- . '.• • . , . , ;- . • • • . ~. .1. _ , A. S. GERRITSON, Pioprietott A Fool and His lloney. John W. Steel, familiarly knoWn' as "Johnny Steel," and somewhat dis tinguished sa r an 4 ! oil prince," having fur a considerable length of time enjoyed the princely income of $3,000 per day, filedtin the United States District Court, a volun tary petition in bankruptcy. Many of our readers will remember his romantic exploits in the East, published sometime ago, dnring which is reported to have spent several hundred thousand dollars. After having "sowed his wild oats," and, losing his oil farm, he found himself in rather straightened circumstan ces, and was recently compelled to earn a living\by driving an oil team. His indebt edness', as set forth in his petition,amounts to over 8100,000. Steel is a Pennsylvanian by birth and is now in the neighborhood of twenty-three years of age. Ile has but little education, has no business qualifications or shrewd ness, and especially cut out by Dame Na ture to attest the truth of the proverb, that "A fool and his money are soon par ted." Of his early youth we know very little; manhood and riches sprang upon him about the same time. His interest in the famous McClintock farms -and oil wells, in Venango county, bequeathed him by his father, for a number of years yielded him an income of $3,000 per day. This .iirincely income was the means of awakening in "Johnny" an ambition to seek other fields and sources of amuse ment than those offered in the wilds of Venango county.. We heard of him first by his lavish waste of wealth in Philadel phia. Here he made the acquaintance of Messrs. Skiff it Gaylord, of minstrel fume, and one of the first rash purchases was an entire new outfit fur the minstrels, com posel of velvet coats and vests, and plaid trowsers. Many of our readers will remember the troupe in this uniform. To those eccentric costumes he added dia mond breastpins of the first water, and a new suit of clothes for each member for the street. Several members of Carncross Dixey's minstrels, of Philadelphia,were also favored in the smile manner. • Another of Johnny's eccentric acts in Pyiladelshia is related as follows: Walking down Chestnut street one day with a friend, ho espied a beautiful span of horses attached to a splendid carriage, just turning down from Second. To see, was to envy ; so, hailing the driver, Sam' M—, who as it happened was also owner, Johnny coolly asked him if ' he would sell his establishment. Sam looked credulously at his customer, wondering if be were drunk or crazy, when Johnny again put forward the question, " What will you take for the whole rig ?" Saha, with a wink, and while knocking . the%ash. es from his cigar, doubtless thinking to frighten his unknown customer, replied, " Well, I guess about $7,000 will take the lot." Johnny answered by laying down seven one thousand dollar bills on the seat of the vehicle, .and taking hold of the reins, he cooly said, "hop out ;" and "hop out" Sam did, while Johnny drove off, leaving Sam standing in amazement on the corner. The day was spent in riding about the city, and spending money lavishly. To ward evening he employed a man to drive, and finally, while winding up the day, he reached the Girard House. Alighting on the pavement, he asked the driver as to his circumstances, and learning that be knew the " grip of poverty," Johnny made him a present of the horses and car riage, telling him not to offer thanks, but "drive off quick." While in Philadelphia, one of the ec centricities of his morning walks on Mar ket and Walnut streets, was to watch for a man with a shabby hat. He would then follow him until be g ot in front of a bat Store, and then, with a swoop, he would land the offending bat in the middle of the street, at the same .time apologizing to the wearer, and asking_ him into the store, where he would buy him the best to be had. Johnny never carried any baggage with bim while traveling-, purchasing every thing as he required it. Having resolved one day to stop at the Continental hotel, instead of his usual retreat—the 'Girard— he was driven there ip 'company with a friend, Mr. Wm. B—y, a noted mer chant of our own city. Sauntering up to the office, he made known bis desire to, "stop a while." The clerk asked him , n,s. to the whereabouts of his baggage. John ny replied that he - had none. "Thenr. said the clerk, " ; you must -pay in advance; that is our rule. Jobnny cast a glance at bill; and won dered that he was not knoivn. Sp, kvink ing at his friend 8., be asked the clerk - if the propriefor•was:tri. in the affirmative, - ibe landlord seminar) bre appearance, wben a conversation of tho following tenor ensued: " You are the proprietor, I bebev,e, sir —the responsible man Y".. "Yes, sir. " - " I wanted to make a short stay with yon, but that gentleman (pointing to the clerk) says I must pay in advance." Well, sir." _ "How much do you consider, your whole house worth for a day ?" 4. About $3,000." "Ili take it 24 hours, anyhow, and, see, how it goes." _ Johnny then touted out thi pipitey, and turning to his friend, said: " Now, Bill, jump in , and play clerk." Rumor says this was B's first and only experience in hotel keeping. There are many anecdotes related about him, but th&above will suffice to show the general Character of the man. When more recently, the avalanche of money had exhausted itself, we hear of Johnny act ing in the capacity of door keeper for the very same hand of minstrels the members of which be had given the diamond: pins • and costumes. Field Battles of the Ancients. Free from the smoke of a modern en gagement, a Hellenic battle must have been a gallant sight. In purple tunic and burnished armor the men stood ten, fif teen and twenty deep, beneath a glitter ing forest of spear heads. Those who were well to doled no lack of gold about their grooves and breast plates, and were dandified in plumes and sword belts; while even the poorest citi zen wore a helmet fashioned by the exqui site taste of a Greet artificer. It must have been a trial for the nerves of the bravest to stand biting his moustache; humming . a bar of the man which he was to sing within the next quarter of an hour; wondering whether his widow would marry again; hoping that the cobbler on his right might not turn tail, or the teach er of gymnastics on his left shove him out of the line • dimly conscious meanwhile that his co lonel was exhorting him in a series of well turned periods to beth!nk himself of the tomb which covered those who died at Thermopylae, and the trophy which stood on the beach at Artemistiem. And then the signal trumpet sounded, and the music struck up, and the whole army tbrward, steadily at first, but break ing into a run when cnly a few hundred yards separated the approaching lines.— And, as the distance between grew short er, and the tramp of the enemy mingled with their own, the front rank men had just time to try and imagine that the countenances of the people opposite look ed like flinching, and that. the notes of their war ch nt had begun to falter, and the next second there would be a crash of pikes, and a grating of bucklers, and a clutching of beards; and those who would fain be home again were pushed on by the mass behind, excited at hearing oth ers fighting, qnd with no steel at its own throat; and, after five minutes of thrust ing, and shouting, and fierce straining of foot and knee and shoulder, the less de termined or worse disciplined of the two hosts would learn, by one more cruel ex perience, the olelesson that life as well as honor is for those who retain their self respect and their shields. Remarkable Cave in Penniylvania. A Niiroy correspondent of the Lewis town Gazette gives the following partic• ulars of the discovery of a wonderful cave in Armagh township, Mifflin county : "On the 24th of April, while Charles Nagony, of Milroy, was having a site dog for a lime kiln, he was surprised by find ing an opening in the side of a MIL The moment it came to view, a strong stream of air began oozing forth, like the press ing of a pair,of bellows. The work was continued until the aperture opened in size large enough to allow the body to crawl in, and then it, was found to be a splendid cave, with gorgeous gangways; during the week the work progressed,and a formal entrance was made. After first entering we found ourselves enclosed in a narrow underground path for the distance of twelve feet; here the great cave came to view; the gangway about fifteen feet wide, with gigantic walls of rock; was a direct line of about fifty feet, in the centre of which we be held the banging or projecting rocks, in the shape of a mantel, under which were small crystalized rocks, long and hollow, appearing like icicles on a house in winter time. Here we turned to the right;and had a fall view of the p'atform rock, a natural platform about three Ifeet above the level I of the floor, and running together in the centre; above it ivas a shelf of canopy, which indeed- presented a magnificent, sublime sight. Here, over 1,70 feet under ground ct aod in natural formed rooms and gangivays; with a splendid spring of fresh water beneath your feet, who could not realize that' he bands of nature bad truly been at work here. .4 short distance further on we beheld the hanging lamb, and then came the sub teranean Chamber, situated below, where the - rocks. seemed to be more mar belized, as they are firmer, whiter, and more solidly settled.' After returning, with the assistance of I ,i ladder ,provided by lir. Nagoney, we were enabled to, take a look up stairs.— Hein was anOthet chamber with colossal wait- of rock, . which-, presented a sight never to be forgotten • the distance trav ersed was abOut 60Q ient ' ut) T air within is very warm, and the 404 ,or ground seems as if cemented ? and is grid and sol id. The diagrain is in the shape of an written; and ; very , neatly laid out. The base of the springs are:like small pebbles laid aside astde'of each "other s " with bor. day compood of &large size. The save is situated, on . rhe !ingot* tbe end Cen tre Pond', railroad,' Oiout tl:trav fettriks of itithi belch? .I)Wrcl.," MON*ROSE, PA., TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 1868. Radical Rasiidities Exposed by a Rad- . foal. For some r won the morning Radical organ of this city is in a bad humor at the political ontlooktind, judging from one of its articles, it enattains no hope of success, in this State at leant, for the Chicago nom inees. Professing`lple " perfectly satis fied with the eandidateti of Convention at Chicago," it yet midi* admits that "we believe more in measures than in men"— which means that its perfect satisfaction is of the "grin and bear it*. kind. The fol lowing hi the remainder o(the eaitorial : "The Keystone state watidisgraced and I hemilated in that Convention y men who, neither at home or abroak i respect the wishes and the will of the rattsfies of Abe Republican party of Pennsylvami. These men made their money from the advantage they took of the patronage of oukparty, and to-day every embarrassment we 44er in the advocacy of our principles spirgs from the charges of corruption our op* nents are able to fling to our teeth, by reason of the dishonesty of the men who defied the will and misrepresented the wishes of the people of Pennsylvania at Chicago. These demagogues are rich, and therefore claim they can do as they please. They are the authors of our po litical disgrace, and therefore act with desperate unconcern whenever the reputa tion of the Republican party is at stake.— But the old wheel-horse must strnggle.on in heavy harness, and while demagogues riot in the wealth they have already 6 ch ed from our Country's necessities, or plan new schemes of plunder, the Repubican masses of the geystone State are expect ed to be true to principles, are looked to to win victories out of which these clique leaders may secure the means to add new acres to their already gigantic land pos sessions' and more dollars to their over swollen bank accounts. The Republicans of Pennsylvania will not always submit to such wrongs and dishonor. Our load of disgrace is more than we can bear, and and when reaction does come, woe be to the plunderers who now assume the tyr annical management of our political or ganization. In the meantime, go long wheel-horse, and do your du y!"—State Guard, May 23d. After such clear admissions in regard to the past. rascalities of the Radical lead ership (if Pennsylvania, can the people be made to confide in them or their candi dates or pot faith in the platform of prin ciples which they have erected ? We think not. Who so silly as to believe that persons branded as "plunderers" in their own party can or will practice hon esty or economy in future, it brought into office.—Harrisburg Patriot. " Undisguised Villainy." The above appropriate.caption the Car bondale Advance (Republican) gives an ac• count of the party influences used to pro cure a conviction of the President. Further commenting upon the trial it adds: " But in the prospects of acquittal, in judicious and unprincipled partisans strip it of its respectabitlity, of all pretense of justice, and demand a verdict of conviction of these sworn Senators as a partisan measure, upon partisan grounds, and to subserve partisan ends. We would not expect such audacious villainy from any men not fully ripe fur perdition. " Impeachment has tailed ! It has equally tin ed, whether the verdict under these indecent and abominable manifesta tions be conviction or acquittal. We be lieve acquittal would not be for less inju rious to the party of the two. " Each day seems to add to the,start ling shamelessness of the proceeding.— The world has seldom witnessed such an exhibition of moral and political proflig acy." In another article it says : "From the hour that Robert C.Schenck, Chairman of the Republican Congression al Committee, sent ont his manifestoes for getting up meetings, resolutions and letters, to influence Senator!, and demand conviction, from that hour conviction could not. fail to be a disaster to the Re publican party." Their Harry Over. The majority of the Senate, while the trial was in progress, were in a very great hurry to conclude it, and appeared to be very much afraid lest the President's counsel should succeed in protracting it. They refused to allow a reasonable time to prepare their case, and forced every stage of the trial through with the utmost expedition. Their hurry seems now, how ever, to have left them; when it would have taken but an hour or two , to fival6y end the case, they have postponed it, first for four, and then for ten days—tivo weeks altogether, The public interests which they alleged demanded that the trial should be quickly concluded, seem to have given way to party interests, which in their opinion require that the Chicago Convention shall pass upon the gully or innocence of the awned, before the High Court of Impeachment shall be able to'fin ish the voting _nitoiligently ott the ques tion, '—Tbeie are twelve Denioeratio and siz Aidieertietaties.iii adich aro Who is Responsible for Extravagant Expenditures ? In the string of glittering and inconsist ent generalities, which was adopted by the Radicals as a platform at Chicago, a deliberate attempt is made to shoulder up on Andrew Johnson the extravagance which has prevailed in the general gov ernment during the past seven years.— Does any one suppose people of the Uni ted States are such fools as to believe an assertion of that kind. Surely there can he no man in the couritry who does not know that ever since Mr. Johnson became President, Congress has been entirely re sponsible for every dollar that has been expended, and that the President and his Cabinet have been utterly powerless to restrain the reckless extravagance that has prevailed. The tax payers of the nation, the toil ing masses, from the sweat of' whose hon est brows the many millions which have been uselessly squandered were wrung, are justly indignant at the extravagance `which has prevailed. The tax gatherer in Ails country has more hands than the fa bled-:monster, whom men called Ageon and the,goas . Briareus. The masses see what a heavy percentage is added to the cost of everything which they buy, by taxation. Asibey Snd themselves cramp ed in the neoesiartea of life, and see luxu ries which they once: enjoyed put out of their reach by . taxatietii they begin to in quire sharply into the 'Catises which have produced this result. ' They have looked at the ,reckless and enormous expenditures of theieneral gov ernment,and have investigsted\ the mat ter for themselves until they are siitiefied that their burthens have been greatly in creased by Congress, without the nation's receiving nny compensating 'benefits. The Radicals who nominated General Grant at Chicago know how general is the spirit of inquiry and dissatisfaction, which exists among the masses. They have heard the mutterings of the coming storm of popular indignation against Con gress, and they attempted to shield them selves by the passage of a resolution in which they undertake to throw the re sponsibility for the prevalent extrava gance and corruption upon President Johnson. The people cannot be 'blinded by any such transparent veil of falsehood. They know full well that Mr. Johnson has been utterly powerless ever since be came into office as President. They know bow com pletely supreme has been the rule of Con gress. They know that not a dollar has been expended during all that time, ex cept under the direct appropriation and approval of the Radical majority in Con gress. The Bank of England. The Bank of England possesses singu lar experiences and traditions. We beard the other day an anecdote from an au thentic source although it happened many years ago, before the lifetime of the pres ent generation. The directors received an anonymous letter stating that he had means of access to their bullion room.— They treated the matter as a hoax; and took no notice of the letter. Another more urgent and specific letter failed to arouse them. At length the writer offer ed to meet them in the bullion room at any hour they pleased to name. They then communicated with the correspon dent through the channel he had indica ted, appointing the hour of midnight for the rendezvous. A deputation from the Board,. lantern. in hand, proceeded to the•bullion' room, and awaited the arrival °fate mysterious . correspondent.- • Punctual to the hour a noise was heard below. Some boards in the floor were without much trouble dis placed;and io a few minutes the gay Guy Fawks of the bank stood in the midst of the as.onished directors His story was very simple and straight forward. An old drain ran under the bul lion room, the existence of which had be come known to him, and by means of which be might have carried away enor mous amounts. Inquiry was made. Noth ing had been extricated, and the directors rewarded the honesty and integrity of their anonymous correspondent—a work ingman who bad been employed in repair ing the sewers—by a presentation of eight hundred pounds. The" Dead Duck" places the follow ing journals on the "black list," because they did not denounce the Republican Senators who voted for acquittal : New York Evening Post, Chicago Tribune, Cincinnati Commercial, Providence Jour nal, Springfield Republican, Bridgeport Standard, Buffalo Advertiser, Buffalo Ex press and Hartford Courant. This list, it, will be seen, embraces about all of t he! ablest and most influential Republican journals in the country. —The military tyrants of Arkansas have arrested and imprisoned Jacob Fralich, editor of the White County Record, for strictures upon their conduct. Thislin a Republic; and in time of profound peace I —The Cottage Gardener, of London, says earthing up potatoes tinishes the produce, and retards the rimming of the tubers, Long _experiments In England basefroved this Wt.pihat, up_thp potato w W taboo th e dtbp.doo-OMbo Resignation of Stanton, The prompt resignation of Stan t on is the tit and necessary sequel of the ' utter collapse of impeachment. If the resolu tion offered in the Republican caucus of Senators to postpone the vote and keep impeachment. alive had been carried out in the Court, Stanton would have held on in spite of the further injury that would have been done to the public service. Omar ohject of the postponement was doubtless to site the President ~ by his longer re ten two. There is no result of the President's complete acquittal which will give more sincere joy to honest men that the humili ation and disgrace of this insolent miscre ant. He was not only the occasion of im peachment, but. its chief instigator. As soon as the President caused the notice of his removal to be served on ot him, he im mediately volunteered to send a copy of it to the House without waiting to have it called for, as if be had made up his mind that lmpeachment was the necessa ry consequ ence , and be bad a right to dic tate it. His office has been the focus of all the impeachment intrigues. He has regarded the whole affair in the light of a personal Contest between hint and the President„ and he expected Congress to decide tha"t.bis title to power was better , than that 'of a President elected by the people.' lie lie was to disorganize the Gov ernment, to virtually destroy the War Department by severing it from all con.; uecuon with the President, and to keep the military administration of the country in a state of confusion, to gratify his igno ble insolence and his sordid avarice of power. His humiliation is as signal as his character is infamous. He will slink away into obscurity despised by the very Radi cals who have abetted his insolence to gratify'a'ipirit of base revenge. Nor is Stanton the only person who is humiliated by this extorted resignation. General Grant, who first secretly conniv ed at this contumacy, and afterward gave it his open countenance; General Grant, who forfeited his word to restore-- Stan, ton, and who was convicted of duplicity and misstatements by the written testi mony of half a dozen gentlemen of the highest standing ; General Grant, who, to serve Stanton, caviled at the order of the President forbidding, him to recognize the endorsed orders of Stanton and disobeyed his commander in chief; General Grant, who permitted it to be given out in the Republican newspapers that be thought the conviction of the President to be es sential to the safety of the country, shares the disgrace of the man he tried by dis creditable means to uphold.— World. The Telescope and Microscope. While the telescope enables us to see a system in every star, the microscope unfolds to us a world in every atom. The one instructs us that, this mighty globe, with the whole burden of its people and its countries, is but a grain of sand in the vast field of immensity—the other, that every atom may harbor the tribes and families of a vast .population. The one shows us the insignificance of the world we inhabit—the other redeems it from all insignificance; for it tells tie that in the leaves of every forest, in the flowers of every garden, in the waters of every riv ulet, there are • worlds teeming with life, and numberless as the stars of the firma ment. The one suggests tonathat above anfl, beyond all that rs yisisble ,to man, there'may be regions of 'creation which sweep immeasurably along, arid the lm preen of the-Almig hty's hand , to the re r motest scenes of the universe—the other, that within and. beneath all that mingte nese which the aided eye of man is able to explore, there may be a world of invisi ble beings ; and that, could we draw aside the mysterious veil which shrouds it. fromnur senses, we might behold a theatre of as many wonders as astronomy can unfold—a universe within the com pass of a point so small as to elude all the powers of the microscope, but where the Almighty Ruler of all things finds room for exerciae'of attributes where he can raise another mechanism of worlds, and and fill and animate them all with eviden ces of His glory; * Gmr. Grum Mown nis Posmost.— Charles E. Mesa, one of the old chums of Wendell Phillips, an original member, we believe, of the "Liberty Guard," writes thus from Washingtnn, under date of May 12th, 1868, to Rev. A. M. Powell. He says: "Gen. Grant is working . hard with his friends .to secure conviction. He says ,his . acquittal result in bloodshed.— ,His opinion. ought to influence Republi ,can Senators to remove the only obstacle in the way of peace. "By the way, Gen. Grant the past three weeks has declared himself is favor of universal suffrage, and declares that must be the. ruling idea of the administration erected in 1868.". . General Grant has entered upon a ca reer of defeats and disappointments, that will lower him as molt as his success in the war raised him. From the day he an. perbeded Stanton.and deceived Johnson, be bat deolineiiiu popularity.. His labors for din pe=r 3, 4 isgraPeral bii throw dt trinalubla.; tvoLumE xxv, NUMBER 24. The following photograph of a South ern carpet-bagger we clip ftom an ex- How well it, suits one of the same species in the North, and especially those _who infest our leading hotels, and are bold enough on every occasion to introduce their unasked for opinions upon 'still more unwilling listeners, *alcove our readers to judge : 'You find them everywhere. • On the cars, and in the towns, and prpwling about in country places, and you can't take up a paper, hardly, or hear a man speak, but what there is something about • the carpetbagger. Few know where they come from ; . nobody knows how they live—perhaps nothing but an item ized account of the secret, service money of the Reconstruction Committee of Qin gress could tell-;-but here they are .bus , ' zing about like gad-flies, add seeking the weak points of the country with the un erring instinct of carrion crows. Hound ed out of the North for rascality—for ev erywhere now and then some ugly put is brought to light shoat them—they seek and obtain employment in the cause of Reconstruction and come South. Some sworn into the Bureau, others foist them- selves on the Revenue, others again play pimp and spy and call-boy for the service s and outside of these, the great bulk Sus tain life by taking up subscriptions for the freedmen, and levying contributions for the good of the party on enthusiastic Radicals at the North., Like Jonah's gourd, they spring up and Sourish and fade in a day, descending from nowhere at daybreak and ready ere night to run for Governor. "I know one case, where, on the - ap. proach of election, one of these. gad-flies name, on the next day announced himself a candidate, and, on the third 'day, was 'elected,' and now sits in a sovereign con vention to reconstruct a State. Still an other case occurred, and it is . 'susceptible to Verification on oath, where anoher ,of these creatures, on his way to stake hi* seat as a 'delegate',: pawned his 'carpet- WOG pay expenses, and never coming to redeem it, had said receptacle opened on ly to find thereia some Radical documents under Congressional frank and a few lit tle personal articles, not worth, in all, ov er two.dollars and a half. Such is car pet-baggery, and just fancy its beauties to yourselt.You are a Southern man, let us say, and sitting at night-fall id some little country village, and here, at dusk, there comes striding in a strange man with a carpet-bag. That night there is a Union League meeting, and the next day, before noon, the strange man has poked his nose into half the houses in town, knows everybody by name, and has a list of all the negro 'critters in all the Country round about in his pocket. Pretty soon there comes an election, and the strange man, whom you now begin to recognise as a carpet-bagger, you seedge at the polls. As such he counts t he votes, de clares himself 'duly elected' to a conven tion somewhere, and as the day of assem• Wing approaches takes up a. collection among the negroes and departsz-he and his carpet bag. For awhile you hear nothing of him, but pretty soon it appears that he has framed a State Constitution, and is coming back to run for Congress. And here; after a few dar, he is again.. the people's money in his pocket, and_ a bran new suit of clothes, at their' oast, 'ha his carpet bag. - , A prominent physician iii'Vi'iushingtoo has written a commutation to the, CAmiele contradicting the paragraph- now going the rounds of the press, stating,"among others things, that "thirteen hundred rich men's daughters had applied-for admission to the Inebriate Asylum of New York-- The writer expresses the opinion that it is time that this absurd slander on our *gun. try -women should cease to circulate in the public prints, as it was authoritively ecin tradicted long since by the officers of the institution refer to, and express his ear. prise that a State Temperance Convention should have published a statementso.dam aging to our national character without a more careful examination into its truth.— He states his conviction, the result of much attention to the subject, that there is vast ly less intemperance among American wo men (natives of the country) than those-of any other country in Christendom. In an extensive medical practice of forty years i he has not observed a single case of ntern perence among young ladies of respectable families, either rich or -poor, and hardly a dozen intemperate women is nth faml. lies, embracing all ages. r —A toll gate keeper in England was brought before a magistrate for cruelty to his daughter. The little difficulty arose from a discovery made by; the parent, that the girl who was frequently left in charge of the gate, used to allow her sweetheart, a young . butcher, to drive his wagon throughfree. Eho never tolled her love. -.The ElOrgant at *Fmk et the Beni t. eubrmed all the witnemea in the imiielieb, meat .trial,by telegraph,Limn nkarged ten cents mile traveling nit:peaces to quirt #orn, the place* efresidenoi. Eui 'dispatch to Eifmatortaeati ia.Oiego , ,Ent, $1 . ikikkieet f ' l 4 l 'nkfdl" +Oil A Carpet Bag.i9i. The Sex Vindicated. .: 3; •