Mit potato Nuttl4genctr, PUBLISHED EMT WEIMEZIDAT Br H. G. SMITH & CO H. G. SMITH A. J. STEINmAN TERMS—Two Dollars per annum, payable all cases In advance. THE LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGENCER IS ptlbllShea every evening, Sunday excepted, at 5 per Annum in advance. OFFICE—SOITTILIVInT COUNEB OF CENTRE &MARE. pioctliamoito. The Pirate's Thumb i.-TH 1.; A D 31 . 1 RA L . 'S RETURN It seems only yesterday that I was but six years old, and was standing on the lawn of our house, fourteen miles from Dorchester, holding my mother's hand, and, with my brother Ned, wait ing fur the arrival of my father, the ad miral, who had just landed from a cruise after slavers on Lite African coast. It was about the year 1783, and my father had written to 'tell my mother that he should post from Plymouth, where his vessel lay. The bells were clashing out in the village steeple for King George's birthday, but I, some how or other, associated all the rejoic ings with theanticipationsof my father's return. It was harvest, time, and the men were shouting across a distant up• land an they brought the last load home to the farm stackyard. Those shouts, too I blended somehow with the happy feeling of expectancy. Even the very sunset, that was Just reddening the sky, seemed to me almost an part of the cere monial, mid only a fitting compliment on no great an °evasion. My lather had been three years away, and I had but an imperfect recollection of anything but his severe, keen look, him uniform, his cocked hat, his satin knee-breeches, his white silk stocklugs and his gold-buckled shoes. I milieu'. beret!, too, his grave pacings after din- ner up and down the quarterdeck—an he called the suave by the front win down of our dining room—when the folding-doors were thrown optm. I re. : membered how he used to occasionally turn aside into the hal) and tap the big barometer, then shake his head, and resume his silent pacingl4. I remelt'. bared also, him having a mast erected in the Dutch garden, on which on cer tain days, the Union Jack was hoisted ! with a salvo from an old ship's cannon that, was kept In the harness•room.— My brother Ned, three yearn older than myself, had, when we were reading together, and resolving on becoming future Robinson Crusoes, ; taught not to associate any father with all the naval heroes who ever fought against, the enemies of England, from Drake and Frobisher dOWII to Blake and old lien how. 1 always, I know, pie• tured Idol erect on his quarter.deck, with his band on his sword, and Cl/1111011- shot as large as Dutch cheeses !lying • thick around hilll. Perhaps 1 and Ned partly derived this conlcw hat exaggera ted impression from all old engraving of Itenbow which hung in the dining• room. Our notion of au African cruise was boarding slavers, cutting down Navagu•looking men in straw hats, and wititphalf a dozen pistols in their belts, and splashing grape-shot inWscurrying fleets of black 110ni's many•paddled canoes. A small brown cloud of dust grew nearer and larger. Suddenly, from the brown cloud emerged a large yellow traveling carriage, four white horses, and two posit HMIs In scarlet jackets.— My mother gave a slight scream of de light—lt was my father. The carriage stopped; it tall, thin, grave man got quietly out; another moment, and my mother was in his arms; then lie turn• ed to us and kissed us composedly. He was a reserved man, and made no great display of affection. His luggage was a large telescope, a gray and red par rot, some charts, two valises, and his sword. " Why, papa," said \ed, looking up at the carriage," "you've gut Roldusuu Crusoe's Friday with you.. Look, mam ma—look, Fred ; it is, isn't it?" There way, indeed, ti blackservant In our uniform sitting grinning good-na• turedly ou the dickey, with a large, live tortoise under his arm. " Friday No; that's Monday,' said my father, smiling ; " his name, for that is the day we picked hint up, one hun dred and twenty miles front the Isle of Prance. There was henna his brother; they'd drifted in a canoe three hundred miles, and they were sinking when we found them. Weren't you, Monday.." '' Yes, we was, massa." "And, my dear," said my father to my mother, " I've taken hint us my Mblumn. Ile's too useful a lellow for a ship's cook. I sent his brother In the Thunderer to the \Vest Indies. We found hint very quarrelsome aud re vengeful." lontlay ventured a remark, lutensl tied by all oath,— " Ctesztr, him 111111 blootl up." bad temper, when " Mmiday," said my father, " no more swearing now you're on land. Remem ber, footmen never swear." My mother looked rather alarmed at the new domestic, mid drew tie hack from the tortoise, who had just put out Lis bead snail-like to reconnoitre his new quarters. "Polly, my dear," said my father, "Monday saved my life in Old Calabar. A shark had all but snapped me, but he dived under him with a knife. Didn't you Monday "Caught him under third rib, Massa (laminar ; but them ground shark berry hard to , " Monday,'' said my father, "no one ever swears in England except oa board ship." "Berry true, massa—dumb, massa— berry true, No one swear in Englund— not even postilion, when wheel come off, ah "Quite right, Monday," said my father, smiling at the man's quickness; "1 forgot. Yes, postilions sometimes do. But mind, Monday, If you Imitate postilions, though you have no wheel to come off, you go back to sea and the caboose install ter. Now, mind that, my man." Years wont on, and Monday grew into one of the most faithful and admirable of servants. My poor father was killed In the great battle of the glorious let of June, and Monday became not only a playmate but a sort of guardian to us boys. He climbed walnut-trees for us, he scaled old ruins for hawks' nests, he laid our night-lines for us, he drove oil violent bulls that chased us in meadows intersected by " trouty " brooks, and he even fought farmers' men who caught us under suspicious circumstances in cherry orchards. A daring though a a bad rider, he broke in wild colts for our speciallle followed us in coursing, heitelpal us in ferreting; in fact, till we went to Rugby, and from there to college, Monday was our in separable henchman, a servant of whose entire trust wort hi ness my mother nevereutertained a mistrustful thought. On one occasion, and one occasion only, at a village club Festival, Monday got drunk, and fought in succession four champions of a rival parish who had dared to uphold republican opinions, praise the French, and deprecate Lord Howe's victory. 'lnc quantity of beef forced upon Monday by his admirers on this occasion, however, finally led to his doleful f a ll—in fact, to tell the sober truth, to several falls. It was the year before I attained my majority that the failure of a bank at Exeter, and a long series of frauds and forgeries committed by our too-trusted family lawyer, reduced my mother's property to a bare four hundred a year. It became, therefore, necessary for Ned to at once relinquish his intention of entering the Engineers, and for me to abandon my hope of distinguishing my self at the bar. It wits a hard struggle, particularly for Neill but we did It, and both entered the house of a West Indian firm—Mulford and Suargate, in Abchurch Lane, our mother living with us in verynice lodgings In Gower street, where Monday—now a man about thirty-five years of age—continued our faithful and devoted servant, just as cheerful, willing, and indefatigable as he had been when lie was first set down at our door in Doreetshire _fourteen years before with a live tortoise under his arm. It was, I think: in the third year of our mercantile life that our head part ner, Mr. Mulford, one morning called me into his room, where Ned was at work with him auditing some Jamaica accounts. " Gambler, my boy," he said, looking up from the red lines he was ruling in an enormous ledger, and handing rue a bank-note, "I want you to go to the post-office with this oue thousand pound note. Put it In an envelope at once, and direct it to our consignees; Haber fleld and Holmwood, John Street, Bris tol. Mind, post it with your own hands; for it -must reach before to-morrow night;to catch the vessel for Barbadoes. ,Here, .Ned has got some news of your bleak servant's brother from a West Indian paper."' "0, Fred—" Ned began. "NOt a word now, Ned," said Tr,!.: . ': 34anti4teti sttteltilytt,?/c., BU, VOLUME 69 Mulford severely. "Go on. Three slx four, sixteen two." "Three six four sixteen two." I left them at their work, and went • into my own room. I found two ship brokers waiting to see me, and Monday with a message from my mother, upon • some business she wished me to see her lawyer about. It wan ted only twenty minutes to the post time. In my hurry and vexation I • hastily directed the letter with the bank- I note, and gave it to Monday, with spe : clal directions to post it. Monday told me afterwards that he had punctually j posted it ten minutes before the box j closed. The Jamaica paper Ned referred to contained bad news of Cresur. He had long become drunken, vicious, thievish, and mutinous, and had once narrowly escaped the yard arm for stabbing a boatswain when off Madagascar. The • paper went on to say, that„ on June 7, IKOI, while the Thunderer lay on Lagos River, Cfusar had Jumped overboard with the Intention of desert , lug, lie was seen in the water, and a bout Instantly lowered to pursue him. J All at once a shark was seen to turn and snap at him, and presently blood rose to the surface of the water. The sailors stopped rowing, horror-struck, , and pulled back to the vessel. A shout I from the deck, a howl, lu fact, of rage I and horror made them turn round; they then saw Cresur rising, nut fur from the shore, turd taken on board a fourteen-puddled canoe, which instantly pulled up a muddy creek, and passed out of sight under the mangrove • brunches. Directly they reached the vessel they discovered the pause of that heart-rending shout. Fiesta had leaped overboard, out or revenge, with the rap lain's child—a line troy, the delight of his father turd the crew, and, being chased by a shark, had thrown him the child to stop Ills pursuit. We told this horrible story to Monday, who seemed to take It deeply to heart. Ile tossed Ills arms up, and tears came into his eyes. ' "Sunni father," he said, " t hearts. Him always bery bad when blood up. Old nigger nurse told o n e he , struck great monkey Atlsh when he could hardly walk. 'ISVII,pl!,111101( , Massa Gambier, but no 'snipe Debit, 1 think." ' To our utter astonishment and Intl ' idle regret, two days after that, Mon day, who had been sent with a money letter and Koine messages to the West India Docks to a captain of one of our vessels, never returned. Wesel a Bow Street runner to search for hint, we in formed the patrol all through Bother ' halm and Wapping, we wrote to a magistrate, we advertised, but all in vain—Monday never returned. "What do you think ~l' the bust ,ll eSti I said to Ncd one tinny in the office. "It could u't be that twenty pounds." I thought Ned would have struck me, but he only said coldly,— "Fred, I am ashamed of you. Busi ness makes you cruel and suspicious. I would trust Monday, even now, with the Bank of England and never care to count the gold first. Just then 111 r. 11ulford entered the of lice, hot and agitated. " Here's a })rutty thing," he said, " Gauthier; that one thousand-pound note has never reached Haberlield and Huhn wood. Are you sure you put it in yourself:"' I felt the blood rush to my head and my brain swim us I replied miteringly— "NO, I was very busy at post-time. I sent it by Monday." "Then that's what the villain bolted with, of course," said Mr. Mulford. • I hung my head like a detected schoolboy: I felt bitterly the result of my carelessness, the hopelessness of re pairing it. Ned thoughtfor a moment, and bit his pen. Then he rose and jammed on his hat. "No," he said, "I still believe in Monday,—the note has been lost. Fred. let us run to the post-ollice and make inquiries. Strange things sometimes happen to men of business in a hurry; and unless I hear Monday own it, I will never believe he took that looney. My belief with the second lot is, that he was decoyed into some brandy shop, and there drugged and murdered. No, I'll never give up my belief in Monday." "The delay with that money may ruin our consignees," said Mr. Mulford. "They will not send the sugar vessels till they hear, and so we shall lose the market, 0, young 111011, unwise young man, how could you ever trust that black seoundrel .."' I put on my hat, and I and Ned ran like madmen to Lombard street. No hackney-coach could keep puce with us at all. We rushed breathless into the Lost-Letter 011 ice—then a shambling, miserable little room, ill-ordered and lazily superintended by three or four careless, badly paid clerks. We told them cautiously that we had lost a let ter posted on such a date, and directed to Messrs. Haberfield and liohnwoud, Joint Street, Bristol. No,—no Aid' letter in the pigeon holes. " Or perhaps," said Ned, " in a hurry, misdirected Messrs. Daherfield and Holm wood, Bristol street, London." "No." This reply was said with a cold reserve. "Or perhaps," said I, "to Messrs. Mulford and tivargate, Abelturcli street, Bristol.'' The clerk looked over the minim, as if beaten at a game of skill, and slowly handed me a letter. My heart seemed to swell as large as a quartern loaf. It was the letter, the seal was unbroken. My eyes and Ned's met,—he too saw it was the letter. "What is there to pay ?" said I, coolly. "Sixpence." I paid the sixpence. I never parted with sixpence with less regret, and we hurried out of the office. I tore open the envelope, which was covered with postmen's annotations. There was the bran new thousand-i.ouud note. We danced for juy. "So poor Monday was innocent after all, you see, Fred," cried my brother. I was almost too pleased to care whether he was or was not. Pour years after this remarkable and fortunate recovery, my brother Ned went out to Jamaica, to conduct our agency there, and I became a junior partner in the firm in Abchurch Lane. Ten mouths after my brother's depar• tore, I received time following letter from him, dated Kingston, Jamaica, August, 1805: My DEAR Br:MUER: But I need scarcely recapitulate the commercial details of the prices of sugar and rum with which the letter com menced. It ended thus: I have now something to tell you that will indeed astonish you. We have been tormented for six months past by a pirate schooner, that has intercepted our fishing vessels, and once or twice carried off the smaller merchant ships between here and Cuba, and New Or leans. The vessel was commanded, it was reported, by a negro—a runaway man-of-war's man—ii rascal of sonic parts, and of equal courage and cruelty. The momenta small vessel came within range, this bloodthirstyscoundrel would hoist his black flag, pour in two or three broadsides, and instantly board,his men dashing in hand-grenades and bottles full of gunpowder with a match in each, and leaping down on the terrified crew, sabre and knife in hand. The moment they took a vessel this monster used to nail down the hatches, put sentinels at the cabin doors,then call up the crew and passengers one by one, and put them to various horrible deaths. Well, this sort of thing went on for some time, till at last we Kingston people grew rather savage, and determined, cost what might, to burn out this hornet's nest So Alfred Dawson (that's one of our magistrates) hired one of the largest and fastest schooners that could be got at Porto Rico, manned it with a tremend ous devil-may-care crew of volunteers from this island, and mined us all to the teeth. He then—very clever it was— turnedthe vessel into a fire•ship, stuffed It full of powder everywhere; if we were beaten, we could then pretend to desert the vessel, and leave it with a time-match burning, and if the beasts drove us off, we could part from them with a fair chance of sending them nicely up to the moon. We set out one line day, and sure enough,- two hours from Kingston, who should bear down upon us but El Negl*Capitano, all hot. Their, first well-aimed shot brought down one of our masts, and before we could recover, the confusion of this, their boarders were on us. We stood firm to receive them, but they poured down In such numbers—Creoles, Mes tijos Negroes, Spaniards, Maroons; straw hats, red nightcaps, felt hats— tliat they pooa drove us to the quarter. deck, with heavy loss, too, work our cutlasses and boarding-pikes as we ' might,—and as, by Jove, we did, for our blood was now pretty well up. Well, we were outnumbered, that s a fact. ! There was no standing six to ten. We made for the boats, and -lowered them pretty quick, too, those who were left of us. Most of us got down safe,—l among them, but not by any means first,—Fred still pelted shot, and Just as I we were pushing oft' who should I see ; grinning through the boarding netting above but El Negro Capitano himself; and who do you think this El Negro Capitano was? Why our Friend Mon , day,—fact! 0, I shall never believe in human nature again. Only think of that laughing fellow who used to carry us on his shoulders, and help us to steal old Farmer NVood's apples. The worst of It, however. to finish, was that the rogues put out the match, and saved the ; ship for their own use. Ned was quite right' Three years after this El Negro Capitano grew so desperate and troublesome to the Ja i maica merchants, that three armed schooners were fitted out to follow him to the Terapin Key, the little sand Island Which_ Monday had fortified. The resistance wag desperate, but two thirds of the pirates were eventually ' shot down, and ho and four of his otlicers were taken, and sent to Eng land for trial. I was abroad at the time on business; when I returned the trial ! was over, and Monday and his four comrades were swinging in chains at Itiarkwall Point. Mr- Mulford went to the trial, and recognized ouriblack foot , man, now scarred, ferocious, and des ' perate, but he was unable to obtain leave to visit him afterwards in the condemned cell. I saw from the papers I hat the villain fought desperately, in Ills press room as he was being pinion , ed, and nearly strangled two of the turnkeys and the hangman's assistant. Iv.—TIEE coossmi NEAR THE BASIC. --dt wise about th ice years after the trial that I and Ned, (just returned from Jamaica) were walking down Cheap side, full of talk of old friends and old dun's. I Was propounding, to his in ' finite amusement, an old eccentric theory of MI nu about transmigration— " diving" us I culled it. "Men conic up again," I said, "de pend upon it, Ned; same faces, same characters, with fresh bodies, that's all. 1 met Francis the First yesterday, driv ing a Kensington 'bus—thelong big nose, small mouth, piggy eyes ; lie was porn pous, gallant, and full of light as ever. No use talking to him about that im prisonment in Spain, but the same man. Socrates—snub nose, high cheekbones, big brow, look of coarse honesty—keeps a second-hand book shop in Holborn. 1 saw Henry the Eighth the other day at a butcher's door in Newguto Market. He's a Mormon now, and has written anti-papal pamphlets on Spiritual Wives. 0, they come up again ; they've only been hiding." Ned laughed, and said, "Mad as ever." Then we agreed to call for Jones, man we knew in Lothbury, and go and dine at Greenwich, at the Trafalgar; , and so we did. We had the Dolphin room, and after dinner went out on the balcony to see the grand old river turn into Burgundy in the sunset; then, as twilight came on, the vessels and barges grow more spectral, and steal by in a ghostly fashion. " Perhaps," suggested Ned, as he sip ped his claret, " those vessels are bring ing back sum of your divers. Suppose we found El Negro Capitano a cook on board a :Margate steamer Be kind enough, old boy, to touch that bell.— They've got very good weeds here, I'm told." All at once, as we leaned over the balcony smoking, \ed, who was always full of fun and adventure, proposed a wild scheme. "Suppose, Fred," he said, holding his cigar up like a torch, "we wait till the moon rise—it rises early to-night, and it is ayoung one, it won't give too much light—and then we take a boat, pull to Blackwell Point, andsee that oid friend of ours, that horrible rascal, Monday ; I want a lock of his curly hair as a keep sake. I want to look at the black ar ticle under the microscope." " But suppose we were seen by the river patrol, there'd be a pretty row. It would look very nice, Frederick and Edward Gambier, City .Alerchants, re spectably dressed men, charged with stealing a lock of hair from the pirates' gallows at Blackwell Point. 0, it'll never do." " Nonsense, Fred, plsh. I thought you'd more courage." " 0, there's no danger," said Jones, a quiet sort of second-fiddle man, who had been eating and drinking placidly. "They'd only think we were examin ing them ; or perhaps take us for sail ors, imbibing the moral effects that Townsend brags of as derived from such ghastly exhibitions. Come along, boys." We ordered coffee, took a " Uloria," paid our bill, and off we went. We hired a boat and pulled it ourselves, singing a West Indian negro war-chant as we darted rapidly, and with a steady stroke, to the quiet bend of the river where the ghastly triple framework stood dark against a sky just flushed with the earliest dawn of moonlight. The last red glowof the sunset gleamed behind the black framework of the gib bet, wherefrom dangled the five hideous. shrivelled bundles. A crow, late to roost,hovered near, looking through the wire network. "By Jove, here they are," cried Ned, driving the boat's nose up into the black sludge, from which stuck out one or two dry and muddy reeds. Ned and I laid down our oars and leaped on shore, leaving Jones with the boat. " Give us a back," cried Ned, and he was up on my shoulders in a moment, close to the body of El Negro Capitano. " Look alive," I said, " Ned ; you're heavier than you used to be, and I shouldn't like to be caught.'' He drew his knifeout, cut something, then jumped down, and we made for the boat. "0, it was Monday; I knew the rascal's shrivelled face in a moment. It looks cruel, even now, as if he washing ing to cut our throats, if he wns'nt pin ioned. Here's my souvenir of him." lie held up in triumph his trophy; it was not a lock of dry black wool—it was the pirate captain's thumb. " There, Government will never miss that," he said, "Now then, Jones, back water, and give way all." Ned was silent for a moment or two (au unusual thing for him) as we pulled back to Greenwich. "Well," said he, "Fred," after some five minutes, "it beats me still, tothink how that Monday could have gone to the bad so suddenly. I shall always keep separate in my mind the old ser vant, and the pirate the brute after wards became." It was the day after this little adven ture, and Ned's acquirement of his keepsake, that my brother and myself were coming down Cornhill, on our way to the Bank. Ned had been bantering me again about the "Divers," aud ask ing we to show him one. . . "There," said I, poiriting to a passing scavenger's cart; "look at that dirty lellow driving; so hard, so vicious, so crafty and cruel. Do you know him?" Ned Uid not, by any means. "That," said I, grandiloquently, "Is Ca3sar Borgia. I know him directly from the old medals of him shown me at the Museum by Mr. Vauz, only ten days ago. Couldn't mistake him. But hush, I see he does not wish to be recognized, and he has just stopped yis cart at the Yorkshire Gray for a glass of gin." Fred was fond of this wild Bedlamite theory of mine, and laughed as usual in his hearty, frank, joyous way. "Come, cross over," he said; "we must call on that stockbroker just op posite the Bank." Just as we crossed, an old negro cross ing -sweeper came across the road to wards us with extended hand, for the usual penny. We came full butt against him. Ned drew back, and laid hold of my arm. I confess I felt my flesh creep and my eyes dilate. The sweeper himself dropped his broom, and seized one hand of Ned's and one of mine. It was Monday, come down from the gibbet,—Monday, there could be no doubt, for there was qhe same large droll eye, the same form and manner, more wrinkles, white hair, but still the same man. Ho was almost hysterical in his de light, so we drew him to the entrance of a passage in Threadneedle street. "0 Massa Fred," he said, "0 Massa Ned, how mother? How dear missus? 0 dear, 0 Lor', you thought Iran away with twenty pound twenty-eight year ago; no, no, not old Monday. Prem., LANCASTER PA. WEDNESDAY MORNING JANUARY 15 1868 gang seized him at Wapping, took him off to Indian station—kept there ten years—then run away—never asked to go—came back to London—got this crossing—made money here. Last week Alderman Woodman—good man, pass here every day to business—left me a hundred pounds. 0, ten years I have got that twenty pounds of yours, Massa Uambler dear, and brought it daily to this very crossing, hoping to see you— hear ofyou. Here it is." As Monday said this he drew from a side pocket of his long soiled scarlet waistcoat a small, greasy bag of gold, and pushed it into my hands. Tears sprang into .ny eyes; as for Ned, who was always more impulsive than myself, he walked away for about twenty yards, and then turned back obviously red about the eyes. We both shook Monday by the hand, and he grinned and danced round us, careless of the whole world beside. "But, Monday," said Ned, severely, as if still almost doubting the truth, and looking scrutinizingly in Monday's face, " how did this arise—this murder at Jamaica, your turning pirate captain? Who was it, if it wasn't you, who was tried at the old Bailey, and is now swinging in chains at Black wall Point ? Moreover—mind now, man, you're on your oath—let me see, have you got two thumbs?" Monday smiled quietly, and held out his hands. The thumbs were safely on. Then he sighed, and beat his broom thoughtfully on the ground. "I wan at that trial, manna. That was brother Ciesur ; bad lot—bery bad when him blood was up. Neber liked white man after Captain of Thupderer gave him two hundred .lash—blood always up after that." The Dutchman who had the "Small. Pox." The writer sat alongside the driver ono morning, Just at the break of day, us the stage drove out of Blackberry ; he was a through passenger to Squash Point. It was a very cold morning. In order to break the ice for conversation, he praised the line points of the oil' horse; the driver thawed. " Yeas, she'sagoot hose, and I know's how to drive him." It was evidently a case of mixed breed. Where is \Vood, who used to drive this stage "He be's laid up mit to ter rumatlz, Hence yester week, and I trives for him. So"—I went on reading a newspaper. A fellow passenger„on a back seat, not having the fear of murdered English on his hands, coaxed the Dutch driver into a longconversation, much to the delight of a very pretty Jersey-blue-belle, who laughed so merry that it was contagious; and in a few minutes, from being like unto a conventicle, we were as wide awake as one of Christy's audiences. By sunrise we were in excellent spirits, up to all sorts of fun, and when, a little later, our stage stopped at the first water ing-place, the driver found himself in the centre of a group of treaters to the distilled Juiceof apples: " Here's a pack• age to leave at Mrs. Scudder's--the third house on the left Land side after we get into Jericho. What do you charge?" asked a man who seemed to kuow the driver. "Pout a lefty," answered he. "Ter fird haus on ter lefthaud out of Yerlko?" On we went at a very good rate, con sidering how heavy the roads were.— Another tavern, more watering, more apple jack. Another long stretch of sand, and we were nearing Jericho. " Auny porty know der Miss Scutter haus?" asked the driver, bracing his feet on the mall bag, which lay in front of him, and screwing his head round so us to face in. "I don't know nobody o' that name in Jericho, do you, Lishe?" asked a weather beaten looking man, who evi dently "went by water," of another who evidently went the same way. "There was old Squire Gow's da'ter, she married a Scudder, and moved up here some two years back. Come to think on't guess she lives nigher to Glasshouse," answered Lishe. The driver, finding he could get no light out of the passengers, seeing a toll raw-boned woman washing some clothes iu front of a house and who flew out pf sight as the stage flew in, handed me the reins us he jumped from his seat and chased the fugitive hallooing, "I'fe got to small pox, l'fe got der--." Here his voice was lost as he dashed into the open door of the house. But in a minute he reappeared, followed by a broom with an enraged woman an nexed, and a loud voice shouting out: "You git out o' this! clear yourself quick. 1 aint going to have you dis easing honest folks if you have got the small pox!" "I dells you I'fe got der small pox. Ton't you versteh! der small pox!" " Clear out ! I'll call the men folks ; if you don't clear!" and at once she shouted, in a tip-top voice, " Ike ! you Ike! where air you?" Ike made his appearance on the full run. " IV-what's the matter, mother?" "I deli you onct more, for der last dime. I have got der small pox unt Mishter Ellis he gifs me a lefty to gif der small pox to Misses Scutter, and if dat vrow is Miss Scutter, I promised to gif her ter small pox." It was Miss Scudder, and I explained to her that it was a box he had for her. The affair was soon settled, as regarded delivery; but not as regarded the laugh ter and shouts of the occupants of the old stage coach, as we rolled away from Jericho. The driver joined in, although he had uo earthly idea as to its cause, and added not a little to it by saying, in a triumphant tone of voice— "I von pount to gif ter old vomans ter small pox!" A Visit to Thrum rowers' Studio I visited Hiram Powers, the sculptor, to-day, and must tell you a word about him. We found him. engaged with a party of gentlemen when we first en tered his studio, but after tiller departure he received us in his private room with great politeness. You all know how lie looks, for many writers have sent you vivid pictures of his noble forehead, deep-set, piercing eye, and his classic contour. The long iron-gray locks fall lightly on his massive shoulders, and his whole appearance inspires one with pleasure, ease and confidence. When he stood with his'chisei in his hand, working on a new piece which is to astonish the world of art, "It represents," said he, The last of her tribe,' and my idea, that she should flee before the march of civi lization, the weak before the strong." It is an Indian girl in the act of fight; one foot on the ground—the arm ex tended or rather reaching forward with au eager fear depicted on the averted countenance. " I shall put a wampum girdle around her waist, and moccasins on her feet," he said, " for we must have a body, before we clothe it, you know." He showed me the first at tempt he ever made at modeling in clay —the head of au infant, a beautiful lit tle gem, and as he says, "as good as anything he can do now." When eighteen years of age, while working on wooden clocks, he occupied his spare moments for twelve months, in model ing this little bust—his first attempt, and the beginning of a successful and brilliant career. He has not visited his native land for 30 years, and though pressed with work every moment, will endeavor to leave for America during the coming year. There are ten men at work on different marbles, both ideal and portraits, and their skill in copying from the models of their master is quitesurprising. The Greek slave is being copied again from the original model, which I saw, and when finished will be the sixth copy. He has an ideal bust which he calls "America," a beautiful face—more Gre cian than Columbian, and a mixed ex pression, in which you read determina tion and modesty, firmness and gentle ness, purity and holiness, shining from the cold marble. This is Hiram Powers' idea of America. I noticed from his conversation .that he was much disap pointed, and perhaps grieved with the decision of Congress, which gave Clarke Mills the statue of Washington to cut from marble. He thinks it hardly a fair thing, and with thebelief that " his dog is better than any other man's dog," he holds that Mills is incompetent for the execution of such a statue. We left our countryman with many expressions of gratefulness for the kind reception he had given us. Verp , Doubtful With all the tinkering of the radicals of Congress to get the ten Outside Southern States reinstated on the bads of negro su premacy in season for the Presidential elec tion, will they succeed? Very doubtful. Without those States will they succeed in the Presidential election? Very doubtful. Will they head off Andy Johnson? Very doubtful—lV. Y, Heivqd, I, The Political Situation What An lonest Radical Thinks of It. The New York Tribune gives especial prominence to a letter from a special Washington correspondent, from which we make the following extracts: The session of Congress thus far has been chaotic. Nothing has been done, became no one has seemed to know , what to do. Impeachment died Ignobly n i with saarcely enough friends to give it decent burial. There can be no doubt that the Impeachment attempt injured us. It gave Mr. Johnson the courage of Insolence. It fell upon the party like a shower of rain, and especially when It was mtended by the reaction against Reputlicanism in the October elections. Then, also, came the Financial ques tion. The Western people are sensitive and restless about the finances, and we have Antler making just such an appeal as Jeer. Cade made to the men of Kent: " There shall be in England seven half penny loaves sold fur a penny; the three-hooped pot shall have ten hoops ; and I will make it felony to drink small beer " The Reconstruction measure comes once again. We have tried to make this complete; but Mr. Johnson's vindictive earnestness, coupled with the cunning of Judge Black, has made it impos4ble• The Tenure-of-Wilma bill —violated in the person of Stanton--still remains reft and torn, and Stanton is as much am, of our politics now us though he were dead—or au ex-President. For a gentle, easy fading of reputations, com• mend me to this dear old dusty town. "Where Is the brilliant and rising Gab by front the Rock Mountain District"' " !—Gabby ! yes; splendid genius— bu t he was beaten by Rocket, and keeps a tavern in Montana.'' So long as Stnnton was God of War, he was wor• shined; he lied organs end courtiers; but now, when his name on a lieuten ant's commission would not be worth a smitht.reen, lie Is forgotten. Probably they may crowd him in when the Sen ate mitts. But people care very little about .t. The woes of Stanton—lmpeachment —the irenchlng storm of the October Equinox, which came down upon the poor Radicals so dreadfully—Butler's financial Jack Cade notions—are all for gotten In the Presidential handicap: " C. s. Grunt, b. IL, aged; dutn, Victory, sired by West faint.—hidden by E. 13. Wushherne. Colors, red, white und,blue —with u black hoop." If you will allow the racing calendar text, I thus give you the favorite horse in the present handicap. It looks very much is if our betting man had it ar ranged that he should be formally en tered at Chicago. I use "handicap" in a more expressive sense than a mere form o!speecti. Grant is the favorite horse in the political betting-books. Every jockey and tramping man of the Republican party shouts for him. The amountof shouting is wonderful. There is so mpch organized enthusiasm and disciphoed spontaneousness: "Ask no questions—answer none—merely hur• rah, bo3s." This is theGrantidem Then we have Mr. Washburne himself. The good "father of the "House" has gen• erally baeu a stern fattier—unrelenting and ezacting—a perfect old Squire Western, and apt at any time to bring down his cane upon the back of any poor yuing, member who came within the range Mills gouty toes. Ask Roscoe Conklirg fora youthful experience—say about 07egon War-debt times! What a dear old father he is now !—a perfect, blessed, heavenly old gentleman—lras cibility mellowed into Benignity—full of dimiles, and cheeriness, and good humor, with a sort of " Bless you " my dear chi.dren," stealing over his face as he walks down the House of a morning. The young members cuddle around him as a perfact Kriss Kringle, and, for the first time in his Congress career, Mr. Colfax finds that he is not the most popular titan in the House. No, no, gracious Mr. Speaker; the man who carries tiese foreign missions and things in his picket is the man of men to day. This is the jockey who trains the fast horse Ulysses—who teaches him his paces, and what gait he shall take, when lie shall trot, and when he may canter. And there never was a more favorable investment! See how the trading men crowd around his paddock and caress him. The number of "original Grant men "—sf men who discovered his merits years ago—who stood by him and believed in him—and who saw in his modest, quiet face the features of a second Washington—passes compre thension I doubt if ever a man was more "believed in." The admiration with which Captain Cuttie regarded his' marine comrade Mr. Bunsby was noth ing to it. When he writes his letters are gold. No man since Bacon ever wrote such letters. When he speaks it is the voice of the ‘sliver-tongued.— When he neither writes nor speaks, then we see something Platonic or So cratic iu his silence. The ashes from his cigar, yeti, and the smoke that rises' froah the ashes, are full of statesman- I shi). You hear his praises on all sides. Blidr and Forney praise him, although people remember that Blair and Forney hale the most unlimited admiration of success, anti have praised every Presi dent since Jackson. They keep house here, and make a business of it! .4 it wise, say many of our most thinghtful men, to make a soldier a clultlidate? Are we to take the advice of tiose leaders who insisted upon in doliing Mr. Johnson long after his tre4ison begun to work ; who feared the Frsedinan's Bcreau bill was unnecessa ry,dimi „Manhood Suffrage the greased cartridge of the Sepoy, and who demand the nomination of negative military candidates? The candidate may be grent soldier ; his character may have civic beauty as well as military glory ; lie may be"indorsed" by radical politi cians. Any of these considerations might be pleaded in behalf of a military nomination. They are not pleaded. • We must have a military man as the candidate of necessity. The4e men find sun.iess dearer than principle, and prefer an easy campaign with au uncertain leaner to a manly fight at every odds for liberty and justice. The Republican party should certainly meet this ques tiot : Should success in war be the highest recommendation to the Presi dency? Our best men had hoped later years would give us the moral strength to to in this respect what no party in this country has everyet done. With the exception of Washington, we have had no military President competent to deal liberally with affairs of State. It is customary to say this of Jackson. We cannot honor the man with the highest honor who debased the public morals by fostering corruption, and who regarded the country very much as he did his plantation in Tennessee, and the public officers to be kept as well under the whip as his negro slaves. The edu cation of the mere soldier unfits him for civil responsibilities. His life is spent in camps or forts, on the Indian frontier, or in circumlocution offices, drowsily winding red tape. One of the greatest modern thinkers has shown how few of theeiementsof character thatcontribute to greatness are needed in the successful military commander, and names Crom well, Washington, and Bonaparte as the only three men in modern times who knew how to command an army and also how to govern a nation. The experience of men and books—the knowledge of political economy and civil law—the serenity of temper so necessary to a ruler—are almost impos sible to a military man inactive service. Hls profession is lawlessness, his discipline tyranny. His education teaches him not to make men happy, but to give them utility and force. His virtue is the bayonet, his law a cannon. He is surrounded by soldiers. With an education limited to the stern re quirements of a military command, he finds the Presidency surrounded by poll ticians,.who flatter him, and pander to the very weakness which it would be wisdom to curb. He is slow to recog nize the sacredness of law. He chafes under authority and precedent. His Constitution is a general order; his Su preme Court a corporal's guard. Ac customed to absolute power, it is not in his nature to surrender it. So, when a critical Congress ruffles him, or his policy is overruled, the temper of his mind is to regard it as he would a break to his line, and order up his artillery. A President like Johnson, with mili tary ideas, would' most probably have replied to the exasperating speeches of Sumner and Stevens by a couple of batteries on Capitol Hill. Freedom is almost incompatible with a military spirit. A warrior who rises by his sword cannot always resist the tempta tion to rise 'still higher on the shields of his soldiers, Because the halting, cowardly, and timeserving policy of the Republican party led, to its defeat at the recent elec tions, they must enter a new campaign with a soldier candidate. The party does not want a soldier; if it had car ried Pennsylvania, it would have done without him. But this is the hour of its despair, and only a soldier can save it. This argument—resting only upon necessity—is urged in spite of reason, experience, and common sense. There is not a politician here of any party with skill enough to do the rule of three who does not feel that military service is the lastqualitication for the Prealdeny. Philadelphia Photographed. William Wirt Sikes has a graphic pa• per upon Philadelphia in the January Northern Monthly. We quote a few passages: A delightful aspect of Philadelphia life is that which is presented by the personal appearance of its better classes. The young men of that city are cele brated for their manly beauty, their clear, rudy complexions, their erect, compact, well-rounded figures, their bright eyes. There is less dissipation among the youth of Philadelphia than among those of any other of our great towns. Young Philadelphia can play billiards without madness; it can drink its wines at parties without feeling re quired to get hilariously drunk ; it can patronize bar-rooms without turning them into scenes of wild orgy; and it can go to the theatre in the evening without thinking it a duty, as a climax to its joys, to adjourn to a supper room afterward, and get to bed at three o'clock in the morning with the seeds of a thun derous headache sown in the jaded stomach. The same general truths apply with equal force to the other sex In Philadel phia. Girls trip along Chestnut street in rosy loveliness which would put to shame the whitened Fifth avenue lady. With both sexes there is a modesty of costume which tunes the whole human aspect of the town. English travelers, who have formed some conception of our great cities from their readings pre vious to coming over, generally have an Idea that the Philadelphians, as a rule, wear drab coats, shad•belly In cut, and broad-brimmed hats, shading smoothly shaven faces. They pass through New York, where attire Is often so very " loud" as to suggest the roar of Broad way, and coming to Philadelphia find, instead of a city 01 Quakers, a city of Englishmen. The well-dressed men of Philadelphia affect the English style of attire, and detest the French. They cultivate side-whiskers as a specialty They know a New Yorker as soon as they see him—firstly, by his moustache; ,econdly, by his yawn, and his air of being immensely bored. Literature, as a prgfession, does not flourish in Philadelphia to any extent at all approaching that of the other great cities. To earn one's bread and butter by literature is of itself sufficient to close the door of genteel society upon the scribbler, no matter how able he may be. The newspaper craft of Philadelphia seems to be composed of remarkably steady-going, industrious, well be haved, and, in many cases, even well bred (in the fashionable sense) people, who have in them no more trace of what we, in New York, term Boheini anism, than they have of the blood of the Ciesars. One of New York's most prominent leaders of fashion is connect with literature; and the newspaper men and authors, who are familiar guests to the most ultra select of New York's so• cial aristocracy, may be named by scores. In Philadelphia I know of but one instance of the kind, and in that in stance the favored (I) person is a man of great wealth; as to his connection with types, that is endured merely, with a shrug of the shoulders and a regret that he should not be in a more re spectable business. Perhaps It may not be wrong to mention one or two names of Philadelphians well known in liter ature for purposes of illustration—Mrs. Rebecca Harding Davis, for example, and Mr. George H. Boker. A lady like Mrs. Rebecca Harding Davis would be a lion in the most fash ionable circles of Boston. In New York she would not be unknown in those circles if she chose to move In them, and, If she chose to avoid them, she might still move in a circle where let ters are the symbol of aristocracy. In Philadelphia, fashionable society knows no such person. As for literary society, there virtually is none In Philadelphia. The Asronoolnollon or Colonel Sonehes The assassination of Colonel Platon Sanchez. the Mexican Liberal, who was President of the court-martial which tried Maximillian, on the road from Catorce to Sun Luls, on the 18th of last mouth, was but a token, and a significant one, of the inevitable revo lution in Mexico. His executioner was Domingo Perez, an ex-Sergeant of Maximillian's bodyguard, a well edu cated Mexican and long notorious for personal exploits of during bravery.— Perez at the time stepped out from his post, and, calling to Colonel Sanchez, said: "I am under the necessity of avenging the death of my Emperor, and you who pronounced his death sen tence, and ordered his speedy execu tion, must be the first to fall." He then fired at Sanchez, the ball from his Spencer rifle passing through the Col onel's head, and causing instant death. The Sergeant then called upon the troops, who had all been under Im perial Sergeants and Corporals, telling them, " All who desire to do so may now retire to their homes; while those who wish to follow me to the Pacific Coast will take a few steps forward. Of the 180 men 15 signified their intention of going home, and left with their arms. The remaining 105 followed Perez to ward the State of Jalisco. They were armed with Spencer's eight and Henry's twelve-shooter rides, and were splen didly Mounted. They opened the safe containing the army funds, which San• chez! had in his possession, and took therefrom its contents, $1,700 in all. At each town they levied a contribution of bread, and compelled the people to provide food for theirhorses. Martinez's command at Zatacetas was ordered to follow Perez and to give no quarter. They started 573 strong, and mutinied at the little town of Ojo Caliente, twelve leagues from Zacatecas. Perez joined Chavez's revolutionary party on the Ist instant, at the small town of Santa Ana, twelve leagues to the southwest of Guadalajara, and routed the 11th Regi ment of that state, which had been sent in pursuit of them by order of General Ramon Corona. Sanchez,Pintos, Chaves and Perez then united their commands, which numbered some 1,700 men. They are now in the heavy mountain lands between the Camino Real of Tepic and Colima. They stay there in obedience to orders from Lezada and Placio de Vega. International Coinage The bill introduced by Mr. Sherman into the Senate on Monday with a view to promote a uniform currency among all na tions provides that the weight of the gold coin of $5 shall be 124 9-20ths troy grains, so that it shall agree with a French coin of 25 francs, and with the rate of 3,100 francs to the kilogramme, and the other sizes or denominations shall be in duo proportion of weight, and the fineness shall he nine tenths or nine hundred parts line in the thousand. The weight of the half dollar shall be 179 grains, and less coins in pro lortion ; but the coinage of silver one dol ar, five cent, and three cent pieces shall be disconti uued. The devices on the coins shall be wholly different from those now in use. The value of gold coins shall be stamped thereon in dollars and francs, and also in pounds sterling should Great Britain agree to conform the pound sterling to the $5 piece. All these gold coins shall be a legal tender. The remaining sections of the bill provide for the reception of the present United States coins at the mint, the coinage of the new pieces, and that they shall be issued from the lst of January, I&i9. Senator Chandler Among the Democrats. A good story is told of Senator Chandler, which it may not be amiss to relate. A few evenings since, while the National Democratic Resident Committee were in session at the National Hotel, consulting on party affairs, a rap at the door was heard, and "come in' having been said, who should present himself before the as tonished gaze of the committee but the veri table Michigander, Zaoh. Chandler. Per ceiving at once that he was not expected, or perhaps awed by the presence of the mag nates assembled, Zach. started back, when ex-Marshal Hoover went to him and po litely explained what was going on, telling him that if he "really felt a change of heart and wished to come in, perhaps, if the question was submitted, the committee might consent to apply to his case the well known words'While the lamp holds out to burn, the vilest sinner may return.' " Old Zach concluded not to "join" just then, but thought be Would call again, Bights of Forelgnaltrn citizens—Letter from !!r. Vollnndlahwm. A meeting to consider the rights of natur alized citizens was held in Toledo, Ohio, on Saturday evening last. The first speaker was Hon. J. M.Ashley, who said that when we invite foreigners to our shores we are bound to protect them everywhere. Of what use, le asked, is our country's flag to a man whom it does not shield? It was for the people to decide in regard to these things. Lot the agitation go on until the principles for which we contend become part of the laws of all nations. Speeches were:made by other gentlemen, and a letter from Hon. C. L. Vallandigham, avowing his sympathy with the object of the meeting was read. It wus as follows: DAYTON, Ohio, Dec. 26, 1867. GENTLEMEN : Your note of the lath lust., Inviting me to be present at a public meet ing In Toledo, to be held on Saturday eve ning, the 28th inst., to condemn the illegal imprisonment of our fellow citizens by foreign governments, I have just received. While it would give me great pleasure to attend and participate in person, yet inas much as it is out of m power so to do, al low me to submit a few suggestions upon the subject of your meeting. The point, it I understand it, decided by the English courts in Islenny'a case, is that one born a British subject, though natural ized by another country, may be arrested in Great Britain, and there tried, convicted and punished for words spoken or overt nets committed in that other country, and this upon the doctrine of perpetual national al legiance. In effect, therefore, it is held in England that en Englishman or Irialiman born, who, after naturalization here in due form of our law, may happen, as u Senator or Representative of the United State, to vote for a declaration of war against Great Britain, or for army, navy or supply bilk n such war, may if found at any time 'after wurcl In England, be there hanged, drawn and quartered for treason committed by 311('11 Votes given in the American Congress, The mlitiple statement of a dolt:1110 III:0 this consigns it to utter uondenthation here, and the question with us Is not 01111 of haw, but of diplomacy, of mtuteaniunnhip. law of Bump° is one way; the law of American the other, and the point hue at lam been reached when either Europe must consent to recede from her doginaor Ameri ca 'abandon her whole system of 111Ouriali zation. By negotiat , on, by treaty, therefore, in the linat place. I desire to see the old Continental and English claim renounced, Nemo patricon exucre posit, may be very good laatin,:though not equal quite to Earl Chutham's authes tuber hum'', nor worth all the clasalcs. Certainly it bas 'authority and antiquity upon its side. But the world moves, and justice and right and sound policy are riot to be sacrificed to u dead lan guage, or a maxim which nations have out lived, and which in the cosmopolitan times of steam navigation, railways and electric telegraphs, laud, submarine interoceanic, ought to become obsolete. America cannot now abandon her claim to naturalize the citizens and subjects of other governments. Her early settlers dial put oft their country. She is the offspring of naturalization. Her whole settlement, population and progress to this day are a standing negative of the doctrine of per petual allegiance. Every citizen of the United States now is either a naturalized citizen or the son or descendant in 'wine generation, of one who, at a former period, was naturalized ; and the only real "native Americans" among us are the aboriginal eavages. The Constitution of the United States provides for naturalization ; among our earliest acts of legislation were laws to carry out the constitutional provision, and our whole policy has been a persistent exe cution of these laws. To us, our doctrine is of daily, extended and vital importance. To Europe, her maxim is of but casual and most limited application; unless, Indeed, she shall forbid emigration as to those yet tat home, and, es to others, demand rendi tidn, or by sheriffs and posses, or by fleets and armies, attempt recapture of her mi grating millions, who practically, have put .off their native countries to assume ails glance to ours. Nor can the United States for one moment omit to extend the same precise measure of protection at home and abroad to natural iced and native citizens alike. And should all peaceable means fail, Englaud herself. by her present Abyssinian expedition, made up of fleet arid army, with caution, musket and sword, to rescue her subjects tram un just and illegal imprisonment, is now indi cating, with sufficient clearness, the final means of enforcing the reciprocal right of citizens to receive, and the duty of govern ments to give protection. But I aria satis fied that if our government shall become tonally in earnest in the matter, and exert itself with promptitude and vigor, not only will the American citizens now suffering unjust and illegal imprisonment In foreign countries be set free, but the question itself, of interntational law, which so long has vexed us, be finally adjusted by recognition of the doctrine and practice upon which our whole country and government were founded. This Is not a Fenian question, nor a more Irish question even; but ono in which ell naturalized citizens, In whatsoever country born, are concerned. To the German es pecially, whose government demands °Mini mil litary service, It Is of great and personal Interest, while every native•born patriot must feel profoundly the duty of maintain ing the honor and justice of his own coun try and government, which, by conferring citizenship and demanding obedience, has in this most solemn form promised protec tion, speedy and absolute, to her naturalized as to her native citizens, all over the globe. I write hastily, gentlemen; but whethern private citizen or in otlieltd position, I will maintain the snnndness and justness of the sentiments which I have expressed. Very truly, ac., C. L. VALLANDICUIAM. A Righteous Fuglists Verdlet—What hi a The libel suit of Mr. Rigby Wason, to re cover damages to the extent of one thous and pounds sterling from the proprietors of the London Times for the publication of matter spoken in the House of Lords, con taining animadversion on and censure of the motives of that gentleman in presenting a petition to the Peers, as Just heard in Guildhall, involved points of the utmost importance to the newspaper profession, and its issue in u verdict for the defendants defines the rights of journalists towards the public in such a manner as will leave them much more freedom in the discharge of their duties. Mr. Wason went before Par liament with a petition in which he asserted that a former political opponent, Sir Fitzroy Kelley, who had Just been appointed Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer, had, " upon the 11th of April, 1835, pledged his honor as n gentlemen to the truth of that which he knew to be false, for the purpose of de ceiving a committee of the House of Com mons ;" and he (Wilson) prayed that a com mittee might be appointed to Investigate this charge. Earl Russell presented the paper. His noble brethren were quick, sharp and de cisive in their condemnation of both the language and motives of the petitioner. 'rite London Times reported the speeches. Mr. Waeon sued the London Times for libel, nut for libel in publishing an incorrect or garbled report, but for libel in publishing the re marks at all. The case was conducted in the Court of Queen's Bench, the Lord Chief Justice of England charging the jury in a most lucid and exhaustive exposition of the case as presented on either side. The Chief Justice told the jury that it was shown that the re port was "truthful and fair," and if truth fill and fair its publication by a newspaper I was privileged. The second count com plained that the London Times " falsely and maliciously" published an editorial article on the subject of the debate, and 011 this the Lord Chief Justice told the Jury "that if they were satisfied the article was written honestly and with a desire to vin dicate truth and justice they must find for , the defendants." The jury found for the newspaper on all the counts. This effort to hamper freedom of discus sion and abridge the liberty of the press in England, as well as its signal defeat, are not without value on this side of the Atlantic, where editors of independence and enter prise are continually pestered with notices and charges of libel suits by adventurers who seek to make a little money out of them on the plea that some one has been aggrieved by their placing current facts correctly before the public. Like many persons who are ever ready to attribute motives to others for their everyday acts, and who pretend to be very sensitive in the matter of their own reputation, this Mr. Wason is no way sparing of his abuse of his opponents. He has had printed in London a" Letter Exposing the Falsehoods of the Lord Chancellor and Lord St. Leon ardo, uttered in order to deceive the House of Lords ;" and a pamphlet with the title " Who are the Liars?' In the Court of Queen's Bench be refers to the House of Lords as "an assembly of fishwomen," and to the Judges as " Bailey lawyers," "foul-mouthed" and "guilty of deliberate and malignant falsehood."—.N. Y. Herald. The Late !Melancholy Parricide The following is an extract from what was probably the last letter ever written by the late Congressman Hamilton, of Ohio, lately killed by his insane eon : " As I have named the cause of being at home, it is proper I should be a little more explicit. My wife wrote me that my oldest Boy, Tom. eighteen years old, was threat ened with insanity. I found on my arrival that her fears had a real foundation, but I hoped that it would be but a temporary trouble, till yesterday, when his conduct was such that I despaired of managing him at home or at a private water-cure, and I have made arrangements to take him to the asylum at Columbus. He has been one of the molt quiet, industrious and exemplary boys I ever knew, and my chief reliance for the management of my afralre and the con trol of my Other children in my abaenoe." NUMBER 2 The Ohio Democratic Convection Tho Ohio Democratic State Coin ention, which met at Columbus on the historic sth, Is said to have been not only ono of the largest, but the ablest gathering of the kind over seen in that State. The pro ceedings were entirely harmonious through out, and the greatest enthusiasm prevailed. The Convention was called to order by John G. Thompson, chairman of the State Central Committee. Mr. H. J. Jewett, M Muskingum, was elected temporary chair man, and Henry V. Kerr, of Clermont, sec retary. A motion to refer all resolutions to the Committee on Resolutions, without debate gave rise to some discussion. Au amend ment was offered no follows: liesoteed, That Hon. Geo. U. Pendleton is the choice of the Democracy of Ohio tor next President. The resolution was adopted amid the wildest enthusiasm and cheers. A com mittee was appointed to wait on Mr. Pen dleton, who soon returned with that gen tleman. His reception by the Convention was even more enthusiastic than that which marked the adoption of the resolution. lie made a abort speech, declaring that who ever might be the Democratic nominee would certainly be elected. The Convention then adjourned till the afternoon. The main interest centered In the action of the Committee on Resolutions. This committee was principally composed of men pledged to Judge Thornton. Thu resolu tions reported by them were as follows: Resolved, That tho Demovracy of Ohio congratulate the vountry upon the Impor tant aspect of political affairs, as evidenced by the Stale elections of 1007, and they look forward with hope unit eonlidence to the re sult of the momentous struggle upon which depend in so great a degree the future pence and prosperit y of the Union. Re.rofacil, unalterably apposed to the doctrines which lend to consolidation, we renew with unflagging/Ati and Morel's ed energy our attachment to that political creed which has ever been No staunchly nil hored to by our organication, through days of trouble anti disaster us well as good for tune and prosperity, which was thus ex pressed by Thomas Jefferson, " Equal and exact Justice to all men, of whatever State or persuasion, religious or political ; peace, commerce and honest friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with none; . the support of the State governments In all their rights, as the must competent admin istrators of our domestic concerns and the !Wrest bulwark against anti-republwan tendencies ; the preservation of the general government in its whole constitutional vigor as the sheet anchor or peace at home uud safety abroad; u Jealous cars of the rights of elections by the people, and the supremacy of the civil over the military' authority. Resolved, That wo condemn the legisla tive usurpation of Congress, and particular ly the several acts of reconstruction, so called, as violation of the constittitiobal compact between the States, and as utterly subversive of every principle Lifson' govern ment that distinguluhes u free people, Rcso/ved, That we are opposed to any measures which recognize that the integ. rity of the Union was ever broken, that any of its members were over out, and that we determinedly insist that the Southern States, no longer being in insurrection or at war with the federal government, are entitled to the full Stare recognition and constitutional representation in Congress, and the Electoral College given to ail the Stales, and that the denial of it to them by Congress and Its efforts to dictate by mili tary force a government for them are un• constitutional, revolutionary and deliotic. Resolved, That we are oppo , ed lioth in policy and principle to negro suffrage; that the State of Ohio having, by the emphatic majority of fifty thousand, rejected it fur herself, is sternly opposed Lo its forced im position upon other States, and that we stigmatize such an imposition by the federal government as a most basin usurpation. Resolved, That the practical effect of the so-called Reconstruction acts of Congress is to deliver over ten States to the political and social control of negroes, and to place the lives, liberties and fortunes of the whites residing therein in the hands of a barbarous people, and that It would inevitably lead either to a war of races or to the Africanizing of the South. Resolved, That, notwithstanding the enor mous and conceded frauds in the creation of the public debt. the laith of country is pledged to its payment, principal and in terest, according to the terms of the several acts of Congress under which the bonds representing the debt wore Issued, but not otherwise, and we are opposed to any plan for extending the time of payment, thus increasing the amount of gold Interest to more than the principal, or to any declara tion by Congress that the principal is pay able in gold, which would virtually add more than a thousand millions to the bur den of the debt and to the whole insane financial policy of which these measures are a part. liesofved, That neither forgetting nor de nying our ancient faith that gold and silver coin forma the currency of the Constitu tion, we declare that the five-twenty bonds should be paid In the same currency re ceived by the government for their issue, and that by the withdrawal of the mono poly granted to the national banks, this re sult can he 11CCOM pl haled without an undue or dangerous increase of paper money, now the only circulating medium, thus reliev ing our people from the burden of a debt, the tendency of which is always to corrupt and enslave our government from the re proach of paying a favored class in gold, while discharging its debts to all others, in cluding pensions to widows and soldiers, in an inferior currency. licsolved, That this plan violates no law, impairs no contract, breaks no faith, and, instead of retarding a return to specie pay ments, is the shortest because the only sale way of reaching that end. lees° tved, That all the property of the country, including the government bonds which receives the equal protection of the government, should bear an equal share In its burdens. iteBotvcd, That we indignantly reject the principle derived from the feudal system, that the musses of the people belong to the governments under which they live, which in another form is contended for by the monarchies of Europe—including t; rent Britain—once a subject always a subject ; that we, on the contrary, Maintain that all individual can by emigration and residence m another country, forswear his previous allegiance anti be admitted into all the civil and political rights of his new home; that American citizens by adoption and natura lization are entitled to all the rights, as be tween us and foreign Powers, Nellie!. can be claimed Ly our native born citizens, and it is the duty id* the lederal government to protect and maintain them by every means within its power. Re,yo/vcd, That the people will sustain Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, in his struggle with Congressional usurpation, and that we pledge the Democ racy of Ohio to support him in all Consti tutional measures to relieve the white people of the South from the negro government now being imposed upon them. Resolved, That the fortitude and gallantry of our soldiers in the recent civil war In de fence of the Union entitle them to the grati tude of the country, and they should be remembered by it in its bouutlea. Pesofeed, That the Democracy of the country have neither the purpose nor the desire to re-ostablish slavery nor to assume uuy portion of the debts of the .tatea lately in rebellion. Horrible Saielde—A Bridegroom Desert eLl by his Bride Hangs Himself. We have learned to-day the particulars of a horrible case of suici de that occurred at Treseow, on the Lehigh Valley road. A young man, aged about'_.? years, married a young woman about three months peat, and a few days tack she became tired of married life and returned to her brothers to live. The young man was very much troubled, and calling on his wife on Sat tatiny, intormed tier unless she would live with Lim, he would kill himself. She re fused, and he executed the threat by hang ing himself from a tree near the house.— rope was so long that his feet touched the ground, but, determined to die, be held them up with his hands, and was found dead as n stone. The bride's brother took the body down, carried it toe neighboring tavern, where it remained on the stoop dur ing the day. In the evening he knocked a board from the fence, constructed a rude coffin, and buried the body of his brother- In-law outside the fence or the church yard. That is the way they do things up the river. —Easton Preis of Jan. 7th. Governoc of Virginia The executive term of Governor Pier point, of Virginia, expired on the 31st of December of last year, and it is being dis cussed in the Virginia press what is his statue at this time. According to the con stitution and laws of Virginia, a Governor and Lieutenant Governor should have been elected lust year, and by the first ofJanuary of this year should have been installed in office. But in the process of recon struction military interference preven ted elections and relieved the Legisla ture of duty. The Richmond Dispatch claims that the case Is covered by a general provision of the constitution, which requires that "Judges and all other officers, whether elected or appointed, shall continue to dis charge the duties of their respective offices, after their terms of service has expired, until their successors are appointed." Governor Rierpoint continues in office by the consti tution because there is no successor quali fied ; unless General Sopofleld shall exercise We power under the reeonetruotlon'aet to supersede Inm, which La not probable. RATE OF ADVERTEOLSO. Ja mule Aavarrzeloarys, $l2 a year NIT woe or teolltiesi Fl Der Year for oath. ad. tlotaal ware. SAL ESTATZ ADWITIBING, 10 Cents • Hl:tailor the test, end 5 cents for pun subsequent In sertion. .ENZIIAL Anvil:Tuft:so 7 cents a line for the first, and 4 Con to for each subsequent Inser tion. ?Emu. Nomoza Inserted In Local Column 15 cents per 11fle. .scrst. Names preceding marriages and deaths, 10 cents per line for first insertion, and 6 cents for every subsequent insertion. LEGAI. AND OTII U Noricsi— atectitors' 2.50 Atinitnistmtors' Assignees' notices Auditors' notices 2.00 Other "Notices,' ten lines, or leu, three times „.,„„ 1.50 A Lively Dny for Reporters. From the Richmond Dispatch, January Early on Saturday morning the pollee discovered upon certain walls and fetters in , the business part of the city a printed card, signed by E. Cuthbert of the NOW York Herald, assailing in the moot scurrilous manner the character of Dr. J. 11. Brock of Phu Enquirer and EXaMinerllOWSpOpOr.Tho cbJectionablo cards were discovered, and the • Chief of Police, knowing that the charges I which it contained were of a character likely to provoke a hostile meeting betwhen 1 the gentlemen whose names have been mentioned above, caused Dr. Brock to be bound over to keep the pence. Later in the day Mr, Ernest Wlltz, an other reporter of The PLraminer,tind a friend of Dr. Brock, met Mr. Cuthbert on the cor ner of Eleventh and Itank streets, when there was un itnmediate resort to blows.-- The parties were soon separated, and short ! ly afterward Mr. Wiltz was arrested on a warrant obtained by Cuthbert, unit recog nized for has appearance before the Mayor this morning. This athur created quite tin excitement around the locality in which it occurred, but it was soon eclipsed by another emute, in which nearly the WllOlO reportorial corps of Richmond were more or leas A statement In the editorial eolutnn of The Didpateh of yesterday mentioned In cidentally that our reporter had obtained his informatton cementing the repudiation of Hunnicutt by Porter from W. ll.Saninet, who does the stenographic reporting for the Convention. Feeling in sonic manner ag jrieved by thle, Immediately alter the ad ournment of the Convention Mr. Samuel approached Mr. James I'. Coward in of this paper with the words, " r. Cowardin, you have not the first principles of a gentle man." Mr. Cowardln ottompted to resent the In sult by n blow, but ins Willa wore seined and firmly held, and Natnuol romarked that the difficulty could hu nettled olnowhuro than on thu (lour of the Convention. An hour or two afterward Mr. SlllllllO walked up Twelfth street, near :the Enqui rer and I..rnminer ffilloo, in company with movoral Radical members or the COIIN'tII. lion, 1l r. Cowardln toot him, and demund ed n rotriwtion or Mu roust 11 taboret' at the ()Waal. Till , rotrootion being renined, Mr. Coivordin ruined Ids 011110 cud struck Sam. uelnuvorol heavy blown on the Mid. Thu latter drew idstols unit lho portion closed, when !wilily or Brunswick and other mom horn of oho Convuntion rushed to the old of Manuel, and Join,' In the attack upon Cow ordm. Several bystanders, belonging to the Richmond press and to the Convention, thou rushed in, and the affair began to look very much like a free tight. The pollee 1.10011 arrived, however, and the tollowing parties were arrested mi implicated In the disturbance; Cowardin and heady of The Divrach, Jannis of The Enquire, Leahy of the Convention, and Samuel of Baltimore, sternographie reporter. They were all recoginged to appear before the Mayor this morning. Kennon's for the Removal 01 Gen. Pope.l ' A Washington correspondent (January 3) of the liost.in Mit furnishes the follow ing as the reasons for the removal or (ten. Pope,_ !is communicated officially to the President : Under the State lutes the census of Ala haunt was taken in 101)11, showing a popula ' clot' of 1011,1010 white males over the age of twenty-tiffs years, and 91,000 blacks. The late registration, under :ion. Pope's man ipulnuuns, resulted ill registering 74,000 whites and 9 11 ,11011 blacks. The Bureau con stitution is to be voted for ou the 4th day of February, and, us already stated ht this correspondence, the negroes since the regis tration have become vary nitiOs unuttered, owing to their long habit of changing homes at the beginning of a new year. To cOllll - the effect of this change of residence, (funeral Pope solid an tinier that any per son offering to vote in limy county sli old he allowed to do so upon making ullldn vii that his 'Janie had been registered. This order also provided that, fourteen days pi I . ceding the election, the registrars throug' out the State should open their Hats a it revision, and keep them open live days. A revision similar to this woe liad preceding the elect ion for delegates Loth° Convention. A (thirty its aro before the President to the effect that a large number of negroes under the ago of twenty , one were permitted to register and vote, and unless lien. Popo bad been removed the name would again be allowed. touSC turnishiug &tido, &c. YOUNG FOLIO{ ATTENTION! Now On the I Imo to get on rrted. You can furnish your i 11,1121. with HTU V EN, KETTLEts. PA No, TINWARE, and another necessary ar ticles In our line at the On/OD (.11.1) LOW PRICES. OLD now In the thou Mr you In buy for the young folks TI N. W ARE to look like Nucor IIIiANN nod COPPER WARE to leek like (J, ad. vo have enlarged our Iltoduess, and can .miter every Inducement to UM. who are now buying HOUSE JOHN DEANER d, CO., Nu. 7 Lust Klng street, P Lancaster, a. J tn h-trw /MAN-FITTING AND PLUMBING. kj JOHN DEANER w CO., No. 7 East King Street, with . Increased facilities, urn now pre pared to attend to all orders WIWI reeKs UM! dispatch. Having noun but the host work• men employed, all work will be LIEIII4IIOO In a superior niontier,uud with all the modern lin provemeuls. Copper hail. and Wool, hollers, and all kinds or Copper Work for Breweries .61,d attuotied to With promptness. Having greatly enlarged thin department, all orders eon be tilled lorthwith. 'l'lN BMW'S m HPOUTING Attended to In any part o(i he city and Calmly. Furnaces, limier., Stoves, Hauges, and salt modern Improvements (or heating Churches, Hans, Parlors, Houses, at., always on land, and will he put up In any part of tile nay or county, or their repairs ulcerated to at any time. JOHN DEANEH d CO., N 0.7 East King street., !TEEM E k'UENINLIING GOODS I A. C. FLINN, NO. 11 NORTH Q UEEN STREET LANCASTER, PA., I=l 110 USEKEEP.I,VO GOODS, Ilounekeeperx . Hardware, Stove. of all klnda, Till W.O, JAparlll.l Ware, Wooden Wal), litotakds, rpoanx, Ko I vem, Forka, Cop per and limas V,urv, and Cooking lhonallu of all lauds. STOVEH, -Alli FURRAeE,9 COOKING ItAlsiGlifi Tin, Sheet Iron and Copper Ware ILA UPA cron Y. COI'I'ISR KI=LESI, ALL tiIZEN ROOFING, HPOUTING AN D TIN MENDING Pal/M1 . 11.Y ATTENDED TO. Particular attention paid to fitting np Breweries and Distilleries. PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING Water and Una Plpea, Lend, Galvanized Iron Cant and Wrought Iron, Terra Cotta and Cup per Tublng• HYDRANTS, BATH TUBS AVD BOILERS, 112ItMEINffill FORCE and LIFT PUMPS for ClBtrrns nr deep WeMr, llydraullc Rome, lieglsters, Lan era, Ventliatorn, ac. At A. C. FLINN'S, No. 11 North Queen btreut,,Lancoaaer, Yu. Jai ttdmw gjartlwart, ct.tove,s, U.u.8TEL2.1X.A...N. C. F. KEN 1.11.A.A U .44J/A HARDWAIGEI HE OLDEIST AND LAIR/EST ESTABLISH, /RENT IN CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. CEO. M. BTEINMAIv eft CO., WENT KING STREET, Having recently enlarged their store and thus greatly Increased their busMau facilities, now offer to the comm unl ty, AT THE LOWEST PHILADELPHIA RATER the rineetatelortment In the market, of HARD WARE SADDLERY 0118 1 3 AINTS, GLASS iOVES IRON AND STEEL, OEDAR WARE SLEIOIi-BELcurLtßil OIL LOTHS, SKATES, decr: PERSONS COMMENCING HOUSEKEEPING will Linda full iClisortment of goods In theli line. They are also agents for a auperlor article NAILS, Mid for DUPONT'S CELEBRATED GUN AND ROCK POWDER fri - The highest meth price paid for Clover Tin]Of , ti V. and Old Flax Seed. Idea 81 tfdaw E. IL SCILiEFFE6, wßoLffauz AND RETAIL HADDLERZ NOB 1 AND 2 EAST KLNE2 STREIT LAN °ASTER, P. $26 FOR 1799 CENT COINS INAISTEIDg collections bougbt.; • Book showin prices paid for coins, i 5 °ante; Monthly Coin and Stamp Idegazlne,ls cents, yearly; Ells• tory or American Coins 81.10. Mason NtOthowl.. No. 481 Chestnut street, B'lthadslols.