LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER, PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY BY H. G. SNITII 4e CO A. J. STELNMAN MEM ,lIMS—Two Dollars per annum payable II cases In advance. LAWASTE2I. DAILY DITRILLWENCIIII llSlled every evening. Sunday axcepted, at or annum In ndvance. FICE-SOUTIIWEW CORNER OF CENTRE ARE. iportrp. TUE TWO WORKERS. worlceri in one field Tn tiled Oil Irma day to day, had tile Sallee hard labor, I Pith had the same small pay; With the same blue tike abovu, '1:11e some green grass below, Ilan. snuff Was fllll of love, 'fine other full of wo. ()no leaped up with the With the suaring of the lurk; (me felt it ever :night, For his soul was ever dark, I 111, !wart Still tkard LLt tt.tno, liVilrl evils ever gay; fnu• worked ,vlth many a growl, tine whistled all the day. One had a Hower-clod rot Ite,le a merry mill, NVife and ehildreu near the spot Made It sweeier, fairer vl ill; I Pitt.a Wl , lOl Ol l hovel Trull of .11. word, dirt wad Mu, No %vow!, he geetned Tad. Wne Witt SI ill 111,y N 1,1,10.11 In 1.110Nalal: Ilehl, oti trot" day to dav, hot h had the hard itlimr, itoth had the sinadl pay; 100 11,,y with olle will, The 1110 tell 11Aeolic drank at the still, \ :el the other ht the well. The ll'lre or Garibaldi 1111= ()I t lho w l'- tern shun. of t h e Adriatic •a. 1 1 , 1 r Eli, nuitith ut the Itiver l'o, ioro i- Imiely, mintarloal grave. ;u11: weeds in prufti.ion annuli! , tall gra--e- , hotel over it, :111.1 Wllll 1 ,111 . .1 their perlitine above it. Ito ,dit tide is la.,1“11 only by the song hirds, tllolllollll— 111,fficili , liy 14 the surf as it busks pun 111.• 11.1.1:1i,111 Slllll - hay, .•0111..:1:1.1 gum., :Llld twenty m e , hat, the Ilutver, drupped their .ithoret Ivaro sinoe luving Intntl4 tshititied that hiwly grave, totillerly revered the .11 . :1.1, 11116 Nveoping, .uni the photo of The la t eulutiun h a d run its mu-e; Itunto Int.l ,tirrentlered Lo the :111.1 the 11.01111111 Re ithlie Iva, nu more. A remnant of the atriut artiiv, disdaining to surrender, :el shaken the .111 , 14 the Etertutl City '.llll 1114 . 11' 1 . 1,1, :111.1 111:111(` IL 11..1'11./11, , 1:111'11 :11 . 1 . ..5S the taiiintry to the Adriat - • Son., with the de=ign tanbarlting at 'o-t•natioo fur Vonioe, which was still chi by t Ito revultitiunists, though be iogtal hy land :Hid sea by a powerful ti-trian furco. 'rho huats in \t'hiell toy Lad thi , perilous journey 'ero and uvororoivdod, and the unprupitimitt. the wilt cruiser, of .\ (Istria swt lit the sea, motoring capturo do-tructimi almost certainly. A hool I:\Va 10 . 1 . 11 Wk uu a gloomy, misty ighl, lale in .July', I.tiln, llencral llari aldi, his 'wif, and four or live of his in the striz,gle for Ilalian lib rly, %void un hoard one of these frail ralt , , leered in the direction of elo,igie•red \'enico. 'Pile \vire id llari .ddy teas sulll•ring from a protracted isogi,o, mid thoie4ll she had lo lee car led 111“,1 lilt. way ruts, she pleaded so carms•tly not, to he •It hehind that they could not refuse et., awl sooli neconinioditlions were repared for her as their !Milled rosour is; W 4,11 1 ,1 all , ' \V. The Ni 11111 NV:I, fair, ttittl under cover ii the Leal glided silently awards desiinatien. But when the t o t 1,-.1• :11111 1111 , 1.1 I•ll`ared-aWaV, it I.Vt 1 :111 1 11 hut 1 111.11' anxious gaze twn Aus- Han frigates in dangereus proximity. 'lie wild, toe, lcml changed, tttul they ,ere itetl;ing, 101 l little pregress. It was teptal, however, that such :I spec': Ilium hr Itecatt (veldd net tit traet attentiot ; nil it the Sllll 11,0 higher and higher, I itlettit apparent discevery, they begat' it regard their position as quite secure. tot this illusitot NV:I6 ,m /11 Itrtdken. The wind tir t 1 gun eattut ',mlting over the rater, and il, rumbling report. had It'var in I'll I Int:llttsilio eleittged their cones*, ipitl the jat rho.: I t roo t . that they were ptir,tied. It e as t otiv a r a et• reit lire. '1;11u wind, as terereshded, had changed, and \Va.:, lIONV 'a,vort t lde to their return, and they flew ttoverd 1)11,11111V. Till'lr 1111r:111- .I'S, 10/NVI . V , •I', gained ,teatlily upon hem ; tool \Own their_lstat touched •Iteretheenetted-shot \\;toteltillingthick v among Octet, as the frigates dis taged their I,re:el-ides at the escaping hgitive-t. The 1.11111 . NVI/111:111 1 \l'llll gri t ,' in r, ilu ttlty i t a trot utitlrk the Lodger and eNeitenietit, was tenderly illoa 11,111 the rude Led which .hall teen made rer her en the het tont or the teat, carried heyend rettelt itr the pitting r, s he!, I:m..116,110d a few Iteurs, 114 1 11 111',1111ett 111.1' 111, 1 t in the arms el her A grave \!:, hurriedly inado in Ilia ; and :Is the dart •loolo\v , oi :111:11! hr ~hurr, ii ii ,oured hy the Austria! till hood G:1111 W:LH Inid to rest old tlnrihnhli only time to tiro!! 1 ILL tears 11111111 the 11111111:10 VraVe, :1.111 11011 y:"..11t Wt'ary, hunted fugi The hi-tory ids thi, beautiful, gentle and horiiii• woman, ,ii lull of adventure, danger mid toil, her romantic life iii South Aincrica anal tragic death 011 the frontier of hid rityial and bleeding Italy, forma 1111,-; tere-ling chapter in the history of that lone-oppre-isell but lime free people. Si:nib:dill uas au enemy of oppression from Iris ,artiest boyhood. Whiai a youth he madu his first visit to Itomp, and wit. , soon dral,vti into the the secret repub lican sucietic> which wore just then The spies of ho government were lint long, in di,- coviiring tlic,e rovolutionary iirganiza lions, :mil it, iron hand came down upon then, with smelt litre, that they were crushed and scat Pired ; and as young tied for life through the gate, of Honi6, he i.e.,' hi. 4,,vn sentence of death piebeil on the \rails of the city.— ISot Priiv blew, had a grist wor k f or the young rugitive to perform in the Coining, and the oxectitioncr pur sued lion in vain. Thin: deprived or the abil ity of Riding his vonlilrynien ill thenaspirations l'or freedom, h, wandered forsorno years tin exile, when the -trut.tgle bet tveen the republican:, if South Atneiica :Ind the 1...N - ern:mad. of Itrazil and ISIIPIIOS opp,rtunity of drawing hi" swonl in the elinSe or whit, in thiA hard, dis ctotiraHlig :11,1 perikai , service lliat lie first inct the Wolnall lonely burial we have previously descrihed. Defeat and di-aster had overtaken the little deer \Odell he commanded. Every One of his intim:tic personal friends had per idled by shipwreck or in battle, :old his great heart was heavy with sorrow :tint , r„ words: " I wa , left ip a ,late of complete iso lation, and felt alone in the world. Not one of rhe friends of my heart remained. Aml this ohange had liven made in so sudden and Perrible a manner that it \Va, to ovcreolne the impres sions it had made upon my feelings. I felt the want of Dile to love me, awl a desire that such a one might be very Sinai supplied, itslity present state of mind seemed insupportable." In this frame or mind, I ttrilailtli ar rived, with hisshattereil vessel, at the lit- Ile town of Marinhos, in the province or La g una. One day, while sorrowfully pacing the deck, thinking of lost friends and blasted hopes, Ids attention was at tracted by the sweet voice of a woman who was s i n ,6 lg out, of the patriotic airs of the country. Ile turned his eyes in the direction from which the inspiring strains came, and beheld a beautiful woman, of light, graceful figure, and upon whose dark curls the suns of less than twenty summers had shone. For the first time in his life Gari baldi was tottelml with the "ten der passion." By a power or fascination which he seemed unable to resist, he was drawn toward the fair singer, Lowering 0 boat, he was rowed to the shore, and soon stood before the lady's House, but dared not enter. After hours of search, he found an acquaintance who was known to the faintly; and through him he soon obtainedan invita tion to take collies at the house of the young lady's parents. Amore intimate acquaintance only increased the regard her appearance lirst inspired. In a letter written to a gentleman in New York, sonic years ago, he said : "I found that the hidden treasure I had discover ed was a gem of rare and inestimable worth.' But I have since reproached myself for removing her from her peace tut native retirement to scenes of danger, toil, and suffering. I felt it most deeply on that bitter day when, at the mouth of the Po, within reach of the Austrian shot, while still hoping to restore her to life, I took her pulse and was horrified to Had her n corpse. Then I sang the hymn of despair, and prayed for for- Ttic ''bgaittotet silittettigeitar. VOLUME 71 givenes;t; for the sin of taking her from her peaceful home stood more forcibly before me." Such was the first Wiecting of Anna and the future hero of Italy. They were soon married; and from that time to her tragic death, in 1549, period of ten years, she followed her husband in all of his campaigns—shar ing the toils of the march, the dangers of the battle, the perils of the camp often pitched amid death-breeding marshes, fording rivers, crossing ahnost impene trable forests, or fighting by his side, ever brave, hopeful and cheerful, aiding in his arduous labors, and comforting him in the hours of adversity and defeat. An excellent rider, she was present in nearly every engagement, rallying and encouraging the dispirited troops, car rying orders to a distant part of the field, or ministering to the wounded or dying men. On the occasion of a battle near Cali tibani, she resisted every entreaty of her husl:and to seek a place of safety, and took upon herself the (Pity of serv- I ing out the ammunition to the soldiers. During the heat of the combat, seeing a portion of the line wavering and threat ening to break, she rode rapidly toward the column, hoping to inspire the men with fresh courage. liefore reaching them, however, they brokeand lied, and a detachment of the enemy's pursuing cavalry closed around her. hisetni ble to h•ar, she refined to surrender, and spirting herhorse forward,:titempt ed to ride through their ranks. .\ wits rll , ll :It her, sad one ball went through her hat, outing Mr a had: of her hair. Still she pusheil on, and hail nearly passed through their line, when another shot killed her faithful horse; and further exertion being impossible, she was obligtal tosurrender. The iiiih•at of the republicans was mint disastrous, and hardly a man escapiiil. As dark ness came on the massacre ceased ; and Anna, believing that her husband had not survived lie slaughter, sought and obtained permission to seek (Pr his r, mains tcniiii the piles of dead and wound ed that covered the field. Assisted by two of her countrymen who asst leadn taken prisoners, she prised the night aniong the dead, looking for what she so dreaded to find, yet peering into the ghastly faces for some mark of resent blaeci to him whom she sought. But she looked in Valli, :111 , 1:11 last ;ilia:lllon ed the search. '('hr next. day the victors gave them selves up to the enjoyment: of their tri umph; and, profiting by their intem perance and vigilance, Anna passed out of their vamp and disappear ed in the adjacent woods. It was sixty miles to the nearest friendly camp, liver a broken, almost imp:is-able wilderness, infested with rubbers mut SW:lnning with the scouts of tbe enemy. Oil foot, destitute of supplies, undefended, and without a guide, the dauntless woman set out on her perilous flight. threw n splendid IllirSO ill her way ; and mounting it, she dashed itway along the mountain pathway. A terrible storm hail now come Oil ; the night. was pitchy dark, awl it was only by the aid of the frequent flashes oflighttling that she was cunbled to Pict: her way anion,g the rocks and ravines and ovoid instant death. On reaching the ('auras River, she found it a roaring, maddened torrent, swollen by the heavy rains to nearly a third of a mile in width. Destitute of a saddle, she dared not trust herself upon her horse in the strong current, and adopted the unromantic. but safer expedient of clinging firmly to his tail until the don geri pas-ago was idliicted. To lii her inisforttines, she lint her way, and wandered about. in the storm fir three days before finding any cif her friends; and (luring the whole Dine she scarcely closed her eyes ill sleep, and subsisted entirely upon roots and the few inclithir eta fruits which she could gatherom the way. Vet long after this her first child was who subse quently distinguished himself in the tear betiverat Italy' and Austria, and more recently did in the thnrl. but disasl I'M!, campaign against the Eternal City. \\Then her babe was but a raw tree it-' rail, she sot out with her hushand and the republi can army of a long, weary, 'and disas trous retreat through the rw,,t, and across the iffiathiain—mpazil,,•arryin4 her hale in her anti,. Un the march they were overtal:en by a severe storm. She became separated from her 1,111- ; ;Wit it was only through the most indomitable perseVerallee and heroism that site was enabled t., save the life of herself and child. It teas during the dreary hours 11:1,-,1 iii that WilliertlCSS, divesting herself of al most every particle clothing to Iraep her babe front perishing, that the seeds of that disease were planted which a fray years after clainied her as its victim. In 18,18, when the gallant follmtrars of :\lazzini were gathering around the stall :lard of Italian nationality, ( hastened hack to his native land to join his fortunes with those of hi ss trug g iing countrymen. The stirring, events of 15-ill (ollutccl ; and when the patriot leader ryas shut up in Rome the artily of France, his faithful wife passed in disguise through Hen erttl lilies and joined him remlering efficient service in encoura ging the weak and wavering and nurs ing the wounded and slid:. Hie devoted herself to these unfortunate men with such earnest and untiring; zeal, that her health, already en fcehled, entirely gave tray; and when the thud catastrophe came, and the remnant of the patriot army passed out atilt. city in one direc tion, as the victorious French entered it from another, site \vas unable to walk, and tura to be eztrried Of her friends. In vain her husband insisted that she should not attempt so pt.:li on:4 and fatiguing a journey. llut she begged so earnestly to follow hem. say ing that if she nut-t die she could not bear the thought of I,reathing her last under the Ilag of the destroyers of Ital ian liberty, that I yielded, 111111 she set out trith then! on that famous retreat. I ter sufferings \\rare:l:rate ; but she bore them bravely, ,gradually \vever, until the fatal moment when her brave spirit NVil , released from its sufferings and passed to a happier land. She retained her consciousness almost to the last moment, sent loving messages to her children and other friends, and died, calmly and peacefully, iu the arms of her husband. 'lien years ago, her remains were still I resting in the Intinhie grave veltich first received them, tintnarl:ed by any stone or inscription ; nor up to that time hail Garibaldi revisited the halter ved sin:L-- I'or ten years the chains of enslaved lady ritulkedaboyt. h e r grave ; but then, thatil:s to the arm upon vidtich she had leaned so trustingly in life, the day of righteous. vengeanee canto, and the Austrians 'were scourgod:from the land they had So long oppressed and deluged with Maud and tears. \Vllether, since these happier days have come nil I duly, any memorial has been raised to perpetuate the cubic wonlati's memory, Ice know not. Ao dncs it Matter. The sulidcel gran ile could 110 t ;UM to Hio immortality of her nut', our eoulit s,iiiptunqi warm, correctly portray the beauty of her life and death. In the heart of every true native of sunny Italy—in the bosom of ever lover ui h belly, under whatever shies he may live—the Meer try of Anna tiaribabli will ever be kept fresh and green ; and from her ashes shrill spring inntnnerable defenders of the cause for which she sacrificed so How the Chinese,Came to Wear pigtails It is curious how the Chinese tame to wear pig-tails. Several hundred years ago the inhabitants of China wore their hair as we do, but there was war be tween China and Tartary, and the Chinese got the worst of it and were conquered. When the first Tartar king of the present dynasty came to the throne, he determined to humble the pride of the Chinese. He began in I 64-1, by ordering everybody to shave off all the hair except a tuft on the crown ; that being the way he wore his own hair. There were agreat many proud and high spirited gentlemen in China who would not obey the command and the result was that they had their heads chopped MI; It is rather an uncomfortable thing for a man to lose his head. The Chi nese thought so, end concluded to shave and braid their hair into a pig-tail, although it was an act of degrada tion. They felt it keenly, but as the years rolled on, they forgot the humilia tion and began to like the fashion. As soon as the pig-tails became fashionable, the young gentlemen of China tried to get up the longest, neatest, and glossiest tails possible. They cultivated them just as young gentlemen in the United States, and almost everywhere else, cul tivate their whiskers and moustache, greasing, combing, brushes, and finger ing them all the time. Wybrowe's On my way down to a certain garden party at Fulham on a fine afternoon, with my friend Charley Twistleton, 1 heard the following story of a lady con cerning whom everybody was just then talking. "Wybrowe, Brazilian millionare, reLat. severity or thereabouts, marries Helen Chetwynd, impecunious belle tetat nineteen, daughter of a British diplo mat in those parts ; and after two years of connubial felicity, considerately dies. Wybrowe is a jealous Spaniard, and his jealousy looks beyond his own life. So he leaves a terrible will behind him.— This cunningly contrived document provides that his widow—then just twenty-one—shall receive ant enjoy an income of 1.15,0n0 per annum as long— and only so long—as she shall contain unmarried. That if she do marry again she shall receive absolutely nothing— the entire estate of the deceased passing to two distant relatives, believed to be living in obscure poverty in London. Now comes the n lost curious part of the story. A good many more besides old NVy brown., went mad about labclle Ilelen out imßrazil; notably a unto was thought to be nearly as rich as Cro.sits--a half Spaniard, a half Englishman—by name Alvarez Smith. This hybrid was said to have the temper of a th-nd, Itio face of a baboon, awl the complexin/111,f jaundice patient. The frantic Weis, With which, when at last he did speak, Smith pleaded his case to her, nearly frightened Miss Chet wynd into hysteric , ; the malignant scowl that twisted his ugly face till it grew abso lutely awful in its hideousness when she unconditionally declined his propo sals anti shrank :may front him, haunt ed her sleep for many a night afterward. Alvarez Smith wont away and thought out, his vengeance. This in How lie tiripk it, after waiting patiently for three years. During Wybrotve's lifetime he kept quiet and made no sign. \\len the old man was dead, Smith broke in upon the widow, and, with full ltnowledge of the provision of IVybnlNve's will, renewed Iris former propositions. They were re jt•ted again—this time with the addi tion of curtain word; that I Iclen \Vy browe would have been more prudent not to have spol:en to such a man. same steamer that brought the \vidmv home to England had among it, passengers Alvarez Smith. Ile 'Meer olive spoke to her, or molcstril her in uuy Nvay durin,g the voyage; but his hungry black eyes would rest upon her in :1 way that frightened her ill spite of herself. Those eyes wateleal her into the rail w'aV carriage at Southampton ; met hers as Its got out on the ilat6mll ;it \ Vater hat ; and again as the doors of her sis ter's h o use in Park 1,11110 closed 11111111 her. Every time she \Vent abroad she Met 1111111 ; sleeping and Ivall:ing, Al varez Smith haunted her. It Nvar: in tolerable; but what could she dot' She haft tow'' ; he followed hr. She shut herself lit ill the house for day,; and the first person she inet when, by day or night, she came out again 'Was— ; always Alvarez Smith. :ND's. IVybrotve grew nervous and ill under this implacable persecution, which it Nvo. iiiipossible to tall all end to. And the worst of it was that she felt her ptu•- . secutor was gaining a certain power over her; that those terrible eyes of his fascinated her like a basilisk's. She ever avoided mentioning this feeling to Lady ()swestry, her sister, but she couldn't help confessing it to herself. A feiv Iveeks alter her arrival in Lon don, old Wybroule':: lalvyer eoliiiiitini cated the followingstart ling intelli,geilee A person had hrou,ght up the reVersion ary interest of her IlliSballirs two dis tlu't relatiVes in the illeollie that had been left her subject to her rein:Lining Wybrowe's Litinsinell, too poor to be troubled with many scruples, and considering that it wa, ely like ly a \roman Nvouhl give up lit:teen thou sand pounds aye:'' When she mold Iteeli it on snub easy terms had greedilyaccept - ed the that had I Wt•li made them ; j 10111 accordingly exceuted the necessary legal tbiellinents ; had received a stipu lated stint down, and had emigrate:( to Australia. The person \silo liad bought them mil Iris conseUtiently, the person • 11111, \\*Mild elaiiii the heavy forfeit • front lis ten \Vybrowe in the eVelit of her marry ing again. And it was hastily ;needful to tell her that person's moue. :She glie , ,m it instinctively—Alvarez Smith. 'fhis, then, NV:la her position; she Must either, at one and twenty, mil -1 demo herself to a life-long Nvido \vhood, or relinquish a magnitimni. iurmuc to the Mall she detested. Trite, a court of 11111 . might, 11, her lawyer told her, set I the will wide; and l o ots' could a \Vont:ill position such a court:' Nvottian', delicacy, at all ecru(,, rendt•red iltat out of the question in her ease. Again there might he men who would think laud who could aftbrd to think lightly mar rying, of a beggar and among them there 'night he One WllOlll she could ill her generation, Mrs. \Vy browe !atilt no Castles in the air of this sort. She accepted the situation [ells qu'elle et:tit ; shut herself' up no longer ; went among her ; encounted her basilisk with an impassable visage, tor tured her tormentor 1,:,• an ingeniously arranged sequence or flirtation with passed master, of the art. I I:new• it, in that hour Nvhen our eves met. I kneNv that 1, Francis world worn, case hardened, poccocur. antic cynic of seven and twenty, was to love this wonntn, that I did love her already. Itather tall, graceful as Diana in her statuw,tue Sllllinier draperies, :I Ilelca nr tlie low arclisil 111 . 4 Atilt amber sate and 1151ey violet es•:•;" II NVOIIIIIII With a child's face stain pet! before its tint(l wills the mark pas,ion or of pain, a little thinner and a little paler than it should haVe been, perliait,, but withal the stronger, subtler, attrac t Mil for me 111:11 it was so—this was • NVybroNve, as I saw her that day. 1 don't rementiter what she and I alkell about when we were MIL alone, or hots' long WO Suit 1.111 , kr big beech. ItIIOW She spike, :111.1111111 even' 110 W and then the grout violet eyes ' turned slowly upon me ; when she teas silent, =M==t2l Nya, in Eiy.,ioro, and lost thy moat of time. step,soft and rat-like, that neither of tti: heard, rune dawn the \Valk. A dry hraneh er,tel:ed tinder the cautitms tread, and then we hoth tip. man re , , ed trv. I new hint ,tinctively. The lieree hlnel; eye:, con tracted in their wrath, whieh met mine in one brief, vindiet ivy glare, voto,l only ladonr, to one twin. That lithe dark pers..mage with the feline tread, 11111 the ne.ly, yellow phy siognomy, must needs be the hero Dr Charles Twist Icton', story, the man who had brought up the arbitrament of Helen Wybrowe's fate—Alvarcz Smith. Ile never looked at her this time, only ut me. I wonder whether the man's in stinct told him, even then, that I ll)Ved her? WybrOWt. rose, a little pale; the dark circle under her eyes note plainly visible; a sort of haunted l o ok upon her face that made my pulse throb angrily. " Amy seems to have forgotten use, ,, she said ; "let us go and look fin• 10. r." \\le walked across the croquet lawn for a while silent. 'Mien she said, "You know that man who passed just now?" "1 know him now," I answered ; "I never saw him before, and only heard of his existence two hours ago." ller pale cheeks flushed painfully. " Then you have heard—^" " Every thing," I answered, stopping her. There is Lady Oswestry ycndcr Mrs. Wybrow, quid:elle& her pace, and said nothing more till she was safe under Amy Oswestry's wing again. The season was over ; London empty ing fast; duns pressing ; the heat intol erable. Howbeit I abode still in the Sahara of Burton street. Aunt Medusa had gone down into Kent with the Boodles, having extracted from mo a promise to come down for the Septem ber shooting—a promise I only intended to keep if— The " if " was in I'ark Lane. Lady Oswestry had not yet made her move, hesitating between Buxton and Lin denbad ; I was watching the turn of the scale. For with Lady Oswestry would go Helen Wybrowe. And where Helen Wybrowe went I meant to follow. I had not spoken yet, though nearly a month had passed since that day at Fulham, I had marked with a white rose. Shehadhardlygiven me a chance. And yet she knew, who knew me ILS I was. that I loved her—had loved her front the very moment our eyes met for the first time. And I knew my strange, willfuf passionate darling—my Helen, who was like no other—l knew ske LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING JUNE 8. 1870 loved me with the one love of her life. Only between her loving me and me winning her, there was much. Never theless, the mask we wore, before each other as before others, was getting too stifling to be worn much longer. It fell from both of us at last. I had been sitting with her in Lady Oswestry's morning room, under the shelter of the sunshades, among the flowers, one day for nearly an hour.— My lady was, heaven knows where; and we had been all alone all the time. Commonplaces had languished and died. There had been a silence, which those heavy violet eyes filled divinely enongh, but which both of us knew must be broken : and only in one way. I looked up into her face in its pas sionate pallor, in her trembling lips I read what made me take her swiftly in my arms; :and then the silence was broken by the sweet sound of her own name—" Helen!" She shivered, as she had shivered in that valse, (oily this time not with fear. And her head, with its diadem of amber hair, sank down upon my breast, and I bent mine till my lips touched hers, and clung to them. I had won her! Not yet. 'rho 11(•Xt 11:1 , 1 freed her selr. n( )11, why you done this'.'" sh, siohhed—wailed, '• Why Because 1 love you, Helen. Ilevauseyou love inc. Anil lii•caiise you :mil I Ic now this is so." "Yt.s,",tit murmured ; "yes ; you love me, I that. I kIIVW it that day at Fulham. nu .nu has evur I,,ved— l'N'lq* will lace lite. I know that." nAnd you love me Melva. You know that. tau." " Yes, I lovn you she;t•riett passion- Maly '• I ktimv that, too." And ym you :LA: I began, so tar:Ml*l'ly heat I as to be going, to argue with her. "Because this slmultl never Ittivt. , been. Alt I.ntw,,:it us must end hero :URI •• I ll Ndly I broke in rather wad with this piece fumi nun,crucltc. " NVIly must it "I..rank,''' she saido•oolly now," Frank, tili, is fslly. You know my story. You cannot marry a beggar, as I shall be.,, " Nor you, are (lu'il parait." " Selfish :Lnd cruel !" Even at that moment I couldn't dut nho ire that truly feminine retort. : 4 11e NV(.111. " Am I thinking of myself! And yet this is my fault. 1 It new what has happened must happen. Yes; it is I who have been selfish. I Itnew it ; and I ought . But—oh Frank, 1 !:11, 0 .V you loved me; and my loveless lifr ,i•eineil Litter—, , Litter! Anil And she brnke ,14)wn sobbing .My willful, pa s sionate darling,. She was trying to persuade herself that she was acting nobly and disinterestedly; and being noways fitted for such self martyrdom, was failing signally. She ought to have nipped this love of mine sharply in the bud, but lacked the will. And sow she win trying to sacrifice it, :Liu] her own love was on the shrine or duty—now when she was my own, when she had i.e.:fed her head upon my breast, when she h a il given her lips to mine. I didn't repeat my folly of attempting to argue with her. Her hand was strong enough against Inc a.:l it wits without Stich r , trcllgthellillg. I didn't take her in my arms again and stills her feeble pleadings with kisses. I let her ,ay hersay. And then, when sit , had sunk Mud: into the low, deep futeuil, weak and trembling and tie ten,ele,, again I knelt be,ide her, and, holding fact in mine tit,: little,oft white hand I never meant to letgo, I told how it inti,t need fare with rite if she hail her way. And I ‘Va, conquering what kite‘v all , :klong wad my own right, ; and the violet eye, were full of happy tears ; the word, I looked to hear already treaddintron the full lip, that lutd,grown meek acain, NVII,II there w:1-, a Mind(' Of woman', dralJerieH, told . 011'01101 the a lilt. mein , Lady 1,,.1,2 di, to ti flint 1 :ITUI before I eouLl ,fay her, had fled away swiftly upon her Met, leaving me to face my lady alone. The which I did is he,t I 'Met it. For a while Lady Os‘v.istry looked grave and indicial ; then, by degrees, Loui hilt Mildly W hell I tool: my leave, items arranged het ween us, that I should come to Lane early the next day. At a frightfully undue hour I drove A hansom hail just pulled up at thelit ; tin.; late iii•iittpatit was to the "alma or the chaniLiers of the hall. I was Imt in thin to hear the functionary's ani-ixer to the question put to him : No, sir. My lady and Mrs. \N"y hrowe len town fia• the eontinetil (.vetihlg." Tho rather ,\VI.1112: nitlll,l nn Lis heel xvith a lion r - r . rtrrfjo,! " again I false with Alvarez the mail with the evil face. That night, some t‘venty minutes lacff. eight of th, clerk, my hadt,om, tornhig the Burton :ffrcet *tinier at :ff tart, trot, wa , nearly cut over by an other han-oin eharging doNvn Bond The tLCU D r ivers exchanged 11 broad side of blasphemies, !logged their hiir, , c clear of cash other, :toil again, the offending Jeltu leading. . w ft , bound to (*haring ('rocs, en reete to Dover, Park, Lindezbad, iu the traek of Lady Orwestry and I [den Wybrowe; and in CenSeqUellee of this delay, o n ly saved the S:3O mail by about two seconds. Another man, however, 1,111 it ,doer till. A man in a fur-lined traveling robe, and a peaked cap over his eyes, took a through ticket to Lin denbad after me, and followed we on to the platform, half a dozen yards behind. I heard hint hurrying on after me ; just as the guard had opened the dour 4,f the empty earriage he caught up to me and got in too. 'l'he door was slam med, the whistle shrieked, and the Do ver mail started. I Lod dropped into ono corner; nip companion rolled liini,clf in tile oppo site rod. I lit a cigar: So did lie; \Vt. cleared Loudon and had run a dirzen niilcr•dnwii thy line before I looked at hhil again. I .tray thinking, what llt lets n sudden ilopiirture Wiled ; whether I ma: ,111'0 Of Ivinning her :111er:ill: and, deep in speculations of this sort, I hail no eyes iir thought for anythine: and that peaked cap, that kept his fare in an imp,metrahle ,hadow, would have puzzled me even if I had Inul a suspi cion a , to who the man in the opposite corner wa- , . in the preparation for my sudden departure 1 had forgotten all alnitit So that it wa , not till he h.re oil' his cap :mil Oulu; aside his wrapper that I knew that Alvarez Smith and I were alone together in that carriage of the Dover mail train; anti that he Wll, glar ing at me with all the furious hate lie felt for me in his evil eyes. looked at him tranquilly enough, I think, but 1 couldn't help feeling that the reneontre was by no means an agree able one ; that the express stopped no where between London and Dover, and that Alvarez Smith was probably as mad fts any inmate of Harwell. HOWeVer, 1 ain not easily out of head, mud, as I say, returned his glare with a tranquil stare, and went on smoking,. 'Whether he had expected his melo drama to produce more effect, and was disappointed; whether my calmness irritated him afresh, I don't know.— Certain it is that he rose and came to-. wait me with an oath. It struck me forcibly that he was dan gerous, and I gradually slipped my hand into the inner breast-pocket of my trav eling jacket, and unfastened the loop which kept a useful little revolver dc poche steady there. There seemed likely to be a necessity, disagreeable but imperative, for shoot ing this man before we got to Dover. And it so happened that I felt in no humor to run any risk by the exercise of an unwise forbearance towards a mad brute like this, if it came to a light. It appeared, though, that he had something to say before lie began, for he seated himself exactly opposite to me, and muttered hoarsely— " So we are alone at last—you and I." "So it seems," I returned. I saw that, if he meant to have a row, lie didn't feel quite u to the mark yet, and wanted to tulle himself into the fury, so I thought I might ventute to ! light another cigar, which I did, loosing my grip on the pistol but for a moment, but keeping my eye on my man the while. He actually gnashed his yellow teeth at me. He looked so unutterably hid eous and at the same time so intensely ludicrous, while he was doing it, that I laughed. "Take care!" he screamed, shivering with wrath; Caramba! you have not won yet." "No?" I tnquired, insolently. "No! curse you! you never shall." ''Bob ! you say so, my good man'?" `I ! I have scorn it f" "Your I sneered, rather enjoying his fury, and with no mind to spare hint any stab I could give him. '•You! You are a madder than I thought you were." "You shall never hove her! Madre dr Dios! never.'' " You're wrong. I shall." He smiled in a ghastla• fashion with his white, dry lips. "No," lie said, and if his tone was rainier it was twice as dangerous" and threatening now. "No!" I shall keep my oath—he sure of that. Listen !" he went on after a pause, and with that same foreed calmness; " from the day I saw her first, and each day inure and more, have loved her—this woman, h - " Who, from that S:0110 day, and each day more and more, has loathed and hated you," I struck in. " By the light of the lamp above us I could see his yellow face turn the ashen hue of a doel man's, as that cruel taunt of mine hit hone. He eovered his face with his hanik, and muttered a faint, dull 1110:111, as though he had in every deed gut his heart hurt. The crisis Wai ecidcutly etppruaoltiug; the madman could liardly contain him self much longer. In another minute he might be at my throat; and then • disagreeable as it might be, I should in evitably have to shoot him. Alvarez Smith w•-t("o.fro mean:: the sort of per son to sttiild on much ceremony with when the instincts he inherited from the Spanish creole mother of his were in the ascendant ; and it was his life or mine, I began to think. I drew the revolver quietly out of my pocket, and covered hint , from lily knee in anticipation of his rush. Now," he hissed, '•will you promise never to marry this woman " see you in Gehenna first " You Will not "Confound you, 110! But I'll prom ise you this," I added, as I stlw him crounching like a jaguar Ira spring at my throat, " that, madman or no uran ium), if you lay a finger on me I will shout you in your tracks without fur ther warning." liaising my right hand quickly, I covered hint fairly now. My amiable companion dropped back into his seat with a hideous Spanish blasphemy ; most unexpectedly battled and ,eaten. "'That's right," I said, considerably relieved to tied he was not so mad as to have lost all fear for himself, and put me under the painful necessity of wing ing him; '' of course you didn't expect me to lie so well able to take care of myself; and I suppose you've only a knife. I twit much think you'll kill rue to-night, :filer all, though we are alone, &c., as you were goml enough to remind me just now." • " ()It !" he snarled, " 1 shall kill you yet! " " I •ditrer with you there. My own impression is that you'll he in Hartwell ur Charennin before lung. Meanwhile, let me advisu you not to try this again. If you do, remember, I've warned you." lie thong a curse at me, and turtling away, rolled himself up in his cloak - , and never moved again till the mail ran into the Dover station. 'Then he rose sud denly, opened the door, sprang on to the platform, and disappeared. "And so you ran away from nor, clon ?" It was some 1111'004a flllll* hours after my arrival in I hail forced the consignee, carried Lady Osun,trv's rooms in the Itussia by strm, utterly disioniliting the garrison by the suit - denne,s and vi;zor or my assault, inas much that :tiler a brier, hopeless st rug glc, it surrendered :it darling had spoken tl hound her lift t 4, 'nine tiirever. hider the summer star=, in the hush of the summer night, she and I were sitting iin the balcony of their rows that nverloukcd the river and the l,u rple NVOilliti beyond; at her feet, as I loved hest to sit, and watch the great violet eyes turn slowly on use; at her feet, with lii•r lials Is in 111 i Ilt• ilgai 11. " And ,0 yuti I ftden " What could I ilo? I wit , so \veak will you, Frank ; NVe:lk alai list my hove. Anil for yiitlf it ought not to ire, I stoat'. I t \va, terrible \cork to get Amy to :start that night, though ! She wag horrihlc creel to me ; she fought lior viii. 11. w I loved her when site would ; ;aid so we went." " And then you thought were " Sarer. Nv:ty from 3 - nu I Nvert " did pat think you \\mid by pmt of . rcavh, Hho gave tuna a- a 4a - c,. Then pile said: ylil svtio" . .' I thought you would 1 . 4,1110, but 1101 ru :41011. Nttt till 1 SllOlllll 1111Ve time to harden my heart. I knew I was doing right, Frank. But I thought, too, that I might never see you again. And then "—her fare told me the re,d. " ! What had can to do with it, right or wrong, if you loved me? You were mine. How could you ever think I should let pal g,,? Let you go, who have given me new faith, new hope, now life—Wade life preciom4 to me, now—how could I Helen. my Helen, nothing can take you from me now. You cannot take your. , clf from me." Front my arms, whore she had ttn a sudden she started. " l'here!" she whilieredi In~intin, to the deserted ricer Walk ; "there! Didn't you see him On her face, vet wet with happy tears, had come the flaunted look nice more; in her voice was the old fear, though my arms and my love were about her. I knew what had done this; the sight of a man WIIOIII I was beginning to feel ~me t bing of the hate that kills. " I saw no one, you know. And if Alvarez Smith wants to do me a mis chief, why on earth should lie turn out and do melodrama in the moonlight, threaten me with imaginary daggers, and that sort of thing, to put me uu my guard? " I saw him standing there,' and she pointed again straight before her. " Anil how was lie dressed !" "I n a t:ll,.rt cloak, it s.otAitotl. I -aw him tlinAv it ba,l: whott Ito littod his arm." MEIMIEMZIEIIM That was perfectly posAble. A entiple of strides Nv ould take any one out of sight, who hail stood even in the centre of the broad If Itolen had really SVC!! Ivarez Eolith, he might be Ilidden in that s hadow even now ‘vatching us. bindbegan to stir at this. I hint ju-t twen a wcok in tin, Ilad when the ‘friloit , iar,,t,,r this ~.tnry came We had gone up the river one morn ing in a "hen coop," had landed some three miles or more above Lindenbad, and strolled away, out of sight of the boatmen along the batik, down to which extended the low scrub and brushwood of the forest. We sat down on a sort of a little crag which overhung the river; and from which Helen had discovered a view, which she was doing her best to sketch under an organized series of interrup tions front me. Lying there at her feet, watching her eyes, and drinking in her voice, thinking of that ne \c` life she had given me, and that wan precious to me for her sake, I was terribly near my. death. There was hardly a breath of air astir; and yet, all at once, my pot hat, that was tilted over my eyes to keep otf the sun glare, rolled away across the turf, dipped, so neatly and lightly that hardly felt it, off my head. A sharp crack and a little pull of white smoke rising above a clump of brush wood explained this phenomenon. I saw at once what it meant, I was on my feet and half way across to the cover which sheltered my would be as sassin in a couple of bounds. Another bullet whizzed by my ear, and then I sprung into the thicket, struck by one lucky blow a smoking revolver from the sinking hands, and flown at the throat of—Alvarez Smith. It was well I had lost nothing ; lie got no chance of using his knife. I heard Helen scream, and then saw her fall lifeless on the turf where we had been sitting, and then I was wrest ling for life with a madman. He had no science, but he held me like a fiend. I cut him of his legs again ani again, but he clung so desperately to me that I couldn't drop him.—Each fresh strug gle brought me nearer and nearer n, the edge of the little crag. I guessed what he wanted to do, and put all my remaining strength into one tierce, des perate effort to fling him. This time he went down, but my i'cot had slipped on the dry, short turf, and he managed to pull me down upon him. I felt his arms close round me in a grip of steel as he twisted and Sc toward the:edge ; I heard his )ell of diabolical triumph in my ears ; knew that we must roll over; felt the earth slip away front me; felt the mad rush of air by me; felt a shock that seemed to stun me; and then, locked in eaeh other's arms, the water closed over us like a thick darkness. Hu must have struck against .otm , - thing in the fall, and have been stunned or dead when he reached the water. In a second I had wrenched myself free from that deadly grip, had risen to the surface and was striking out for the bank. Ten minutes more and I was kneeling beside Helen, slowly recover ing her consciousness under the sym pathizing care of a forestkeeper's wife. The body of Alvarez Smith was pioked up next clay. He had disguised hinoclf so well while waiting his opportunity to settle matters with me, as to have eluded detection by the l'olizei Ampt, but I wa able to swear unhesitatingly to his identity, and did, with some pard.ma satisfaction. He is believed to have left no ono b, exact the forfeit from Helen Wybr.,we \Olen she marries me; and, suni,,,;ng his bargain with the original el:Lillian b , to have been a lawful one, there end, you see, of "Wybrowe's Sor-icty. The Census Full Statement of the Information quirett by the time •01. 111,33"1111.: POPULATION \M A, 81-: :31' 31 13EILED. On the first day of June next the cen sus takers will begin their rounds in their respective sub-divisions, visiting each dwelling house, whether in city or country, and each manufacturing estab lishment, us also such other places ;is it may be necessary to obtain information from. Beginning with the population he puts certain questions which ;ire printed on pages of paper marked " Schedule I." His first duty is to num ber the dwelling houses in the order of visitation and to number the famili, contained therein in like manner. Let us suppose that house No. 1 contains one family. The census taker, who- is an employed assistant of the [lilted States Marshal, upon which official in volves the duty of taking the census, records the name of every person Will.e place of abode on the first day of June, 1570, was in this family. A description of each person is recorded, and includes his or her age at last birthday, but it' under one year, the months are simply given. Furthermore, the sex must be stated, if male with the letter " if female with the letter "F." 'the color of the person is thus recorded :—lf wh; te with a "W," if black with a "II," if mulatto with an "M," if Chinese with " ('," and if Indian with an " I." The importance of these questions are self apparent. They enable the government to ascertain the nanie, ago and color ..: every person, front infaney to old age, and it is therefore imperative upon the people:to answereacl question tru th Int ly Maiden ladies and widows of doubtful ages should not confuse the government and render its census tables unreliable by insisting upon their being not ounce than twenty-live years old, while 01.1 beaux of sixty must honesty say sixty ;mil not stick at forty. Reliability being the aim and desire of the authorities, all ;•itizens will perceive the neeessity answering truthfully. I•Ht,FESSI.NS, WCU PAT 1...N5 A Nirrit.% In the foregoing six questions the number of persons in each family is ob tained, and strictly speaking, the celislls of population is taken. But it is desira ble that the profession, occupation or trade of each person, male or female. shall be obtained, and to this end a ques tion concerning ,this desideratum will be but. If the person is a lawyer, :t shopkeeper or a carpenter, he simply states the fact for record. Where tiler, is no business the answer is "none," ex cept in cases where sonic aristocratic in dividuals, desires to inform the govel !i -ntent that he is a "gentleman," whieh 1110:01,4 everthing, from a person who lives on the income arising front his property to one who spends his time in lighting the tiger. Seriously, however, it being desirable to learn what the var ious occupations of the population are, this inquiry should he fully answered. The eighth and ninth inquiries reWr to the value of real estate awl persg gnat property owned by each person—ow the value assessed by government for taxes, but the value putupon such prop erty either by the owner himself or by the market. For example—A person may own a house and lot worth but which the tax assessors value at Ile should report the value :it the first named figures to the census takers, so that it may he ascertdinegl w Mgt was the cash value of real and per:inn:Li property in the county, Skate and throughout the republic on the lit of .11111 e of the present year. MP:l'lr, I'AILENTAW•:, The next inquiry of importance is the tenth, Which requires the place of birth of each person ; if a native of the United States, the name of the State or Terri tory must be given ; if lof foreign birth, the name of the country in which born. Inquiries eleven to seventeen, in schtsl ule one, relate to parental, social and educational matters. The eleventh and twelfth require the information whether the parents of the person were of foreign birth, and are under two lines, one be ing for the father and the other fur t h e mother, so that in cases where 011, parent was born, sav in Europe, and the other was a native, he fact may be re corded appropriately. Where the per son was born within the year the month should be given January, February, &e.), in answer to inquiry thirteen, and if married within the year the month when this interesting event took place should also be stated. In this connec tion we would call attention to what seems to be an omission in this sched ule. No inquiry is made as to the social condition of the person, except where he or she has been married within the year. l'his is an important tact to as certain. When the last census was taken all persons were required to state whether they were single, married or widowed. We would call the attention of the 'United States Marshal to this ap parent error. Inquiries fifteen, sixteen and seven teen refer to attendance at school with in the year and to want of educational attainments, as whether the person can not read and cannot write. Inquiry eighteen is whether the person is deaf and dumb, blind, insane, idiotic., to which we trust there will be a negative answer. Under this head are the nineteeth and twentieth inquiries, which conclude all to be answered in schedule one. The one requires information regarding male citizens of the United States of twenty one years of age and upwards. This is a very proper inquiry, as it enables the govern went to ascertain the voting popu iation of the republic at the present time. The pertinence of the twentieth and last inquiry is not apparent. It requires information regarding " male citizens of the United States of twenty-one years of age and upwards, whose right to vote is denied or abridged on other grounds than rebellion or other crime." This doubtless includes persons living in States where a property or educational qualification is demanded by their constitutions, and persons incapaciated by reason of ailments, such as madness, &c., and in this respect is proper. It would also be interesting and important to learn how many persons are denied the right to vote because of "rebellion or other crime." I E= Schedule No. 2 is devoted solely to a list of persons who died during the year ending June I, IS7O. As in the first schedule, the number of the family is given ; then follows the name of every person who died during the year whose place of abode at the time of death was in this family. The age at last birthday (where an infant the number of months), the sex, color and condition—that is, whether single, married or widowed. Also the place of birth, whether foreign or native, naming the State, Territory or foreign country ; the nativity of the parents, the month in which the person died, the profession, occupation or trade and the disease or cause of death. This table will prove of great value to medical men and to science in general. The in quiries are simple and will be readily answered, and, being divested of the formidable disquisitions on zvmoties" which Dr. Harris used to indulge in weekly, will prove a source of much in terest and instruction to all eoncerned in the health Of our population. I'II,WE'CTION - 3 l.rr ßl- The third schedule is devoted to the rural districts :mil is full of inquiries of importance. It requires the name a the agent, owner or manager of the pro perty, the nimilier or len ss of improved land and the number of acres 1,1 wood land and other unimproved. Next in order, inquiry is made of the present east' value of the farm, and the rattle of tiler:awing implements and Illaellinery. By Way of ascertaining the expenses incurred in working each farm inquiry is made of the total amount of wages paid during the year, including value of hoard. Under the head of "Live Stock. June I, 1570," are spaces in which must he written, under their appropriate sub heads, the number of horses, mules alld asses, milch rows, working oxen, other 1,1.111., sheep awl ,Wine, alld the value of all live ,ti,Cl. ON the the daft nleiltitl;l,l Next in order, and of 111114.11 import ance, is the produce of tho farm during the yoar ending Julie I, 1-,711. This in clu i 4., 1114. uuulbcr of busltl 1, spring :11141 \vintor wheat, of rye, Indian corn, oat , , barley :Ind buckwheat, 1.011114 k or rice and or tohaeco. hale, of cotton, mating 431111011111 s to the bale: of :11111 bcuus and of Irish and ,woet potatta.s. In addi tion, the products of the orchard must ho given in dollar.:, the number of gal lon, of wine produced, and the anhaint in dollars of the produce of inarl:et gar dun,. In the matter It dairy produek, kilter and choose must be recorded in pounds, 11111 ,old in ,gallons. Hay uwst be given in tons, and 0r,ek.41 cloVer ,Ltras, ht bushels. Uf tile other prLt titictiolis of a like nature, hop, lutist he roported in pouti4k, hemp in tons, tlax in pounds, flaxseed in bushels 141111 coettoliS it pounds. Sugar conies untie' ,oparato ,'llll-Load, and 11111,1 he report ed ~.44 a , 11l ..4iVt! that Illallgallured from In:11de by pounds :1101 that front earn , by hog , liond, of 0111' Molasses is to be reported by gallon;.-- The products of 1410,, coinpri,ing wax and Loney, 11111,1 be ,tatod by pounds. Fort. 4 product;, value of hotno mann fnetures, value of animal, ,latightertal or ,44141 for slaughter it is necessary to re port in dollar,. After all these itiqui rie, hay,' been answered, the v,tiinated value of all farm prothictioli, iueluding Itetterniclils [oils to,toelt, 11111,1 be giVeli ill tlollill's ll=l Next in importance to that of agricul ture are Inn' priiiiiirts, anti to little are devoted the fourth schedule. .Xs with the other the inquiries refer only to production: the year ending June I, Is To. To iie g in with, the name of the corporation, eompany or individual pro4luellig to the value of annually s retiuhsetl, and after that the of 111-i nes,, manufacture or product, 44nd the capital, whether real or personal or both, in \•ested in the business. I 'tiller the head 441 - '• Motive Power" it is desired to I:now what Itind 441 power is used, whether steam, water, wind, horse or hand, and if steam or \vater the number of horse pott'tir. If In:whines are 11 0 01 their or descrip tion and the uuulber iu operation are !weer's:try. To ascertain the eXtellt, and :010,1111i of labor of such business inquiry will be made of the :overage :Mintier of hall& employed, in -111011, years, fe males above fifteen years and children and youth ; :41044 the total aliliallit paid iu \vai_tes during the year and the num ber 441 month:, ill active operation, re diloirie part time to full time. 'Co i , vertitill the whatever it may be, and in cluding mill supplies:lml find, the kinds fliefrvaltie , ,iiiiiitting Cractions44l a be Stated. en! Th remains, then, nothing route (in bodulc four lint the inquiry regarding production, including all job bing, and repairing, which must be re ported in 1:111115 and 411I:111iitieS and ill 11111ittillg frae(i , lll , l fatly as in the case of materials. Schedule live is devoted to social states awl is of great importanee as bowing the financial, moral and intel lisitid progress of the people. It begins by 11111 uiring of the valtiati , m of real and personal estate, limy they are valued ;11111 their true valuation. Next iiiiiiiiry is made 4,1 the pod', debt, including the county debt, for \Odell howl , have been is-owl, all other county debts, town, i•ity, township, parish civil or borough debt, for which bonds have been issued, and all other town, city, to \viisliip, parish or borough debt. Third in order is taxation Inotnationall, and this in cludes State taxes of all kinds; coun ty, of all \vll and other local tiixe-, with the total amount of the tclode. .\ (tor ihicee scparate 'tient, have been made the principal kinds of taxes included in them must be indicated. The fourth inquiry ill this schedule relates to pauperise, and the infonnnliou to be given is what was; the whole number of paupers supported during the year, \\ill!' the number of 1111.0 ye and foreign birth; the whole number supporting on the 1-t or June, with the number of native white, native blacks and foreign, and the annual cost of support. Inquiry 11\42 relates Li, oriole, and requires the whole number of crim inals convicted during the year, and di vided int. ive and foTeigin ; the whole number in prison -lime:l, 1 divided into native while, native black and 'Flie sixth inquiry in this ,-chedille is devoted to libraries, of which the kind and number of volumes must, lie stated. The', include State libraries, town or city, libraries of courts, churelt pastors, , .Sabbath school libraries, ei fell- Laing (subscription and private libra ries, including tho.e of lawyer' , and clergymen. regards newspapers and periodi cals, Nvlticli comprises inquiry number eight, it is necessary to state their munes and character, how often they are pub lished, and their average circulation. Under the head of wages, which, from the seventh inquiry, it must be stated what afe the average wages to farm hands per month, hired by the year and boarded ; average wages of a day laborer without board, am! the same with board; average payment to a carpenter per day without board; average wages to a fe male domestic per week without board, and average price of board to a laboring man per week; the whole, of course, to be given separately in dollars. 001.1.1:1;1I5, ACA11I:.\111.15 AND SCIriI()I,S The information required respecting oureducational institutions can he read ily given, involving as it does but few inquries, and these of a very simple or der. It is necessary to state the average number of teachers, male and female, the average number of pupils of each sex and the income for the year ending .lone 1, Is7o, for the endowment, taxa tion, public funds and from other sour ces, including tuition. The character, rank or hind of the school mustbe given under the following heads:-Classical, in cluding universities colleges and acade mies ; Professional, including law, medi cine, theology, technological, schools of m in ing,schoolsof art and music,commer cial and military. The public schools must be reported whether normal, high, grammar, graded common or ungraded common. The private schools must be reported whether day or boarding. To these educational institutions are added inquiries respecting parochial and char ity schools. This part of schedule live appears to us very full. Nothing is left undone towards obtaining full and ac curate information of our schools, and if the person called upon for such infor mation reply fairly to each inquiry, a vast amount of interesting facts will be gathered together on one of the roost important subjects. ETEBBM'S Very httle is demanded under this head. The inquiries are confined to the number of church organizations, num ber of church edifices, the denomina tions, the total number of persons which the churches of each denomination will accommodate and the value of church property. At the time the Census bill was before Congress it was suggested that each person be required to state what his religious belief was, or rather what religion he professed, but the sug gestion was rejected on the ground of its prying into the human conscience, so that it was finally decided to ignore the spiritual part of religion and confine the inquiry to the material part, in the shape NUMBER 23. of churelii,, their ACCOII value. The foregoing artiele is a compilation from the schedules to he used by the census takers, so that our readers !nay depend upon the itectiracy of its state ments. By reading it over carefully every person will be unaided I, answer the inquiries without delay and clearly and intolligildv, tint , avoiding the. risk of a tine fo r refusing to give, or giving false information, besides saving the eensustal:rrsuuirhanti aiirrands o me. prOlall if y. A !GRUM:It VS. 1' 3.311.:110N .1 Sharp Letter fr he El-COllledernfl liellerni Maartlilee---44 en% e 1.1•11.1.11- I lon% Cameron . % e rise it -- 11 ow Magrlinerirrie.seel the I.a lag Bridge into V irginia. anti lioli he lhal Nol Cros4. 114. e pllhh , h a letter is ritten the i•x-Cintiilerato ienerid Magi . " der hi a gentleman in 'Philadelphia, eon Cerning the eirentie , diniiiei: tell i t ttenite, from the reedilar army a the outbreak of the star, and the manner it svhich he left tho Capit tl and t t ! pi,tollla(' 1111 Ilk scar May s, IsTo. 1 have not liad:in ty to ate , l,er 3 your letter of .\ pril milt until now. As I have front politics entirely hill,' 010 \V:ll', I regret that I ant ...impelled to rite a lelt, vdnelf It ill heit construed by souse at d•ast tis being or a ellartleter. It is not so, how ...Veit, ref' this letter in purely per...onal, mid \int- r ten solely ill deteiise et in, honor, which has been reelile , sly, in ildurdisly, and men darionsly atta.•keil by Senator Canter..., of l'entisyli tuna, di a ill hate in the Selialt.. tile 'ar. flow the with me personally, I believe hail the kindness to send fito. for r. Melt I III:t111 toil sincerely. Beloro golfed - farther I it ill here say that you are tint only al lilieriy puldisli this letter, hut that I hope you w ill do so, and in such\l r. Cameron still I hold invselt . responsible personally at :illy tittle to:\ Ir. Callleroll for its ~meats. The pitragraplis in the tleh at 11l II Ill.• 11 allusion is made to in, a.• , hollow s : )1 r. CA1111.1 , 11. -.“1 reineuilier that Cap tain Somebody who 1:e.,111r a ticlll.lll 111 the Rebel artily had ti1t...n.111111.0141 ..1a bat tery here, and he It as g.. to -tart ,If not only I,y nth himself but with his battery, lint soniehoiv or other the battery did not v..,•t flu i•luittssl in it It• Weft l u ng-:n ter, how t, NIL Pomeroy. -"'That was the captam whom escorted Iho Pre, , lcat to the \VIM, I lionsi,? - Nlr. Cameron." II e es. corted the Tres . dent \ Vhile I louse, and I heard him say It , t h e President that he ireil him, and was :_taring I , stand by hint during the Ile said that tle• even ing hefl.rt , lie wont away.. I w ill promise in reference I the above that as I was tliootily apiece that ciminiand eil a Ipattory in \ I'a:slung:ton at that time and alterrvards las••tme:t (:imeral ill the Con federate tinny, Mr. l'amersin iiinitl have meant nomo other loft myself. The rest of Ids reinarl:s are rake ill et park. Illar. In raet, they eork....liditte inie recklrs.vjriol Fur in the first Place I(over \vas I,t tilt NI r. Lin coln in dm prescnee of NI r.raillel L.ll in my Sissmilly, I never eseorted r. Lin coln to the AA A nte !louse, Mr I was on tiny way from or in Europe at that time as the miliLvy I , llrenelltati ol t the ...mitt resent Ale. I Illellallall In 111 , 1Iret and report upon the armies of Europe, and did mg reach Wa,ltillgion tnuilaloo.lheinaugura tion,l think about the loth,: Nl.trelt,lsi:l. 11l fact I never \vas in al r. Cameron's company but nu, ,, ill Inv life 1. , ) my hmiWledge, and that was at a dinner party in the hens.. 11l ml' heather i!oiliiiiislore ieorge .\ of the statL, Naiy, in \Yash ingten, NEC. C 11111,1,11 wan o....retary , A'ar, about the Milt, 1701, or (VIII 01 whoa Mr. Cameron olrered in isuiversation ‘vith I was sitting by Ids side at the dinner table, tosend Le I.llorll toremain until the termin ation of the impending ivar, it I i,..111.1 agree to it. I looked 111 , Wont disgraceful position:in Mlle,: could oceupy. To stand upon the soil of a I . ..reign ,sums , }, to revel', his pay, fold hi , arms :it'd 10.. k upon a deadly r.O list ..r Iris countrymen withotiL taking sides Iv ith o ne o r the other ten, I felt, the 111.,:t igno ble course of all, and I 1.1'1,11, I Mr. Camer on's ow ~ .,litt•lttpt Ineh I thought it de,erveil. In your 1111(0 you ask me to stmt' Ih'rir rumnl:mros Willer %Ville]] I 11l Il•aVO Wanli ingWn for Itichlinnid, Va., at the com mencement of the ,var, I do s, tenth pleasure. The day on Nvllielt President received the telegram from the 1 iovernor of Virginia, my native Slate, de clining to send his quota of troops under the, first proeltunation, or the day alter that, :gr. Lincoln sent for MO anti Illlorlllol of that htet. y State had 11..1 yet se,ell 1. I inrormed him that I regretted deeply thn course event. 11.01 taken ; that if my State seceded, I seas a soldier, obliged to light either tor or against her, and that 1 light for those amide.; w hots I ‘‘its Itirs and bred, my relations and frieink, all 1/1 NI . IIOIII believed they \very right. 1 staled to him that I was a graduate of \Vest Point, but that \Vest Point wily not :I charity school, that it was supported as Icy the SUlldlerll people in ' , for:l,l'- 1.1011 to cadets (runt the mouth a-, 1.3: the North ill the saint, proportion; that the Government had al ways recognized the right 4,1' tile officers to resign uulesa they were ollioiallv charged w itlicrinie, and that the obligations to Nvhielt all onicer sub scribed were simply to °Ley the law tyl or ders of his superiors Sr, long :iv he held tile commission of the i;overninctit, and that every oilicer 1111(1 this right to resign tilien he tilought proi,er. At - . Lincoln :ic.iiiieseed in the propriety ill 1111•sn views; '' lan," I :ultled, "Mr. President. I wall be perfectly true and faithful to the ohlig.ttions of not einninission as long as I hold it, and you and your family wall sl'i'p in sande vtten ever I :110 tin guard." " said Ile, II I knots' it, for you :ire an oili.or of the army and a Southern gentleman, mid ineapahle i.fally tut honorablecornhiet." I thanked him warmly and said: r. President, it I du resign you shall be the first to hear of it after my resignation is phteed in the hands of the adjutant, if I tan reach ;on, and 1 will rennin at least txvels:e hours in \Vashingmn after my resignation."— " Why, - said he, 'vial s surprise, "should you do that 7 - "Mr. President," I replied, " 1 wish to be ofr of , / foe , I , J - o/c .111111 n r,Nn 11, .I.•tl';' `• 1 :1111 sorry to lots you, - lio said with great. snimstion, "tut if you must go I'll help you to be Gen-'lulls 1111' with the old love,' meaning, I supposed, that hi , 55 , .11111 ticcept my resignation when the time came to otter it. A day or t‘vo alter this my :State seceded. I handed my resignation Colonel P. F. Smith, commanding, about. S or II o'clock A. NI., :Old repaired at tlllve Lu the \Flit.° 'louse. Failing tin gel admis sion, I asked a I.rother olli.•er, who said III• would certainly See Ilse l'resident that morning to in Mrin him that I had resigned, which 1 presume lie did, Look leave openly 11l my friends, and found niv:sell It the Long Bridge, in a hark, joss three minutes alder P. 3f., Lou late, the orders being not to 14Iwee the drawbridge after 11 was a bright moonlight night, and :LI. I gut out of rho ismell I found illy own battery guard ing the bridge, The mien uneovi,red :1.4 I passed through them to'sce the lieutenant in charge. I asked him if he Nould he kind enough to lower the drawbridge for I teas all parked and ready, and three minutes behind the 11111'. Ile nand, ed his hat anilanswered courteously, " 'id- Onel, I still lotycr the drawbridge, 1, 11 1 I would do it with far greater pleasure if you were rooting jl,lll in4in ia instead It go ing to Virginia. I departed, taking off Illy hat to toy old comrades, 551111' 11l wll,ll ( lia.l ec:1111111111 , 1- ed for thirty years, and 111th a sad heart bade them lareNvell. I stopped a .lay :111 , 1 a night :It .11exandria, and there receiN•eil the aceept.:ince of nit resignation, which I always thought was liy order el Mr. Lin vole himselr. Thin is a eiretinedantial and isirroet count cd t the manner in which I passed limn the olil 5t.1,11., to the nets', alld :I.lly other it false. I am, sir, vvry revectfully, (lieut. servant, IMM11181!133M111111111111 Ups mid Down,. of Life M r. John Hart is creating a great furore in a minstrel hall in New York by his per fect delineations of negro character. Ile was once a millionaire. When the oil fever broke out in Pennsylvania, Mr. I tart owned,a hundred acres of wild land near 'chiconte, Pa.. worth about sixteen cents an acre. lie was then running a canal-boat on the Delaware and Hudson Canal. In the fall of laud, several intro erase oil wells were discovered on Mr. Hart's land. Stock min - panies were formed in which he was a prominent shareholder, and at one time he was offered t ., ':',00,000 for his interest. This was refused. Ito left the canal, built a most magnificent private residence, wore diamonds of almost fabulous value, and seemed made of money. At one time he was a prominent candidate for Congress, but failed to secure the nomination through the inertness of a trusted friend. Fortune's wheel suddenly turned backward. Mr. Hart was inveigled into more oil specula tions, and within three years was without a penny. He then turned his attention to negro minstrelsy, and is said to be superior to either Dan Bryant, T. D. Rico, or Dan Emmet in his delineations of negro min strelsy. lie speaks four different languages, and liastravelledin Europe and Australia. Ho was once wrecked in the Straits of Ma gellan, and spent two mouths in destitution on the Island of Terra del Fuego. Ile is now playing an engagement at a salary of SAO) a week. RATE OF ADVERTINING BUMINESS ADVERTISEMuNTs, 812 a year per squre of tun lines; $8 par year for each addi tional square. , REAL ESTATS Ar..yetitturiNa, 10 cents a line for the first, and 5 Gents fur email mubsuquent In lusorLion. Ii EN ERA L AnvEnTisxxa, 7 cents a line for the tint, and 4 vents fur ouch subsequent lunur• non. SPECIAL NOTTCni lusortod ut Loud Column.•' cents per SrEciA I. Nirrlvr, 1,0(.11111w nmi - rhozi , :1111 10 ce.lllB Jrg lor first 1ik.,11 , 41, and 5 , Milts for t•vcry hulow,nicilt I rll.ll. 'l'Al. A tt irrli Minces Ailitillilsiraliors' nutlet. I otices 2XO Auditors' notices "Notliies," Len or three 0,11,1 50 Colonel Holley Collet Moral:tied for Di •o ruing rm. Wlle—lletteroh. Groot nml She on the Latel3's Side. During the past two NVeek :11l army t•mirt martial has been ill sesslon in Now York. rue subject it the court martial is Ltrt, rt Lieutenant-l'olonel Elisha J. Bailey. Lii.:l - Sherlllall has preferred charges aL,rainst him or “oulduct tinhoe,i,- ing an officer null a gentlotuall. - - ,to•atiot, are desertion fl,lll 11‘1.1 1.111,a1 to s,lllllOll his 111 W I'lll Win' and other ,1,111- 113111l1.41•0111.1110t. Trust_ dent or t ho court. The lile :11111y :Mil elite,. Th i • ei toll knnnn ill r:.l)itlitalljo rirrlry in Nets York :Lind Wa...linlnghlin. She ha, rare ho:tuiy, inulffiniktble anti it iv Llll . OllOl her lielL Ile' 1,1111- martial ti• try Intl . Inin,h.nnid has heent ~r klerea. I;.tiloy I+ the ilanL:ht., ..f Ilia 11..11 1:11.,)vn frill She tth her father in \ !mit until tilt . , year, :It eighteen year-, Inarrit•.l ( 1 .1. II 111 n, \Ow )via, thou alollt fifty y ea , „j ag , sl it . ..•laint , that was :1 sh, , married; that alth.mush th. , ,P4M an .1.1 Mall, ...ll° 11, 31,‘ 1.0011 trite to her marn.tgo and that hormlly 11111:411.11 , wVIIII army sv.t, vpry !host , ilirtatilms raised Inn) Inn,ll and A‘r , ri , finally ma;oll,l,'d thi. warthtl slhms that tit tlw .1 1,, t ',1 " 11,1 Bailt`y 1 11 W 11111111 :4 hal, in. I I,l•iiital. anal won his wit'. A few Veck-1 alicrssard t • ,,ltqwl s‘ a, do \VArriiii, in II istiiii I Lir-kit. Hi, young till. Imtl - or, it i.vl ‘chat are 11 1 iitticers. sok•to , ,y Suit. Hi 111, inain uul arniy I hrir associates. 1 . 01,111t.1 tliii , oll 4 that ion. hr his tent and nitwit a Ir•It•-•4-t , i. it in Tlicy iivor Mifflin nt Ia I i 01 various army Ito I.iettlottattl. awt lilloctitMat... 1.111•1,1 hiul taut ut lii. teat s wir l nt inni lila , a tr.lpor. 110 tliti Ilut ronlhn, hlv taaliq I.l..litottaitt Utlytor ahem, but t•lll'sokt all lipo army tho (Ito eit.ttllll. ,, rt..ti,tl in Ili-4 men 11.g,i111411(. I It , then tivittatttloil an cApttllltt - frtain 1114 N 1 la•. She acklinlinlenlgiai that , 111. cav lats !lig :1 lilt! , Iltriali“11 NV hill thr Licittettatit, but ttimcktittiod anything I.llr titer. 'rho C.,1,111,1 Ikon rtiollott in 1'i,1t,114.1 7j1,111, putt r, 111111 , .•11 "it ill the Dry Itt.re Ito wa. .out hy I;ottoral Shormalt, :tll.l tlto tin, t.“1“111-1.4 etall'aV , al , 4l (4 , tore,. )1 itatley. Shin, 1,10111,1, "1 \VIII Ilt•\ or t•0n1e...., to a lie; I am iiiita.,sll of (wary! !tuft; except a Ihrttimi. - After phi, 411(0 \V., 1001°1,11 ill 111, 1,001101. ( . 011101111,1t.1ill`y alloll 0111,0011 Uses, wrote ‘vlrki purported to be her 001111 . 1`0.,11111. As...iste.l by 11. 1'000.000.011 I.twyer, M.,. ItailtLy ..ty , .l this they frightened a drill-sergeant. inta SWl'llr -11114 to evidence of :strs. Ilailey's m 11.60 0 .111- 11as 100 her litishmill. This sergeant is Hass t . an his way I'l,lll \. s, lack to testify to the :N AM,' facts hefare he present court-martial. All thui took ill. a iil th•tohor, 1,6 , 4. Ity mutual agreement the C..lonel :eel his si lie then separated. 111, retain...l her purported ‘ ,111.1, .i. , • Within t , " m 1,11, ,, imwes 0, , i, reconciliation seas effected through the hilluenco of arm)' ollii•cre, .la.iroils ..I hushing up the scandal. (*alone' li.tiley met his ss ice at 01111 11011,11 111 . the Itueereml Ir. Cushing, principal of A ulairmlalo Seminary. IA 111.111,1101.11011 sew, pronounced, 1,11,4111 . g :01.1 1..011,4,1 , I ts ire ill fIcIli•o• Ilal'lll ,s ll'. Ole tlal.rll+, Ilur. I II! ,V1•111.11111111 , 11.lIt• y I 11.,v or, thi! Th. ,egiqlattiro Wlt, 111 soisi.,ll. 111L1010•11 Of h01111(` 1 . 1 . 11,101 A ho 11:01 `4001 . 01. Oil I,f div,irru ,Irawn up and pay.c.l 1.. v of flint pis sVili• destitute, and dependont •Imrities (dl tho ullic•ors at. 1 , ,)t.t. W.lrren. 'hey raihed • In doft,ly her 4,111.11,, Il sir, %%here .111, ,vr , rit. She vkilcd .if tho 1...gi,41311111, ,tort'. 11.,11. .1. 'I. . 11111 egv , . , • , i.“ 1, ... 1 I.r cal”.. 311.1 iur,l lii, 1111t1,11, Inni.4.llro a ..(111.. 1,111 hy s 111..1111w Wa4 Tlio :1.•1 vas 1110 iiii3lllllll,l, Vtllll 1111.11 /1.41, 1, , and (Ii law iu ilk, I/1:111 :11141 nn Nlarch a, 1 , 70, Itaih•y that her husband was under the 1.,111111,11 Hartle int 11. S. I nitnerliatoly resolved In pursue and el .11- '4l,lin hill' to emaributeto her timhiteitance. She. /111,111.1 W 4,11 0111 3'0.1 nil March. Cl.l,.tiel Wa. , l greatly agi tated at her prevent,. llu lull the hotel in 'rent huvte, without 01.'011 titOppillg to pity iis bill, :old lett clerk lark lesortod uul fortdf...4tit.t", 1 - “ri,ini a frio.).l rotten nt: the regnlat . army, whn paid hrr brain hill and I:urn:Nl:nil Inn' IA all lan110): lii • to 11"a,hingt.,1). tr, • l.ty her case I;ralit \‘'ar ILepartinctit. Mtstilt;llLe the hush:tie!, becoming alarmed ;Lt. the per,istelice 01 11, wile, managed to procure an order detlilli_t him to service in Alaska, LL hero Ii hole 1 to lie out or his wiro'N reach. Jl rs. llailey arrived in \Vashingt..ii dur ng the first last newt!, :Sloe called 1114111 l'resident I ;rant and narrated, gill ears in her eyes, her sad history. Sionoral ;rant lueraune deeply unteruruted and gas. her a letter intrrdturung her Pu Glum Sher man and Secretary' Ilelluunip. Slur vr u uiled lurth thrso ifilivers, 141Iti pleaded her .3.01 kith all elll - 11,,t110,, that 0.111111,1,1 y us at than 4,vvr to her. At her r0 , 111,1t ii,ll.l,llSherman ordered ILLiley from Ala.,liat , / ,l114N“Ir. eXpetql.gi to arrivo in a fo,v play,, whin he jud4tnont (,r the Court will bp submit- u•d th the War Department. ;rant, :-,llerrtiath Dowell, and a I .(•all lilul w.llthlti 11114,111.,i10, and a Brevet thethenath-t. , ,lotiel lilt thsult. Lot till raMI 010111 , 11. hI tllllll,ll-1.11. 11!=leirn= Elld of Ad venturolls San Frns,el4 COWS Career In (bile. ,Fl,lll till. Sail Frall , , co Al.ky Many , f the readers of the it , t will rt• member Mu adventures of it limn 1.111,41 St. iii this State, about a year slime, who ran off tcith livery horses, and :Liter driving [tient nearly to death, sold them for it trill.4g I, itsi , kration ; and Was iniplica ted im 1:M11111er:0)10 cases of rascality. Ito Was it strum of lair education, well posted in regard to weak plaees in human nature, of ',leasing amt dignified address, and was evidently cut out tor a first-class rascal. I all of his adventures in this State he out witted the officers and always managed to keep from their clutches. Filially his vil lainy became sit widely known that he eon eluded to seek now fields in which to ex ercise his talents. Ile left this rite in I ictolJer last, on the steamship for Acapulco, as a steerage pas senger, under the muuto or Conk ; and that, too, when officers Were on the dock and Vessel watching for him. (In getting well out to sea, he marched to the purser's office and paid for a cabin passage, and informed the officers of the vessel unit his mini, was St. Clair, , )1 * the United Slates Army, a secret service °lnver. His agreeable and affable manners, together wall the ex changing of his clothing for the dress and inslgliiii.sfa hill-fledged Colonel, Were con sidered prrior positive, and every attention tea given to the distinguished personage. At Avapultsi, Col. St. Clair had the in , '- lineation of finding himself in it strange land without the wheroWith to set tle ininier,lis little hills, whi.•ll came pouring in 111)4)11111111. lieeXtricacled liiin selri'roni the yin hart - a:Affluent by remember. ing that he was one of lie ten secret service offivers sent out by the United States tiov t•rlittielit tt, assisl. Secretary Seward and party in their travels, and to make negotia tions and soundings fur the are uisition a all Nlexiro. A number of Franciscans at that place, together with the natives in general, were thoroughly bamboozled, and aided I'ol. St. Clair to pursue his journey to the City of lesion, taking iveconificin ,, ation his orders for (Nish on the t'aymaster said to he with the Seward party, All along the line of wards he conveyed the is'a that ho seas an officer of the army sent forward to make arrange ments for tlr. Seward's journey. 110 bought horses, rented rooms, hired ser vants and settled the bills by giving drafts, letters of credit, A:e. Front the City of Mex ico he went to Puebla and Vera Cr,,?., in each of which places he maintained the Maine gorgeousness and utter disregard for expense. Secretary Seward and party were very much annoyed by the presentatien of these orders, and drafts :nut letters of in troduction, Which the gallant Colonel gavo to many of ills newly made friends. From Vero Cruz ho escaped to I and from thence to Chile. New, has just been re eeived that in the latter place he has been arrested fur passing counterfeit money, A Serious Question in Africa The colored citizens of Palmns, in the re public of Liberia, threaten to 'secede from the authority and territorial rule of the President. Mr. Walter Good was appoint ed Collector and Postmaster at Paining.— Waiter bits, like all good men and true, political enemies, and Walter's opponents threaten to secede should Walter enjoy the " spoils." This trouble originates the seri ous economic and geographical question of where will they go to? Further on away into the interior of Africa, or still nearer to Exeter Hall? The imperial successor of the late King Kettle, of the West Coast, should ho named arbitrator of the dispute, N. Y. Iferotd.