ZjIT MBE E. - B. HAW LEY,: Proprietor. uointoo Canto. SMPBAN & CAP.; Saddle, Earnest and Trank Makers, Shop In C. Rogers' Store Betiding, Brooklyn, Pa. Oak llyrnoa Mi. 110117 end light, made to order, Brooklyn, April 3, 1811.—inG L.D.21 SMITH laviric located at Sastioehatina Depot, ggimpact urer or ansidcaler In licht and heavy llarnevrea,Dol•arNwhip, Trualui„Saddlectv—hoptrig.hy strict at heution to boat seas and fair dealing. to have a liberal shalt of March a. 1872.—n010—m3. BURNS & NICROLS, I DiLti.sißB to Drugs, Mettlelnee,' Cherateals, Dye. Alt ads. Pale ts, 01 TA, Vero Ish. Ltipsort, Splees.Paney ..t.eles, Patent lledietncs, Perfunteryand Toilet As glrPreseeptions carctelly componniled.— Thick Black. litontrose, Pa. _ • A. B. gauss, Fib. 11,11H1. DR. D. A. LATHROP. • Adablisters Es.corso TIILUX44 Daum at tho Foot of caporint street. cat' and consult In all Chronic Diseases. youtrme, Jan. 17. J. F. SHOEMIAKEn. Attorney at Law. Montrone. P. Office next door below the Tarbell 'loose. Poblle Avenne. Montrose, Jan. 17, 18M-003-17. C. E. BALDWIN, AMILIIIT find COMIX2OII AT LAW, Great Bend. Penn itylnota. Bm, - B. L. BALDWIN, ArrOIMT VI taw, Montroge, Pa Mee with James H. thmult. Esq. • Nontruw, /thvist 31:1. 1871. LOOMIS & LIGSK. Attonam st Law. 011 Ice 'No. V.l Lackawanna Avenue. Scranton. Pa. Practice In the several Courts of Ln. zero* and Susquehanna Counties, F. IL Loom. SCIA9tOII, Sept. rth, Ig7l.—tr. W. I. CROSSWON. Attor.ey at Lga. Office at the Court Ilona., in the CacomisalooSea Ocoee. %V A. CW1 4 353103. Montrose, Sept. Gth, ISTl.—tf. NOLENZIE, & CO. esters In Dry 600do,•Clothing, Ladies and Misses fine Shoes. Oleo. agouti ter the great American Tea ad Coate Company. Montrose, July 17, '72,3 DR. W. W. 8321 TE Dioemre.fteestt et. Iltledvelt next door out of the Itepablrcan priatinz office. take haws from 90. at. totr.a. ffoolotte. 1371—tf TILE DAUBER—Ha! nal 1062: Charley Yore. la the barber, who can thane rate Core to order; Cita browa, black and v . 1=10141% la litn Simian vp stain. There you will Mg kick over Oates store. below YieSenzia—jultaaedecin. Ilanoore, Jane 7, irCl.-41 C. NORMS. J. 11. & A. 11. NIcCOLLIJIII, Armworve as Law 0111 ea over the Dank. Itaateme R. Mantra., May 10, 15TI. tl. J. D. VAIL, \ lloartorarrne Purlieu% awn Scaocov, na. permanently -located Niontman, Pa, where an will pirnapt• ty attend to all calla tn his profcrion with which he may Le rarored. °Mee and residenea carat of the Coon Howie. near Filth 81 %Parana's °Mee. MontrotT. FebruarY a. 1871. LAW OFFICE• YMCA 4 WATSON. Attataeya at Las. at the oldollice seek 7 t Mb. Kautram. L r. PITO. '7l-( . v. W. 11.11+011. CHARLES, N. STODDARD. Deslot lo Boots and Shots, Rats sod Caps. Lenthfir and Findings, Pats Buret, sat door below Boyd's Sum. Wort made to order. and repatrin doge neatly. Moutro.o. Jan. 1. 1919. LEWIS KNOLL, - MATING AND LIAM DItESSE4II. Shop in the new Postoillee balidind, where he will be round ready to attend all who may want anythityt his line. Moutrose, Pa. Oct- 13, 1839. DB. S. W. DAYTON, PRYSICIAN 6. SURGEON, tender, his act:lees id the citizens of Greet Bend and vicinity. 01laze at hi, residence. opposite Bantam Rouse. G *t. Bend village. Sept. Ist, ISto.—if A.O. WARREN, ATTORNEY Ai. LAW. Bounty. But Pay. Pellll4ol. and Knew' on Claims attended to. 0111 no dr -our below Boyrs Store,''Bontroae,Pa. [Att. 1.'60 M. C. SUTTON, Auctioneer, and Insurance Agent, sat Mt Friend Pa. C. S. GILBERT, .A.VlCRlCoatata , Or. Great, Bend, Pa. 'Cr. IS. anti Ott - AEU ELY, 17.8. ALlsoltioricierr. MO, Addrcea, Brooklyn, Pa. 301111 i GROVES, raettIONASLS TAILOR. Montrose, Pa. Shop over Chandler's Store. it miens tilled in tlist-rato style. co tans done on stunt notice. sod aszronted to ft. W. W. SMITH; CABINET AND CHAIR MA.NPFACTL of Main lama, NOEITONIC, Pa. )m4: 1. 1869. BIIJIANGS STILOUD. rut! AND UPS ris7aLscs" AGENT. AU b¢sinen attended topromptly, on fair terms. Ordee ant door north et 'Montrose Hotel," west side o. Meade Avenue, Montrose, P. [Aug.ll,lB(4. sly 17, IEII Himmos 671.013 D, ABEL TERRELL, D. is Drags, Patent Kedlanes, Cbeirdcals L 4 Clanrs. P.iuta, 01141,0p1 Snuffs. Varnishes; Win Ohm, Grocerkw, Glass Ware, wen and Window Pl. per, Staue.are, Lamps, Kerosene. Kathleen 011$. Trusses, Gana, Ammunition, &elves- - .Spectacles Bruotteu., Fancy Goode, Jewelry, Perla .cry de.— bcmg Noe eine most numerous, ne.msive, and ,s !sable colleedans of Goods Le Snsguehanna-Co.— Itstabtlebod h tole. [Montrose,'Pa. IL W. SEARLE, TrOZNITT AT LAW. office over the Store of A. lattaop, la fAe Brick flicKk. Montrose, Pa. -tour° DR, W. I. RICIIIRDSON,' aysiciax a aUgGEON, Senders hi. protrusions •errice• to the ittlzena of Montrose and vicinity.— sicr at tODronittortce, on the corner cast of Sayre & Sow Fouudry. [Aug. I, ISO. Dn. E. L. GAIIDNEIL PEISSICIAN and SWIGEOIg, Montrose. Pa. Giro noTi3l attention to diseases of the Heart and Lane and all nail:teal diseases Witco over W. L. Dean.. Boards at Searle's Hotel. Letag.l. HUNT BROTHERS, SCRANTON, PA WUlegal!, dE &tail Itailcapin HARDWARE, IRON, STEEL,. .. NAILS, SPIKES, SHOVELS, %,ILDEWS HARDWARE, riaz RAIL, CO US rsairuxl4.r BAIL SPLTED RAILROAD & MIXVIG SUPPLIED: • cARRIAGE SPRINGA, AXLES. SKEINS ANL BOXES; BOLTS. NUTS cut 6 WARILIPBS, PLATED DANDS. - AIALLSABLX IRONS. lIDDS.SPoXXS. - PELLoSs. SZAT SPINDLER.. Dors: ANVILS. VICES, STOCKS End DIES. neuows *SUERS, SLEDGES. FILES. die.dte. CIRCULAR AND KILL SAWS, lIPLTLIO, PACEIECI TACKLE BLOCKS. PIASTER PARIS czy EST, BAIR & DILLNDSTOLDIEL PRINCE WINDOW LILASILLEATEIBIR P/ILMNGEI MILBANK'S SCALES. Aeraatat. Such MINIX. . . , IOOD EBBED! iM1204726 ROME INANITRAMIIM rgueStOßtan Ned sod Double Drive Wheel. le holditttit cleat 'ew York Mete DetlonalPresolutis elewthe Gresb Qblo National Premlusasaield stlissts. en i the Peos4plyet4e, Maryland and virgulas Stale la = d i g "1 . :1 1? d ip gV aet in i Tt e ctir l in%. rag the to4cl4eretlattaany arArb?,g uffalyi . grt!, The operation CIO be etumestioslSUDY from a blgh rs..sed Wong a third slower, witopet lop. thus Advt. Vse 4 tc'r Oleos *ll4l%U:sod hen, r~o -Lstpst_c44l° blsPesVio N i D e . tV "d . :Imm o° , sesolos/Vrosbk; eau roue= 0141dupou it, Dung Prisstte So sten' Pulleulsr, • - 40444RWL s'atet Canter. ABOVE THE 'CLOVES. [The scene here described was witnessed on the Putney Mountains, in Bontbern India, in the year 1843.] The darkest clouds,-the poets say, Have all a silver lining; Above the storm and whirlwind's roar The sun is always shining. 'Twas once my lot this fact to prove, With closest observation, • As far above the clouds and storms, occupied a station. • 'Twas in the snit* , chme of Ind, Upon the lofty mountains, • Where many rivers, long and broad, Flowed from their tiny fountains. The sun was pouring forth his beams Inn bright flood of glory, While lightning's crash and thunder's roar Shook all the hills below me.• Below, the clouds, with angry frown, Were pouring down a torrent; Above, their white and fleecy folds Of peace gave truest warrant. Their smooth, bright surface spread afar, With scarcely any motion, Whilst crags and knobs, peered here and there Like isles in a silver ocean. Amos Ntercilis Here balmy odors filled the air, From flowed perennial blooming, And fairest landscapes everywhere With radient lustre looming. Here of our lives behold the typo, The favored and the lowly; The clouds that shroud our pilgrimage Arc shades to screen His glory. IMEMOI While in life'e journey, then, we toil, Though stormsere bursting o'er us, We upward press our toilsome way, For heaven is just before us. 35. C. v. Gasper's Teacher. IIY ETUEL LYNN BEEII& They ray that Gasper had never smiled Since dawned the dismal November day When through " God's-acre" n fun'ral train - Slimly and solemnly wound its way. To leave the vrow he had loved, asleep Whereeypress boughs intteetrid wind stirred While Gasper went to his lonely home With a stifled try and rebellions' word. It seemed a wearisome•way to go; An roAlets time on the earth to vialt, Till he, by hands in his turn upborne, Should goat last through the churchyard gate. So he let the sullen clouds of woe Drift over the stars God left ashlar, And dreamed the days of his life away. In eight.and sound of the rushing Rhine. "Daze" all the net:Abors who watched him said, Caring, it seemed, for no living thing ; Careless of worship, or food, or rest. . Of the winter's add, of the bloom of -spring. Till down, with the might of a freshet's will, Tore terrible torrents naught could stay.. And cabins, earned by a weary life, Went, by on the tide of the fearfel 'day. For everywhere there were ruined homes, Wrecks it would trouble your bears to see, But Gapser, safe on a rocky ledge, . Saw all with a silent apathy. Until one night, just as morning dawned, He slowly waked to a piping call, a So very faint that he doubted long if he heard aright., if he heard at all. Then lot as he opened the swooleu door, Louder and shriller the chirrup grew, 'Manic was fain to seek out the source Of a sound so pit Mil, strange, and new. Only a weak little starving chick, Drenched with the tempest, bcdra,, , Ti, cd, sore, With a hungry cry its petition made, Perched on the linset across the door. He dried it softly beside the fire . ; He held it lightly in his tender hand, Andinade' its bed in a basket soft, • ' And meekly rose to its small command. Under his kindly anajzuder care, The petted thing in the sunshine grew, And the village children unafraid, Gathered as once they were wont to do. O Gasper, thus bast thou learned at last, How best to fight agiinst selfish woe, By giving help to another life, Seeking out kindness still to show Cheerful and patient to wait His will, Gasper his happiness found again; While he blessed forever the helphess thing God's hand had sent With the April rain. There be three sisters sweet . But Various in mind— Ono daring, yet discreet., ' True, humble, and resigned; She standeth where would others tall, And trusteth God for all In aIL .4 Another, bright of mien, And jubilant with lite; She spieth the unseen, Beyond all earthly strife. Who hath this bit vivacious maid, Bath sunshine in the darkest shade. P The last is all divine— The ~,, ,r eatest and the best, 0 !world! were she but thine, Thou wert supremely blest. But whoso bath these sisters three, Hath Faith, and Hope, and Charity. graffito and Mititionto. "Know men by these presenta."— Grunt —A drunken man invites sunstroke as a lightning-rod tempts lightning. —lt is an error to imagine that women talk more , than men. They're listened to more—that's all. —A California jnry,.in a suicide case lately, found the following verdict: "We the jury. find that the deceased wean fooL" —The washerwomen of Detroit are or ganizing a trades union to protect them selves against "Chinese cheap labor." —A Utica girl at the proper hour pulls a - string whichsevenaes a picture on the back of which appear in huge characters the words, "Ten o'clookis my bedtime," and her adinirersitake the hint and de tart. 'Gammon—they don't belong to this f‘ Period." ---hawser:'. "How doyen identify this, handkerchief P ; Witness:. "By its gen. eral'appeaninee, and the fact that I" have others like • ft." ' Lawyer:. _ "That's no proof,. for I have one just , like it in my pocket." Witness: .. "I don't doubtthat —I had more than one of the mune:sort —A Fort Madison, Indiana; bridegr&l)m fainted the other day, mobile standing, up to be married; On being milled dont it by his friead afterward,. be. Lushly. said: 'Moll,' you See, it suddenly occurred to me that, o*ing to onr divorce laws, my wife mightgive me the slip before rd Efer cured heir:tray r The Shiers. e - I • LAIT MONTROSE, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, '1872. tottinutouo. MOE CONVERSION Or ANDRENV 4ACKSON. BY Joni. S. c. Anßarr. Andrew Jackson was a very extraordi nary man. The defects and the excellen ces of his character were alike prominent. Great allowance should be made for him in view of the untoward influences with which he was surrounded in early life. Though the child of a pious mother, he was the child of penury, and was born an orphan in, a lonely log hnt in the then wilderness of North Carolina. His. fath er died a few days before his birth. Andrew, exposed to all the temptation of poverty nuclei rude frontier life, where there were neither schools nor churches, grew up an ignorant, profane, rough, tur bulent boy. Ills profanity was said to have been awful, often exciting the sur prise even of the boldest blasphemers. The years rolled on, with their vicissitudes of sin and suffering, when Andrew, hav ing attained the age of twenty, took it into his head to study law. De could read tolerably well, bad committed to memory most of the multiplication table, and could write in characters which few had sufficient skill to decipher. This was all the education he could then boast of. Traditions of Salisbury, where he affec ted to study law, shy, •" Andrew Jackson was the most roaring, rollicking, game cockirtg, horse-racing, card-playing, mis chievious fellow that ever lived in Salis bury. When Andrew was fourteen years of age his mother died, and he was left alone in the world without father, mother, sis ter, or brother, and without one dollar which he could call his own. The char acter of this Christian mother had pro duced a deep impression upon the mind of her boy. It was not until after her death that his predominant vices gained full strength. Through some unknown influence he imbibed such a reverence for the character of women, and such firm. principles of purity. that in that respect Lo was ever without reproach. The years of an extremely eventful and stormy., life passed on, with scenes of vio lence and wild adventure which we have no space here to describe, until Andrew Jackson was chosen President of the United States, with a unanmity almost unknoWn in our history. Wicked as he was, the native powers of his soul were such, that he wild appreci ate the graudieur of the world-beyond the grave; his spirit, was ever overawed when he allowed htmselr to contemplate infini ty and eternity; and he invariably pro fessed the profoUndest respect for the Christian religion, even when ignoring all its sublime doctrines, and trampling its precept's beneath his feet. liev c rllr. Danforth, who was pastor of the fresbyterian. church in Wasington which President, Jackson attended, in formed the writer, that the President, out of respect to the ministerial office, would always excuse himself, for a few moments, even from the, most pressingengagements topay his respects to his pastor when he led. Upon one occasion, when there was uu usual religious interest in the.church and society, Mr. Danforth, iu his re ular pa rochial rounds, visited the President and engaged in earnest conversation with him upon his personal interest in the religion of Jesus. "No man," said General Jackson, "can feel the importance of religion more deep ly thau I do. I have again and again re solve& to attend to the subject, but the cares of my busy life have induced me to postpone it, When f was a candidate for the Presidency I promised my wife that so soon , as tho election was over, so that I should not be accused of becoming a Christian in order that I might get votes, I would attend to the salvation of my soul But just now my cabinet loin such a state of contention that I have no time to think of anything else. I am, howev er, determined, in the first moments of leiaunl can find, to endeavor to prepare to meet my God. It was the old and senseless excuse, which has been kepeated by tens of thous ands since the daya of Felix. "Go thy way," said the Roman governor; "when I have a convenient season I will cull for thee." In the year 1829 General Jackson lost his Christian wife,, an excellent woman, whom he had loved with devotion seldom excelled dud perhaps never surpassed. He never recovered from the blow. He be came more gentle, mom subdued in lang uage and actions, and appeared, in most respects, quite a changed man. 'lt is said that every night after her death, until his own dyitig hour, he read a prayer, from her with her miniature like ness before him. With characteristic frankness he ever avowed his deep con viction of the necessity of vital godliness, and his hope and intention of becoming a Christian before he should die. The administration of Andrew Jackson was one of the most memorable and tem pottions in the history of our country. No President has hod more bittgrenemies or wartudr friends, ~ At the close of two terms of office he retired, in .1837, to his bumble +treat called the Hermitage, , in Tennessee. lie was then 70 years of age. A year after thiihe, not havingyet found the "conVenientscason," wrote to a friend Who had.;addressed, bun earnestly upon the subjeet of religion. "I -would long since have made the solemn public dedication to Almighty God; but knowing the wretchedness of this world, and how prone many are, to eyil, that thescoger at religion would have cried out "Hypocrisy, he has joined the cluireh for,paitical effect," I thought it hest to postpone this public act until my re tirement to the .ShadeS of private life, when no false imputation could bo made that, ight be injurious to religion. Still it was the old excuse. '• The "con ienient.seasour hid not yet come. , Soon afterthis there was what wee then called a "Protracted - meeting," or religious servi ces held for several day) in succession, in the little rural church in the vicinity of the Hermitage. , President - Jackson ot tended all the exercises, annhe audience generally wits impresied with his thought ful, solemn aspect. The het sermon of the series was preached by Dr. Edgar upon the "Interposition of Providence in the affiiirii of men." The life of Andrew Jackson had been one of the wildest adventure and full of peril. He was deeply. impressed by the sermon. With a peculiar expression of solemnity and of solicitude he entered his carriage and was riding homeword when he overtook Dr. Edgar, who was on horse back. President Jackson urged the preacher to go home with him to the Hermitage, evidently desiring to converse with him upon that theme which was now engrossing all the energies of his soul. But Dr. Edgar had an engagement which he could not forgo. The President thus apparently left alone with his God, went home a de4ly convicted sinner. Entering his chamber he passed most of the night walking the floor in anguish of spirit and in prayer. The scenes of that 'night, its penitence, its supplications, its cries for mercy, are known only to Sod and to those angels who rejoice over the repenteuce of a sin ner. But at the close of those hours of anguish, peace came to his'soul, and he had resolved what to do. The next day was the Sabbath. The ' sacrament of the Lord's Slipper was to be administered in the little church at the Hermitage. With characteristic decision of action the Preside.,t announced to his family his full conviction that lie had re pented of his sins, cast himself upon the Saviour, and had been, accepted of him. He immediately sent for the elders of the church, informed them of the new life upon which ho believed that he had entered, of his hope that he had becomea true (kelpie of Jesus, and expressed his desire, upon that very day, to make a public profession of his faith in Christ, and to receive the memorials of his \ hosly broken for us and of his blood stied fur onr sins. It was a solemn scene which was that morning witnessed in that humble church surrounded by the tomtit of Tennessee. The warworn veteran, his brow bronzed and furrowed with the cares of one of the most tempestuous of lives, and his hair frosted by the lapse of threescore years i ltruit.ters, knelt, with the humility of a lit t.tle child,before the communion table, ins acceptance of. pardon through an atoning Saviour, and was baptized in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost. His subsequent life was that of the Christian. Family prayer was immediate.. Iy established in his dwelling, which President Jackson himself conducted however numerous might bo• his guests. The household servants were all called in to partake in the devotions. Twice before he died he read the whole Bible through, with Scott's Commentary and Practical Observations. At one of the meetings of the church lie was nominated us a ruling elder. With humility, which no one who knew the man could for one moment sup ! posetobe feigned, he said. —No! I am too young in thechurch for such au office. My countrymen* have given me high honors; but I should es teem the office of ruling elder in the church of Christ a far higher honor than any I have received." His final sickness was long and ex tremely painful. On Sunday, May 24, 1846, he partook of the " l ord's Supper for the last, time. He was conscious that his end was near. "Death," said he, "has no terrors for me. When I have suffered sufficiently the Lord will take me to himself. But what are my sufferings compared with those of the blessed Saviour, who died on the ac cursed tree for me?" Still weary.days of weakness and suffer ing lingered away. On Sunday morning. June 8, it was manifest that his last hour had come. He assembled his household around him and very affectionately took leave of them all. One,pho was present writes : "He then delivered one of the most impressive lectures on the subject of re ligion that I have ever heard. Ile spoke for nearly half an hour and apparently with the power of 'inspiration." These were the days of slavery. litany of the servants of the household stood weeping around the bed. Turning his languid eye over the whole group of whites and blacks assembled in the room, the dying man, in this hour in which he felt the equality of all before God, said: "My dear children and friends °lid ser vants, I hope and trust tolneet you all in heaven, both white and black," repeating with much emphasis the lasit words, "both white and black." Exhausted he sank, for a few moments apparently into a state of stupor. At length his adopted son took his hand and said, "Father, do you know me?" "Yes," he teplied - , "I know you. Where is my daughter and Marian' God will take care of you for me: I - am my God's. I belong to him. Igo but a short time before you. • And I want to meet you all, white and black, in heaven." It was a lovely June morning; quite a a group of servants, .men, women, and children, crowded the piazia,looking in at the open windows and weeping bitterly. Turning to them their dying master said: "What is the matter with my dear chil dren ? Do not cry; and we will all meet in heaven.". • These Were his last words. Almost im mediately without a struggle or a groan he ceased' breathe. Two days after, his remains wereplaced in the grave by the side of those-of his wit. He bad often said, "Heaven will be no heaven to me,. if I do not meet my wife there." • For miles around the people flocked to his burial: It was , estimated that three thousand were assembled upon the lawn in front of the hermitage. A favorite I hymn of the departed was sung. "Why should we start and fear to die? What timorous worms wo mortals are Death is the gate of endless joy, And yet wedread to enter there!" •A very impressive 'sermon was preached from the text, tThese, are they' which came out of great . tnbalation, and. have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb." - Miss Lottie Hay; a colored graudoate of the Howard University Law: School, "him beery admitted to the bar of tho Supreme Court 'of the District of Co lumbia. Senator Bayard In Favorer Greeley and Brown. The following letter has been addressed by Senator Bayard, to a friend in Dela ware: MY PEAR SlR:—The per...raptor, or ders of my physicians compel me to oh- Cain absolute rest and quiet, and, for this purpose, to leave the country. My passage has been engaged, and shall sail for Europe on Saturday, the• 13th instant Although unfitted by My condition of health, I felt it to be my duty to go to Bal timore 'as a delegate to the Convention, and it is in relation to the action of that body that I wish a few words with you, and, through you, to my other party friendslei Delaware, before I leave. I need not Barre yon or to them with what astonishmetit and disappointment I heard of the nomi9qtion of Greeley and Brown at Cincinnat‘ nor how steadily and open iy I have at all times expressed myself in opposition to the adoption of that ticket by the Democratic party at Baltimore. But the result has been accomplished, however much against our will and efforts, and it is our duty, calmly and steadily, to confront the fact now presented to our eyes. If the issues of the campaign were those only of Revenue reform, of Civil Service Reform—questions in allich pe cuniary losses or pain to the ptblie were involved—l might be willing to take no part in the Presidential contest, but allow the demoralizing course pursued by Grant and his administration to be continued four years longer, trusting that the very extent and flagitious nature of the noto rious !dimes would in themselves so in street thkpeople that they would recoil from placing further trust in such hands. The natural capacities of the soil and limate, of our country, together with ttikinGustry and energies of our people, render the production of wealth (mere wealth) almost aboundless, and we can almost afford to bear the results of finan cial blunders, and, so long as _they are confineß to official circles, of public rob beries and speculations, provided we can in the end buy our experience throngh the usual methods of loss and suffering. But severe and painful though these abuses and their consequences may be, they weigh, to me, lightly, compared to the destruction of all the limitations up on power which our written Constituexm of Government was designed to create, and which Gen. Grant and those who as sist him in administering the &overt:intent, including the Radical majorities in both Houses of Congress, seem either to total ly disregard, or, as I have sometimes thought, to take a scornful pleasure in trampling under foot. It is utterly impossible for me, with the scenes which I have witnessed in the Senate of the United States rising before my eyes, not to feel the gravest apprehen sions and alarm at any prospect or sug gestion of allowing the policy of Grant and his administration toward the South ern States and their inhabitatits longer to continue, if any honorable act of mine can tend avert so great a calamity. Can any man justly deny that the con dition of the people in the Rhenish pro iinces, torn from France by the armed hand of Germany, is preferable to-day in all that protects person and property, to that of the white people in many of the Southern States under tho governments which Congress has set up over them un der the so-called system of reconstruction, and which Grunt has upheld either by threats or the bayonet or its actual pres ence in those communities? He and his party have stood by for the last three years, and have seen the South robbed, insulted, and almost beggared by a mot ley crew, all of his own political_ party of unprincipled political adventurers from the North, and ignorant and vicious ne groes of the native population, and have uttered no word of disapproval; but, on the contrary have from to time to time lent the military power of the Govern ment (as is in the cases of the troops sent upon application of Governor Hol den, o North Carolina, of Scott, of South Carolina, or his own brother-in-law, Cas ey, in New Orleans) to maintain in pow er these rapacious and dishonest, rulers whom ate sufferings and discontent of their people were threatening to eject from office and power. Now, whether I approve Mr. Greeley personally or no, whether he had or not been the steady and violent, opponent of the political principles and measures which you and I have been upholding all our lives, yet if lie has' become, with or against our action or wishes, the most likely or practical means of restoring a better condition of feeling iu the North toward the South, and restoring security and justice to that oppressed region, I should feel myself as au American, with out regard to the name of party, but With-. out the sacrifice of any conviction in re lation to my . political principles, compell ed to assist in placing him in power. I say nothing now of his qualifications or personal fitness for , the place; I have spoken of them heretofore, and against my wishes and judgment the representa tives of the party have placed him in the candidacy. If there was any practicable limeans of electing a man better fitted for the place, and ono whose political career has been in harmony with your views and mine, I need not say to you that I should strive to see such a one chosen ; but the current of popular opinion in this vast country takes strange and•oftentimes un toward, directions, and 14 good or ill sweeps us with it. :Sixty, days ago the condi!ion of of firs wo now witness would havelbemi deeined incredible, and any . man would have laughed at, as absurd and impossible, what we now see in .fact and substance. Events as , they .now-confront' us were shaped in opposition. to our efforts, and as they are we are notresponsiblolor them; but weiaroresponsible ror 'our :mode' of dealing with theui new r and - I /sopa - our State Convention will promptly ttud. do cidedly nominate an electoral ticket in opposition to Grant and Wilson, and in limo; of the Onlyenndidates Who;gsliiat tem now, send, can be hopefully expected to deat them—l . mean Greeley, and Brown; for : whom I expect to'voto 'on the sth of November next I hope to retire borne by tbo taiddWof September, alth my health restored and enabled to take part in the tiolitical can vase. . The subject to which this letter relates has given me a great deal of anxiety and distress, which I knoiv iashared by thong ands of true men of the same political party' in this State; but I jpelieve that my decision is the right one, and I know that it is founded upon honest motive. This only alternative to a whole or half way aid to Grant's re-election may be luird for us to adopt, but I think it, oar duty, and so I trust will you and the entire De inocmcwof Delaware. Your friend sincerely_, T. F. BAYARD. Wilmington, July 11, 1872. LanceVi Description. Dr. Lancet was a blunt old fellow and an excellent physician, and he noverdrove around an obstacle when there was need of going through it. Matilda Jane. had just come home from boarding•school, and was not feeling well. She was troubled with a rushing of blood to the head, with dizziness, and with loss of appetite. In this condition she called in Dr. Lancet and asked him if be could not help her. "I have been trying to doctor myself," she said languidly, and with to faint, flut tering smile, as the old physician felt her pulse. "What have you been doing?" "Well—l have taken Lirnshin's Sarsa parilla. and Knave's Anodyne, and Hum mer's Pills. upd Numhead's Balsam. and Fooler's Tonic, and the Nonesuch Expec torating Cordial, and Flathead's Cinver sal Vivifying Recuperator—and—and—" "Goodness mercy!" gasped the doctor; and havn't any of these things given you relief?" • "No," replied the pining fair one; "they have not helped me at all. 0, dear Doc tor, what can I lake that will be sure to do me good?" "What can you take ?" repeated the old man, moving back and. eyeing her from head to foot. "Take!" he exclaimed, with a flash from beneath his shaggy brows; " my dear girl, take off your .cor sets r—New Fork Ledger. The Earth's Crud at Chicago. The Chicago Tribune gives the. follow ing account of what the drill passed thro' in boring 1,220 feet in that city: The drill had au ens" time of it through the first fifty feet, boring with great read iness through clay. , Then came 335 feet of slate and rotten rock, which was pretty easily disposed of. Then flee kt of quick sand, which caved, and mado things gen- erally uncomfortable; then a 12-foot mix ture of sand and stones; then the drill worked its way slowly through 102 feet of bard rock, after piercing which the water made its first appearance, and the well was filled; then came 110 fiat of white limestone rock, which was pierced slowly; but having made its way through, the dilligence of the drill was rewarded with a " soft thing," in the way - 0f.290 feet of clay. More limestone to a depth of 25 feet followed, and then a mixture of slate and after that 40 feet of soap stone; then slate again to a depth of 105 feet, and again 400 feet of white lime rock. Here a strata of 25 feet of brown eandst)ne rock; another layer of 10 feet of shale, 20 feet of lime rock, and.ls feet of slate and rotten rock.. This caved almost as badly as quicksand, and an iron pipe of the size of the well was let down to cover the treacherous spot. Below this was 75 feet of limo rock again; and then, at a depth of 1,195 feet a crevice, lined, as be fore described, wit h -metalic flint, contain ing water, thirty feet below which the flow nearly doubled. How A DUNCE BECAME A STATESMAN. The following story is told of the late Dr. Salem Towne and William L. Marcy:— In his youth he (Dr. Towne) was a teach er of youth. One day, seventy odd years ago, a boy was brought to him, of whom the account was given that be was an-in corrigible dunce—that none of his mas ters had been able to make anything of him • and ho was brought to Mr. Towne as a last experiment, before apprenticing him to a mechanical trade. Mr. Towne proceeded to examine him, - preparatory to entering upon his instruction. At the first mistake he made the boy dodged on one side,, with every sign of terror— " Why do you do that ?" asked, the mat ter. "Because I was afraid you were go ing to ,strike - me." " Why should .you think so ?" "Because I bare always been struck whenever I made a mistake." "You need never fear being struck by me," said Mr. Towne. "That is not my way of treating boys who tici as well, as they can."' The lad very scion improved rapidly under this new treatment, so that Mr. Towne advised his father to give him a liberal education. - The father could hardly believe the report at first, but waa convinced and complied with the good master's sugg,restion. The result trail that Win. L. Marcy became an eminent law yer, one of the Supreme Judges. of New, York, Governor, United. States- Senator and. Secretary of War and of State. —The 'United States import three or four million cot:ea-nuts every year. This numbers is large when compared with the trade twenty years back; but it gives us little idea of the luxuriens growth of this fruit in intertropical. climes. There are said to be two hundred and eighty miles of cocoanut trees along the coast of Brazil;' Malabar, besides supplying home demands, exports four hundred million cop-daunt annually, besides`an equal value of ooPPornh, or dried kernels' and there are seven million cocoanut trees is Tray. ancore. As for ontselves, we import these nuts almost wholy for eating, as ' a pleasant frult,,and kive - from` twelve .'to eighteen Shilling per hundred for' them; they come mostly from the' West, Indies and Guiana. The milky_ liquid contained ivitbinibe nit is alio pleasant to thO taste. The oil expressed from the uut is, nevertheless, becomiog .inere important than the fruit, as an edible; Even - the Fiji ,Islanders, occupying a tiny spot in the great Pacitief Inoue to press ont several hundred, tone of oil from their nuts, and to export it in Autrallau int; ships. VOLUME XXIX, NUMBER 31. Blr. Beecher on Settkw Henery Ward Beecher inquires of -Mr.Bonner in the last issue of the 'Ledger: "Mr. Bonner, do you ever, bet? Do you think it helps business, tests a mates, sincerity, aids his morals, or, in - the long run, fills his pockets? How is it -with Dexter, StartleondPocahontaa?•Do yon think a bet on their performance would get two secoeds less out of them?" • AVil theneoes on to argue the ques tion thus: ••• •„, em is another matter— Betting on . Elections. Can anything be more foreign to good sense, sound principles, and real patriotism, than to turn politics intd a hugegambling game ? are they not bad enough already? Do they not stir up the passions of men enough, without this Greek fire of bet ting? There are two kinds: the larger: bet ting, which means real business, which is carried out in the expectation of making money. There is another minor betting —for a hat, a suit of clothes, a supper, or any other small matter. This is mere pandering to the other. It breaks down us # a the pnneipliand smothers th conscience. A man who bets five dollarsy notbe stimulated as much by that all risk, as if ho had planted five the ud; but lie is really a gambler. If it iszi right for a respectable ma 5122 bet on e ection a. Fair of gloves or a dozen o ere, then it is right to make lip a'ban or 1150,000. It seems to me tha very right-minded man, who has hi erto made bets on the results of politi campaigns should look. upon this ma r more soberly, and re fuse to add spark to the fire which al ready. burns ercely enough.. A betting man is alway on the side of bad: comp . - ny. That wa lies all manner of knavery. A man who never beta is on a plain, open unquestionable gronnd. Only a brutal fellow would bet on his mother's chances, if she was critically sick. No man would bet on his brollePs' life, if he was on.trial for treason, or an his children's chancel, if a mortal disease should break out among them.. Why not ? Even a brute would feel that sub betting was dishonorable. Why should one bet on that which should be to every honest man as sacred as his own household, namely, the affairs of the commonwealth—the interests of patriotism ? The . virus of gambling is hard to espel when once it is in the blood. —Dwain Swirr's llcsou - rtorr.- 7 Tho following resolutions were drawn • up' by - Dean Swift, to be observed "when I come to be old": Not to marry a young., Ira man. Not to keep young company, un less they desire it. Not to ,•be peevish,- morose or suspicions. Not to tell the same story_ over and over toe the SUM people. Not to be covetous—the hardest of all to be kept. Not to bo over severe with yonfig people, but to make allowance for youthful follies and weakness: Not to be too free of advice, nor trouble any but those who desire it. To deem sumo good friends to inform mo which of these resolutions--I break or neglect,, and to *form accordingly. Not to talk much, nor of myself very hard again. Not to hearken to flatterers,. nor oonceire • can be beloved by a yonng woman. Not to be positive or opinionative. Not to set up for observing all these rales,.for.fear I should observe none. --GOOD INK.- Common Inditi ;ink, simply disolved in water, is - excellent - for writing. Being compo sed . of carbonAind little else, it will keep to any climate' or place from year to year, perfectly sweet. Even - freezing does not injure its.good, qualities, a simple cover is all that it re quires to prevent evaporation and - keep the dust from falling into it. It flows from the pen with ease and freeness. The stroke of the pen made with it is quite black if desired, and will endure unchin• - god to all time, provided th e paper or parchment remains sound; and even papers that have been burned and not fallen to pieces, with-this kind of Writing upon them, remain quite plain to read. —A writer in the CoinAin Nagizent, for June, speaking of the infatuation of gamblers, says : "There has never been a successful gambler who has not" believed that his success (temporary though such success everis, , where games of pure chance are concerned) has been-the result of skillful conduct on his own. part; and there has never been a ruined gamble!. (though ruined gamblers are to be coun ted ;by thousands) who bas not believed that when ruin overtook him he Ives on the very 'point of mastering the secret of success. It Is fatal confidence which gives to gambling its power of famine : ting the.lucky, as well as the unlucky." . —The word carat used to express:Bre fineness of gold, is so called from an Al • yssinian bean, which from the, time of its gathering varies very little in its weight, and for this raison is used_ in Africa as - a weight in gold; as it is in India foreras an and pearls. -It is, with us, an ' rimy weight, used to express the proportion of gold, in "a given mess of metal. „Thus; if , an onnce.of.gold is divided intO,24 parts or carats, then gold 20 minds fine is that in Which 20 parts are pore instal, and 4 parts silver, copper or some other —The queer ideas whichenter the fer tile brains of Hibern inns at all times are sufficiently astonishing..- A school of poor children having read in their chapter in the Bible the denunciations against hypo crites who ;strain at a gist and swallow a camel," were alterwarus examined by the benevolent patroness, Lady as to their recollections of the chapter. 'What, in particular; was the sin of_the Pharisees, children?" said the lady. "Alin, camels, my lady," was the prompt reply.- --Be reserved, says Penn but not soar; grave, but not formal but lot rash; humble, but not servile; patient, but not obstinate ; cheerful, but not light; rather be sweet-tempered than familuir ; familiar rather than intimate. with 'very, few and up:kW - good . grounds. ' transmission of sourid- thorough solid metalib tubes is perfect that cony venation' so has been maintained in a low tone between the ends of one of the Paris' water-pipes 3,120 feet long. The velocity of the transmission of sound is greater, by four to sixteen times, in metal', that;. in air and in wintd.