The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, August 29, 1861, Image 1

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    THE MONTROSE 'DDEMOCR T, .:-
IS p6n.tsuEoultatBlkkyai BY
C4'er l.l .tfifithirl•
- OFFICE ON PUDUC4v,b. WC, .;
Tltnsx DoOus /MOVE SEARLE% .
• •
TEnms.-41,50 . per annum in Anwar= ;
otherwise $1 will be charged—and,d Mints Per annexe
added to arrearages, at the option ache Publisher; to pay
expense of collection ; etc. Anrancs :payment preferred.
1 i •
AiirstrrtensiEyrs will be i nserted at the
rate of $1 per emigre. of ten lines oilcan, for the Stint three
weeks, and 93 cents for each additional worit--pay i
Merchnnts, and others, who advertise by
the year; Will be charged at the following rates, Iris.;
=MESIMI
Yo eridlt given gxcnot. tO 9icis . c of kr ! ir f rn resporopkty.
BUSINESS CARDS.
mu. Rumps° worm ' imort - brOlus•
W 24. H. COOPER 4-
-ID AN KElRS,—Montrone, Pa; Summons to PockCooptr
& Co: Office, Lathropienew building, Turnptkast.
IeCOLLUX‘ • si"
.--; " 11cCOLLITM -,E7 ' SE. TIV,
k ITOUBBYS and Connießete at 7-'2itc.—Bettreee. Pa:
.41. Office In Lathrops*.new'bulldlngyever the Bank.
•
•
• HENRY B. 110i.EAN,
ATTORNEY and cotensellor at Law.—TowAxtuk. Pa
Office la the Union Bhait. lea 58!tf
DR. 'E. F. WILMOT, ' '
GRADUATE. of the Allopathic and Ilomeeopathic Col.
legee of Medicine.-Great Ben* Pa. Office, •:corner
of Main u.l Elisabeth-eta, nearly uppoeite the Methodist
'Church. apt tf
. .
DR. 0: Z. DIMOCK,
urlystimvs ANTI - SURGEON,—itontsose, ; °ince
JL -oveioSlisons' Stotts; Lodgings it Sear not& •
WILLIAIf. W. WIIEATON,
tCLECTIC PHYSICIAN & SIMEON DrATIST.
WITH DP. XYJW.Y wgzArak, i •
Mechanical and Surgical Dentist, recently of Dlnghliathion.
N. Y. tender their professional services to all whouppre•
elate the " Reformed Practice of Physic:" careful and
sxillfhl operations on Teeth: with the most scientific and
approved styles of platework. Teeth ektract4
w ithout
pain and all work warranted. . : •
Jackson, June 14th. ltihb.•*.
DR. ti. SMITH it SON, ;
O.I,ItOEON DENTISTS,—Montrose,
000 Ice In Lathrop? new building, over
the Bank. All Dental operations WIII-bo'
performed in good style and warranted.
J. - C. OLMSTEAD • J 'L.' ItlitlD.
DRS. OLMSTEAD& READI
WOULD ANNOUNC.E- to the Public
w that they have entered Into a partnership for the
Practice of MEDICINE & Surgery : -
and are prepared. to attend tt; all calls in the line of their
.protemslon. Omen—the one formerly occupied bY Dr. J.C.
Olmstead, in DUNDAFF. 1 • my ,73m.
DR. N. Y.LEET,
•,,• . . .
. .
Otytician and Surpron:Frienrtsri&, Pa. OCcv oiyoai t te
t la Jackson Houle.
DR LERT gives -particular attention tatheAreatment
of diacases of the rite andET S ; and la confident that
his knowledge of. and experience In that branch of prac
tice will enable him. to effect a cure in the most dialcult
caeca. For treating diseases-Of these Organs .no fee' will
be charged unless the patient Is &metalled by - the treat
ment. , . [Angust 30th, IMO.
•
SOUTI-INVORTII VADAKIN
Air ANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS in Italian and
Al. American 'Marble for Monuinenta ° Readstnnes,
Tomb-Tedes. Mantbia. Sinks and Centre-Tahlea. Alt.°
dealer. luMarbletzed Slate for Mantlea.Centra-Tablef, de.
.... . . . .
* * *Shop a few doors east of Searle 's Motel On T.nritpike
street, Montrose, Pa.oc4 , y•
.
--- __,_ -I__
. - 'WA!. A. SNOW,
. .
•
TUSTICE OF' TITE PEACE.—Great Bend; Pa. Odiee
oP on Nab street, opposite the Western House. apt
: .TOIIN;SAtTTER, ' i •
IIASIITONAI3LE TAll.oll.—lfontrose. l's. Shop ,i '
over I. N. Du'lard's Griurry, on Main•street. • ,
Th‘nkfullor past favors.. lie solicit,. s continunacq
—pieduiaztlltn.Clf to dos!' work satlifsetorilv. Cut-
tins: done on short notice. and warranted to At. i
Montrose. Pa.. :Idly :Rh, ISGO.—tf. e
P. •1.1 N . ES,
11ASIII0IsIABLE TAILOR.— MoDiri+Qe. Pa. Shop
In Pheanii over atom of Read. AVatrous
Foster. All work ::arranted. a: to tit :yid finish,
Outing dose on :hart notice. in lio:t. jar' VA ‘
JOII (;1)01-IiS, -
` •
. •
T.ti1..01t, , --Montrpe. Pa. Shop
near the Itapti‘t Met•tinu Huse; on Turnpike
'trivet. All Orders 1111,1 promptly. in tint-rate etyle.
('toting done on ehort ninth_ and warranted to flt.
L. B. ISBELL;
EP AIRS flock!, Watche - e. and Jewelry at the'
ellortret notice. nod on rna-onable terms.. AU
work, warranted.' Shop in Chandler and JevetWe
story,moNT.r.; • tf •-..-
W 31., W. S3l I'fl I & CO.,
rI%BTN CHAIR mAxullAcTurtEr..4.—r4t
IL 7 of Main street. Mont ,e, Pa. ' • ang tf
C. 0. FORDIT A.M
Air ANI7PACT MIER of BOOTS & SHOES, Montrone.
.111 , Pi. Shop over Trler'e etore. ' All kinds of *uric
amide to order. and repairing done neatly. kJO y
ABEL TiII:BELT
)Eit' in I>rn M edicines , Clumieals, The lfr,
cello Glass, Oratories. Fancy Goods,,Jeweliy: Perfu
mer.. Otc.—Agent for all the most popplar PATENT
MEDICINES,—Montrose." Pa. - ang tf,
PROF. CHARLES 3101lItIS, 1- •
BARBICR and flair Dreg Per. lionirwe, Pa. Shop In
basement of S.me-'S Hotel. '
HAYDEN BROTHERS,
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
-ir.aavxr4nzi • • MTOTTIDIVEiI
FANCY GOODS:
•
WM. IIAYDEN.
JOHN HAYDEN. • • ! i.
-TRACY RAYDEN: :NEW;NILPORD, P 4
GEORGE lI4YDEN.
P. 4 BRUSH, M. D.,
DAVVSG .:OW LOCATED PERMANENTLY, iAT
l 5 rin.gville,
Will attend to the 'lntlea of his piofeasion promptly.
Office at a. LatbropiO Hotel.
AT awarviTzxy!
NEW MILFORD, PA.,
IS THE PLACE TO BUY YOUR
HAItNESSES,
CHEAP FOR CASH;
AND GET THE WORTH OF YOUR MONEY.
INSURANCE COMPANY
Cif Niemtrwircosqz..
CASH-CAPITAL, ONE MILLION DOLLARS
ASSETTS lrt Inly• 1160, $1,481,819.27.
° " 48,008.68.
J. Xiltoti Smith, See'y. Mee. J. 'Martin. Presidelit;
Jolla McGee, As% A. F. NV ilmarth. Vice -
lesuedana renetred,bylbe to) derilgned,
aff ix: o izs boot above Searle'e Rotel, Montrose, As,
anv29 y . BILLINGS STBOVD, dgerit. •
•
21. XI 17 Wit. R. I 'T. My
irirsk p a t rece i ve d ",‘ Vega . *took of new Stoves. for
Caoklaz. Parlor. Office Xid Sbop purpose s, for Wp:mi
at Co& irbl &owe Ptye, Zinc, Ac.
fitassoorOMOs and will be Bald
oerthe tcostlararstik term tor! Co 4 or to Provilli:ffiz
Mora, Bury%
Near l fof flab.
Dandelion Cote% •
k
HEALTHY beverage. Ostaysoki. of this Coffee ..111
11 make se znarli tak , ,o pima& of picker Cofee. Far
sale by • • • MO:IOII.74IELL. •
.
MEDICAL . CARD. !!
Ft; Toth . e .ClVX24l Allopa;te. run Cli' mckWe ir b
Wins. staid tearable elneere thaniut t,o *spoof* of Gt.
Bend and Ifildtatyna S 4the very. MP," 9iaP 2 4 B fylth
which they have fs, for Win, sale bop* lAr a
tentloh to ter.r.ineriose.lertt. n Itheral shikee the nun
eanAdencir. Great send, 113: 1 1147 41.•
TAKE NOTICE!
. ,
110 0 "11.4 few Ingscitesar
Sheep efta, For., m.ww., 31wstrat, anti alt MI& oit
Fars. .1. good assortment of Leather out Boma 43 4
Shoes rattetas.dy on hall& Otace. TemerY. 46 t> QS
Mein Street.
Molar:Jae, Feb.Stk. ' At. P. A f FL. O. mesa's
DAVID • ANEY, D.,
..
VITAVEVG locum perm:min .: Ova New Atiltord. Pc.;
IDlLwitl attend promptly to all twit st#k which bo•omay
M farreti.i..Mat it Todd.' Uotal- : i
NtirMllford. July.l7, "g5l • . ' . ; •
We Join Ourselves! to no Party that Does not Carry the Flag and Keep Step to the Music oti the: Whole Union.
VOL. Is. •I
'Erection of a 'Monument to the
Memory of B. P. Tew,kebury.
. •
Agreeanly.to prelious notice,tne teaen•
era ofSusquelninna county, and friends of
education; met at the M. E. Church, in
Brooklyn Centei, August 3d, 1661 e for
the purpose of erecting: a monument to
the memory of Benjamin F. Tewksbury ; ,
late County Superintendent of Common
schools. . • _
D. W. •t.iDW.
2 . Notwithstanding the iiitensip - beat of
the day a gOiitily number of perseni was
in attendance.. -
.• j
W. Faurotealled - the meeting to Order
by nominating E. A. Weston, 1.84„ chair
man.
Mr. WestOn after taking the ehair,
made the following remarks: I
LADIES AND GENT
monuments
!most
noble and enduring monuments are 'those ,
of worthy deeds, and . duties well perfOrni
ed.. Such will remain and • be. perpetual,
when those of bronze and marble shall
have crumbled to ruin and decay. I The
lavish expenditure of time and wealth for
the costly monumental Works of SealPture
and masonry; is seldom iiioniniendable.—
SuchAinie and means .are far better em
ployed to aid inore directly and efficiently
in producing!those grander and more per
manent—those imperishable', ruonunients.
just-spoken - Of., But some modest; taste
ful memento ;- some simple emblem of the
true memorial may not-be inappropriate•
nor untisefill. From the artless gPeen
clad mound to the elaborate tablet and
the impo?iine; 'column, and in all the varied
-forms which -they hive been made td, as
some, from the earliest ages to the ! pres
ent day, they evince that innate desire for
eontinued•existenee-,—the -desire - to, live
again—a presumptive proof of itniriortali
ty. • They ask the living to emulate the
virtues of the departed. -As commemo
rating great 'events, thevserVe as histor
ic records, to enliven and deepen atach
nient for cherished-and vital principles.--t--
As relates to public benetlietors, they' be
token and invite `sympathy fOr the r inse
that died not with the champion-.
RR regards kindred mind friends, they Lare
the spontaneous offerings of gra titudeiand
love. Such a tribute frOin his eo-workers
ers
in the-field where he so zealously labdred,
has to-day beefi erected to the inenkuiy.of
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN TEWKSBURY, rthe
late Superintendent. of
_Cofinon Schools
of Susquehanna county. • And this the
occasion for which we-are eonvened.l
E. P. Gardner was.then elected Secre
tar. ,v and Ansel Mack, V. Bryant and E.
P. Mack,-Vice Presidents:
Rev. L. F. Porter, by invitation of) the
President, caw forward and offered hp a
prayer. The 'choir then overt tired a Piece
of music, after which R. 8., Little, Esq.,
was introduced to the audience, and. &-
livered the following:
. • :
We, vet living—are wet by theashes of
the dead; not merely to embalm midi pre
servo a cleclying body--nor yet, to limn
for posterity, its fashion and countenance ;
but to perpetrate among us the: merhory
of a brief life, devoted to others gorl.
Engraved by material eares, i .ive arc j too
apt to.forget their intet ests, unless they
are so obtruded that we cannot easily es
eape,their contemplation. This is a com
mon saying. But now is this more than
true, when we . feel the great throbhings
of national: life--when hushed jand
awe-struck; we witness this sublime strug
gle of our nationality to vindicate itself,
and when mighty .questions of empireqand
rerclutiOn, cf order and chaoS, arc being
solved, questions that involve every !ma
terial interest that 'weVossess. '• All other
subjects conic as intruders, and arc goon
dismissed. • But even 'these . should !not
exclude duties like the present. one, iand
now, more thin ever, it becomes us tq sit
awhile whith reverant questionings at the
mouth of tilt tomb. ° • _
1-, Standing in this presence, how (ran,
Siedi seems the proudest pageantry of em,
pare! Fortune, greatness, ye - shilling
emptiness—bubbes floating on the sea of
time! The despoilerlarks; oh, how near
to their .surface! He may not indeed;
take the pleasant pictures from the :4-all;
hut surely he taketh light from the eye
Oat looks uponn - them 2 -she doth not' up
root the groves which he planted, or the
cmrdens which he adorned ; but he chain
eth the foot that. walked there—he (loth
not destroy his honor's, hut he.summoneth
the master away from them. Here,i, by
the cold, silent and cheerless grave, we
learn the end of earths glory, and that
the life itself IS vain, if it have no more en
,during.objects for our pursuit. if Eoo
geodness and `•Virtue perish in the tontb. 2
if for them, there is no immortal trans.
Planting benemlr ever favoring skies,where
the greenness never fades and the beauty
never, dims ; then, indeed, is ; our life a fail
ure and the World g blank: -
No my friends, We ineet here • to day,
not so much to imam over the early ill!).
Ping ofthe . rung bud by an untimely
frost, 'as to rise in prospect to its glad blos-.
Somings in.the great Hereafter.
1 Humility is the great lesson of lifei"That
be that humbleth himself shall be
tied," is as philosophical as it is spiritnal.
All that we dream of greatneSs, . had, its
,day of feebleneisi of darkness and . dotibt.
IVe must stoop in order to rise—the Mili
tant goes before the triumphant; and the
ladder at whOse shining top stand the an
gels, is only; planted in the caverns *of the
dead. „ •
'The subject of the ceremonies: 7 B. F.
Tewksbury died in Brooklyn, Pa., June
1860 } at the age of 27 years.. Re
left a wife tea two children. '
Few men at'so early an age have sodis
tinguished themselves by mere force. of
personal effort and dicipline. Like most
ethers Who ever achieve anything worth
of reeordi—he was a self-made. man. Ile.
Posiosed qualitiei of mind andlheart,that
endeared him:to a large circle of friends;
bitdeed. we ttuSY say that our whole_ court
trvAdt'und deplored his untimely death.
It was fa the eapseityofSapenntenderit
of -Comtnan Schools in this cntinty, that.
he became beat known to us—.-aw office
Which be heldfroni untilbis '41e413.
To the &inflame of these duties, - hebrci:t
eoergy.and power. that Showed 'his
heart-was deetr:iwthe work.. • During
:Part of the:thee, he had very : etficient
from Prof. Stoddard, and we all 'felt that •.••,..
J. H. STIITII.
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the cause of popular Wei:ldt* .=had::re- °
ceived an impulse and a-vitality, -hitherto
unknOwn. - The - thing that was dead 'was
made'ilive. • But he was stricken suddcn-
ly, aud laid away out of our sight; but his
memory is yet green; and. in • order thit
it may never fade, we, to-day, rear upon
his grave - this beautiful monument. It al
so expresses our - gratitude towards, one
who tried to do us good.
The occasion suggests two leading
thoughts. First, of the qualities that best
endear and prolong our memories among
those Who live after us, and •
Second, of the particular Field of useful
ness occupied by him we now commemor
ate.
1. The desire to be remembered after.
death, is one of the strong instincts
. of
the„beart, which no- life of selfishness, ever
obliterates.. The bad and the good alike,
covet-a rememhrance after their body -is
etine out of eight, and the bitterness of
aeath springs mostly from its dreary: for
getfulness. Men devise strange things in
order to gratify this restless longing of
the heart—but alas, how few know that
this does not come by the'seeking. We
shall niverget a grateful place in the
hearts of men, by a' life of sell-seek
ing and self- exaltation, however, success
ful. It comes from a of toil 7 —.of sacri
fice for others good. •
Ministry Is the order of Providence;
taught inipreSsingly "in the washing of
his disciples feet.' The strong must min
ister to the weak,—as We receive, so must
we impart, and-our reception should be
large; n order, that-our impartation may
be munificent., Each must reach down a
lifting hand to those next below him, and
so on down to the lowest strata of human
_life ; while from the top of thiS ascending ,
climax, beams a benigner ministry, whose
compassion never tires, and whose sup
plies are never less. - From all the ignor
ance and guilt—fro allin the sorrow , '"and
suffering of this, world, hourlY ascends
the stricken cry of "help! help! and hap
py is he, who car inclines to the call.—
Nature illustrates this duty in 'the very
laws of animal life,. •The , bird deposites
her helpless yopng in that cunning nest.
By what in tenons-tie is she - bound •to
'her we'ry service? why is she not tempt
ed by 'the brightness of the morning—by
the fragrance of the flowers, and by the
'carol of her mates, away ! away! into the
glad freedom? Why is it that at even
tide she so nerves her: wearied wing,when
she hears from thestill distant f_ , rest, the
chirpings of her own test?
.i4 The law of
ministry, of sacrifice makes had-life beau
tiful—it makes man-life glorious.
My friends, we are gathered here by the
retnains ot:the departed'one; fiot to cele
brate anything that 'Men call "suceetts in
life"—not to speak of his surrimndin...s
and honors, fiw.his life was_ simple, and to
these The made no claim. But. it is be
cause he toiled thr others good, and gave
sacrifice in the cause of-popular education.
that we rear I.Q his memory this lasting
tribute of gratitude. We recall to mind
how he - traveled, ofteti on foot,from school
-to schrinl—how he sympathized with the
little disCouraged learners—how he 'en
couraged the teachers; and how he infuSed
into all, a generous emulatioa and Ardor in
pursuit of knowledge: •We.eannot forget'
how the humble school • that had
been an out of the way, eiceptional place
scene of vulgar sport,. of rude disor-
der, and of dreary task-work—brightened
under his ministry into decorum, order,
and delight. • The debris and rubbish of
centuries was cleared` away from the
spring-heads of learning, and their crystal
waters now leaped forth glad and bright
to the sun. - '
-But it was to the Cotnnion School teach
ers that he rendered the best • service—
raising them from a position of conscious
drudgery and contempt, into one of usetul .
nets and honor. We no* begin -to unf
derstand that, as the office needs more of
the graces of lifc,more discipline and beau
ty of heart and mind, than any other; so,
should it rise in appreciation and honor.
Teachers, it is fitting and comely,this sim
ple, but expressive monument, reared to
your cause. ,
2. But now in the order of my subject,l
must look a moment at. common . school
education, for this was the field for which
our friend toiled and died. -
It used, to be thought • that education
came soon enough, when the pupil had
attained the age and inaturity that .was
supposed to be necessary, in order that
be might best profit by it. But now we
know that character springs up 'from the
beginning of life, and that as was the seed
time, So will be the harvest. As this, is
the most formative period of life, so the
common. school is the most : shaping and
controlling agency in the - world.. The
Prussians have a: wise maxim, that What
ever you would have appear in a nation's
life, vow must put in its schools. A peo
ple having a good system of schools, wiH
be a people skillful in art--fruitful in ,in
vention—prudent in peace--;invincible in
war, and wise in :governinent. By this
is meant a complete system of education;
one that concerns itself for the entire
body; and all parts of the human life. Our
age and country ask of its educators fora
manhood, well built : and vital, manifold
and harmonious, full‘, of wisdom, full of en
ergy, fbll of faith. Education is hot sim
ply the training of the mind, but the train
ing of the man.. It does not consist Alio!-
, ly in inserting facts 'in the memory, like
specimens in a. cabinet,
.or • like appleS
dropped in an empty barrel. Of all the
,bbres to which We are subject , none : are
1 more persistent and offensive, than the
men of mere memory, whO are never satis
fied with discharging at you their volleyti
of facts and statistics. '
The teacher has something also' to do,
than merely to ccimmunicate knowledge;
his profession should .extend to the faith,
to feeling anittovolutiOn. -
.There are figurative and subtle forces
that play through the business pf , educan
tion, with fine energy: There is an uncon
scions tuition alwsys going on; in 'which
some of the most- nutritive ; and emphstio
functions oftin instructor are really being
performed, while heseems least to be in
structing. Mere lessons, rules,and words,
'ate but the body of beyond and
above this, is en ; tiedefieed. - spiritualness;
For instance,-afterall •- yon have. Paid
MON'TROSE4A., THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1861.
.
'ltliokkt a subject, you feel: that there': is
something more you. never can say; and
there is frequently a sensation of . pain at
,th'e inadequacy. of !angrier to shape and
convey; perhaps also, the • inadequacy of
thfpnrceptions to define that secret and
nameless thopght,. which is the delicious
.charm and loon%
. of the subject,' as it
'hangs in robes of glory before your - mind.
Where The nature is rich and the. emo
tions are getierous,.there will always be a,
leyerential perception that ideas :only
partly condescend -to be embodied in
words. So it is alwaYs found that the tru
est effects of eloquence are when the ex
pression suggests a region of.' thought, a
diin vista ofimagery, and. 'oceanic depth.
of feeling beyond what is actually von
tinned in thesentences. You hear thoughts
perfectly within the range of the • 'under
standing, sublimely.uttered, and )-tni k . are
made aware of the nearness .of a 'world,
whole thoughts are more sublimely :unut
tered. You have to judge. an orator .as
much by what he leaves out, as by what
he puts in. Nature herself, hints to us
the same thing; When we are most
moved it any - Way, she-prisons our souls
in dumb solitude, and makes us feel the
utter helplessness of our tongues. Men
may chatter and laugh together i the
variegited and blooming valley;but Whe
they. go up - among the eternal hills of od
andlook off from those solemn pills of his
Heaven, an invisible hand • wilizteem -to
draw tbCm apart from one pother,Another, in
spiring them with a. wonder that no dia
lect can articulate. Tidy may gossip in
gardens of sunshine(bnt one ,roll of celes
tial thunder hush& them.
It was said of Lord Chatham, that ev
erybody felt there was something finer in
the man; than in anything he ever
We-are taught,and we teach by something
about us that never goes into language at
all. Often this is the highest kind of
teaching, most charged with moral pow
er—most apt to go 4lown amang the se
cret sp'rings of conduct, and most effectu
al for vital . isSue.s- = because it is spiritual
in its character, noisless in its ,preten
sions, and constant in its operations, Ev
ery science taught in the school room, has
its moral relations,.and terminates in mys
tery. And when you have awakened a
feeling of that great truth in your pupil,
.by the veneration, the earnestness, and
the magnetic devotion of your own mind,
•you have done him a service no less essen
tial to the coMpleteness of his education,
than when you have informed his mind of
certain scientific facts.. For instance, ar
ithmetic ascends into astronomy, and:
there you are iniroduced to laws' Of quan
tity that make the universe their diagram
the intellectual . magnitudes of La
Pla ce and Newton—to the -unsearchable
empire of that -religion which feels after
the God Arcturus • and Pleiades. The
truth is, that in this, as all other relations
with maim, the unconscious goings out of!
our inner selves, through the voice, the
countenance :mil the manner, will mock '
.all our outward attempts at deception:—
A 'power is all tlie time acting out of us,
which we - can neither see, nor control. It
proves nothiMg, that science does. not de
fine this' mystelions force. - There are
many . fill truths connected with the mys
tery of being, that lie outside of all verbal
delinitioris. And the beauty of this great
sympathetic force is, that it must be un
conseioas„or not be at all.. We cannot
exert it by the Will ; but it must go out of
us without our Willing it., It alone is true
to our natures, with whatever mhsk of
words we may seek to diver ourselves.
• Now comes the greatest -truth of all.—
The measure of-a man's real influence, is
the measure of his real personal merit.—
The moral balance will remain.. We cad
not cheat here. High opportunities, 'far
exerting influence, avail us nothing—un
less, in patient toil, we have educated our
selves up to their level. If we would con
verse with an angel ou the mountain top,
he must find our tent already pitched in
that upper air. 'Our real rank is taken,
not by a: lucky Jam lint by a. 'life of
diligence. There is. no. retrieving of a
Wasted life by any fitful and strained ef
fort. •
Luther, Iluss, Cromwell, andWashidg-,
ton, did not leap • into.. their apostleship
at a bound. The roots of all their tower
ing greatness ran back under the soil of
years. The fixed and everlasting princi
ples of character cannot be bribed or put
aside to accommodate our indolence, nor
to make up for Our neglect. What we
sow in self dicililine, we shall reap in suc
cess. What is in us will out, spite of all
masks and trickle. Genuine souls tell up
on the world,-and all assumption of. feel
ings and powers that we do not posSess,
deceives no one tout oufselves. We are
watched, studied and searched • through
and through, by those we Undertake to
lead ; not in a jealous or malignant
but in earnest good faith.
In all-situations; and especially in a
school, what h'inan is, is far mote than
what he say's: Thu value of every person
is the very value that silently and unob
served, be has accumulated in his .charae
ter. He stands, for the-wealth of being,
that his life of effort and trial have been
unconsciously storing *sway. It was said
ofthe wise Greek,'Bias,"himself is the re
asure that a - whole life Was gathered."—
Thus stored and armed, when the occas
ion comes, he can rise and triumph aaeas
ily as it that-were natural tohim. Ne is
• equipped for the, storms of life, - and he
can ride the tempest--:not by fitful and
• nervous strivings; but with the ease and
grace ofconscious strength. • These are
the men that takedestiny intotheirhands
in the crisis-periods of the world; and
after noisy and bustling pretenders have
fled away. it' Was through long :tad pain
ful seasons of fasting, and penance, and
weakness, and trial, that Luther - laid hp
those. materials of character, that enabled
him afterwards fo let down the cords and
sinews'of his - intinenee; - and - draw • up a
sunken world tci,his ohm exaltation.• An,
it may be,thaiinthiidny of our coun 's
peril, sorne.startling reverses• ar . neces
sary to frighten the .weak an . retentions
from positions .to .whit nature never
called them, in eviler. - giVe way to some
one now louried , e obsenritiee; of the
crowd, who s • .come forth to vindicate
the 'tower:. dileipline ch a racter..
-it is of true that great occas'ion's make
•
Igreat nien..; It is true that . ! great . occes 7 I
ions do but develop to our. gaze, the ac
cumulated character that the preViotie life
of effort and, toil,-'had slowly aggregated.
And it is alio , true, that the . possessor i
himself tray b e tmconscions Of the power I
he has - stored away, minil the test-dine I
comes. .
' - I
I do not aippose that the rude Corsican I
boy dreamed; that one day he . should I
tread" an Empire,,and aware , Continent,
Nor did the Stripling that Swain rivers
and traversed wintery (4E116, to perform
a 'mission into our western 1 wilds,, then
dream that aeon the fate, of America, was
to rest upon him alone. - I '
True, when the bukle call of our coun
try, with clarion blasts, file land ata es
.our remote solitudes; the pripared , p is
stirred with new sensations of, • -er—he
is charged like a galianie ti tier) , ; and
the very magnetism of hi esenee com:'
mands universal' faith.' ePend . upon it,.
i "
the people must belie in-their - leaders in
-the time of trial. he has not - the power
to command th - aith of both the "willing
and
. u e n:il e l t i l
et he
soldieris uninspired
.eN,er4oub t for
e that his
work, an t will -languish or; die, on his
I
hands.
_Rs own Napoleon' was invincible ; • and
hence, he.too was invincible, ,
• Nelson, in; he simple sUbliniity.ofgath
ered and conscious power on the eve of
battle, only said :* 4 .‘Eugland ' expects ev
ery man to de his duty ; ' and from that
electric - Moment, the victory of Traflager
was just'as certain-as if it bed ' been al
ready won. I - ; .- '•• s.
Peter the Hermit, o'er"charged as he
was, despatched along the wires of mind,
the genuine Utterance : "It is the will of
God—it is the Will of God;" and in that.
miraculous' instant, the prindes and peas
ants of all Europe, were fired into a fran
tic crusade to, the Holy Laud, •
the unconscious sympathetic forces
that 'may be accumulated in Character, by
a life of appropriate disciplin'e and trial,
pass, all- estimate and • all description.—
. They belong to the divinity that is within
us,, : -
But our subject divergesl l into other
aspects and relations. ,r 1 • - ,
The heart May be changed, as well as
the mind and, will.
There are moral,, as well as mental in
spirations, and the stored materials of both ,
arc" slowly hoarded in a life eftoil and eff
ort. A life of goodness and! love groivs
firmly into character that sheds its un
• spoken influence like sunbeams on all
'around. From such sources as these,
conies all the: moral light and beauty . we '
have in. this dark world. Hilt especially,
is this influeneefelt by our children, There
is somethiug very affecting in the simple .
and solemn earnestness; with which
,chil
' dren sometimes look lip Miro; the faces' of
their elders. 13) , invisible coinruunication,
they thus catch the - spirit ;and temper,
that you may suppose, ydu have' shut
back-and hidden trom thein.l Some -Pa
rents and Teachers complaiti that they
cannot control,or influence their children,
. owing, as they suppose, to their • nataral
ugliness afilisposition. It May be true
I that natural temper and dispositions , vary;
; but still no child was:ever so perverse as'
to-always resist the patient' yearnings of
parental love. - ; If from . the exhaustless
fountains of the heart, we pour over them
the all subduing spirit of ail untiring love,
,they will become plastic in our hands as
clay in Potter's, and we can mould,them
at will. Nature most be reversed before
' a child,can long rebel,.under the ;FELT in
spirationsof an Unselfish love_; not formal
and word-spoken, but sent by the donta
giotrof the heart. ;!
Finally, we ,learn from our subject that
all valuable attainments in learning, or
goodness, come, not by natural gift, but
from long andpersevering efforts. • ,
• Every tipicard-path is steep,and thorny,
and the gifted and the ung ifted must alike
tread it,-.with , weary an d -bleeding feet.
We also learn that one of the rewards
vouchsafed us; on the way, is; that iu the
exact proportion that our own being and,
character gather richness, will beams - of '
unconscious influence radiate from us, - to
cheer and strengthen the weak and sorrow
ing.. And still further, that every et
tempt at disguise, imitation, or assump
tion, is vain and abortive. -
But after all, our best rewards come
not in this life; Every benef i cent worker
ill the harvest-field of Time, feels groWing
upon him, day by day, asense 'of -weari
ness, ,a secret.homesickneSs df 'the heart;
which .ia . but, the gentle fluttering of , the
growing wings Of his spirit; -trying to
break away into the mystic 'freedom of
God ! And by and 'by he gets: so far
:above the earth, that his ear Catches, ever
and anon, the:faintest possible out-swell
of some distant seraph's note; which his
answeringlieatt-assures him, comes from
some laud of immortal harmonies; whither
lie.hastena! . I . - - 1
• 1 .
Deep in the heart-of every o ne of us, is
a chord that thrills responsive 'to the
pinch' of music, • . •
Deeper still,llies a spiritual . 6horti, that
yearns to be stopt by the music breath of
heaven. I
- - I
These longings of being, are Ai- the de
sires of the meth for, the staij, - they are
the prejnonitiens of our eternity! '
. Once, a yoting,ltalian spent! many years
of his life in cristructing a chi m e of bells:
When it - tvas dolts, their music was so 1
..7 i -
accordant, sod resonant and so beautiful
thit they- were the pride and joy - of' his
heart. - Hi wee induced however, to part
with them, to the prior of a neighboring
',convent, for al large sum of .T eney. With
this he built lein a villa Leon - a sloping
hill-side within sound of t ie bells, and
morning andrninethe rich air wafted
their melodie 4,crlils rapt ear; end his soul
was full of
, e,rmienti But presently, the
tide of Hevolutiottswept over Italy, in a
mingled waveofErtand blood.:
_Ms vil
la-Was burned,' and hie familyl..acattered.
TheVenventlivas lazed - to. . the . ground,
and the bells were -'carried -.. to - .some . tin
kuoive and -foreign' country; Desolate
and heart-lick theyoungltahan wandered.
froin 'city to city, and.countrytO - country
in.ikursnit ofhis lost belts,-
~ gis life, wore
away in the si3areh,and . 'be.ivais-eldi. One
afternoon.hisscl , sailed npi 'theSham.nOn -and - dropped anchor . hy, - clr . side :Lim
erick; Just l
the red sun sunk into the
1 , • • I
i - •
- I NO. 34. -
sea the; chiming, Olds_ oisii`bells, humu s Aid and, Comfort to the- Eliemy
from one of the steeples of ,the city, MO 1 The abolition press 6f the North
loaded - all_ the air_tvAth their richnesb, is engaged in the treasonable business of
what a flush Vesapread the' old pW 3/G grim's giving aid and comfort to the enemy -in
warm cheek, is he turned his fdee to the , two ways. Pint, byencleavoring to per
west, crossed his hands on hjefbreaet,t;on.- ! vert this war for the Constitution , and the
ed his bead,.and then hi4,lrfe floated out i Union into a egusade against .slaveryp and
on the waves of that -mnsic, into the bo- I thereby utterly destroying the remaining
som of the Infinitevilis comrades con- ! Union.tientiinent in the Southern Statea,
veyed his body to land, and left it ,in i Second by wickedly and maliciously rep
the Chiirch-ya tt , , . , i reseiitiug the Democrats of the North as
So, my fr ends, do - wewander among 1 secret sympathizers With rebellion, ready
the field f time, in 'search of the - unguess- ;to revolt against the Government upon
ed lop ng. Should the gates of the Neu' I the first favorable opportunity, and there-
Jer sa cm open to receive us, -oh, what a: by encouraging the Southern people' to
ad peal of music *odd break forth out persevere in rebellion With the hope of ut .
of the steeples of Heaven, flooding all the r tunately . obtaieing assistance . from the
e
aislei in! the courts of glory with its mys- i'Northern Democracy. • ,: i •
tic melody, and bathing the soul in traps- I No argument is necessary to demon
port. Then only, will our satisfied spirit , strati; that the dissemination ofsuch trea
exclaim' " home at last." . - I sellable. views - . throughout - the South
!
would be followed by - disastrous conse
quences to the cause of the Union,, and
perhaps postpone indefinitely the prospect
ofreconstruction. So anxious was Con
gress that the object of the Government
. .
The Choir then Overtured another piece
of musi c , which was followfd by sonic
very appropriate remarks, . by Prof.-J. F.
Stoddard.
After the thanks of the.. meeting being' — should be set before the SouAhern people
tendered to the speakers, the secretary fin the proper light, that It adopted with
'was instructed to publish the procedings l singular unanimity the resolution of Mr.
in the county papers and
_also the Penna. ' Crittenden, declaring that the war was
School Wournal. A committee was alt- ; prosecuted for the soje'purpose of main
pointed to wait on . R. B. Little Esq. and i tabling the Constitution and the Union
solicit al copy of his address for publica- - yett in the face of this official declaration
lion. - 1 •
!such abolition organs as that of the Sec-
. The Choir then sani; the. following line's
to the memory of B. P. Tewksbury, coin.
pnsed S. B:Eldriage, of Brooklyn, after
Which the meeting adjourned,
_
lu early life death called him forth,
worlds of endless love, -
4nd in his Saviour's glory dressed.
W ent to that world above. .- •
We laid him low ID earth's cold clods, :.
Ere winters winds drew near, .
And now diagram grows p'er his tomb, . • :
Watered bylnany a tear.
tin education's cause be strove,
With unvebtrleted_zeal,
And while for hlita his hlendado mourn,
Ilia toes all deeply feel.
'Ley of hilt loved and cherished causes
Gave raised in memory, •
A monument that long shall but,
*hen we shall cease - to be.
*tale round his grate, today. we mioot.
A tribute there to pay, , ' •
Ilia spirit dwells with God on high, ,
In realms of endless day.
. i Cabinet Pictures. • I
Patin TILE BOSTON POST.
Since the leading Administration papers
have vied with each other in censuring
the Cabinet, we suppose it permissible for
to air our Own opinions without being
deemed i quernlous or' hypercritical, 'lt
seems tq us particularly unfortunate that
at this crisis of national affairs—our grand
climacteric so to speak—we should beat
the mercy of men whose incentives.to
ex
ertion have but the single deficient of sel
fishness - and individual advantage: Public
opinion :appears. to, have centered upon Si
mon Cameroni as the Jonah of our ship of
State in !the existing exigency, and it'
seetnn that nothing but' the fear of
strengthening the secessionists bk-a shew
of contention among .ourselves, has pre
vented Such a popular demonstration at
the door, of the White House, as w4uld
have long since sentthe Secretary of War
back to his bank and railroadiii th,e Key
stone State. Republican editorshave fur 7
nished is with a long list of this ofii
ciaPs- poSitive 'misprisions, while an infini
tude of suspected derelictions have teen
tacked on to swell the indictment te a.
frighttuh extent. Party lines have been
overleaped in this unanimity of the popu
lar verdict, and the Pennsylvania specula
tor stands forth in the position of one
who is managing the war for the Union
upon the mercantile basis of a private
,profit and loss account, without much re
gard te . the public, the Union, or the mo-.
mentous issue at stake: For all thii Mr.
Lincoln is,reSpoifsible. lie cannot. plead
ignorance of Mr. Cameron's antecedents
and proclivities. It is notorious that the
first shadowy intimation of the possibility
of Mr. Cdmeron's beings member Of the
Cabinet, inspired the very pith and ntar 7
row of Republicanism to protest in every
form .against the impending outrage upon
decency. Letters by the bushel, from
prominent partisAns, were showered upon
"Honest Old,..Abe" in virtuous and indig
nant protest Against fostering this taint of
death upon the new born Administration.
Delegations, numerous and • respectable,•
waited on Mr. Lincoln at Springfield' and
Washington to forbid the bans between
untried virtue and imputed wantonessi-- .
- Honesty was voted, by common Consent,
to be the pest policy, and in such - case it.
seemed :certain that Simon - Cameron
could tio4ossibly find a Cabinet seat
an4%eable; Congressmen by the score
jected to _his exaltation; among them, -
many representatives from his own State.'
But all was vain. The wily tactician Was
too much Ifor all his opponents—and just
.at the proper 'moment, the needed pres
shre,was applied, and the , question deci
ded in hisfavor and. against'the country.
.Of all the New York papers, the . pious
World alone erected colunins of approba
tion and eulogy overfills - grave of admin
istrative integrity; and verily, that jour
nal has its' reward. . •
qr. Mr. Stephens, Chairman ‘ , l'.• the
Committee on Ways and Means, and the
chief financial .member of Congress,stafed
in the House of Representative's, that the;
expenses of the Government were .a the
rate of *1,250,000 per day, and he quietly
added that he could not see - where the
money was to come from. This enormous
amount exeeds the rate of exrenditureof t
the French, English and Russian goVern
meatscombinedoinring the Crimean wit.
Where docs it - gO;,:to ?
IlleirHorry, in his life of Gen. Marion,
says that the last words of that hero were :
"Ainbitions demagogues will rise, and
the people through ignorance and love of
change, wiil follow them. Vast armies,
will be.ndoo,,and bloody haulms fought;
find after:desolating! thew country.. with
all thehommi - ofei.vl l war, the 8 1 4 1 40' ala"
pars will have tobend their iaolorto the
iron-yoke of some stem usurperyand. like
beasts ofbnrden, to drag unpnied those
galling chains which they have riveted
'upon themselveszforever:
I I IMIItINTtNG4tALtknOW
t .
• ..' • DOVE A* . ii3 . ,....g OkklCIF 077:HZ -.. .
1 1 t)331311C:C. Ctli Z t, AS. I T 0
- •:•...- •NBA.TLY- ANO•PROXPTLY. - --. •
.. !
I. :' • A. D A? ." LIVE AND LET LIVE" BaiaS. '
'.
I : ..-- '•‘. - ' • - ' -
~. . . ,
1, T u office„of, the M o nt ro se Democrat
raw reenact,* been supplied wittr a new awl , choke variety
!of tyyppss,, etc. and we are now prepared to print battiptdeta
i circulars , etc., etc., in the beet style, on short notice..
[ Ilandbills,,Posters, Programmes, and
mleturifterworicainusfte,fteosemralue!lec
1 - ;13uSineis, Wadding, and Ball Ca** •
I Tickets, etc., ptia!ed with .eastA,lfrand deteatab. - •
I ' Justices' and Constagibe-Insoks,,lcoiii.
!Deeds, and z all other Blanks, on Iniregie Outwit* miry.
I' li!,/.lub - O;Ork 111:11BiatIke, to be Paid for%* dative:7r
rettiry of War, published at this . place by
an (Meer of the government, insist that
the war shill be prosecuted for abolition
and revenge, and that - the reconstruction
of the:1;11ton is no longer 'the _Nation's
watchword.
In reply to the oft repeated charge that "
the Northern Democracy sympathise
with•the efforts of rebels to destroy the
Union, we ask the questiOnWhy - should:
a Democrat be a . traitor ? The Demo=!
critic party, has 7eVerything to Jose -and
'nothing to gaiii . by the - dissolution of the
Union. A dinit the-fact that. the strength -
of the Democratic party k in the Southern
States, and'so much stronger the reason'
why Democrats should desire and lubcir
•
and fight for-the maintenance of the Un - - .
ion. Those who seek to affix the stigma
of treason td the Democratic party . be
, cause it has stood up for Southern righth,
in the Union, reason .most illogically,
when they conclude that this party must
! necessarily sympathize with - :the Southern
I States-in their efforts to get .. out of the
Union. Nut only the duty of the govern
went, but the highest interests •of the •
Democratic part y- , impels it to wish for
and.to work for the preservation of age
j Cnion. ' • . . •
Thus taking a purely selfish view of the .
I ease, 'it is evident that the Democracy as
I a party hive an interest in the preserve.'
I tion of the Union beyond that of any nth
' party organization.' But the greet mass -
of Northem Democrats who Avere ready
.to make - every "sacrifice for the. Union
when the Abolitionists talked of " letting _
it. slide," and when the Republicans- es
claimed " not an inch" of concession for
the Ufliun, were governed by higher,- no
I.liter anil More patriotic iinpulses, when .
they filled up'the ranks of the army anA
I iiished to the defence:of the Government.:
They are now as ever loyal to the con
stitution. and `eonStitiitional goVernment,
and- as determinedly he stile to abolition
ism in allits phrases awthey were during
the last campaign. when they predicted
the bitter fruits ofsectional domination. •
The Deinocratic . party is loyal to the •
Constitutioh and the Union—and the
only traitors at the north are .those who
seek to destroy the Constitatien and to
give such aid and comfort. to the enemy
as to render the reconstruction of the Un
ion impossible.- - Ilerrisbury Patriot and
I Union.'
"Treason."
The Republican papera, are now con
stantly, charging treason upon.every man
who questions any of the -acts of their-.
reckless and 'corrupt party leaders. As.
the'N..Haven Register welllays . ;* "Any
thing- and iiverything that damN come up.
to their standard, is treason; It is -trea
son to circulate petitions fora compromise
or peaceful adjustment of our national:
troubles, and it is proper to arrest persona
circulating them. It is treason to quest
ion the - constitutional power of the Presi
dent to increase the standing army wits
ont authority of law. It is treasonable to
question the power of inilitary command
ers' to refuse to obey a writ of habeas.
corpus • and more treasonable - to question
the authority of- the Prvident, to confer •
Stich power on 'his subordinates.: It is
treason to question the right of the Presi
dent to seize the .private contespondenea
of the citizen against whom no suspicion
or complaint has been made:. It istreason
to question the infallibility of the President.
and treason not to concur with him in all
his recommendations. It is- tredsoil to
talk of the hard 'times ; to refer to the
distress in the country consequent - upon
the war ;. to ruined tradu ; closed man
utfietories and Workshops ;' to prospective
heavy- taxes. It is 'treason to say that
this war might- have been avoided had,
:compromise been adopted,' and not spit
upon the Republic leaders. In fine, it
is treason to be 'truthful and faithful to
the Coniititution and to the people. kis
a very good - thing.t hat these Republican
have not 'the power to enforce their ideas
of 'what constitutes treason. - Had 'May
the power,
they would shame.. despotism
itself with their acts of.tyranny. -
—Aug, 20.—The President received, to.
diy, five different petitions signed by the
Bull Run prisoners at Richmond,
_praying
that some rneasures might be taken - fin
their release or exchange. One of.them
was signed exclusively by the marrie men
and heads of families, amounting to four
hundred and thirteen. -It beg g 0 that
they might be exchanged, in order that
they might return home to . provide - -fer
they families, whom they alleged were
suffering. Another was from - the three
Months volunteers, whose time has expiri.
AIM* 41t the hottest or\ the War
. or.
gaps, agree in strenuously urging upon
the AdMiniatrateon the moral necessity
for allowing an exchange of prisonent of
*ar.