'5 - VoLUME LXXII. THE CARLISLE HERALD, Published overt MunnJoy morning by WEAKLEY & HADDOCK,. EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS. Offio , in . Ithernes Ilall, in rear of the Court House - . Torme--$2 00 per annum, in advance. ' 'RATES OF ADVERTISINO : IN 2 oil lig I 4 sql c 1 col 1 w 001:. 1 00 200 3 00 1 001 7 00 12 00 22 00 2 " 1 50 3 00 1 00.3 00 POO 11 00 20 00 3 " 200 4 00 0 00 6 00 11 00 16 00 30 00 4 11 3G0475 5 75 0 75112 50 1800 32 50 5 " 306 5G0050750 14 00 20 18) 30 00 U l . 35011 50 _4%_50_112121115. 50,22 60 37 50 214100. 4OU 750 Bbo 0 50117 50,25 00 49 no 3 . 1, AOO 850 050 10 ficl2o 501:10 on no 00 0 " 750 10 00119 50110 61128 (1014 n On '75 00 1 year. 10 00 15 001'20 00,25 00 1 40 00175 00 100 00 12 lines constiloto 11 wpotrr. For Executors', and Adolloi,t.ratars' Notices, $1 00 For Audii.ors!.NPtic.'.l, 2 00 Fur Asstgpees' sinillar Notice, - 300 For yer.riy Card+, not e•roodlog six liors., 700 Fur Knuouneenruntl, .05 roots perliar, juniors con tencted for by t , MC year. For Buhinessi nod Special Notices, 10 coots per lino. Doublo column 41.1verthosoents extra. Notices of )larrtagen and Doaths poblished free. CARDS. •A. AM... • .1.3,0 W. B.INeR. , T —. • ATWOOD, RANCK & CO., COMMISSION M EMU ANTS 117130leaalu deal (n•Ft in all kindn or PICKLED AND SALT FISII No. 210 North Wharves, Abor'o Rare ntreat, loc7o PIIILADELI2IIIA, W. SCOTT COYLE,. SPRING. 1872, COYLE BROTHERS., B• M. COYLE 1872. .1011111 NO AND COMMISSION MERCII NTS, NO. `_'4 SOUTH HANOVER . 6T.,.C.1 ELISLE. Thqy have constantly in stock a large selection of Notions and Fancy Dry Goods, ladies' and gent's hosiery, gloves, suspenders, neck tics and bows, white trimming and ruffling, paper collars and hote, cap, business, letter, billet, wrapping paper, envelopes, paper bags, ti - e - drqgs; fancy soap, huh- oil r perfume, and an endless variety of knick knacks. All orders will receive pronipt atten. tion COYLE BIZOTHERS 7mll,as D R. J. S. ENDER, 11031tEOVATIIIC Has trinnven him (Niko to Foulk's Coou I . Corn. of South Hanover mut Pomfret etrtoltn, and opposl tio• ;wow! Prvsby tenon ehurt.h. 1,0m.69 BELTZHOOVEI3,.. _AL: • Tolt \ NY Al TAW. (Milt 0 In South Hanover stroet, oppositr Itontz's tlry goods store. 10sr70 C: I'. 114ASILICII. WM. B. 'PARKER IIUMRIC & PARKER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Oflice on she, t,iu 3.lariou ti lt, Carltelti. 103e70 =I J. 11. GRAIL' M ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS-AT-LAW No. 11 Routh Hanover street, I=ll 11. Graham, late Pre.iitiont Judgc Ulu Ninth Judicial Distri. t. 1-h:wined iho phictiiic of law, and no. irinlod with hito his goo, .1. If. Cot bum, jr. Will prod ion. in tilt- c. Indies irf ruinhor- Inml, ferry and Juniata. JAMES M. WEARLEY, TT 011 E •.1 T-1, All 01 , 1 , 1ri , ,, NO. 22 SOUTH OANOVER STREE'T CARLISLE, PA JOHN OURNMAN, ATTOHN AT lAW unk , No. 7, Rbeem'a Ht.rear of the Court.:Ho 10Witl JOHN HANNON, W HOLESA LE AND RETAIL DEALER IN THY. QUALITY OF W ESANDLIQ ( 7 (I R , No. 41 South Ilanover Street, llja72ly JOSEPH MTN ER, JR.; ATTORNEY AT I,AW AND SURVEYOU Nlochnnicxtturg, Nt. 011 Ice vn Itallrtml domm north 01110. Both Inmitiess promptly :tttriolt,l to. JOSEPH G.. ; VALE, ATTu It NEV AT LA W. VtacticeN in Dauphin and Cumberla ( 0111 It 10% -- OFFICE—In Voort I.l:aiding, lu tho of illy r+tablislne I= 12j Ln7ll y CULL' LAT''LOAN ANL) COLLECTION OFFICE OF JOSEPH F. CULT El. - k - BRO. PONTIAC, ILLINOIS. We hove the host of forth. ties for placing capitol 'on lirst..eloso.lni proem forms In vt,tlgotiol, and Al...trams furnlnloof irtim our 11W11 Mlle°. Ten per rent lamest tool ligroi. payment 'marmot...l. We Mod , c0rr....p0nd...1s in ev. ry port of thu We.tt, t , hick kin, jokes nn every Ilty for openly colleenoits. ltl?FI:ItF:1~Hon. :Mot os 11. O ,' rshom Peorose,''esq„ it in. .1. C. E. :11n glauchnit, totil C41'11..1..; ILimilt on Alrle.k., tom. llorrlsburo. lion. C. P. Culver tool lion. Unroll ashlntitme: It. C. bleorlM' Stuiirt, Philo M t n, ChambersPothroy, Nov York - Air C. HERMAN, .04-• ATTORNEY AT LAW, Carlido, PA Ns. fi Rhvon's IL,ll. MOO 1p • LC SITAMBARGEII, JUSTICE Cle THE PEACE,, A. Plainfield, Westpoliti.ltoro' township, Cuntherlitn,l County, Itenn'tt. All Inthiness,.entrusted to him will receive prornp atteutioth-,11111, 290ct70 ZIT A. LINDSEY, VV . A T T Olt NEY-Ay- BUILIWin, IN nr..o or 1k10721.1 COVIIT F. F SADLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, . . - 0111 u' next the Good Will Homo 11.7 r. lOtiettl WES. B. ITIRONS, • ATTORNEY AND COUNEHILOR AT LAW °MCI: AND RESIDENCE,"UEEOTII 3110 MEET, Below iWalnut Street, • PHILADELPHIA. Unclassified Ads. .., t( CAMPAIGN cArgs AND PRESIbEN'fIAL CA.Mi,AtON. CAPS, CAPES & TORCHES •Illustiated 'Circular, and _Price List. • . • CUNNINGHAM & HILL,, MANUFACTIMEII4I, No. 204 Church Street, , PHILADELPHIA OEM KEYSTONE , - SHAVINC SALOON The undersigned having removed his harbor AltRI Irian Kramer's building to North Hanover streul betVreen 4.1111 . 0 hotel And 1thI:10131111th & Itupp's ttn wary eatablishtnent, ctnnounceA that thin roan lin been greatly unlArged and ,reanalelled,itha lie I •00m , prapard to Attend to thin wants of nil who inn patron'so hum jir you wont it dean Nhove, or yot hair cut antrilfelatod thdlittest Idyl° of tonsorh art, girolilin a cap. .• • HENRY" .1. • Proprietor. ltha ,Ini ATOTT can- obtain Dyd - Stuffs, Porfn _ll.' Morrell, and Fancy Arlielea, at 'J. B. IlaVer ntlolex. Phygclano' proecrlptlona carefully cur pounded et all time J. B. 11 A VERBTICK; South. Iptuovlr etruot, Carlisle, Po I=l N Ew ADVtRTISEMENT, ' Bouquets, Wreaths, Creases, Baskots, Cut Flowers and other Decorations for Parties, Worldlims,l,4o. arranged In tho best style of nrt to order. Ordure by mall promptly C, utE . tended to.. Address,' VON • • Carlisle, Pn. .10nta72Gin • . .. . . . . ' . . . • .-. . . . . . .. ~ . . . . ~. , •' - .- ..... •" . r .. ' .. •.. -,, . . . . . . .-,. . ~, . ._..._ , . . • . . ..... .. . ~ . . . .. . ......, .• . _ - '\,(l . ~ •. . . . ~ i . . . . . .1 A . . . . . . . . . - . .. . . ._•! - i - . • .1 :, .;!.!•... ~ , \'l. .., . .. .." , . .., i' • . ' '''' ' - r ai ' I . 1).,1 , . ' . 'A:, -• •. ' , ..-... .. . 11_ . • I , 1 . . . . . . ~ • ! •,. : . -.. . . . • ~"?, ''.. • • Ik , ~ 4, :,!: . • • • • _ . . . .. .. .-. • . . . . . ... . . - ~,,c, .. . '-'•-) * ' " - . . '1,.;, • .: - . x - • .. • •-et. - , . ;•.„,.!..- , , t qi 4 . ~ - . - ' \''. •. ' , z;F:; - . -, .- i4 .1 -‘.. e2i ' ---'' .4' 1 -', . - .— '• . . - , , .. - . A. L. &PON&EBB'S COLUMN.. A L, SPONSLER, Real Elt eta Agent, Scrivener, Conveyancer, Insur ance. and Claim Agent. Oillco Main Street near Centro Square. VALIt ABLE iPARDI PRIVATE BALE —Situated on the Baltimore Turnpike, five miler Pout.ll7iif'Crifliale, near the village of Papertown, Cumberland County\ containing. 116 nerea—lately known as the HUTCHISON FARM." The improvements lire a largo Stone MllllSloll 110000, 11111 k eonvehient out buildituo—lt large Bank Barn, live Tenant 11°1.re—well of water and Oaten.. Aa a halt 11,in it Cannel Ile excelled In the county, having n large apple and peach orchard, together with pears, cherries, grapes and etrawherries In abundance, and a good market for the same. The fine 'oration of the buildings, delightful niece and plea cant hurroundinga, render it IMO MI the , most eienirable hounea in the Cumberland valley. The property 0 111 be (Reposed of upon favorable trans. Amity to - MOWN PROPERTY AT PRIVATE SAM.: —Situated on South l'ltt ,trout, Car• lige, containing 30 foot in front nod 1101 n depth to nn ri innrerement , are a TWO-STORY .13RICK HOUSE, with a LI NI: had:Alibiing, en:1(3001m; parlor, hall, dining room and kitchen on the t floor, and four roomy on fly, rocond, with balcony and garrot—: in :nth nonoo, !Ink° noon, smoke bowie and other roll. vu uteri) Out hoihlings nod a good riatern, frog' tree, and grnpv bun,. Enqnjto of 001un% ISEMEO MIN PROPERTY. FOR SALE.— AL. Pomfret street, 111101 . 0 Pitt rfre.t Tlhe lot is 33 feet In front and 210 In deptlN, one of the !mst elegible building lot,in 11.0 1001!.Ilre It WO-SV . 1 . 1 FRAME DWELLING. TM terms soul 111.• 1110110 easy. Enquire SPON of A. SI,EII, :1 ~N"2 110111 Estate Agent. ITOUSD-70%.TD LOT OF GROUND AT PIIIIILTE SA L an Wet South street. Lot 30-by 24111011, 11 WO story brick build. lug set 20 fact bark front the ,street, 15 by 45 feet cloptaioing roams on in , b Poor and ma• on the at: Camenitnt out build Also, hydrant In the yard, abetolaner of fruit, rollnisting of 'apples; pears, plum , and t:ltertte... The properly , Is In good ardor un , t as ill Ile dfv,,,l at op., re asoable terms Apply In Aco)B101)1UUS TWO --STORY. ,),, - 11.1.1 NO ON NORTII PITT T1;1,1:1 . FOlt_l= A —Containing Ilouldo less 01dortin, lo and t first Iloor, it , td tin lnl,ivl rib,. I llit• 0 . 11• 111 vitt and I 11, Nord. Apply 1.11 SIMI BRICK RESIDENCE AT PItIVATE on South lilt street, fluor Pomfret, n TWO 510111 DOUBLE 111111.'K 110UnE, out:Onto,: Pnaore, Hell. Dining Room end Kitchen, on the firAt tloor nod four comfortable roUrlls on the ee , tool onory. Fruit and flowers in the poll, tu' row 01if Thu property In In 110111 repnir, Niel will be filepotell of mein the most renounnble term, Apply to ME TWO VALUABLE FAllNlS,witllu Oro ndloo cfCarllrle. Neves! other honsen add lonldlnn lots lii Ow borough, awl a hon.° and lot in Palo low], gill alno be dhipoorol of upo rankott,ble 0.1..4, by =SE A I)AIINISTRAiVIIS' NOTICE. ..EA_ Letters til onlinittintrat ion on tine estate Lent Tre e ,', late or West Pelitislntr‘i' toxvoiilp, d eiro il, hosebeenl+ , lli'd the Reeled, 01 Olathe In i.. 1 ounty to It. M. lien dernnu, ',siding in Co link, and Unmet, Miller. t ridding in Went l'ennsbor I 0,,, - ..11111, Cumberland roomy, l'n All pernot In roid .mete will Wenn. , make imtnrdin payment, and thine baring elitlion se ill prose them, o'perly, lor redileinent, to It. M. BEND ERSON, u liolltlt MILLER, I iiiie7.ltit Atlnilnintrlttorn. ==l ESTATE NOTlCE.—Lottors testa. enentyry on the enntato of Enatintennl Covet, lot Upper Allon townolnlp, deonowel, hem toted by the llogisber of eumborland county, le neenbannbersrenthlieny Inn Now Cumberland borough I pernnon, lotting Helium agalnyt the maid eentoto tern ifienl ten pronnennt them, and lieu Indebted to th to tool, Immollato payment, to ,101 IN 11 COOVER, .PASTES S. CROWELL. Executors. MEI tIiCUTORS' NOTICE. Letters tentamontnry on the 'est ete of It. 11. D. Wuntln, tato of Dickillooll township, deceased, hays been issued by the not:WA r of Cumberland county, to S. M. NI ,oils, of Dickinson him nobly, :toil Mrilin R. Sharps, of Newton tom ;Ishii?. All persons indebted to mild sot atc "ill picasi make Immediate payment, and duo, tinting . chains tn' pre.ent then] duly au to titts.iteil, to the undersigned. 1,1 niatlionent. S. NI NVOODS, JOHN R. Excentots. pROTHONOTARY'S NOTICE Sufi. e i, herebygiven that .tho J 0110" ing tr.( aeeoniitH hale . been liled Joy oftie r.IrTN ,, ~ i :, l h et rr p of e day 01 Andled. itch 1, vi 4 " I Thu aecoant of.!. C. Stoll, a...nigher.. of William 1. 1110 10-001.01 of .I!iileidl Eleock, ar,igneo, of .1.11. IV. Ile-1 , 4k. The ;0 eloint 'of Matthew 11. Ito3l, needguee of Robe: Tl. • ngediint 01 It. 11 1 11-. on and Samuel (hist, es el l , uud I , lollr. The .10101 I,44igitee of doneph 11.411.1.1 ter. . he . osit of .1. C. Sha k 'o , eligfle.. of ./...neph %I-4;ler. 7 Th., onl n t lienry assignee rf IDmrt 11001101 t, MIMI, 1f../.ntr., I,lllllllilll, of It. .I'. McClure, a 10naiie. I= EM 24.1`ul I SCHOOL TAX OF 1872.-' S. hoot 'lax for the present 3 oar, laft!,) has hten lerlctl sad /09043rd hy [ha School Directors of the borot:gli, of Cat liole. and a duplicate thereof issue.' awl deli, prod to Ilia Treasurer for eollectlon. The tosahle toptirens of said Sehaol District are (Itorotoro loathed that the Pre asurer will attend Itt the County (ourt (Colomissiouers' elllreJ on \V EllN Eci.DlV nut' THURSDAY, the . . W ENTY•EIO HTLI AND TWENTY-NINTH OF UtillET or, I, I.llWeen ar(lolli . x of 9 and ft o'clock of told days, lor the purpoer, of recoltriug nail Du r ex, tool up to mid dote, Watts may he pAld at the ..thce of the Tre.,..ort.y. No 111 :glottal Hall" 1.1111,1114 f, feet :gain of e., On all faxen paid Ott or before Itlitter dates; at deduction of FIVE" PRE "CENT III hr uneh b,r pron,pt payment, end for all taxes omit. tip, ;moth!, It warrant of duplicato o 11l be anal, enforelng the roller tont thereof according to J. W. EBY, Treatiurer. Catlien+, June 17, 1872... uge•77ut TIIID undersigned having been quali fied ad eJuntico of the Peace, in how prepared to attend hi 1111 hotlinere entrusted to him 011 Ice in Mr. Girl,,', Building, noir the Fannon.' Bank, in't in rear of rir e tProebyterhin Church. Ruh -06 Weft street illopT2tt C%nuHLE, P . MILITAnY CLOTHING ! GEO. EVANS & OOH No. - 914 Market Street PIIILADHLPHIA. ire Companies_& Brass Bands UNIFORMED With 1ELIA111,1 , !1 (100140, at low prides Samples of gOodA and Photograpic of Uniforms sent free on appZicialon. . • A. quaittity,i;if • • •' • ' SECOND-lIAND 7.61.1AVF, UNIFORMS Ili gOOd cOnditiob, for'saio very cheap. .• 4Jy723m POLITICAL 00.4.MP41GN OF. 1872. GRANT AND WILSON , GEAELEY AND BROWN, ' CAMPAIGN' CARS CAPES AND TORCH - EFL Transparencies and Banners With Portraits or anyrico for till Parties. Sink, Bunting and 11111811 Flags of . all sizes U habit Or made to order. Chinos!, LanNrus of al sizes and - styles; Paper Balloons, Fire %Yorks, tc Cantpalgu Clohs fitted out at the Lowest Rate nt • - W - M.. F. SOrIEIBLE'S' • , CAMPAION DEPOT-, 40 South Third Street,-Philadolithia. - SEND FOR CIRCULAR. 41y728tzt . ' • , DA.I7iID SMITH, , formerly Justice of o 'Wade, would announco to tile .numotatio nroughout. the counts , and-vicinity, that hie special attention will ho given to tho. collection and. eottionient of all donne, boOleocconnte, due not., Ate:, and to wrlting,of,deetle, mortgagde, innate, ke., and elan to the veiling and renting of Baal Betatoi Terme moderate. efllco In tho Court' - •• • • • ME A. L. SPONS.LBR, Real Estate Ageut A. L. SPONSLER, Roal Estido Agvnt A I, 81'0:I:SLIM, We are this week enabled to lay be fore our readers, in advance of its official publication, Horace Greeley's response to the Baltimore Convention. Its tone may not be relished by thoseto whom it is addressed, and it will probably be fol lowed, at-an early day, by a supplemen tary letter tontatiiing explanations of the kind which Mr. Greeley is so often obliged to make. But no doubt can be— thrown on its authenticity. Its language will be familiar to the readers of the. Tribune, and every word will be recognized as coming directly froth Mr A. SPONSLEIt, Greeley Iteal Yxtnte Agent A. L. SPONSLER, Real Etanto Agent A. L. PI'ON'SLER, IG•aI hmtelte Agent. Legal Notices W. V. CAN ANACIiII. Prot hullo tv • F. A, KE:gEDY, CantliitiOii Go 9(IS. Liao 1 VANS k LEEOLI, THE iv ALTZ OF VON WEBER'4; 13Y . Nona, rznnt t ,, Gayly and gayly rang the gay Manic, The blithe, glory music of liatp and of born, .; Tho mad, minty melt, that pet um a dance PK, Till over the midnight came stealing the morn Down tho groat hall wentsivnving tho banners, Waving and waving their red, white and blob, As tho swoot summer wind surne,blOwing and blow log From tho e;ty's groat gni'dons saloon in Um dew. Under tho lingo, an tilt( floated and floated, Under the arches nod arches of flowers, We two and we two footed and floated • Into the mystical midnight hours. And Jost as tho dawn canto stealing and stealing, Thetirst of the). wild Weber waltzes began; roan hear tho soft notes now appealing and plead ing, And I catch tho faint scout of the sandalwood fan That lay In your hand, your Itantl on my shoulder At down the great hall, away and away, All under the flags awl under the arch.. iVe danced and danced till the dawn of the day. But why should I dream o'er this dreary old lodger, In this counting room downlit-thle dingy-old street Of that night or Chat morning, Just there at the Morning, Whole our hearts beat Ili time to our fast 'lying Not? Mutt IN It thnt brlogn Int that Ncont of enclinot meat, So fragrant and fresh from out the (tend yearn, That Just for a moment I'd smear that the Inutile Of Welter's wild waltzes was etlll In my ears I What hi it, Indeed, In thrii dnaty, old alley, Vint bring,no that night or that morning Ind one? What Ii it, indeedl-1 laugh to conc.', It 4-intud-organ grinding a croaking old tone! lilt futilely noro or ottfor I caught in tho 11101.1 Ire hat; Whit,. of Von-Wther's, nod hack It all came, hat ulglit'or that ihornlrlC, Jura thtreat tho dawn inc, When I danced the loot donee with, my toot and lost flame. My first and my last! but who would bclicsc me down in that dusty old alley to day, t the talk about cotton, tho markets, the looney, I should suddenly turn in some moment and say— That one oratory only had left then lonely And gray•hearded bachelor. dronmhut of Jures, Wbrre Om nights nod the mornings, from the dusk to the downlogn, Seemed not to the Ini.fc of Webel's wlld hums ! —Gutory. -7147' I . KNOW . ADO UT DEMOO RAC)." To an obscure person named James R. Doolittle, President of the Democratic National Convention, and John Mor rissey, John T. Hoffman, Ben. Wood, 'Horatio Seymour, Toni. Fields, Mat thew T. Brennan, Billy McMullin, Fitzhugh Lee, Raphrel Semmes, rind other Democrats : LIARS AND VILLAINS Saw the other day a'sukgestion that I would Probably be the best Democratic can didate to run against Grant for Presi dent. I thought that about the most absurd thing I ever hoard or read. I the Democratic party were called upon to decide between Grant and myself, I know that their regard for what they must call principle would induce nine tenths of them to vote against me. Why? lam a decidoil' enemy to that party, even in its most respectable as pects. Point wherever you ploaso to an elec tion district which you will pronounce morally rotten—given up in a great part to debauchery and vice—whose voters subsist mainly by keeping policy offices, gambling houses, grog shops and darker dens of infamy—and that district will be found giving mlarge majority for that which ktylos itself the - Domocratic party. What porportion of the voters at the Five Points and kindred districts of our city have usually sympathized and voted with the Republican and with the Demo cratic parties respectively? Canvass almost any township in the land and distinguish those who take, from those who fail to take a newspaper, and you will find that two-thirds of those Who take, vote Ropublican, while three-fourths of those who read nothing but a chance newspaper picked up in a bar-room vote the Democratic ticket, and will not be persuaded to touch any COM . If there were not a - newspaper nor a common school in the country, the Democratic party would be far stronger than it is. Neither elemeneary instrpc tion nor knowledge of transpiring events is necessary to teach the essential arti .cles of the. Democratic creed r " Love ruin and hate niggers.". The less ono learns and knows, the more certain he is to," vOte'the replier ticket from A. to ,IzzarcL' To. smoko is a demderatic virtue ; to chew is that virtue intensified ;'t'o tliihk rum is that virtue in the superlative. All do know that there are several hun dred thousand mulattoe's in this country,-. •and we presume no one has any serious doubt that the fathers of at least nine tenths of them are white Democrats. And wo hold that" those _Denmerate, if they will'have yellow children, might better than otherwise treat the mothers respectively as wiyes, after the laudable patterii of that eminent Demociat, Vico President Richard M. Johnson. For the last thirty years every Ameri can slavoholdor on the A frican coast has accounted himself in politics a Domocrat. So every ono who chooses \to live by pugilism, "or gambling, or harlotry, li\ith nearly every keeper of a tippling liciciso, is politically a Domoc lit. A. purely selfish interest attaches the_lowd, _ruf, fionly, criminal, and clang rous classes to . - . . the .Democratic party by the inetinot of self-preservation, the preservation of their right to' make gain of others' deg radation. May it .be'written on my grave that was never its follower and lived and died in nothing its debtor.. Mr. Webster was not only a gentl'e•, man, lllit he bad the elements of moral greatness; and ho had faults 'as well He failed only in one respect; and in this respect•l differ from him—he wanted to lie President, Mid: I don't. ° We have soon our greatest man, Mr. Chase, making the same blunder. I have soon men who had tho disease early, and died of it at a very pld age. Gen. Loomis Cass died at about s s2, and up to the' day of his death , ho wanted to'ho President., No' ono ever escapes .who, catches the disease ;`ho lives and dies in , the.delusion. Being a reader and an ob server at an early ago, I saw how it pois oned andparaimd the Very best,of our public) men, and have carefully avoided it. Wo hold traitors responsible, for the Work upon Isiah they-Imo 14mi/dated . . CARLISLE, -4 ENN'A., THURSDAY. MORNING, AUGUST 8, 1.872 us, and we warn t.em they must abide the full penalty. The . rebels may-not flatter themselves that they can enter upon a war against the Government and afterward return to quiet and .peaseful homes. They choose to play the part of traitors and they must suffer the penalty. When the rebellious traitors are over-• whelmed in the field, and scattered like leaves before an angry wind, it must not 1 he to return to quiet and peaceful homes. They must find poverty at their firesides, and privation in the anxious eyes of mothers and the rags of children. The riiasses of oar country Men, North" and South, aro eager to claSp hands across the bloody chasm which has too long divided them, forgetting that they are and must henceforth remain broth- A thief is a thief—a liar is a liar—a perjurer is a mmjurer ; and every South ern traitor, who is morally responsible, is all three together L. Pray,, do not let us have any more talk about our " mis- mxim as taluable in politics as in war. The Tammany Repuhlicat:. will bog, bully and implore for arrangem6nts for prompl local nominations„. Hoar., ex actly -what they want, and thou—don' falsehoods with which the ignominious do it ! guided Southern brethren I" There is one thing which Southern success-cannot compass, and that is oblivion, in history and tradition, of the frauds, felonies and enterprise began. These traitors are outside the world's respect forever, - A. Democratic national triumph means a restoration to power of those who de serted their seats in Congress, and their places under the last Democratic Presi dent, to plunge the country into the Red Sea of secession and rehellion. Though you paint an inch thick this com plexion• gt 3 must conic...at last: The brain, the heart, the soul of the present Democratic party is the rebel element at the South, with its Northern sympathiz ers. It is rebel at the core 'to-day. It would come into power with the hate, the chagrin, the wrath, the mortification of ten bitter years to impel and guide its step. It would devote itself to taking off or reducing tax after tax until the Treas ury was deprived of the means of paying interest on the national debt, and would hail the tidings of national bankruptcy with unalloyed gladness and unconcealed exultation. Whatever chastisement may be deserved by our national sins, we most hope that this disgrace and humili- ation will be spared us. I hold our Government is bound by its duty of protecting our citizens in their fundamental rights, to pass and enforce laws for the extirpation of the execrable Kuklux conspiracy; Mid' if it has not the rower to to it, then . 1 say our Gove•n tnt is no government, but a sham. I, therefore, on every proper occasion, ad vocated and justified the Kuklux act. I hold it especially desirable for the South ; .and if it doe's not prove strong enough to effect its, purpose, I hope it Will be made stronger and stronger. It is urged by the gomocratio organs that the law is to bc/ enforced in State Ad municipal elections. This is done to make it mom obnoxious, if that be possible, to their party. But, unfortu nately this is an error. Tho law apnlies only to Presidential and Congressional elections, although wo heartily wish it could be made to apply to all others The people of the United States know General grant—have known all about him since Donalson and Vicksburg ; they do not know his slanderers, and do not care to know them. Many will -be surprised at the Pres dent's hearty endorsement of the clv service reform (in his annual messages) but ho has been there all along. Tho President's summing up of the lending objects of his policy, and especially his desire to secure a "pui.a and untram- meled vote, ( ' must appeal cogently tOth'e judgment and affections of the American people. He is Abraham Lincoln's lineal successor; and the l)j)3ar heart beats "in unrsTA with his administration and his efforts. , , . . A good Prftsident would be far more likely' to obtain a second term through the unbought credit which a duo enforce mentsff the Civil 'Service bill, as a law, would confer on his Administration, than through' all the manotu'veriug ho could effectprough power over appointmenti, heretofore exercised by members of Con gross. ,)yeelievl3 he (Gen. Grant) will be grateful for , any and all' laws whose operation will - tend to purify , mid strengthen his Administration. The things, however, for which the Administration ' deserves the highest credit in connection with the improve ment in our financial condition, are such as relate to the carrying out of Grant's pelicy of honesty - and retrenchment.. When Grant announced his brief and simple policy for remedying the con fusion of our financial ,state—when ho began carrying out `practically the pro -1 gramme he had announced—it was evi dent we were about to take a long stride toward the settlement of our troubles. To say that the expenses of the Govern ment have been vastly reduced, and that. the interest has been decreased by ,the diminution of the debt, is only to give a hint of the retrenchment that has been carried out. But those things have told with immense effect upon' our financial condition ; and it is to the admirable policy and action of the Administration that we owe the improveMent which is now going en to its conkulemation- A Democratic paper recently took the trouble to attempt to show that Grant nor his policy deserved any credit for the .brightening financial outfoeffl But Grant and his policy deserve the 'very highest credit. Bupposo his polioy had boon of a different kind from. what it, has been. Bupposo ho Collected the revenue in the .negligent Manner of. which we:had 'BO Much previous experience—supposqt tbe , debt had -been • increased as it was in.tho, Iy,tor part .of Johnson's Administration —suppose the - wasteful expenditures of Johnson's time • had been . continued-- suppose we wore experimenting with th, greenback theory and the repudiation fraud—does anybody suppose( that our bonds would .be at or near Par,or that,. gold would be quoted. at the present price, or thOt. Our credit would stand whore it 'deiis ' abroad ? ' .To ask . the question is to answer It, and to show the absurdity of the reasoning of the Demo cratic organ. , It is not by the display of-any immense genius, : or of my gigantic or 'mySterious "plain!' that -these great r zesults , have hoen„wrought. R is. be : tho carrying out of a few-simple principles, tiuslirin ciples of honesty and ec*my._ There can ho no more bone - lanaiatural gotiiiis thau is' found in the pow r to perceive amitqforce those Inincipl 0. ..' 1:, general Grant has failed to gratify some_eager aspirations, and has thereby incurred some intone liatteds. These do not' and will not fail, and his istration will prove at least equallivital. We shall hear lamentation after !amen. tation over,fis failures from those whose wish is father to tho thought ;'but the American people let them pass unheeded. Their strong arm bore him triumphantly through the war and into the White House, and they still uPhold and sustain him ; they never faiLand never will. I venture to suggest that General Grant will be far bettor qualified for that momentous trust in 1872 than he was in 1868. I am not the man you need. Your party is mostly Free Trade, and I am a ferocious Protectionist. I might ba nominated anclj, elected by, ybur help ; but it would place us all iii a false posi tion. Nciver do what your enemy wants, is a Yours, gratefully, - Homier: GREELEY. i THE .LATE DEASTI?UOTIVE FE S. This vicinity has-lately been th ceno of an unusual sofies of destructiv 4Cros. Last week we had the extensive one of the Erie Railway shops, consuming nearly a million dollars' worth of prop- killing a bravo fireman and tbroNy- ing many persons out of work. Tholi came the burning of the Girls' Protec tory, in 'Westchester county. Tuesday brought the great petroleum fire at Hun ter's Point, destroying thirty thousand barrels of oil and stripping acres of ten i tory of the buildings, burning a uumbe of vessels, involving the loss of ,p millii dollars and really threatening such! swooping conflagration • ati• last year devastated Chicago. The same night the fire in Eisnor's slaughter houses, in Eorty-seventh street, consumed seventy beeves 'and two hundred sheep, whose moans mocked the futile attempts to save their lives. A young child also perished in the flames. The occuirenceof these large fires carries its warning. Greater care is demanded in the coaistruction of mu buildings to make them less liable to burn, and far greater caution is re quired by all using combustible mate rials. Especially the storage and hand- ling of coal oil should be 'subjected to strict municipal . scrutiny, and only allowed under most stringent regulations, and in such localities as to obviate the danger Which ever lurk-s in this combus tiblo. Only the fact that there was but slight wind, and that in a : fsvorable direction, prevented such a catastrophe as has never yet befallen New York. A strong easterly . wind would have wafted the ships on fire, and Which no human power could extinguish, upoii our East Rival. shoos.; sotting cnililsl-34-Ing and that side of the city in flames. Had the wind been strong from the northwest all Brooklyn might have been sot ablaze, with the shipping at her docks: In view of the extreme_ risk from pe troleum works and depots it has been suggested that they shbuld only be toler ated in•isolated places, surrounded by wa ter, and so constructed that whorl fire breaks out-they couldireadily be flooded or scuttled, so as Zb prevent the spread of the flames. Thin is a subject which nearly concerns-the safety of every one's life and property, and it should receive prompt attention by the 'public authori tics. Coal oil in largo quantities is hardly less dangordus than gunpowder, audtio less care should ho oxercised by all who have it in chargo:S—Neio York Herald. THE JAPANESE EMBASSY the Japanese Junior Prime Minister Ambassador Extraordinary, with his as soCiates, some of the, most intelligent am liberal statesmen of the empire, are tak ing notes of tho greatness of the Ameri can metropolis. Their tour, which will embrace the chief Stales of Europe, is one of the fruits of tie disposition to connect their ancient civilization with the: modern progress of their Western neighbors and to constitute themselves ono of the living national powers Of the time. Philadelphia has entertained the Embassy in form. Mayor 'llall has wisely forborne to initiate any such municipal bahquet itahoir honor as that which sbme years ago disgusted the tax payers and fuddled the politicians. The courtesies which have greeted•the Em bassy hero have not been ef the formal , sort involving ostentatious display, but have been civil and sincere, tendered, by our foremost citizens, and expressing to our trannYaeillc neighbors how sensible wo aro of the great advantages to accrue from the cultivation of _intimate friendly relations between the two peoples. Scant time has been nllowed the Orientals to become acquainted with the resources of our city, but enough, wo doubt not, to create a . pleasant impression, mud when they leave us this evening fel* Boston we .bollevo it will be with the desire to re- turn and make Now York a longer vie New York ' A TEXAS colored jury Wore told by the Judge to retire and "find a verdict." They went to the jury room. The' slier. Iff and several others standing outside hoard the opening and shutting of draW ors, the slamming Of doors, and other sounds of unusual commotion. At last the jury came back into, the court, When tlio foreman rose and said : "Massa Judge, we have done looked every whai in the, draw's • and behind the do', and can't.flnd no verdict. It warn't in the room." • , A. i'An'Anute.mt is:going ~the rounds about a girl in Chnster, - Verinont, dying from tight lacing. An editor, Commei3t ing on the lad, slue ; Those comets should be done away with, and' if the girls can't live yeithout being. squeezed, wd slg)posd ;mon' could be found who would Haeriii4 thernselveii. 'As'old as we aro, Vio Iv:mid rather. devote three hours a day,..without a cent of pay as a brevet 'corset, than spo those. girls dying 'off in thnt manner. ;Office ilQlllii almost any Wee.' That's our sentiments to a letter. . sax FIIANCISCO . 'imported 5,000,000 :Boutti Boa oranges last year, and re ceived elm& as many,Morn. from Flow•,• OrA CalifOrnim . oTHEiI,BABY. 1-_I33C. ,PAIL lIAMIL_TAN Well, when yoq_con . 3o to that, the cap is pitiful.: To think of Baby Harry abdi nating in favor,of this minute mass of scarcely animated nature f Harry, all brightness and quickness and sturdy strength, all determination and purpose and eager liking and definite will4and this little lump of flesh and flannel noth- ing but (iroates nnd, folds and bulgings, and rumblings, and a irk: at, that ! But Harry tlio,AigriSnimous knows not euvyings nor jetdO'nsios.: Ho caresnot for mown and, .theprie, , admit : es his little sister vti,thwlnke4l.ilod enthusiasm, and shows her off to visitors as if-sho were a panortuna and ho the oshibitor. " Bat's hot: , itair," rubbing up tho golden haze that clouds her he4d. " See her eyes I" and he pokes his dimpled finger into the staring, , blinking orbs, under a firm con viction that it is an ontiro novelty for babies to have eyes. They are ctrange creaturls, these ba bies. You do not expect t em to walk and talk and turn out their toes and be generally decorous ; but it does seem as if 'they might kloe , enough to Ism, their heads'f Dm droginng, tliarslintillfirs. They do not. True, I never k'now baby to jerk its' head oft, but no thanks to baby. From honorable, even Christ , inn motives, from a benevolent desire to evince your sympathy with the fond pa rent, you hold out your arms to receive the proffered infant. For an instant all goes well, but the next, without warning or provocation, flop I goes the head back over your arm with a jerk, as the vertebral wero resolving theinselVes-into original and phosphorus. Am a baby i es so voluminously dressecl that you can never be sure you have clutched the real article unless you take it by the neck, which hardly agrees with baby, though it is the faverite4node of hail hog kittens. The . trouble is, there nothing humah about a baby. It has no sympathy, no love, no ,hope nor fear. It sometimes contorts its face into a grimac'e which partial friends fondly call a smile,.but it is just as likely to be followed by a scream as to subside into sobriety, and it certainly looks as Inueli like pain as pleasure. No, there is no good in talking about it. The baby be ing subject to cold and heat and hunger and thirst, must be warmed and fed and sheltered ; but as to being. interesting, an to comparing it with Harry 1 But the wonder, the marvel, tho mira- cle (?) Eastern jugglers show you a palm tree bursting the soil, - branching. to the heavens, putting forth loaf and bud, and before your eyes ; but a baby is more wonderful than the palm tree. For the change has come, so flue, so subtile, that your eye can not see it. Even while you were looking, • even while you wore revil ing the little atom, it ceased to be an atom. Imperceptibly, undetected, the microcosm put off its impersonality stepped into the ranks of humanity. The midget has found her,soul. In hec eye Is recognition, in bur Bmilo emovcs;lou. How it came about mono can tell ; but yesterday she was Isolated, and to-day she is linked with fill the world) Oh, but now she strikes' out gloriously into life, and puts her foes to shame ! •No more aimless lopping heads NI. her, but a stretching anirsettingin all directions whlthersoever she would' - rusti—Ley--ro- • searches Now for parentSwid nurses who shall be humble and meek in spirit, and willing 'to follow nature, and not Set theories founded on their own conceit. We shall never.cease to havejthe church broken up with dissensions between old school and new, the state fuming over tariff and tax, families tore with inter nal dissensions, until we bring up chil dren logically. Wily can a man he logi cal when 'his parents' were continually interposing to , make him illogical from his infancy? A child should be permit ted to follow out his own conclusions The adult world agrees that it is not polite to interrupt. 'Phe learned world understands that the sequence of thought is not to be lightly disturbed. Let us . take our politeness and our philosophy into the baby world. The little sister is gaxing.,r steadfastly at the chair. Her blue eyes are fixed and, bulging. You will immediately begin to toss her and coo to her, distract her attention, and prevent her solution of the problem of the chair. So her mind loses the power of fixation, end by-and-by you will have an unreasonable and unreasoning woman. —I wakura on your hands I, on the contrary, reverence her maiden meditations, hold my peace, and simply, and silently watch her. Pres ently she stretches .out her tiny hand. :Nattnie is fumbling for the evidence of touch as well as eight. But she can not quite reach the chair. She leans for ward. I obey n,ture and let her clip toward the chair. She feels it all with the experimental bands. She ap plies to it her little toothless experimen tal Mouth. Of course she drools some what on the silk cover, but it is far more important that a child should be brought up logically than that a phair should be kept unspotted. She' evinces 'a desire to investigate the lower part Of the peat. Thorongliness, a disposition to' go to the root of the matter, dontinuity of alien tion, aro traits whici},ctur not be too highly valued or tq6 fully cultivated, She leans out and strikes forward with a force that . shifti her centre of gravity. .Nature, as if for; the very purpose of aiding her in the pursuit of knowledge, has made her utterly without fear. Wo adults should not dare to look over.a cor-' responding precipice; but she, with blind faith in the unseen. holding-back power' of the universe, flings, herself forwrird. I do not falsify her faith, but gather her long' petticoats,' for Shah ease made and provided, into mcrhand,.and'hold her as she descends head-first to look' at the legs and rungs of the chair. Prejudiced_aud self-conceited adults mak; a. great out , ory,..as' if you Wore lotting the, baby down to'perdition ; but it Is pure logic. want her to continuo herinvestigationa So long as they havirinterest for her: You talk about her 'brains. why,-tier brains are hiller bend, Ad trirning.her upside down is not going 'to take them Mit: , Does not :nature knew as much about her brains as you andl, and would she impel her •dOwnward mid keep , her 'fuMbling and stretching and staring if it was not. a good thing to do? 'Only be humble and not self-conOeited, and baby' wiWpresontly give a sign that she 'is thtei4glewith that branch of the subject 70ady to, cOme right side up with IBM And up she comes, bright and Betio flea, to give the lie to all your narrow brain.—theories, and prepared to' study the next subject with the attention which befits s reasonable being. And she has suddenly blossomed into bbauty. There bd who think she was ahvays beautiful. "The baby is splen did I" says doting partiality, while as yet uo unprejudiced person can soc„aught but shapelessness and diseolorationa head sunk in shoulders, a pudgy, puffy wab. But the wab has unfolded like a flower. The stately head rises from the shapely shoulders, the yellow furzootEls_ into silken hair. The nose asserts it self, the mouth unfolds and curls into Cupid's bow, the plump and perfect arm, the dimpled, dainty baud rise and reach with matchless grace, or lie folded in tender repose. She looks and _listens : what spirit in the erect head, in the straight and supple neck 1 what bold out-look in the eagle oyes I what brill iancy of tint; what purity of texture I It is a statue of breathing marble, but nlO yet so line and fair, n test petal• of the rose so soft. And all her 'whiteness is suffused with the bloom of life. She recognizes the voice that speaks, the face that gazes, and her Pose breaks into movement. Leaps a sudden light into the eyes' un fathomable blue. The tiny rose-bud face is shining all over with smiles. Logs and arms, and the whole lithe little body, are astir and aspring, It is the far-off hidden heart that as yet has uttered no word of love, but feels in its fastnesses the gre . at throb of human sympathy, and darts oil its swift and glad response. say, more than that, the shy little, coy little woman, the Sleeping Beauty that a score of years will scarcely waken, breathes oven now 00 the unconscious air, and baby turns quickly away--from the too- fervid-sum: shine of your look, and buries her happy face in nurse's sheltering shoulders. PEOPLE . who are such fools as to stake their money on horse races might have their oyes opened a little by reading such a fact as this, which is told of Mr Har per, the owner of Longfellow, and his white rider, before the race at Long BraUch. The old' - man observed some thing mysterious; but said nothing. He telegraphed to Kentucky for t colored boy, who had driven Longfellow before, to be sent immediately to Long Branch. He arrived ; but not a word was ,said, and the white rider was dressed for the contest with Harry Bassett. Then the old man told him that he thought the colored boy could ride better that day than he. The .colored boy was dressed in a moment, mounted .upon Longfellow,_ aud won the race. And now comes the conclusion : . The white boy was seen by Mr. Harper to have a roll of money, showing that be had been tampered, with. Cupar Bsuias.—A. funny joke, and all the more palatable as its truth can be vouched for, says an exchange, occurred at a prominent dburCh in this State.. It seems that a worthy deacon had been very industrious in selling a new church book, costing seventy-live cents. At the service in question, the minister, just be fore dismissing the congregation, 'arose and said : ' All you who have children to baptize will picas& to present , them next Sab bath.' • The deacon, who, by the way, waa liWe derif, having an eye to selling the books, and supposing the pastor was re ferring to them, immediately jumped up and shouted : ' All you whb havon't,any can get as many as you want by calling on nib, at seventy-five cents each.' .4 UTORPOGRAPHICAL SKETCHOF CHANCELLOR KENT. NEW Your:, October 6, 1828. Di. t Sin :—Your very kind letter of the fifteenth ultimo, was duly received, and also your argument,in the case of Ivey vs. Pinson,l have read the pamph. let with much intefent and pleasure. in composed tvith maFtorly ability. 01 this theta can be no rpubt ; and without presuming to give 3.,,n3. opinion on a groat case still sub juclice, and only argued before me on one side, I beg leave to ex press my highest respect fur the reasoning, and doctrine of tho argument, and my admiration of the spirit and eloquence which animate iL My atten tion was :very anuch fixed on the perusal ; and if thorobo any lawyer in-this State who can write a butter argument in any ybint of view; I have not the honor of his acquaintance.• As Unfit() rest of your letter, concern ing' my life and studios, I hardly know (What to say or _do. ' Your linter and • t,itnent and character and name, have impressed me so favorably that I fool every, disposition to oblige you if it be not too nuieh at my own experts°. My attainments are of tine ordinary a char , actor, and too far limited, to provoke curiosity. I havo had nothing more to aid me in all my life than plain method, Prudetiee, temperance and steady, perse vering .diligence. My diligence was more : romarkablo for being steady and uniform than for the degree of it, which never was mmossivo, so as to impair my health or eyes, or prevent all kinds of innocent or lively recreation. I would now 'venture to state briefly, but very' frankly, and at your special do-, sire, somewhat of the course and pro-, gross of my studious life. I know you can not but smile at times at my simpli city, but I commit , myself to your in dulgence and honor. • I was cc uentod at Yale College,. and graduated, in 1781. I stood' as wolf as any in my class; but the test of scholar ship at that day was' oontomptib le. I was only a very inferior classical scholar, and we were 'not' required, and to that day I had never looked into any . .Grook book but .the ,Now Testament. My favorite studies 'wore 9cogrhphy, Ms tory, Poetry, Bella; Lottrel etc. When the College was broken up'und dispersed in July, 1770, by the British, 1 retired to a cbuntyy village; and finding .Black stoue's Commentaries, I road the four voluMes. Parts of the work struckany taste, and th,o work inspired mi) at ylio' ago ; of sixteen with awe, and I fondly de termined to be a lawyer. November, I'7Bl,- I was placed-by rnifethor with Mr. (non , called Judge) Bendon; 'who was then Attornity,.Genorai at Poughkeepsie, lon tho banks, of the Hudson; and in my NEM native county of Dutokess, Here I on. long since discovered them to, have boon tered on law, and was tho, most modest, , slight and hasty productions. I wanted steady, industrious - studonthat - such - a judicial labors to teach me precision. 1 place ever saw. I read the following dropped the course after one term, and works : Grotius and Puffendorf, in large soon became considerably involved in folios, and made copious 'extracts. My business ; but was never fbnd of, uor felloW-Eitudents, who worn more gay and much distinguished in, the contentions gallant, thought me very odd and dull of the bar. in my taste ; but out of five of them four I had commenced in 1.786 to be a zeal died in middle , life drunkards. I was ous Federalist. I road everything‘on free from all dissipation, and chaste as pure, virgin snow. I had never danced, or played cards, or sported with a gun, or drank anything buk water. In 1782 Iroad Smollett's HiStory r ef England, . and proculio`d iice. farmer's libuffe, whereT boarded,, Rapin's brig° folio) and read it through, and I found during the course of my last summer among my papers my MS. abridgement of Rapin's dissertations on the laws and customs of the Anglo Saxons. I abridged Hale's History of the C - - imon Law, and the old books of Practice, and road parts of Blackstone again and again. The same year I pro cured Humo's History of England, and his profound reflections and admirable eloquence struck most deeply on my youthful mind. I extracted the most admired parts, and made several Volumes of MS. • I was admitted to the Bar Of the Supremo Court iii':7artutity, 1785, at the ago of twenty-one, and then married "without ono cont of "property ir for my education exhausted all my kind father's resources, and left me in debt $lOO, which it took me two or three years to discharge. Why did I marry ? I answer—at the farmer's house where I boarded, ono of his daughters, a little, modest, ldvely girl of fourteen, gradually 'caught my attention, and insensibly stole upon my affections ; and before I thought of love, or knew what it was, I was most violently affected. I was twenty-one and my wife sixteen when we were married ; and _that "-charming _and lovely girl" half boon the idol and solace of my life, and is now with me in my office, uncon scious that I am writing this concerning her. We have both had uniform health and the most perfect and unalloyed do mestic happiness, and aro both as well now and in good spirits, as when wo married. We have three adult children. My son lives with me, and is twenty-six, and a lawer of excellent sense and dis cretion,-and of the purest morals. My eldest daughter is well married, and lives the next door to me, and with the inti macy Of one family. My youngest daughter is, now of age, and lives with me, and is my little idol. I went to house-keeping at Pough keepsie in 1785, in a small snug cottagy and there Ilived in charming simpliefty for oight years. • My practice was just -about sufficient to redeem me from debt, and to maintain my wife and establish ment decently, and to supply, me with books about as fast as I could read them. I had neglected, and almost entirely forgotten, ray scanty knowledge of the Greek and Reman classics, and an accident turned my attention to them try suddenly. At 'the (now the codiflor for Louisiana), and he had a pocket Horace, and read some passages to me .at some office, and pointed out their beauties, assuming that I well 'understood Latin. I said nothi', but was stung with shame and mortification ; for I had forgotten even my Greek letters. I purchased immedi ately Horace and Virgil, a dictionary and gi arumar r and the Testament, and formed my resolution promptly and de cidedly to recover the lost languages. I s'.l lied in my little cottage, mornings and d. cheated ono hour to Greek and another to Latin daily. Isoon increased it to two for each tongue in the t enty four hours.- Illy acquaintanc with 't 'i.anguages increased rapidl . After 1 had road Horace and Virgi 1 turned to Livy for the first time in y. life ; and after I -had construed the Greek testa ment, I took up the Iliad, cud I can hardly describe to this day the enthusi asm with which I perseveringly read and studied in the originals, Livy and the Iliad. It gave me inspiration. I pur chased a French dictionary and gram mar, said began French, and gave' an hour to that langilage daily. lappropri ated the business part or the day to law, and read Coke Lyttleton. I made copi ous notes. I devoted evenings to English literature in company with my .wife. Front 1788 te. 1708, I steadily divided the day into five parts, and alloted thorn to Greek, Latin, law and business, and' French and English varied literature. I mastered the „best of the Greek, Latin and French classics, as- well as the best 'French and English law books at band. I read Maohiavel and all -the collateral branches of English history,. such as Littleton's Henry the -second, Bacon's floury the seventh, Lord Clarendon on the Great _Rebellion, etc. hevea sent to England as early as 1790, for Warbur ton's Divine Legation and the Lusisd. My 'library' which started from noth ing, grew with my groWili, and it has now attained to upwards of 3,000 vol umes ; and it is pretty well selected, for there is scarcely a work, authority or document, referred to in the three vol umes of my commentaries, but what has a place in my own library. Next to my Wife, my library has boon the source of my greatest pleasure and devoted attach ment. The year 1793 was another era in my life. I removed from Poughkei3psio •to the city of Now York ,, with which I had become well acquainted ; and I wanted to get rid' Orthe..ienciimbrance of a dull law partner at Poughkeepsip. But; though I had been in practice nine years, I had acquired very little property. My furnituro.and library wore very scanty, 'and I had not $5OO extra in the world. ; But I owed nothing, and canto to the pity with a good character and With a scholar's reputation. My- newspaper writings and speeches in the• Assembly had given mo somo notoriety. Ido not believe any human being over lived with more pure and perfect domegtio repose and simplicity' and. happiness than I did for these nine yours, I was appointed' Professor of. Law in Columbia College late in 17011, atuithis drew mo to •deoper legal researches. 'I road that year ,in the original Bynker. shock, Qulnctilian and CiCero's rhetorl-, old Werke, besidee reports -and digests, and began the compilation of laW loo tu,rose, I r a a' course in 1794-9 to about forty gentlem of the first 'rank in' tho oity. They wore very well received, but I `have NUMi3 c ER 32 politics...l got the Federalist almost by heart, and became intimate with Hamil- ~,,,, ton. I entered with ardor in the Federal ' - politics against prance in 17931 and my hostility to the French democracy, and ID French power, beat with strong puls ation down• to the battle of Waterloo. Now you have my politics. ' ", I had excellent health, °Wing to the love of simple diet, and to all kinds of. temperance, and never read lato at night. I rambled daily with my wife over the hills. Wo were never asunder. In 1795 -we made a voyage through the lakes— George and Champlain. In 1797 wo ran over the six Now England States. As I • was born and nourished in boyish days among the Highlands east of the Iludifon, , I ,have always loved rural and wild ' scenery ; and the sight of mountains, hills, woods and streams, always on- chanted me, and does still: This is owing, in part, to early association, and is ono secret of my uniform health 'and cheerfulness. In 1790 I began my offic= - ial fife. It came upon me entirely unso- licited and unexpected. In February, 1790, Governor Jay wrote me a letter stating that the office of Master in Chan cery was vacant, and wished to know confidentially whether I would accept. I wrote a very respectful, but very laconic, answer. It was that I was con teutto accept of; the office if appointed. The same day I received the appoint ment, and was astonished to learn that sixteen professed applicants were all disappointed. This office gave me al most a monopoly of the business, for there was but ono other 'Master in Now York. The office kept me in petty do- , tails and out door concerns, but Was , profitable. In March, 1797, I was ap pointed Recorder of Now York. This was done at Albany, and without my knowledge that the office was oven vd cant, or expected to be. The first I heard of it was the appointment an nounced in the papers. This was very . gratifying to mei because it was a judi cial office, and I thought it would relieve me from the- drudgery of practice, and give me a way . of displaying what I ' know, and of being useful entirely to my taste. I pursued my studios with in ' creased application, and enlarged my law library very much. But I was over whelmed with office business, for the :- Governor allowed me to retain the other office also, and with those joint duties, and counsel business in the Supremo Court, I made a groat deal of money that year. In February, 1798, I was offered by Governor Jay, and accepted, the office of youngest Judge of the Supreme Cenrt. This was the summit of my ambition. My r object was to retire back to Pough keepsie, and resume my studies, and ride the circuits, and inhale the country air, and enjoy °throb cum digoilate, l' never dreamed of volunies of reports and written opinions ; such things were not then thought of. I retired back to Poughkeepsie in the spring of 1708, and in that summer rode over the western wilderness, and wag delighted. I re turned home, and began my Greek and Latin, French, English, and law classics as formerly, and made wonderful pro -1 gressin books that year. • 1 1 In 1799 I was obliged to move to Al bany in order that I might not be too much from home ; and there I remained - stationary fetwenty-fod , years. -v., . 1 on I. came to the bench there were no reports . or state precedents. The opinions from the bench wore delivered 1 ore leans. We bad no- law of our own, and nobody knew what it was. I first introduced a thorough examination of cases, and written opinions. In January, 1799, the second case reported in first Johnson's Cases, of Ludlow vs. Dale is a sample of the earliest. The 'Judges .. when wo that all assumed that foreign sentences were only good prima facie. ..I I presented and toad my writteh opinion, that they weie conclusive, and they all gave up to me, and so tread it in coni.f ' as it now stands. .This was' the con)- , mencoment of a new plan, and then was . laid „the first stone in the subsequently , erected temple of our jurisprudence. ' , Between that time and 1804 I rode my share of circuits, and attended all the terms, and - was never absent, and was always ready in every Case by the day. • I read, in that time, Vette] and Eincri gon, and completely abridged the latter, 11:1 0 11:d : popious digests of all the new. En 'ali sports and treatises as they came out. I made much rise of the Corpus Juris, and as the Judges (Living ,ston excepted) knew nothing of Froueli or civil law, I had an immense advantage over 'them. I could generally put my . brethren to rout, and carry my point by my mysterious wand of French and civil law. The Judges wee Republicans, and .very kindly disposed to everything that was Frenchl, and this enabled me, without exciting any " alarm or jealousy, to make free .use of such' authorities, and thereby..enrieh our commercial law. I gradually ad finked proper directing influence with , rcly brethren, and the volumes in ,Tolnu on, after I became Judge in 1804, sho'w it. The first'praotice was for each Judge to give hie portion of the opinions when we all agreed, hut/that giadually fell off, and for the two or three last years be— fore I left the bench, I gave the most of, them. I remember that In Bth -John son All the opinions for one, term. are "Per Ouriani." The fact is,' I Wrote them all, and proposed that course to avoid jealousy . ; and many "'Per Igu)i am" opinions are inserted for that rah-, son. • Many of the cases doellibd during, the sixteen' years I was fa thn goroMe Court wore labored by me most unmerel fulli; but it was necessary, under circumstances,' to Subdue opposition.' ,We had but few American procodentss our Judges Were7.Demooratio, and my brother Spencer particularly, of a bold, vigorous, dogmatic mind,: and (Ivor• oaring mannbr, . English authorities did not stand-tory high In those foveridh times, and this led 4 nie a hundred - times to OttOMpt, to beat down OPpositicine or alumna it, lik — oxltursting research' and [CONCLUDED ON TON OISOOND PAGE ) CM