a HOLCOMB &. - TRACY, Publlshaii. VOL. VII. ----TIIF.--- Bradford Ilepublicao Pablkhed Every Thursday, AT TtIWANA, PA., BY HOLCO&B & TRACY. $1.50 Per Annum, in Adrance idrertising Ealea—Slx cents a lino for first ::..eertinn, ant five cents per line for all sub,e .,itlent insertbns.`Beading notice advertising tell cents per lirke Eight lines constitute a pare, and twelve lines an inch. Auditor'. c-t . ..:es $2.50. Administrator's and Executor'. tetices $2. 0 0. Yeirly advertising , Alto.oo per rohunn, • • . . THE REMILICAX is , published in the liacy, More and Nobles Block, 'Lk the corner of Main a:A line streets, over J. F. Comes Boot 'and SL, ,). store. Its circulation Is over 2000. As an aavertising medium it is unexcelled in its ini ea,liste TnAranda Buzinesz Direci:ry. ArTORA EYS-AT-L A W 01ITH k HILLIS. .Attorneisa,t-Law; ()Me 1 7, over Powell .5: Co; ' CCLIFF. J. N., Wilco in Wood's:l:dock, south First Sational flank, up stairs.. June 12.78 LILKBREE & SON IN CrElsbree and-z, Elsbree.) ILI :Mee iu Bercur Block. Park St. - msyl 4,78 PECKS OVERTON tßenj if Peck . and I) 4 OrAr tont. Offlee over Bill's Market—. 40-'79 VERTON A-. SANDERSON (E Overton and Jnan Q 1' Sanderson.) Office in Ida= Block. julys 78 M.. °Mee over Day ton'a Store • april 14,76 • mxXWELL, WILT, J. 'DREW. Office in Mean's Block . apr.14,76 TNAVIES, CAENOCEAN & HALL, (W Davies.- 1-. 1 Ivfl Calodtan, it (Mee in rear of Ward Ilon a b. Entrance on Poplar Bt. '00.2,75 MEIICITS, RODNEY A. Solicitor of Patents. Particular attention paid to: business in Orphans' Court and to the settlement of estates. oft.ice in- Niontanye's Block. 4149 Air c PHERSON /4 YOUNG. (1. McPherson and W. 1. rtn9.l Office month Nide of Slercur's Block. feb 1.78 tDILL ts KINNEY, Cate corner Main and In. Pino aL Noble•s block. second floor front. Collections promptly attended to. feb 178 - TETILLIAMBi ANGLE & BUFFINGTON. (II N VV E J Angle and E D Buffington). uffice west aids of Main street, two doors north et Argus office! All Maine's entrustod to their k-sr, will recede prompt attention. oct A TmEs CODDING, Attor al neys and Connsellors-at-Law.. Office In the 4,rear Block, over C. T. Kirby's Drug Store. July 3, 'BO tf. TT EENTY, J. P. Attorney-at-Law.. Office in 1.1.- Mental:lye's Block, Main Street. Svpt.,ls, rIIIIOIIPSuN, W. • _And E. A.., Attorneys -at Law, Towanda, Pa. Office in Mercur 4 Block, er C. T. Kirby's 'Drug Store, entrance on Main ,treet i first stairway north of Post-ottice, Ui buAness promptly attended to. Special anon. n , .0 given to claims i-againit the Unitedßtates PensioLs, Bounties. Patents, etc., and to Alectious and settlement of decedent's es:etes. April 91. ly • YIENRY B. mama, ATTORNEY-AT-LANS ilicllor of Patents. Government claims at eiled to. I,l6fettti2 PBYSWA N 3 AND SURGEONS TOWNSON. 'T. B.; 3I:D. Office .over Dr. H. C u Porters's Drug Store. f5b12.7.8 NEWTON, Drs. D. N. k Mee stThrelling orrltiver Street, corner Weston St. feb 12,77 Tl D. C. K.. 11. D. Office Ist door above old .I—i bank building, on Main street. Special at ration giveln 'to diseases of the throat and = WuoDsuss, S. M.D.. 1 Office and reel deuce. Main street, north of ALE.Chureli. Medical Examiner for _Pension Ecrartment. . Feb 22,78 P —_ NYSE, E. D.. D. Office ' over M•mtanye . Store. office hours from 10. to 12 A. If. 1112 from 2 to 4 P. Y. Special attention given t Diseases of the -Eye, and Disesses of the Es . tict 20 a .17 • sw „lis, or auy other light miMbigery. It i; of inplo constructiou. durable and easily staged. Manufactured by Charles Perrigo Co., Groton, Tompkins County, N. Y. - C. W. HOLCOMB, . General Agent. - ri,ter, Pa., July 21-w kit the magazines, daily and weekly pipers Crosze. - Mr 2. :Mother b(ed of Salt .Itheum J. W, 2i4.lams, Newark, Ohio, says: "Cud a :: Remedies are the greatest medicines on a-th. .11.1 tho worst case Salt Rheum in c,,,inty. My mother had it twenty,years. 11 in fact died from it. I believe Cuticura • ,uld have saved her life. My arms, breast ..1 h, ail were covered for three years, which acrance 12,041. Benefits $3.00 per ecsd. 41., age annual cost, 5 yeari experience. $ll. - J. B. KITTRIDGE, Reporter, ICJpIDELL, Jo., Dictator. feb 22.78 BRADFORD LODGE. N0.16T, I. 0. 0. F. Meet in Odd Fellow's Hall, every Monday evening at ; o'clock. Waimea LULL, Noble Grand. June 1%75 HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTING. PORT, F. E. No. 32 Second street An orders will receive prompt attention. June 12.75 EDUCATIONAL ;;I n i - sQLTEHANNA 'COLLEGIATE INSt it ti kJ The Second Winter Terra will begin Monday, lanuary. tn, ISS2. For catalogue or other infor ,llll.loll, address or call on the Principal. EDWIN E. QUINLAN, A'. X. Towanda. Pa. July 19,78 PLUMBER AND . GAS RITTER WILLIAMS, EDWARD. Practical Plumber and Gas Fitter. Place of business in Mer cur Llock next door to Journal ofilce opposite leublic Square. Plumbing, Gas Fitting, RePair ro.: Pumps of all kinds. and all kinds of Gearing romptly attended to. All wanting work in his ne should give him a call. July 27,77 INSURANCE RUSSELL, 0. 8, General Insurance Agency, RU Towanda, P. Mu, in Whitcomb's Book t3re. July 12,76, SPECIAL' ANNOUNCEMENT JAMES McCABE ll.\- ItEIIOVED HIS GROCERY BUSINESS O THE EorTII-EAST CORNFH OF MIN AND BRIDGE. STREETS, WHERE 4 -! HE HAS . ESTABLISHED Head Quarter's FOR EVERYTHING IN THE LINE OF IiaCERIES, PROVISIONS, • &C. ' CASH PAID for Desitable Pro duce. Fine . BUTTER and EGGS siweiti4y.' April 29 ly NATHAN TIDD , (Successor to Mr. McKean,/ DEAL= ICI - PITTSTON, WILKESBARRE AND LOYAL SOCK COAL, • FOOT or : NNE . STREET. NEAR COURT norsE. TQWANDA, PA. W LOWEST PRICES FOR CASE!. -to The patronage - of toy old fr iends sad the public giaerslly is solicited. 9sep:ll 0 . . . . . . . . . - . . • . _ .. . . . . . , . , . , , - • . '. • . ' .. . . ..--..--;:. .J.1.:-_•-... -,'-. : - ' `••••-• -,‘• ,- ' • .. ~• ...,... • . -.. ~. , 4• .. 1, -- 1 ,: . : , 7, r •. . , 1 , ,I ' .„.,",.. ~-.-; ' ; _ a. 7.4 . 7 -,4r, -. 1 ., , ,,, 4.. ,:::(•.;.. :,:„. -Al' 4i. y .- • ; • 'r , r • • - - ~. .. • _ .. . .. , • - , ✓-:,- .."t , ':: . -. H ,4 • . , ... , , ... .. . .., -'' . ~..--, ” ~..- • ~. ~, '•." - .t-- '..,:-: -'..:2:- - -.." •.„.. ,i- ,-„...,:'•,.. /-..: . . Pl4"` . i . ',:.:'L - , ;... ,:%.•.; •-. ': ,-..k. , . 2 ., :,,,,.. ~,:,,, ; 71, 1 ,- ; t n , . .-- -,„ t .. ; ' • ... . 7 :,„ - ',- : .. . -., . : 7 R i pr. . __ -...•-• _ _ .. . . .. ._ , , .. . .:,• -.2 z.!...;.... , ..-2..., - , ..t .! ,-..,-,.. VM 4-. '.l--2-10, t (•-• ...."... '''''''2: - .'-! . .. i ..''7'...,-',. - . - ....- . . • .1_,...• . . .. • •,• -.- '''. ':- . = . t . ' ..- ;-.'" ' ' '-', . . ... . . ~ - ...../-..,,:-..--. - - ge. .•. s i. • , - . _ .. _ • . '•: -'"- ' -,•-,- - - ,-....," • . •-- - - --- , Y. :••••----:-,.,...- ..-, --,-:::-..-' .. . • --.. --•.:-•-•.-, ~ .....,i- ,-. i , ,:;•.-.. -..:.- .....:. - t ...0+ ',•. -- - - ' , la. 4,10). - . t_.. , - r _7- .7.;'.. - U. 2"a11i51...;: * '• - A Vi r t.it i 4114 - al fiC 1 it'l :'" 4 ji-T t .'C')--:.• '' - -..- - • • . . . • . . .. , . BARCLAY R. R. TIMETABLE. TAKES EFFECT JAN: 1, ISS2., - . TILAINS ‘ TRAINS ' NORTH.' , ROUTS. 10 iiii STATIONS. i 3 , 9 .- Way 'Ace' t . i . • i Ace' Way Mail. tloni • ' ition.l Mall --r--..............2._ , - A. 1 0— .., :t ! 1 iA.11.11 1 . la 9.20 , Ai: ' -... Towanda ... Dep. ; 0.17 1 3.15 3.05 DeP. •.. Monroe.... Ar..; .6.35 3.30 9. 0 4' , Ar. - .Monroe—. Dep.! 6.41 3.31 8.591 " .. Masontown... f' i ! 6.47 . 3.35 8.54' " .. Greenwood .. . I '. 6.52 i 8.461 " ....Westons.... T . , -7.00 i 3.47 1*8•;18:....11" , e 8.3 51 -" . Lamoks.... ';" 1*7.15i*3.38 : . :flitZp. i i. IglithiTltre.P I i;:! 7 T.Ii VI P.M. 6.20 6.03' 6.021 5.53 0.53 • 5.46 *5.30' *5.35 1 53 11 5.20 . 0 ! Indicates that trains do not atop. P. P.Li.YON, Sup't and Eng i ri, Barclay, Pa 2mrB2 I MGM VALLEY & PENNA. AND - 1 - 4 NEW YORK RAILROADS. ARRANGEMENT OF FUMING* TRAINS. TO TARE EFFECT JAN..Is , I ' - . 1 EASTWARD.: . . . . r . • - STATIONS.; . vs .1 917 1 3 • -1 ! •1,.... 1 ...........,-. P.51. 1 .4.314.31.1P.M. 51141w/tr . 's nap : 2:05 , 7.201 - - I 7.15 'Buffalo ..-1 • - ! ! 2.50101.23.-- 9.20 liocheater'.l .... : ...... .. - ....1 5.1110.05' ~ 1..... Lyons - , 6.491.051 .... .. .. Geneva - .1: 6.55111.3(q . 1 . - Ithaca 1 8.331' 1.00 ' Auburn .. .. 1 5.1111.05' ...,:. Owego - • ' 8.5 W 1.351 .. Elmira • '1 9.10 1.451 9.00 . ; 3:45 Waverly 9.44 '2.10 9.40; 4.15 Sayre 110.10 .2.30:10.00 1 4.30 Athens 10.15 2.3410.05 4.34 Milan ,10.15 Mater . 1 10.25; raivanda 'lO 46 3.00,1043' 505: . Wyaanking 1.....1 10.51 1 5.13 Standing Stone • : • *• 11.03 Itunimerlield 1 1., ... 11.101 5.26 Frenchtown - -11 .... 11.19',1 - . Wyalneing 1" . 1 ..111.30t ..s.ii Laceyvine !MU' 3.67111.50116.03 Skinner's Eddy 1 '111.53 .6.07 Blesboppen - 1 1 4.12'12.10 6.23 Stehoopany 1,.... * -.42.16 6.25 Tankhannock 12.23 4.35; 1.00 7.10 LaGrange ; 1 1 1.10 7.20 Fails I 1 1.21‘ '7.35 t. 5; B Junction .. ......... 1.01 - 5.10 j 1.45 8.05 Wt:k •s-Barre..- 1.95' 5.301 2.20 8.35 Kamen Chunk ; 3.451 7.35; 4.10 11.00 Allentown , 1 4:44! 8.29' 5.33 12.00 Bethlehem 5.00,.8.45 6.05 12.15 * Easton . 5.33 9.00 1 C.40'12 55 ' Philadelphia.. J 4.55 ; 10.10, 8.401 9.20 New York - 1 8.05; 1 9.15 3.35 A,MiP.11.P.111.P.11. !jaw York. Philadelphia Easton Bethlehem allentown -.- Stanch Chunk Wilkes-Barre.. L & 13 Junction Falls ... .. LaGrange Funkhannock Mehoopany Veshoppen Skinner's - Eddy.. Laceyville Wyalusing- ...1 Freuchtown Rummbrfield ' ; Standing Stortis.... . Wysauking Yowanda Ulster ......... 4 Milan &thens • Sayre.. Waverly Elmira Owego . auburn Ithaca Geneva' ' Lyons Rochester Buffalo ............. Niagara Fa 115.... .. TOWANDA, PA 1 julyll,7B No. 32 leaves Wyalusing at 6:00, A. M.. French. town 6.14, Ilummerfield G. 23, Standing Stone 6.31 Wvaanking 6.40. Towanda 6.53, , Ulster 7.0t7, Milan 7:16. Athens 7:25, Sayre 7:40, Waver ly 7:55. arriving at Eimiia 8:50.,.A. M. No. 31ileaves Elmira 5:15 P. 3.1., Waverly 6:00, Sayre 6;15, Athens 6:20, Milan 6:30. Ulster 6:40, Towanda 6:55, Wysanking 7:05. Standing Stone 7.14, IlummerSeld Frenchtown 7:32, arriv, Ing at Wyalusing at 7:15., I'. sf. 'lrains 8 and 15 run daily. Sleeping cars on sins 8 and 15 between Niagara Falls and Phila. Telphia and between Lyons and New York with ut changes. Parlor cars on Trains 2 and 9 theetween Niagara Falls and Philadelphia aith rout change. and through coach to and from Rochester via Lyons. is i W5l. STEVENSON, Supt. - of I_ &TILE. Pa.:Jan. 2, 1882. Pa., tc. N. Y. E. It. i lliscellaneotis Advertisements. th Towanda 5 ci. Store ITAIN SPX 1?....E.E: Is prepared to offer a complete assort DRY AND FANCY GOODS, Croakery, Glassware, WHITE and DECORATED CHINA MAJOLICA WARE , BIRD CAGES, ' SATCHELS, &C. For the coming Spring Trade, we adlwre as heretofoie to our established principle—that a quick sale with a small profit is better than a slow one with a large profit—and therefore our prices in any line of goods will compare fp:s!orable with the prices of any other lielf - Wre endeavor to sell the best article for the'least possible' money. LOEWUS & FREIMUTH. myG-tf THE POPULAR CORNER Hat filled up the old MOSTA:WE STORE with t a full and completes rof FRESR I GROCERIES AND P OVISIONS. Can. here for your Groceries. After you get prices at noes' it will be of no use to try else- where for his pricesnre down to rock bottom, Farmers can get the tip-top of the market s; Geo. L. Boss'. All kinds of Produce taken In ex change for goods or for cub. HORSE ' Send 25 cts. In stamp or currency for the as VISZD =mos of "A Treatise on the Horse and his Diseases." It gives the treatment for all , diseases. has 60 fine engravings showing B 0 OK Er i t s u es ons ;r e a r m:mi n b y in n s i t / taught in any other way, a table showing doses of all the , principal medicines used for the horse as well as their effects and antidotes when a 25 et_ poison, •a large collection of HIS yam/Ariz macs:rem, rules for telling the age of a horse, with an engraving showing teeth of each year and a large =Aunt of other valuable horse information. Hurdreds of horsemen have pronounced it worth more than books costing $5 and slo.' The fact that 260.000 sold in about one year before it was re. vised shows how popular the book Is. The re• lilted edition is sues atom nerzasenra Rxico rola a cmcntra. AGENTS WANTED. %Dr. J. 13. Kendall k Co., Emosburgh - Falls, Vermont. Afar 11-17 r. JOB PRINTING OF ALL KINDS dons at abort milks and reasonable rates 113urnmscas Oka. . Railroad Time. Tables. WESTWARD. 1 iiTATioNs. • 4 ) .1fi'A.31. 1 A.111.`P.* 6.30 7.40; 3.40 • 8.00 ....; 9.00; 4,15 10.151 5.50 • 9.50:10.45j 6.15 • 10.6.51 10.54 6.24 1.1.05!..11.55; 7.25 ..I 1.081 7.t10. 2.03! 9.45 1;35 8.01 2.25 10.10 8.27 -10.32 8.45.. 30.46 H;65! 3.000.52 .9.20 ... 31.22 9.27' 3.27411.29 9.43!11.45 9.50: : . 1,16:11.50 .10.14, 4.03 12,07 10.27 , 10.37. 1 ~• .•12.24 . ,10.44 2,1 10 30.54 12.37 1 1;0:1 43 12.46 11.17 '4.55112.57 1 :1.30 11.3.11 5.101 Ll 5 4.40'11.41 5.20 1.23 4.45 31.50:, 5.301 1.30 5.25 1 12.40'.6.151 2.15 5.30! .... 6.25 .... 8.50: 9.35 i .... 6.101 6.40; ..... 7.411 8.141 ... ; 8.40; ' " 8.50 , .... 1 9.501 109.401 .. - 11.40, 8.10 12.05 8.00 11.03 i 9.251 1.081 9,40 1..3.1.4'.31. A. 31. A. 31 NUE •••1.• , 2.1 d 1 -1 3.62 (Nk.XT DOOR ',CO PF.LCII CO meat of Latest designs and patterns of GEO. L . .10SS, - . :. PRICES 43 LOW AS THE LOWEST. Mil MEE CURES KUM CORIUM EIIIE CU _ ipepsicf, Liver 4f ignelifnam i r iBM, Dropsy, Disease, BU. town:eas t - Nervous debuts/, etc. rho But MEM ;EMT to Man'. 11,000,000 Bottles This Syrup possessei Varied Properties. It Stimulates the Ptyalin's la the Saliva, which converts the Starch and Sugar of the fined into gismo,. A dell. cleney in Ptyalin° :causes Wind and Souring of the food in the stomach. 111 the medicine is taken immediately after eating the fermentation of Mod Ia pm. Tented. • . It sets upon the "deer. It acts upon Me Ridnetsi. - It Regulates the Boatels. • It Purifies the Blood. • It p . Wets the Nervosa Sasm • In sotm. It Yourtsfies. Snal Znelparahs. It carries th Older and snakes nese opeas_perm of the akin and induces Ifealthy Peraption. It neutralizes the hereditary taint,lor poison In the blood, which generate - Borofula, Ery sipelas L and all manner of skin diseases and internal humors. ' - ••• There are no spirits employed in its mann. facture, and it can betaken by the most dell. cate babe, or by the aged and feeble, careen!' being regutredin attention to direction". DEVOGISTS SELL IT. - Laboratory, 77 t'West 3d f3t., NEW YOUIC CITY. barer fails to Care. ' Ashland, fichuykill co., Pa. Dear Bir:—Thia is to certify that your INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP has benefited me more, after a short trial, than all the medicine I have used for 15 years. - B. B. BILLIKAN. Ashland. Scluiykill co., Pa. Deitr Sir:—l have used your excellent INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP for Disease of the Stomach, and it has proved to be a valuable medicfte. 30 2 i 9 Nervous Debility. Turtle Point, Neiman co., Pa. Dear Bir:—l was troubled with Nervous De bility and partial Paralysis, for a number of years; and obtained no relief until I used your INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP, a short trial of which restored me to health. ' 'For Scrofula. .. Turtle Point. McKean co; - , pa. . • Dear Sir:=My little girl was cured of Lutlani mation of the Face and Eyes, by the use of your reliable INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP. A physician had previously failid to afford relief and it was thought that the child could not live. Its neck and breast was entirely covered with 'Scrofulous Sores, which are now entirely gone.- . Sure Care for Liver Complaint. Turtle Point, McKean co., Pa. Dear Sir:—This is to certify that your INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP as effectually relieved me of Liver Complaint and -Dyspepsia, after the doc tors failed. Remedy fur the Rheumatism Virile Point, McKean co., Ps. Dear have used your excellent INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP for Rheumatism and Liver Co mplaint. and have detived great relief therefrom. - , DAums SUn'SON. An Agent's Testimony. Turtle Point, McKean co., Pe... Dear Sir:—l was a life-long sufferer from Liver Complaint until I need. your great INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP. from which I soon obtained permanent relief. I also find the Syrup to bee valuable Bowel Regulator. --- A Valuable Medicine. lerlla, Somerset' Co.. Pa. • Dear Sir:—This is to certify that your reliable . INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP is the best medicine ever used in my istally. Hoping the public will ho benefited by this:great remedy. I take great pleasure •in giving my testimony of its value. JOB7.PH P.•BlLllnaglig. Dyspepsia and Indigestion. Berlin, Somerset Co., P. Dear Sir:—l take pleasure in recommending your INDISN BLOOD SYRUP as the best medi cine made. People who are Dyspeptic should not fail to give it a trial: For tue Stomach it has no equal. I have mold it and know itto be valuable medicine. Berlin, Somerset Co., Pa. Dear Sir:—l was, troubled with Liver Com plaint for a long time, and by the perausalob of your Agent, I commenced taking your excellent INDIAN BLOOD SYBlTP,which has grestlY twine fited me. 1 have "never found any medicine to °oust it, and can confidently say it la's safe and highly valuable remedy ; • Pain in the Breast: Berlin, Somerset Co., Dear was saluted with a Pain iDGlmy Breast and Side. and when I would lie down, I could scarcely breathe for Pain, I was also very: weak in my Breast and Lungs. I used some of your INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP and am now near. ly. well. My Lungs are strong once more and I am very grateful to you for such a valuable remedy. • Dyspepsiaand indigestion. I - Phi/10000s. Pa. Dear Bir:—This is to certify that your valua ble INDUS BLOOD SYRUP has cured me of Dyspepsia and Indigestion. which I hid been afflicted with for 3icars. • For kidney. Diseases. Philadelphia, Pa. Dear Sir:—l was subject to severe Pains in my Kidneys, Wealmess l and Painful Sick Headache, for years, and haled to obtarn relief, until I was induced to try yoiir reliable INDIAN BLOOD SYBITP., a short trial of which restored ms to perfect health. . ' No• 1525 Bartestit St For ,Costiveness. Philadelphia, pa, Dear Sir:—l was i troutiled with Costivenes arid Ileadaebe, and the nse of your INDIAN - BLOOD SYRUP proved mast beneficial to me. It ls ,O. best median* I ever used. N 0,817 Federal St Philadelphia. Pa. Dear Sir: —I was afflicted with Dyspepsia and Billiminess for years, and Baled to procure re. lief until I began timing your INDIAN' BLOOD SYRUP, which scion effectually relieved me. I take great pleasure in recommending its nis to the &filleted ' 1 FltAsx T. Go =tsar, No. 1035 Lomat Bt. - . Disease of the Stomach and Liver. Buslmill, Pike Co., Pa. Dear Sir:—Thii is to certity that I have used your INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP for - Disease of the Stomach and Liver, and have been much bane. fited thereby. Pnemuzer VAIIANICUM. Best Family Medicine. Bushkill, Pike co.. Pa. Dear Slr;—l consider your reliable INDIAN BLOOD MITE' the best medicine lever used in my family. His just as recommended. 1 • • MALAsm Comm Dear Sir;-4 nave used - your great INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP in my family .for Worm and Summer Complaint, and , it has 'proved effectual in allows. THOUS CORTSIGHT, Co„; • ' Buil*U M l. e - PL. Dear B}r:—My daughter was in Poor Health . and $ short trial of your INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP entirely cured her. 1 Rawl Vananumi. - , . MVP r the Ws AGENTS. the Da& BLOOD la imp wn oi *Moo, in which I b O o no agent. Puticutolaro g iven pump:atlas.- ; ~.,6 1 ,,,;Z!,,, , , r -,. r';' , i .,.',..: - . ,i. , ;,: . :' , A;47-„r.<47- , ';'.*, .. ..' , - Z ,- ,_;: . '. *.2-...:,,,- -.- -...:-. ---:-.: -' : ......-. ~., , , ~i _ _ -. . .•,. -, . 1. - . '. 1 -7441ErtlAjD'It' ~- - ~ . FOREr - ,-- -, - :*PA -4- : -- T - ItURSDAY-1-!. - -11ARCH -- _. . . . _ .•..._ .... . . _ _ .. •_ . , . • • ME . • - 1101 antEs ILL awn OF THE STOMA IHNIETI4 BLOOD. SOLD BM= 1870. Disease of the Stomach. MILB. J. MVO D. C. Vi'nqintr WARBEN SMITH F. F. Blsitop. Ht.NaY C. 13ncoson Ear= Kanuarsaza. Lip er Coin EIMAIM Zo9 D. M. BALi. Gronol 31. ELuor JAirsa JAL A. lisomr For Billloasness. Remedy for Womb's. never Fails to &tie. ; ivxmannuairr Ortat•PX(FPLZ *EOPLE AND, FOE THE.PEOPLE." • , - ENE FM ELAINE'S INE 7 S r mi ATLOGY • ~,• 1 ON cr..4IZPIELD. ROVSE OP REPREISENTAMMES, v. S. ' .F.EaIiVARY 2r, rase. - At 1200 the!mator of the day, Hon. Janie G. Blaine, was announced, and his advent was the signal for another round' of applause. , The ceremonies were then rop'ened by the following prayer by Chaplain. F. D. Power, of the House: '0 Lord, our Clod, we thank Thee for this hour and fore this service.l We thank Thee for a great 'life given to this Nation; for its genius and' poten cies; for its example and memories; for its immortality and eternity. May this! &lid:llia never forget its dead. We come together this day to ;recall the wisdoin, the integrity, the states manship, theioyalty, the, reverence for Thee and Thy ward, tho unselfish love for country and for all mankind, wherewith - Thou didst endovi Thy servant anti fit him for the wiministra ; tion of the affairs of the Government,. As we meditate upon the patience, the sweetness, the furtitude, the faith, the quiet resignation to Thy will wher e. , with Thou didst fit him' for his sore trial; as we remember his triumph and our sorrol, grant 134 Thy ,gracions ben o u. - dietio - We bear, during this memorial; service our Father, before Thee, on, our hearts his loved ones with who'll we weep. Sustain, we beseech Thee, the -Mother who bore Lim' May the peace of God that passeth-all unde.standing be the strength and tbecrown of her spirit: Be i very merciful to the wife in her preseueseparation from the husband of her youth. i May , she rest in God. and may she Sad such sympathy in her God and Saviour that the world; cannot' take away. Be a father to the children now fatherless, and may they' imitate' tee virtues of their illustrious, parent.. May the { youth of this country and of. all lands feel the power of example and followin his footsteps.' Nay those who rule among us and l'Aitiong men everywhere by the study of virtues be incited to like patriotism and faith fulness. • , , r ow we ask .Thy ,le sing ',en this . assembly. May the remembertioce of this great life be a genuine help to all those present and that greater•audience waiting without. Clive grace' Of utter ance to Thy servant Who shall speak to us. Mas his words be wise And worthy of, full honor, like appler of gold in piclures of silver. Remembq Thy servant before Thee. the President of the United States. Preserve hirri from evil influences and evil men.! 'May truth rest " upon his brow and upon his lips, justice in his hands and groce in his heart. Bless this august assembly, our magistrates and judge's, our Army and Navy, cur , schools and churches, our Whole land and all.the inhabitants thereid. May we keep alive in us the faith and virtue of those who biie passed before. Give peace in our land: Mike religiort and righteon'sness; truth and justice, knowledge and fr3edorn Alined ' every where. May Thy name be glorified and Thy kiogdom,rule over us from sea to sea. j •We asli , it all reverently. through Jesus Christ. our Lord. Amen." President Davis then said: "This day' is dedicated by Congress for mem'. oriel services.on the late President of the United States, James A. Garfield. I present to you the Hon. James G. Blaine, who has been fitly chosen as the orator. for thii3 historical occasion." Mr. Blaine then proceeded to read his oration as follows: Mn. PRESIDENT: For the second: time in this generation the great departments of the Government of the United States arc assembled in the Ball of Represen latives. to do honor to the memory . of a murdered President. Lincoln fell at the close of a mighty struggle in whish the passiOns of men'had been deeply stirred. The tragical terminatioa of his great life adlded but another to the lengthened succession of horrors which had marked so many lintels with the blood of the first born. Garfield was slain in a day of penie, when brother bad been reconciled to brother, and when anger and hate had been banished from the land. "Whoever shall here after draw the portrait of murder, if be will show it as it bas been exhibited where such exlmplei was last to have been looked for, let him not, give it the grim visage of Moloch; the brow knit ted by revenge, the face black with set tled bate. Let him draw, rather, a decorous. smooth-faced, bloodless de mon, not so much an example of human nature in its depravity and in its parox ysms of crime, as an ,infernel being, a fiend in the ordinary -display and devel opment of his OharaCter." .From the landing of the pilgrims at Plymoth till the uprising against Charles First, about twenty thousand emigrants canoe from old Eagland to New England. As they came in pursuit of intellectual freedom and ecclesiastical independence rather than for worldly honor and profit the emigralion naturally ceased when the contest for religeouiliberty began in earnest at home.. The man who struck his most effective blow for free dom of conscience by sailing for the colonies in 1620 would ',.have been ac- counted a deserter to leave after 1640. The opportunity had then come on the soil of England for that great contest established i the auth ority of Parliament. gave religious freedom to the people, sent Charles to the block and committed to the hands of Oliver Cromwell the Supreme Executive • au thority of England. The English emi gration was never renewed, and from these twenty thousand men. will, a small emigration . - from Scotland and France, .are descended the vast numbers who have New England blood in their veins. - In 1685 the remotion of the edict .of Nantes by Louis XIV, scattered to other countries four hundred thous and Protestants, who Were among the most intelligent and enterprising of French subjects—merchante of capital, skilled manufacturers. and handieraftt man, superior at the time to all othe iu:Frrope. -A considerable r umber of these Huguenot French came to Ameri ca; a few lauded in New England and became honOrably prominent in its his tory. • Their names. have in large part become Anglicized, or have disapOar ed,. but their blood is traceable in r;iiittsy of the most reputable families, and their fame is perpetuated in honorable memorials and useful institutions. From these two sources, the English : . Puritan' and the French-Huguenot, came the late President—his father, Abram Garfield, being descended from the one,. and his mother, Eliza Ballot], from the other. It was good stock on both sides—hohe better, none braver, none truer. There was in it an inheritance' of courage, of . manliness, of imperishable love' of liberty, of Undying adbEirenee to . princi• .Garfield was proud of his blood; and, with as much satistiction as if he were a British nobleman reading • his st4tely ancestral record in Burke's reerage,Ale spoke of himself as ninth in descent fro& those who would not endure: the oppression of the 4-Stuarts, and seventh in descent from the brave French Protestants who refused to sub , mit to tyranny even troni the Grand , duarque. - 4 . General Garfield delighted- to dwell on : these traits, and, daring his only visit to England, he busied Oimself in discoverfng every trace of his fore fathers,in parish registiies and on; an cient areal, rolls. Sittitik , with a friend to the gallery of. the House of Com mons one bight after a long day's labor in this field of researich, he said',with evident elation that.; in every ,war in which far three centuries patriots of English blood had struck sturdy blows , for constitutional government; and ha, man'fiberty, his family had been repre seated.; They,werc . at Marston Moor, at Naseby and at Preston; they were at Banker Hill, at Saratoga, - and at Mon month, and in his own person had bat tled-for the satnevreat cause in the war which preserved . the Union of the . State. m - Losing his father before he was two years old, the early life of Garfield was , one of• privation,• but-its poverty has been made indelicately and unjustly ,prominenti Thousands of readers have 'imagined him as the ragged, starving child; whose reality too often greets the eye in the squalid sectious of our large cities. Gen. Garfield's infancy and youth had none of their destitu tion, none of their pitiful features . ap pealing 'to the tender heart Nand 'to , the open hand of charity. Ho. liras a poor boy in the - same sense in which Henry Clay was a poor boy; in which Andrew Jackson :was a poor boy; in which Dan iel Webster was a poor boy; in the Sense in which a large majority of the eminent men or America in all genera tions have been poor boys. Before a great multitude of men, in 'a public speech, Mr. Webster bore this testi mony: ' 'lt did pot happen to me to be born in a log clibin, but my elder brothers and sisters were born in a log cabin raised timid the snow drifts of - New Hampshire, at a period so early that when the smoke rose first from its rude chimney and curled over the frozen hills there was no similar evidence of a white man's habitation between it and the settlements on the rivers of Canada. Its remains still exist. I xnakel it an annual visit. I carry my children to it to teach them the hardships endured by the generations which have gone be fore them. I love to dwell on the ten der recollections, the kindred tics, the early affections and the touching narra tives an 4 incidents which mingle with all I know of this primitive family . abode.'`, With the requisite change of scene the same words would aptly portray the early days of Garfield. The poverty of the frontier, Where all are engaged in a COMMOEI struggle and where a com mon sympathy and hearty co-operation lighten the burdens of each, is a very different poverty, different in kinAif ferent in iofluerce and effect from that conbcions and humiliating indigence which is every day forced to Contrast itself with neighboring wealth on which it feels a sense of t, , rinding. dependence. The poverty of the frontier , is indeed no poverty. It is but the beginning of wealth; and has the boakiless pos siltilitie.4 of 4lie future alwaYs opening before it. No man ever grew up in the agricultural regions of the West where a house-raising, or even a cornihnsking, is matter of common interest and help fulness, with any other feeling than that of broad-minded, generous independ ence., This honorable independence marked the youth of Garfield as it, marks the youth of millions of 'the best blood and brain now training for the future citizenship and future govern met, of the Republic: ,; Garfield was born' heir to land, to the title of free holder which 'has been the patent and passport of self-respect with the Anglo- Stump race ever since Hengist and Horn landed on the shores of England. His 'adventure on the canal—an alterna tive lieiween that and the deck of , a Lake Erie sohooner--was a faymer boy's device for earning money, just the New England lad begins -a . possibly great career - by sailing before the 'flint on a coasting vessel or on a merchant man bound the farther India or to the China seas. No manly • man feels anything of shame in looking back to early struggles with adverse circumstances, and no man feels a worthier pride than when he has congnered_the vbstacles to his progress. But no one of noble. mould desires - to be looked upon es having occupied a menial position,' as Laving ' been re pressed by a feeling of inferiority, • or as having suffered the evils of i poverty until relief was found at the hand of charity. - Gen. Garfield's youth pre sented rio hardships which family love and family. energy 'did not overcome, subjected him to .no privations Which he did not cheerfully accept, and left no RE M. memories save those which were recalled with delight and transmitted with pro fit and witk pride. c- Garfield's_ early opportunities for securing an education were extremely limited, and yet were sufficient to de velop in him an intense desire to learn. He could read at threeyesrs of age, and each,winter he had-the advantage of the district school. 'He read all the books to be found within the circle Of his acquaintance; Some of them . he: got by &art. - While yet -in childhood he was a constant student of the Bible, and became familiar . with its literatu r e:' The dignity and earnestness of his speech in his maturer life gave -evidence ...of this early training. . At eighteen years ,of age he was able to teach school, and thenceforward his ambition was to 'ob tain a college education. To this end ho bent all his efforts, working iu the harvest-field, at the carpenter's bench, and in the winter season leaching the common schools of the neighborhood. While thus laboriously occupied he found time to prosecute his studies, and ,was so'successful that a ut twenty-two years of age he w as able to enter ;the junior class at Williams College, then under the presidency of the venerable and honored Mark Hopkins, who, in the fullness of his poWers, survives the eminent Pupil to wigint he was of - I in estimable service. • The history of Garfield's life to this period presents no novel features. He had undoubtedly shown perseverance, self-reliance, self-sacrifice and ambition —qualities which; be it said for the honor of our country, are everywhere to be found among the young 'med of America. But from his graduation at Williams Onward, to the hour of .his tragical death, G.arfield's career was eininent mid exceptional. Slowly work ing through his educational period, ceiving, his diploma when twenty-for years of age, he seemed -at. one bound to spring into conspicuous and brilliant. noses& Within six years he was sue-, inisively president of a college, State Senator of Ohio, major;general of I,the Army of the UnitedStates s ,and sentative-elect ..to the National Co n! giess. A combination of honois , so varied, 89 elevated, within a period so brief and'to a man so young, is without precedent or parallel in • the history of the _country. -Garfield's army life was begun with uo Other military knowledge than each as he had hastily gained 'from books in the few months preceding his march to the field. _ Stepping from civil life to the head of a regiment, the first order he received when ready to cross! the Ohio was_ to assume - ; command of a brigade, and to operate as anindepen _dent.force in Eastern Kentficky. l His immediate duty , was' to check the ad vance of Humphrey Ilfarshall, whO was marching down the Big Sandy with the intention of occopying, in connection with other Confederate forces, the en tire territory of Kentucky, and of pre cipitating the State into secession. This was at the close l of the year.lB6l. Sel dom, if ever, has a young college pro fessor been thrown into a More embar rassing and discouraging position:i Ho knew just enough of • Military science, as he Expressed it himself, to measure the extent of his ignorance, and With a handful of • men he Was niarching,, in rough winter weather, into a strange country, among h hostile population, to confront a largely auPerior force un der the commanii of a distinguished graduate of WestlPoint, who had seen active and: important _service in •two preceding wars. The result of the campaign is matter of history. The skill, the endur ance, the, extraordinary energy shown by Garfield. the ) courage he imparted to his men, raw and untried as himself, the measures he adopted, to in crease his force and to create itythe enemy's ;;naiad exaggerated estimate:; of his numbers, bore perfect fruit in the routing of Marshall, the capture 'of 'hie camp, the dispersion of his force, and the emancipation of an important terri tory from' the'fontrol of the rebellion. Coming at the close of a long series of disasters to the Union arms, Garfield's victory htfd an nationally and extraneous importance, and in the popular judg ment elevated the young commander to the rank of a military hero. With less than two thousand 'men, in his en: tire command, with a mobilized force of only eleven hundred, without can non,ho had met an army of five thousand and defeated them—driving Marshall's forces successively frourtwo strongholds of their own selection,. fortified with abundant artillery. Maj. Gen. Buell, commanding the Department of the Ohio, an experienced and able ; 'soldier of the Regular Army, published an or der ,of thanks and congratulation on the brilliant result of the Big Sandy cam paign, which would have turned the bead ofia less cool and, 'sensible m,n than Garfield. Baell declared that his services' had called into,actiou the high est qualities of a soldier; and President Lincoln supplemented these words of praise by the more substantial reward of a brigadier general's commission, to bear date froin the day of his decisive victory over Marshall. The subsequent military career of Garfield fully sustained its brilliant be ginning. With his new commission he was assigned to the= command of a bri gade in the Army of the Ohio, httd took part in the second and decisive - day's fight in the great tattle of Shiloh. The remainder of the year 1.862 eras not especially eventful to Garfield, as it was not to the armies with "which was serving. His practical sense warealled into exercise in completing the taskiss signed him by Gen. Buell, of recon structing bridges and re-establishing lines of railway communication for the Army. - 'His occupation in this useful, but not brilliant, field was varied by service on courts-martial of- importance, in 4 which department of duty be won a valuable reputation, attracting the - no tine and securing the approval of the able and - eminent Judge-Advocate ?General of the Army.. That of itself was warrant to ,houorablei fame; for I among the great IDA n who in those try ing dap' gave themselves, with, entire dev,otion, to the service of their coun try, who brought to that service the ripest learning, the most' fervid do quence, the most varied attainments, who labored with modesty and shunned applause, who iu the day of triumph sat reserved'- and silent and grateful—as Francis Desk in the hour of Hungary's deliverance—was Joseph Holt, of Rae tacky, who in his honorable retirement enjoys the respect and veneration of all who loy,e4he Union of \ the States. Ea4inlB63 Garfield was assigned to the highly important and . responsi ble post - of chief of staff to Gen. Rose crane, 'then at the head of ,the Army of the.Camberland. Perhaps in a, great military campaign no subordinate of fiee requires sounder judgment and quicker knowledge_ of men than the chief of staff to :ilae'Commandiug genet:- al. An indisernet man in such a posi tion can sow more discord, breed more jealousy and ilisseMinite m'cre strife than any °Emir in the entire or gauization. When . Gee. Garfield as sumed his new duties he found various troubles already, well developed and se riously affecting the value and efficiency of the Army of)the,Cumberland. The energy, the impartiality and the tact with which h& sought to allay these dissensions and - to discharge the duties of his new and trying position will al ways remairione.of the,- most striking proofs of his great versatility. His military duties closed , on the memor l able field of Chickamauga, a field which, however disastrous to the Union urine, gave toliim the oecasion of win ning imperishable laurels.' The very rare distinction was accorded him of a great promotion for his bravery on a 'field that was lost. President Lincoln apooint_si him a majoi-general in the Army of the United States• for gallant and meritorious conduct in the ',battle of Chickamauga. The Army of -the Cumberland was re organized under.the command of Gen. Thomas, who promptly offered Garfield one of its divisions. He was extremely desirous to accept the position, but was emharrassed by the fact that t .he had, a year before, been elected to Congress, and the time when he mast' take his seat was drawing near— , ,He preferred to remain iu the 'military 'service, and had , within his own breast the largest confidence of success in the wider field which his new rank ; opened to him. Balancing the arguments on the one side and the other, anxious to determine what was for the best, desirous above all things teed° his patriotic duty, h was decisively influenced by the advice of President Lincoln and Secretary TStan: ton, both of whom assured him that he could, at that tithe. be of especial value in the Hum; of Representatives. He resigned his_.coternission of major-gen eral on the sth-day of December, 1863, and took his seat in-the House of Rep resentativgs on the 7th. He had served • two years and four month in the Army, and had-just completed his thirty-second year:. The thirty-eighth Congress is pre -eminently entitled in history to the designation of the Wax Congress. It was elected "while the War was flagrant and every, member was chosen up on the issues iniolved in the continuance of the struggle. The Thirty-seventh Congress hall, indeed, legislated to a lsrge eiteut on tear measures. but it, was chosen _before anyone , believed that . secession of the State would be actually attempted. The magnitude` - of the work which fell upon its successor was unprecedented, both in respect to the vast sums of money raised for the support of the Army end Navy, and of the new and' extraordinary powers of legislation which it was forced to ex ercise. Only twenty-four States were represented, and one hundred and eighty-two members were upon itst:roll.;. Among those were many distinguished Party leaders on both sides, veterans in the public service, with established reputations for ability' ; , and with that skill which comes only lions-parliamen tary eiperienee. Into this assemblage of men Garfield entered without4ecial preparation, and it might almost b,a said unexpectedly; Theq uestion of taking command of a division of troops nutlet Gen. Thomas or taking his seat in Ccingress was kept open tilll the last moment, so late, indeed, that the resig nation of his military commission and his appearance in the Howie, were al most contemporaneous. 114 wore the ' uniform of a major-general of the Unit ect Statis Army on Saturday, and on Monday, ifi.civiliam7s dress, he answer , ed to the roll as a Representative in Congress from the State of Ohio, He was especially fortunate in the constituency which elected him. De scended almost entirely from New England stock, the men of the Ashta bula district - were intensely radical 'on all questions relating to human 'rights. Well educated. thrifty, thoroughly in telligent in affairs, acutely discerning of character, not quick to bestow con fidence and slow to withdraw it, they .were at once the most helpful and most exacting of supporters. Their tenac ious trust men in whom they have once confided is illustrated by the un- 'paralleled fact that Whittlesey, Joshua R. Giddings, and James A. Gar field represented the district for. fifty four years. Ther e is no test of a man's ability in any department of publiolr life mote severe than, service in theli Hone° of Representatives; there no place where so little deference is paid to rep utation previously acquired; or to nence wen outside; no place where so little consideration is shoWn, for the feelings or the failures of beginners. What a man gains in , the Houie be gains by sheer force of t hi s (hen charac ter; and if ho loses and falls back he innat expect no . inercy, and will receive no sympathy. It is a field in which the Survival of the , strongest is: the recog nized *isle, and where no pretense can -deceive and no glanior can mislead. The real wan is discoverefli his worth is impartially weighed, his rank is irre versibly decreed. OMB With•peelibly a single exception Gar- I field was the youngest member in the House When he entered, and , was but seven years from his college graduation. But he had not been in his• seat sixty days Were his ability was recognized awl his place conceded. lie stepped to thefront with the Confidence of one who belonged there. The House was crowded with strong men of both par ties; nineteen of them have _since been transferred to t?ie Senate, and many of them have served with distinction in . the gubernatoral chairs - of their _respec ,tive States and on foreign missiona of great conseqUence; but among . them all none grew so rapidly, none so firmly as Garfield. As is Said by Trevelyan of his parliamentary,. hero, Garfield suc ceeded "because . all the world in con cert could not have kepti him in the background, and because when once* in the front he played his part with a prompt intrepidity and a commanding ease that,• were brit the outward symp: toms of the immence reserves of energy on which it - was in his power to draw." Indeed, the apparently reserved farce which It arfield possessed was one, of his grea t characteristics. He never did so wel(bnt that it teemed he could easily have done better. He . riever ex pended so much strength but that he seemed to be helding additional power at call. This is one of the happiest and rarest dietinctioiis of an effective deba- • F" ter. and-often counts for as much 'in' persuPling tin assembly as the eloquent _ and el4ioratei augment. The.great measure , of Garfield's fame was filled by his serdee in the House of Repreaentatives. His military life, illustrated by honorable performances, and rich in promise, was, as he himself felt, prematurely terminated and nec essarily. incomplete. Speculation as to what (lie might have done in a field wherai the great prizes aro so few can not be profitable. It ie sufficiant to say thatiO a soldier ho did his duty bravely; he did it inteligently; he won an 'en viable: faine, and he retired from the service without blot or breath against him.; As a lawyer, though admirably equipped for the profession, he can scarcely be said to have entered on its practice. , The few efforts . he made at the bar were distinguihed by the same high order of talent which he exhibited on ever* field where he' was put *to the test, and if a man may be accepted as a competent judge of his own - capacities and adaptations, the_ law was the pro fession to which Garfield should . have devOted himself. But fate ordained otherwise, and his reputation in history will (rest largely upon his service in the House of ,Representatives. That ser vice was exceptionally long. , He was nine times consecutively chosen to the House, an honor enjoyed' by not - more than,six oth Representatives cf the more than five thousaiiii . who have been elected from -the organ ization of the Government to this hour. As a parliamentary oratar, as a deba ter on an issue squarely joined, where the position bad been chosen and the ground laid out, -Garfield must be as signed a very high rank. More, per- . haps, thaii any man with whom he was associated , in pibiic life, he gave careful and systematiestudy to public questions and he came to every discussion ;in which he took part with elaborate and complete preparation. He was a steady and indefatigable worker. Those who imagine that talent or genius can sup ply the place or achieve the , results of labor will find •" no encc-nragement in Garfield's life; In preliminary work he was apt, rapid and ikillf4l. - He pos-' sesied in a high degree the power of readily absorbing ideas and facts, and, like Dr.*Johnson, had the• art of get Ling from a book all that was of value in it by a reading apparently so quick and cursory that it seemed like a mere glance at the table of contents. - He was a pm-eminently fair and candid man in deliate, took no petty advantages; stooped to no unworthy methods, avoid ed personal allusions, rarely , appealed to prejudice, did not seek to inflame passion. He had a quicker eye for -the strong pointlof his adveriary thin - for his weak point,'and on his own side he so marshaled his weighty arguments as to-make his hearers forget any possible lack in the' complete strength of his position. ; He bad a habit of stating his opponent's side with such amplitude of fairness and such liberality of con cession that his_followers often com plained that he was giving - his cas e away. - But, never in his prolonged participation in the proceedings of the House did - he give his case away, or fail in the judgment of competent and impartial listeners t o gain the mastery. These characteristics, which marked Garfield as a great debater, E.did not, however, make him a great parlimpen tary leader. A parliamentary leader, as that terra is understood wherever free representative government exists, is necessarily and very strictly the organ of his party. An ardent -American de fined the instinctive warmth of patriot ism when he offered the, toast: "Our country, always right; but right or wrong, our country." The parliamen- . tary leader who hasa body of followers that will do and dare and die for the cause, is one who , believas his party always right, but right or wrong, is for his party.- No more important or ex acting duty devolves upon him thin the selection of the .field and the time for contest. He mast know not merely how to strike, but where to strike sod when to strike. He often skillfully, avoids the strength of his opponent's positron and scatters confusion in his ranks by attacking an exposed point when really the righteousness of the cause and the strength of logical in trenchment are against-him. He con quers often both against the right and the heavy battalions; as when young Charles Fox, in the days of his toryism, carried - the Honk of Com mons against justice, against its imme , monsl rights, against his own convic tions, if indeel, at that eriod Fox had convictions, and; in the interest of a corrupt administration; in obedience to a tyrannical sovereign, drove Wilkes_ Ini .$1.410 a Year, in Advance. from the seat to which the. electors of Middlesex hadhosen him and installed Luttrell in defiance, not merely of law, but of public decency. For an achieve ment of that kind Garfield was dia qualified-E-disqualitled by the texture of his zniudi by the honesty of his heart; by his co,nacienee, and by every instinct and aspiration of his nature. . The three most distinguished Parlia mentary leaders' hitherto developed .in this - country aro Mr. - Clay, Mr. Douglas and ' Mr. Thaddetus Stevens. Each Was a Man of constim mate,ability,,of greet earnestness, of in tense personality, differing widely, each from the others, and yet with a signal trait in common—the power to command. In the - give and take Of daily discussion, in the art of control ling and I'consolidating reluctant and refracto4 followers; in thoskill to over come alt forms of opposition, and to meet withcompetency and courage the . , varying phases of unlooked for assault or unsuspected defection, it would be difficult to rank with these a. fourth name id all our . Congressional history. But of these Mr. Clay was the greatest. It would, perhaps, be" impossible to find in the parliamentary annals of the world a parallel to. Mr. Clay, in 1841, when at sixty-four years of age he - the control of the Whig party from-the President who had received their, suf-_ frages, against i the power of Websterin the Cabinet, against the elpquence of Choate in the Senate, agaidst the Her- culeim efforts of Caleb Cushing and Henry A. Wise in the House. In nn shared, leadership, in the pride and plentitude of power he burled, against John Tyler; with deepest . siorn the' mass, ok that conquering column : Which had swept, over the land, id laid,: and drove his Administration to ! seek shelter behind the lines of his political foes. Mr. Douglass achieved a victory scarce ly less wonderful when, in 1854, against the secret desires of • a strong Adininis i tration, aga inst , the wise counsel of the older chiefs, against the conservative - instincts and even the moral sense of the country, he forced a reluctant Con gress into a repeal of the Missouri com promise. Mr. Thaddeus Stevens. in his "coutepts from 1865 to 1868 actually advanced his parliamentary leadership until Congress , tied the hands of the President and governed the country by its own will, leaving only perfunctory duties to be discharged by the Execu tive. With two hundred millions of. patronage iu his hands at the opening of the contest, aided by the active fares 'of Seward in the Cabinet and the moral power of Chase on the Bench, Andrew Johnson could nut command the slip port of one-third iu either Hihse against ,the Tarliamentary nprisiug of which Thaddeus Stevens was the animstin g spirit and the unquestioned leader. From these three great men Gar fi eld differed radically, differed in the quality of his mind, in temperament, an the form and phase of ambition. - He could not do what they did, but he ; Could do what they could not, and in that breadth of his Congressional work he left that which *ill longer exert a po tential influence - among men, and which measured by the severe test of posthu mous criticism, will securea more en during and , more enviable fame. • ,_ Those unfamiliar with Garfield's in dustry, and ignorant of the- details of his work, may, in some degree, •meas ure them by the . Annals of Congress. No one of the generation of public men to which he'belonged has contributed - so much that will be valuable for 'attire reference. His speeches are numerous, many of them brilliant, all of theti welt studied; carefully Phrased, - and exhaus tive of the subject wader consideration. Collected from the ;scattered pages of ninety royal octavo, volumes of Con gressional Record;they would present au invalnable.compendium of the politi cal history of the most important era_ through which the National Govern ment has ever passed. When the his tory of this period shall be impartially Written, when war legislation, measures of reconstruction, protection of human rights, amendments to the Constitution; maintenance of public credit, stepa towards specie resumption, true theories of _revenue may be reviewed, unarm _rounded, by prejudice and disconnected from partisanism, the speeches of Gar field will be estimated at their true , value, and will be found to comprise a vast magazine of-fact and argument, of clear analysis and sound conclusion. Indeed, if no other authority, were. ac cessible, his speeches in: the House of Representatives from December 1, 1863, to June, 1880, would-give a well connected history and complete dr.- fense of the important legislation- of the seventeen eventful Years that con stitute his parliamentary life. Far beyond that, his speeches "would be found to forecast many great measures yet to be completed—measureS" which he knew were beyond the public opinicai of the hour, but which ho confidently believed would secure popular apprcival within the period of Ids own lifetime and by - the aid of his own efforts. -Differing, as Garfield does, - from the brilliant parliamentary leaders, it is not .easy to find his counterpart anywhere in the record Of American panne life. He perhaps more nearly resembles Mr. Seward in his supreme faith in the all- conquering polver•of a principle. He had the love of leirning, and the patient industry of investigation to which John Quincy Adams owes his Prominence and his Prisidency. He had .some of those ponderous elements of- mind which distinguished Mr. Webster; and .indeed, in all 'our public life have left the great Massachusetts Sena tor without an intellectual peer. In English parliamentary history, as 'n our own, the leaders in the House of Commons present pointi of essential difference from Garfield. But some of his methods irecall - the best features in tho strong, independent course of Sir Robert Peel, and striking resemblanOes are discernable in 'that most promising of modern conservatives; who died too early for his country and his fame; the Lord George Bentinck..: He had allot Burke's love for the sublime and 'the NO. 41