2 ,-- 5? : ; VOL. 6. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1872. NO. 44 arn "'''''"'"""""'""niT mm m i mi i ii itt- r -- ywnya- OREGON CITY fi M m in "O "1Tb 1 Biill i IHjIiFfi Si She lUccklij (enterprise. 4 DEMOCRATIC PAPER, FOR THE Susincss Wan, tho Farmer Ad the FAMILY CIRCLE. ,tEI EVERY Fit'DAY BY A. NOLTPIER, EDltOll AND rilllLISHEU. FF1G la Dr. Tlies"ng's liikk Building TERMS of SUBSCRIPTION': Single Copy one year, in advance, $2 50 TERMS' of ADVERTISING : rri i-niit advertisements, including all (e Ml ii..tices, V -I - ' 12 liUCS 1 w $ ; o0 For each sub-eTneniHiserUoii 1 J One Column, one year :'M'W y i ti ter " 5 B i -iine-- Car.l. I square one ye:ir Ii Kg- R, inUt tnee to be made at the risk o Subtcrifors. mid at the expense of Agents. BOOK AXI JOB PPISTISa. ear Hie Kuterpri.se office is supplied with beautiful, anproved styles of type, and mod ern .MACIIIN'K I'UKStfKS. winch will i enable fche Proprietor t-. do Job Punting at all nines .Xeat, Quick and Chrap .' Tff" Work solicited. . . All ninetrnnactiin upon a Specie baft. B USIXESS CA 11 DS 7 IT. W ATKINS, M. D , SURGEON. Portland, Orkgi n. OP Fir: Od I Fellows' Temple, corner First. uid Vhler streets Residence corner of M.iin and .Seventh streets. S. HCKLAT. CHAS. K. WARREN'. MUELAT & WARRED Attorneys at Law, OFFICE CIT.VIlMAX's BIUCK, MAIS STREET, () It K ION CITY,O'.lE00 X . M irch .-, ls7-':tf F. BAHGLAY, Rfl. E?. C. S. Formerly Sia:,'ron to the lion. II. U. Co. 3 Ytuis ExiifiUurt'. ru vuriciNCi physician and surgeon, ?Iit Strri-t. Orrgon City, a. McCOVVN ATmTCi and counselors at-law, oasaoN city, Oregon. vn.LincncK in all the courts of til" -'.fate. -;;i,'ci il attention given to cacs in the U. S. L-.riti Oii.e :it Oregon City. April A, 1ST:.': if W. F. HXGHFIELD, Et ibli-'li'id si nee 1849, at the old stand, "If on Street, Oregon City, Onqon. ri Assortment of" Watches , Jew elry, itritl Sith Thomas' weight -1 I ' t. . I I ..C... I. : 1. ..... ..........mljjil L( :it; il U'fl ..rmru. i:aiiiitgs done on short notice, in 1 thankful for past favors. JOHN FLEMING, PiiALKil IN BOO.CS AND STATIOMEBY, IX M VERS' FIRE-PROOF RRICK, y VI STftKET, OltKfiOX CI TT, OREfiOX. fj"v)ix r. r.Acox, Iinjiorter and Dealer in STATlOXEIiV, rEUFU.MERA. tc. &c. Oregon C'tif, Oregon. it CUari,i'i ll'itmeFn old t-'tntl, lately oc cupied by S. Ackertfinn , Main stru t. lo tf DH. J. WELCH, fM!zm& DENTIST. OFFICE In Odd Fellows' Temple, corner of First and Abler Streets, Portland. T le natron.is'; of thoe desiring superior operatio.is is in special request. Nitrous ox iiif fi - the painless extraction of teeth. !T"A tiiicial teeth "better than the best,' and ?. .7 its the chiapet. Will he in Oregon City on Saturdays. -Nov. .";t,f A. G. WALLIXG'S pioneer Book Bindery- Corner of Front id Alder Street, PORTLAND, OREGON. BLANK BOORS RULED and BOUND to lut desired pattern. MUSIC BOOKS, MAGAZINES, NEWS PAPERS, Etc., bound in every variety ot style known to the trade. Orders from the country promptly at .tended to. REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE. PORTLAND. - - OREGON DEALER IN REAL ESTATE AND OTHER INVESTMENTS- C mimissioner Selestipg Swamp and Ovei flowed Lands. Firm Lind-i sold and purchasers obtained for all kinds of Ian led propertv. Val i ib'e securities transferred in exchange for real estate. Loins nej;o'iited on nrpperiy, and titles exarninel and determined. 0 )nnji.ssioas solicited and executed with fid 'Htv an 1 promptness. OFFICE No. U C irter's Building, corner of Abler and Front streets. Feb. 3. )S70:tf ' 5 .1 -,' mm BUSTER GEORGE, Am 4 Black Eyed Susan:' All round Long Branch the Dents lay moored. At eas tbev in their chairs reclined. When Buster George, he hove on board: Oh! where shall I my Hiram fina? Tell me ye faithless lubbers, tell me true. What is it makes you look so devilish bjue? Hiram was outside in the yard. Hocked by his valet lo and fro; Soon us his (ieorge's voice he heard, lie stopped, and quickly rose to go; The fresh cigar dropped half smoked Irom his h;mds. And quick as thunder by bold George he stand.s. 0 Hiram. Hiram, lovely cuss. My love shall ever firm remain; Lei me brush off that Jersey dust. And tell me where you lee! your pain; Change as they may, you Dents, your George shall be The Tallapoose that always sticks to thee. Believe not what those papers say. They shake with fears and anxious mii.d; They'll tell thee, tell thee every day. That thou ai t sliding far behind: Yes yes, believe them when they like sin. For that's the only way they hope to win. Is not sweet Boutwell in the Sonih ? And Wilson, too. speaks there to-night: Gay Conk., at last, has oped his mouth.. And Murphy's eyta are diamonds bright ; Then why dlspair with such a cheerful views ? 1 wouldn't, blow me now, if I were you Though Greeley men are getting thick, Lei not my pretty ltiram fear; Though Tribunes roar, Suns make thee sic!.-. Your Busier George will slill be ne;ir: George helps the 'Times to many a bulls lie, Lest too much truth should shut my Hi ram's eye. The Denlling. rose, each gave the wink When jolly George t-ok Hiram's arm; Methinks they went to lake a drink; They drank; they smoked; George found it warm ; His lightening belt no longer could he stand ; B'-bye, he cries, and waved his chubby hand. Tii!: and Now. Q iiie a distinguished ex public man died in Georgia the other day, without receiving much newspaper obituary notice. We refer 'o Geo. W. Crawford, who had been Governor of Georgia, and was the first Secretary of War in the Whig Cabinet of President Taylor. While holding that office he Wi- misled into paying an old claim of one Gulphan, and this act was followed by an immediate burst of honest indignation, not merely from Demcrats but from Whigs also. Dr Greeley in the Tribune taking a leading part in the movement. I:i fact they made it so hot for Mr. Crawf.rd that he had to resign his office and retire to obscurity, in which be has ever since re mained, no event in Ii is s bsequent his tory being known to the public except his death. Nowadays as the New York Sin ob servt s. members of the cabinet boldly engage ie swindles like the Chorpening Iran;!, amounting to S ! EI.OlM). and like the representative frauds of Ilobcson. amounting to S'MS (KM); and the most in lluenlial members and organs of their party sustain them in the act and praise them as thotig'i public plunder were a virtue. The subserip'i-m to the first mortgage seven-thirty in gold bonds of the North ern Pacific Railroad for the month of July . foot tip $1.0 JO J ) ). a sum which, at this dull season, mu-t be in st flitlermglo Messrs. Jay Cooke t Co.. the fiscal agents. By the reception into the Treasury of this amount the Board of Mmager.T arc en abled to carry out their plans steadily and without interruption, to payr cash for labor and m I'erials. and to perfect their schemes for settling the couutv as they progress wnh industrious and hardy emi grants. The produce, the piotnptness. and the energy thu far displayed in the prosecution of the work, is well calcu lated lo inspire confidence, and that it has done so is evidenced by the freedom and steadiness with which the bonds are being subscribed for. IJachkloks, Attention 1 The attention of bachelors is called lo the following wail : There are some sail sights in this world; a city sack ed and burned a battle-field after a orreat slaughter a i ondon in the midst of a plague a ship burning at sea a family pining in starva tion a jug of molasses wrecked upon the pavement. All bad but true. But to us the saddest sight is an old bachelor wearing toward the end pt' iiis journey of life, his great duties undone. Miserable creature ! Just look at him; his shirt buttons off his stockings out at the toes not a son or a daugh ter nor a relative to drop a tear, close his eyes in death, or to leave his money to nobody, in fact to care for him shunned by saint and sinner. Scrnoirr.s Gkkki.ev. Hon. Emerson Ltheridge. one of (he most prominent and influential Radicals in Tennessee, has ad dressed a letter to the Memphis Avalanche declining to accept the position of candi date for Presidential Elector nn Lib eral ticket, for which he was nominated. He. however, supports Greeley, as the representative of prevalent ideas and the needs of the times. Estopped. The latest objection urged by Grant's retainers against Horace Gree ley is. tbat if elected President, he may place a "Rebel" in his Cabinet, Thai is an objection, remarks an exchange, which they are estopped from urging against any candidate, for Grant did tb.e same thing in m iking Arnos T. Afcerman, of Georgia, his Attorney-General. Grant's Wretched Failure. Extract from Mr. Schurz's Speech. No President, save perhaps Washington himself, was elected under more llatteiing auguries,and there is not one whose perform ances stand in more glaring con trast to his opportunities. There is nothing so apt to dazzle the eyes of the multitude as military glory. Even the most discerning of minds cannot ensilv resist its harms. We are fond of believing i that a man who has successfully commanded an army must be able to govern a nation, but that uni versality of talent is but rarely met with. I venture to say that it is not in this instance. This is not a harsh judgment, for Gen. Grant has failings in common with some of the greatest captains in history. I lis career as President warrants the conclusion that he has never been able fully to appreciate the difference between military com mand and the complex: duties and responsibilities of civil administra tion. I doubt whether it has ever become quite clear to his mind what the Presidency means in our system of Government. When that high office was presented to him he took it as a sort of natiou tional reward, an accommodation, a place in which, after his military exploits, he miixht make himself comfortable. His mind seems to have been but little disturbed by the great duties and perplexing problems he was to take in hand. It may appear somewhat startling at first siulit that as one of his friends, Colonel Forney, once informed the public, he should then have stipu lated for a second term on the ground that one would not pay in point of emolument. This finan cial view of the case was indeed quite unusual, but if he did not look on the Presidency as an ac commodation he naturally desired that it should not be a losing busi ness, and some of his friends who have readily entered into his spir it actually use this mercantile ar gument in favor of his re-election. His first duty was to form Ids Cab inet. The exigencies of the times urgently demanded that he should pick his constitutional advisers from the ablest and most enlight ened statesmen of the nation. lie asked nobody's advice but made his selection himself. When the Cabinet was announced it was the wonder of the world. The State Department was first given to a pesonal friend by way of compli ment, soon to be exchanged for a loss responsible and mote comfort able position. The gentlemen ap pointed Secretary of the Treasury was at once discovered to be dis qualified bv law, and as for the Xavv, a wealthy burgher of Phil adelphia, who said of himself that he d"ul not know what he was ap pointed for, and had good sense enough to insist upon being speedily relieved of this troublesome busi ness, for which he had neither fitness nor taste. In the course of time i some changes were made. Men who, by their independent spirit and enlightened sense of duty, threatened to become troublesome had to make room for others whose accession to the Cabinet made that great council of the Slate still more wonderful. It is impos sible to draw from the traditions of the Government or from the ex igencies of the times a principle or theory of a political character up on which so curious a Cabinet could have been constructed. ut, however little in its composition the great interests of the country might have been consulted, the President true to the accommda tion idea, consulted his own con venience, ami selected men for the most important positions of the Government whom he desired to please, and who pleased him with their company. He looked upon it as his personal affair, which con cerned nobody else. PERSONAL C.OVERXM EXT. A painful but still reluctant ap prehension was then dawning up on the minds of some that the con duct of this great Government had fallen into the hands of a triiler. The distribution of offices was now in order, and the President began at once to shower the sweets of his oflicial patronage upon his relatives ami personal friends. lie had probably never heard of nepotism, and was undoubtedly the last man to feel the indecency of his con duct. Kegarding the Presidency as an accommodation to him, and its appendages as a sort ot person- al property, ne out not see wny ne idiould not increase his own com fort with the offices of the repub lic. Likewise did it not strike him as scandalous to reward men who had given him valuable presents with high and responsible dignities? He simply liked to please those who had pleased him that was all. He found it unreasonable, therefore, that in the gratification of that de sire the opinions of others should stand in his way. He surely be lieved tbat the fault-finders were 1 phttsttjy meddling with things which be longed to him and were no business of theirs. Neither did he find it reasonable that the man to whom the Presidency had been given as p. reward should be hampered bv legal obstructions, and when he found an old and wise statute stand ing in the way of the appointment of his Secretary of the Treasury, and the Tenure-of-Office act troub led him in distributing the natron age, he simply said to Congress, "Just repeal tiiese laws.'"' That the repeal ot such laws might lead to very mischevious consequences troubled him little. They stood in his way, and that was enough for him. Soon after his accession to power he gave his mind, not to the great problems, the solution of which the people so anxiously look ed for, but to a project of his own the acquisition of Santo Domin go. Such a subject as the incor poration with our political system of a tropical country with an ut terly heterogenous people, called for the most careful and earnest consideration. It is believed that the Secretary of State did not favor the scheme, and the State Depart ment, whose office it is to conduct all the diplomatic affairs of the Government, was unceremoniously set aside. The President commenced a per sonal negotiation with laez, the ruler of Santo Domingo, which he intrusted to one of his young aide-de-camp, whose zeal he had reason to believe equal to his own. The extraordinary character of this proceeding did not trouble him. He wanted the thing done, and to do it, an ai le-de camp was better than a Secretary of State. The aide-de-camp made a sort of a per sonal treaty between the poten tates, in which the President was pledged to pi opitiate the favor of Congress for the scheme by the lobby influence. This disgraceful engagement would have revolted the sensibilities of any President having the dignity of his high of lice and the honor of the nation at heart. But P resilient Grant was so far from disapproving of it that, instead of marking that aide-decamp with his displeasure, he con tinned to employ him in conliden tial missions for the same object. Nay, in compliance with the stip ulations of agreement, he actually did descend to the role of a lobby ist. I have seen him in that capa city myself. How could a Presi dent loner himself so far? Why, if no one else wanted Santo Do mingo, he did; he employed the means most congenial lo his prac tical mind. Holland. New York World Correspondent. Holland, one of the most interest ing countries in the world, wheth er to the scholar, engineer, farmer, or sailor. In this 'and the very laws of nature seem to be reversed; tie: sea is higher than the land, the lowest earth is twenty-fourfeet be low high-water mark; the keels of ships lloat above the chimney-tops, the frogs croaking among the rush es look down upon the swallows in the eaves of houses ; rivers Lake not their beds through beds of" their own choosing, but through canals regulated by human art. Trees dare not grow in the natural way, but are arranged infixed and sliaight lines by the rod and plum met; their branches are not allowed to spread, but are clipped and cut, so that they stand as a spade stuck in the ground with handle down wards. In the suburbs of this great City of Amsterdam (as in all others) the giant arms of wind mills stretch out as if they were the ever-watchful sentries at the outposts. They are never absent from the landscape; they drain the land, saw timber, crush rape seeds for oil, grind snuff, beat hemp, and thrash grain. The enormous dykes are generally planted with willow trees, so that their interlacing roots may bind the banks, the base of which is faced with masonry and protected by vast lrups of stones. The canals are the roads and drains, the walks and ledges, ami although the landscape is generally void of picturesque effects it possesses a quaint interest from the peculiari ties mentioned, as well as from the hundreds of fanciful summer-houses or pavilions generally attached to the garden of every prosperous Hollander. Some of the Kansas Bepubli cans who have declared for Gree ley are: Samuel Crawford, Gov ernor from. 1 to 1871; Charles Robinson, fir-t Governor of the State in 1SG1: Marcus. T. Parrott, Delegate in Congress from 18-5 7 to lSCl"; Edmund G. Rose, Senator from 'lSOO to 1871 ; S. A. Manlove, editor of the Fort Scott Jfonitor; Colonel George P. Smith, editor of the llumbolt Sott.hicesi Judge C. Webb, F. P. Baker, A. Thomas, Colonel Manlove, and to quote from the Lawrence Jiepub li'xm Jonrtvdy "many others." OF BANCROFT LIBRARY, What Hie Democrats Intend. From the New- York (L berat) Sun. Evidences of discontent had be gun to crop out along the Liberal Republican ranks at the inactivity ami seeming apathy of the Demo crats in many parts of the coun try. Apparently there was some ground for this uneasy feeling, but it had no substantial foundation. The situation was a complex one, with no precedents to guide the ac tion of the Democracy. With a large patriotism, to which all mere party considerations were subor dinated, the Democrats had promptly and cordially accepted a candidate who was not theircboice, and who had been their life-long antagonist. It was a work of dif ficulty and delicacy to reconcile the masses of the party to a course without precedent in the practice of the organization. One of the conditions indispens able to the success was the hearty acquiescence of the whole Demo cratic party in the action of the Baltimore Convention. Of course the defeat of Grant and the cor ruptionists was certain and inevit able if the Democrats acted to gether and were reinforced by the Liberal Republicans. To secure that co-operation was the first ne cessity. The Democrats wisely, as we think, desired the initial movement in the campaign to be made by the original supporters of Dr. Greeley. Besides, it was im portant to ascertain the effective strength of this class of politicians. They have now demonstrated their power in the contest, and the Dem ocrats are commencing the work which bids fair to end in a glori ous victory. The Democrats of Illinois, always true and determin ed, opened the ball, and their ac tion has now Ik'cu imitated by the Democracy of Connecticut. With, a degree of sagacity and liberality worthy of all praise, they have met the Liberal Republicans on terms of equality. The electoral ticket will be composed of anti Giant Republicans and Democrats, three each, thus insuring a major ity such as has not been seen in a Presidential election in that State since Adams beat Crawford nearly four to one in 1824. This discreet and catholic move ment will sound the keynote to the campaign. We regard it as in the highest degree important as indicating with unerring precision the purpose of th" Democracy to meet their new allies in a spirit of fairness and generosity that will give unmixed satisfaction to the opponents of Grant, and swell the majority of Greeley in the Elector al College to unexpected propor tions. "JLiberol Reductions to Regular Ia troiss." The Civil Rights Bill has gone into force in the District of Colum bia. It imposes penalties for mak ing any istinction in serving re spectable guests on account of color, and requires a conspicuous display in public houses ot list? ot prices. While in some of the res taurants food and drink have been served to all colors alike as yet, others have put up cards with enormously large prices marked on them, a heavy discount being made in the case of white customers, so as to accommodate them at the usual rates. At one leading sa loon on the avenue, prices posted up are as follows: Whisky, two dol lars per drink; brandy, five dollars; gin, two dollars; ale, one dollar; all mixed drinks five dollars; all bit ters one dollar. The bill of fare is as follows: Steak, two dollars; chops, two dollars; ham and eggs, three dollars; boiled eggs, fried eggs, coffee, tea, bread and butter, one dollar each; fish of all kinds two dollars; raw tomatoes, ii ft y cents Down-town places have printed scales of prices as follows: Brandy, one dollar per drink; whis ky Holland gin, hock, sherry, and Rhine wines, malt liquors, soda and seltzer waters, and imported files, fifty cents per drink; mixed drinks, seventy-five cents; cigars, twenty live cents to one dollar and fifty cents each. Champagne and im ported wines, ten dollars " a lib eral reduction made to our regular patrons.' Ox IBs Travels. Giant is still on his travels. With an amount of stolid indifference that is amazing at such a crisis, remarks the Balti more (Sozctte, he continues to in dulge in his Sumner frolic, utterly regardless of public interests, and seemingly unconscious of the angry tide that is fast sweeping him to destitution. So did Belshaz.ar treat the solemn warning that met him in the midst of his guilty revels A German banker has bought of the St Paul and Sioux City Rail road Company 1,000,000 worth of land, mostly in Minahan county, Minnesota, 81,000,000 worth o"t which is intended for a German colony. Presidential Eloquence. If General Grant's reticence were but the indication of pru dence and discretion, qualities so commendable in a General or a President, it would not properly become the subject of adverse cri ticism; but when the evidences are so numerous that instead of being the cloak of wisdom it is the cover of imbecelity, it falls justly within the domain of discussion, as one of the inherent intellectual deficiencies that make against his re-election to the Presidency. While no one expected him to be, and he never laid claim to being a public speaker, still it is surprising that a man brought be fore the public so often has never betrayed the slightest glimmer of originality, or wit, or humor, in any oi' the numerous little speeches he has delivered, and of which the following are fair specimens: At the great demonstration to sustain Andrew Johnson at the Cooper Institute. June 7. 18G5, he said: I thank you for this reception. If I were in the habit of speaking, I am so impressed by it that I would not be able to respond as I should like to do. You will have to excuse me. His speech at tb.e dinner given to him at the A'stor House, June 5, 180 5, was as follows: Gentlemen: I know you will excuse me from attempting to re ply to your very flatte ring remarks. At Kalamazoo, Michigan, Au gust 10, 1805, he said: I am not going to reply to the address, gentlemen, I could not do so if I should try. After a long and flattering ad dress from the chief orator at the L'nion League rooms, New York, January 7, 1805, Grant said: Gknti.emex: I bid you good night. 1 am much obliged to you for this reception. Following is his speech at the Biddle House, Detroit, August 1G. 18C5: I bid you good night. His speech at Toledo, Ohio, Au gust '20, 1805, shows how natural it has always been for Grant to lean on somebody's shoulder: Gentlemen and Fellow-citizens: Rev. Mr. Vincent, who has come out mi the train from Chica go, has kindly consented to return my thanks for the hearty welcome which vou have given nie. The following is an examnle of a speech, very much mixed, in which Grant speaks of a thing done and not done in the same breath. It was delivered at Ni agra Falls: 3Iy modesty compels me to turn over that written speech to Mr. Hall, who will deliver it for me whenever it is writtin. In this way Grant shifted the responsibility of his speeches upon other people, just as he used to shift the responsibility of a deci sion in time of battle upon his staff officers: Recently, on his passage through Waterton,Xew York, (August 2d), in company with Senator Coiikling, he made one of the longest ad dresses of his life. Mark it: After an absence f more than twenty vears I fail to recognize' a single one of all the faces I now see before me as familiar to me then. Your city has altered much indeed since I last saw it. At that time I was a lieutenant stationed at Sackett's Harbor, which place I expect to see before I return. What a contrast do these speech es present to the bold, heart', in telligent utterances of Greeley, in stinct with patriotism, knowledge, and statesmanlike capacity ! Just the Max. While he was holding the office of Secretary of the Interior under Grant, Jacob 1). Cox endeavored to protect the in terests ef the people and arrest the numerous swindles which were be ing attempted in his Department. Finding that Grant was giving countenance to some of these swin dles Air. Cox telegraphed to him: ' I am fighting fraud to the best of my ability, and must have your sup port or I will fail." The result of this appeal was that Air. Cox was turned out of the Cabinet. Air. Grant did not want an- man there that would interfere with the schemes of his corrupt "rings," and Cox had no other alternative but to leave, and his place has been filled with Delano, who has been connected with corrupt jobs and a manager of "rings" ali his life. He understands addition, division and silence, and is therefore, as the 'World says, just the man for Grant. Not so Pious. A little Dan bury boy doesn't think his aunt is so pious as she pretends to be when she puts so much starch in his Sun day shirt that he can't jump over a single post on his way to church. Senator CaTl Schurz says twice as many Republicans, will vote for Greeley as was at first thought. Testimony to be Heeded. Dewitt C.eLittlejohn, ten times elected member of Assembly from Oswego county, N. Y. five times elected Speaker of the Ilouse by the Republicans, and a member of Congress for one term, who also was nominated by the Republicans for Lieutenant-Governor in 1ST0, but declined, made a two hours spcecli for Greeley and Brown at Oswego on Thursday night. He said: Forty millions of people are about to select a President for this great countr, a duty that devolves upon the American people once in four years. That man is false to principle who says we must smoth er our convictions and blindly fol low part'. I stand here to-night to announce, myself for Honest 0 Horace Greeley. The party has become corrupt and should be hur ried from power. (Applause.) I stand here no office-seeker; I ask no office from the American people. Some of my old political friends call me a traitor to my party; but I call it patriotism, when men shake off the shackles of a corrupt party organization. You Republicans who go for Grant through thick and thin and call me a traitor because I go for Greeley, where diel your candidate stand in 1S08? He was a Democrat, and your committee had to fly with lightning speed to get him to accept the nomination before the Democrats caught him. What is it to me to be called a Re publican if all that has made the name great and good is taken away ? I prefer to go with the meat rather than the shell, f care not what party a man belongs to, if he is honest he is the noblest work of God. There are Christian men here to-night, members of churches. Would they leave the church because a democrat belonged to it? When the war was raging and re bel bullets fell like bail, and Demo crats and Republicans stood shoul der to shoulder in the field, did any Republican soldier hang his heael because a Democrat stood at ftis side? Go home and reflect upon your course as you-would in every day life. I am opposed to Grant because he would centralize the powers of the Government. I sup port Greeley because he is "kind hearted, of generous impulses, has a massive intellect, but above all, because I know him to be hones Grant is in favor of two terms. He is in health anil vigor, and with his military education, when his second term (if he should be elect ed) expired, he would want a third, and would have it. Greek1' is a one-term man, who after serving would be willing to leave tlie office, with a fair name for his children. Caught Ix a Trap. The New York Jlcrold tells a little story of Settle, which illustrates the way the party of Hate conducted their North Carolina campaign. A Southerner said to him. in a confi dential tone: "Judge, I know about a dozen voters near here who will go for the opposite side, but they can be got." "Howo can they be got ?" quoth the innocent Settle, thinking, erhaj s, of the $10,0CO that "got" him. "Well, it will take nioncv." "How much." "Not much." "Here," said the Judge, displaying a mil of green backs, "here is 00. Is that enough?" "Plenty," said the Southerner, and disappeared. Ten minutes afterwards Settle had the pleasure of seeing his friend on the stump, recounting the whole affair. I lie crowd adjourned to a neigh boringg roggery.where the Judge's greenbacks provided whisky for his opponents. The Sea-Side Louxtjkk.- Mul tifarious are the names by which the Philadelphia candidate is call ed. By some he is styled, in short form, Hiram Sympson. The am brosial Oonkling says his proper name is Ulysses Sydney. Others describe him as the Great Renom lnationist. Others still, with refer ence to his scholastic attainment, dub him, with elegant simplicity, Doctor. But a Western journal those Western journals are outra geously irreverent and disrespect ful sometimes names him, not in aptly, the Sea-Side Lounger, which is pretty, and neat, ami classical, and singularly appropriate1, in the judgment of another journal, for a 'gentleman bearing the marine name of Ulysses. Bli vco's Coxsolatiox-. Hiram Green, Esq., thinks that the Grant organ's "good riddance to bad rub bisri" cry "at the loss of such men as (Jen. Banks, Chief-Justice Chase' Horace Greeley, Lyman Trumbull, Carl Schurz and Charles Sumner,, is equal to the consolation felt by o old Tommy Blinco when he lost both of his feet in a saw-mill. "Wall," said the old man, groaning o with pain, it's a good thing they're gone, for somehow or other it did take a power of money to keep tho darned things in shoe leather o o o o o o o o G O