THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCEP. PUBLISBED EVERY WiDREEIDAT BY H. G. SMITH & CO A. J. STEINMAN 11. G. SMITH • TERMS—Two Dollars per annum payable In all cases In advance. THE LANCASTER DAILYINTELLIGENCER IS published every evening, Sunday' excepted, at $5 per annum in advance. OFFICE--Sotrrit WEST Con:clip. OF CEXTILE SQUAIut. Voctrp. A YOUNG 11.1.31,11A.'S LAYIENT Not long ow' I used to sing, And donee, and feel so gay: lint now this little baby thing Has stol'n my youth away' I'm not oil, at least In years, My hales not streaked with gray, No wrinkle on my face appears, Awl yet.—“l've had my day !" How Irwi zigly my heart did bend Ti Charlie, when lie came! I never dreamed Itwould put an end To parties, amid Ouch game. Before the bridal charm tools flight A novelty I seemed,. And when I danced and felt Ho bright No harm was ever dreamed. But by and by niy baby canto, A na up sprung In my heart. A huly, louder, cleuthless flume, If iv Rich my Ilfu suunted purl Ilul sparaling eyes, stud sunny mall° VI h dimples dta•p and rare, In lathy farm cannot. beguile The 11.0. uf Fitshlull fair. They rldieule such Joys as mine, l'hey VII, for me ßio more, My husband's ceased to be divine My baby's thought tt hare. SO now they never ask me out They have no room they say Fir people all about Their dancing MOMS so gay. 811 l ill lllu "Gerlllllll . S .. III:1M! and glet Th.• 01.1., sholltd 'War 1111111nd, The very tidings that 1)11.11h:11,d tne, They", trying hard In find! 11321:11111 I Ililnlc Irue love Iv never blind. Ilia rather hring, nn n.,11,..1 light ; An Inner Vl.lon nutel, to Ilnd The Iron, I'ollllll,ll Sight I=IIIIIMENZ=II . . An.a 111,',1511411. , t, 11.0.1v , t part Savo I linal.:11 1111110iophy 1.,v11,4 wkdoni a the !wart. Y.ll, unanollilvil •Itall rttl I Ohl tvh.t tills my s.ttli wit h light; Sim .11, 11./t Net• 11 . 11,11 ttil, what hitt, froth Your sight. i h.• haa that fain to alla 11111 tilt• licit turn astray I saa the .5 nalhtrattal, sallii1110: Von, hat tin gamic ut, ttial the clay st..• IL lborlal, t•L'or by th.• I LIP iwrlec•tecl, row•li th.. sILLIALL . L..If a gIll!. I/1111 , 10 , 1 I Stiml4l. I,IIIIIW yon stad, Till an nlna•cyci, with toorla, rNrol•L 1,ovl•, dellvertn . , lull Ills 11111111, Allll III! I x•or1111p IllritVeL! 4+l(sccllanrotts. Deaf Smith, The Celebrated Texan Spy A tuna two years after the Texan rev olution, a ditlieulty occurred between the new government and a portion of the people, w h ich threatened the most serious VI/lISCIitIVIICVS --C VOll the blood shed and wrn)rs of a civil war. Brief ly, the eause \Va. , : The constitution had fixed the city or Austin as the per manent ':capital, oiler,. the ',oldie ar ehives were to be kept, with the reser vati,m, however, or a power in the Pres ident to order their temporary removal in ease of danger from the inroads of a foreign enemy, or a force of a sudden insurrection. Conceiving that the exceptional emer gency hail arrived, as the Comanches frequently committed outrages within sight of the capitol itself, Houston, who then resided at Washington, on the Brazos, dispatched an order command ing his subordinate functionaries to send the State Records to the latter place which he declared to be, pre., tempure', the seat of governinent. • It is impossible to describe thestormy excitement e hirh the 1)1,11111IgatiOld of this jita raised in Austin. The keepers of hotels, boarding house:, groceries and faro lianks were thunderstruck, mad ihmeil to frenzy ; for the measure would he a deathblow to their prosperity in business; and accordingly they deter mined at WIC(' 10 hake the. IleCeSSary steps to avert the danger, by opposing the execution of llouston's mandate.— They called 0 meeting of the citizens And farmers of the circumjacent country, who were all nmre or less interested in the question; and Oiler many fiery speeches against lb asserted tyranny of the .01miuistration, it was unani mously resolved to prevent the removal of the archives by open and armed re sistance. To that end they organized a company of Four huikdrea men, one par ty of whom, relieving the other at regu lar perio,ls of duty, should keep con stant guard around the State House un til the period passed by. 'clic comman der of this Puree was one Colonel MOr- LOH, who had achieved considerable re nown in the moor for independence, and Lad still more recently displayed des perate bravery iu two desperate duels, in both of which he had cut his antago nist nearly to pieces with the bowie knife. Indeed, from the notoriety of his character for revenge, or courage, it was thought that President Houston would renounce his purpose touching the archives, so soon as he should learn who was the leader of the opposition. Merlon, on his part, whose vanity fully equalled his personal prowess en couraged and justified the prevailing opinion by his boastful threats. 1 - ic sward that if tile President did not suc ceed in removing the records by the march of an overpowering force, he would then himself hunt him down like a wolf, and shout him with little ceremony, or stab him in his bed, or waylay him in his walks fur recreation. tic even wrote the hero of San Jacinto to that effect. The hitter replied in a Hole of laeonie brevity : "I f the people of Austin do not send the archives, I shall certainly come and take them ; and if Colonel Morton can kill me, he is weleifine to my ear-cap." On the reception of this answer, the guard was • doubled around the State I[ott 'hosen sentinels were station ed along tile road leading to the capital the military paraded the streets front morning till night, and select caucuses held permanent session, in the city hall. hi short, every thing betokened acom ing tempest. One day, while matters were in this precarious condition, the caucus at the city hall was surprised by the sudden appearance of a stranger, whose mode of entering was as extraordinary as his looks and dress. Ile did not knock at the closed door—he did not seek admis sion at all ; hunt climbing unseen a small bushy-topped live oak, which grew be side the wall, leaped without sound or warning through a lofty window. He was clothed altogether in buckskin, carried a long:nal very heavy ripe ill his lewd, Were it the bottom of his left. suspender a large bowie-knife, mid had in his leather belt a couple of pistols half the length of his gun. lle was tall, straight as :in arrow, active as a panther in his motions, with darkened complexion and luxuriant jetty hair, with a severe, iron-like countenance, that seemed never to have known a smile, and eyes of inten.ic vivid black, wild and rolling, twit piercing as the point of a dagger. Ilia htrange advent, inspired a thrill of involuntary fear, and many present un consciously grasped the handtcs of their side-arms. " Who :we you that thus presumes to intrude among gentlemen, without in vitation?" demanded Colonel Morton, ferociously - essaying to cow down the stranger with his eye. 'rite latter returned his stare with compound interest, and laid his long bony linger on his lip, as a sign—but of what, the spectators could not imagine. " Who are you? l4peal: ! or I will cut an answer out of your heart ! " shouted Morton, almost distracted with rage by the cool, sneering gaze of the other, who now removed his finger front his lip, and laid it on the hilt of his monstrous knife. ger, and was in the act of advancing upon the stranger, when several caught him and held him back, remonstrating. " Let him alone, Morton, for hod's sake. Do you not perceive that he is crazy?" At that moment Judge Webb, a man of shrewd intellect and courteous man ners, stepped forward, and addressed the intruder in a most respectful man ner— " My good friend, I presume you have made a mistake in the house. This is a private meeting where none but mem bers arel admitted.'' The stranger did not appear to com prehend the words, but he could not fail to understand the mild and deprecatory manner. His rigid features relaxed, and moving to a table in the centre of the hall, where there were materials and implements for writing, he seized a pen and traced one line : "I am deaf." He then held it up before the spectators, as a sort of natural apology for his own want of politeness. Judge Webb took the paper, and wrote a question. " Dear sir, will you he so obliging as to inform LH what is your busluess with the present meeting!" The other responded by delivering a letter. : lnscribed on the back, "TO the citizens of Austin." They broke the seal and read it aloud. It was from (I.tit 1 1. )ilt/gotet ..srt.tgviligiat?,et. VOLUME 71 Houston, and showed the usual terse brevity of his style ; " Fe //ow citizens :—Though in error, and deceived by the arts of traitors, I will give you three days more to decide whether you will surrender the public archives. At the ends of that time you will please let me know your decision. SAM. HOUSTON." After the reading, the deaf man wait ed a few seconds, as if for reply and then turned and was about to leave the hall, when Colonel Morton interposed, and sternly beckoned him back to the table. The stranger obeyed, and Morton wrote: "You were brave enough to insult me by your threatening look ten minutes ago.; are you brave enough now to give me satisfaction 9" The stranger penned his reply : " I am at your service?" Morton wrote again : " Who will be your second ?" The stranger rejoined : " I am too generous to seek an advantage ; and too brave to fear any on the part of others; therefore 1 never need the aid of a sec ond•" • • . Morton penned: "Name your terms." The stranger traced, without a mo ment's hesitation : "'Time, sunset this evening ; place, the left bank of Colora do, opposite Austin ; weapons, rifles, and distance, a hundrad yards. Do not fail to be in time !" lie then took three steps across the floor, and disappered through the win dow as had entered. "What!" exclaimed Judge Webb, is, it possible Colonel Morton, that you in tend to fight that num / lie is a mute, if not a positive maniac. Such a meeting 1 fear, will sadly tarnish the lustre of your laurels." "You are mistaken," replied Morton with a smile; "that mute is a hero, whose fame stands in the record of a dozen battles, and half as many bloody duels. Besides he is the favorite emis sary and bosom friend of llouston. if I have the good fortune to kill him, I think it will tempt the President to re tract his vow against venturing any more on the field of honor. "You know the man then. Who is he? Who is he asked twenty voices together. Deaf Smith," answered Morton, coolly. " Why, no; that cannot be. Deaf Sniith was slain at San Jacinto," re marked Judge Webb. "There ' again, your honor is mistak en," said Morton. "The story of Smith's death was a mere fiction, got up by Houston to save the life of his favorite from sworn vengeance of certain Texans, in whose conduct he bad acted as a spy. I fathomed the artifice twelve months since. "If what you say be true, you are a madman yourself!" exclaimed Webb. "Deaf Smith was never known to miss his mark. He has often brought down ravens in their most rapid flight, and killed Comanches and Mexicans at a distance of two hundred and fifty yards f' "Say no more," answered Col. Morton, in tones of deep determination; "the thing is already settled. I have ready agreed to meet him. There can be no disgrace in falling before such a shut, and if I succeed, my triumph will con fer the greater glory!" Such was the general habit of thought and feeling prevalent throughout Texas at this period. Towards evening a vast crowd assem bled at the place appointed to witness the hostile meeting, and so great was the popular recklessness as to affairs of the sort, that numerous and consideable sums were wagered on the result, At length the red orb of the summer sun touched the curved riot of the western horizon, covering it all with crimson and gold, and tilling the air with a Hood of burning glory; and then the two mortal antagonisis, armed with long, ponderous rifles, took their station, back to back, and at a preconcerted signal— the waving of a white handkerchief— walked slowly and steadily off in oppo site directions, counting their steps Un til each had measured fifty. They both completed the given number about the same instant, and then they wheeled, each to aim and tire when he chose. As the distance was great, both paused for some seconds—long enough fur the beholders to (lash their eyes front one to the other and mark the striking contrast betwixt them. The face of Colonel Morton was calm and smiling, but the smile it bore had a most murderous meaning. On the contrary the countenances of Deaf Smith was stern and passionless as ever. A side view of his features might have been mistaken for a profile done in east-iron. The one, too, was dressed in the richest cloth, and the other in smoke-tinted leather. But that made no difference in Texas that ; for the heroic courage were all considered peers—the class of inferiors embraced none but cowards. Presently two rides exploded with simultaneous roars. Col. Morton gave a prodigious bound upwards, and dropped to the earth a corpse. Deaf Smith stood erect, and immediately began to reload his rifle; and then, having finished his brief task, lie hastened away into the adjacent forest. Thrue days afterwards (len. Houston, accompanied by Deaf Sudth and MI more men, appeared in Austin, and without further opposition removed the state papers. The history of the hero of the forego ing anecdote vas one of the most extra ordinary ever known in the West. He made his advent in Texas at an early period, and continued to reside there until :his death, which happened sonic few years ago; but although he had many warm personal friends, no one could ever ascertain either the land of his birth, or a single gleam of his pre vious biography. When he was ques tioned on the subject, he laid his fingers on his lips; and if pressed more urgent ly his brow writhed, and his dark eyes seemed to shoot sparks of livid lire. lie could write with astonishing correctness and facility, considering his situation; and although denied the exquisite pleas ure and priceless advantages of the sense of hearing, nature had given him ample compensation, by an eye quick and fur seeing as an eagle's and a smell keen and incredible as that of a raven. He could discover objects moving miles away in the far-oll' prairie, when others could perceive nothing but earth and sky ; and the rangers used to declare that he could catch the scent of aMexican or Indian at as great a distance as a buz zard could distinguish the odor of a dead carcass. It was these qualities which fitted him so well for a spy, in which capacity he rendered invaluable service to Hous ton's army during the war of independ ence. He always,went alone, and gen erally obtained the information desired. His habits in private life were equally singular. He could never be persuaded to sleep under the roof of a house, or even to close a tent cloth. Wrapped in his blanket he loved to lie out in the. open air, under the blue canopy of pure. ether, and count the stars, or gaze with• a yearning look at the melancholy moon. When not employed as a spy or guide, he subsisted by hunting, being often absent on solitary excursions for weeks or even months together in the wilder ness. He was a genuine son of nature, a grown-up child of the woods and prune, which lie worshipped with a sortof Pagan adoration. Excluded by his in firmi- ties from cordial fellowship with his kind, he made the inanimate things of earth his friends, and entered by the heart's own adoption into brotherhood with the luminaries of heaven. Where ever there was land or water, barren mountains or tangled brakers of wild waving cane, there was Deaf Smith's home, and there he was happy; but in the streets of great cities, in all the great thorougfares of men, wherever there was flattery or fawning, base cunning or craven fear, there was Deaf Smith an alien and exile. Strange soul ! he hath departed on the long journey, away among those high bright stars which were his night lamps; and he has either solved or ceased to ponder the deep mystery of the magic word, " life." He is dead;. therefore let his errors rest in oblivion, and his vir tues be remembered with hope. Dttrnt Want toMorry It is no doubt wrong, but it is perfectly natural, to laugh at a certain man in Riply, Me. This unhappy person was about to be married, and so distressed was ho at the prospect that he took two ounces of lauda num to avoid the calamity. But the ex pectant bride (who was probably a widow) was promptly on hand with a doctor, and the poor creature was pumped into a fit condition for the altar. Only a fortnight before the victim tried to hang himself, but was saved for the joys of the honeymoon by timely cutting down. This wretched gentleman had better give it up so, and submit to his fate, for he can no more escape the noose than could honest Jack Bunaby after ho was led captive by Mrs. McStinger. A Romance of the Docks. For a month or more previous to the day on which they first become of in terest to any particular reader, two ugly uncouth vessels have been towed, and pushed and anchored, about the piers and wharves, making a horrible, bust lingdin and clamor in the daytime, and awkward, angular shadows In the night. One is a ponderous box with a cabin aft, a small donkey-engine in the center, and two huge teethed beams standing upright, forward, with a pulley at the top, and a heavy ladder reaching from the deck upward. The other is also a box, but a square one, and much larger. It has a more powerful engine, higher beams, a net-work of heavy chains, a braced and bolted cross-timber, to which is hung an enormous yawning iron box, which is also bolted and barred, and which, with the hanging chains, give out:a fitful, dismal chorus over the si lent wharves, deserted and damp, now that the night is setting in. The two machines have been dredg ing and thundering in the docks, and are now drawn up together to rest, moored to the piers and quite motion less, except when the slow, incoming swells lifts them, chafing and grinding together. Nobody is about within speak ing distance, though there are dim lights to be seen in the small windows of both the crafts. It is damp, steam ing and noisome, •ulthough the sky is starlit, and it is not yet so dark but that one may see the figure of a man labori ously el inib from the cabin of the smal ler vessel,and also be able to see to some extent what sort of man he is. lie is tall, broad-shouldered, but a lit tle bent, as if lie were a hard worker, with a narrow chest, a lagging gait, and an irresolute air. He wears a flannel shirt, a belt with it:sheath knife behind, his trousers thrust into his heavy boots, a slouch hat, and a set of heavy, tangled whiskers, and a shock of hair. He takes a step or two, stops, feels for the wind, hesitates, and looks over the side into the water, then to the sky. A few inure steps, and lie feels for the wind again. Then he goes hesitatingly to the oppo site side of the deck, and after a mo ment of doubt, kicks the side of the other vessel several times with his boot. He listens a little and kicks again. Pre sently there is a rattling of chains and a man's head appears, which he hails, and which hails back again ; whereupon he wheels about and goes forward by the upright beams, where he awkard ly seats himself with his feet hanging over and touching the water. Soon the other man followed him. He appears to be much younger, and, though as roughly dressed, is springy and elastic in his movements. lie seats himself 5(1 ((lose to the other as to appear to be in his confidence. A moment elapses, which the elder man seems to occupy in think ing• while the other glances at him from the corner of his eyes and impatiently taps his boots against the woodwork. Finally he speaks hastily : " Harker, what are you glum about? Hits it been going on again to day the same as the rest Yes," replies the other, glancing be hind at th e cabin-windows, and speak ing under his breath, "yes, just ;is al ways. They was sweeter at it than ever." " By—"' mutters his companion, striking his knee with his list, " how mad it makes me to think of it:" " lie was here, sure enough, as hand some and laughing as ever. She came out of the cabin and stood over there against the railing, talking and chat ting like a magpie. They didn't mind the men wino saw, nor the anise and dust. lie brought her a bunch of flowers, and was telling her about them, and she's got them stuck in a tumbler very careful." " Why didn't you stop it ? Don't you see the way it's going? ' " Because I ain't a fool, that's why. If I were to let in a word against him, or to warn her that he is fooling her, would she take it meek and mild 1 No, she wouldn't. I daren't breathe to her, nor look at her hardly, though she is my baby. And what are you so hot about ; is it my daughter ? No, it ain't. It's your chances with her that fetches you to me with such long faces. Why don't you march square up to her and tell her plain, instead of going unhappy and miserable about your work, because she can't tell you're loving her when she don't set her eyes on you the live long day ?" " You ain't going the back track?" asked the other, anxiously. " Not a step. I'm a better friend to you than you are. I'm in hopes you'll get her, for you're smart, and you're one of her kind, and the other ain't." " No, he ain't," broke in the young man, sharply. "He's handsome he's a notch above her, and he's playing with her, d—n him!" " What sets you a think i ng that Daw ley !" His voice was a little thick ; he looked hastily behind him again. "Are you stone blind'.' Don't you see that she's poor and pretty, that he is a smooth-talking one and handsome; haven't you watched them gm iv to know each other, until to-day it's got to flowers, and to-morrow it'll be brace lets, and the next day dresses and fin ery? Don't you see that you'll be get ting edged out of her fancy as he edges in ? She won't put up with a homely cabin along the docks with a rough man to love her, when she's been told that her pretty hands, her sweet voice, her dearest love, is wadrd on such as you. gospel ain't truer than that, Harker." Dawley caught the arm of the other tightly at the elbow and twisted him around. "I tell you the gospel ain't truer.— Haven't you read the same things since you were a baby? Haven't you heard it in books and stories? It is a little cheating, a little smiling, a little money, and years on years of heartbreak and misery. Think of her drawn away out of your sight with a pack of lies, and then of meeting her skulking, spoiled, nod shameless, like one of them." Here he pointed up along the edge of the dusky, shadowy wharf, where there were faint, whitish figures moving slowly about with the dress and gait of women. The large man shuddered and turned away with a swallowing movement of his hairy throat, and a muttered protest at the words of the other. "Don't, Dawley, don't. She ain't to be spoke of so." " Ain't to be spoke of Sur hAepeat ed, excitedly, and drawing nearer with a closer hold upon the arm. "What's that, to using of her so? If you're scared to think of being robbed of her brown face, her bright eves, and sweet voice, how will you stand it when you feel them slipping out of your way; and perhaps may come across the self-same floating about in the dirty water sonic day, where she thing herself, desperate and tired?" " Stop, Dawley. Stop man ! It can't COMA! to that." " lint it is , Harker, it's very nigh to it.. She's nothing but a woman, and he's artful. It's an old game with him, most likely. Come, brush up! look at me, what will your do to stop it? I'm ready to turn my hand to any thing, and I'm not her flesh and blood. 1 only wor ship her, that's all; I ain't her father, she don't rennin(' me of any wife, or don't eat at my table ; she don't put her arms around my neck ever, nor nurse me when I'm sick, nor cheer me when I'm tired, and yet you see what I'd do for her; l'd ." Hero he stretched out his hand with the fingersapartland then slowly curled them back into his palm, clinching them so tight that the tension of his muscles made his arm quiver to the shoulder. His lips parted over his set teeth, and to the irresolute, shrinking man by his side, he seemed, for the moment, to be the impersonation of hateful malignity. A moment of si lence, and mute glances exchanged in the dark, and then a stealthy secret drawing away on the part of Harker, almost imperceptible, but still eloquent. The hand of the other remained out stretched in mid-air until a hooded and shawled figure, which had been stand ing behind them for some moments, bent down and laid a hand on the shoul der of each. " Father and you," it said, looking front one to the other, " get up and come into the cabin." Without a word the two slowly clambered to their feet with hanging heads, making an awkward pretense of ease, and picked their way over the cables and chains after the girl, who went rapidly on before. She halted by the little companion-ladder, and let them pass her, and, after they had groped a difficult, noisy way into the bowels of the vessel, she followed, mop ping her eyes hastily with her shawl, and drawing a deep breath, while mak ing a quick gesture from her lips toward the city with her hand. The two men sank hulkingly into some seats, and put their soiled hats LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING AUGUST 3, 1870 carefully upon the floor. The younger, Dawley, was, however, a little quicker with his eyes, and a little readier to be come self-possessed. He looked like a man ready to take fire, and he followed the girl with the closest but most covert looks. She passed them, throwing off her hood, and stood beside her father, with a hand upon his head. " Jacob Dawley," said she, half re flectively and half directly, " I won der if you meant well by me when you sat taking all that to my father, up there " You know I could never mean harm to you, Aggy," replied lie, thickly, " though you do treat me so miserable." The girl flushed a little, and the tears started again. "But was it all your true belief; did you think it? do you? "May I be struck dumb and blind!" cried the other, stamping upon the floor, as a flood of morbid thoughts rushed back upon him, "what business has lie to hunt in these parts ? If lie is going to fetch shame and sorrow among you two, I say, tell him to keep away, not to show his devlish face here, and to keep his foot off your father's deck, and his eyes (Ala you. Don't you say so Harker."' He turned savagely on the other man, with the same extended fingers, looking eager to make the same significant gesture that lie had made before. "Maybe," growled the father eva sively. "Maybe." The girl caught her hands together in front of her, and, fixing her bright eyes upon him, regarded him with a statute ike steadiness, and an almost statute like paleness. " Who knows but you see all you heard me say, Aggy cried he, leaning forward, questioningly. " Per'aps you have the head to bid hiln to stay away, but not the heart, eh '?" He hesitated waiting for an answer, but none came. " Would you let me warn hint to keep oir front you ? Say, Aggy, would you?" There was something of a softness in his tone, and, for a bare instant, her eye faltered, but she answered promptly with a resolute shake of the head, and a calm voice: " No. I want him to come ; he's com ing to-morrow." Harker let his hands fall outward up on the table, while he turned a working, sickly face upward, to look at her.— Dawley labored to his: feet, breathed heavily through a pair of dry, contract ed lips. He pointed his forefinger at her, which trembled from his agitation. 'Aggy, Aggy darlin', what are you saying?' His fettering words fell upon the little cabin as . 11 stone on a narrow pool—disturbing, distracting all within it. To outward appearance, all three were calm and silent, but within them selves there were tumults of thoughts which had never been before. "And you're bent on going to—to the bad, Aggy, is that it?" His eyes eagerly caught the sight of a whitening, furious anger wldch swept over her face, and saw it in a good hope for his purpose. It appeared to him that she was true in her intent, but wrong in her judgment. It seemed to be a matter of view, and he rushed on, seeking to convert her to his, but man like, began with upbraiding her. " 1 don't know why I'm called upon to talk to you ; there's your father there, whose heart you're breaking, per'aps he would say a little to you if lie was tit to speak. Hut he's choked, don't you see ? It would make him right happy if you'd pull out your hair by handfuls and show you're crazy. You are crazy. It would lie better if you'd spoken your last word and looked your last look than to live overnight till to-morrow comes. I'd rather see you take a knife and cut your pretty face out than to have hint look at you again! Ile has no business with you but evil. If you don't tell me to keep him away, you're lost; you've no right to I iNT among honest folks. You re one a them that—" say, Dawley, hold up, man !" thundered I larker, leaning over the ta ble with a warning hand. "'f'ain't for you to say that, d'ye hear? Clod knows there's mischief enough to come, but Pam not the one todrive her to the river if she's going to be drove." Oh oh, my poor father," cried the girl, throwing her arms around his neck, " has he cheated you, too !" She muffled tier voice upon his rough face, while her ever-ready tears burst forth again, the ever , gratelul vents of unhap piness. " Has he mode you believe it? It is not true. He is honest with me, I)awley. Oh he could not lie." "How 110 you know he could nor.'" , demanded Dawley, fiercely. " Because I live," she retorted. "If I dreamed that he could fool me, I should die. I feel it in the memory of his face, his touch, and dress. Ile lie! Alt never! Ile is too noble. Ile is too gentle. Do you see my flowers!" She pointed to a trifle of a boquet floating in a glass of water. "Well, that is a heliotrope. It means a message to me front hint. It is my sunshine, and, without it now, I should feel so dreary and tired. But with it"—she cried, with glowing face—"but with it, I could do so much and so well. You are nothing to me, Jacob. 1 never led you on, for you are too tierce and too easy to anger —l—l—oh, don't look at me so—don't Jacob. Do not torment me ;go away for to-night ; lucre is my hand ; good night—good—" He brushed her hand ofr his shoulder with an oath, and siezing his cap, ran furiously to the ladder, upon which he stumbled, too blinded with rage to watch Ids footing. He struggled up, and burst ing the lock apart, forced his way into the murky darkness; and they heard him quit the deck with hurriedstrides. Frightened fur the moment, the girl remained silent, and then turned with a scared face to her father, who had folded his huge arms, with their veined, browned hands, before him, and laid his shaggy head upon them. " You're not doubting me, father, are you whispered she, stooping. " May God fetch you through all right, Ag,gy," answered lie, brokenly, " and keep this boy's heart clean toward you." Would you give him work, father, if he ennit , for it? " W"rk, child! What does he want with work?" 'l' he nutn raised his head, wonderingly. sake," replied she, slowly, with a sor rowful face, and slipping her hands caressingly over the shock of hair. Anil so, Aggy, here comes the bitter fruit dropping already. It's all wrong, wrong, wrong. Jacob would have been true, though he's much rougher." I lere there came a silence, and for an instant the hand stopped, but soon it went on again with its soothing, until its wordless, saddened possessor went her usual round of the locks and bolts, and soon after all within was dark and quiet. Without, too, it was also dark, and, barring the noise of a heavy, regular footfall, which echoed dismally among the wharfs and shipsides, it was also quiet. Around the deck of his dredger, of Which he was owner and master, from the Windlass aft, along by a narrow skill turned bottom up, to the great, oily, sturdy mast, with its gallows-like beam, then - by a heap of muddy cables and anchors, and back to the windlass again, walked Hawley. His driver anti spirit was Jealousy. It whipped him into speed when he hurried furiously past the shadowy way-marks, stamping with his feet, and beating his breast with his clinched hands, or lulled hint into a thinking, pondering face, with drooping head and long breaths; and the last seemed more dangerous and malignant than the first. The people who slept beneath looked out and begged him to stop and go down; the watchmen on the wharves hailed and warned him ; the loud voices calling and expostulating aroused the dogs on guard on the neighboring crafts, and the foggy harbor became discordant and alive with sounds. The men came and stooped over the edge of the piers above him, and turned their lanterns upon him ; they called his name, but he did not answer, but went on with his walk. They whispered together among them selves, and then went away and left him. Nothing interrupts him or his thoughts; they slip from her to him, and then back again,_ catching fragments of fire as the go. Soon they fix themselves on one of the two, and the other slides away leaving him alone with his rival. Over this subject he hovers, vulture;like, and plunges upon it, vulture-like. He rends and analyzes with a morbid persistence, turning all into fuel to feed his consum ing hate. As his walk drives his blood, so it drives his fury from his heart to his fingers'-ends, where it changes its character for that of re venge. As it reaches this point he walks slower for it has reached the puzzle of how to take it. The question of, shall he or shall he not, is long since settled ; and with his hands grasping his surtout at the lappel's, his eyes turned downward and his step grown moderate, he walks his ceaseless round fur into the night.— He turns occasionally, as if measuring and looks up at his far-reaching cross beam, with its ponderous Lox and chains, and then at the spot on deck of the other craft where he always stands, laughing and chatting, and where he will stand to-morrow. Then to his walk again ; then another look. The watch men come, as their rounds lay that way, and watch him curiously, and fruitless ly call him. As the clock strikes twelve they find them there; also at one and two; at three, however, they nibs him ; and, laughing among themselves that he is lovestruck with Harker's pretty daughter, they conclude that he has turned in and gone to bed. The truth is, in fact, that he has mount ed the wharf and gone to a drinking place close by, where lie arouses the in mates and demands something to quiet his nerves, and lie then goes to sleep upon a bench, where he stays for twen ty-four hours, debauching himself in his endeavors to get himself up to a cer tain point; he does not reach it, and still drinks, and, as it happens to be Sunday, they do not miss him much aboard of his craft. As the girl Aggy promised, Suffern Caine in the morning, but with a stimu lated elation in his face and step. He whispered that it was all over with ; that there had been an outbreak, and that he was homeless; work with her, in sight of her, was now his object ; and for her it would be a greater pleasure than he had ever had. Her tears and sorrow availed nothing; they could change nothing; for huhait made up his mind; and he turned to Harker. Harker's keen eyes gleamed with sus picion, but they found nothing but frankness, honesty. and a resolute will. They turned upon his daughter; there they found something to fear in her im petuous face, and he felt that the ques tion before him was an ultimatum which presented either the acceptance of Suffern's labor or her instant quittance of him, with its attendant loneliness and misery ; and so, with a lurking fear and a lurking dread, he gave the boy his hand. He reluctantly leddiiin about, pointing out his rough duties; the piles to be driven, and where, the working of the engine, the hoisting and the precipita ting of the guillotine-like fall, and where he might be expected to help. The workmen in their holiday dress looked curiously at the sight, but Ilarker, with the vision of his daughter before him, kept on with his task, until all was shown. The young man was stout, full-faced, and handsome. To any other but his father he would have been all that was true, but for the time he became a hy pocrite, and sometimes worse, for the words of Dawley were neither lightly spoken nor lightly meant. lie beheld him standing in the sunlight all the long afternoon, side by side with Isis daughter, with a growing fear and dis trust. To eyes of such a color, nothing itself becomes a monster, and a caress and glance the hateful indicators of a thrice cursed intent. The day was spent in brooding and watching, and, when the night came again, and with it the departure of Suf fern, he lay stretched upon the warm deck, harrassed by the memory and im port of the parting kiss. To him, as with Dawley, Suffern and notlhe girl bore the burden of his thoughts. And such a burden ! Cruel, ungenerous, vin dictive. They burned with him, so that he began to dream of taking her, his only treasure, and of secretly Hying oil out of the way to some spot where the spoiler could not penetrate, and of giv ing his life to winning her back. She, so beautiful, so trusting, to be torn from him, to be petted, then thrown worth less, alike to lout and all the world, to be a wretch, a preacher's text, and the abhorrence of her kind! (hod forgive him, but what would he not du to save her. As lie lay, groaning and sighing, he caught the sound of footsteps coining over the planked wharf. This could be no one but Sulrern, for Suffern was up permost in his mind. lie watched greedily, but not savagely. He saw the figure grope down the rough ladder hes itatingly, and emerge from the pitchy blackness into the faint starlight; he slid not hail it, but lay still watching it. It stopped as it unused to the spot, and looked about. It was indistinct, but still he could follow it. It crossed the dredger's leek and stood upon the rail ; another step and it stumbled, it caught wildly at the sides, but missed every thing, and fell into the water, with a little noise and no outcry. Harker, as all men would do, leaped to his feet. He listened, there was no noise of run . ning help, nobody saw him, there were a few faint plashes and struggles. Suf fern in the river! Well, let him stay there. Ile sank cautionsly3;down again with beating heart. He listened; the struggles lessened, and grew less fre quent: he was being freed! Presently he started again; his keen ear caught a painful, hoarse whisper: " Har—Harker ! Oh, Harker, Hark er! It was Dawley Like lightning and human like, with a hurried prayer, he grasped a boat-hook and jumped to the side, and, with en couraging words, th rust it into the water. Quiet, llawley, boy, quiet; don't move ; I have you." He threw himself flat upon the deck, and fumbled about with his hands, and, with a powerful arm, brought the man to light, weak and shivering. He struggled with his heavy body, and laid hint, a leaden weight, upon the deck. Weakened but sober, Dawley gazed thankfully but vaguely around, while Harker bent over him. His eyes, glancing upward, caught his face, and a fierce smile gathered 'moulds weazened, colorless lips. lie struggled to speak, and for a moment in vain. Presently he succeeded. " I saw you there, Harker." No answer but a gulping movement of the throat, which the half-drowned man watched eagerly. " You thought it was him—Sulfern ?" A motionless pause, and then a fright ened glance downward into the horri ble, purple, cadaverous face turned up ward, and after tint another wait—a Lime seized by llawley to read, to doubt, and be reassured of the temper of his scowling savior. He raised his drench ed arms out of their pools of water, and rested them across his breast for an in stant. Suddenly he raised them, drip- ping, and threw them about Harker's neck, and drew him down with all his weight, and pressed his cold lips to his ear. "Would ye do the like for him again?" He released him and sank back upon the deck, as if his question had a recoil. Had his own spirit put the interrogation, Harker's lips would have whispered a savage "Yes," but now they muttered a scared "No, no, no! not that way, Daw ley." And he stooped and seized him in his arms, and carried hint to his cabin, where lie laid him in his batik, and, kneeling beside him, told hint of the events of the day. Ii was afterward that Dawley put himself the question, concerning this moment, whether Harker was acting the part of a subtle coward, or that of an overburdened man who sought to lessen his load by imparting all he knew and felt to another. As lie remembered his own unbounded fury, the strengthen ing of his frame with the infusion of new draughts of jealousy and envy, the de fined and iuflagging wish and intent which were born of that news, lie was ready to believe that Harker told it him to stimulate and egg him on ; but, when he recalled the sight of the bowed head the broken voice, the tears, he was ready to think it but the overflowing of the cup, the awkward, but innocent search for sympathy. Possessed of the intent by these and infuriating causes, he dreamed of it, or rather tossed and groaned under it, as a nightmare, and then, Laggard, alert and unrelenting, he arose with it in the morning. His first thoughts concerned it, his lirst move ment lay toward it, his first wish for its consummation. Calculating and dog- ged, he subordinated his men, their hi bor, his previous plans, to its working. It was while in the very act of giving his strange directions to his astonished helpers that Suffern crossed his deck smiling, happy, and in earnest. He gave him a nod, which Dawley was too honest or too absorbed to return, and passed on to Harker's craft. As the early hours wore away, and:the time for work was at hand, the pile driver warped into its position close by a row of half-submerged timbers, and securely anchored. Suffern lent his hand bravely, despite the novelty of the work, and the scowling, heavy face of his employer. He often nodded and smiled toward a happy, brown eye that looked proudly upon him, though it would sudden and fill at times (1.9 the woman overrode the lighter thoughts of the girl, and she beheld the sacrifice. Full of his intent, careful and cool, Dawley worked his engine into the place which he had chosen with con summate skill. In doing so, he had cal culated an angle, a curve, a force, a mo tion, and a distance. With his own hands he belayed the lines. He looked aloft at his far-reaching yard, with its festoons of slippery, blackened chains, its yawning, monster dredge, pending, and gaping for its feast of river mud ; from thence to the clear deck of his neighbor, thirty feet distant, and so near that his chief assistant comes respect fulty and says he hopes that there'll be no danger of the dredge swinging out of their control, for it might do damage, meaning to give a warning; but Haw ley tells him to mind his business, and orders work to begin., It does, and Dawley pretends to find employ ment in the roar and bustle which en sue. He fumes and domineers more than usual, to show them that his mind has no other occupation than in filling the floats from the river-bed. His heart seems to be in the rattle and noise, the surging and boiling of the muddied water, the clanking of his engine, the cries and halloos of his men, but it is all and wholly on one sweeting, brave hearted lad, who is toiling for love's sake thirty yards away. His evil eye watches his slightest movement, his coming and returning, and especially greeds upon the gay gesture which is made now and thou toward a blithe some figure aft. His hate of inns has reached a point so low that it can go no further; it settles as it were into a pool, smooth and calm, but deep, very deep. His intent, now defined, changes its place, and a chance is now what lie waits for. lie looks aloft and then at Ids enemy. Suffern comes aft occasion ally, and Hawley breaths thickly to see him so near, but he returns immediately, and is again out of reach. The morn ing passes and the chance has not yet come. At regular intervals the huge arm, stretching far over the water, swings away to the left, plunges the great box into the seething river until the slacking chain shows that it has touched the mud. The little en gine then groans and slowly sways the bolted arm to the right, and the dredger drags its way and fills itself, is raised and emptied while in the midst of its midair flight around a circle about its mast,and is caught and held by a tetherof ivindlassed rope. Should the windlass give or the rope part, the dredger would lle round and round until t-he engine could be made to whip it up to the beam, and the force spend itself. No one knows this better than Dawley. He waits patiently for his chance. At live in the afternoon, as the shadows lengthen and creep over the waters, it comes. Suffern conies aft, • tired, weary, but as much in earnest as ' ever, and stands by a huge cleat, talking and laughing with the girl, who seems happy but anxious. She looks at ins hot face, and flicks the dust from his clothing, allowing her hand to rest an instant, in spite of the daylight. Daw ley sees it, he needs no pretext; for he is filled with hate, from his dry lips to his wet hands, and, like lightning, he meas ures with his eye; he sees everything ; lie vanishes for a moment, and then re appears, a furnace within, an iceberg without. The enormous dredge swings to the left. The two still stand. Dawley is calm and carries his hands in his pock ets. lie conjures the visions of the dim figures of the women on the wharves which he and Harker saw two nights ago, and then the face of Aggy. lie sees the dredge move to the right, plow ing and straining. it seems to have twice its force. lie can not help a gasp as he sees it rise. The two are still si lent. L'p it conics. Itsways, is caught, is emptied. but does not stop; it flies away bustling through the air, the wind lass shifts the tether, and the men shout. A swift-moving shadow falls athwart the deck. A scream rings out wild and piercing. Thirty men fling down their tools and stare with pale faces.— Dawley turns. The girl is unhurt, but in agony, and a body falls plashing into the water bleeding and heavy, fifty feet away, Dawley, with Ids fierce heart and fiercer face, makes a pretense of moving, and steps away a little. It was a splendid aim ! Suddenly a din of voices arises. All of them about glare at him and motion wildly with their arms, and scream. lie does not under stand. He trembles. A something comes between him and the sun. lie turns. lie shrieks. lie cannot even step or fall. The dredge! The gaping, horrid, yawning dredge ! A half glance at the world about 'din and it is upon him. It ingulfs and batters him down, and all is over. In a sunny, breezy room of the hospi- I tat they lie together. Pain has long since fled, and both are mending—one in body, and, one in soul. One draws in the grateful air, the sight of flowers ' the sweetnesses of sympathy, as a thankful man only can do. The other, crushed and broken, is looking beyond all men and things of men, and on this day sees further and deeper than before. They gather solemnly and slowly about him, at his left, leaving the side toward Suf fern free and open. There are ghastly traces of deformity distinguishable even through the white linen, and those about * him shrinkingly look upward to the face where there are none, and they find instead, in the set of the thin lips, the wavering smile, the instant's glance, a purity and beauty which attracts from all that lies below. The purity be comes purer, and the beauty more beautiful, as the sunlight grows richer and redder with the passing moments. They hold their breaths, and glance covertly at one another. As his lips move, they stoop to listen, but catch nothing in sound ; but the frightened girl at his side, kneeling close to him, looks up quickly and catches her father's eye, who nods. She then raises her hand warningly above her head toward Suffern. He turns about - and she WiliS- . _ pers sobbingly in the man's ear, and touches his cheek with her hand ; smile overspreads his face, and he turns about slowly, with his eyes still closed. They watch him with beating hearts.— An instant passes, fraught only with the singing of birds and hum of the insects among the flowers arranged on the win dow sill. His eves slowly open upon other eyes eager and soft with tears. His thin, weak hand lifts a little, while she smiles again, and it clings longer about his lips as the other whispers, "Good-by, Dawley, l led bless you, God bless you." They watch for the face to turn back, but it never does. It rests there, and the work begun a month before is finished. They draw the linen sheet up higher, and, in doing so, they cover all, and, without its face, the mishappen pile loses all semblance to a man. Then they pass by and go to the other. Crippled, maimed, helpless, he hopes to be nothing but a burden. The fond, trusting girl prays to him to let her work for both; he half yields, but a flance downward at Ilk horrid bandages orces him to shake his head firmly. She Weeps, she implores, and buries her head in his bosom. It is useless. The resolution which made him seek her, also bids her turn her face away and save herself from misery. Full of ago ny she obeys, but haunts the place. One day they discover that he may mend and walk again. She looks upon the operation they perform dauntlessly, for through it and in it is her true life. The strength of her presence, the cheer of her eye, and the food which he finds in her touch and smile, make him pow erful, and bring him through his subse quent strait. They set him upon his feet, lie gropes, he totters, he hobbles, and as days pass by, he walks again— other days come, and finally that upon which they cheerfully say he may go.— He looks about for the last time, gladly at one cot and mournfully at poor I)aw ley's. He then takes her arm and they pass out together, and Harker meets them cheerily at the gates. Err= The New York Commercial finds a bad account for wine-bibbers in the conflict in Europe. Patriots and not peasants, says the editor, now promise to gather the grapes of the Rhine districts, and the German and French vintage will be quaffed from tin canteens and not silver goblets. The ad vance in drinks in New York indicates that importers and restaurant keepers are alive to the above fact, and propose to husband their stock on hand. It is fearful to contem plate the amount of dilution which will now be indulged in, and the varieties of stuff which will be palmed off as imported wines A Visit to Bull Run A correspondent of the Chicago Tri bune, lately visiting Bull Run. writes as follows: This is the ninth anniversary of the battle of the first Bull Run, July 21st, and I write these opening lines at the Robinson House, where the hottest bat tle was concentrated. How time files! It is a beautiful day, not quite so warm as the day of the battle, and we are all looking at maps and eating soft boiled eggs under Robinson's shed, with old Mr. Robinson looking down at us benevolently. " Mrs. Robinson," says one of the la dies, "were you frightened when you saw they were going to tight a battle round your house?" " Dear, dear, honey, says Mrs. Robin son, "I was so frightened that I can't tell you nothing about it. ' Peared like I had done so many sins, they sent all their armies after roe a purpose that blessed Sabbath day. I jist got in the cellar and prayed, and the ore man he got under a bridge, and I 'speet hepray ed too. Thank the Lord for these bright Sundays now-a-days." We paid twenty-live dollars fora title, showy, solid team and two horses and left Washington with four persons, one of us acting as driver, on Saturday af ternoon at 4 o'clock. Country roads of a fair sort led us by Ball's Cross Roads. Upton Hill, Falls Church, and across the shallow branches of the Accotink to Fairfax Court House—fully eighteen miles—where we put up for the night an the clean and not expensive tavern of Major Tyler, a c o usin of the deceased President, John Tyler, and formerly commandant or marines at 'Washing ton Barracks. Centreville is one of the most ruined of all hamlets. There were originally about thirty houses in it, a majority of which are now mere chimneys standing erect among weeds, and several of the houses which remain have been patch ed up with logs and planks, so that what stands is, if possible, more forbidding than what is destroyed. At present the oily signs of life about Centreville seem to be one store, one shop, one new church, and one Methodist Sunday School. There is no tavern in the place and there seems to be no wells of water in the vicinity, and all the water is pulled from the branch, a half-dry arm of Bull Run. The site of Centreville Is one of the noblest in Virginia, standing upon the tall spine of a long, crescent shaped ridge, which bristles with dry forts along its whole profile, and makes against the sky a battlemented horizon, which might almost give suggestions to an architect. Seven ditli.rent roads meet at Centreville, and in revived times it ought to be a busy place. One naturally expects as he approach es a celebrated field soon after the event which commemorates it that he will ob serve many vestiges of the action.— There are but two battle-fields I have seen which bear out this character— Waterloo, where the loop-holed brick walls of the orchard remain its they were on the day of the tight, as well as the blackened ruins of the Chateau of Hougoi intuit; the other battle-field is Bull Run, which is full of ruin, and the signs of ruin begin from the time you quit Fairfax Court House, following the path of the Northern army. In the first place, there is Fairfax itself, partly pulled down ; the court house, which wan loop-holed during three-fourths of the war, still showing the fresh bricks in it; the jail, also loop-holed, and just on the outskirts of Fairfax a few bricks are lying upon each other to tell where existed the hamlet of Germantown. About a mile past Fairfax the good turnpike runs off to Chantilly, the scene of Pope's lilt defeat, where Stevens and KC: gave up their lives. Leav ing this turnpike our carriage descended into what is, above all other highways known to man, a road of ruin—the road to Centreville. A forbidding and a lonesome look marks this wide road from a far distance. Like all the old turnpikes of Virginia, it had been built in a staunch mariner, with a hard, high, limestone pavement in the middle of it; some of the stones white and some red, but all large, hard, and set up endways; and, formerly, this rampart of rock was covered with clay, sand Will gravel, so that it made the broad area of the road level and like a parade. Now the ma terial hart of the road in the centre has been washed free of all the gravel and the clay, so that it looks like the naked skeleton of a blasted highway, the lorries of a road once merry with life and tinkling with teams. The only way to travel it at all was to take the side-paths, or what are called here the summer roads, which sometimes run pleasantly for little skips, and then suddenly come to little promonotaries of trap rock and out cropping limestone, at which we could see the ladies looking alarmed from a distance, and nervously holding tight their seats. 'lids lonely, this desolate, this battle-accursed road runs from Fair lax due west for 13 miles, passing through Centreville, and a short distance from Stonebridge it is barred across its whole length by rail, for Stonebridge is still a ruin after live years of peace, and all wagons have to take to the fields, making at long detour, and fording Itull Run at a point where the long, aged, roots of the oaks, cline and hemlocks form a danteseque bank against the ford, while the other is a dark, succulent and snaky copse, with swamp, grape vines and Wild mixtures of dogwood, willow and Virginia creepers. Through this de, tile, worthy of the pencil of Salvator Rosa, our city made carriage moved like a London shop hunting in a Bengalee jungle, and directly we plunged to the hubs into Bull Bun, a pretty stream of reddish gray color, inclined to be mud dy, with swampy banks, and crops of earn growing closely up to the margin. Below and above, the stream made an aisle of black light under the arch of the trees, and in the current grew bunches of duck-weeds, blue stalked flags, and other aquatic leaves, the appearance of which indicated snakes beneath them. We made another long detour on the other side, and came to a pair of bars, which again admitted us to the turn pike, and here we made inquiries at the Van Pelt House, and then retraced, over the truck taken by Tyler's divi vision to the celebrated stone bridge. The turnpike was grown up into long green grass, and before we got to the bridge we saw a snake wriggle off be fore the horse's hoofs. Close by the bridge we took the horses out of their harness, decended beneath the abut ments of the bridge, and proceeded our selves to cross the stream by certain stones and fish boxes which span it. We had nosooner put our feet on the first stone than three black water snakes dropped noiselessly into the water and swam away. A black boy coming by, told us that the stone bridge had be- come a spot where you are always sure to see snakes, and that sometimes they lie up on the tail red abutments, and throw themselves with a lifeless splash into the water. I sat by the single areh of red lime stone—broken, grass-covered, the pura pets of the approaches overgrown—and heard the dark waters sing and curdle along under the natural ledges of rock, and saw the turnpike barred by worm fences and deep with grass, where once, in times of peace, the young men rode courting, the buggies rolled to church, the runaway negroes slipped northward by night, the cattle and sheep limped in dusty groves to slaughter, and finally, where great guns rumbled and the troops stacked arms to rest and thought of death close by. All these images were faint by the light of this highway oh desolation, and these appealing abut ments stretching toward each other and seeking to span the river. What a little stream to be known round the world— fordable every few rods, not above sixty feet wide, yet withal a stream of dignity and austerity! The timber that grew along the half morasses here and there upon its borders was high and branching; the morasses themselves were full of rank grass, and the movement of the water was sullen and dull, as if it loved to tarry in the dark pools and draw back from the light. To left and right the woods closed In upon the visitor, and over these tree tops careened the tall hills, with but one house in sight, and a vague suggesti on besides of Robinson's shanty in some huddling fruit trees, which carried a human intimation.— Looking back toward Centreville from the bridge, a group of negro quarters and a small house stood oil one side in an out field, and a new negro hut, solitary in a corn field, on the other, both backed by wood. Down this road the half will ing troops of Tyler hail moved at day light, blocking up the way, delaying Hunter's men, and these last had finally reappeared across the bridge, their ad vance measured by the ohm& of dust NUMBER 31. which were denser and higher than the cannon's smoke. We followed up this turnpike to where the Ludley Ford road crossed it at right angles, down which, marching south ward, the flanking divisions of Hunter came, and by the white cabin of Mat thews it unfolded from column to line, stretching three-quarters of a mile, and staking a fringe of skirmishers to the front. All the forenoon the contest was to carry the turnpike, and release the divisions behind the stone bridge. By beating Evans and Bee this much was accomplished, and then the battle was transferred to the other side of the turn pike, where one long, oval hill, the pro monotory of a high plateau, stretched front the turnpike to the Ludley road, and on this exalted cape the first armies of civil war fought what was the real battle of Bull Run, on a space of ground not above two hundred acres in area.— The shape of this hill is defined by two rivulets tributary to Bull Hun, that in front called Young's Branch, which erossess the turnpike, once at the cross roads and again near Bull Run, crossed in the latter case by a small wooden bridge. The back side of the hill is covered with small wild timber, oak and pine, which leaves the summit and the slopes toward the roads nearly bare. Upon the bare parts the fiercest battle raged for three hours around two small common farm houses—Robinson's near est Bull Run, and Henry's near by Ludley road. The Federal troops -were strongest along the latter half-sunken country road, and they formed a line of battle like a carpenter's square, while the rebels made a Hue like a crescent iu the edge of the low woods, which half covered their battalions. The length of the line of battle was about half a mile or less, and the Confederate batteries were massed on their right, and the Federal batteries on their own right;respectively. Upon this oval sum mit a 'fight:as desperate as any of the war took place, fiercest around the shanty called the Henry House, confin ed almost. to the musketry and artillery and the hotest contests were for the batteries, whose horses had been quick ly killed. At present this hill is marked with a few gullet's, where the ruins have wash ed, and by many excavated pits where the dead have been disinterred. The country for many miles hereabout is plainly revealed, the monument at Groveton on the second battle field of Bull Run, showing distinctly, and Manassas Junction, a tine white village, ve miles away, is seen through a fissure the timber. =EI I ascertained these foots about the persons who occupied the dwellings on the battle field of the first Bull ]tun: The first house on the Warrenton turn pike, to the right hand, after passing the stone bridge, is occupied by Mr. Dona hue, who lives in the house of the widow Van Pelt. This house isa pleasant frame dwelling, surrounded by tall and um brageous trees, and it was the only house in sight from the stone bridge on the day of the battle. All the buildings stand, though the barn was shelled through and through, but on this par ticular farm no lighting was done, yet across it hundreds of troops retreated to recross Bull Run. The second house to the right is that of Gus Van Pelt, in which Bob Payne now lives ; this house shows marks of the fight, and the farm was well' fought over on the morning of the action. The third house on the right of the turnpike is a very peculiar one, and no man who ligured in that action can well forget it. It is a large, oblong, red lime stone house, built of large blocks, audit stands nearly at the junction of LlMley road. It is owned by Mr. Starbuck,who was a sutler in the Federal army, and who keeps a house of entertainment there now. This house was well riddled in the battle with shell and ball, and was set on fire sonic time during the day, but the neighbors, in a very neighborly manner, overcame their fears so far as to rush in and put the lire out. All ac counts, even the most moderate, agree that the Northern troops, put the high est construction on the crime of treason on the day of the battle of hull Run, and gt fire to whatever would burn. Turning to the left of the turnpike, the first place beyond the stone bridge is the celebrated Jim Itobin::on's farm, which was one of the centres of the elliptical battle of the afternoon—the other centre being a farm of the wido w Henry, just to the right of it about a water of a mile. I walked to the widow Henry's over a part of the field where most terrific fighting happened, passing tlw spot where the two rebelgenerals, Bee awl Bartow, were struck dead. A. block of marble was set up to Bee's memory after the first battle of Bull run, but when Joe Johnson deserted Manassas, in the spring of northern soldiers cracked the stone to pieces and carried oil the chips for relies. Bee was an able officer, raised by the United States, and it was he who gave the name of "Stonewall" to Thomas Jonathan Jackson, as the latter came to his support in the action. "There stands Jackson," he said, "like a stone wall." • As we approached the Henry }louse, we saw a woman, dressed in black, pick ing flowers in the field. She was a daughter of the widow 11 en ry, who suf fered a cruel death in her own house. She was aged and an invalid, and when the full hurricane of the action burst right round this old shanty, the unfor tunate woman was cut all to pieces with shell, hall and bullets, and the house itself was torn to !finders ; they could MN= fury of the figtit was over. The Henry House is now replaced by a small frame dwelling painted blue, with end chimneys outside, and in the yard of this dwelling stands, in the open sun, a small monument made of red limestone, from the banks of the Bull Run, two miles away; the monument is about sixteen feet high, and is capped with a large rifled projectile, while round the carriers of the base four other cones of stone and exploded shell are raised, the whole edifice standing upon a mound of sod which has given way, so that it is probable the whole thing will tumble down within a few years. A white stone says, in crudely carved let ters, " Honor to the Patriot Dead ! " But round the monument are neat little wooden signs on each of the four sides, which tell the story of the surround. ings. One says that near that spot were captured parts of Griffin's, Hickett's and other batteries. Another sign says that Bee, Bartow and other good officers of both sides were killed here. Another sign says that Stonewall Jackson was wounded hard by, and that here he got bis historic appellation. The fourth sign says that twenty-four Federal sol diers lie beneath. The monument is lean lug, (rum de feetive foundations, and will soon tum ble down. The number of people lost in the bat tle of Bull Run attests, and by its equality as well, that it w•as a well maintained conflict. The rebel killed and wounded numbered 1,557, one-fifth of them slain. The Federal killed and wounded were 1,492, one-third slain. These official fi gures are probably too low on both sides. About one thousand persons gave up the ghost on this field. The Federal loss in all was ten cannons captured, besides seventeen others abandoned, and four thousand muskets thrown away. Nearly one-third of the men afterward promi nent in both armies fought in the first battle of Bull Run as subordinate of ficers." Why Grant Hankers After Salt Fish. When President Grant was in Connecti cut ho had a taste of salted shad, and it hid such an effect upon his palate that he order ed a barrel for consumption at the White house. We mention this fact so that all the aspirants for office may know what sort of fish to lay in. Shad salt passably well, but it is far inferior to mackerel or salmon. The shad is a fish of such a delicate fibre t a largo quantity of salt is necessary to c re it. Consequently it requires so much freshening to fit it for the table that there is not mnch flavor left. Perhaps, however, Gen. Grant intends to use the lish as a pro vocative, after the fashion of an honest cit izen who desired to drink more than he had a natural relish for, and so resorted to salt fish to produce an artificial appetite. Ile was a naval officer, in command of the old steamer Fulton, and he invited an acquaint ance to make a trip with him. The first day out he had soused fish for breakfast, and it was cooked without being freshened at all. A piece of rock salt, powdered with Liverpool blown, would have boon quite as palatable. The friend tried in vain to swallow it. " Why Jim," said ho " how can you eat such horrible stuff?" "Sir," replied the captain, "I have a design in it. By eating my fish in that condition, I got a thirst on by twelve o'clock that I would not take ten dollars for."—N. Y. Sun. A little boy in lowa has committed 1400 Bible verses to memory and died of brain fever. RATE OE-A.EVERTISING BUSINESS ADVERTISEMENTS, ,12. n year per aqure of ten lines; $S per year for each addi tional square. F.B4TIt ADVEUSI, 10 cents a line for theflnit, and 5 cerith Yoreach riub,equen.f. In insertion. URN ERA T. A DVERT !SI NO, 7 Centr. a nue for the find, and I cents for cacti anbacquemt In er• SPECIA t. NuTICIN inserted In Local Coluumn 15 cents par line. • SPECIAL, NOTICE'S preceding niarrin.es and deaths, 10 cents per lino for nrst Insertion II and 5 cents for evury imbsequent 11,:ert1011.111 LEGAL AND OTHER NoticEs— Executors' notices 1: ou Administrators' notice ..: . - ol Assignees' notices 2 53 Auditors' notices 2 15; Other ' Notices," ten lines, or less, I z j; 5 three times E=l N law YORK, July '27.—The announcem rut of the Cambria 's arrival treated great ex citement in this city, the colors of the yacht being promptly displayisl from the city hall and her victory announeed by the tiring of cannon in City I tali l'ark. Ito Cambria proceeded up the bay, flying the stars and stripes at her fore and attended by numerous tugs, yachts and craft Of various descriptions, 111111 e3lllO to nntl un • Stapleton, Staten island, at half-past four. Her progres: till the harbor was greeted with demonstrations or wotrouut from .11 passing and accompanying vessels which the Cambria acknowledged In - her colors. The Cunarder, Scotia and Cuba, or the same line, .just entering port, tired salutes as they passed the Cambria. The Lowg Branch steamer, Plymouth Rook, however, made no recognition of the winning' yacht. A number of tugs and yachts, gaily decorated, went down to the Cambria from the city, and hearty and cordial congratulations eS changed with the victors. The sailing mash, +4 the Cambria says that the yacht never sighted the Dauntless after the night of the start. She reache•l Cape Race in eighteen days, had heavy fozs, and saw many icebergs. The greatest run in any one unit - was 20s sh e Sandy !look lightship one hour thirtN minutes ahead of the Dauntless. Th,,:tif ing master also says the t ':nutria pilot boat last night, and the Dawitle— passed the same vessel, w Licit rein:tined :liana stationary twelve hours al'tertc:u•d. ht, NV, a passenger in the Dauntless, report: that she tin. one overboard, and spent two hour, and a half in vain etiort to pick them up. The Cam bria proceeds to the navy yard to-toorn , w to lnr overliatileil. It is tualerstodd she will go to the \Vest Indies :tiler the regatta in this harbor. • The Cambria passed Sandy I fool:. at ro. I and the Dauntless at I'. M. Tho log of the Cambria states that the yachts lost sight Of each other at eight P. NI. July -I, when the t'aniliria made out the Dauntless two miles 011 the Ira bow; 5, at 1.30 A. M., the Cambria tacked, hiving her course N. \V. by N. ; at 110011 Wiles 5011ti1 , V,4 1 4 . Cape CIOIIe / at eight I'. M., reefed mainsail; very heavy sell run ning, anti ship behaving nobly; 6--tvotither moderating, Mit thick, eleutly and rain; distance run, 179 miles; .luly 7—tvetither improved; clear at four I'. :M.; distance run 112 miles. July S. Becalmed ; at 3.30 feretepsall bacl:sttlys gave way, causing foretopmast to go ever the side, carrying away foretopsail and jibtopsail; all hands emplovis I in clearing Wreck and getting sail aboard. -- .July 9—Signalled Anchor Lino steamer; distance sailed, 220 miles; July lo apparently approaching, and l'oretopmast was !mused; distance sailed, -17 miles; July I I --heavy sen, ',hipping great, quanti ties of water ; at times 1111011 and ferosails double reefed; inaintopmast liteise.l and everything snug; yacht behaved nobly; distant, sailed, 13:3 tulles; JulylS—we;lher inn-hanged ; distance sailed, lie miles; .1 My 13—weather moderate; distance sailed, 111 miles ; July 11 - at 1111011 tnrkrd Ship ; 1/11511. 10ng..12. 25; distance sailed, 171 milt,. July IS, weather thick ; distanced sailed. 211 miles. July If,, disc inceti sailed, 92 tulles. July 17, weather extremely veld; passed sevornl icebergs; distant, sailed 61 miles, July IS, sighted St. John light; at 1 A. Al., tacked ship; alit I'. M., sighted Cape lance; distance sailed, 150 mil,. .July 19, thick fogs; distance sailed, 109 mints ; at 6 I'. 51,, foretoptilast went over side, tar rying uavuy forehmsail and jilittipsail July 20—Light tun! clear. Carpenter em ployed in scraping remains of two /MI, 1111/StA ready to 6o prepared fee an other break; distance sailed 151 miles; July2l, sent second uuaintnpsail !loft; dis tant, stilled, 169 miles. July 22, distance sailed, 155 miles. .July 213, distance sailed, 71 miles. July 21, tacked .ship; distant, sailed, 158 miles. Judy 25, at 7;50 p. pilot came 011 loan': Nantucket lightship 25 miles miles N. W. by N. at 10:30; dis tance sailed, s 5 miles. .liily 26, di/41111, , sailed, 82 miles. Jiilv 27, at II a. in., head still' breeze, which brought. us to Sandy Hook at :4:30 p. The leg Of the Dalllltle/. /.110 \VS- -.filly sth, run 103 mile., fresh ‘vesterl%; wind, hazy; 6th-90 miles, variable winds, licary head. swells, cloudy ; 7th—Lill tulles, heavy gales, S. S. \V. lost Charles Scmtt and Al bert Deena' oi . erboard, whilo furling !ly ing jilt; have to 2 hours; gel nut boat ; re luctantly compelled to give the!. up; sth 210 miles ; fresh gales :untiring:l! sea,which moderated to ntnlrrute breezes; 101.11-112 !tilts ; night squally ; heavy head sea; split forestaysail ; broke jibisstni ; hove to over all lour; IR], —155 miles; 12th miles; 1301--1:10 miles ; lath-155 miles; 151.11-11'i Ioth--150 miles 17th-70 miles; 15th—Gs miles; 19th--11:, miles; squally • 20th--225 ; pleasant weather; 21st :110 miles; 22,1-191 miles; 2:1,1—.52 miles; calm and fuggy; 24111--120 miles; variable weather; 25th 7:1 miles; foggy at 3 P. Ti!.; sounded itt In lathems; 2601-95 miles ; passing Sandy Iltsok light Shit/ at .1:47 I'. Al. 'For Ames-Huller Wedding . . The New York papers sire snaking almost as great a sensation on the marriage ssrm iss Blanche Butler to tleneral Asielbert Anus, in NI assachuselts, as they diet of the lamssus Oviedo " disLmsind wodsling" in New York some years ago. Under the term of the " bride's trosseau," the reporters uud CO, respondentv have given in minute detail the number :end quality of every article of the bride's clothing, all of which is repre sented to he (ir the finest texture and Paris make. Passing over the greater pert of the catalogue, we give the following sketch of the lady's tras cling costume for the bridal tour: Among the most markedly striking is the traveling suit of China silk of ti,, new tea lOW, Shalill erns,, The lower skirt iv trimmed with deep ruffles and putts, and in length just touches the floor and the back, and reaebes to the instep in front, just clearing the foot. Tho overskirt is rather long and quite bus/Irani, trimmed with rullles of the same :mil a Cluny lace, an inch said a half in width, exactly the shade of the dress. 'the jaeket is a grace ful, half-lifting aintir, with loose sleeves, trimmed to en rrespsmd with the upper skirt. A fall of valenciennes lace is fast ened into the sleeve and drops over the hand. The hat is a jaunty little soft-crowned thing, made of the same material as the dress, of a nondescript shape, utterly un like anything yet seen in America, and iv trimmed with green ribbon, plaited quite full around the crown, and completely covering the very narrow brim. A rosette is placed at the left side, and that consti tutes the whole trimming. It is very sim ple and girlish, and exceedingly becoming to the face of the wearer. The boots, too, are like the dress, with square, rather broad toes and high heels, nearly in the middle of the foot. Ti,,, boot is lower than those that have been warn for ONO or three years past, being 011iy about seven Sashes ill height.. They ars• buttoned with tiny gilt buttons. The parasol is quite a new idea, and is what young ladies call " perfectly stun ning." The handle, which is quite heavy, and covered with green Russia leather, forms a wal king stick. The head is a horse shoe of French gilt, which surrounds a tiny looking-glass. The shade is of core Chien silk, lined with green, and erne mentos' with heavy erre eord and tassel. The fan is of sandal woad and ecru silk, with the 1110110gralll B. B. painted on it in green. • During the hotly contested canvass for the Republican Senatorial nominations in Crawford county, E. Montague, of Con neautville, uttered $.5 ti S. D. Neal, of rho same place, to vote for Delttmater. Neal took the money, in the presence of wit nesses, one of whom was the Postmaster, but, becoming dissatisfied because some of his neighbors had received better pay, lie violated his pledge, and on the day of the primary election both worked and voted for Anderson. Montague was, of course, very mad, and, as only an angry or silly man would do, lie brought suit for the sum at Meadville. Neal was prepared for the fray, and, in defence, brought a bill against Montague, as "agent," for three day's elec tioneering, at per day, making in all $3O. On this tie allowed the received as credit, leaving the tunount due $2. - t. In or der to sustain his claim, Neal proposed to introduce witnesses, showing the standard sum paid in the section for electioneering services during the canvass, but Montague found that he had " caught a Tartar," and paid the costs and withdrew the complaint. eal is not satisfied, however, and, by last reports, intends to bring suit against Mon tague for the recovery of the balance claim ed. Both men are pre-eminently "loyal," and chief among the sachems of that hot bed of "great moral ideas."—Eric Ob.yerrer It is estimated that over 100,000 emigrants have entered Texas within the last twelve months, and during last December over 1500 persons came daily into the State. The crops this summer, it is believed, will he double those of last year. The hilly regions of the western part of the State are very healthy, but the persons who settle on the low, flat lauds, and use the water or the streams, are liable to chills and fevers, and the inhabitants of the coast cities are subject to yellow fever. Labor is in 'great demand in the agricultural districts, and farm hands receive froth $l5 to $2O a month, and their board. During cotton-picking season they aro paid front $2.50 to $3 a day, and board. In the cities journeymen me chanics are paid from $3.50 to $5 a day. A Murderer Shot and Captured. LEAVENWORTH, July 27.—Malone, the murderer of Col. Buell, was pursued and captured yesterday. Ile was driven from his hiding place when he ran to the river, Jumped in a skid' and pushed across. On reaching the Missouri shore ho was stop ped by two mon, who tired their revolvers and wounded him. At the last accounts he was still alive in the guard house, but was not expected to survive. •