._,,k = .,_ rpM;SAND .:Mtt77lo3tB4'DAT. Br, 4E. 11. 11131iTil H. G. SOUTH. I TENSIS,Two Dollars per annum. psqab In an ogee In advance. • Tire LAIWASTSR DAILY asmeirn Invunw published every evening . Sunday assented, et SS par annum In adTaElae. OFFICE-SOMME:ST 00112CER OF CENTRE.I SQIIAZE. ibettp. IN SCHOOL DATIL Still site the school-Louse by the road A. ragged beggar sunning; Around Itstill the sumacs grow, And blackberry vines are running. Within the master's desk Is seen, Deep-scarred by raps official; The warping floor, the battered seats Thejack-knive's carved initial; The charcoal frescoes on its wall; Its door's worn sill betraying The feet that, creeping slow to school Went storming out to playing I Long yeara ago a winter gun Shone over - it at setting; Lit up its western window panes, And low eaves' ley fretting, It touched the tan,„"led golden curls, And brown eyes full of grieving, Or one who lain her steps delayed When all the school were leaving For near her stood the little boy, Her childish favor singled; 'MIS cap pulled low upon a taco Where pride and shame wore mingled lie saw her lift. Mr eyes; he felt, The soft hand's light caressing. , And heard the tremble of her voice As if a fault confessing. "I'moorry that I open that wool I hate to go oboe', you, Because"—the brown eyes lower fell— " Bemuse, you see, I love you :" Still memory to 6gray-halred man That sweet child-face is showing, Dear girl the grasses on her grave Have forty years been growing ! Ile lives to learn, In life's hard school, How few who pass above him Lament their triumphs and his loss. Like her—because they love him. ftliscellantous. Mark Twain He Weibel , . About Chinamen and Deem,- From the Buffalo Express One of California's euriosities,the peo ple in the States will some day become familiar with through the Pacific Rail road. I mean the Chinamen. Califor nia contains 70,000 of them, and every ship brings more. There is a Chinese quarter In every city and village in Cal ifornia and Nevada, for Boards of Al dermen will not allow them to live all around town, just wherever they choose to locate. This is not a hardship, for they prefer to herd together. Ml= They are a people who fondly stick to their ancient customs. They dress in the quaint costumes dad rancestors wore five hundred years ago. They build temples, gaudy with gliding and hideous with staring Idols, and there they worship after the fashion of their fathers, A strict record Is kept by their chiefs of the name and residence of every China- , man, and when he dies his body is sent back to China for burial, for they can never get to their heaven unless they start from China. And besides, China men worship their ancestors, and they all want their share of worship after they are done with this world. Even when the Chinese Government sells a 'Ship load of degraded and criminal coolies to a Cuban or Sandwich Island planter, it is strictly stipulated that the body of every one of them must be sent back to China after death. The Chinamen hieing smart, shrewd , people, take to some few of our com mercial customs and virtues, but some how we can't make great headway in the matter of civilizing them. We can teach' them to gamble a little, but some how we can't make them get drunk. It is discouraging—because you can't re generate a being that won't get drunk. The Chinaman is the most frugal, in dustrious, and thrifty of all creatures. No matter how slender are the wages you pay him, he will manage to lay up money. And Chinamen are the most gifted gardeners in the world. Give one of them a sand-bank that wuuld not sup port a lizard, and lie will make it yield generous crops of vegetables. The Chinaman wastes nothing. Everything has a value in his eyes, Ile gathers up all the castaway rags, and hones and bits of glass, and makes marketable ar ticles of them. And he picks up all the old fruit-cans you throw away and melts them up to get the tin and solder. When a white man discards a gold placer as no longer worth anything, the patient Chinaman, always satisfied with small profits, and never in a hurry to get rich, takes possession and works it contentedly for years. The Chinaman makes a good molt, a good washerwoman, a good chamber maid, a goad gardener, a good banker's clerk, a good miner, a good railroad laborer, a good anything you choose to put him at; fur these people are all edu cated ; they are all good accountants ; they arc very quiet and peaceable ,• they never disturb themselves about polities, they are so tractable, quick, smart, and naturally handy and ingenious, that you can teach them anything; they have no jealousies; they never lose a moment, never require watching to keep them at work; they are gifted with a world of patience, endurance and con tentment. They are the best laboring class America has ever seen—and they do not care a cent who is President. They are miserably abused by the laws of California, but that sort of thing will cease some day. It was found just about impossible to build the California end of the Pacific Railroad with white men at $3 per day and take care of all the broils and fights and strikes ; but they put on Chinamen at $1 a day and "find" them selves and they built it without tights or strikes or anything, and saved the bulk of their wages!too. Yon will have these long-tall toilers among you in " the States " some day, but you will find them right easy to get along with— and you will like them too, because they will stand a heap of abuse. You will find them ever so convenient, because when you get niad you can snatch a club and go out and take satisfaction out of a Chinaman. The native American negro is getting so insolent, now, that the patriot from Ireland cannot take a little recreation out of him without get ting into trouble. So the Chinaman will afford a needed relief. As evidence that Chinamen are sails- fled with small gains, I will remark that they drill five holes into the edge of gold coins—drill clear through from edge to edge—and save the gold thus bored out, and fill up the hole with some sort of metalic composition that does not spoil the ring of the coin. Their counterfeiters put nine parts good metal and only one part base metal in their bogus coins—and so it is very lucrative in the long run, and the next thing to impossible to detect the cheat. It is only greedy bungling Christian counter feiters that blunder oto trouble, ey try ing to swindle their fellow creatures too heavily. I=l Another curious feature about Califor nia life was the breed of desperadoes she reared and fostered on her soil, and af terward distributed over adjacent Terri tories through her Vigilance Commit tees when she had had enough of their exploits. These men went armed to the teeth with monstrous revolvers, and preyed upon each other. Their slight est misunderstandings were settled on the spot by the bullet ,• but they very rarely molested peaceable citizens. They robbed and gambled and killed people for three or tour years, and then "died with their boots on," as they phrased it; that is, they were killed themselves, almost invariably, and they never ex pected any other fate, and were very seldom disappointed. Sam Brown, Of Nevada, killed six teen men in his time, and was journey ing towards Esmeralda to kill a seven teenth, who had stopped the breath of a friend of his,when warty of law-abiding citizens waylaid lum and slaughtered I him with shot guns. Mourners were exceedingly scarce at his funeral. it is said that Sam Brown called for a drink at the, bar of the Slaughter House in Carson City one morning (a saloon so nicknamed because so many men had been tilled in it), and invited estranger up to drink with him. The stranger said he never drank, and wished to be excused. By the custom of the country that was a deadly insult, and so Brown very properly shot him down.. He left him.lying there and went away, warn ing everybody to let the body alone, because it was his meat, he said. And it 115 said also that he came back after a while and made a coffin, and buried the main himself—though I never could quite believe that—without assistance. Virginia kinrp C.4 . was full Otdesperadoes, ti,soe,of the pleasantest newspaper reportLug:l evezdid was hi those days, -became" reported the inquests on the lentdre, lot of them, nearly, .We had a ;fresh one pretty much every morning. Towards the last it was 'melancholy to see how the material was running short. Those were halcyon days. I don't know ..:..:~' M ~ - ' ... .._ .._ ......1 . . . , . .. , _ , ~... .. , .:::!”'I • • ".. i.:4,,t , . 1-:;.:11....',::1'...,..- • .. .... . . .. . . ' ... „ . . ... . ;. , :•;••••••,..:•,,,.. -. :.:••• ..,, 1 ~....,;.-:,„:.,, : J r, ,-, .... ••••...!-:. 7 ........; ~ • * -, • . .. ... . , . . . , .. . . . . . - I ..`....,;11,:;,f1...4 . . . ..•', - .....•,' ... . . ITh - . ." 1 '''''' '' ' .:, ' ,'- '' :' '... ".' ...'.' ' ' .;. ,„ ; --.-:' .'. ":•.'''"-. ..... ..:- ' ... ' _ .' • . ' ,' . . - 1 ~ '• ' i 'l ''' s ''.' ' - '-: ' ''' , i.; , , .. .. ... .. . .. •, .... . . .... , . . . ,t... .. .f.! ',, - 1• .. ... 2 !;... ... 4 1 . .• . , . •.- . "- ' .. „. , , .. ... . . _ . . , rT , . '.:. .• • . - . ~.. , , . ~ __ • . .. ..., . . . . . . , .. . ... . . . . . . . . . . .. . , . . VOLUME 71 what halcyon days are, but that is the proper expression to use in this connec tion, I believe. JACK WILLIAMS. Jack WiMattis was one of the luckiest of the Virginia City desperadoes.. He killed a good many men. He was a kind-hearted man, and gave all his cus tom to a poor undertaker who was trying to get along. But by-and-by somebody poked a double-barrelled shot gun through a crack while Williams was sit ting at breakfast, and riddled him at such a rate that there washarclly enough of him left to hold en inquest on—and then the poor - unfortunate undertaker's best friend was gone, and he had to take in his sign. Thus he was stricken in the midst of his prosperity and his hap piness, for he was Just on the point of getting married when Jack Williams was taken away from him, and of course he had to give it up then. CE3I - ETERIAL CURIOSITIES - - - - _ It is said that the first twenty-six graves in the cemetery at Virginia City were those of men who all died by the bullet. And the first six in another of those towns contained the bodies of a desperado and five of his victims—and there in the bosom of his family, made dear to him by ties of blood, he calmly sleeps unto this day. EMI= At the Rocky Ridge station in the Rocky Mountains, in the old days of overland stages and pony expresses, I had the gorgeous honor of breakfasting with Mr. Slade, the Prince of all the des peradoes, who killed twenty-six men in his time ; who used to cut offhisvictiin.s' ears and send them as keepsakes to their relatives •, and who bound one of his-vic tims hand and foot and practised on him with his revolver for hours together—a proceeding which seems almost inex cusable until wo reflect that Rocky Ridge is away off in the dull solitudes of the mountains, and the poor desper adoes have hardly any amusements. Mr. Slade afterward went to Montana and began to thin out the population as usual—for he took a great interest in trimming the census and regulating the vote—but finally the Vigilance Commit tee captured and hanged him, giving him just fifteen minutes to prepare him self In. The papers said he cried on the seatibld. The Vigilance Committee is a whole some regulator in the new countries, and bud characters have a lively dread of it. In Montana one of these gentlemen was placed on his mule and informed that he had precisely fifteen minutes to leave the country in. He said, "Gents, if this mule don't balk five'll answer." But that is sufficient about the des peradoes I merely wished to make pas sing mention of them as a Californian production. Discovery of Mines The richest and most valuable mines have in almost all instances been dis covered by accident; often by ignorant persons, who knew not the value of their own discovery ; and by children. To an Indian hunter is owed the knowledge of the chief American _mines, and to a shepherd the silver mines of Peru. This latter, leading his flocks to feed on the slopes of the Andes, lighted a fire to cook his meal, when a pebble, heated by the flame, attracted his attention by shining like silver. He found the stone massive and weighty, and finally carried it to the mint at Lima, where it was tested, and proved to be grod ore. As the Spanish laws, with a view to en courage Mine-discovery, make it the property of the tinder, this lucky shep herd became a millionaire. The Sacramento gold-fields were dis covered by a Mormon laborer, who worked in a saw-mill. Again, in North- Carolina, in 1799, a child picked up a yellow stone, of which its father, a rude settler, thought nothing; but because it weighed fifteen pounds, used it as a door-fastener for his cabin, for he was so poor that the door had no latch. He showed this stone to one of his few vis itors, and he opined it to be a metal of Some sort, after which verdict the owner used to exhibit it as a curious rock speci men. Three years afterward, on going to the market at Lafayette, ho took the thing to a goldsmith, and asked fifteen shillings for it, which was very willing ly paid. It was in reality a nugget worth £875. Thus it took four years to find out that the yellow stones in the streams of California were gold. It is fair to state, however, that science has occasionally predicted where the precious metals have afterward been found. Sir Roderick Murchison, for instance, after a visit to the auriferous tracts of the Ural Mountains, was struck by their great similarity to some rock from East Australia ; and in his address to the Geographical Society in 1814, prophesied that gold would be found in the latter region. Led by his observa tions, one Smith, engaged , in the iron works at Berrima, searched for gold, and found it. He cane to the governor of the colony with a nugget in his hand. "See what I have found," said he ; "give me live hundred pounds, and I will show you the place . ; ' which the governor declined to do. Again, Mac gregor, a Scotch shepherd, used to sell grains and nuggets of gold to the gold smiths of Sydney, but would never re veal whence he got them. It is not usual, however, for discover ers of the precious metals to be prudent ; they consider themselves " lucky " in this particular line and will leave or sell a good " find " in the hopes of finding a hater. This is what the Spaniards call " the miners' frenzy." Thus, the rich est vein of silver in Chili was discovered by Godoy, a hunter in the Andes. Fa tigued by the chase, he seated himself, on one occasion, under the shelter of a great rock, and was struck by the color and brightness of a projecting part. He chipped the stone with a knife, and finding he could cut it (to use his own expression) like cheese, he took a speci men of it to Copiapo. It was found to be chloride of silver. He agreed to share the profits of his discovery with : a rich man, who engaged to work the mine ; they came at once to masses of sil ver; but Godoy sold his interest in the matter for two thousand eight hun dred pounds, and started to find more mines; and having wandered about the Andes for some years, died having met with no inure "luck," and without a penny. Two brothers, named Bolados, dis covered near Copiapo, in a crevice open ed by some earthquake, an enormous block of silver ore, the cutting, trans port, and fusion of which was so easy, that these ignorant men effected it with out assistance; and In less than two years realized one hundred and forty thousand pounds. They squandered, however, this enormous sum in gamb ling and dissipation; and when 'their mine became suddenly exhausted, they had not even the wretched pittance left on which they had begun. The history of the discoveries of the famous Allison Ranch in Nevada, Cal., is a more satisfactory one. Some poor Irishmen, workers in a neighboring mine, were so fortunate as to hit upon it. They were so unlettered as not to be able to write their names, but they were excellent fellows. They first built a chapel, to thank God for his favors ,• then they erected handsome villas, and placed their workmen in exceptional positions ; and they went by turns every week to San Francisco to spend their ingots of gold. They retain their sim plicity, though with an income as large as that of many princes in Europe, but refuse to furnish any statement of their receipts. The success of Gould and Curry in their Nevada Silver mine is even more astounding ; they were so poor that they were at first obliged to barter two-thirds of their claim to a grocer for the neces saries of life, notwithstanding which they have realized enormous sums for their own portion. Including the pro duct of 1857, the Gould and Curry Com pany have got fourteen millions of dollars out of their mine. The history of the Monte Catini Mine, in Tuscany, is very curious. M. Porte, its original owner, was half ruined by it, and sold it in 188 . 1. Immediately after ward; a block of massive ore was found that paid all expenses; and left four thousand pounds net, profit. Then for fifteen years the mine produced forty thou Sand pounds a year, and still con tinues to yield largely. M. Porte, who had witnessed this heart-rending spec tacle of the immediate success of others, where he . had labored In vain for years, soon died of. grief. Ells marble :bust adorns the entrance ef the principal lery of Monte Catini, but his heirs are Gottschalk, the pianist; and Lefebure Wely, agreat organist, have died within a month, and each was stricken with death while playing hie favorite instru ment. Reporters and Reporting BY DB. B. SIIELTON The competition of reporters for " ex clusive" bits of local news is as energet ic in England asst is in this country. In one instance, a' reporter had very nearly got into great trouble by his zeaL He lived a mile or so out of town, and on one side of the road, for a considera ble part of the way, was a thick grove. As he was returning home, late one night, after having seen the paper to press, he observed that one of the trees near the road side, had an unusual ap pearance. Going within the fence f he Uscoverld that the body of a man was suspended from one of the branches.— Hurriedly cutting it down, he drew the body into a part of the grove where the undergrowth was thick, in tending to conceal it. This done, he went home. Next morning he was taken into custody, on a charge of wil ful murder, and brought before a magis trate. A gamekeeper, going through the woods at early daylight, had dis covered the body in its place of conceal ment, and some other person remem bered that, about midnight, he had seen the reporter issue from the grove. The case was suspicious—until a constable, searching the pockets of the dead man, discovered a written statement, with his name and place of abode, and declaring that domestic misfortune had made life so unbearable that he had resolved to commit suicide. Of course, the reporter was discharged. His explanation was to the effect that, finding such a fine bit of " local " as this too late for his own paper, he had concealed the corpse in or der that the rival journal which was to appear on the next dav, should not profit by the news! But !Or thesuiclde's confession, a pretty strong case of cir crmstantial evidence might have been made:to the peril of the knight of the pen. Another of this class entered the edi torial room, in an excited manner and with rapid steps. " A capital fatal ac cident !" he exclaimed. " About ten minutes ago, my mother-in-law tum bled down stairs and broke her neck. I have desired them not to say anything about it to the neighbors until the morn ing, so that we shall have it exclusively for our paper." His heart was in his calling, undoubtedly. A system of reporting casts before the police magistrates has long been in vogue among all the daily morning pa pers in London. One gentleman of the press attended at each +office, reported one or two striking cases each day, and, taking a sufficient number of copies, by the manifold process, sent one to cacti morning journal. Only this particular reporter was recognized by the magis trates and by the newspapers. The pay ment was at the rate of three cents for each line of print, and no police news except what was supplied by those re porters, so often contemptuously. called •'penny-a-liners," was ever received by the sub-editor. Reports of little interest were not inserted, and the pressure of parliamentary or other news very often excluded even good ones. This system, which continues (except that The Times has a reporter of its own at each police office), relieved the newspapers from the heavy cost of regular salaried reporters. The average outlay was small, but when half-a-dozen papers paid for the same paragraphs, each "penny-a-liner" con trived to earn a respectable income. In the event of anygreat crime having been committed, which public curiosity in sisted on having reported in full, the lucky reporter in whose police court the charge was disposed of, might publish from one to three colunms in each paper day after day, while the interest lasted, and sometimes earn front fifty to a hun dred dollars per diem. The reporters of the Guildhall and Bow street police of fices were reputed, at the time I refer to, of severally making between $3500 and $4OOO a year—tiut heaviest cases being brought before the committing magis trates here. Black mail, or accepting money for suppressing names, has rarely been charged against these police re porters, who enjoy a singular monopoly. I ant cognizant, however, of one in stance in which a London " penny-a liner " showed more sharpness than probity. It was in the autumn, a dead season for the London press, when the political and fashionable and profession al classes are " out of town." A report er, who hail been called to the bar, but had never been employed there by any one, not finding any news, resolved to make it. He invented a dreadful mur der, attended with romantic and mys terious circumstances, and described it, very fully as having taken place in a remote suburban district, for which he manufactured a Saxon name. He mani folded it to all the daily papers, only one of which accepted it. He supplied additional details ; gave evidence at the inquest before an imaginary coroner; published a verdict of " Wilful murder against some person or persons un known ;" described the funeral of the victim; lehgthily and legally went into conjectures as to the murderer, compli menting the police, who, he stated, were on his track. He had "a clear stage" for some ten days, until the Home Secretary thought it his duty to inquire into the case, and soon discovered that it was a fic tion from first to last. The newspaper was laughed at, but the imaginative re porter, who had done nothing for which the law could punish him, was allowed to escape. Years passed by, and the next time I heard of him he was attorney-gen eral in ope of the Australian colonies, finally rising to aseat on the bench. I last saw him in 1847, when he visited Eng land on official business, and we had a good laugh over his remarkable " Mur der in Essex." Some forty or fifty years ago the Morn ing Herald, a London daily paper which has just expired, obtained sudden and remarkable popularity, on account of its very amusing reports of eases before the magistrates at Bow street police office. Mr. Thwaites, the managing editor, ac cidentally encountered, in a stage-coach on the journey from London to Bir mingham, a Mr. John Wight, "a fellow of infinite jest," whose quaint man ner and racy wit made the long ourney—l write of the ante-railway time—appear very short. He had him to dinner the next day nt the great mail coach inn (who has not heard of Hen and Chickens :) at Birmingham, discovered that this facetious gentleman was a struggling patent ink bottle man ufacturer, resolved to convert him into a newspaper man and induced him to remove to London on a handsome salary. In a short time, lie became the exclusive Bow street reporter for the Morning Herald, taking care not to be known ns such. He merely sat in the court, as a casual spectator, without tak ing notes of any case. Nevertheless, his Bow street reports were admirable, full of life and frolic, with cockneys figuring in them who dropped their H's, and Irish people using a brogue thick as a London November fog, which looks as if one could cut it with a knife. By and-by the best of these comic reports were published, with characteristic sketches by. George Cruikshank, as "Mornings in Bow Street," and a second volume also had great success. The fact was—each case, as reported by Wight, was fictitious, or, at least., only fashioned on something that had actu ally come before the court. The magis trates enjoyed the joke, the public laughed, the Morning Herald doubled its London circulation, and, as a reward, Mr. Wight was presented with a one third interest in the paper. This secured, which gave him a large income for life, he never wrote another Morning in Bow Street. He had worked hard, while in dependence; he eschewed labor when independence rewarded his past efforts. There is an anecdote, of which one of our journalists, now at the summit of his profession, is the hero. When he conducted a newspaper in the West, he introduced the novelty of reporting cases before the police magistrate. One of these, in which a brawny butcher, of Teutonic race, was brought up for ad isdnistering, personal correction to his wife, had some peculiar features which the reporter dressed up in an amusing manner. He was sitting at his desk, when the defendant, who, if not re-fined, had been fined by the justice, entered the room, in company with a huge bludgeon. With a Stentorian voice in broken English he inquired - by what right he and his wife had been put into the newspapers ; and his manner was so threatening 'that the editor, a slight youngster, Without even a cane to use in (lefence, saw how very hopeleae his ease was. Keeping his:eyeonthe burly gi ant, and drawing himaf, if, up In his chair'. With an air of great dignity,: he asked • "Do yea . 'subscribe for mylia pe r - The enem stared, d answer ed that heJlid not. y " Then an ," said the editor, triumphantly, "I do not, see what right you have to find fault with IMMIMEI LANCASTER, WEDNESDAY MORISING, FEBRUARY 9, 1874.. anything that I print In It. When you pay two dollars, which is a year's sub scription, in advance, you will have a right to complain." This was not a very logical deduction, but it hit. The man, in a very abated tone and moder ated manner, muttered, " I will go and talk with mine wife about this," and quitted the office, never to reappear in it. The editor's presence of mind had saved him from an assault.—Proof Sheet. A SERMON. Delivered in the New Jerusalem Temple on Sunday, January 30, 1870. by Prof. S. S. Ilathvon, Leader of the Society. [And I, John, saw the holy city, New Jerusa lem, coining down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. —Rev. azi-2.) The distinguishing doctrines of the New Church, signified by the New Je rusalem, in the 21st Chapter of the Book of Revelations, are these : I. That God is one in essence and in person, in whom there is a distinct and essential Trinity, called in the Word, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit; which have a finite correspon dence in the soul, the body, and the active energy of every human being; and that the Lord Jesus Christ Is this God, and is therefore the only true ob ject of worship. The sole divinity of the Lord Jesus Christ, may be regarded as the great central doctrine of the Church, because without a right concep tion of who God is, as well as what he is, lie cannot become essentially a.true object of human affection, and without affection, there can be no interior wor ship, for "God is Love." If the full ness of the God-head did not dwell in Jesus Christ bodily, then, whilst he was on earth, he uttered the most extra ordinary assumptions that ever emana ted from any being, since time began. In the very earliest days of his mission on earth, when Satan—who was the complex representative of all the aggre gated wickedness of the world—appear ed before Jesus in the Wilderness, offer ing all the kingdoms of this world if He would only bow down and worship him, Jesus asserted his sole divinity by saying : "Get thee behind me Satan, for it is written, Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God." When one of his die iples wanted some further manifestation of the identity of Jesus with the Father, he received for reply, " Host thou been so long time with me, Philip, and host not known me? He that bath seen me bath seen the Father. ''l and the Father arc one." Could any other being than Clod, restore the dead to life:; open the eyes of the blind; walk on the water; feed a multitude of five thousand on five loaves and two fishes ; declare that he had power of Himself to lay down his own life and power to take it up again ; and finally, proclaim, in the face of his persecu tors, "BEFORE ABR. 11.1.11 WAS I Ax?" Verily, " the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy." 11. In order to be saved, man must believe in the Lord—notmerely a blind, supine faith, but an active living belief— and must earnestly and honesty strive to obey his commandments, looking to Him alone for strength and assistance, and acknowledging that all life and salvation are from Him. Faith in God, is such an essential elementin the character of a true Christian, that He has found it necessary to declare in His Word : " He that believeth shall be saved, but he that believeth not shall be condemned, yea, is condenmed already." If the inmost of men's minds were known, it would be found that very many are lashed un der the condenmation of disbelief, be cause believing does not consist in a merely sentimental faith; for, our Lord has very explicitly declared, that "He that docth my commandments, he it is, that believeth in me," and " He that keareth my commandments and docth them, I will liken unto a wise man who built his house upon a rock." Althou, - ,,h practical faith is a necessary element of sound doctrine and of the Church, yet it is possible that not all who nominal ly believe, and are in the church, may have that faith:; because not all are of the church who are nominally in it. When we say the Church, we do not re fer to any particular edifice, or sect, or association, but to any number of sincere worshippers, of any class in life, and wif - ereverassembled, who worship God '' in spirit and in truth." Who, in holy confidence, look to "Him from whom all blessings flow," alone, for strength ; and who acknowledge that every thing of life and salvation are from Him, and that, "In Him we live, and move, and have our being." Nevertheless, if a living faith in the Sole Divinity of Jesus Christ constitutes the centre of that church, it will embody more of that New Jerusalem which descends from God. The Sacred Scriptures, or the Di vine Word, is not only a Revelation of the Lord's will, and the history of his dealings with man, but also contains the infinite treasures of his wisdom, ex pressed in symbolical or correspondent fat language, and therefore in addition to the sense of the letter, there Is in the word, an interior or spiritual sense, which can be interpreted only by the law of correspondence between things natural and things spiritual: It was in accordance with this law that David, in his representative character, wrote ; " I will open my mouth in parables ; I will utter dark sayings of old ;" that the Evangelist deGlared that Jesus " spake to them in parables, and without a par ble spoke he not unto them ;" that John was " in the spirit" on the Lord's day, on the Isle of Patmos, and was com manded to " write the things that must be hereafter ;" and finally, that St. Paul, declared that " the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life." According to this law, all the visible and sensuous things of this world are but the corres pondential out-births of the invisible and supersensuous things of the spirit ual world justas the body is an exter nal manifestation of the soul within it; for without a soul the body would in stantly perish. The word of God, in order that it might adapt itself to all the conditions of mankind, from the earli est to the latest ages ;in order that man might realize practically the declara tion—" my words they are spirit and they are life," and that they might be a " lamp to his feet and a light unto his path, "—could not be any- , thing ices than all else that has em anated from Him, " who is, and who was, and who is to come, the Almighty." The sciences of correspondences is as old as human society, and although for ages partially lost, yet in hieroglyphics, I signs and symbols, something of it has ever remained, and is now being de veloped again in the world, through the writings of Swedenborg. IV. Note is the Second coming of the Lord foretold in the 24th chapter of the Gospel according to St. Matthew ; and the establishment of the new church signified by the New Jerusalem, in the 21st chapter of the Book of Revelation; and this second coming is not a visible appearance on earth, but a new disclos ure of Divine Truth, and the promulga tion of true Christian Doctrine, effected by means of the Lord's Servant, Eman uel Swedenborg, who was specially in structed in this Doctrine, and commis sioned to publish it to the world. While Jesus was in the flesh, he paid unto his disciples—" I have many things to tell you, but ye cannot hear them now." But as soon as they could hear them, He came, not in person, but in the power of the Spiritual Sense of his writ ten word. And in order that Jehovah Jesus might manifest his will to ,the human family, he has, in this instance, pursued the same plan that he has in all his former dispensations of truth and light ; namely : through the instrumen tality of a man. He, as the omniscient searcher of hearts, knew exactly what men were the best instruments to pro mulgate:his merciful and infinite pur poses. It does not militate against the testimony of Swedenborg, to say that, as a .general thing, the world has not received it. The Jews did not believe in the first Chllstian dispensation, be cause Jesus did not come according to their literal interpretation of Scripture, and for the same reason the masses of the Christian world, do not believe in the second dispensation. Hundreds and thousands, yea, tens of thousands, of earnest, thoughtful Christian men, how ever, in looking over 'the events of the last hundred years, have not been able to resist the conclusion that in some manner there has been a new influx or outpouring, of God's truth, which amounts to an entire hew dispensation of His will to the human fa . V. Mans the material body is but the preparation for eternal life, and when the body dies man immediately rises into the spiritual world, and, after 1111 preparation in - • intermediate state, dWells:Torever iri Heaven or Hell, se cording to the eharacterle hab acquired during his earthly life. Aecorffn.g to St. Paul "there is a spiritual body, and there is a natural body." The natural - = ..-- ti. . . is "sown in corruption and is raised in incorruption," and becomes invisible to naturareYes. If we needed any assur ance that this raising of the spiritual body, in the human form, taketi _piece immediately after death and nor at a very' remote future period, we. might have it bathe case of the rich man who " lifted up his eyes in Hell and saw Lazarus" in the bosom of Abraham ; or ou the Mount of Transfiguration; where Moses and Fl as"talked fitceto face with the Lord ;" or in the thief on the cross to whom the Lord said, "This flay shalt thou be with me in Paradise." But the matter of paramount consideration in this connection is, as to the character we have acquired during our earthly life. Not what was, or is our external reputation, but our internal character, for reputation relates to what we appear, butcharactertowhatwe are. And while the more flattering unction may be found in the maxim that "Whilst the lamp holds out to burn the vilest sinner may return," yet the more scriptural ad monition is, "Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard las spots? So may they do good who are accustomed to doAvil." What we accustom our selves to think, intend and do from affec tion, be it good or evil, determines the status of our characters ; and those are the only possessions we can possibly take over with us into the spiritual world. External evils and virtues will vanish as internal evils and virtues are devel oped in the intermediate state. VI. The spiritual world, the eternal horde of men after death, is not remote from this world, but is in direct connec tion with it, and we are, though uncon ciously, always in immediate commun ion with angels and spirits. Heaven and Hell are not so 3:unclip/aces of beillg, as they are states of being. Our Lord said, "The Kingdom of God cometh not of observations. It is not 10, here, nor 10, there; behold the Kingdom of Heaven is within you!" Men would not be happy in Heaven, if they could even enter i therein, if they had not Heaven within them before they entered ; neither, would they be miserable in Hell, if they had not Hell in them. It is the aggre gation of these millions of individual Heavens and Hells, that makes up the sum of happiness or misery of the larger Heavens and Hells. This is the practi cal lesson of this doctrine. Let no man therefore imagine that he can escape Hell and enter Heaven through artifice, however refined it may be. As to his spirit, he is in the spiritual world, whilst as to his body he is in this world ; but still in estate of equilibrium and is affect ed by good or evil spirits just as he wills it. He does not originate either good or evil; these are either from Heaven or from Hell. But the Lord has endowed him with a free-will principle, in which consists his manhood, and distinguishes him from a brute. By the exercise of this faculty he can turn to God and Heaven, and, through his guardian angels, can have communion with his Maker. But by the abuse of this facul ty, lie can also turn towards Hell and be influenced in his thoughts and con duct by devils there. But even the power to will and to do, either good or evil, is from the Lord. "If I ascend to Heaven, Thou art there ; if I make my bed in Hell, behold Thou art there."— Man is therefore a co-operative being in his character, and his salvation or spiritual destruction depends upon whether he co-operates with influences from above, or with those from below. From these doctrines, very imperfect ly stated, it will be apparent that an honest and affectionate reception of them, involves not only an acknowl edgment of the Bible as the word of God, but also the claims of Swedenborg as its illuminated expounder, no mattertow hat external church organization an martelong. An intelligent re ception of them, of course, requires a knowledge of the distinctive doctrines of the Holy Scriptures, of the Lord, of Faith, of Charity, of Works, of the Re surrection, Regeneration, Repentance, Baptism, the Lord's Supper, he., but especially of the doctrine of life. With out the latter we can, at best, be only I nominal Christians, and I think we might hazard the assertion, that nomi nal Christianity alone, never can effect the salvation of a soul. In conclusion we may say that wher ever two or three meet in the Lord's name, there he has promised to be in the midst of them. But tomeetin His name, is to meet with the desire to be imbued with His qualities. Ak now ledge of these qualities can only be obtained in the Word of God, or expounded from it, by one competent to teach and interpret. We believe that the Lord's new Church is now descending from Heaven, "as a bride adorned for her husband." But, as seeds that are scattered over a diver sity of soil, some becoming parched,some choked, some devoured by fowls, and some taking root in good ground, and bearing thirty, sixty, or an hundred fold, so the spirit of truth which by a general influx is now descending from God will find a congenial element in thehearts and minds of those only who have "ears to hear what the spirit sayeth unto the churches." In our states of humiliation we may feel discouraged, but in a more exalted and hopeful frame of mind, we entertain no apprehensions as to the final result. The Lord will, in his own way, and in his own good time, establish His Church among men on this earth. If he does not find " where to lay his head," in the hearts of the professed receivers of the doctrines of the new dispensation, there, as in times of old, when he was rejected by those to whom he specially came, He will build up his church among the Gentiles. An Undertaker's Wedding There was a "melancholy lntere,st" in a little nth& that actually occurred not a thousand miles from Boston, a short time since. A well known clergyman received one morning an imperative summons to be in attendance to perform "the ceremony" at the residence of an equally well known undertaker in the evening. He went, accordingly, sup posing, of course, that he was to accom pany the man of grief to a house of mourning, but was agreeably disap pointed on finding the house (over the shop) brilliantly lighted and filled with guests, who the undertaker proceeded to introduce as follows: "This'a.3ny intended wife, sir, Miss Cm . I shall marry her to-night, if you ll officiate." " Certainly," replied the clergyman, somewhat amused ; " and these are your friends to witness the ceremony?" look ing around at the crowded apartment. " 0, yes, you know many of them— allow me—this is Mr. Bones, Sexton of St. Charles Church." Mr. Bones rose Solemnly, and heaved a hundred dollar funeral sigh as he bowed to the minister. " Mr. Mould, sexton of the brick chaple." Mould, who had a low-cut white vest, a large glossy white shirt bosom and collar, a pale face and sunken eyes, which gave him the appearance of being " laid out," replied to the clergymans's greeting with the usual sad shake of the head he had practiced at funerals the past twenty years. " This," said the host, as the individ ual approached on tip toe with downcast gaze, as if disturbing the silence of a grief stricken family , sitting in the front parlor at a funeral, `this is Mr. Black, the undertaker ; I believe you've met before." Black bowed and inclined his head sideways, as if he expected the minister to whisper some directions to him before proceeding with the service. " Allow me to make you acquainted with Mr. Stone, the sculptor . ' Stone griped the minister's hand as he would a mallet; he was proprietor of Stone's Monumental Works. Then followed introductions to the superintendents of two cemeteries, a plate engraver, and others more or less connected with the grim business of the host, who, after fin ishing the introductions, announced himself ready for the marriage cere mony. " You don't mind standing here and using this black walnut case for a table, do you?" said the bridegroom ; "it was too heavy to move, besides it's full of shrouds and caps that we don't want to trouble." The minister acquiesced ,and the twain were duly united, after which cake, wine and conversation pervaded the company. The clergyman congratulated the bridegroom on his bride. "Yes," re plied the happy man f "she's been my housekeeper some time—nice woman— ain't afraid of dead folks." • • " Ah, Indeed," said 'the cletgymaia, getting a . little atallY - Aowg.aiong 'his backbone in spite' of bhE Mid wish ing to change the subject, he remarked . — " Any news to-day, Mr. Tremens ?" " News, no—that is, yes !, You re member Merker, that jumped overboard MWMM and drowned himself from the ferry boat last week ?" ‘iYes.". " Well, they found him this morning ,ten feet of water, and paving stones in his pockets." " Indeed!" "Yes! We've got him up stairs, if you'd like to see him !" Not knowing what might come nest, the clergyman thought best to take his departure, which he did with a grave demeanor suited to the occasion. The Late Chief Justice Taney—llls Lite and Character-Forthcoming Biography, &e. The interest in the life and character of the late Chief Justice Taney, revived by the recent arrival of Rinehart's ad mirable model of the statue which he has been commissioned to execute by the Legislature of Maryland, will doubtless be much enhanced by the appearance of the forthcoming biography in course of preparation by Samuel Tyler, of George town, D. C. Shortly before the death of Mr. Taney he placed in the hands of Mr. Tyler a collection of papers and documents relating to his private and official life, that gentleman having long been his confidential friend, and having signified a desire to write the volume which is soon to make its appearance. A Washington correspondent of the Cin cinnati Inquirer, who has freely con versed with the authorupon the charac ter of the work, indicates that the mate rials furnish a complete refutation of the divers slanders which unscrupulous politicians have cast upon the distin guished jurist while flying, and contin ued since his death. Among the people of Maryland per haps no such refutation is necessary, but it is well for the cause of truth and his -1 tory that the work of writing Judge Taney's biography has been underta ken. One of these slanders persistently quoted, though repeatedly condemned, credits Judge Taney with having assert ed, in the Dred Scott decision, that " a black man had no rights in this country which a white man was bound to re spect," the story originating in a wanton omission of the context, the expression really being the logical deduction of legal and historical inquiry, and in effect that " it was manifest that at the time of the adoption of the constitution negroes were regarded as persons who had no rights which white men were bound to respect." The charges made in Con gress and throughout the country that he rendered his decision in the Dred Scott case in the way and at the time he did for the purpose of assisting Mr. Bu chanan and the extreme pro-slavery wing of the Democratic party ; and also the charge made during the campaign of 1860, that he sought to influence the action of parties by announcing his preference for Douglas, or in ,any man ner on any other occasion, will be fully met. This last - mentioned point was answered in a private letter by Judge Taney, the following extract from which will show his- temper upon the sub ject generally :. " From the time I was put upon the bench of the Supreme Court of the Uni ted States, I have endeavored to extri cate myself entirely from party politics, and I have never permitted any man to approach me as a politician. I have -never even voted since my appointment. I express my opinions, of course, upon political, as well as upon other questions in the private circle. But a judge of the Supreme Court ought never to be con nected with the parties and politics of the country. If he should, he will cer tainly destroy his own usefulness on the bench, and the court itself will be finally brought into the political arena." Judge Taney refrained from express ing any opinion on the origin of the war, fearing that the question might come before him for adjudication. He did not hesitate, however, to say in private conversation that Mr. Buchanan's tim idity was to blame for the great disaster, and that a little firmness on the part of that official would have prevented it. Having in the early part of the war is sued a writ of habeas corpus in favor of a man arrested for treason, he thereby laid himself open to the criticisms of the truly loyal, and though then upwards of eighty years of age, was often threat ened with arrest upon a similar charge. Although Judge Taney was a pro slavery man, and the greater part of his patrimony- was in slaves, he manumit ted every one he had when a young man, having little other property, and with a family dependent upon him. So fur from his being cruel and tyranical, as has been often represented, says Mr. Tyler, "there will be,facts cited in this book to show that he was a man of ex traordinary kind heart and gentle na ture ; so far from his being haughty and aristocratic he will be found very hum ble and very Democratic. As an instance of this I will relate what Father McEl roy, his confessor, told me. The old man, though educated as a Presbyterian, was a pious and devout Catholic. When at his home in Frederick, Md., he used to go regularly to confession. Most of the Catholics of that town were poor people. One day the judge came to con fession and had to wait quite aw h ile,th ere being several who had come before him. When the judge entered the confes sional the priest told him he had better for the future come in by the back way, so as to avoid the crowd and not be de tained. To this the judge dissented, saying that whatever difference there might be in rank and station among men in the world, he couldn't come to confession as the Chief Justice of the United States, but as an humble Chris tian, and that as a Christian he had no more claim to priority at the confes sional than the poorestman in the parish. There was not a manor woman about him who did not soon learn to love him for some act of kindness. Among the first men drafted for the war was his body servant. The family physician offered to secure his re lease on the ground of physical disability, but Judge Taney, though a very poor man,_declined the proffer, and promptly purchased a sub stitute, for which he paid several hun dred dollars out of his own pocket." Judge Taney, after a long life in the service of the public, which included the position of Secretary of the Treasu ry, died a very poor man. So poor that ' his daughters are now earning a living as copyists in Washington. If poverty be a test of party, he certainly cannot be said to have been a corrupt man. Mr. Tyler relates that soon after the out break of the war the Judge was notified that certain Virginia State Bonds in which he had $lB,OOO invested were very likely to be repudiated in conse quence of the inability of the State to pay the interest, and the fact that many of them were owned in the then hostile North. He was told however, that in consequence of his distinguished char acter and extreme age the State author ities would redeem his bonds if he would present them for payment. But he de clined, saying that he knew no reason why his bonds should be redeemed and all the rest repudiated, One of the most startling effects of this monkish delusion was the crusade of the little children. A band of fifty thousand children from Germany and France set out in 1212 to redeem the holy sepulchre. A peasant child of Vendome first assumed the cross in France, and soon an increasing throng of boys and girls gathered around him as he passed from Paris to- the South, and with a touching simplicity declared that they meant to go to Jerusalem to deliver the sepulchre of the Saviour. Their parents and relations in vain en deavored to dissuade ' them ; they escaped from their-homes ; they wan dered away without money or means of subsistence ; and they believed that a miracle would dry up the Mediterranean Sea one enable them topass safely to the shores of Syria. At length a body of seven thousand of the French children reached Marseilles, and here they met with a strange and unlooked-for doom! At Marseilles were slave-traders who were accustomed to purchase or steal children In order to sell them to the Saracens. Two of these monsters, Ferrers and Porous,. engaged to take the young crusaileis - to the Holy Land without charge, and they set sail in seven ships; for the. East. Two of the vessels were .sunk on the passage with all their basserigere ; the oltheni arrived safely, and the unhappy children were sold by their hetrayers in the slave mu kets ; of Alexandria. or .Carlo. Other large bodies of children came from. Ge rmany across the Alps. Many perished ..Aom,hunger, 4lsease, ; few were _enabled-to di on, the. seem], soil of By ria ; and it is estimated flat fifty thou sand of the flower of European youth, I were lost in this most remarkable of the cruasdes.—Harper's Magazine. OMUMNI The Children's Crusade MEM THE YUMMIER DUCH. A Beaten of the Article in the Atlantic Monthu Mr. Ulrich Strickler furnishes us with the following review of the article on the "Pennsylvania Dutch," which appeared in a recent number of the Atlantic Monthly : An article on the " Pennsylvania Dutch" was published a few months ago in the At lantic Monthly, which, while it contains many facts concerning the customs of this class of people, contains also many inaccu racies, and conveys false ideas on many subjects. Two criticisms on it have been published in different periodicals, bat as they point out but one or two of its many inaccuracies, we now, after having waited so long in vain for some one better quali fied from a literary point of view than our selves to perform the task, deem it our duty as a "Pennsylvania Dutchman," to point out and correct the most glaring of its in accuracies, and particularly those which convey false ideas to those who are not acquainted with these people. The writer, who is apparently a lady and a Yankee, says: " I have lived for twenty years in the county of Lancaster, where my neigh bors on all sides are " Pennsylvania Dutch," and in consequence of which she claims to be well acquainted with their lan guage and customs. That she is an observ ing woman, and a person of considerable intelligence, we are not disposed to ques tion, but that she knows very little of the Pennsylvania Dutch language, is apparent from the examples given by her, as speci mens of this peculiar dialect, and which are all with one or two exception's, incor rect. It is also apparent from the article that she knows.nothing of these people out side of the immediate neighborhood of her residence, which is,..she informs us, in Upper Leacock township, this county. Now no one acquainted in but a single locality, and thereassociating with the peo ple to only a very limited extent, could give a correct and accurate account of the merme', customs, b3liefs and language of the whole so-called Pennsylvania Dutch people, no matter how strong his desire might bo to do so. A foreigner who had for some time resided in New York, Chica go, New Orleans, or San Francisco, might as well attempt to give a description of the entire United States and of tho manners and customs of its people, by describing only that particular city of which ho was a resident, its business and its people. From a description of Boston, or even of the whole of New England, its industrial pur suits and its inhabitants, very little knowl edge of the South, of the Pacific slope, of the Rocky Mountain region, or of the almost boundless prairies of the West, or of the manners, customs and pursuits of the people inhabiting those sections could be obtained. Nor will a description, no mat ter how correct, of the Pennsylvania Dutch of one locality be an accurate description of all that class of people. Although they are not spread over the whole United States, yet Upper Leacock township com prises but a very small part of the country inhabited by . them. Not only is nearly the whole of South Eastern and Central Pennsylvania inhabi ted by them, but there are many counties in Ohio, Indiana and Northern Illinois set tled almost exclusively by Pennsylvania Dutch, who speak that language yet to a very great extent. There are also a great many In other sections of the United States, especially in the Shenandoah Val ley in Virginia, in Western Maryland, in lowa, and in many other sections of the Union; also in the southern part of Can ada West, (now the Province of Ontario.) It will thus bo seen that these people are not so insignificant in numbers (nor in in fluence as will hereafter be shown) as might be inferred from the article in the Atlantic Monthly, in which they are called " a people which are almost unknown out side of the rural neighborhoods of their own State." We may safely estimate their number at not less than four or five mil lions. There are, however, man of them, particularly in the towns and vi es, who speak English partly or altogether, ut who are none the less of this class for speaking a different language, as they are the de scendants of parents and grand parents who were "Dutch." In many of the "Dutch" sections this language will have disappeared in one generation hence, and in two generations the English will have superseded it everywhere. Yet the people of these sections will not be a different people for speaking a different language.— We may, therefore, call all the descendants of these people Pennsylvania Dutch. All Americans bear some resemblance to each other; there is a something in their appearance by which they can at all times be known from Europeans, and yet in many respects they differ widely. It is so with the Pennsylvania Dutch, they differ widely in different sections, in their - cus toms, their religion, and even in their lan guage. The writer of this is a genuine Pennsylvania Dutchman; his ancestors having all been Dutch, and he having been raised in a Dutch neighborhood. He has also spent the greater part of his time liv ing and traveling among these people, not only in different.countritre of South East ern and Central Pennsylvania, but also in Ohio,lndiana, Illinois,` irginia and Canada. In no two sections has he found them to speak the language exactly alike; but on the contrary in every section some terms and phrases are used that are not used in any other. In one section, more and different English and partly English words and phrases are used than in another, while in another the language is nearer the Pure German, and in still another we notice a slight trace of other languages. We might give examples but think it unnecessary.— " Pit Schweffiebrenner's " letters in the Father Abraham, are very good specimens of Berk' County " Dutch," but they would be considered poor specimens of rork County "Dutch," and still poorer speci mens of the Dutch as it is spoken in Central Pennsylvania, in the coun ties of Union, Centre, Huntingdon, ,t.e. While the language differs some what in different localities, yet it does not differ enough to make it unintelligible to persons from the different sections. There is however, occasionally, a word or a phrase used the meaning of which would dark to any one not from that particular locality. We have met with such, the meaning of which we had to inquire. This is owing to the language not being a pure but a mixed one. While nearly every, if not quite every, county of England has some peculiarities of dialect, and nearly every section of the United States and wherever the English language is spoken, yet all educated persona speaking the Eng lish language , m. speak it nearly alike, as there is a certain standard by which they are governed. So with all other pure lan guages. The Pennsylvania Dutch being a mixed dialect, has no common standard by which persons speaking it can be governed. There are no newspapers or books pub lished, but occasionally a poem or a hu morous article in this dialect makes its appearance. The most extended of these are the letters before alluded to. Each per son's productions in this language differ from the productions of all others, in style, in language, but more particularly in the orthography. As the Pennsylvania Dutch is a dialect of the German, with but a trace of the English and other languages, the German orthography should be followed, and the German sounds of the letters ap plied as much as possible. The letters of " Pit Schweffiebrenner" aro very faulty in this respect. To make the words spell what the writer intends theyshall, or be as they are E spoken by the people, the nglish sounds must be applied quite as often as the Ger man. The English and Gorman sounds of the letters are so indiscriminately mixed among each other that no one not acquaint ed with this dialect could pronounce all the words correctly—that is as they are spoken. German or English, or German and Eng ligh scholarship alone would not suffice to make anything out of such words as .. weaves " " neayer," " froga," " warta," etc.; it would require a knowledge of " Pennsylvania Dutch." Even his nom de plume "Schwefflebreruser," which Is to be a combination of the two German words ",schweffet" (not schweff/e) brimstone and " brenner" burner, would not be pro nounced by a purely Germanscholar as the intention is that it should be. Sometimes two different letters, which have no similar sounds, either in the English or the Ger man are used to represent the same sounds. Forinstance, g and y, whose sounds differ in both the English and in the German are used, sometimes one andsometimes the other, to represent a certain sound. We find " nearer" and "nearer" (negro) in the same letter. "The tongue which these people speak" says the writer in the Atlantic Monthly "Is not German. They audit are Dutch." This is a blunder. They are not the descendants of emigrants from Holland, the country of the Dutch, bat their ancestors principally came from Germany, and but a small pro rtion from other countries. Nor is the language Dutch. Although it is not Ger man, and is called "Dutch," it comes nearer the German than the Dutch or any other pure language. The liberal policy of William Penn, in allowing religious freedom to all settlers, and the proscriptive policy of the Puritans, served to attract not only the 'Mennonites but also the Lutherans and Reformed from Germany, French Protestants, Swedes, and others, to Pennsylvania. Here they Were not subjected to persecutions on account of religions opinions as in the New England and in some other colonies, and in conse quence all classes that could not find a congenial element in other places hi the New World, came to Pennsylvania. These settlers from different nationalities, speak ing different languages, in their inter course with one another, gradually formed a new or mixed tongne, and as the Ger mans greatlypredominated, theirlangnage entered moatlargely into the new language. In localities oonfignons ti English -Settle mentiy we find the • linguage'_ partaking -more'or the English thin in localities Mare distant from them. We have before stated that the words given by the writer in the Atlantic Month ly as specimens of this language were given NUMBER 6. intierrealy. We will now point them out 'more particularly. Although, as before "dad, the language differs somewhat in different localities, yet in tho main there is a general similarity, and wo have not heard at anytime or place, the words spoken as given by her, or as we would pronounce them from her orthography. She gives "for fbr "fahre" the German being"fithren." Pronounced like the German, with the ex ception of the last sound in the word (n), which is omitted. Shortening words by omitting some sounds is a peculiarity of this tongue. Nearly all words ending sim ilarly with en are abridged in the same manner by dropping then. InMany words of two or more syllables beginning with a consonant and containing a abort vowel sound in the first syllable, the vowel sound is omitted and the first and second syllables are blended into one as"gfarige" for ' s yllables and in some the first syllable is drop pod entirely as "kumme" fur "gekommen.' pod should be "6-tick a mohl do," and "haltybisseP' should be "halt a bisseL" For the German word "am," which represents in that language both the English adjective one, and the article a we use a. When an article we give it the short sound as in at, when an adjective the long sound as inlate; in some sections the broad sound as in all. For the adjective pronoun one (German einer, rine, eine) we use ever, fine and ens, with the long sound of a; in some sections the broad sound. But the short sound of iis never used for emir, as would be inferred from "haltybissel." We might quote quite a number of other errors, but consider these sufficient to prove that her knowledge of this language is very limited. A large portion of that part of the article relating to the religion of these people, is also erroneous. We would infer from it that all these people belong to the three sects of Mennonites, which is very far from being so. All the Dunkards or Germ Baptists, and nearly all the Lutherans an German Reformed in the United States are Pennsylvania Dutch; the same is also true of the Evangelical Association, United Brethren, and several minor sects of Ger man Methodists. Among the:Mennonites the men do not keep their hats on, nor the women their bonnets, in religious meetings, and candidates for preachers can not ex cuse themselves front the service, thel wri ter in the Atlantic Monthly to the contrary notwithstanding. It is the doctrine of this denomination that there is a Divine guid ance in the selection of preachers, and that the lot:will only fall upon God's elect. states in the beginning of her articie she has "learned to hearti ly esteem" the Dutch "for their native good sense, friendly feeling, and religious, character," she has taken some pains in a subsequent part to ridicule them ; thus pretending. ono thing and laboring to prove the opposite. Remarks like the following are,—to say the least that can be said about them,—disrespectful and slanderous, and do these plain, honest and unpretending people great Injustice. They are plainly intended to ridicule them, anti bring disre spect upon them. "Titles do not abound among these plain neighbors of ours. Pe ter's little son used to mill him " Pete" as he heard the hired men do." " A person once asked an Amish man the difference between themselves and another Mennist sect. ' Vy, day years puttons, and we years hook oont eyes r and this is, in fact a prime difference. " After meeting is over, the Amish people are all seen going to the store which gives the highest price for butter and eggs—for they have compared notes." There are other remarks of a similar nature in the article, but we consider these sufficient to show the animus of the writer. These false hoods are so plainly apparent to every per son, that we do not consider them worthy of refutation. She also tries to ridicule their extreme cleanliness. Cleanliness in every thing is a characteristic of these people. The "tin ware and brass ladles" in a Dutch kitchen do "shine," and no Yankee will have his stomach turned at a Dutch table, or by seeing the process of cooking and baking in a Dutch kitchen. It would be a fine thing for the Yankee men, who love cleanliness, and dislike eating dirt, if their wives would previous to be ginning house-keeping, serve an appren ticeship at learning cleanliness and cook ing and baking in a Dutch kitchen. No class of people can compare with the Dutch in real cleanliness, in their kitchens and about their cooking. From the great prominence given to the Amish by the long description of them, wo would infer that they are a numerous soft. But they are quite the contrarv, being the least numerous of the Mennonite sects, and in fact of all the sects of the Dutch. The eastern part of Lancaster county con tains nine-tenths of all this sect in the United States. The re-aainder, who are all emigrants, or descendants of emigrants from that section, are divided among the following places : Buffalo Valley, in Lrinon county; Juniata Valley, in Mifflin county; Ilm' s Valley, in Centre county, and untingdou county. Although she says, "Our Dutch use a freedom of language that is not known to the English, and which to them savors of coarseness," no true Dutch woman would hint, in a newspaper article, at a subject alluded to by our " English" lady writer, in the following words : " In regard to this (soap-making) and that other chemical ope ration making and keeping vinegar, there are certain ideas about the temporary in cdpacity of some persons—ideas only to be alluded to here." On the subject of education she says, "Much education the Dutch farmer fears, as productive of laziness ; and laziness is a mortal sin here." In regard to laziness being despised, she is right, but in regard to the Dutch fearing education she is wrong. Laziness is not esteemed, as being Indus triots L 9 one of the characteristics of the Dutch. To prove that the Dutch are not opposed to education, we have only to pomt to the public schools of Lancaster county, which are not surpassed by those of any " English county in the State, and which will compare favorably with those of any section of the Union. The leading townships in Lancaster coun ty in educational matters are Dutch. They pay more liberal salaries to the teachers than the English townships do, and in con sequence of which they can command a bet ter and abler corps of teachers. This is also true of York and other counties which are partly Dutch and partly English. The Superintendent of Common Schools of Lancaster county, who has hold the office now for eleven years and under whose ad ministration the schools and the school cause have made such decided progress,is a Dutch- Man and so area great majority of the load ing teachers of the co un ty,an d many offihem are the sons of Dutch farmer& The statistics of the Department of Common Schools of Pennsylvania prove that the Dutch are not opposed to education, and to them we would refer the reader. It is true that the Dutch farmers are °little slow in forsaking old and established customs and beliefs, and adopting new and untried theories, but when they once see the wisdom of a meas ure, they are its firmest friends. This is true of education as well as of other sub jects. Although not many give their sons a classical education as yet, a good com mon school education is now conferred very gemales. nerally upon th err m on a co lea us an state ments in the article, to which this is in tended principally as a reply, but as they are of minor importance we will pass them by unnoticed. THE WYNOCHIE CHILDREN The Mystery Solved by the Dbteovery of the Bodies of the Children—They Are Tweed by the Crows. The mystery of the disappearance of the three children of Joseph Wyble, of Wy nockie, in Passaic county, N. J., ;which has occupied considerable public attention for some weeks, was solved yesterday morning. The information was brought to Patterson yesterday afternoon by Mr. Rusling, the engineer of the New Jersey Western Railroad and the excitement caused in that city 'by the intelligence was intense, the offices of the local journals being fairly besieged and the street corners crowded by speculative gatherings. It seems that a man named William Ramsey, with a companion, was walking through the wilderness yesterday morning, about two miles from the but of the Wy bles, when their attention was called to a large flock of crows ascending and descend ing at a point near the foot of a mountain. Proceeding to the spot thoy discovered, near a large shelving rock, the three lost children of Joseph Wyble. Their bodies were considerably decom posed, but still recognizable. Their wan, pinched countenances gave unmistakable evidence that their death had been caused by starvation. The bodies of the two younger children were found under the shelter of the shelving rock, while that of the oldest was found about ten feet distant. The bodies were also slightly injured by the crows. The bodies were' carefully carried to the hamee of their parents, and were during the day visited by hundreds of neighbors all of whom recognized in the corpses be fore them the three lost children whose disappearance has caused such an excite ment. It is now quite evident that all suspi cions against, the parents of murder were without foundation, while aithe same time it is somewhat strange that, after the dili gent searches made for the children, and the large rewards offered for their recove ry, they should be feu id within a distance of two.miles fto{ri their home. In the Senate of • : : on Wednes day, the memorial asking Congress to submit 'the Female' Suffrage Amend ment to the State Legislature was tabled -hy the casting vote of the Lieutenant Oovernor.. In the Senate , of New Jersey, yester day, the. bill appointing Board of .Pollpe 'Commissioners for Newark 'was passed is' third reading ''llie",johit resolution rejecting the Suffrage amend ment, was made the order for Monday next. LATE OF ADVEHTLSINO Bream losnurrimoiperns, VA. Alm re MuLS9 / 10 11.1 2 . *IN Att. Yrit Wk. UM% the Ind. and emus tor each subsequent tn. Insertion. • . • CIETCI2I.&i, ADYJIBTISIIRO,7.Oents a lino for tbo first, and 4 cents for oath subsequent Inger. , EIPMZEAL ttIYTICIIN 1111110Ctad. in L<%tai 011aZani 15 °opt& Par ' 7 Or*Mei "Nom= primbeafror marriages sad ~ deaths. 10 .oents per line for first paserttost. 'slid Cr ovals for every subsequent tosertiOti. . . Lama. /um trrzuoi Itevrtnisi-• =Motors ' 160 Administrators' 2 en Assignees' notices. -. 260 AndLtors' 700: • r Other "Notices; ton Itnes,.or teak three ...... 00 Jere illnelVs Leiter to Attorney General Mr. Mee" Eute. onelLate Secretary Stan Wasnixerrort, Jan. 18, 1870. Hon. E. R. Haan, Attorney GeneraL Sin : I was not present in court yester day to hear your remarks on Mr. Stanton, but today I was shown a newspaper report of them, which I presume to be perfectly accurate. The folloWing paragraph has struck mo with surprise : But it is not of the lawyer, eminent as, he was in the science and practice of the law, that men chiefly think as they 'remember him. His service to mankind was on a higher and wider field. Ile was appointed Attorney General by Mr. Buchanan on the 20th of December, 1860, in one of the dark est hours of the country's history, when the Union seemed crumbling to pieces, without an arm raised for its support; when, .with out the public counsels was' doubting, and within were fears; when feebleness and treachery wore uniting to yield whatever defiant rebellion might demand and good men everywhere were ready to despair of the republic. For ten weeks of that winter of national agony and shame, with patriot , ism that never wavered and courage that never quailed, this true American, happily not alone, stood manfully at his peat " tor tween the living and the dead,", gave what nerve he could to timid and trembling im becility and met the secret plotters of their country's ruin with an undaunted front until before that resolute presence the de mons of treason and civil discord appeared In their own shape, as at the touch of Rhu dere spear, and fled baffled and howling away. This statement was carefully and delib erately written down before you delivered it. You spoke for the American bar as Its organ and official head, and you addressed the highest tribunal in the world, knowing that your words were to go upon its records and there remain earever. I take it for granted, under thesq circumstances, that uo earthly temptation could make you deffeet a hair's breadth from the facts as you understand and believed them. The inevitable conclusion la thatyou musthave in your possession or within. your reach some evidence which convinces you-that what you said is, the truth, and nothing but the truth. lam sure you will excuse me for raking you to say what that evidence la. The paper I have transcribed from your address sounds like the authoritative sum mary of a historian, as ho closes the most interesting chapter of his book. You can hardly consider the curiosity impertinent that prompts an American citizen 'to in quire what your Judgment is founded upon. Besides, I have some friends whose repu • tatlon is deeply involved in the affairs you pronounce upon with so much confident*. Moreover, I have a personal concern in your remarks, for lam ono of Mr. Stanton's colleagues, and am as liable as any of them to be taken on your statement for ono of the "secret plotters of their country's ruin." Bo pleased, therefore, to give mo the infor mation I seek. Do you find on the records of your office anything which shows that Mr. Stanton was in violent or dangerous conflict with "demons of treason and civil dis cord," or any other description of de mons? Did Mr. Stanton himself over lay claim to the heroic character you ascribe to him or declare that he had performed those prodigious feats of courage while ho was in Mr. Buchanan's cabinet ? Has any other person who was in a condition to know the facts ever given you that version of them which you repeated to the court? If yes, who are the witnesses? What par ticular danger was he exposed to which tested his valor, and made his " undaunted front" a thing so wonderful in the descrip tion of it? Whose feebleness and treachery was it that united to yield whatever defiant rebellion might demand?" and how did Mr. Stanton's courage dissolve the combi nation or defeat its purposes? You say that for; ten weeks "he stood manfully at his post, between the living and the dead." Now, when the first law officer of the United Statea addressed the Supreme Court on a special occasion, and after elaborate preparation, ho is presumed to mean something by what he says. How is this to be understood? You certainly did not intend to assert merely that he stuck to his commission as long as he could and gave it up only when he oouldnot holp it. Standing manfully at a post of any kind, and especially when the stand is made "be tween the living and the dead," has, doubt less, a deep significance, if ono could but manage to find out what it is. Who woro the dead and who were the living? and how did it happen that Mr. Stanton got be tween them? What business had ho be tween them, and why did he stay there for ten weeks? These questions you can easily answer, and the answer is needed; for, in the meantime, conjectural interpretations are very various and some of them injuri ous to the dead and hying aforesaid, as well as to Mr. Stanton, who, according to your representation, stood between thorn. I can comprehend the well worn simile of Ithuriol's spear, but I do not see what on earth was the use of it unless you thought it ornamental and original, for you mike Mr. Stanton by his mere presence, and without a spear, do what Ithuriel himself could not do with the aid of that powerful instrument. The angel with the spear compelled a demon to lay 'aside his dis guise, while a mortal man dealt with many demons, and not only made them all ap pear in their proper shape, but drove them " baffled and howling away " out of his "resolute presence." Ido not object to this because the figures are mixed or be muse It is an extravagant outrage on good taste; the custom of the times allows men who make eulogies on their political friends to tear their rhetoric into rags; and if you like the tatters you are welcome to flaunt them. But I call your attention to it in the hope that you will talk like a man of this world, and give us in plain, or at least Intelligible prose, a particular account of the very importanti transactions to which you refer, together with the attendant cir cumstances. I eupposoyouhaveno thought of being taken literally; your description of Mr. Stanton conjuring demons is only a metaphorical way you have of saying that he frightened certain bad men. I beg you to tell me who they were and how ho scared them. I repeat that you are not charged, and, in my opinion, could not be justly charged, with the great sin of fabricating statements like these. You have, no doubt, seen or heard what you regard as sufficient proof of thorn. What I fear is, that you have been misled by the false accounts which partizan writers have invented, not to honor Mr. Stanton, but to slander otters. If you had known the truth concerning his conduct while he was Attorney General and told it simply, you might have done great honor ep his memory. He was at that time a regular. built, old fashioned., democratic Union saver. He believed in the constitution as the fundamental law of the land, as the bulwark of the public lib erty, and as the only bond by which the States could be rightfully held together.— He regarded his official oath as a solemn covenant with God and his country, never to be violated under any circumstances; and he had a right wholesome contempt for that corrupt code of morality which teaches that oaths are not binding upon the rulers of a free country which they find it inconsistent with their interest to keep them. Ho uniformly behaved with "mod est stillness and humility," except when hisopinion was asked and thenhe spoke with becoming defference to oth ers. And from that part of his life at least, you might by telling it truly, have derived a "lofty lesson" indeed, but this quiet, unpretending, high principled, Democratic gentleman is converted by your maladroit oratory into s hectoring bully of the abolition school, rampaging through tho White House and around the depart.; ment, trying to frighten people with -big looks. es )I* ln I beseeech you to re-examine :au thorities. If you still think them s sut to sustain you, I cannotdoabt your wi g ness to communicate them for the scrutiny of others who are interested. If, on the contrary, you shall be satisfied that you have made a great mistake, then, Justice to all parties, and especially to the subject of your well meant but unfortunate eulogy, requires some amends to be made. It will be for you to say whether you will or will not ask the court for leave to withdraw that part of your speech froarthe record. .r. S. BLACK. lee Business in Milne The Gardiner (Me.) Reporter says: "The prospect of a short ice crop in the section south has created great activity in prepara tions for gathering on the Kennebec, and a large number of persona are making arrangements to go into the business. Every available place on the river from that city to within three miles of Richmond is said to be engaged for storehouses and an immense business Is to be the result. The old companies—Cheeseman, Knickerbock er, Kennebeck Land and Lumber Company and Marshall & McCausland—will 1111 their houses, making an aggregate amount of abontloo,ooo tons. The Kennebeck Ice Com pany have erected two houses on the Coburn place in Pittston, and have laid the alga for two more, and will store about 20,000 tons. Mr. Charles Wait has contracted to deliver 20,000 tons to parties in Philluielphis. It is to be stacked in the open air until ready for shipment. Ile will cut it a few miles above Richmond. Five or six other companissi composed ofparties in Gardiner, are making arrangements to enter• the business, who will probably cut nearly 100,000 tonsin all." The President yesterday signed the bill authorizing the Passport Clerk at the State Department to administer oaths in applications for passports. The Governor of Wyoming Territory was before the Indian Committee of the Senate yesterday, trying to procure the ratiticatitm of the Sioux treaty, 'so that the Sioux may be removed , 'tenni l‘thi) lands they now occupy, comprising about one-fourth of the Territory.