Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 20, Number 32, Jasper, Dubois County, 23 August 1878 — Page 3

WEEKLY COURIER

0. MAXI, fWU"Mc. , . - - INDIANA. JASPKK ITEMS OF INTEREST. Perianal Mil Ltrrjr. Mr. Tennyson, it is rumored, is busy won a n" volume of poems, which will soon make ita appearance. UK Vftrt Sikee.U.S.'CoiisuI at Car diffi i preparing a book ba the legends, yfhs, fairy tales, and folk-lore of Wale. jMWt . -----1 - . , - was recently played at the new Philharmonic Society conoert in Loudon. The late Mr. MacGahan, it is said in the London Alhemtum, left behind him, orreotedfor publication, as much of his experience in'Bulgaria and the HuseoTarkish war as will form a memorial volume." Mr. Kaneko, the author of the clever Japanese story in the last Atlantic, is a young Japanese of great intolligenco, a graduate this year of the Harvard Law School. He returns to Japan the present month. Sojourner Truth, the old colored woman who is somewhere about 100 years old old enough to have been long a slave in York 'State two or three generations ago is still vigorous enough to travel and give air oeeadonal lecture. Bob Ingersoll has sailed for Europe with his family to collect material in Scotlard fer a lecture on Robert Burns, and hn contracted with Itedpath for 100 nights, at $25,000 and expenses, after his return about the 1st of October. Charles Koade isGI years old ; Jacob Abbott 76; Edrriond- About, 50; William T. Adams (Oliver Optic), 50; T. B. Aldrieh, 42 ; Berthold Auerbach, 66; George Bancroft, 78; Robert Browniatr, 60; Carlyle, 83; S. L Clemens $ark Twain), 43; G.W.Curtis, 51; 11. U Dana, 91; Darwin, CD; Disraeli, 73; Hepworth Dixon, 57; Emerson, 75; J. A. Froudc, 00; W. E. Gladstone, 09; Bret Harte, 39; J. G. Holland, 59; Dr. Holmes, 09; Julia Ward Howe, 59; Thomas Hughes, 55; T. II. Huxley, 53; George Eliot, 68; Longfellow, 71 ;, Benson J. Lossing, G5 ; Donald G. Mitchell, 56; Max Muller, 55; James Parton, 56; Mayne Heid, 60; John 6. Saxe, 02; Mri. Stowe, 60; Tenuy&on, 69; Whittier, 71; Wilkie Collins, 53; Swinburne, 41; W. Black, 37; M. F. Tupper, G8 ; C. D. Waraer, 49; W. D. Howells, 41. geteaeo iBtt iHrtuntrj. Oil made from peanuts closely resembles olive oil. In Germany the finest Hour is being made with mill-stones of glass. A society haa been formed in Paris to organise a series of visits to all the chief museums, exhibitions, and public monuments, under the guidance of well instructed lecturers. In France architects and carpenters are legally held responsible for a period of ten years after the completion of a structure for total or partial lose occasioned by defective plans or work. France, so fortunate in its wine yield since the war, is now a heavy sufferer. The phylloxera has already appeared in 34 departments and done damage computed at $200,000,000. Burgundy has escaped as yet. Ico machines are now made by which ice can be manufactured at $1 per ton. A cake weighing 140 pounds was exposed to a hot sun five hours on , a street in Cincinnati, recently, when the thermometer was at 92, and lost only about half au inch on each side. To restore the softness and pliancy of leather which has beoonu. hard by having been wet, apply neatsfoot oil and rub it in, Castor oil is a good substitute for nontsfoot oil for softening leather belts, boots and harness. The best oil for harm ss is one quart of neafcfoot oil, four ounces beef tallow and three Ublespoonfuls lampblack ; adding four ouncee of beeewax for use in summer weather. AVayne County, New York, prodaces about two-thirds of the peppermint crop of the country. It is grown on black ash swamps, which have been thoroughly underdrained, from roots which are planted as hops are. When cut, it is partially dried and taken to a till where the oil is extracted. The oil sells from 2.60 to $5 per pound, and When it brings $9 the crop is a paying one. About 70.000 iMiunds are used an nually in producing medicines, manuinviuruig CftlUllCS HllO IUKKlll wimwa .School bhiI Church. InNew York the Irish language is now taeVhtatai: exnense of only 25 cents a month to the student. Two Chinese young men are preidling ior me rrotesiani npiwii ministry at San Francisco, Cal The three chief Presbyterian de nominations of Scotland raised, last year, $0,040,000 by voluntary subscrip tion. The Nnw 'IWmnnt lln.vision Com pany recently met at New Haven and completed the first eleven chapters of "evelation. The Baptist havo ordained a Chinaman at San Francisco, another Celestial now located at Portland, Oregon, assisting in the ceremony; these converts are not asked to abandon Confucius. The Catholic papers report 67 conversions to the faith in England within a fortnight, among whom are It olergytaen of the Establishment; Earl Percyiheirtothe Dukedom of Northum-

Ingfeilow's iem, 1 M Masque

afl'aiieorai n8 oeea wr.io wumiu uy

mf TLioaiiniara. kvniiM. unn iiiu uvurLurn

berland, and Lord St. Asaph, son of the late Karl of Ashburnham.

The Hev. Dr. J. A. 0. Clark, eomRi'wHmed by the Blahon of the South-

em Methodist Church to collect funds ' gave f ."wu unne waiters, x m oorf.ir u i'uii ....m-i-i u c ( raennndent of the London iwut tooK

vannah. Ga , the scene of .lohu Wesley's iirst labors on this continent, haa sailed to England on a collecting tour. A Gospel Garden is the lateet religious novelty. It has been started bv the Bev. Stephen H Tyng, Jr., at Seventh Avenue and Thirty-fourth Street, New York, and consists of an apartment fitted up with a fountain, floral baskets, urns of plants and whatever will give it an inviting appearance. To the ceiling are attached long linen fans, which are kept all the time in motion and supply a cool and refreshing atmosphere. Services will bo held every nigfct and on Sunday. The fifth Episcopal Church Congress will be held this year at Cincinnati, Ohio, Oct. 15 to 18. The subjects for discussion are: "The Interpretation of the Bible in Relation to the Prosent Condition of Learning and Science ;" " The Novel in its Influence on Modern Life;" "The Now Tostamont Doctrine of Absolution;" "The Sunday Question ;" " Mutual Uolatjons of Labor and Capital;" and "Christ in the Personal Life." The problem of co-education of the races has been successfully solved at Berea (Ky.) College, which is attended by white students of all classes, who mingle with colored students without the least display of raco feeling. Both races, winch attend the college in ai most equal numbers, recite together and t 1 .1- 4i :..:i rri, 1 have exactlv the same nrivileffos. The last commencement exercises of the institution were attended by visitors drawn about equally from each race. It will be a surprise to many -to loam that there is at Pekin, China, a college modeled after English institutions. It has been in existence M years. Since 1869 its President has been A. P. Martin, of this country, who writes encouragingly of its future, although it had a struggling existence for the first few vears. At first it was regarded with hostility and jealousy by conscrv- , stives aoout mo tnrone, oui it already developed into an institution of importance. A curriculum extending over eight years has been established. Its students, now upward of a hundred, arc educated at Government expense, to fill ofticial stations. HHfti and MUhup. Lydia Berry, a charming young ladv of Charlestown, near Boston, Mas?., was fatally poisoned, it is supposed, by wearing striped stockings. j A daughter of Thaddeus Frost, of Boston, about 27 years of age, commit-1 ted suicide, while insane, by pouring kerosene over her head and clothes, and then setting fire to it. A vounir man named Amos Greecor, of Frederirksburg, O., wae shot through ine noau aim uisuuiuy uibu wuuc blowing into the muzzle of his gun to see if it was loaded. Near New Paris, Ind., an 8-year-old son of John Brurabach, while fooling with a revolver, shot an elder brother through the liead, killing him instantly. James Quann, a tramp printer, was run over and killed on the railroad near Vincennes, Ind., while intoxicated. His foot caught in a frog and he was unable to extricate it, before the train was upon him. Samuel Mesick, aged 21, of Danville Junction, Ky., shothim9olf through the head because his girl's parents objected to his heaping company with her He is said to have Iwen a young man of good habits and well connected. At Port Huron, Mich., John Holt and his son were removing a piece of machinery weighing 600 pounds down a llight of stairs in his grist-mill, when it slipped from their hold, knocking the father to the floor below, striking him on the head and smashing his skull. Joseph Lewis, a farmer living one mile north of Bronson, Mich., while mowing a marsh, met with an accident l.i..L. ! 1.S-. U Wlilln .f which reeuuuu in 111.1 uimimi. u work on the marsh Ids team and mower began to sink. Getting oft the machine to lighten it, he forgot to throw it out of gear. Ills horses lloundering, threw him down in front, the knite coming in contact with and cutting oft his foot just above the ankle. KareljCH Not. Englishmen are all dreaming of going to Cyprus and making money there. The Spanish Government has just secured the extradition from France of a mysterious lady of high rank, said to have been engaged with several illustrious accomplices in a theft of .$4,000,000. The death is announced of the Marquis do Vibray, one of the leading agriculturists of France. He wa3 proprietor of the Chateau de Cheverny, near Bloit. and reclaimed a large tract of land which was at one time waste; he was also a very eminent geologist and a great pa tron of alt. The Countess . Ilona, daughter of the Austrian diplomat, Count Andrassy, was lately betrothed to Prince Alfred Montenuovo. The Prince is a grandson of the Aruhduchettt Maria Louisa, who married the first Napoleon, and, subsequently, the Austrian Count Neipperg. From this second marriage the Prince is descended. His father, the Prince William, is still living. It was recently announced, apparently upon good authority, that a marriage had been arranged between Prince Louis Napoleon, son of Emperor Napoleon III, and Princess Thyra, third daughter of Christian IX, Klag of Denmark. The report has since Been contradict etl.

Lord Reaeonaftald occupied witk kis j mtite Ht the Kaieerhon", during the late J

HrliH Congress. ($8 rooms at 7,0O0 a month, andhU fowl Will was $10,000. . tm ... W.W0 with him for exuMtf , and ex- J )ended 1:1,440, in addition tetegratMS. xne wue i the Congress induce I j-iktulti tliu atfipiiiat.il ra n upon a fan which she intrusted to him. t She considers that she poeeeeees a treasure of especial value. I oitm and Kmiii, Vaahtfinahla mother" Maria. I'm i almost discouraged; how many times , havo I told you not to say tater, but pertater?" ! - .... i There is no brighter moment in the life of a young lady of ton than when the happy discovery is made that sho can at last balance a pair of eye-glasses on her nose without squinting. It is now very fashionable for seashore belles to wulk on the buach in company with their motiicrs. This seems to prove to the world that they are voumr and thoughtless, instead of .i."a r " Don't toll a man you swoat. It is vulgar. Inform him that you arc being deprived of the saline and oleaginous iluids of your material substance through the excrotories of your pellucid cuticle, with a sensible condensation of moisture upon the superficial exterior. A cocknev inquired at the post-of-I tfsui lw nlltsr iav fnr nlnftnr fnr "Knflrv Uogden." He was told there was none. f.nntr 'flm." hn ronliml a little anirnlV! Look 'ere," he replied a little angrily; "You've hexamined a hodd letter for my name. It don't commence with ahaitch; it begins with a ho. Look in the 'olo that's got the ho's." wnv, o WHV? 'r asks a fellow when lie meete IIU neighbor, " What's the news.'" Why Blto a woman on the floor To button up her shoes? Whv i it women all prefer A howl-bath to a plunge? Why If It they prefer a a For washing, to a Hpoiifce? Why U It women tjroan and moan Of what they have to do. Vet gladly walk a core of miles To match a shade of blue? St. Lout Journal. A gentleman desires a situation as President or Treasurer of some manufacturing corporation. Is not a member of any church, temperance society, or lodge, not of sufficient consequence to be generally respectou, anu uoes noi , 1 . . ..1.1 1.. -v..

descend from any old family. -Never , matter) sa5d tho sp0ttker, ami prohas held any office, is not an eminent j cometi to sell copies of his books at the citizen, and can bring other equally rgte o 35 cents each, easily disposing strong recommendations if desired. o ft lare nuraber within a very few There being an extraordinary oppor-1 mjnnte tunity for corporations, applications will , Tne prjnopie 0f the fraud, for it was

1m) considered in tho order received. Address, etc. notion Commercial Bul letin. Death ef XissleMarles in China. A letter from Pekin, June 4, 1378, announces the death of Kev. P. K. Hunt of the American Board's North China Mission, and of several missionaries connec'od with other societies. Sir. Hunt was seized with typhus fever on the 19th j of May and died on the yutn. ue was born at Arlington, Vt., January 30, 1816, and, alter learning the printer's trade, went in 1839, with his wife, to Madras, where he took charge of the Erinting establishment of the American oard, and managed it with groat success for 27 years. In 1806, on the relinquishment of the Madras Mission, he und his wife returned to the United States, and after a stay of a few months j wont to North China in 18G8 as Missionaries of the Board. Miss Dedricken, who had been in China for about a year under the auspices of the Church Mission of London, and was preparing to take chargo of a girls' boardiug-school, died of the lever on the 11th of May. Her death was was followed on the 18th by that of Miss L. A. Campbell of tho American Methodist Mission, who had been in China two years, and was an industrious laborer in the girls' boardingschool of the Mission with which she was connected. Between these two deaths came that of Kev. William N. Ha l at Tientsin Mr Hail waa n mi, siomiry of the English Methodists, New Connection, and died on tho 14th of May. also of typhus fevor. On tho 25th f mv itnv'.'i.s. narradala of thnT.nndon Mission at Tientsin, died of the same disease, his wife having been carried off by it during the December previous. Rfv. Albert Whitney of tho American Presbyterian Mission died on tho 25th of April at Shansi, whero he had gone to aid in tho work of distributing alms to the famine-stricken people. Sharp Sheeting.

There is a pieco of rook standing on Much of his time has latterly been passthe ridge running up the South Moun-1 ed in Ireland, where he has succeeded tain at Kgan Canyon. One morning in in winning goldoh opinions from all 1803 an Indian was discovered stamfing sorts and conditions of men, and he is by this rock, calmly survevinsr the scene i commonly spoken of as the " llowor of

below, and particularly the overland station to tho west, then garrisoned by a number of soldiers. He was so far off that ho enjoyed the excitement produced by hts appearance, and made a very significant gesture of derision and contempt for the soldiers. One of them determined to reply to his salutation, and iired at him from the station with a ritlo, and, Grange to say, with wonderful accuracy ftf aim, shot him through the head. His remains were buried behind the rock on the mountain; and in 1878 his skull, disturbed in someway from its resting place, was exhibited among the miners at Kgan as a relic of the war and of the disaster which overtook the Indian, who waaN ignorant of, or conceitedly despised the virtues of lone range. It wae a shot of nearly 2,000 feet. CAerry Ork (Nev. Intle-

A PerlpateUe Tsokr el ArItkU. , .777 ...

" ueniienHMl, inw l l nww suivnv of arithmetic," said a short aad pompons individual, dreeeed in a broadeloih suit, white vest, and silk hat, who was haranguing a curioua crowd wasH seat of which was a huge stack of pam pmeis. " I Jon't like to call myself a bene tor, " leciiuse it would sound egotistic xl. and I am onlv a student, a scholar ' of humble pretensions; but I may say without lwasting that I have devoted a long life to the pursuit of mathematics. r- I I. . t .1 . , r, xnora are puopiw wim jjiowjhu iu v that arithmetic is an exact science, and that there is nothing discoverable in its oertain and known quantities, but they aro poor idiots who are content to follow in the beaten track of their illustrious but common-minded forofathers. Yes, gcntlemon, I am potid to say that I stand here to-day as the inventor or discoverer of a new system of mathematiiofi. lean snow anv man m iuw win f that would astonish the oldfogy savants of former ages". Thosilvery-tonguod speaker here produced a small blackboard, upon which ho traced rapidly with chalk tho following figures: 8310297040 "I will show you how to perform a sum in addition," said he, and continued chalking down figures until he had enough to completely fill his blackboard, whereupon hu proceeded to set down the sum total without the least lookers-on. The table when completed was as follows: 83 102 9704 0 I 18 5 908 2 308 10 8 9 7 0 2 3 5 3 3208764013 0701 235980 2754820854 7 2 4 5 0 7 914 5 31350082305 Of course the surnrisc lav in the ra pidity with which tho man drew his fig- ' uros and performed the addition, the 1 latter ooeration being apparently done from left to right instead of in the unal manner. " I have the whole secret in these pamphlets, which contain, besides, a a fraud, consisted in the wily peuaicr taking advantage of the peculiar properties of the number 9. It has lone been i known among mathematicians that this 1 figure is capable of many strange feats, j among them that of the itinerant pedrltnrli?iier tirntilin'pnt Tt. flill lift fMLsily explained. Put down two rows of figures, the sum of whose respective numbers shall be 9, thus : S3 10287K46 1080702853 9009009 Out of the larco sum sriven above, and used by the peddler to illustrate his theory, eliminate the second row from the top, and it will be seen that the successive rows when added together, make nothing but nines. Tho total, with the second row eliminated, would bo 29900999997 Now add the second row 1 3590823GS and the result is, of course, 3135908230 5, or the second row with a prefix of 8 and an addition of 97 to the last two liguros. The rule holds in every case, no matter how large or small the sum, and is to tho effect that in adding up it is only necessary to write first the number of couplets (in the above there are three) ; then set down simply the numbers that are given in the inserted row (which may consist of any numoers ac cordmc to laiicv), and at tne enu suoi tract the number of couplets from the , last figure in the inserted row. A little practice, rentiers this work easy. It is in reality nothing but a trick, and is i valueless in ordinary computation. Chicago Tribune. The Duke of Connaught, Victoria's son who is about getting married, has proved himself a model prince, and no shadow of reproach has ever been cast unon him. lie has studied his nrofesi sion in all its branches, and has now for several years steadily done military tlutv nrecisolv as anv other officer would. ine hock." In 878 Knrope undorwent a visitation of grasshoppers far worse than that experienced here. They are referred to in Spanish and German monastic archives, and are described as having hidden the sun, and devoured crops on 100 acres in one hour. After devastat ing France they wore supposed to hrtvo j perished in tne Atlantic. At the Baptist Church in Manchester, Va , during a protracted meeting, a young gentleman named Andrew nooupied a seat in the window. He lost his balance ami fell to the ground, a distance of 30 feet, mashing his skull, it ifeared, fatally. A vouiu? lady in lite congregation fainted, and the two incidents oame well nigh producing a panic,

on

.l0 , L"AT...?. r .VT-1 ?, Dmm were so weakl. tMr yaty

n i ijiowiw. ut mwi utjii ' aiietfjiiBee that the Kepuuiieaas woiue mm, her husband to run of itinerant peddlers, and he spoke oarileld Sneaker Tle rwult wa that they t raamhar frnman onen carriage, unon the laok were "cleaned out " bedilv. and hl will he

POLITICAL OTE!. Bk(1(hxo to xo PuHfoeK. The Kepulilfeaa CmmimIkh Committee have alreMly started la with their eampalgn of blew. They my that they will oarry the aext Homm: hut they said so a Kreat deal mere

eonMdently twe years aco: reiterated the what will happen this year, only ia a werse ilMcree. Detroit Free J'rtto. ZACK ClIANDLKK COMl'I.IMKNTKI). Mr Ctmndler Is a putrid remlnlMienee of an era dhtlngulnhed for its rotfenne! and debauchery as well an for Its patriotism: ler Its vile partleanMilp as well as for Its laek or siaieMiiausnip; ior me premium upmnw upon public crime as wen as ine uweenHt It placed upon public morality. And hie elevation to the OlialrmaiiHlilp of the Republican State Central Committee, which Is preliminary to an attempt on his part to reseat himHelf in the United States Senate, is t!ll another evidence that the Republican party has outlived Its usefulness and that it fs time It stepped down and out, Pontile (AffcA.) Commercial. A Poijtic.U. Conundrum. How came Hayes In the early part of his Administration, before he knew a third of the members of the Kepublican party in Congress to Ihdnrse Delude, Anderson, and othertt, who were local politicians, and olwure except for notoriety which circumstance attached to their names, to recommend them to ollice as "special case." unless he was familiar with their oonneotion with the gobspiracy? And if he was deceived la thows oageti, as is falsely pretended, why has he slncothen prostituted the honors and public offices, intended to recognize public uerviee and public worth, to pay the political debts of the conspirators, unless he knew of the bargain, ackowledxed Its obligation, or felt himself In the power of the crew who stole the Presidency? iVeto York .Vmh. Ortii's rtKSUKRKcnoN. Since the body of a son of a former President of the United States was carted off to a Cincinnati medical nnllntrn.noHiich atrocious cafie of Erave-rob-blng has conic tollsht as that which was per0f th Ninth Indiana District were the guiifV parties and the "stiff" they I drew from the political graveyard was 3fr. UodloveS. Orth, who retired from the oanva8 for Governor, two years ago, beoauscof Ids connection with the Venezuela Claims Commission and its work. Mr. Orth is now nominated forCongreso, the party managers evidently believing thatthe people have forgotten the event of 1870. There was a hot light In the convention, but the resurrectionlists finally carried their point. It will be in order now for pme Indiana eonveation to trv the galvanic procee on tiie political eoYpse which once bore the name of Colfax.. Chicago Times. "Muzzuno tiik Southern Votk." The lloston Journal is dltresed over what it calls "muzzling the Southern vote" in Mississippi, Delaware and South Carolina. Why didn't llio Journal feel distressed over the muzzling of the "Southern vote" In Louisiana In 1870, when thousands of South cm Democrats were disfranchised by a set of Itepuulioan scoundrels? The " Southern vote 1 not muzzled" now at any p int, unless the unwillingness of Southern Republicans to nominate tickets to be beaten by an overwhelming black and white Democratic majority mav be called muzzling. Nobody interferes with any Itepnblioan noralaatloae in the South. Democratic majorities as fair as Republican. majorities in Maine prevent thoe nominations from coming to a eaeeeeeful iwtue In the South. It la as readable te say that the Democratic voter of Malae er ltkode Island are muzzled, a to talk abeut muzzling the Southern vote,"by whleh tke Iloaton Journal means the Southern liepublican vole. CoHrier' Journal. MARHI.K'ri Dkkkxsk Or TII.DBN. The most serious charge atrxtnst Mr. Tilden for about a year and a half has been that when the people of the United States had given him the Presidency he had not the courage to take it. It has been uriced among Demo crats that timiditv prevented Mr. Tilden from asserting his rights. If it should be found that it was the timidity and the felly of men supped to be his friends and representatives that wrought tho mischief, It would lift Mr. Tilden largely in the National Democratic eUcem. Theletterof Mr. Manton Marble, to which we alluded yesterday, was au attempt, and au attcmptmore successful than many believed possible, to free Mr. Tilden from this chargeunder which he had labored. That he did not oountenanee the Electoral Commission bill, which made his defeat possible after his election, seems evident from his correspondence, now newly published. It will be asserted that this publication is made to promote the chances of Mr. Tilden for the Presidential nomination. Grant that, and it does not alter the faets that should become recorded history. Mr. Tilden will be largely advanced in his hopes for 1881) If the Democracy of the Union oan be fully persuaded that he consistently and forcibly opposed the scheme that made possible the power of the Kepublican party ia the Kxecutlve Department for this Executive term. Cincinnati Enouirer. Tun KllA OFlKCUI.ATIONANI)PLUNl)KK. During tho eight years of Grant's Administration every department of the public service became more corrupt than had ever been deemed possible at any previous period of our national history. Wo wtre told that, as a General, he had wonderful capacity for selecting the best men for anv and every dutv, and that, in this respr:t, he made no mlsiakes. "We learned that, at President, he had a faculty, scarcely less wonderful, or selecting the worst men, and that, having selected them, he was too obstinate to admit his blunder by turning them out of otflee, but stuck to them and keptthem where they could do the most harm. He surrounded himself with men whose Intellectual inferiority was only excelled by their moral corruption, and his Administration heeanie a reproach to the nation, a stench In th neetriU of civilization. We are glad to believe that Grant himself did no stealing; but he gave his friends, who were apt to be inellned to public robbery, abundant opportunity to follow their Inclinations, so that peeulatlon became the rule and honesty the exception. Under sueh an Administration the leaders of the ltadical party became so corrupt that the diabolism by which they prolonged tins hold of their party on the offices after Grant's term, the fraud and perjury by which Ilayes oame In, seemed but a natural continuation the prolongation of a line nither than a new and startling departure. When pasjloH shall have ooolcd and prejudice died out, the, honest historian will write of Grant's Administration in sorrow, not in anger, as the most Corrupt and corrupting era of our history; and M will say that the man In tho White Hons1, bv putting weak and bad men in high places, by failing to dlcoiintenance and frown upon evil practices, by helping to build up the fortunes of reckless advehttir ern. and by his general unfitness for his high ufiiee, brought lasting disgrace upOH his country, and aMieted her with many evils that endured long after he retired to private life. We believe the Amerioan people itt fer self government, aad this belief renders it Impossible for us to imagine them eapable ef re-eleetlBg Grant. IPs