and they sit down *-ti.Li." . 4
breakfast shivering in the dreary gray --.-',,i„
dawn. After breakfast comes. thes - f_' -, ,. ,,
monotonous half-hour's walk, which-1 , .:
is supposed to be good for the health, r---',...
but seeing only to have the result of
. : 77.,
fatiguing the children before rtheir„- -- ::
day's work is well , begin. • Then '--
conies a long morning, in which elims,-:,,', ~,
succeeds class with scarcely anyin-:;`:,:- ;
termission. -Latin, French, 43man,.
inusic,drawing,have all to be sq egged ; • ;
in, as well as the other lessons filch :::.
; iit
belong to a good English education, -,
These of themselves would,be enough.- -,
to fill up the whole time. - - - 1
. -.
After an early dinner, if the day is ,
fine, there is anotherldreary'strolli - , '
but every one rejoices-if the weather - , -•„.
is wet, fo# then Ahere is little time ::::
for idlenese or play. The classes be-
.."---
gin again in the afternooti and lait --
until teatinie ; perhapi even after that . —a,
the preparation for the next day niust .-:
be got through. If there is no hear ''':-
before bedtime in which relaxation;
is insisted on, the industrious girls ;
will - work up to the last moment, and
then dream half the night;Of unpre-, •'.
pared lessons or problems they can : ,
not solve. Their feverish restlessness -
is the natural result of overstraining
young brains, and not giving the
muscles -vigorous, healthy exercise:. . .
Not that much is accomplished after -'
all in the. Way of learning; _ far. from-
it ; and, worst of all, they are,never
taught boa' to learn. The time•given
'to lessons is too long to be advant
ageously employed. It is impossible •
that it can be good for either , the',
mind or body of a growing girl "to '
spend nine er• ten hours a day in
bead-work, - particelarly when the -; -.
1 greater part of the time is passed in : %
an overcrowded, stuffy schoolroom.
Boys have a g reat advantage over -
girls' in this respect. - Their 'class-,
rochns 'are mil larger, more niimer-
ous,,and better ventilated.' They are
notr:.; hung with curtains, or covered", - .
with carpets which. can scarcely . be
kept free from dust. Then, too, boys . .1 ,
have another advantage over girls in
the liberty they enjoy during theii
play hours. They are not constantly
under inspection. Their, g ames .of -
cricket and foot ball are I adia . rabic-
tonics after a morning'otthard ork.
Of
The healthy glow exercise se ds a
or
fresh current through the` tired rain,
and completely changes the
,ourse
of their thoughts. But of thisirivig- ~
orating sensation . -the properly
brought up school-girl knows nothing. -
She is not allowed to warm her feet
by a good run, or her hands by ;a
boxing-match. The nearest approach
.t ,-,f;
she ever gets to healthy exertion is li 71 ,
the weekly dancing lesson.--'-London - i iv,
‘,
Saturday
- ___ - 4' .
"ONLY AN IMBEEIttALIL"
How often do we hear the remark , 1
" Only an Irishman."- We have no''
doubt if people would ;hut reflect a
little, they would think more highly' ;
of the Irish. An exchange says:
Berkley, the philosopher, was only
an I rishtnan.
Robert Fulton, the inventor of
steam navigation, was only an Irish
man, by descent. , •
Curran, the inimitable dxator and
wit, was only an Irishman:
Duns Scotus, the most subtle phi
losopher of the middle ages,-_mas
only an Iri.ihman.
Donegan, editor of the most com
prehensive Greek lexicon was only.
an Irishmm.
Drs. Kane and Hay •s, the Arctic
explorers, were only Irishmen, by
descant: aF
Marshall Neil, the celebratedyen- -
gineiv., was only an Irishman, by, de
scent.
Captain O'Hara Burke, the explor
er of Australia, was. only an Irisli
man. •
Ossian, the last of the heroin age,
was only anArishman. .
Charles O'Conbr, the -bead of the
American Bar r is only ah Irishman,
by descent.
Sarsfield,-Marshall ,of France and ;:
tie hero of Fontenoy,.was only an ,_ 4 . 0
Irishman.
Kavunigh and. Prince Nugent, -••• 1 '
Marshals . of Auitria, were only •'
men. • • f , -
Barry, the great personator, of
Othello, was only an Irishman.. •--
Patrick Clebourne, ',the • ,Stone-'
wall Jackson of the southwest," was
only an llrishnian„ •
Quinn, the great personator of
Falstaff, was• only an Irishman. •
Doyle, the caricaturist, perhaps:
the most versatile. of modern artists,
was only an Dishman. - _' • ; - -
Edmund' ' 'Burke, the greatest
statesman that ever stood in thelEn,
glish House, of Parliament, was only
an Irishman.
McCormick, the inve)flpF of Me-
Corm - la's steam reaping machine, is
only an Irishman:
Marshal McMahon, the' present
head of the French, nation, is only
an Irishman, by descent.
Tom Moore, " the poet - of all, cir ,
cles, and the idol of his Own," *as
only an Irishman. ii
,Marshal O'Donnell, Fie , 1 Prime
Minister of Spain, arid, Dictator at
one time, was only an Irishman.'
O'Connell, the llercul6s of thpal
force agitators, pronounced by Wen
dell Phillips the most 'powerful ora
tor, he ever heard, was only an Irish
man. , - •
- Virg,ilius,a Bishop who flourished
'n the eighth Century, and who was
the
_first to discover the sphericity of
-the Carth;was only an Irishman.
Macklin, the great actor, was only
an Irishman.
Father Mathew, the 'Apoatlel of
ernperanee, who administered. the -- _
To bstinence pledge to tipiard 'Of _
- five mi lions of persons; who acco*
plished more in his day for the cause
•of temperance than,all thiArieieuk:
and AngloArtieria*:.; . Lieltl:fie . „,.oll6e
O
'at 4 kerzAlic4 ll o4,l
via* hoaXse
ikosOaa-elartkit_
_.;);