put up with the Bee'line's language. The investigation now rapidly changed .its ootirSe:• The ...prisoners ''Were - left.aloae, while! this stew ane was eagerly followed up. But .they were only left alone, after a final' ef fort had boon anal© withSehonlebon. The court. seetnal more than ever,de • sirens to extort a confession now 'that the affair threatened ,to „take a new WO: :,The idea of the prisnners being innocent,.after all, and of hay ing suffered so long and so much an .of course extremely pain !`ftt'and . rejected as Jong as possi ble. Hence the redoubled .eagerness geit'a acinfeSsion,' which shonld jus tify the Court in its own eyes and tlitrbyes 'of men. Sehonlebon rwould` ! - nonfeqs nothin' t ,m; could dorifeSs•iieth ' ; -EN'Y Might do. With• him , what theyy . pleased, he knew nothing of the 'Ybbbdry.' Batted, the court asked him if ho-had perhaps any suspicion' Of one of the locksmiths who bad . (iv ei done work for Sterbenkarid then ettddenly asked him ; Which of these tilde tAL'-and. if either, on what ..f.fitn.ii.iWs - ? A light seemed suddenly to`' in uponSehonloben. He at ' ciudnintimed Gosser. ~But his grounds `were not verrstrOligi'Hii - s - di - tr - EM - 1 GOsisel- ivitaWry . poor, being Uri abi e,:to pay three Olden (six shillings) for a window ornament be had bought;, that' he had repaired the house door lciOrki and that just before his (Schon lebeifs) arrest, Gasser' had met him in the Area; and asked him if ho would net soon be ordered to make a DOW -cash box • ( . other 'evidence now pouredinfast. Evidence trivial for the most part, littt'holping`in its cumulativaeffect to r'tetr.ongthen the .suspicion©" against Gosser and his man. The strongest indieatiou ofull was tbitt - Gosser, who - Nfita notoriously - in very straightened. circumstances, had - applied for 'apass port to DreSdeticiintendin(r to visit his relativei there."' Instead of go ing to Dresden, ho went to prison; ho, his wife, and man. His house had been searched, and facts discovered which admitted of no denial; as the seensed at once saw, for they confess ,otl 'Christian Gottlieb Gosser, thirty-- years of ago, was born in Dresden, whore his.„ father a shoemaker, had 'llOniJAtly earned's. livelihood, but had 'died:o6g before the arrest of his son. iGesser came to Nurnburg in 1786, and .settled there as locksi - nith, and !Wed there with his wife?. and two children; Business was very slack with him ; and it was only by serious money sacrifices that ho obtained ad- mission into the guild of iockSmiths, and the citizenship of Nurnberg.— He- thus began in • debt;and warms not Ilitonanito clear'himsf by onergetib Ittßi• vindtfiril 'business habits; He appears to have been one of those liegativotykOod - men - who keep from site so lotik-as temptation does - not treSs hie Vrty~7r on. ay accepting it as a necessity.— He Confessed that he had often• had oCeasion tc; Ohter Sterbank's bonse, and had become aware of the facility -Whioh Cie •count o use door aiiight'he . operredlbylany experienced: trait. He was often in wltn . t, of the' very iiecessall?es.of ; Emily would not,- Or could not, assist hiar; add he began to despair of over Isom egtly making his way. There was box ftill of money; the half ofit,-nay the third of it, would help - him out of all diffieulties. . This Men , ' haunted him. It;greve more • and more fascinating. ..every ., hour; At length, on the night -of the 29th 30th June;"towards iwo•o'elock; lici'procceded to the house; .opened the door, which he found to have been left unbolted,`tocik.' out' the , .windoiv. .pahe; - opened -thetbnytting-hohs& door drieered without having Made the least' nage. He was now iii presence Of the coveted cash-box• ' all was tent;nil was darkness..bui,he knew the localities, and stealthilk• triedf:t6 fbren the eash..:box . .opem Th t this Viiis'lmpossitile-; after rOpeated trials find failures ; he tried' to lciarry ite off:; bit . this also he 'found impossible ittitopfhasistance.. TheperspiratiOn poured devin hie face: Herliad coma so far, beep hitherto so suceessful,.and now ell seemed , hopeless ! He 'had incurred the risk, - and not gained his abler . = 'Slideferily - the thought of. his man 13losel occurred' to him. lle.could be induced to assist. In -another minute crept fromithe counting-house, an r chhrottgla thErstreet door, which he 'closed earefalty; and hurried to the bed sidkrcif his sleeping appren..- flee.* Blosel , half stupitied with sleep heard him describe in glowing colours the wealth' .and enjoyment- which fi tyro te 4 himif he bad the courage to peke one bold and easy stroke.. It 'did not seem to require much elo 4uence to overcome the scruples of 'the apprentie6 . , if indeed he felt any ; for,.rubblng his eyes to assure him `self that he was awake, he juinped iiat of bed, dressed rapidly, and fol lowed hie-master down stairs. In the silent Sleeping streets they only met one living soul ; and conclud ed it was a watehmati—it was prob- Ably the very - shopkeeper who depos . - ,ed to having seen two suspicious 'looking men crossing the Horse-mar ...ket about that hour. They found the -800 (4400r slightly ajar. They en .tered,oarried off the cash-box with dititurbanee, and traesported it They opened it, end_ divided 'Ebb spOti, during the absence of Gas ser's Wife. They hid the box in .a hole - under the- workshop, , and there lt-had remained until three Nreelta two,: when-it was removed, brofien'to -pieces, - , , and 'thrown into the Pegnitz —the muddy : stre w ,,.,wbich flowsAroughlbkrnborm Your days after . the ..robbery, GOB ser-_ confessed it to his : wife, who siveoped 'away,' And - fon , :-.l'"poyering kerne I f rmploredhim,tp. restore the mower, - o,snideed she bad.' centlp,4,94 daily to.iinploraiiim,,,ever hipaid:soinehprOssing what was needed for ae well as clothes for himse If andfamilk, And Would- not hear of restoring the ;nonesP, Gosser further declared that no one had ever instigated_ him to the deed ; no one it ad 'even, Ivinted tat it. The idea occurred to liiin-; lie had no ac-: ` - com pike but - : : had never. : spoken to any one On the -Subject,ex cept Blosel and his wife, neither be fore nor since, least of all to the nests, Sehonlehen .or Bentner.— These ware, entirely and Blosol alone were guilty. Before his - arrest .and imprison ment Gosser bad attempted suieidp , ,, by cutting, his throat with a razor,;. and in-prison _he tried to open ei,v'ein;, but both, attempts had been, frustrat., ed. He confessed :having made those,- I attempts 'lrom - despair." Beyend7; this-single crime he had. :nothing which to accuse". himself. His life : bad been honest until that fatal 29th, June,- Ho '',coahLgive no reason-for that deed, 'except the. pressing pover, which weighed him . down. This confession- was made so_sirr ply, so explicitly.; and :was correho-, rated in so many details, that no, doubt-wed arise us ,to its perfect truth,; and one would h aye thought that -the _previously -accused prison, oilers would, now ~be at, liberty, and jttteireoliL irktteetc..—pera4.4.4*.e.d., 1 , Not so however. 'Nurnberg jtisticc; rash 'enough in. suspicion of ,crimc; was tardy in recognition of in noccpco. It dreaded the. Wee, of liavingbecits‘-soi deplorably misled. • Gesser's wife was ,next .examined., She corroborated in all essential points the statement - of tibr - _ imehand : .: : -On the night in question she slept away, from her husband on accomu l t ,of 'the si c k n ess of her "bow, then,•ittt the breast ;fen- t.•;:.at.she knew,.-nothing of his getting upend quitting thehouso.. Only in respect or•tbe qiny ph- which he confessed the crime to,-her d'd she differ from his statement. was on the second ' , not on-the /earth. day af. : tor the deed. She had lust :returned. from being "eherched" :at. St. :lieu- -1 rens; and.saw Jierhushand pay . a dot= lar for some nails he: had beMghtion. i her asking him, -when alone, • where that money:came from, he Taplied that Hers von 141,,A1 him some moneyiin advaneefeirwork,i ordered. ~ Sho reproadhed , Itim for acting withotitt her atlyiec'ttail -know l edge,keeping4lor in ignnranco, of his affairs ; whereuponire' replied that. iE she Would only be a decent , woman and -leave off , reproach-ing him, be would her everything. Lie constantly went out into the shop, , and after whispering wii-th the appren-.' tine Blosel, retWrned again ;.and she, "with some impatience, demand ! ed whatithis meant, he lieized her, ''by the arm, ledthet into:the bedtookin and,- having first asked her if she - : :wourld4orgtve him, and not:be startled :I at what-he told. 'het, Ivo - confessed all; I She thought the earth would, swal low her. She ithplored him not to ruin her and the children ; hut :he pa ;assured-0(A tto.tyriel IN wau l over Know an). been in the utmost need; and she "described the various places, where', the rest of the money was - hiciclen, d natuinif'which sums belonged to the: , apprentice, and which ;to her 'IA us-,; bumf: She declared 'that repeatedly-1 she had • Urged the restoration .of:uty least:a. part, of the .money,. and treat,ed bim, to matte-his peace with:: G76(.1 . 11.14 Man by' a. confession ho was:itrktriovahle. When' she painted tiyhimuthe sufferings tstrieb cent were lir.tlergoi.eg :for! •lyis(erime; ed to te aetti re bar, deoldri ri g. that. their itrnobeirc,o'nrefet . soon be 'proved,' and then they sviruld-be.eat tree: !Magnus; -the ap .oPre ntice ) .-aged' - twain ty-fi,Ce, 8017 OE WOO ki - Aallp en ter, - stil+ .NUrnbergt,..vonfested to all - that Gore, .ffe.:oelY_-urgefel,•as tr de fence; that.bo bad: . etfugglfed - iagainst -temptation, tAliken' i Gosiser -:on. the night offthe.2oth ifzurie'shoolcirim his :bed and 43.v.otte him by Are! ntallt: ante that them should , be Maido.thappy, how 2 aid where-?: , NO Boonizi.barl ; the:Sol:lards+ tions been anSwered then.he eXcluirit ad, ."For God's sake, mriaterl . What +midi come :.'jt? We should botb.poirril to grief , !" to'; , disstiade the _master..'t3!usel;:.tai subsequent inVestigations, . did -trot persist. in even this modest. scruple; and - additted .that the m'aster's:,re i ply, c . rhoArlothing Will come ofjt" quite , silenced biro. fle- corrobotiuti ed all the other detail's, and ed that'it was on his repeated remorir stranees .that GOsser.at 'length 'th.ade a clean breast of it-to . his wife. lie had also often . ..soOke,•with Gosser, [-tam t-tfre-trrrhyrirryrwiticersearreUtteri-nzl for them, but• only-got hie answer, that, "these must be set free at last, and thus we'_nre safe:l - a second 'search la: . GOsser's' dweiling, which completely -confirm ed all that had been , said, und.which. yielded upwards:of.2oo' guiden, from . various hiding-places and after pieces of the-iron-box had been 'fished up froth the Pegnitz, and recognised— in 'fan, after no ShadovV• of 'doubt could exist as to the truth of Gosser's story, the uafortunato Itlatinert, Schonleben, and Beutner, were light ened of their irons, and their impris onment in many respects mitigated ; but it still continued; and it was on ly by degrees that they were inform. ed of the new turn the affair had tali on. And now imagine the torrent of public wrath against the barber Kireh meir,,who m every one accused of being 'the solo cause of all the cru el injustice perpetrated on the Mau- Dens, no .one, of course, accusing him. self of living, by cred.ulity and fa- cite hypothesis of guilt, aided and a. betted.. Itircbrncier was held respon sible for alt. It Was not enough that he had perjured himself; he bad - this. led juStice, bad caused the death of one peer woman, and the sufferings of a . whole family. He , was 'arrested .on the 4 th November; and after the tblrce=confossions had been read , a- • loud to him, was 'asked if he ittli ven thretif.toitfErm what.hci had sworn? :iVith,sfirm. voice, Kirchmeir dental.- I ,ed; "That !lb - mould still -in 'clear con science affirm that, on the morning in question, in the presence of Frau Istaunertand her youngest 'son, while shaving Mettnert, he had seen a dark green etriped cash•box ' painted with , flowers on the cover, and the lock or namented, with four leaveS, ilueiree be had provithisly described, standing by the oven behind the door. It was - Vo him inexplicable and inconceivable that God should so have se Tiered him to be deceiWiff, inasnkeh ache` , flard` never traca the slightbst "tendency 40-illusion, or defect of understand -ing„-ell his life. Ile could not believe in Such s' . .deception of 'llia senses." In vain were the con fesSionerdad to him ; Was all the,cerrobo rative evidence adduced ;in Vain Wei° the f fragments, fished pp froin er - laid before' him ; he steadfastly held to his original positien, that be had seen box io and on theAay stated , onelinew_ —no one ever ,knefei,:wket h er.,tbis was a real eoniietiOi, si i mblated confidence aili3pted 6,146 f stitcliefen'eti. ; And -here the t paYeirnlogical • inter est of this caserlies •to its height,. precisely where the criminal interest ceases, kV le at ntystery lies at the: 1)ottom of kir,elitneier accusation?' I.l.e_was not 'himself ap implient ed..inthe'robbery, so th`at his motive cod mile bare - Venn "to llivert.snapi. cion. lie .was not, tinetwe, tO be in any degree unfriendly with the lelau nerts,,and- the absurd idea of his hay ing =Used them, ; because irritated at receiving no neWyear's gift] liy its very absurdity - shows 'that no in telligible motive for,hatred ekisted. If therefore the motive was neither one, of self-defence, nor of diabolical malice,. what was ,it? To this day the prciblem'olthat afteliblit•reme.ins unsolved ; - and the psychologist may fairly ash, Vies it not tvhdlly lA-- lucioationon`ehe barbef.'s pare"? - W i tte not this pretended cash-box, seen -at, Alttunertis the .product of a too vivid imagination gfVfligq•eli_tiey - to edn ceptions, as.Sfelai.:beth'S heat-000'485 % ed brain saw the actual_ dagger Mar t stealing hien the way • WhiCil .lie was: ; going, "and en its: blade and-dudgeon: gouts of 15166 d --?" There are I -cient examples, of hallucination, even in persons not suspected of any.men tal diguibanne, to Tarifittr such In idea very pr4bable. Kircb meier declared 'Abut be hull, never kPown vinsorf,ijiti,lslo idanylf'- lbsitens of 'the season. And•this mayl haie been the ease. But ho was of a, bilious, excitable temperament ; and had only quite recently recovered from a severe attack of biliouefever. If now we imagine euch a man great ly excited by. tbo news of the reb beryi and hearing •on all hands de scriptlonp of the cash-boi, it is very conceivable _that the image of 'this cash-box would soon be • aema se vivid to his mind, that to believe .he had seen it some Where woultrbe an easy, alinost irreßistitlespre. But where? That he had noticed it at katenert's taigUt have occurred to bitn, "either. - f 'the m ~~~_ -- clear. to.us that this idea of Mennen's room being the locality,. mast 'have. been an. afterthought, Siricto on liii mentioning to llolz,el that. he had, seen sneh r n 'cashbox sotneWhere, he did net, On ,being, asked where? give' any direct aptSwer. ,g(iiv it'ia in the . II ig,iiest degree ltiiprebabre„, that ~lie, 'sh o uld pgrve 6on , ceaTed - suchn : fact-: t haiing.lTOYirokiVe TO`r m eoneedl'mditt tia that, helad, - seeft: rhe b r O . X l ,Ofrtlie: very morning'tif, that' day, ire, giti., nert's room, Not until ter(days af i,terwar,thi`clia l Ell,i'clirneier'tel 'Holzer 1 Where ho had seen r it," .Itiving once conceived., the idea` I.lynt, he had seen 1 th,e:easliAip.,X at, l 3l.l.iiinert's tha belief ~ ebultl - 4nly - AYl.engthpn iohis ruirid„--:' Tode.4.l,this.ia'tltliVery nature of an hallu'cipatiVu; - and'Peehaps thareittl ee..play,liiiiliteyestecl if We digress . I.i little , i lfere l Let iihrra to an,. tintltd`itte ettae,"whiiili 4 wAl 'l.'e il a er: _lt irchine,icy's h all'aeln4iion 'in telligi 're '''W tk" #4. tie ii fiaiti 1 5 :releaser f 7 hikes'" ,7Jti - 4 , 07 Physiotosl, Where, it ik n arra teilli . y the Physician to wheiii it - occured7.. -4 - . 1 .',,' When he, Weitft-Vg .. ol' six, years olo3 ettrltiined't,liat he waS passing. 63; a large pnri'd, of u.titer {n 7 l}Vept soli Cary place On 1, fie , cippostte side 'oaf it thre stood tigtat tree ibliclooked 4.1 f ii had Veen streck &y lightning; anci,in the pond, at •Yiiiottier part, an old, fallen trig-nit i ,.,4:o, , o'hp ott, theptoy)n Brit ba, Of, wltich there, wash ttirthkautt-- ping : . I.) ; linTielf. ""c.)ii j a' snil'cleti-t"liit says eitt'"witrd et Ose; ; ;vii'ich . & At f e. , a ins , into,ibe ppnd,and in 14 dyingiitftig gles to eitriearo, myself :ftotyt 'as green , aild slimy' waters, I - awl:ike, tre`ra, Whig. wi tit* t erYor. ' . 1 .2030i1.1, 'elgh t .37 ears alter, 'wh Lle recovering frenit ,t4ti „etc aek p ' f' Satii , leefA . l7V, this d ir•S!ft in Pi-es Clitteir iiselrtihiie lig atn ,- tdon ti tfa I in,al/ respects...tren up to this ti IWO rgo not think I had even seen a liv . - ing , tortoise•br turtle;. but .I indistinct ly rethetphetedthere Wats the picture 1 of on fi e tit 'the npelllngmhook that ihad bee n .i f ,ty cj i• hae.'? !This fact of never hating seen a turtle iS : Whitt) Inoticing, 15cause - Tiircltnidier itad al so never. sts..eit gterbenk's' Cnaltbox ; , but he, of Course, heard it deacribed 1 with some ad!lirae,y„, - and,'...the deSerip i tion sufficed for his initigination, as I the spelling-hook picture sufficed for' I the bdy's dream. "A dozen 'years ielapsed," continues the narrater. I. had become a physician, and was now actively pursuing my professional du -1 ties in one of the southern States. It so fell out that One July, nffernoon 1 had to take a long and"'Wentiifethe ride on horseback. It was. Sunday, and extremely hot ; the path. Wits sol itary, andnot a house : for:Miles:* Tho forest had that intense silence Which is characteristic Of this 'part of the day ; all the wild animals and "birds n;t seeed to haVe gone to their retreats to be 'rid of .the nun. Suddenly- at one point of tie road ,reatne upon a gfeat stagnant water pool; _and cast ing my , eyes aerose it, there stoOd . a pine -tree blasted , by lightning, and on, a.log that, was netcrly_pven With the surface a turtle WAS ' Vitali* ,in oe...seq.: The...dram:xi of lilyfLfaney wee upon me:; itegiidle,fell, from itY ,bands.; an unutterable fear overtilead. 9wSd ,t4391,i-'18149; a * ( .T I IPI /l e ateqrae4R4ool .`4. :•,i Par years the' horro „ of "that a 1: ment was upon him; and although business led him in thatiirection, he always by another palih'S.voided that stagnant poolitrid hi - liked pine-tree, which heltairseetti (as he be ii evc d) in broad day -light. 'At last reflection— he being a reflecting •inan - -!- , eirme to ''hl aid. -He - asked himseit-whetber it wise not more probable that he should, for the 'third ttme, have dreamed this, dream,- than -that the dream' itself "should attintllY haVe come ,true . ,?`."ila-VQ 1 really ..800:0 the blasted . pine -tree, and basking turtle'?" he said. ' , Are a,weary ride of 'Fifty ` miles, the, nociiiti4e-heat, the silence that could 'elmostlre . felt,'OV' prOVocatives to-dldream?!. I pave rid- 'd'en'underimeli eiteamt4eee muss y' . , a:mile, and rive ,a . 'Welie Vsill' 'll-nolovn it, aiid'Bq iliesotrte, if efer • circum stances 'sbeirld - tall mefinto rhise genii agate, I' would satis '''iny'Seltai * to the t matter. .A.Cebriliriift, Sortie tit 'aithfr , iii,l44 * t 'he visited'the'vell reino efea sPet: . There, sure enough, Wss h'Atabil7atit pool but' the blasted pfrietree - Was not there. ire searched' all ibhtiff, hut not "a stump or Mc Of any - tree, w having:gron there enu, be found', and h 9 rightly conelul that, as'he i was hilling,asieep, UK' g irifse of- the water hid" been iner ilbrated With his - dream, and that it ritility lA — had` dreamed, but hp'cl9A - se, "the vision which so deeply moved irn. Sap- I pose this physician to haye - been an unreflecting man, and hil: , ' would irt any time have been read" to swear' setetifn ly to -have seer), u: ' nosey Fay light,;; I igh t ; ', ' the thing whichv' `lirlbNi the could not have e;e:en:No ' , l , ' the differ ence behween dreams:andVallfibiiia-, thins'rs little moire than bit, in the one case; we dieanr',witll dux' 'eyes clOsettio 'the ottrer - with ft'il' 'ey , elre . -: ; lien. 1-dt the i — ag 7 * nat• t' be vi 'AI3 irdpresied,'and it will sed'its objects as distinctly 'as the e - ye Can see Kean 'ties ;;Tied when 'there is' ';ll`othin g-' edi , warn a man of his 'error, he canriat do otheiwisetlil , iri believe in it: This is the only 'extilanntion- of Kirebmoirer's conduct that C can offer ; and that Sonip ,sttob 'View was taken of it by trlb coint-st.tyttys:Rn. tain, fat' although tried as a' peijurer, he was ae4dittad of havjn4'fitiSely sworn from. any bad-niotiv:e ,:his oath was regait-ed fts a sTheere het his 'part, althoitith be binisolf. bstd' 'bovr unaccountably &delved. *as,' ther;d6r4, condoailed to the: costs, and reeelved• l no oWei ipubisb: , .ment, the It vas othei-irise with the verdict' of Nurnberg: ~The law might acquit him ; 'Society was impliCable. In said had he 'given three' hundred gulden to the wretched Mannert/ as the cilly compe'nsitti6h in his' peuiei foe:the initiry done him ;' the ptiblite Writh.was very nearly proceeding to LynCh Law ; ATV WaS scoured in the streets ; all his friends ttixtied away ficlm 'him in ton tetript ; Ift.‘itter nor Vtiy of his • fain tl i Y' Rhin d' rll of . conVaigdii !kW ;'ol his to erg, w iere to at . so on t ; .eon known reSpeeted, las -a ; re! igious, , 1 bonourabi,e, punctual citizen. With What I thonghts ho must haw endultd 1 thiS piniSlitifent;if he fete uldruscif initocentJ. Arliat•lie todity felt was , 1 neVer krieNfn to others than - his fzitni= ! 1 I 5 1 . 1. ; iiiir l Vvals l l, here "ev`dr •41ny, !'r eine as Whethcr 19 , e realLY codtihned:•to L 'Ett-Itete "iiitatt lie 1114 'SO-Let eitetfitstry 1 ; • - ;, ,After''stio.h-tase, the ';vaide of. a , howeveic statement, and however ilichimirable his -`zhiti•i t et e r 'necessiwily •• • became comparatively slight. No' twiY'per• sonii Would be likely to htuve had.pre, 4,lsely'the same illusion: , and) l'inieSs tvie;peitbris-swoav to a kat, juriSprut clOtkce''Vtrrprop'erij:' , :Seo tfte:Wittiestlieintin error: , ;-_ .A.dd ;tam untappy accused ? ' Publie opinidn of eotirse tartr4d • contpletely rountit: hfid 'every 461id ,, W11:s , anxititts-to heti) by a3 - mpathyl, or friendi.y: offices, tilos° 'Whom - it had ,. so'• unjustly Moir deftettli,' 4t, f i tetr• recerded' •Itow realty gorittps 'on db4.4tcps- and- .in beci•••holiabs. tissereed• that they had. al- Ways thotitit thciamtaedilVelT inno cent; but we max he s'ute tiatOtr.;tiris expost facto clOursightedness :Was abundantly procldiimed,:. '',Afaumett,in deed, had test I/ iSi wife, and,-his.child 'ion Weirs motireAess , j'-'• Scltonleben's younresirit4el ed. These grave ]'eyed ; but then 'seine extent be - simple good; mate ' their best to , mak get - what - vmS bike; PAYMENT:Ai' We-do not mue wonder that there ' nia T tif es t e , a •str Butler. .This hatred is not -oe. casione'd:by - politicil differences, be: cause his; political friends tahe as tie: Live a, part in it as Ails, ene mies,•but is ,produced by hi s.tyranei• cal; binvdering and "blowing" tots; he is:ft : dt: 'borne down beeltuse remov. ethriirn . command)- - --others havebeen removed and honored in tlteir, retkre ment,—but, he is mmed, because be willdelight to honor the r Many . acted, eir put.iti thesq Oppging times; i hp.:wjik bo Atopng tlw few who will. becronly :remearatbered—to be de- 1:07,Th llist" salt of true i ebidelit tro,2 , o9;ooo•lnedil ih e'x . pr4SslY Stated tiiat'Op are wanted defi- ChlllooB in the ,pr,evions Pennsylvania basitbus ;Ur tilled up all 4) ( 61' quotitS, it is:very 'hard , to- see ho w there can' ' defteiehey here of sonie..sitY hoventi thskigang • • („-• .Y 7 men,. when ; oar :whole gnota,iyas es than,that natnber on-tlias9opoOAL'etig. if :ft, is the 'design 15't 'the •• National Administration'• that"Pahasyl van ia. Ocitilds fi 1.43 - the defieleißlies of The abolition New England States, 3vp trust ' .fivelatle' will ff i l bSPOtittql d i deirti6, viAri oti 'job': , 'TJet.avaty tub' Standon - its own botibm, 'at'd l'et th Cover /, t` • enor anti" Leg!slature see 4,11 at, 4, is not tumbled over ,That, , ' ivilt we 4havesgot to say; • treason og,no tllol3ir. ,l ' 4 r ME if ala , AiSe'sfrikes" it few nibre such s)ikow s it!t, the' rebellion us he •EitTUPi !he.- T el A o,vec t .a * Ll als grficedillatiorsi,we,shall begin tnhuue little' oYei 114543•6 than we‘ 'laire - had fdr 'the The Ternoval . ef. , l4t9ter., had the, immediate * cense silence x_f:,thp fall V9yt ?ishei..- 7 - -,- The•J'attir*O4tig_hWty have , thiceo iiliteelftirhlid' not , been i)reced ed. - by , If the Pi eeident ~s ' cret'to listen to- we could point out, sto several other places, . mhere, he can strike equally effective r.blekva, if !he goes to work rigiik sm. About the :only stumbling- I blocks in the way of peace at this time 'are Lincoln and Davis. The 'peop* want peace, but these two 'n loth quariel, aid.'botb are too stubborn to yield unless they are sue dessful 'in their crotchets. Lincoln wants slavery abOlislia.l; and unless he gets that,',accoMplished he 'Wont, give up. Davis wants "separation," thitfpairitlie - i's just tfs stub= boil' as Lincoln. -The great mass of thp people north do not care three cents about slavery, so long as its at tempted abolition is' of eivilWitrand its attendanthon4rst The people South clnnto't want sep ration, if itSalt:oll4a' ae CO tti 14i Ai , meat lb to be a continuance of iimjai evils aura suffered 4by the 'North. When will these men' lay aside their ' passions, and itet'forthe goalt of hu mn.nity- by resforing . peAce 'to a suf- If6iina norilitilii ,A The Legislitiire has a bill be fore qt eon - v.1144r % the , Passenger Railroad Companies in Phitadelptkitt Wallow negroes-to - i , itivhr'their cars the 'whltes. Tbe AblitiOn ists that" '“‘eCtualit,y." ,Tbey should make the, bill a,general one, 'Admitting the "Colored. Cuss from Al;ieti," net only into' the, cars, but also intd Chitiches, Theitres.-and all other intblie and private Places. Then probably, by the middle of next Au gust they would beeosme cured of tile disease known as "Nigger on. the brain." alho a t great pity that the Legislature does not meet in Au gusti - and that abos.t ~a doxen big buck niggers are not 'mufflers and aecoinmodated Mediate vicinity of thd greatWO'S": piPe,:66-atOr SEir The. name of the Rev. DANISL STECK, formoHy of Lancaster, now of Dayton, , Ohio, has been ' dragged aboutiin a seurrillous manner, in nearly all - the abolition papers of the country; because he 'refused to pchnit his church to be,made Club!Room, and ehosa to • vote, fat, Gen. McClellan. The falhaticism and political rancor of his opponents di ildod his churebi*llfthis friends & WIWI:10U. build. a. new one, is now progressing mo§,t ; gloriously, His• present Congregation is -one of the laitest, most 'intelligent and at ten'tfCC' Daytt:in, and 11* leery is 520% per auc3tun,lie tlid not 'choose to•-say anything in reply to the ifh saultsnf the abolitionist§ upon him, Arntil , theiproper time, Which has now place 'who his Warm . friends next Week, a letter from himself, which e,xplains all the rancor antl.expliges ?lie falsehoods 'of 111C4thOlitiotiists"in this conWe . kikifr. e - Tito Alciivi \teen , in Pennsyl- Van* far fresideni; in Novembtor, l'9ljorteil '418f0I1OWS: ; Home vote LiheoiA . ''206 5 679 ;itivOlonan. ;,:263,967. Lincoln's innj. 5 'lli 14A64 - 7' 20;174 Tjm, i s noted que.ptiop being§ . ettled, we„slifiuW,iike . to see the official vote of therieleetion in October, in, Ws sintv 'VricTogt!.%F ,, AHE Agmr.ANo.''fikO. c4iitui e :(if.rott IVXDN*4II,Y,: 3 : 111)11 4tY:Rt — , 1865: :t7i4l• l ol` . o', 110111 defending 19'car IdretirTPtilit ths bee» 60ptured.','It 02) &wetly a.'COribined land "and "naval - Under the confrdanif of' 13.ref'6t .Vii4of/!ddlieral Alfred It. Ter- Whd Etki, Admiral Da 4 44 - D. " 3utle z etur ried fro; to"ft7VlON:shft-r -the preVicirs' fie liiiAfitt, Pot ter`thok tliefreet'in 136tinfort,Niitit tool IVortikr, ' ane t preisll2red- rdr sehorid VII'S re froin cnitiniincl; 'Gen: Te'rry \vas placed' at, the head of the troo is at Fortress `Atonhie:;;and' irndeP or ders, f - roni Washington,' 'be . once 'sailed to Behrifiitit'r At - this pe(ft, ' Jann'ary Stli; all .the land - kroolt 'and; nayal vessel s'w ere asselh led,prepar ed Tor - a - second expedition against :The land forces num bered about eight-thilusaritt `The dect 'ccirtilhq'd . fielil•ly' tihb !inn d. and'tiftY toinbined sailed." 6 oni'l3eaufort. The* lyerifhcr'vhiA gc, lo 4d - andthe'sca smooth onJanuary - I.lth, first Wednes day, the fleet had'all'arrived rie4B.lla rsontoro Inlet, on the Atlanfin coast,' ,aborit miles`rortir 'of For"t Fi'sh - or s.%Tlie ships re tit once prepared for battle, and 'the unfortunate expe rience-of - the, previous attack made th'e ihovements.ofthe larici and naval_ t . 'orees harnionioris: - 4 -0 a . Thursday th .ft vessels of the fleet appeared 01l foltt, And oh-Friday morn.: ing fift,..-Ferreritl vessels lvere ib close - proxibrity tb Ferc . .Pislieli% At' day dikhtthe icon if ds and frigate3ried.: wanted to thesilit'taeli - , ant -amt. - About ' 4 eikht o'clock horabardinearti was .begfun. i ne - shellinwriptlied.ith a t of% the -‘former attack ni 1 idtbrasityyr.94- was'kept up day: Tlie,!_ifort sol-4, -dom replied, the' stoinvot4shellr ing:too heavy for.: -. tlie.ance to labor at their guns.' Abont noon; under. the.; protection - :of - fleet of grin boatd„. preparritiorsAveriiimade torland eral-rilerry!s troops., strip ofiwoodo %lithe beach, about three miles:ribeirr ' llo`rt., Fisherpwas , shelled, to drive (the • r eonfederattetwritind the landing.llle-: ganalicLostTie:same spot:.,-vheret ...Bath& debar") twinail:whet...before, 411 h;landing - nras riop and.o to MEM '26,712 , 7.- - . , 206',491. ...12;349 21431,6 DM ing Friday and Friday night Terry succeeded in getting his entire force df eight thousand men on shore. During all this time the bombard ment of Fort Fisher continued. It was reaewed on Saturday with'egual force, and Terry began his prepara tions for another assault. A line of earthworks was' "constructed across the narro,-7 beach, between the ocean and Cape. Fear. river,,, and a, iportion -F of theederal troops placid in them. These worksfaced3owards the north; and were in tended' asiunproteetion I gainst any assault: which .:inigbt made by the Confederates, from Wil mington, upoethe Fiderat . i.ear dur ing the attack upon Gen.norryaleo,bkaotbA,A l s l l B 4lo - tientWakistowardsW 4 6 assist him while the attack was• be rig Matte. During all this time. the: bombardment of Fort Fisher by the fieet• wad kept op, and scancely a., gam was fired reply,. Being,thus unia ; terrupted, the Federal- laboring ,par-. ties progressed rapidly,: aid by noon on. Saturday : ciemithing was ready 'for the attack.:-An ; assaulting col umn of infantry was, at,once seat for-, ward against the northwestern anglj3 - of Fort Fisher. Another assaulting party, composed of Sailer§ and m.e. rill es, was advanced-lig& mit Ale north eastern ngle. half,past„threii the irdantry reached the * fort, and,ar-, terolong and bloody struggle suii ceeded in effecting a lodgment. The sailorarond marines who Advanced . gainst the other angle, were repulsed with heavy, loss. They . ,ware`Aiceordl ingly withdrawn, and sent to assist I the infantry column. Having, effected a lodgment, the Federal ,troops , :. gradually woi'kcd their waYalong the ramparts, driving. the Confederates from one bomb proof and traverse - to another, until, at ten o'clock in . ithe evening, the ea tire fort was captured and the: garri son driven out.. General Whitney and Colonel. Lead), with the Confed erate troops, retreated „south along Federitl„ Point, to New,,lnlet. They could retreat no. farther ; had no de fences ; and were captured. Both N'tidiftney and Lamb were,. wounded. AIL the works On Federal Point have been captured by the Federal troops . . Seventy-twocannon and a number of prisoners variously estimated at from ono Aiousand to twenty-five hundred, have been captured. Wit mington is not yet taken, It is thir ty miles north of Fort Fisher. The Cape Fear river is aikt closedby thie capttirei Wit has-another entrance south of New-Inlet. By judiciouh tuadmvering, howeVer, if the Confed erates-have no large force to.