3cuotci to politics, ilcvatuvc, Agriculture, Science, iUovaUin, .aui) encval Snlclligcncc VOL. 27. STROUDSBUIiG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., JULY 30, ISG3. NO. IS. Published by Theodore Schoch. TERM3-Two itoll.irs a year in ailvamo ;iml if not liu octore mc cn.i 01 1 lie year, two dollars and filfy ct. w illbe rhaiprd. No ppertisfiitinnol until all arrcaiaras ore paid, cWpii tlie option of the Editor. nJA'Uertisemcnts of one ?iunrepf(eij;1.tlinriOpr wii.nneor inrce insertions $ I 5L. li.i.li ailtlilionat Inert ion, 50 cents. Longer ones in proptii lion. jo B v ii I x tTmc , OF ALL KINDS, Bxecated in the highest Hyle of the Ail.aiul onthc most icajoirtble terms. in. i. coof,ftAUt;is, Sip and Ornamental Painler, SHOP ON MAIN STREET, . - Opposite Woolen Mills, STKOlIDSIiVKG, A., Respectfully announces to the citizens of otroudsburg and vicmily that he is prepared to attend to all who may favor him with (heir patronage, in a prompt and workman like manner. CHAIR3, FURNITURE, &c, painted and repaired. PICTURE FRAMES of all kinds con stantly on hand or supplied to order. June II, ISGS. ly. Drs. JACKSON & BIDLACK, PHYSICIANS AND SUIUi EONS. DRS. JACKSON &. BIDLACK, arc prepared to "attend promptly to all calls of a Professional character. OJJlce Op posite the Stroudsburg Bank. April 2T, lsG7.-tf. IMS. I. 1$. SMITH, Surgeon Dentist, Office on Main Street, opposite Judge tstokes' residence, STUounsBuao, Pa. OCT" Teeth extracted without pain.-fj August 1, l!rG7. A. Caxcl. The undersigned has opened an ofucc for the purchase and sale of Real' Estate, in Fowler's Building, on Main street. Parties having Farms, MilU, Hotels or other proper ty for sale will find it to their advantage to call on me. I hive no agents. Parties must see mc personally. GEO. L. WALKER, Real Estate Agent, Stroudsburg, Pa. S. HO 13 MS, jr. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, AND GENERAL CLAIM AGENT. STROUDSBURG, PA. Office one door Icfoiv Klory's Tin Shoji. All claims against the Government prose cuted with dispatch at reduced rates. Ojr An additional bounty of &10O and of $50 procured for Soldiers in the late War, FKEK OF EXTRA CHARGE. August 2, 19GG. .A. Card. Dr. A. KEEYES JACKSON, Physician and Surgeon, BEGS TO ANNOUNCE TtlAT IIAV ing returned from Europe, lie is now prcpircd to resume the active duties of his profession. In order to prevent disappoint ment to persons living at a distance who may wish to consult him, he will be found at his office every THURSDAY and SAT URDAY for consultation and the perform ance of Surgical operations. Dec. 12, 1S67.-1 yr. Wl W. I" ACL. J. D. HOAR. CHAP.LES TT. DEAN, WITH WM. W. PAUL &, CO. Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in BOOTS & SHOES. WAREHOUSE, 623 Market St, & Cll Commerce St. above Sixth, North side, PHILADELPHIA. March 19, ISG. tf. ItcTi! Itch.! Itch! .SCRATCH! SCRATCH! SCRATCH! USE No Family should be without this valua ble medicine, for on the first appearance of the diorder on the wri.-ts, betwecu the fin der, &c, a c!kt application of the Oint ment will cure it, and prevent its bring ta ken by others. Warranted to give alisfaction or money refunded. Prepared and sold, wholesale and retail, y - W. IIOLLINSIIEAD, Stroudaburg, Oct. SI, 'G7-J Druggist. 9 JMNTZ, imvijst. 'Has permanently located him- Ha Pelf in Stroud.sburg, and moved hia office next dooi to Dr. S. Walton, where he is fu prepared to treat :the natural ltclh, and &loto insert incorrup tible artificial teeth on pivot and plate, in tye ;latest and mot improved manner. Most persons know the danger aM! fblly of trust ing their work to tiie ignorant as well as the traveling dt-ntist. It matters not how much experience a person may have, he is liable to have soiae failures out of a number ,of cases, and if the dentist lived at a distance it is frequently put oft' until it is too late to save the tooth or teeth us it mav be, other wise the inconvenience and trouble of goin' o far. lluncc the necessity of otla ining the services of a dentist near home. All work warranted. Stroudburg, March 27, 1802. Don't roitcirr ihai uiicu you want any Uiitig h, t,0 Furniture r Ornamental Jimj t l.iit. McCarty. in the .Odd-Pi How:,' II:,!!, M.in tjtrcct, Jitioii.L byrjj, Pd., is t!,e rl.-ce. u get jt. f riqjt. "Match IIim:v Grant, the hero's on the course, Match In m, match him, Democrats from any pourcc : Match him if you can. You arc sure to nieit the wall, In the vote the coming fall (J rant Ls bound to Wat you all, Match him if yau can. ''See, the conquering hero coiiio;,. Match him, match him, Sound your trumpcU, Wat your drum, Match him if you can. Unpretending, fall revealed, Finn as on the battle-field "Forward, loys, we'll never yield," Match Idm if you can. "Pence" surrounds our candidate. Match, him, match him ; "Jric" is knocking at the gate, Match him if you can. Choose from Democratic "stars," Heroes of the triple liars Wc present the "Son of Mars" Match him if you can. "Boys in blue" the challenge fling Match him, match him ; Echo makes the wilkin ring, "Match hint if you can." Crippled by the relnTs hate, Taunted in a Northern State, They prtsent a candidate, Match him if you can. Grant's the man to "fight it out," Match him, match him ; lie will put the foe to rout, Match him if you can. Grant is on a mission bent To the "White House from the tent Grant shrill le our President, Match if von can. Proui the riiifJi'ltt, III., JonutI. Grant's Way of Expressing Great Truths. Gen. Grant, though not a politician, has a parenthetical way of stating great truths and sententious facts which is re markable. As early as the second year of the war. in a letter to Mr. Washburnc, he writes: "I never was an abolitionist not even what could be called anti slavery but I tried to judge fairly and honestly, and it became patent to my mind early in the rebellion that the North and South could never live in peace with each other except as one nation, and that without slavery." And again: " Af anxious as I aui to sec peace established, I would not there fore be willing to sec any settlement un til this question h settled." In his correspondence with President Johnson in reference to the removal of General Sheridan from the district of Louisiana, he says: "This is a republic where the will of the people is the law of the land. I beg thai their voice may be beard." In his 5-pccch to the committee ap pointed to inform him of his nomination, he said: u If chosen President, I shall haje no policy of my own to enforce against the will of the people." In his letter accepting the Republican nomination, he says: "Purely adminis trative officers should always be left to execute the will of the people. I have always respected that will and always shall." These arc only samples of Gen. Grant's manner of expressing great truths, culled at random from our Glcs; but they arc "apples of gold in pictures of silver," and show to the people the manner of man be is. In his general order to his soldiers, af ter the capture of Gen. Lee, in referring to the enforcement of the emancipation proclamation, he calls "Slavery the cause and pretext of the rebellion." In bis famous letter to the President, while acting as Secretary of War ad in terim, he says: "I stated that the law was binding upon mo, constitutional or not, until set aside by the proper tribu nal," a doctrine that will do to-stand by. In bis testimony before the impeach ment committee, he says: " I have al ways bceu attentive to my own duties, and tried not to interfere with other peo ple's." And again, " I never was iu fa vor of a general amnesty until the time should come when it would be safe to give it. A young girl named Prince, who has been employed as a letter-carrier for the postofficc at IJurlington, X. J., was re cently arrested, charged with robbing letters of their contents. After her ar rest she confessed that she had been in the habit of taking the letters to the bouse of a woman named Miller, who opened them and took out any money, jewelry or other articles of value which they contained, giving her, the girl, part of her share. The woman Miller with her two daughters have been arrested, and the girl is held as a witness. ..I i me .i i A rich farmer of Calais, Maine, aged sixty-five, recently married a second wife who is only ninetocu years of age. A daughter of his first wife is forty years oi l, and her daughter aged twenty id about to be married. Thus thcro ii a child who is twenty-one years older than her mother, and a grandmother who is a year younger than her granddaughter. A ropcwalk in Trenton, N. J., has just turned out the longest wire rope ever made in cue piece, it is sail. It is 1)70'J feet iu lentil.; its diameter h over ii.cLs:.-, rui 1 ciht .; ;UiC Iwwuty tonn. GENERAL JACOB M. CAMPBELL, BSnwrnifii J General Campbell was born in Allc- i,; o - i- on the -20111 day of November, 1821; consequently, ho will be forty-scven years old next November. At an c&rly oo lie wss Apprenticed to tlic priutinsbusinc.sS, in Somerset, Pa. Af - tcr mastering the "art preservative 0f arts," be emigrated to Pittsburg, W11CU be "worked at case "for some time. Uc next found his way to New Orleans and into another printing office. Tired of the "composing strand rule," he tried his hand It steamboating. first as a deck emigration to California, remaining there but a short time. In 1S53, we find him in Johnstown, Pa., ass'rsting in the con struction of the mammoth Cambria Iron Works, with which establishment he was connected up to the breaking out of the war. In 1SG1, he was among the first to enroll himself as a volunteer, to defend the Dag of his country, 'and bclomjcd to the Jirst Cvmiavy (hat entered Camp Curtin. Upon the arrival of the compa ny in Harrisburg, and the organization of the Third Regiment of Pa. Vols, to which his company was attached, Lieut. Campbell was appointed Quartermaster of the Regiment, which position he filled with credit to himself and to the satisfac tion of the officers and men of his regi ment, as all those who remain will testify. He was mustered out of service on the 28th of July, 1SG1, and on the 30th of the same month, wa3 commissioned by Gov. Curtia to raise a regiment. The regiment was recruited mainly through Col. Campbell's individual exertions, and upon being organized, was designat ed the 5 lib. i I is regiment was the es cort of honor through the city of Wash ington, to the rcmnios of the lamented Col. Cameron (brother of Hon. Simon Cameron) who fell at the first Ball Run battle. On the 20th of March, 18G2, Col. Campbell wa3 ordered to occupy the the line of the Baltimore & Ohio Rail road from North Mountain Station, fifty six miles westward to the South Branch of the Potomac. In that position, the executive as well as the military abilities of the Colonel were constantly called into requisition. How well he performed his arduous and multitudinous duties in this trying position, the officers of the I. & O. R. R. as well as his superiors in the military service, do not hesitate to de clare that but for his energy and sleep less watchfulness, many miles of the road would have been destroyed. On the 25th of December, 18G2, he was relieved from duty along the railroad, on the Gth of March, 1SG3, was assigned to the coin- inand of the 4th Brigade, 1st Division, bth Army Corps. In 18G1, Gen. Sigcl took command of the Department of West Virginia, and in a re organization of the troops, Col. Campbell, at his own request, was returned to the command of his regiment, and took an active part iu the battle of New Market, occupying the left of the lice. II13 regiment fullered severely and wa3 the last to leave the field. But for the determined stand made by Col. Campbell, Sigcl's army would have been routed and demoralized. In his official report of the battle, he acknowl edged the valuable services of Col. Camp bell in a very handsome and flattcriug mauncr. A deserved compliment to a deserving officer. Gen. Sigcl also took occasion to thank Col. Campbell iu per son. "My God! Col. Campbell, I wish I had known you better!" Gen. Sigcl exclaimed, rushing to Col. Campbell and grasping his hand with both of his own, ftcr the tumult of battle had sub3idcd. The Colonel and bis regiment took a pro miocnt part in the battle of Piedmont, under Gen. Iluuter. He was breveted a Brigadier Gcucral for bravery and " fit ness to command," in this battle, and again assigned to the command of a bri gade. He also took an active part iu Hunter's celebrated "Lynchburg Raid," bis command suffering heavily in the at tack upon Lynchburg. When Col. Mulli gan fell at Winchester, Gen. Campbell took command of the division, and continued in command until, by severe losses in killed and wounded, it was consolidated into a brigade, which bo afterwards com manded." He also participated in the en gagements in the Shenandoah, under tho gallant Phil. Sheridan, winning other and new laurels while with that intrepid chieftain. Gen. Campbell was mustered out of the service in the fall of 1801, having been in the army almost three years and a half. Ho was never absent from his command, except three weeks, .sitting as a member of a Court of Inquiry at Wheel ing, Va., nud had but two "leaves of absence,"-during bis whole period of ser vice, one for tcu and the other for twenty days. The political record of Gen. Campbell will also bear examination. Brought up a Jackson Democrat, he voted for Polk and Dallas in 1814, but in 18 18, seeing the determined cucroachmcnts of tho slavery propagandists, ho voted for tho lrco, soil candidates, Van Buren ami Adams, in 152, again voted for the free soil nominee?, H;:lo and Julian ; end in 185G, wai the delegate from Cambria couuty to the Fremont Convention. In 18;)J, the Republicans of Cauibru county privcutcd him to thur di. triet eotifcixuco i- fh. ii' Lj.c: 1 -f the Jt.uiul a .u.im hand, and subsequently as clerk, matc -ciion 01 ail parties; ana naa brongut up and part owcr of a vessel. Iu 1817, wc !? la.rc aunt of unfinished and intricate find him in the iron business, at Urady'a I business. In March last he was unam i'rtr,,i t i, r.oiV tun (;,iAr moiiify renominated by the Republican 'Ition, and three years ago he was nnani '.monsfy selected again as the choice of (the Union parly of Cambria, for State Senator, bat failed to receive the nomina- i""on Iroin the district conference upon ic'tI,er CMion, not however from want of appreciation of Ins worth and service.! as .c,t,zou a,,J as a bravc anJ meritorious I " L 0n,l,S 17lh of August 1SG5, Gen. Campbell wu nominated for Surveyor cral by the Republican party, and in ! Octobr , ofT !hf sam ?car' elected fvcr CoV J;1"10"' lil9 competitor, by a argo majority, l or over two years he ls administered he : duties of his office Va) "cognized ability and to the satis- State Convention, for the office he now so ably and satisfactorily fill?. A unani mous rcnomination from a State Conven tion of cither party, is no small compli ment to any man, and no one within our recollection except Gen. Campbell and bis colleague on the State ticket ever be fore received such a marked endorsement. Such in brief, is a hurried sketch of the life and services of one of Pennsylva nia's uoblcst sons.. He is first found a "printer's devil," a "jour," a "deck hand " on a steamboat, a " clerk," " mate " and "part owner of a vessel." He is next found in the irou business, then in California, and finally iu the gigantic en terprise of the celebrated Cambria Iron Mills, where his great experience added largely to the success of that stupendous undertaking. At the breaking out of the war, he wa3 Lieutenant of a militia company, entered the army and was ap pointed a Quartermaster, then a Colonel, and after a brilliant campaign of three long, weary years, he was honored with a Brevet Brigadier General's Commis sion, a position long and doubly earned in command of a brigade and division, and by gallantry iu the field. Thu, it will be seen, that Gen. Campbell comes from the working class, and is cmrhatic- j ally a working man. His social characteristics never fail to create the warmest friendships and a last ing impression. He is a shrewd business man and a useful citizen a man en dowed with strong common sense, and rarely fails in his judgment of men and measures is well read, and famiHiarly acquainted with alLthc internal workings of the great machinery of our government. Among the ablest articles on the subject of our National finances, was one from his pen, written during the early part of last winter. He is a genial compauion, a clever, wbole-soulcd, boDcst man, strictly temperate in his habits, and that he will be re-elected by an increased majority, is already beyond a peradventurc. The Democracy iu 1SG1 pronunccd the war to pescrve the Union a failure, and in keeping with this same spirit they now pronounce the reconstructed governments null and void. They will have a fine time in ousting the members of Congress from those States, if even there was a possibility of their electing the next Pres ident. Wc think they will find this a plank in their platform as great a blunder as the one of 18G4. . Here is what Chief Justice Taney said on the" subject, in, an opinion of the court, delivered in the oclc bratcd Dorr case : Under this article of the Constitution it rests with Congress to decide what govern ment i3 the established one iu a State. For as the United States guarantee to each State a republican government, Con gress must necessarily decide what gov ernment is established in the State beforo it can determine whether it is established or not. And when the Senators and Re presentatives of a State arc admitted to the councils of the Union, the authority of the Government under which they are appointed, as well as its Republican char acter, is represented by the proper cou- stituional authority. And its decision is binding upon every other department of the government, and could not be ques tioned in a judicial tribunal. A Philadelphia physician writes to tho Lahjcr, of that city, to let the public know the following manner of successfully treating cases of sunstroke : "Let the person thus affected be remov ed to a cool and private place, bis cloth ing taken off, and the body rubbed from head to foot with large pieces of iee, at tho time that pieces of ice arc kept in the arm pits This simplo treatment, if steadily persevered in, will savo cases which seem almost desperate and, there is reason to believe, under any other treatment would certainly prove fatal." Tho Pittsburg Gaztttc says : "In select -ing Hon. Galusha A. Grow to conduct the campaign in Pennsylvania no mistake was made. Thus far that gentleman has labored diligently, and to day, as a result of his efforts, the political machinery of the Stato is in fmoothcr working order than it has been for mauy yenrs past'. Under Mr. G row's management an over whelming vote will bo obtained for Grant and Colfax in Pennsylvania." A Shaeji Worth I hiving. W. II. Doming, of Harfuid, Conn., bbcarcd eighteen pounds of wool from his two year old buck last May. It was tho growth of one year and one week. Tho buck, after shearing, weighed eighty lOUil'l.i. lie is not quite full bliod, au l ' ;' nd ueaily lice IVoui oil. (Jan any of oui" ! lVun !v;..';i '. hitr-i' i.- t.tv.t ?h.;i ! WAS TRUSTED. From Dana'a Life of Grant, wc make the following extract, showing how fully Gen .G rant was trusted by the Govern mcnt and what immense power he had irmr nn a vn in liis hands iaritt il.c period from l.isl: c c0";!'?' "artM Ly a in( .n-lxliont Licutcu.ut General to'-A paVS 'n .fCBrrcDI:! . x.ti.v, apparently thirteen years . . the close of the war: " In accepting the grade of Licutcnant Gcncral and with it the immediato li- rPftion nftbr. nr'tmr ,F ft,. lf ' did not in my way neglect the more iui-r cn 0VC1 hc:lte' on, b'g very pale port ant and comprehensive duties cf bi:;is,!C ran to ll,c noarcst seat and fat down, new office. His firct care was to recu're' ,Icr2 f5,c Prc??'- ,,cr hands to her forc for the command of the various armies 1:Ci r'ni5 loaned forward as though sh military departments, and division" Gcn-l Wcrc auyut to faint. Her strange con- era Is who wcuM work harmoniously and in support of himself and each other auu ins nuii, to tievi.se tutii ii general! plan of operations as would compel them ! all to do some specific ?ood toward:; nr.. I 1 l- i . . i compllshing the general result to be taincd. The war had hitherto been c Ob- ducted upon no well established or proper principle. Each Gcncral had been as- signed to extended bailiwick, with an uncertain number of soldiers, and although con- uncertain number of soldiers, and although l. 1 1 1 1.1V r . . . nv nuu uitu icii wiin iew or no lnsiruc-j " ui vuuu?, tions, much had been expected of him.auJ scracd without the power of moviDg When Grant assumed command of the ,cltl.,cr hinbs or body. Her eyes all tho. armies of. the United States, the loyal jw,lllc hcing wide open, all believed her troops occupying the insurgent territory ViUlU UlYIUtU IUW IWCIVC UliUnCL UCpaH - mcnt commands, with many minor dis tricts more or less independent of each other the troops of which were nctiDg!uaiilon ,cto which she bad fallen. under no general system pointing to the "cr coaaicnancc then assumed a lively accomplishment of wcll dcfincd military ;arpcancc, and she commenced bending, results. The different commanders knew 1th0 .forefinger of her right band soon at that tho rebellion must be put down, andter.' a"J most gracefully raising her band, that the Government would reward sue- j ported it toward heaven and said, "Mo ccssful military operations; but notwith-t ! , 0 ncxt ,et liCr Iiriu'1 faI1 npon standing the fact that the President upon!"" Ijrcast for a moment her coun morc than one occasion had i?sucd' hisifC!ia?c? X701'c an expression of deep mc- oraers airccting a simultaneous movement . . . consolidation of departments aud armies LtliiLllUUU t,IilJ before the bc"inniuir of tlie campaign, and that nine months after the established. On bis accession to the command of the armies he designated Sherman to succeed him in the command he designated upon tne enemy by ail Hie armies, the' , " uv"""lul ,uv 'oqcui prayer, mo military organisation was too cumbrous toih?S"a"c r vr?,ic!l Vl'as select and appro admit of effective working. The team j Flatci msoaiuch that all were astonished. v.-asot only bulky, but badly bitched, MlG ccxt repeated a great number of and hcuce cue or lro of the best horses vcr"c.v ;nd !7li0rc hcrncmory lacked sho were doia- aV. ihc wcih. It r,iii re- scrP,lu WiU a realisable degree of . . . UniWr 7 A I'f r. J -.1.1 mnn iltrm 1 !i i f ini-.' ran.'. -n. !..! 1. '"- . .Illv'l llji-. ..- 4.U1U H BlOfV. of that military division, addiu to it thc!tc i ..... . . i Irinil department of Arkansas. It has been seen how he consolidated four depart ments in the Virginia region into the Middle Military Division, and placed it under Sheridan.. As Sherman collected his forces and began to operate south eastward from Chattanooga, a new con solidation of departments took place on the lower Mississippi, with Gen. Canby in command. By these means widely separated regions and amuses general plan; were bronchi into the great power vras committed to the brads of able and juJicious coin menders, actio? nader the instructions of a clear he :iucd a"'. I f.ir sccing generalissimo; and decided and concentrated action followed, bringing down, by the terrible outset cf 700,000 patriots, in a few months, the well-founded and closely compacted fabrie of the slave holders' rebellion. . " The generalship displayed in this wonderful concentration of effort and in the unerring dircctiou given to tho na tional armed forces towards the vital points of the hostile territory, shows stra tegic skill seldom surpassed, coupled with a depth and breadth cf comprehension sustained by a high moral courage capa ble of the highest resolutions. In bring ing the Government to the adoption of such radical measures, Grant displayed all the tact and sagacity of the profound cst statesmanship ; and it is doubtful if in the history of the world so much power wa3 ever entrusted by a civilized stato to the bauds of a citizen, with less hesita tion or doubt, while it is' certain that such power wa3 never so virtuously and the men tat forgot that he was as far below tho laws as the most obscure private in the ranks. If the Government ever entertained a doubt of his fidelity ov a shadow of jeal ousy at bis success, it is not known; aud this is a circumstance as creditable to the General a3 it is to the President aud his Cabinet. "It is not withia the limits of this work tri'fivf the details of the corre.ron- denco aud orders by which Graut carried! his plans into effect, nor even of the ope rations which resulted therefrom ; but enough of both will be mentioned to show that the success of tho national cause was due to the unlimited ccutror which he exerciser i . .1.. i n i i- . .. isuu iu ma selection oi sutioruiuatu n.lr, n,i;1,1i;WM;.i1,if.!,rt.n.!( commaiu ments against tho i , r .i armed loiecs ol the enemy in accordance with tho true prin . elides of warfare Aa a matter ol course .1 . . i . ! . n . i , ii- ; of tho people, wee tho underlying and primary ctuiso ol our success, but tncv were powerless until guided and coutroll - mc patriotism, courazo. ami civ i virtue iiy a luauui ui ;iuu noiii iiicmse vs. . 3 , i i .i i who com or task assigned him, and If. IV VJ.' . - I I1U 111 .1 I I t ... - - - proceeding to its cxecutiou conum'iii.y. Jub 0 I'.lihu Footi: h bora c-t u Ii : iiie-.1 From the Nashville (Tcnn.) Banner A Child Wonder-Strange Episode in a Ball-Rooni-FoclfalLs on tho Bounda ries of Another World. The comnanv at tho hill crlrrtrl nf ifin' ?.0."!1 I,0Ti3 hy the Narhvillo Baseball iCluo were somewhat startled by a most ago, had made her appearance without ar." escort, b'bc had danced every set, and had parlakcu IVedy of all the rcfrcsh- JlDCnlS .TlVCn her UP to clerp.n nVlrtrt- . uut- saving auracicu 111c attention ol a ouno n,ai who sat beside her, he at onco ; hasfpnon di 1ifi imj.n .1 r, u.J..-iani, .iu cuui o Wa.!cr.anJ faR? Vilt a hope of speedily relieving her from her pecarious eitua.- nou. jn mc Bimpie remedies tha4? could be thought of or recommended were used without avail. She fank into a kind U3cd Wltl,0ut avail. She fank into : ol slluJ,or from vl,ich il was thou-1 wou.ia n?Tcr avrako. Her rc'spiratio ' hiT.r. aQl1 frc1ucut,y attended with ht she ;piration wan i hid. aQl1 'frequently attended with con- IVulIlOn SllO WJ nnl tir.nn it,.:.. - . . . o nM cuuiuiuuvUi and administered s2rftr.1l rrtnritliTc- l " . ".w "viwi iwiuiauvw, 'which seemed partially to relieve her from ! tuc .stuPor l'ut nct from the hysterical . v ,MiJ iroui ncr ups a I tPAC t L.iotH ifi.l . , I T . . . i f J w I !uU,J'vlu? out tuc thread and clothiug it All her remarks were scemln.-rc n.T. dressed to her mother, though dead, yet ! liVlno' ln tac memory of 1 her child. Sho I san5 a so" aM JJinJ sacS :i Fal"03 with so much that everv eve was fillrvl with All this time Dr. Mcnr had tried in vain to attract her attention. She awoke at aqr.artcr to one, and said, she would again enter the same sisto: when one o'clock should come, which wa3 verified. Sue continued in the condition, which wa3 cot so severe as before, for an hour, when she awoke and became ex tremely lively and vivactious in conversa tion. She resumed the floor and dauccd until late iu the morning. She is represented sa'bcing very pret ty and intelligent for ouc of her age. ilcr mother died some time since, leav ing her with her father, and three broth ers, the first of whom sccms to care litthi about her, and the last three to abuse aad? cruelly and brutally beat her. . One of her brothers is new iu tho work house, having been sent there for seventy-two days, for violcut treatment of her. While she is cruelly beaten, sho ts also starved for days. Her appetite at the ball room is said to be most ravenous, aud she is said to have eaten much mora, than three healthy pcrsous ought to have done, without suffcriag a derangement of the system. Martin F. Conway sa3's he is going to. take the stump in the present campaign;, but declares himself for Grant and Col lax, lie closes his letter as follows: "Wc have had war enough. I prefer, peace, and am willing to take it on tho. basis of- existing facts. Wc aro lucky enough now (us wc were ai the end of our great revolution) to have at the head of the army a man who, though comin out a cououeror from a rreat wnr smlia f? pnvc wo sitoutu do content to rest who w 1111 ... arc, without speculating upou tho results, of another war." The nigger is no more to be damned by tha Democracy that is, when he is cn tho Democratic sido. Who can doubt this after it is known that tno New York Democratic Fmpire Club held a meeting oa Monday evening, and was addressed by "Mr. Quickly, a colored gentleman from Georgia, and an attendant from that Stato on the Tammany Hall National Couvcntieu." .! JJunii' the sessio: Duvimr the session of tho Democratic- . i u - 0nvct,,D.lfo loyal soldiers, who had 'experienced the ho , ... ,4 i. . iilClimoiHl uuriiig tue uiti. mo kap- -J" .u r.n i P. 1 l;l . , i ... i " . him a ureaaiui ocaung, wiucn was not XM 0 ccrtalnl y, but not unnatural citucr . ' rri i : i i n n r o 1 1 The Criminal Court Bui for bchuyl ingnituuo o tf.e County, about which the Coppevheada w;is capable ot . . -f ' , . . , ; i j have howled so much, has been pro u canc.-iy ; pounced Constitutional by the SuprcuiQ ' ! Court. - I II - . $700,l,00 iu specio was shipped to Ku-