THE . - MONTROSE _.DEM 9 CRAT. B. H&WLEY, Proprietor. IM:3l=!!=i ro - o stmt. 0211 G/ AL. Thi Fear Year Old. bit'kei ie. Milttleitotthip, I did dlt Lots Mee sings In um, Tait some laPhelxVidet I must Many" But 1 duune whin ni begin 'um. ,-..adotorputic auk trumpet, „,...M.socb kilo% ontings, ao many put theta all away ; an' I dot toady too, - xt Batraln't gotta' to dltton any. Did 'on see my Wee aewalste, I bake de old an, ao I dm aztader, pat my Itsleibet right woo it While I was mania' after madder. De 'on see how nice det I tan dram " My Mg round O's and sings, see um; eon make uns look so nice, But den I Winos, ever spell urn, I lan unlike elephants with great big noun, A house too with mines running round it, , A great big heart, but mamma says A twist's* picture—no one ever found it a L. 'am are the Friends of my Tooth. In moods sentimental we're apt to ask questions That were best left *masked, if I must tell the truth; And von* time ago, in a flesh of emotion, I sMibbled a poem on "Friends of my Youth." " Q where am the Friends of my Youth," %vie the tide Of Hues I thought tender, and touching, and teMe ; "rims all very welt, hut I rather regret it— That hurdling into interrogative verse. l ion% see what I men if you Ibten n moment ; A' nice tort of creatures they turned, out for sooth ; The next time I gush out in poetic *Wore. 111 not be so rapturous concerning my youth. The letters that reached roe were simply ss tormding They seemed to pour In from earth's distant ends, Conyeylut the tidings I'd rashly requestcd— The doing of early and Intimate (Heads. lola Smith wrote to say he was just then in prison, eouldn'tsee hint at that moment 't was plain), And Jones, who in youth had a turn fig the turns, Was gallery " checker" at old Drury Lane. And Brown, who in boyhood WAS such a wild , (I often bad trouble to keep hilt' la boards). He dropped me a fine, with apologies many, To know if rd lend bfm a couple of pounds. Toting Aaron, Islip had attend In bit probocis, We tilleiciated_the ttp Trben sniffs Wealent. Downlinalteespel way b s flaring pawnbroker, 404encts osithis money at sixty per cent. And young Thomas Tompkins bad turned out quite horsey, I mind me he talked of the turf and its ways ; And Green, who we thought would grow up to be pious. Waststarrint about OD the dying trapeze." Md Sitoktos—poor dolt—who was no end of *Wind, Es clown m a circus was pawing his life ; And .big Bowles, whom we used to call Cupid," 11* bolted last summer with somebody' sir ife. But Illy vast ;loha I—`tie but in effftetion ; EaCbWarne asitttnepti up presented a blot. I think on tha whole you'll join in the conviction 'Mei 6 Friends of my Youth" were a rather 'bid lot ! BitEIPIIES. —,Sports for the nursery — bat and bawt• —Frau tier eettlerame much annoyed by hoststeal Indiana. —llArever mnch a pawnbroker's shop may. be crowded, it is always a loan-some place. —Why is love ale s represented as a child ?—because be never reaches the age of discretion. —An old maid speaking of marriage, says its like any other disease ; chile there is life there's hope. —A model surgical operation : To take the cheek out of a young man and the jaw oat of s woman. it likely that Horace Greeley or any other man could steer the ship of Suite by means of the tillers of the soil ? —Says Josh : " I don't advise enny buddy to oultivate erns ; they want as winch waittng on as a Wind mule on a tow -path, and there aint pony profit in them intire than in a stock dividend of the Erie Railway. The/ are - fond of titles in the East ; among his other high sounding titles the King al Lea has that of " Lord or twen ty four Umbrellas." This looks as if he bad primed for a long reign. • —Some eleser fellow has mumnfactured handkerchiefiropon which the seat of ear in Europe is stamped. They hare pr.v,..1 an immense success, everytaidy wishinu t,, Poke:l4lMiss into the sumac of coußict, without danger. —A ciolomd inebriate vas lying on n bettaXibe;Othei evening in his cell at the Central Station at Providence, when the oieervlsde therwand of inspection. Un able by the fitful gaslight to discover the prisoner's features, the officer asked "are you colalwar " No," answered the en franchised, drowsily, " I was born so." the nannotetor of a hotel was but link-shout the other morning at 10 o'. clack , with twenty things to do, when ioNioattetitemd bun why he didn't call shan't eall him as long as I am help it," leplied be wheu be is is bed i know where b e Is, but after he is up. I don't know where to end him. gPctibutcovo. "MI DEAR FBINND : i shall be very glad to accept your kind invitation to pass the Summer with you, on your grant ing me one condition. You know some thing-of my aid history; how at the age of nineteen, after six months of bliss, my idolized husband was ruthlessly torn from me by the destroyer—death. During nearly three years I have lived a Secluded life, that has been sacred to the memory of my sainted James. I feel that I inn yet wedded to him in everything—must be through lifr; and that I must not be brought into contact with any frivolous company. It would be sucrile ,, e,, to his memory, and I have no desire but to be lett alone with my life-weight of sorrow, and remain as far removed from the thoughtless world as possittle. If I can find any seclusioc in •your home, and if, during the period of my stay, you will accede to what may seem to you my selfish demands, and forbid your young and hap py friends to visit you, or at least to see we, I will gladly seek your home as a place of rest, and your heart as a twin sister in sympathy cud consolation with this blighting grief of a life, and we will mourn together. Your true friend, "Usara. Ara Enos." Now, the lively little gray-haired wo man who was the recipient of the above missive, puzzled over it a long time tt. know what to think of the writer. and at last her conclusion on this point was made evitAent by the lieurty,good-uatur cd laugh she indulged in. Don t be shocked, my sensitive readers, ii t 4 supposing that this little woman, who had years enough to know better, was laughing through shear heartlessness at the imagined grief of the young Mrs. Mabel Atherton, which found expression in her letter, within deep fringe of mourn ing. Ay, that was it—"imagined grief," for the lively gray-haired woman of fifty, Mrs. Jane Fleming, had seen enough of the world in ail its phases, and had with- 1 in her own life enough of its experiences. to know that the griefs of a girl (the old :ally's words, my dear friends) of twenty one ur two, when of more than three or 1 four months', or we'll say at the utmost, a rear's duration, are but the precerted foibles of a silly brain, or monomania of a disordered intellect. Remember, this wise little woman had reference only to those griefs which seek outward sympathy. 10 be sure, there are griefs which lay their tender touch over all the elements of the heart and and head, breathing a gentler hush over Like spirit, and tinging with a golden glow of quiet, peaceful submission, every I lineament of life ; those are too holy for ut•erance—too pure for contact with the outer world—tog rentir and sincere -to find sympathy in aug ht but the quiet whispering of their own memory, and too full of heaven's mercies to precert a life from its heaven endowed purposes of good, and make in au inunity. She had such a grief, hidden from the world's view, and it was never perceived in her face by those who were curious about it. After a happy union of five years, her husband, whomshe had loved with all the truth and devotion of a faith ful heart was taken from her. That was years ago; and she, too, might have sit down in idleness, and frittered years away in selfish repining. but fur the needs that forced her to forget her griefs in severe struggles with the world ; hat even now, wheu she sat in the twilight, with a peaceful calm in her face, her eyes were looking through the shadows, and, her thoughts were wondering down cob-Feb bed and dust-begrimmed vistas, to that golden period of her existence when be wandered with her. She has never married since. She be lieved, too, in her good, generous heart that Mabel Atherton had each a quiet sense of loss in her heart as we have de scribed above, and it was not at it she was laughing; but at the false grief, the imagined duty to mourn loudly and to weir her sorrow on "her sleeve for dawn to peck at." At any rate the young widow received the desired assurance of seculsion, and finely found herself on her arrival a Mrs. Fleming's, clasped in the lady's arms, and greeted with a warm kiss, which made her reciprocate these friendly advances with more animation than she had ex pressed in any act for a long time pre vious_ These two never met before, but the widow Fleming . had been the dearest friend of Mabel Atherton's mother. This bond at once made them fast friends, Mabel was made to feel she was sincerely welcome at this country home. . . During the first days of her stay with Mrs. Fleming the sweet, sad faced little form, wrapped in sable habiliments of mourning, with not a vestige of white to relieve it. gave herself over a prey to her _chronic melancholy, and sat during the lung days end evenings in a lethargy of hopefulness, looking with expressionless eyes and face into the future, or. if speaking, sending a grace-like chill with every word, and wandering off as soon as possible into panegyrics over the dead, or taking joyless views of the future, with !Ouch the same zest that one idulges in a good dinner with indigestion lurking be n.ticl it. You have seen inch people, my friends. and no doubt have thought, as I do, that it is the most extreme aellishnesii) to ha inanity and thanklessness to boVren thus to wrap one's self in the shroud of one's own griefs, and expect ail the world to abandon their dunes and mourn also. ' Mabel Atherton did not realize this; somehow Mrs. Fleming bad a way of dropping in at the moment when she felt must despairing, and exercising these sable spirits by drawing her thoughts away into pleasanter channels, and mak ing her forget self in the cares, hopes and joys of others. Indeed, several times she was shocked, almost horrified, at finding a merry peal of laughter, as in olden days, well up to her lips and escape from them ere she maid control it; after which co mmence she would do pennanee by re. MONTROSE, PA., WEDNESDAN JAN. 11, 1871. lapsing into a deeper shade of sadness, and talking more frequently of her mourned idol. Yet, withal, her face was not so gloomy, and her heart was lighter; while the world did not seem so bad a world as before she came to this lively old lady, whose thoughts always wandered in to pleasanter places. " Mabel," Mrs. Fleming said to the young widow, one day, "you must find the constant company of an old woman like me very tiresome. A number of my young friends are anxious to manifest their sympathy for you and to lend some little enjoyment to your stay among us; and I have decided upon having a quiet social gathering of them here, some afternoon.' " 0 auntie! (for she had learned to call the old lady thus) the bare mention of such a purpose is perfectly shocking. and for me to consent to it would be a sacrilege to the dear memory of my lost treasure. ' "But you must have some enjoyment, love." " Enjoyment! the word is dreadful to my ear. There is no enjoyment for me in this world, fur my life is buried in the grave with my sainted James, and I beg the world to forget me. us all in it but me have forgotten him. I want no consola tion but his memory, and I shall find no happiness until I am laid by his side." "So you think now." "So I think! 0, auntie! do you know that I shall think so all my life t" " Yes, as girls' lives go, which are spans of several months, when they commence is new existence, with other feeling and purposes." Your insinuation is awful, aunt," re plied Mabel ; "but my own life proves Its incorrectness. 1 have not changed during these three years." "The more need von should change at once," dryly responded the old lady." " Your words terrify me. I can never forget my lost one." " Neither should you. But while we grieve tenderly over the departed we should remember that our lives are not urns in which their u.shes should be de posited. We have our duties in life as well as they had, and their removal does not absolve us rum them, but rather raises up new obligations to their fulfill ment. No one can liye within himself or herself and do their duty to mankind and heaven. Neither is it best that we should ever force upon all who come in contact with us the sense of our bereave ment by word, look or dress. Bethink you how long we should submit to one , who, having a wound, should tear it open to all, that they might see it in its hid- ; eousness always." " But no 0:-e was ever called upon to part with such a treasure as mine— She did not perceive the pained, re proachful look that came to her from the old lady's eyeg, and she confirmed : "And I will wear deepest mourning for him all my life, to prove that there is one who can clip to one object through life, and never seek another.' - . - tile calliper was arappeo, young people were not invited to come to "Ann t Fleming's." The young widow had found a quiet, so ber retreat down by a wooded stn•am, and here she wondered every day, and iu the solitude indulged in her pet melancho ly. One day Mrs. Fleming was suprised and alarmed to see her return from one of these visits to her retreat, leaning heavenly on the arm of a young man. It was evident that something had beful her : for she was very pale and almost speechless, and the old lady hastened to relieve the young man of his burden and lead her to a conch. The coring man was already known to Mrs. Fleming as Ernest Welelland, the physician, and in reply to her look of in quiry he explained the cause of Mabel's helplessness. It seemed that while pass ing along the road he had been attracted by her screams, and going to her a.sbist mice, had found that the alarm had been occasioned by a harmless snake, which had made its appearance from some dead leaves near which she was seated. After dispatching the snake, he saw that she was rendered so powerless by her alarm that she needed his assistance to reach the house. Mabel had by the time this recital was made recovered from her fright stitlicivt- IY to make an effort to convince Mrs. Fleming that Dr. M'Clelland had done himself justice for all the bravery he had displayed in saving her from what she believed most otherwise have terminated in a dreadful death. Her expressions of gratitude to him were warm and sincere. and when he ventured to beg the privilege of calling the following day, to learn if she had entirely recovered from the an pleasant alarm, the request was readily granted by Mabel and acquiesced in by .11ra. Fleming, with a smile which might have meant nothing—or a great deal. During the remainder of the day and evening the memory of the dead was tabooed, and Mabel favored the patient old lady with repeated thrilling accounts of the young doctor's terrific combat with the harmless snake. " She Mt that he was the savior of her " And," the old lady remarked, "de served her warmest thanks." " Yea, her eternal gratitude." " A noble man," Mabel thought. "Worihy to be received us a friend," Mrs. Fleming continued. " He was a genuine hero," Mabel was convinced. "A highly respected gentleman," the old hilly knew. "So self-possessed, so brave, so regard less of personal risk!" " A pleasant talker." " thsndsome, • dignified, noble in his biasing." " And an agreealile companion." With such expressive eyes, and grand intellectual face, and delightful scaring hair, and musical voice, and deferential air—" Mabel was ertopped iu the full flow of her enthusiasm, for want of breath to continuo. "He vu considered the best catch in the neighborhood," the old lady assured her. Bare," oung wid ow silent. " And," p y ursued the ow 61d lady, "thOngh the snake was perfeetlikertateit and any eight-year old boy would h av e d one as much as this doctor who was suddenly metamorphosed into a hero of wonderful proportions, it twat due to him that he should be received as a friend." Mabel bridled up at this insinuation against the great dariug of ber new found hero. She could not be convinced that this particularsnake was aught else than the most venomous of reptiles, that would literally have devoured. her, but fur the opportune appearance of the physician. 1 he two worneu were so greatly at variance with each other on this point, that Mabel was permited to retire unshaken in her belief. The young doctor made his appearance the following morning, and every day thereafter. In the time consumed dur- ing these visits, Mabel had little leisure to think of the sainted dead; and the nota ble change in her appearance, the ripened color in her cheeks the happy light in her eyes, and the smiles- wreathing her lips, might, I suppose, be also attributed to the young doctor's visits. " Mabel, darling," and the old lady, one day, "where are you wandering to now(" " For a ramble over Cm pastures after wild flower 4." " But are yon not afraid of the snake ?" " Dr. M'Clelland will accompany me, you know, and I am never afraid when he is with me. Then the day is to full of enjoyment, and I ion so brimming over with life that I cannot remain in." " Is that right, Mabel ?" said the old lady, with a very sauctmonious face. ••liave you forgotten that there is no en joyment for you in this world, and that your life is buried in the grave of your lust treasure r " Now, auntie, your insinuation is very cruel," murmured the widow, in a hurt tone and with tears in her eyes. "I have never ceased to mourn for my great bereavement. Dr. M'Clelland is different from any one else, and lam sure that if pour James were alive be would extend to him his warmest friendship for his kind atteutions to me." " Then he would he very generous. The young man's visits aro very fre quet." " That is because our residence is on his way tram visiting his patients in the neighborhood.' dis:mse must have become very prevalent Without my knowledge. I re member that before that snake adventure of yours his professional duties did not call him this wil 4 y mum than once in two or three weeks' "It is very compassionate in him to call so frequently to learn if we are all well, when his time must be so precious " That he can devote the half of every day to our humble selves," dryly put iu the old lady. "Now, auntie. I am sure I should have been very ill after that terrible fright, "Jim, IVi 11 13 S. - Wrc stint KllKtizras. " I agree, darling, that his course of treatment has hero very beneficial to you." And, anutie, he is generous to sacri fice his own comfort by coming over every day t• accompany me in my walk& Just think, I should nut dare to go out of the house fur fear of those dreadful snakes if it were not for his thoughtful ness, "So doubt he is very disinterested." " And I shall never be able to repay him." " Why, can he be looking for a re ward ?" "Oh no, auntie; he is too unselfish for that." " Of course.' And Mabel went away satisfied that the dear old auntie did realize how good, noble and distintervsted the young doctor was, though, for the moment, she im agined there was ft slight - tinge of sar casm in that last utterance of hers. She had been afraid that the old lady might think she was too much in company with the young man, and that she was forget ting the one whom she mourned for; in deed, unwelcome thoughts, to the effect that she really was forgetting him, some times intruded themselves, but not so often now as formerly. She was silencing them, fur she knew that Ernest M'Clel land would never, never presume to be more toluer than her dearest living friend, and that good, buried James was more precious to her than ever before. And thus having satisfied the old lady and quieted her own conscience, she thought it was only right to make amends for her miserable doubts about, the doctor by leaning more heavily on his arm and looking more confidingly into his eyes, that shown down on tier with such a warm light. It Was natural that he should pass his arm around her to help her over the marshy places, and as nat,nr al that he should retain it there, rnly with a closer pressure—lest she might take, cold if it were remo%ed. I suppose. Strange to say, the buried James was so satisfied with this bold proceeding on the part of the daring doctor that he did not arise from the grave to forbid it; and. of course, after this proof of her dead idol's acquiescence, Mabel could nut find it in her her heart to object The following morning 3fabel mani fested a good deal of trepidation about something, the nature of which Mrs. Fleming could not divine for a moment. " Auutie "1 ant listening, darling." "Do you thilly there would be any harm in my wearing with culls and col lar ?" "None in the least child; nor if you went farther and discarded mourning al together." "Gracious! auntie, you shock me fear fully." "As I did a nnnfber of weeks ago, when I proposed that-you should put on a white collar. But 3fabel, 1 amy dying with curiosity to know what good influ ence has been at work to occasion this query of yours." "I—l look so fearfully horrid in deep mourning, with nothing to relieve it." "And has it taken you three years to find that out ?" 4 And—and Ernest thinks I ought not to wear mourning all the time." The Mai and :the -ElleSaud. Shay,' was a quarrelsome old fellow who, though born a Quarker, had been read out of meeting for his overbearing and irritable disposition. He owned the crassest dog, the most troublesome steers, and the wildest cows in the neighbor hood. lie was always in hot water with his neighbors In consequence of his un ruly stuck. But Shavy came to grief one day In a way that taught him a lesson. The story is told in this manner: A short time since Van Amburg's me nagerie was obliged to pass his residence. A little before daylight, Nash, the keeper of the elephant, Tippoo Saib, as he was passing over the road with his elephant, discovered Shavy, seated upon a fence, watching a bull which he had turned on the road. It was pawing and bellowing and throwing up a dust generally. "Take that bull out of the way," shout ed Nash. "Proceed with thy elephant," was the reply. "If yon don't take that bull away he will get hurt," said Nash, approaching, while the bull redoubled hie furious de monstration. " Don't trpuble thyself about the bull, but proceed with thy elephant," retorted Shavy, rubbing his hands with delight at the prospect of a acrimmage—the old fel low having great confidence in the in vincibility a his bull, which was really the terror of the whole coutry around. Tippoo Slab came on with his uncouth shambling gait. The bull lowered hit head and mace a charge directly at the elephant. Old Tippoo, without even pausing in his march, gave his trunk a sweep, taking the bull on the side, crushing in his 'ribs with his enormous tusks, and then raised him about thirty feet in the air, the bull striking on his head as he came down, breaking his neck and killing him in stantly. " I am afraid your bull has bent his neck a little," shouted Nash as he passed on. - Dent T -- wee Mae. y, tts cicrplv.a* WO heavy for my beast. but thee won't make so much out of the operation as then suppose. I was going to take eay Family to the show but ft see thee and thy show in Jericho before I go one step ; and now thee may proceed with thy ele phant. Mr"Sinith courted Miss Brown, and so did Jones. She married Jones, despite Smith's groans. With pain in his breast, Smith went out West. This was in '4B. (Now dou't forget the date.) In less than two years he dried his tears, but refusing to mingle, he remained single. In 1862 he concluded to go down and visit the old neighbors in his native town. As he ap proached he meta damsel aged fifteen. There was something in her features ho remembered to have seen. "It must be her daughter," he hastened to conclude, so he ventured to accost her, (not think - •hia sued : "Smith (who lisped a little)—Ain't your name Jonesth ?" Miss Jones—Yes, sir. Smith—Ain't you Sim Tham Joneath danighter ? Miss Jones—Yes, sir. Smith—Nell, Miss Joneath, I came plaguey near being father month. FILIAL Lovit—A plain old gentleman went with his team to bring home his sons, two young sprigs who were aoon'es pecting to graduate. While returning they stopped at a hotel in a country town for dinner. The landlord, struck with the dashing appearance of the two gentlemen, made himself very officious, while he took the old gentleman from his home spun appearance to be nothing but a driver, and asked them if they wished the driver to sit at the same table with them. " Well, Dick," said the yoonger, aside to his brother, " As he is our father and it is his team, and be will bear the ex pensus, I think we had better let him eat with ns." " Yes, I think so too, under thh carmn. stances," Dick replied • " Landlord, give him a place at the table," ar"A waggish journalist who is often merry over his personal plainness, tells this story on himself: " I went to a chemist's the other day for a dose of morphine for a sick friend, The assistant objected to giving it to me without a prescription, evidently fearing that I intended to commit suicide, " Maw 7 said I " do I look like a man who would kill himself?" Gulag steadily at ma a moment he re plivd " I don't know.. It seems to me if I looked like you I should be greatly temp ted to kill myself." RrA Yankee wagered a Dutchman that he could swallow him. The Dutch man lay down upon a board and the Yankee bit his toe severely. The victim screamed with pain and told him to stop " Why, ye 'tarnel fool," erica Jonathan, "ye don't wink lam going to swallow ye whole do ye ?" The same fellow waggered another Dutchman that he could throw him across the Chicago river. lie pitched him some ten or Ofteen feet into the water, and he swam to the shore and claimed the stakes. "No ye don't," said the Yankee, reso lutely: "do you thidk I'm going to give up ? slr ; I'll do it, If L - try all day." —They tell a good story in lifilwoukie of st...hiwyer who came back, after some years' absence froth the city, and went almost immediately into the trial of a ju ry case. " I believe," said he to his op ponent, as he glanced at the occupants of the jury box, " I know more than half of these fellows, if I have been away so long.' "Undoubtedly," wis the reply, " you do know all of them." —A paper has this advertisetnen : Two sisters want washing. We fear that mill ions of brothers sre in the same predict. meat. Governor's Message. lb the &mats and Ariusßoprestaatiaa of of tlb Commontixatth gir hrumirahid Gentlemen All-wise Providence has permitted you to assemble_uuder cir cumstances demanding profound grati tude to the great Lawgiver of the-Uni verse. Our acknowledgments are first due to Rim whew band bas not grown nears in showering blessings in profusion upon the people in every department of industry, and crowning their toil with richest rewards. The circumstances under which yon commence the duties of the present sus.. ' ion are indeed suspicions ; and at no for mer period in our history has there been greater cause fur felicitation upon the in estimable privileges we enjoy, and the happy and prosperous condition of our great and growing Commonwealth. The 'meeting of the General Assembly is always a matter of deep interest to the people, end perhaps never more so than now, when an unusual amount of neces sary general legislation will occupy your attention, and questions of the highest importance will be discussed and acted on. I sincerely trust your industry and faith fulness to the performance of the impor tant work before you, will win the proud title of " the working Legislature." Amid such circumstances our attention should be directed to a careful review of all the most important and essentialin terests of the State ; and in the ezereise of that discretion which the Constitution has confided to the Executive, I propose to communicate such information, and to recommend to your consideration such measures as are deemed necessary and ex pedient. As first and moat important, I will pre sent a carefully 'prepared and precise statement of the finaticial condition of the Commonwealth. PIICAXCEB. It affords me pleaaure to congratulAte the people upon the satißfouto4y cundici(m of the treasury. .F. eery deroatid,unotl it for other expenses hue been promptly paid, and the public debt materially reduced, which has inspired such public could dence in the securities of the Common wealth as to cause them to command the highest premium in the market. The fol lowing are the receipts and disbursements for the fiscal year ending November 30, 1870 : Ordinary receipts, $1,100,862 49 Balance in Treasury Nov. 30, 1669, #6,336,603 24 Total in Treasury, Nor. 30, 1870, 67,737,465 13 Ordinary expenses paid du ring the year,enaLng Nor. 30, 1870, 62,860,832 09 Loans, &e. redeemed, 1,702,879 05 interest on loans, 1,86 4 1,811 77 Balance in Treasury Nov. - 30, 1870, ' 81,302,942 82 PUBLIC DFJq The public debt, Nev. 30, 1870, was $31,111,661.90. On the 15th day of Jan. 1807, the total State debt was e 37,704,409,77. Since then and up to Nov. 30, 1870,tbe sum of e 5,592,737.87 hits been paid. The reduction during the year ending Nov. 30, 1870 is 81,702,879.05. The average reduction per annum, fur the last four years, is sl,:i-18,181. In view of the fact that prior to let of July, 1872, nearly eight init.ion dollars of the public debt will be due, and in order that the Como:tuna-ea/6 nun continue to meet all its obligations promptly at matu rity, I recommend that such provision be made by the Legislature as will author ize the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund to sell all the assets that may be in their possession, and apply the proceeds to the extinguishment of the debt ; or at the option of the holders, to exchange them for the outstanding bonds of the Common wealth. The indebtedness of the State might be paid in the following manner : As already shown, it was on Nov. 30, 1870, abouts3l,ooo,ooo, from which am't if the said assets, 39,500.000, be deducted, there would remain unpaid i 21,500,000. After which, estimating the revenues and expenditures to continue as at present, the entire liabilities of the State would be liquidated in about eight years. If this method of paying the State debt should be regarded as unnecessarily rapid and oppressive, then a movement to re vise and modify taxation may meet with much more geuerul favor. Our debt is now held firmly by those to whom it is a great benefit to have so se cure an investment. A certain reduction of one million dollars per annum on it would perhaps be more satisfactory to them and to the people, than to strive to pay it off so hastily. In an endeavor to force things under the present mode of taxation, there is great danger of driving capital away from cur manufacturing centres. The landholder has been exemp ted from taxes on his hind for State pur poses, and the burden shifted upon the active, energetic and enterprising por tions of the community, who have always had their full share to bear. The farmer is at cue and runs no risk, while the business man, merchant and manufacturers are the motive ,power of tho conimunity, upon which the farmer himself must in a great measure depend for a realization of his industry.' A more liberal policy toward those engaged in mercantile, manufacturing, railroad and mining pursuits should be adopted. Un lest these interests are fostered and kept in full operation all classes of the people I will suffer. They are the very life-blood of the State, and should not in Any way be chilled or impeded by overburdening them with taxation for the immediate payment of the entire State liabilities. The foregoing recommendations, ltr my opinion, embrace the true policy of the Commonwealth, anti if adopted will doubtless receive a heartynse and endorsement from the people. respo The taxpayers detand thitall their so. cial, industrial, conitniteita;eafitlanedel operations shall be ielieved - from the her. VOLUME XXyIII:NXIMBER dens of an, mots Shall be necessary fur the gnidt tm lainit of the debt, ask lost shows iptdno fray the frugal' upomberot . tration of the govertifeezt StiefP l 9 and reform should no !anger ims earorated glittering generalities, or seem abstror. , time, Without meaning or latent, but as vital, living realities. cos -I =MCUTAL C;fUMW:LON. • Four years' aperien‘ rip as a exectiti:o officer Laren MA abundant opportuni ty for care al alienation upon the work my of our fiusdamental law, tad the leg idationottheState. This6B4 strongly impressed mo tha tt should be a thorough revision of the State Con • stitotion, with each stneadnAiteita the wisdom of a convention assemilined : fur that purpose would aadoubtedlysinggest, and an enlightened publio leatiment de mand. The authority for heading shah conven tion is found in the second section of the ninth article of the Constitution, and is declared in these words "That all poweria inhesentin,the 'ma ple, and a 1 free governments aswitnimied on their Anthony, and instituted for their peace, safety and bappinesa. For the advancement of these en 6, thethave an inalienable and indefeasible right at all trees to alter, reform or abolish theirgov ernment, in such manner as they may think proper. The last convention for lids rupose, was held in 1133£1. Durinttha _ll4oy- two rears that have since ehrd.- endry amendments have been made byjai4t res olutions of the General Assembly. and in compliance with the tenth mtele of the Constitution were approved and ratified by a majority of the qualified waters of the State. The most important were thorn Of I£o making the judges of the courts *dive ; of 1857 creating s sinking fund,regula ling the public, debt and legal:lElin dis tricts ; and that of 1854 meaning the right of suffrage upon those engaged in the mill. - ary service of the State or ustann. mi e d imposing sundry restraints Foga tau Lg-mature. These amendments, though important and valuable, give an incongruous and sort of patc h- work chardter to the Con stitution. and aro not consonant with the requiretnente of the times. This is a progressive period, and our State has outgrown its fundamental law. That law should therefore be wide to keep pace with the age in which V lire. The existing Constitution, including tho I.4starc amendments of 1850 and 1 • lavas% many wholesome restrictions on leaf - er and jurisdiction of the ; but experience has demonstratedAtkin. , adequacy to protect the peopla intended against the evils to he remell, asides pecially those of corporate power, and of special and local legulation. The pamphlet laws for the last font years show that the general laws for each session made oak: about four bundre a ges, while the Toad and special • tion fur the same perintraannuis L- •-• -I.,et 1 350. The resulting eaters Manifold and aggravated ; and prominent' among the masons and suggestions why a remedy should not be applied, I reit pectfully submit the following : Pirst.—Different systems of laws for roads, bridges, schools, elections,. poor houses and many other things, are enact ed for the several counties, townships end boroughs, on subjects which ought tb ho regulated by general laws, operating noi• formly upon all. • Second—lt is impossible fat the efts. zees, judges of the courts, or members of the legal profession, to acquire or retain an accurtate knowledge of the varying systems of laws in their respective die tricts ; nod frequently on removal from one county to another, our p e 'find theta elves under almost entirely ' t codes. 86,434,4'22 91 Third.--Practically, the wboly theory of our Constitution and government is subverted and destroyed by the present system of local enactments. Repreeenta live Saws is based on the idea that the laws shall'be framed by, and be the result v 4 the collective wisdom of tha people's representatives. But what are the actual tiicts ? The minds 'and efforts of the members are so wholly absorbedby private and local bills that it is almost impossible to get a priersl or public act considered or passed. The special and local bills are usually drawn by the mem ber representing the locality, or by some one from the district interested in the proposed law. By what is called courtesy, it is considered a breach of etiquette fOr any member of the Senate or blouse to interfere with or oppose a merely private or local trill of any other' member. The result is, the bills are passed asoriginally prepared, examination or comparison of views,—often credo and ill•digested, anti without regard to constitutional require. nients, or sound public policy. &me of the worst of these hasty and badly con sidered enactments are arrested every year by Executive interposition; but in the nature of the case, the veto at best can only be made a pahal restraint upon the evil; and nothing can eradicate It short of constitutionol prohibition. Fourth.—Special legislation is the great and impure fountain of corruption, pn vate speculations and public wrongs. , It has become a reproach to republican goy. erwment, and is one of the most algirming evils of the times. Judicious amendment; to the Constitution would arrest and de stroy the growing evil; and it is the duty of every patnotio citizen to co- 0 1111., all lawful measnres to effect so destrablim change as demanded. Every bill pesse4._ ed for adoption should be read, st. lent once in NI, and the yeas and stye Du -lOW corded etr iterdnal itept=that' . 8600 t. Constitution ebouldle. to 'mister= to the Constitution of the Unitarl. States as recently amended. , Sixth.—The subject of minarilq reVa.. sentatioWia now much agit ated. , 1•411 givinglarge share o fconsblentisms• among theughtful and ooneidsmte It em%acee, problems ofireet politic ; importance, and its mealifitiaintato MI. - mends it to public favor. whilst lonseof the objects it propel might be 'el l by legislative itnactwafts4 (Pie Forted