INTELLIGENCER. T WEDNINDAY ur EM=IM!! A. I. STEIN MAN per 11.1111M11 payable iNTIZI.r/Errrnlt IA g:, r.rtinn exceptd, at VOLUME 71 matter to either of them. Hospitality was never refused in that land at that day. They rode boldly up to the gate, and gave a loud halloo. In an instant the door opened, and they could see within a sudden panic in a lively dance, as uIl heads turned to see wh at it was that caused this interruption. " Can yell let us sleep here heniuld?" asked role of the friends, :is one ad:s \vino fcars uo refusal - . " gentlemen," said a pleas ant moire. " You're NVI•il,1,1(•. find a stable there, and corn for your horses. Every 11 1 1 01.101 k is 011 the lil/1,1 . to-nif4lli ; but here's a lauMni, if you'll tend to yourselve," " All right, stranc;er," said tarry, "anal thank ye tom" tll . ll men led their horse- into I a sclidc alrcady,. tolerably full. Ned I ,oered tlimn, and secured them ror the Inigh!, awl would have len the place m once, Mit, that one of Om ail llllals at traeted I lasry's attention. Ile turned heel; to 11,,,k at 111111, examined him from head to fool, Corned red and ic,lo, mid suddenly elutelied Ned's arm. I "Volrenmin her the bore we bou;,.111 I:,:• Charles Chester.'" he asked. "• l'es," said Ned. I " dool; :it this fellmv," said, I tary. •• ye,. the very TM. star on hi rmdc•:ol, the :ear on fore lec the ite• Net it's Cliai ley's WOODS. rlhr•rn i:h.• 1 r an• , :111 :11,1:r111.,111. ` II i. Iln• hnc~•,"-si~l \~•~I, Iv 11:Irry, if Cliarl, , y Lr,f, 111, W , ell , lll:lV , ' '• The ~, , V ,,,, r ,11. 1 11! Itl:ly sv e I " Ned head, aild :11,11y \Vnt 111, l,,,Varti Ihe 1,11-e, They c,,;11.1 the it, lii h_li alit! that this w.L. the the itt.fliet.'-: hridr•a pr,tty With ,Vh.,111 1111. stalWail 1,1 Ver . , rl,llll I , „ Iln III! WI I.nr "1 . 4.1'Vnni.1111 . 111 111111 . 1'1V I 1 "!!!` ! Y ( " 1 ' L.-!'lt , iii'hi" l in hi , H -iit!!!110-Lac-., and 11.111 many Li.. • ' ,H., y, 11,1. :I 111.51", . appnrtinlly I• 1,„, .2rrn~ca ! wan terrild V. 1,11,1 hr h . :ld 111, i Inlll . ol , 111;11 k'aVk.lll.l' will' , 1,111 11,.1 . 11 ,••1 _i x , 11 , 11 11 1 , i„.1 1 . 11 1 \v, w _ 111. Silly rnid!!!!! and \Vntlll.l - it, Ina !!!!- !nil! : hi 11:111 nr" \\di"' i" his I "nii• fi ! 111,1111. d, ha ,adal!!! :Lail r!!!!!.!!!!! l i "iiini it awl 11" W i" I 1 his t'w. 111 , 1,551 IbllSw, F.1111;1 a-4 1111 ' 1 . 1111 willlnnl :IVA. I 1!•d!!!!1 in hi- , arm! , is their \vntiniiii,' and !In iii'_ ! i i "i"!"" , 1111 i "s !""!!!!` " ! ! 1 i 1 "\". !! II!! .!!::111„11". all I i ' ;: ,",d! , • "" , "" 4 ' r " L ' k i " fl LnindlilliNv rialt! !i vdli!!:11 • li11 0 , 1! ! !!!!(mi l dv ""1 ,1 511 • 1 I mr . w! !lrrn 11,1- in W. Il l 11 . 1: " 1 . •,21, ,:‘,l rnal . -.sll.EUpon 1 , 111 . cy but \\ s hy, \vll . o I . id! 11111 y. awl 11, Writ,' Thii ; "11111 :1 1,•• ii• i-11111114 111,i :111 sl'arl'lt `1"•1111•11:11 11 1 11 •1 ,, , him , 11:1 „ 5,1111.. hi, Nvity 1111,111;h Until 1111111 hid illl iddeols: ...I,„t 1111111 11,3 , 1 I lie fill fu :ffi d Hi'. ntl.llll.' 10,r,. Ili!! !!i•I! 11, lf li' \V:I-. ill IL NV:1 , 111 In 11511 h i . , ( . ;nr111:1.11 NVllnk•ntild in,LICII./.Ecigli,ll. In 111 111, / I 5,1,1. I.lllilnZ, Iln Ir . ,' 1 11 . 111 • 111 NV:IS Gin• 11.5 „ 1, 1 . 11 „. 11 Vo'y :11...1 ill. 14 . 1 .,, r , \v:s s ;klple 51 . 111 , 1h , rch0 \viii , lllllll I,!!!ffilnunicaiti ,i!!!! . \! in any all III!! "Id nand h,111.!!!Irciiiirnl'illgCnIll•I'lln1,1,1'1111/11eV, '•'l iny eel ll.:rrlo,l hits. sir 55:15 11:11. 110 null 151 0.--1-1 paiVilt, 'l'l' 1".." 1•5.4 liim• lant'Oto . .; Oil= r kktpr,., am( %, I:, ~~.rr ~~u•.:.:nUc in 1.1) 11,:11! 1,1,11 y 011 \Own Ili 0•11 . 111001 their I:011111y. ' !'lli- Ile Willllll, told Itin,-triitztz,l, , ...ttH 1110 .0. I:111V :1! 111' , 1,10111111•y \\*l•l'o ioVofllxll Lc 11011:01 liii•j:i 'llll ' tdtt :Hitt Ittitt return, , ! Itt it:iv hi-, :tut! 1,•,11111l . 11101111 ii :lOC ' Ili; Ili'. .\ frip;t4l,l,.l; 1•,,I,1 ,•Il;ll. w ''" vith 11 " 1 " I " . Uy ' d • !hell!. l'artit,t• had 11,11thlIP— truth. Ile did out even ,erly the t'ii i hail a and t" 111-.1. ac 1 111 . 111. \Vt . NV:1111 'i n!" in 1111 ' ttutl fill,! ILe hurl, tit wttmkt, I'll steno' tell," said Ill• „hi art!il:ltexy 'm111'1112; nl'lLc ria,r; 11u1 (he / Lu rott.•h , it." tuttl,,ito -the tit.;oll,r,,tp.4lti it, life, 1/I' the Allll Ile 1,11111,W:1y 001111111:11,1'1,0011, " r , the , b1 "" 1 `.1 . 11,1, :1 nitlt• Lea,,prpod. .v-1.... ".111,1 11.0.V11 here, 110 ! :out of tlit•ir friond-tiilt in rental a ever; but it kv.-i-mit iv'ienl. t „ m'el't 111.,t each other : ii' _•.%it Tho I mini ttloti hall -.,111f,111 11011 I i l l° \\,' 11"1! \yin,oao I 111:111 natt tv:lt'llt Ili nceu~e their N . „l tht.yilolll,ll,l or his t() troultl, 111 - 111,111 'I iii' ,iitt it r '' lt !""" ff ' wtiys wltt•ti quite hy ,„ 1,.114,11'Zik :14 1011.2 lie rt•l`llli'd liCttd. ih ,, fttr n'Jloir,„,ll 1 . 1001' , 1 1110 thin, 111,11 0 1'y 011001 f Yct it tv.H.L,ti l sate OP' pyed, I,i li LL.I Li p i ', 1, 1PP , 1 w,t11:111 dp-,Wite ,of•cn L , l ,_ ‘, hpr hoax! pp,ll . :tri4 , l•, with the Iptler• I'. I'. ot the tli.);tll,l ar..l I,tut.,prp,l \Olen hp her: :1101 1111 . 1111 0 NV:1,10011- ! !011' `' 1 ,0 ,:tyWilli/ hall 1110111,11 sake. tttli W,l) . I r.t . devil I,y th-y hey 1 Lu n d their lut,l Plup!',' 1,11, •It• • Ili y' Icnl I :1 t...1 . 1C11 11 , ; •hpv.,l It j -t V:ti 'll \v;tli,:ttitl him ;Hid 1,trlit . 111:111\" .t•C I‘'.• 11!:I: II Tilt.y h ut Ili\ iillltl !vivo t ni di 1 , ,•,) uu h.i had !Willa. 1 , 11 VII, Vi•r , • t NO I . 1 I /1,- ..y.v;111111 , 1t : I r:.111..t• Ir..i)iii I 1., HI:11 td.,iiih,1•.,1.111. ;I 11 It, 111- 1 111111 :11111 1 I !I 1 11 11,• (-4 da-utorotype of a youn-4 s'sri of mluin they it, v,.ry Ilvan !ltd.:man. That prince of dead Iwo', tool '1 . y.,5511 " Ili- hot - , in Ilea stable, hi, is iii Sew 11,1'0, Volls tut(' has 15 ,5 1 It.v re lit,- turf, it_ pwst,-r of the Ne‘v Tort: mean eritl !lorry, atutio. '.\ mom,: qll,- , tions pot to 111.- great .\ No.I answered. " NVe shall soon t'olleotof" \vet' , ,„„i strode into Ihr srrral ,-„.„„ you tat:, lunch inter.•.: in enr- i ‘ 0„- 1 .,, theslaurinb was tent polities, ..51r. I lieknout up to lite kridegroolo, at the 11, yt•- , • Mwap , g” to Ihnso eoln'i n- ! of \ ' irtiuia re, I,wills Ihrlli lly I t Li I / Icildin lii,sit n.ills I LlVt` attoud " a hit," e s •ie I ed the national convention , - for the last 1 " \\'‘• 15:1et. n ,pl.-ti.ni to ttsk. Who,- thirty year , . Don't care horse is Ilctl in 1110 1,1',,W 5110 With •Wllii'' \V hat ore your " Mine," said th, rongr•ss desolly white, " \v, to tell the truth, .1011'1 think the. L I 11,-1,.,g, lip stair., `elm .\ stupid I Oadot I brokers tool Rieitie -topers -that's \vital farmer liit - ned paler. I I sill 'out hey They ain't so lively n G011'41,11,11," he said, " not it and g , IIII,•111,1.111y 11,,1V-,1-slay. , as they o w roiog, and I '.till to he. They all go in for oheap honed, awl ::11 that. They save their " Hos,- to I...tris the troth f r"volltle said p.un-s• e."111 , - , -1 55 a faro " You had a soven That 11,-.! to he the N‘• ; ,‘,- a-zo, I inn It • into' iii ly day. site a ,11111.,1111 ,,, r;:l'y 1 . 1,111 liis• 111:111 .11:11'1'y 11,111. .1 . I tray. ls n'n 51 " w" ult - sif I,,,ast that old Ilanovereotinty prod tee-! throe great .\ merit-nit- Henry clay, and Ilan!, 115.5 . 2 Then :, no nest nl a great 01:551 its intzd e evili-dt lodest, put I:tor,v not what I %vas though that's a Utet. t . s.lto gtO•al WWI the 1.01 . 11 - - , \Vilile It•I 'Thl:5l5 :I ti I 111,1:111 1:1: . 1 . t . 41!:: 1111t'd Ihr “in•. 11101 I ,11:11110 to.\ hush. to inspnN 11111' ‘" l ' ll , :trik . t'llmlll I dillll,l', I , IiI en tilt . Vt•I'allii:111 55'hiqt . eould hear hint, liet•till.,l out to hi-. valet, 'I ins. Itrim2; ninety-sel-011 , 1 I . ol' diltllcr: I 101,1 WI( 101I , 101' Is, Illy . 111'ill,f Inc my one Inindred and isiliely set•ol,l pallloit.ll,, and 1111 . \ - - sixth so,at,' 110 hotted hy the nest,“:, , - 111/r:› bait. Podt.t•ii i=s word from the tort . , you kno,v. I 'say: him :std Its ill hint mt.. hundred het, as 11.-y its 1'11:11's the tearl o.tme tol he S7rt.brt•rl repo-tor here nittl:iog a demonstration to‘vot - t1 the door, the distinguished penionagt , above deserilted iniptired if he I:new what " ehips \vere? l'rofessing ignorance and o teach:ll,le spirit, lie ‘vasinstrueted to the ellect dell the Ile:toe:ills atSI bill "white chip," tt. "retlehip," and tt.-- , 211 hill "Ulm , chip." A littlf a dollar he calls a "split (-hilt.' phrases, he in formed hisantlitor,lie leol borrov,aol from the gaining roont to designate the antutints he was atenstoinett to levy upon all gentlemen who "were intro duced to Idol, or introduced themselves to him, or to whom he introduced hint - self." 'rite reporter took the hint and gave the (treat Interviewed the "(dills," whereupon they parted. II is 11,111 , 1 rtizzl.. iii itp.l 111t1 \villtch im.llliii a 1 :1 dt,lr ful Inly tof i. .% •\V;I' ti- Iln• 1.11 , 1'..1ht•y h,rt th,ir ~•ith him.- i,.•c.• I •:1 th. , tr..,1 , 1 upon Ow ,;, pi . .,f, , 0• 5v.1,11,1,•,• " I \i'l•ill i•• I . Li , i1(11 a 111111_ , (. .\•-• tile NVi.ii•111111 . lu iill•111. " • 111:LII you f,,r iiilit`y,:lll , i Iffiriod in t yondur, \Own. II t 10.2: ,1,11 Harry \Ve: \ i I ha • , h. t mi... They Affil In' 4,1 1*!. th‘•3,i ii 1.•1” he -• ;" tlwy I,•II rt+:111.•.1 Nv it 11 I 11?1•,•. ..1i 1,1 ',well 1.1:III hilldcr, us." Ilk, \Own. f nu•r" I'm afrai,h.it \v“:)1,1ill,11. I murtlera n. --I ! Tlit•ro, I'm a ! . .11 f•an. fm.st NVIll'Ils! 1,11(111111t: I:I 11:1, 0111.3 s :IS I. (' , lllll, :1:111 lor 11 , “.V , 1 . 1 , 111 11 . 1111, 1 , , 11 . 11,• . \* 1V:111 , 1 lui,ll . \* ; 1a,i111,y11 , ..wl V . 1 . 11:0 1,1111• V11.,1:111'lN" 111111,i111 , •111, 1110 y Shl.“k ith n'il , l4` 11;111 .1y 111,1.1,,,1,V,1" Wlll , ll 111 . ,t1“IIL , . I ' o 11.111111. lunf 111i1111,. 11 , ki thought liIIrJ 111•11 I.ltl-1 fate, • ,‘ itat lti•••\" Awl Lilo 5p3.1..,,ti1k turf, n the lerrilielhfu-41 , g:C.11 , • rodarwill.1,:z the bride clunr . ljti,haiors Q r. affil 1(111111, Illt•lallch.dN . \;:L:1 1111:,1 and, at ju- , , thing lion yolho.v twain, upon lii ,ut dug oarll;, Ned \Van•en cried, in all inc rid yaiiai, here!" And the two friends lifted trout the that whieh lout been a man, with Mug deatlegrown Mae% hair falling down over Ins slued tiers. Ile had hccn :41101 in and through the heart, ;mil urns uu doubt in either mind that it was the body of their lost friend. The farmer seemed petrified with burr o :•. The bride fell into a deathlike swoon, the guests fell away front their host anti looked at him askance. The old father tore his hair and pleaded for tnerey. Ibut there was no merey in any he:u•t there. The avengers were all-powerful. The great room adorned I•ur festival and mirth was turned into a court, room. 'lite women were thrust from it, the men remained. Oil the raised stand where the tiddlers had been seated 1 tarry Bray now took his seat in the ehanwter ofiudge Lynch. The jury was maned, the mock trial hurried on, the accused called upon to answer. Ife pleaded not imtlty. ILe denied any knowledge of the lint that a grave lay so near his helm, Ile per sisted in the repetition of the statement that he found the horse and saddlebags, but he admitted that there had been money in the latter. He stood before them, looking very unlike a murderer, calling on them for ' justice—calling on (boil to witness the truth of his words; speaking of his young wife and his old father; bidding his neighbors remember that he had never done them any wrong. mount , and rollowk , 11)Y a favor unJ ivito \voulo by ,chiml, the tv.m set loth ,•;:. lo s t. comrade. They taken. :Ind cabin fin' ' One Oki Mall remember toot licr man had pointed •rons place in the road I precipice to a unlit ml's description, but :It to clue was Oct.l After lid many inquiries, our it to Mar that they should examine the rucks Cull foot or the precipice al tlrt,y proceeded further, •d to turn back and do so. o this resolution about, .inst as they had reacinal a little farm, Nvliiclt Intl' refill tillage. I".pon i his larm-house ; from the shutters of which stream ruddy lamp-light, :nut null ..I . lllLl9ie plainly the only dwelling wiLlt- ay there," said one friend nail dawn, and then re- se was not an inn did not T, '4,firttitltet Itictitgicitc'et In• it But Judge Lynch has no mercy, no compassion, 110 belief in the_possibility of false accusation ; and this Judge Lynch was an avenger of blood. The end was what the end of such a trial generally is; the sentence the awful one of death ; and in less than three hours from the moment on which they first. , saw the bridegroom happy and blithe, ' standing with his bride at the head of the gay country dance, his body dangled, a horrible sight to look - upon, front the branch of Ilse that shadowed what all believed to he his victim's grave teas over they found the olil father dead in his chair, the fireplace, and found among the Nsmnen Icilieles: gibbering maniac, whom they would hardly have known for the rosy sheiik . eil yoillig bride, ; They were avenged, but at what co-it? The Iwo men returned to their homes, banal and yet not rencirse ful, for they hail but avenqVll their i• 0111- rad,: and this to them, seemed continon I Justice. The legal 1.1,11• of 11111,10 r tilt' had been :nlbt•red hilt fn' the last look al the mad bride I hey could sear,— iy have recognized 11110wful this hail been. They liveiron together, friends still, speaking oftcn of poor Charley and ran,yintzilutt other world Ise mi4fht l•V4`11 1,11./W 114/W well they hail revengedthems , lves upon his intirderer. five ycar ,, ; cant! one day 1 \Vela Eclat Ity nit (11,1 Froilichliinit ill the of S i m liilV of 111,4., and With ,14.11 , h•r ,h-0,111,/latrh; over their s hi,; 1 1,•!•, vii :'ill, F. , ..11h1 st ! •Vi• ,:,0•11• , 1 Cht. l•hy p,ll Idil II V.:I , 11.11it' , ( . 1" , 1 , 1*, 11,111t1 , 1,211••ad 1•11,•1,1 . 11). Li. :111,1 Wt'li-t 1-114) Chat!, ( 111111'- 1 h.l,r 1 ht•y (11,11 , I .‘ll,l ...hlry hi' 1,M4 h•I111.2: at th,•ll' pal lilt 14/i Pk- , all.l :MC -110 Whilt• : ''.1.$11.111i111,•Y 1101= A correspondent writes in regard to tins celebrated cathedral that to all external ap pearance it has escaped uninjured by the recent bombardment. The spire is as at tractive a spectacle as ever, but it has been struck in more places than one. The cross on its summit appears to have been touched Iy a projectile. It leans to one side. Smite of the ornamental work has been carried away, and in one of the side towers a por tion or the stone stairway has been destroy ed. The outer roof of the nave has been burned; the windows have hero and there been pierced with balls, but the famous clock has escaped destruction, and the ea thedral• is on the whole in excellent condi tion. Jefferson Davis arrived at New York, from Europe, yesterday, in the steamer Cuba. LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING OCTOBER 26 1870 Circumstantial Evidence Though there are no two persons to be fAuud on the face of the globe who are in all outward respects perfectly alike, there is, unfortunately, no lack of persons who so closely resemble each other that they can be identified with diflieulty when seen separately. It does not at all appear that any desirable re sult has ever followed from such veri similitude; fictionists and playwrights have made them the Of their plots, and there are to be found in the lit erature of :di nations and of nearly all times representations and descriptions, grotcs.lue or serious, onnic and absurd, of the perplexities and imbroglios due to personal resemblances. The reeordsi of . justice furnish scenes almost as nu merous of a tragic kind, no way analo got!, to fiction, but invested with the terrors of grinunt st reality, in which. through the founding of circumstantial testimony upon the basis or mistaken identity, the innocent have luid to suf fer in place of the guilty. instance of this 1 - :ind is all . ..rded by the e :widely. This unfortunate man in apub he house kert by Mrs. NViiiianis :it York, and much frequented. The landlady hustlinv: wo:nan, ;t tit vorite ion Of lit Mil; writ-In-dn. l4u• un~rniu:t i! was Gin nil that her scrutoire had Iwo, brokcn open and dried of a con , ideralde sum ; and as on that . sank did not make his appearance, everybody coneholed I that he was the .% year after or 111:;11 ,•.itt,, , 1,, York \rho, under tir, 11:1111e ,Hapl,,.vratill as a p,,r_ tha, 1,1,•koll lip a liu'a ru\V dayS. :\ll.:111`.\1111C, 11 , 111 1111111 , 1:y 1110•110 , 1 , 1 ht• 110,4;11:C11 I , W !Lill! :IS 1 . 0111(;t'llikly,:1 1 1 , 1 WIICIL lie dt.l•lal'l•d I hal Itr did IlOt 1.:110\{" 11.'111, ill:a 11:1111t . NV:IS :int! that Ito 11:1,1 novo,' livokl in lurk hotiore, too I,rlicvc Lien,:unl :,11rilmleti tlotiiill 1,, ile• ,iro tho of 110 rohlwry Ii lEttl oollonittca :it the publi‘ \VII11),4111, , ,1111( . 114 iliS NV;4 ,1•111 f.l", ,111! , ;:t . t1 hint 4,111 I'l'olll 1111111 1, 4•1 * 11,•111.1e, :l11,14 . :1.11111, 4 4 hint him with his iLII,I him with her. th, or th, :Lott ,x:totto,tt in hi-, t•tt.•,, th, Ithitt th: :L+ iiiiy man i•i,iild, 11E11 hi. w:1 , 1144 I;4•4blrly, 111:1; 114`VI1' I<n4wll :Lily 41'111:11 III:11 IP' 11:14I In V 1.41 in 1'.11: 1 , ..ft , I'l.,:11111111:li hi 11:11111 . NV:I , .1:111it , 1 . 1,,t{". Ile I• 1111111 WO, ho\lrcrr. ;441 :lily ~lanliatelli~ulllrnlali , ;n+; by 10011 _i~'r 1.1:1 it I.o.:•:ll , • , iittit liiit It.ti V:1!:' , I , .)11 , 1 lifo :111 , 1 Ow I„ hi, :Li Yc,ll( Casik 14 :1%V:111 ili , 11' . 1:11,1i in 41110 1•,1 "XOl Mat lii' \V:L , Ihr 1,0rr.,11 1111 1114 , I,ll4lindy 4f th, hot tottt 111111.itno-~•r-- SWtql` 114/SitiVt•ly III:11 11 , W:l. , Iho i4lrnlirnl . 1111)I11:1:i 41t.1y wvh4 \V:ls \Vaitt.l . when wad NVlliii• a SOl'Valli latsed that she 11,1 seen hint :ill the very morning 111 . the rttlthery ill 11, , nttatt where the settutttire b1,1:1•IL ,)1.1•11 \Villl,l 1.'1,1' ill 11:11111. 1111,1 , Iicr 1,01 11 , 011i11.2: t urvy against I.ll,:evidt , ina• a.-intplo denial and at , lie etttll:l lilt tot:tve was I s mintl guilty :tf the r:lltltery, \vat aw:l:lined kid. :II I [1 /101 . ,1,1, 1 /t.. hi, liar-i I,rcath iit :1111vin ing that he was nut Tlt:atta. (t et ltlet\t, and that It is tutint , was I'll, truth itiltlte:lto:at,rell:•\v'stleelttrati:ln.\vas t,t:tblish:al all tit. late. Nitt I:tng tate; (Int \v's uu . j n.t puni-linuatt, real Niter the rt.l, Itery, had Iled Irtan 1I:111t Iteland NV:I , taken up in I /I:ldin It I a crinte the ttatite,lttnip, :n:1 tht•re crlndomlict ext,tilcd. Itolvccen and nxwwlinn, awl :n . .win nt ft.' raw] trnw lw in I, ry Thotan, t.L•.l.lely whe liall eentatit tea the robbery at. I"..rk ter which the 1...- forth:late hlu'ot , 1111;q1,1. II 11111 i VO 111 . Durk, will hap pelted t.. :It Ottl.ht. at the time el ....I.lely's trial :11111 , N,•11ti , 11.:11111 1:111•11 111th NVllt'll h i tiVt•ll IVith 1:111 the IWIAVeI.II lilt` IIVI) 1111'11 NV:, re111:1r1::1.- NC that IleXt (4) illill,-illlO Ili:Magni:Al their per,.... , ..-.1111.11•1% ()no of the .....-I latact:tal.le that ..r t "Is whiff 11 may l -n as fellow In the newlll of Arrih 17!1 , ;,a yoirez' pen, .1.,,111 i!I II iS 11:11 thirty-three years of :eZe, ale! :t 1 . “1 (t, lift,' alld 111:td, fur in Paris. One of his lirst. ear', was in repay one (;ttestio, fr:tw., he 11:141 iwlroweil him. ()II the followitez dny ;ite,r, in vited ke...t•t . .ii:e , t.) hrealcfa,-.t. They ne e,rtliogly Nvent Ina refre,hioent room, in eolll pally tvillt 15 5 ,1 of wham, uunlell cuuriui, lutpp•uu•d call just they Neere tloWe. to table. A.fter breal:ra-L they proceeded to the l'a]ais 1;,.ea1,111111 Inkeing talc n - separated. rotir.laysafter\Vard , , huh horsemen, Ilietintt.(l oil hired Satre seen Lo MO of P.11'1,. all Neeri. 1.,1e4 saltres hniir in fr o m the \vaist. (Hie of the party was ( 1'...t 111,11 Iwelre :tilt! rue few: horsenten :u'- rived :it the villie..;t• on :' , 1,11111. Till•I't• they pt.,...•"1,1 :it. 11. !",,t 1 ::,.1,,vard- I They tie:wheil Lietir,iint akin( threo iII theacturiiiiiin, and iniiiit•it Inn Ilan al Ihr ian.anin \•c: them having hi,. .\I hall past seven they II 111 anal ni,lo tii \yard: :\ Inint an lintir later the eolll'ler P:l6 , In arrived t.O ell:1111r,e Itor,es, It tea: (lien halt-past eight, anal the night. Inn! lieon having eliangi it liiiri•es, set nut in pa., the long riire,t n. Lenat. 'Flo. ivail iti pert.' It largo I rlllll. behind 111,. h,a'r ten , .;:t . llin 1014 111,,11 I. ill , puhlie, ill Eh, l I11:11 day hy 'Han :thou! i yar. that ii in Ili , noine I iiourior Ili, Ho. Ow ortil - loir, only Ill:a Ow Tho Iwo! [won in ^il V,•l' lank-hill-. Tll , 111111 lice INTSI/113 13111 thl ,. .igh the ii:1111,•,• onllliiir Puri, liot.woon four lieu morning afirr \vo.,\vaiLdoriwz. ;11milt the l'lat ; awl t t;1;1,,; ii115,;;11 :haul fiVe iu the inerning, to a man named Muiron, Poe )les , ier pAilx,,,Tak, hy two person- , who had hired then, (he day helre. These Ivan per,;n: were nained Bernard and renriol. Bernard NV,i , Couriol e,aped. A description of the Intn' who lied ri)ldcn from Paris ainl stopped at Mongeron :111,1 Lieursaint, and also or the limn who had taken his place with the courier un der the name of Laborde. Couriol was tmeed to Chatern Thierry, where lie was arrested, together with Guesna, the Douai-;wrier, and one (truer, who Imp 'wiled to he in the same }Louse. ( inesno and Bruer proved (di/,/,'so clearly that they were discharged on arriving at Che magddrate, alter discharging tincsno, told him to apply at his office the next morning for the return of his papers, which l i d been seized at Chat eau Thierry ; at the same time he had sent a police officer to Mongeron and Licursaint to fetch the witne,ises, of whom he gave a list. Ouesno being desirous to obtain Ids papers as soon as possible, left home the next day earlier than usual. On his way to the (Alice he met I..esuripics, who consented to ac eompany him. They went to the Mike, and as Daulie Mon, the Juke-de-Pais, had not yet arrived, they sat down in the ante-chamber to wait his arrival.— About two o'clock the Juge-de-Paix, who had entered his room by a hack door, was thunderstruck on being told by the police officer who had come back with the witnesses, that two of them declared that two of the actual murder ers were in the house. "Impossible!" he exclaimed ; "guilty men would not voluntarily venture here." Not believ ing the statement, he ordered the two women to be introduced separately, and examined each of them, when they re- peated theirstatement and declared they could not he mistaken. Warning them solemnly that hfe and death depended on their truth, he had the accused brought into the room one by one, and, after coo versing with them, sent them again to the ante-chamber, where they waited as before. When they, had left the room the magistrate again asked the women if they persisted in their previous declarations. They Ind persist: their evidence was tak en down in writing: and the Iwo friends were immediately arrested.— No time was lost in pushing on the pros vett ion• Seven persons were put upon their trial, amongst whom were Cnuriol, Madeline Ilreban (his mistress), Lesur ques, and ( uesno. Lesurques was sworn to most positively by several as being One of the party, at different places on the road, on the is nctlie robbery and murder. It slut tlt i born in mind that the ease/was quite conclusive against Couril.r"l i attended them," said said one Witllt, li dottier at M s tilii2 onger ; thi4 l .esrtilic3l Willited to pay :I the hill in s. gnats . , but the tall, dark one paid it in silver. — A noble-luny' ut .Mongeron iilso identified Trim. A woman named Alfroy, of Lieu r saint, and the innkeeper and his wife of the same place, all recognized him as of the partythere—riefiurquefi deelaring that he had never been present at either place. lint tin , witnesses Wl pn,ji 11'111' turimlaaehed,Were liptieVcd, aril --were all uti.talion. 1.1,111 1 11 A, mud “I,4llo,tl,tigh as po-itively sworn to, proved Ids per` (eel tosplitied. surqui. , called tlitovn iu'r,ons of kiwi prubity to pii) an alibi, which was ittconsequence or the folly of WIC of illl`lll, \vim falsified an entry in \rift the .le,igu of :ehliti.l2; t.) the evidence Le,urques favor, but aid it so clumsily that the fal,itleat ion di,covered. Eighty iwr,onA ,•I:l,,ses declareil the elt:lr au•ftr of 11,, , urtows to be irrep,achahlp; but all wa; of Jill W:IS \\ien the .. , entenee prOnoliceil, ri , int4 front hi. place. lie : "1 too inotteent or the eritue imputed to we. :1,11, citizens! it !Winter on the IliellWny :ttrtwitto-t, it i. nett 11,0 It crimel esn eine 111:111." Madeline lb el.:ln:though eoinproniis.ing licr.clC, wildly exclaimed: " Lesurtitics hittooen; -he is the victim otitis fatal Hl:cites:: so I bilnc-q." then, ad dressing the judg,4,, said: not ; I :lel: now ledge my crime ; my Nvere nu roclint and LYSLInitleS ii 11104.0111.” After the mentenee fern pronounced the horror-strict:- en Nl:etch lie again presented- -her l”.fore the Judges to reiterate her deel:u•alion, and two other witnesHes at tested to her having told thcni so litefore the trial. The judges applied to the Directory for a reprieve; and tlae Itj r•etory applied to thellouncil of the Five Hundred, requesting instructions for their future ;..; - nidatiee, and concluding with the entpliatie question: "Ought l-urque: to die on the scalllild because he re-.clubles nerilliilinP.""rlit.:lllSlVer OtH jiroinpl : '• The jury [oil legally ,cillciiced the accused, ;Ind the right of pardon ha l !Well Left to hi, fate, poor I.estirques, un the 'morn ing. of hi, wriiti , to his " .1\ ty dear friend, NVO our fate. I shall, at any rate, endure wine with the courage which become , : a III:111. I ,ell,l sonic Incks of toy hair. \\Then illy children are older, divide it with thcin. It is the only thing that I eau leave them. - l'ouriol had disclosed Lestiripies the history of llthosq, and the fatal inistal:e which had been inade, ueeordiugly,ou the eve °chi , : death, hr luel lhr following mournful feller in the journuk ":\ fan, in Nch. , se place I :Liu to die, be sati,lied kith the ~:tel'itlee of my life; iC you he ever lo:,teght In ju,tiee, I or toy three children covered NVith and of their Toot her', dosielir, nil do not i•ro lot::: the tui,lrtuto•-: fatal IL re On the loth larrh, 1797, Lrsunluos w(alt in the pla,at of rsrrutiou 111%•,- , 041 ,•0111 pliql•ly in white, a+a syntiotl or his 011 the Nvny front the pri,on l" lie Phu,' of csocu Lion, (. tttivitti, wit" N va, ,cat,,l in Ole lot'sillt• hill!, rricil 1 , 11 , 1 wire, iWin , `ing tin' Pn"l'h' , I :on but is inno cLaii." Un ren,hing himself up to an.l 411,1 I mi,giv iitt.t,, and nt murmur.: on the part niche th, anti th, !Ira pr,,o, , tling4, rrsulvr,l to invt,litgattt tho truth, which (amid only he ,itisrartorily dons. through ih.• arrt,t and trial of Ow fonts persons de nolincol Ly (',uvhd as his ncotinplices. years elapsed in vain inquiries. At lit' "Id 11l 111 , a time he di aatveretl that I),,nrochat-- the man will', tinder the talon Oro plncc iliesideolthe I,ll;ler—had twoit arresleli rolWer• y Intl:, in St. ' \Vlwn tlit. trial of I villian came on, cxatothm: of tali by the inspector of Ow mail, :L, the 111:111 it'll. had ',ravelled 1 tvitlt iln. CMll*ll`l' WI tile \yin, with the rari, ,01110 taint clam tuts, emices,(l, relating ho paticular , : of the all tallied with the stahlitelits mad.. hy that Vidal 11:1,I pro t :aid had ,•fflimititlit•aled it h. him :it a 1.,-1:1111 . :LIII in the (.11:1111pti Elysoe , .. The erinilmik Nvere Couriol, nlhe, I;,qoidy, \idol hinowlf, :tint 1)11- kn. Ihihe,..l Bail f0r,L02,1 for him the io the name of hy 11,,,L11S or \vhicli he ea,ily porno tl :fflotio•r for to 1 , 1 I/Win:6l. ra•rilnill 11,1 5111 , 111ii , i 11W r.,(11. horses. They loui :zitneke,l the carria.4e :Li the postilion was-lacking his paee the hill. It NV:el he 1 Durochat l \VII,/ f4t:liobed the courier, at, the instant ilnit z o , s i tilt down the postilion with it sabre ; 11nssi laid then given tip his hor-. , to him Durrell:in, and haul re- lorile,l 10 ll;irl; on that of the hey arrived there, they all owl :it 1 mho i d 's \ellen , they proeeeileil to divide Ili, booty. who only proeureil the 1i0r,e,4, \ea, Hien., awl clainteilhi:-,I:: re :mil got it. have lie el lvil, "that there may a fcllt,W 11:1111 , 11 L1,1.11,i11C, effil ili.llllll,l for (hi , lint, to tell (lie truth, I never I:flow the fellow,eitli er of die all3ir, or at i eNeeiltioil, iir at the of Hie \\' 3 ' Diirtn'hal: ,, eon a. tal,en down in writing; he added a .1,•-eritttit , t1 of I 9fi'o,ti, ,tating that on the tl.ty of the myrtle' . he wore a 1.,1011‘.1e shortly after thl - t-arrest of inm,,•haf, vidai Nva , s reettff nixed hy the w tnes,es and po,itively , tlvorn to: but 1 • drilled everything, and teas 1 , 1i,011 of La : ^ eille. — TOWak ill end of the year 179tt, Du llttsti, having been arn•,ted t . ttr a rob bery in the deplixtinent of flier, was reeogni;.ed in the itri , on, anal wa-t brows.lit to Versailles to he tried al the ~:one time as Vidal before the criminal tribunal. It \V swell by the registers that wiv., a thorough lit'Spenloi,l: !ll' had 1,4 . 11 to the galleys for life, but had escapod, and on four ,ever al l/1 . 1•3,ii%11 , broken rri , llll. Vida!, he denied everything. (:ontincil in the same cell with hi,: old companion in guilt, I)ubosli planned all escape; but tlik time he broke liiy leg iu the at tempt, Vidal alonegetting clear atvay,to lie rebiken, however, after a brief inter val, to be brought back to trial—and to execution. Strange as it nay seem, Inibosq had no sooner recovered from his fracture than he found another opportunity of attempting an escape, and fur the sixth time succeeded in breaking his bonds. As lie could not live without rapine, however, he fell again into the hands of the police before the expiration of a year, and was brought before the tribu nal at Versailles. The President order ed a blonde wig to be put on his head, and thus attired, lie was recognized by the same witnesses who had sworn away the life of Lesurques, who now recant ed their former testimony, and declared too late that they had been mistaken. After the execution of IMbosq, in February, 1802., there still remained one of the accomplices to be brought to jus tice. This man, ltossi, whose real name was llerohly, was at length discovered near Madrid and W:L9 given tin to the French Government. Unlike Vidal testi tying the utmost remorse. In the declaration, which he confided to his confessor, he affirmed the entire inno cence of Lesurques; but, for a reason which does not appear, made it a condi tion that the declaration should not be published until six months- after his death. According to law, the property of I.e -simles had been confiscated On his vim ' viction, and his widow and ,ehildr,ii reduced to indigence. One would Face thought that a government which had erred so egregiously as to execute a man for a crime of which lie was not guilty, would have been eager to make what atonement was possible h the family or the victim. Nothing of the sort. The widow and her advisers, relying 011 tilt' elffireSSioll:4ol the real criminals, and the retractions of the witnesses, applied 1.. r a revision of the sentence so far as con certed Lesurques, in order to obtain a judicial declaration of his innocenee mid the restoration of his property. All their endeavors were vain. The right of revi sion no longerexisted in the French code. Under the Directory, the Consulate and the Restoration the applications of the widow and family were equally t:11,110 cessful. All that they could o btain the restoration, in the last two years of the elder Bourbons, of a part of the property sequestrated at the condemn:, 0011 of the unothulding husband ant father. The widow or Ll`S•llr(1110 , dirt in Id, leaving a son and daughter, whom she charged with her dying breath still to labor on for the estaldi-h -ntent or their father', ii inurneo, Coarvrnim; Jealous) i' . 1,111 lii.. S'o.ll,lily o•1V. 'Flier,. are two sort, of jealous . t passion and the habit. There is 111 jeolousy Which , by the absent of poets and dramatists, t•hatiges the hue of it , vietim by gnawing at his vitals ; there is the joaloil ,- which, affeetinit neither circulation, digestion, 11111. Lile s iudirales its presence solely IQ,- a cer tain rigidity of outline. Perhaps there is no vice more respeetable than 11. - latter form lir j( , :tiou,y, which is 0 qual ity wholly independent of passion, and acting, in cold blood. The jealous na ture 1111(0 1101 Heed a lover or :1 mist to exercise herself upon ; it rises out of a certain vombination or itualitie, --all exaggerated idea of one's mvii claim , . craving for their recognithm by others, and not the best temper in the world.-- :\9 till eXIIIIIpIe of the jealousy rising out of an insatiable need of universal homage, tal:e the case N:111(11(4111 I. Oil the occasion, 010 think, of his being elected Consul for life, All eyes lit' a vast assembly 0101.0 nixed full 16111, NV hen Ile !l(lted a momentary turn of rhos,. multitudinous eyes front himself to some new object of curiosity. 'l'll4. en trance of )la,litnie !tee:tinier in the splendor of her youthful beauty had caused this diversion, and 0 jealous scowl on the conqueror's tinny' noted his displeasure—:t lasting displeasure against a rival who for a few moment - reduced hint to a second rank. For i h.' inure familiar jealousy or the obscure ‘ve may refer the reader to the habit mil temper of slit 11111 SerVll,llt, it' any rti.olei is fortunate enough to possess the se: . - vieus or one confident. ill herself real treasure of honesty, industry :Mil ;11111 1.1,i11.4 these virtues a grounds of , f ierpelual ill-temper. Ite spectilliility in this class atoll 01,11 a hand-to-honed tight with tempt ation I hat we should not perhaps won der at their valuing themselves on the scoreofnegativeexcellence which ought not to pass for much with their betters. As a fact, we have often observed that the self-complacency arising from an orderly life, religious observance and trust‘vortifiness, presumably ena,•ted under the eyes of all admiring world, issue , : in an exelit , ive claim to every lhinc good and pleasant that is going on. Sueli :1 person grows 11l d every recognition another's merit as a deliberate personal slight to be aveng ed by a judicial sullenness (11' nspl.et. 1111111 con101•o exponents of the quality there are infinite legless. \Vc ought never to outsider either ourselves or :my one else to lie free from it, or purely dispassionate and clear of personal bills not to he otherwise ex plained. WlnTever there are panty:Ll rights, Ito \vever they may seem to is' forgotten or disowned, it is IliwaYs U, steer clear of ally I.olll'Se 111:11 1111I5' aNN'lllft•ll more hl:ely to be slumbering than id,- sent. Nor does it ever do to suppose circumstances a bar to its preseins..— \Vherever there is a sense of dependence 011 others there is room for jealously. There are certain people so tempt,•,l 11. jealousy by eircumstances that it is a merit ill them to keep reasonably el,•ar from it. Snell are all whose lift , and credit hang on 1.11110:1r favor, all \vlio-t• business it in to amuse the public, and who ha \;c their tenure insecure. A sue cessful poet must be a horrible 1.0:1Sill.1*- atilin to his less famon, 1 irotherhood. It is expecting 1,,,, innell from fallen hu manity to Suppose otherwise. f.io it 11 , ...,1 to be in the free-spol:en days of which Mir literatlllie (OHS LIS Si/ NVOSee it in the elFect of NVords‘vorth'scarcerupott sI MO Of his l'Ontelllll,lraril'S. 1 ) 1/111 . \V:IlLt•r showed ill his vlinsfze of plagiarism, and in his rage Still the f lie of rcatlers,for adllliriu, the metaphor of the sounding shell ill Wordsw. , rth' , l Verse NVlliell 11:111 in 'I-- own. And it brooks out ill De Quin..y . , splenetic allusiOns to the poet's liyed destiny of prosperity, and the sortotlion lie asserts him to have had on the in come of other 1111.11 who happened hi stand in his wway ; sn that. " fm• he adds, 1 lad 1 happened to 1:11,,v of any peculiar adaptation ill an estate or office of mine 11l all existing need of Word,wortit's, forth \vitli, find with t Ile speed of a man running for his liCe, 1 would have laid it clown at his feet. it,' 1 should }MVO Said ; take Ill' ill throe weelts I should have liven a dead man." 11 is tail' of \Valter .nice; prominent points or greatness flat he lights that were to til, , eure his men, and seemed 111C:1T:1101e of jettlousy ; though a sense of his own boundless resourees may very well I elVt` aided ill this, the eele-ielliteillesii 011111 un tried field of power all his own malting humility easy. Social life present , a thousand eases Nvhere iL isgreatmot 14, be jealous. Thustlic limn of varied fimvers, who would fain make sonic figure Nvith thelll, secs himself' supereetled liy an other with a knitelt 1.. r entertaining--a sort of 411 a m,, felicity—who interests \vithout elll,rl, ovlll, says thitigs with nothing in them, but whieli yet take because he slly , NVllllllown or thouOlt, from some awl:ward nes, in the setting., are not looked at.-- A 11, in fact, 011141 have to play second fiddle where they feel they could play , first linty learn that society is a scht,ol ' for greatness of mind. Jealousy natur ally rules where the 11,1,1 of competition is narrow ; the examples that most readily rise to our memory have had it Private and narrowing training. A person under exciting circumstances has been pitted against one or t Ivo --for Open competition does not excite it. It is wrong, therefore, and unjust to ex pus( the young to temptations 01 this ltind ; to bring a plain girl into close comparison with a beauty, or mean eir 'cumstances in harsh contrast with wealth. All that interferes With 1:1111 deVclnpntcut and eV:01111S natural ener gies induces to jealousy ; Ii temper that derives the true It.-son tram :1 subordin ate plave thus hirced MI it is it rifle 111111 a rare tine. In filet, every close circle possessitig points of stimulating interest is 0 hot bed of jealousy, conducing ill strange, unnatural growths.. Thus clever mothers have daughters tried:llld irritated by being thrown into the shade, and young'inotliers see rivals in their daughters. Jealousy isexeusable so long :is circum stances can be math. to bear half the blanie, and therefore those are most tol erant of it who see furthest. Vet even in this partnership of blame it is some times hard to be indulgent enough to people who, while jealous of the exclu sivealrection of thoseibehinging, to them, will do nothing to secur e it, aw l make 110 sacrifice of will or temper to attain their end, while they betray to others in proportion as these nialte up their deliciences, and thus gain a regard or influence which they think exclu sively their own by a sort of divine in alienable right. I eery Len, F. E. S., writes to the editor of the Littler? in regard to the paralytic seiz ures from which Chang, one of the Siamese Twins, has recently suffered, He has re ceived letters from the rrwins and their families which induce him to believe in the possibility of their separation in cave of the nredeCease of one of them. A letter from Zinc of Chang's daughters says that her fa ther is low-spirited,can scarcely nbive with out assistance, and that his Whole right : STU is perfectly useless. "uncle tries to 'the& him up, but he has nothing to say. - From the sentence mentioning Eng's endeavors to cheer and comfort his brother, Dr. Lee infers in each a distinct and separate voli tion and vitality, and hence that Chang could successfully be cut from the dea3 body of Eng should the latter die first. Advice to Young Ladles 111 1,1,/ LEW IS Now, ladies, I will preach you just a little sermon, about an inch long. I don't often preach, but in this ease nothing but a sermon will do. Firstly. You are perfect idiots t o go on this way. Your bodies :ire the most beautiful of God's creation. In the can [Mental galleries I always saw groups of people gathered about pictures of women. It was not passion; the gaz ers Were just as likely to be women as mien; it was because of the wondrous beauty of a WOMILICS body. Now stand with me at my office win dow and see a lady pass. There goes one! Now isn't that a pretty looking object A big hump; three big lumps; a wilderness of crimps and frills; a haul ing up ~f the dress hero and there; an enormim:, hideous mass of false Lair or bark piled on the lop of the head, stir mounted by a little Ilat,ornamen tell wit It bits of lace, birds' tails, etc., etc. The shop windows tells us, all day long, of the paddings, whalebones and steel springs which Occupy most of the space within that outside ring. In the mune 4,f Ilk:Hirt:plc, s‘vcet sen timents which cluster :Wont a home. 1 a,k, how is a man to fall in 1:lve \VW! snot apiece of t-ttuipptithl,tl.tildt..l :nil twisted, '0,11,h-two-riot artificiality, as you see in Ilse wriggling curiosity'. ;•- , ,,,0nd1y. With that wasp waist, ~ iticezing your lungs, stomach, liVer ;111 , 1 vital 1:1'1!:111S into 4.11e-11:11f (111.11:11:1L -0.ral size, and \\Atli that long, trail drag gin,: o i l th e ground, how rvm any man of sense, who knows that life is pile up of use, of service, of svork, tal:e such a part tirr? Ile :oust Le desperate, in- Ired, I unite 111111-elf fine lir,. Nvitl,,twit fettered, half-breathing ornament' Thirdly. Your had dress and fael: of ex, reise le:td, to had health; and loci: wisely fear that instead 4,t :t helpinat.c they Avuuld get an iuealilt t.. take care of. This bad 11011111 ill you -just a, in null Wakes the 11111141 :1S the body !sad dled and etrettlinate. You have no power, no magnetism. I 1:11,,Nv you gig gle freely and 11,11 big adjcvlives, such as " " awllll ;" but (licit this .I.ICI 110111 ye lls ; We SOU: 1111 , 111.:411 it all. You are superficial, alrected, ; you IlaVt , 11.11 e t(' that woumnly strength and Nvartlllll Nvhich :ire so :tssuritig and attractive to l tell. Why, you have Co mae S. :11111 that you refuse to \vent: docent names oven, and insist upon baby names. Instead ul I !civil, Nlargaret and Elizabetli„vou alli•ct :\laggie and Lizzie. \Vllen your brothers were babies you ,•allcd them boot , / - , 1)iel:y and . o nly; but ‘Shen they giIMV lip to manhood, no more of that silly trash, if you please. I I:now a Nvontait of twctity-Ilse years, and She is as Itiv; as both lor Illy lilt n, mlieus Catharine, and II:out:It her brain is big enough to conduct the allitirs of : , tate, she does nothing but giggle, cover up 11,..r lave with tier fall, :11111 01111: in folll' .. 1/4,11'1 you arc real 11. ,•7111 a 7111111 7.r77177),ac n life ouch goose? Aly dear girl..., you 1111174, if you Nrould gel bandQ and decent one,-, dre,, in plain, neat, becoming* g:trnient, , , and bill: like seic•ilde, earnest sisters. You say that the most sensible melt are crazy Idler these butterflies of fash ion. I beg your pardon, it is nut so. )eca,lollally a Mall of hciiii:uit success limy marry a weak, silly Nvomati ; but to say, as I have heard woman say a hundred times, that the most sensible men choose women without sense, is simply absurd. Nineteen times ilt t \Vett ty, sensible men choose SVII , IHIP I grant you that in commtay they are very likely to chat and toy with these ''verdressed :tad forward creatures; but they doa't ask them to go to the altar with them, Fourthly. Among the young men in the matrimonial market, only a very small number are independently rich, and ire America such rarely ruakegoiti Butt. the number or those who are just beginning, whit:lre tilled with a noble ambition, who imve a future, is very large. These are worth having. - I tut sue!' will not, dare nut, ask you to join them, while they see you nil idle, ~illy, and vu gorgeously :Mired. Let them sue that you are industrious, (won- Nvitli habit:: that Seeure health and strength, that your life is real, that yl/II truul be willing to begin at the be ginning in life NVILIt tho 'nail you Nvould eorts , ent 111 Marry, then Niarria . :;(' Will 1101,111 e ill, 1 . 111 , , and 11 , /%l', the ex4.ept.14,11. =II Tle•re'. [due men a ,danditt' al ;1n dere, an . they :kll,ed they'd tal:‘, lirether \vie, the tall: in aliy ronc woos( eitinntoll iii this ioir land; bill the this is gone IV anti the sails lain dry, alit nn luau all say to his lialitir, boo ant limit loan, alit] \VIII ally More shilgar But the wm . d.,,rmii• ttiX lICC awl anior pertikidar nu er.in limit this. 'Filar they Slomi at the dare a 1,141 iyinter ' S 1111:111:11; :WC) :%10111111::-: :01:111VI . Llltllll - :11111 the (Other IMP \VW , n 11:1101: - .Andl they all ivith nue voi, sod they Wouldn't dirty their fort in a draw ht fit, but if the publikin \vouldgti and :fel the drinks they'd pay On Anil they all cric.tl wit and overy mau it lI " take mine with shugar lor it \VOW( t . V1.1 . 2 . 01111 111 drink the ',lnn' (MI :+wceL,..llill." So the pliblikin hr marl .h... 1 in ati,l har-keeper said, " What \N . :oil yes."' !Id 11, , all:Averetl:111,1scol " dritil;..” ' lino i " Plain Rita st rate," says lie. "fur it ain't no use w:-tin SIIll:Zar U, (•111•11111 , :liiVate 3kalor ti,." Ilut there's nine more a standini it( the door, and they all sed they'd take , litig,ati ill ther'n. Friends and lirether nig-, it :hurt only the lil:ker or spirit., that is drunk in this rounilal,out and underhandol way, but it's the 1 il:l:tir of all sorts of human wickedness in like 111:111111 . 1% 'llier's the lil:kiir of niallis that meniiy of you drinks lo the dregs; but yore sure to sweeten it with the slitni:ar 1,1 !-,elf-justitleation. 't'iler's the III:1:er of avriss that sum keep behi n d the curtain for constant use, but they always has it well mixt with thes xect in 110 itrtititins and el:whiny. the of self-luv that stun men drinks by the gallon, but. they always put in lots of the Amu:lr of take Inier of N' 1. .'4 lid lastly, that's the likker tiv ex torshun, which the num sweeties ac corilin to eirl:tunstances. If he's in the lour line, he'll say the poor 'II he better )11 . eating corn broad; if he's in the dolh line, wy it's a good thing to Lan cm to make their cloth at honle; if he's in the leather line, it'll taro them -the of taking better lacer nv shoos 11.1 there'., 111111! wen at the do,,r, and they all sed they'd take shugar in ther'n. Bat, friend:att,lbrethering, athne eolnin' and a plat,. fixin' wharthar'll ho no "standin' at the lore" to cull for nshugar in ther'n." But they'll have to go rite in and take the drink square up to the front; and the harkeeper'll h e el ( ' t-latan and nobody else; and he'll give 'en] "shugar in ther'n," you'd better believe it, and it'll be shugar of lead, and red hot lead at that, as sure as your Ilallle'SConshunce Dodger. Amt be entitled to your rations three tittles a day, if not more frequentlier, and if you don't like it you'll have to lump it and so may the old Nick close down upon all your silk palavering around the plane old people of brotherly luv and giuirn-ity ;aid feller-feelin' and fain play' Amen. A Russian Dance Tliey haVe a singular kind of dance conducted on the greens of the country villages in Russia. The louvers stand apart, a knot of young men here, a knot of maidens there, each sex by itself, and silent as a crowd of mutes. A piper breaks into a tune; a youth pulls old his cap, and challenges his girl with a wave and a bow. If the girl is willing she waves her hnd kerchief in token of assent ; the youth advances, takes a corner .f the handkerchief in his hand, and leads his lassie round. No word is spoken, aml no laugh is heard. sow with cords and rich with braids, the girl moves heavily by herself, going round, and never allowing her partner to touch her hand. 'dim pipe goes droning on for hours in the sume sad key and measure: and the prize of merit in this 'el reli ng,' as the 'lance is called, is given by the spectators to the lassie who, in all that summer revelry has never spoken and never smiled. Benjamin F. Butler WM yesterday renotninated for Congress by the Re publicans of the Fifth Alassaehusetts District, and Nathaniel P. Bunks was renominated in the Sixth District. NUMBER 1 rm Domondttol—lf eet- League of 4.lklindel- Cote.'lllation:xi ita•f Jag at the Vstioaa joist evening a target - fleeting:of the Union League NVIIS held at tin' League 1.1 ills,', 11l Urinal street, to consider the proposed am,li eation to the legislature for a call for a convention to aline.' the 1,5,11[11110n of Pennsylvania. lion. ISlortotiirbaolpresided, :ii on taking the chair he spoke :IN collo G1 , 1101'111(1 Of the Union League: The board ut directors 11 i‘econYeiled att,,lncet ing, tie the notice puhlisheil in the daily hiurn:ll , and sent to each if you throtigli the i , ost, has informed you, " Glr the pur i,c.s,, Of considering a proposed application to tile Legislature for the call.of 011- lion to amend the l'onstittitioil or Pennsyl vania.- They have been 111,,eed to take dins at•ticin mot only Liocati , e theirowu conviction of pt. , .ntrted 'wenn 111 do sl, 1.1,t also 110e1111-te prominent citizens in tlillerellt I it/IIS of the State 11.110 urged that, recogni. , .- ing the necessity of and the public tletti.tnil such it !no, oincint, an institution so 1.1- NlOraitty Sitlillfetl 10 111,1111,0 it:l,th, 1 - anon 1.0:1:4110, 011110111 141 Itt it We OAIIOIII,I .1 . it, indorseinent,:ind aid it by all the ittenns in its power. l'or sunlit` orebs p.tst this sithloot has Levu Illnlor disrunsir , n h\ th, heal,' Of tli recline: antl they trill present for your con sideration this I.\ tilling a IVO:1111HO :11111 1 1 1+0111111M110 11 1111'11 C11111 ,1, 1y their \ which tllt'y trust Slut lei,'i\rapp 1 presume 'here are see Oral „rntlrnurn 110, 01 I,t 11ho 1 1 ill at.l n ('Ill,! 1,11111111 , 11 MlLit•ilialv e :111 1 ,11• . 111 111:1y i'lllllollt mv>rlf 11 ith th t1,1,11 1 :11i1 , 11 1! t 1 join 1111 , 1 heartily in ;40 , 1 NVork haveill3ll2,lll,W.l: MI- I 1 ,11 it I 'lt llll Ile Crowned sto•oe.., it , 1 11. 1 1,'dJonll it will 110, 1 shall rr,.101 Ito Share w hie!, our leAglic Hill have 11 , 1 iil gs eon-nimit . lion as not the lt,st high eliaracter for p \L 111 , 11 has al \,.tys 11,011 11111 1 1 , / t•- , t,1111 .11, I 1115 t . 10111 the 1111 1011, t”tr,n.,..,,. 4 Inllll ti.ol 11,1:10,1 11 111,,r111. th, Mr. I iihltiott., ion Itr,•-,111111 , 4 the ri Lion , : 'l'h" high ore ugly ~111tt11110i 61 Wt. 11 ,1 1 , 11 or th, 1 , 00:111 , ty,r, htt,,,tim,r4y not Illagnil\• Ihv I'l,lll I II 1.11`,1 , .; 11 1 the 1, 1, 1•1 311 \ .1C1 , 111111 , 0 or onn' State gips ertotient. It is the itnw Valle resist of a system \vhiell gist , 1, Ihai t1':11111111 tilt' 11, \\,'l . to cont . , slit , 1 II :OM V.llll.lltti . priVll,glis 1111011 rille zrt 1/1 111 , 11 111,1 s• tilt like to other. Si 11i1111,11 tor oltieets hh • lier, 'melt a piss ie-ide , ill a Logi-I:dm o, rill exTerienet . 111:li ncillsr 11,' , 1111 , 1 seek nor tht.••e in Int titan i c! . %11 , 11 1:1 \ 1.11, rrnrh M Tll , 11 1 .111,11 k t, ttl i !Ito in lathe thl\• , Its, I ks" 1.1 . 11 1 1 11 Mit' 113,1111,1 111:111 h . l 1111,11,1 of ttriL att. gain 11 iulliei,lu:ll', cunt 111,11,..11 , .\ 11:1V, Itt.i,llllo Illit 11111111 S: 1111fitilillgs“tirre. 1, f that. corimption ‘, inch is shaking Ilmeolllidelme of many p,ople iu the Stability M popular \•ertinictit. Puldic opinion exhausts its indignathm upon those si lei hash surrcii derell to the temptations of lirlhory, \chile the initnagers or corporations si h,l permit the 1111/I11•0 0f I.llllir s oehholtrrs t, hit ap t:Wet! t 1 ,It'll pl, tip, e s tiol••11', 011-Irvnliott anal 1/1111',411111111t, 111111 501 , 111 111 inutgiue that 110 `Ware of tint resinl 11111111 their shoulders. oh sounder morality teaches that they w Lu prorlur 111, 111,111. to Li' aro the lirst transgressor,, and are more guilty than their ictims, lucre too Immo.l to resist it. "I 1 most. he that. I,IIeIICCS come,o, tut 111'0 hi than 111:111 nn \\lll,lll the 0111111111,01111 . 111 ll ' it be right to grant the I'l - .1'1,11 ' 1 , w of the Stale Mr a particular purpose in 11111' room ty, it is equally right to grant them for like purposes, \vh.ett any other cotnity. lII', if it 1 1 1' right to grant, ` , 1 1 1,1111 PM\ eriii 111111 IlriVilegt , to lOW corporation, it is equally right hi grant the like po,vers Co ;ill others ot the same diameter. The people I'lltitl,l In iu: partial Irgislntion. lIallr0:111 111:01111:14,111,111-r ,11 . - 1111.11i0S, luimiug, haul: ing, 11,111,1111, 1 alai 11 1 1151 0111111:L1111,, 111111 01111 . 1 . toil COII6IIIIO 1,1 11,1'1,11 . 111, important services to the State, and 111 . 0 so t•.11111/1011 \Lit/s'oll with all 1/111 . 01.,1:11 :11111 111:111.1. vial wants, that they should he created and regulated only hy fir or 1,.11 brit.. Sue - 11 :1 reform would stril:o the root of the corrup tion dowpininr , l ''l: Tht . 0X lent 1.1 \VIIiI . II 0111 . 1 . 1:11 Ir;;islN ion i , carried nia - he seen hy reference to the pamphlet lass's ”t . th, Slatl. T 11,1: e,1,11,11 LllO cat, 55 111 , 11 Way probably l'Xi•itt• it,tll:le totrio•i,o, that r Vaot :111.1 rxprnsico 11111- 011illtiry l , r 111:L1,111g lases WM", Vitr . V . little 011111loyllnint ill Illatieri which , 1/111•,111 Ibe pllhliC glitter:llly. It cos „r "r to set. it 1111 every year, and is then Pin ',toyed exclosicely in "."1,1,111 lern ation, at an ad ditional annual expcitse "r Tito 1:11.1, of 1 0 1 i, are 1,11111 , 1 ill a ling , lavo colony , of 1,.1 I I page ,, , the law , 'o'l'69 ill a Si Mil:, VyllllllU of 1,311 'tart,: la 1 , 7, ill a similar Nollllllll traite.; 111:11Ii1101 .1 1,.11 - 1 , TLVOllt\ •- t l ll O 11101,a11.1 copii, Writ,' sass t. have ham print'! at, We 11111/tic expense, :11/. l llf 1.111,', 111111111,1 1,11:1,1 i i0 of the. II In tic 01111111 1. r ....111:1111 :111 the general 5c !deli have bran passed 1.. r ism 1,1 thi years. In Is .s the Legis:.tture passed sl rial 1.1,5, and 1.7 I 'ir tit kiln) 111 I ' 1 " , it je.1e.• , .1 71 r llO 1 111 1111.1 Iris ale acts. In 1 , 7 ,1 it passed, a.- nearly Is I can a-.•er- Lon, Iu general IaIVS.IIIIIIII.III 1,I.: 1111 111 . 1,111 . or ,ilitt•i:ll 111111•11 , 'I, Ht.- , special arts ri I.ge tocorporations; hundreds ap ply only Irtlet:I:1r ,11111 ti t ,, Minty „r th,lll r..hth• 1.1 sleep, aloe pugs anal "tht, 1.11.1 . ,, 111 cer taintoNcriship,, and 1,1 them to mtte, %Odell emild he hotter regulated hy general and permanent la‘,s. Melt might he safely left hy i-em to contr. , l "r 1 ~,t1 If the po‘ver of the Ns , r.• re stricted to the sass, poldie nature, there would he, in 1 wt, tin' it to J,l. Itieloilal session- al , all that the poLlic 11 efttre would require. \‘'/' nett,. lifOly In term 100 11111:'h than too Mule h•gislation. II general clec Scene hicrinia!,iii-tead I , .❑lnn et, they t. 111.1 eitlll, tlntill 1-1,111,11 for the , sanity, 1111/rallty and Imploill,"1/1 the peo pl,•, and t chatige mild result in a pi'odi gimes of till,, health and money. There are Ittlltir oilltitiot, \\Ain't] Is mild necessarily for., I.llcm . ..elves upon tilt at tention of a con\ ention. The rights of pl, htical minorities are entitled to rcspec Lund should he goardcd and protr.eled bv the fionlamental law. 111•1 c this ':111 hi' host accomplished is . .1..1:1i•-•1 0.1 0 1-1 air.. a , Iy engaging the attention of ' , One "r th, hest I.ltlllls in lilt shat". .\ Buck, low i s not of 111 . 1 . political huth, 1 :tin free Lo say that in my opinion he is entitled 11l groat Moor I'll' Ids patrtotie efforts in this diret•tion. The practh•o I 11p011 I'loll, , 1f 1.111, II hose jiidge% aro elective, isa thrratening evil, which is worthy 01 - serious thought. I lor system ill public very inipericet 0110 AIM 1•011111,1,11, 11111Ill'or,llily ill it, rl,llll, 51 1 1111 111:11 of ' , MI , other countrie., far he. hind nq in liberal ideas 01, stil6,•cls 4aal. Silted whit tholitleal science. The, are tuatters 111:11 11,1,1 Wit 111,1•11", ,, ,t1 here huh they too important to be IlOgir•t•Le, ill any revision that. Way I , 1115111- 1/111 State L'onstit 11111,11. The proposition embed.... I by tie. resolu tions involves party pttlillt'.. It etaitetnitlates nothing tem. , than the as• eertain room of the toil of freemen of the State in relation to :he (•,,[l,•nti,tl for the pm pose 1nd....n0d. I. killlloo , Kil , le tf)1•10 , 0` our eyes I, the necessity of rho popular eicreavor to vheck vtdruption iu public places, widen is eon lilted to Ito party, and has grown se Itttld flea it seirrNs to phul lenge the virtue of I lie Itettple to an open contest for supremacy. It is ant Peculiar to Pennsylvania. It is Hail! brut in of her siam... Not on. V ll,' legislator, Iti Nett y4,,k, but the meal ju diciary of its great coition rcial capital i. befouled by it, ..1.1 coh , -.7r ,9 . 4 ari• not (lasi from IL: 1,1.01-.IIIP 1,1111. 1:11:.011r duty is at horn°, among - our If we do our part l'aitlifully iv,. shall un veil the old shield .-1 tbu ,•.I”,”,n,v,,atth, whi,h 11.t.1 been s Irtatz oltseured, rout nial:o the pletic, of "virtue, lilatrty and independence," ushieli our fathers inscrilicd upon it, our pledge, to in violate. The following ni-Mutions tvrtre then read and adopted: lt is lectured by the Consti tution of i'minsylvania that all power is in herent iii the i.i...ple, and all free govern 111011t4 are founded on their authority and instituted for their peace, safety awl lialtiti ncss; and that, Ili r the ad% mita:meld of these ends, thity lia.vo at all times an Ml alivnablo and indefeasible right to almr, re form ,r abolish their government in S:1171I Ill:10111X ;IS LIIPy think proper ; and WitEnc‘s, The high powers ism ferred upon the legislative department of the government Were delegated by the people, with the fell confidence and expectation that they wound he exercised for the com mon hrinelit, :10.1 that nn temptations of private gain or advantage would over con trol or influent.° ,uly branch of the lalv mak he r ; power of Me:State, in the execution of the, sacred trust isitilided to its nianatgr , went ; anti \ rdn.:As, 'rlie history of the legislation nC l'ennsylvania for many years past is strongly marked by the corruptive potver of corporations, seeking special Mvors by the temptations of bribery; the franchises iif the State are bartered for money, anti our leghlative halls lasso often heel, 0111- % cried into market places, \Olen: important public Millais have been sold to the highest bidders by faithless itml venal pulilie ser vants; vested rights have been threatened and assailed fur the solo purp.iso of extort ing ransom from their lawful proprietors, and public acts, which concern the com mon welfare, are passed or rejected without intelligent consideration, and thus the safety and happiness of the people are fre quently impitircsl and imperilled by d is- BATE or'ADVEETIMIYV BIIIXES. ADVERTISEMENTS, $l2 a your mute of ten linen; $8 por year for moll add tiOnnt square. REAL EATATi AvvzietraiNt;, 10 cents raffle the first, trnd 5 cents fat eneh tnhAeghent Insertion. OFVI:RAI. A DVKIITtIi I SO, 7donta 1111110 for t! flrnt, and 1 mita for each IMbnequent Ingo Lion. BrEmu, N,Yrlctai incorted In Local Columnrs 15 cent. per IMO. SrECrAm 'Morn:rat procetitag marrinca; and dentha, lit rents per line for first Insertions arid 5 Mats for ovary eulameqUent I wier LEGAL AND OTHEIL NOTlCED— EXecntors' notices AdministrittOne n o tice Assignees' notices AntMors' notle, Other "Notices, - ten lines, or less, throe times_ ....... Eli= Vt'ti Ent:As, Thole appear. to be nn ol'i• remedy for those monstrous :ma act,Al : edged evils Ohm such N 1 • 31110111111111 , 11tS Of the ennvtitul ion of the H• .1 as will deli err the Legislative lusly the temptations which rontin wally„ ! anti improve the ell,traotcr of I: , by securing tho rights of ni i 101 . 11 les popular idcctiona, therefore That the mentborsu t tint. t Leagnl , of l'hibulelphin, 1111 w general meeting, do approve nthd mend the calling of a convention, t01e,. , poseil of delrwates chosen by tile it.: rn °Me State, Apr the plirp.,e "1 prop. , , auttmdittelits to the constunti,,,,c N ahia. k!, In Ord, •. frectrion or tlio ( . 1,111111,11%% . 1,01n 11111 y :140011:lineLl in rasped In Ow Nttelt a convention, that 101 l 1.1,111 (4 ) 11, 1,0:,11,1,1tIlre, :It It. 111,1 people tt, Iho peoplii tor their an election to it livid, for the cud 1.11 pose, lin Ow fir-4 Tiikkkkiilily in M iii St. at ',onto otlicr coliveniiktit 111111, :I cOll I,llillee, 1 . 1.:1 , i,1 1,1 per , , , IIM, NN /111111 ',I13:1 1,11 I:1k. 11,111 cinht• ;11..! live k tlio linnr,l, r NI:In:Igo, „ 1 op• lor the k itigk lie altrnli~nl F, tlic o k; ti t ..G. pre:1110,1i , rtisiiiiiitio kiik n, t, if!, .1111li (iiifer with iiny nict•tink4:. 11., viutt roc viol, - tho pron., :k- 1111 y I rolient. Crow(l 011 Th V 4 1)01711 114 of Defia 11, ti CAM 1111 . .11.1 . tll I ICI I OW / , ,11 1.1. Li 11 , P t • Nl,ll' I t "I r. r: nett I "ilito.l S;.ttc , I at 51..111,1111, /AN ul 1,i1.21,1 principle, • 110 ,111111t1 11,1 barn t , ll, \\ or,' 1'1'111..111111 11, 11C111,'1 1 111.11 tho it iI I toTI,IM Stato or 'AI I ivitmvals 1111111 111111111' • Wllllll \ll'e 1,11•,11111,111111; 1110 1.10 s. 111111111•111 1,1 1110 1 . • 1 1,110: 111111 II \Sas 1- upon hits arrival al NI. ilitattitli that her I beolllld high in vlrtract,r, 1,1111 , in iifit.g) try, ”r atlainmotll-1, trom I. 1,11 , 0 id . , dill atily %,1111 1110 111 5i31.0 . , that in 1.1 ally 11:t41 iill‘ll,il.l I ILO [ll l•ro. 1.1 M 0111i1 111111 Uu•ll Ii L. Maki' 11031 . 11, 111111 thliV 111121,, rt,..,i•( langtioi , .ol 11. it nn .". ilitt 31111 111.0, 1110111.ir.ildt. 1. , t 1 wh:a: Iltov had do:daro:I ::: :1 rll‘ 1:, •11. had r111111;t1:1,:tial: II rrnlui i ~11~ :' Ii wont s.ky 111 LI, lir :14 thl ,•:111•,1 p.,licy 111 111.11:111 th, Pn• ti inwata, a rollll, ak 1;11'1110 1.11, 11.0 0011M1 uttho had (illly In..l\', It ctit,•l : Ihr b;, , 1111 rt ha had that lu , M.111[•1 IFI,SVIIL tills 11l•at Ili,l'INIIIO1.11.11,0i1“111 n. Nlah•. 110 Nkllll.l 111111 till wilt 0.1.4 1141,11 111 , • 12/l//11.10t CPI tilllilllloo 1.111.110 I'l,-.1110111 lit 111. 1:1111.1 , 1 States, untl tit% tto Ittin t,. k,1111.. Wilk Ilk 1 . 01111,31 , , mIJ /•041 lii In. offilltl curtail tho s“voreigilty lit n Ire,' In oiposilion to thy ststtinimils .• ace, frah•rility, an,l itmugurattsi in 111,1 hogintiitig rninktratimi ; (hat so far 114110 ‘l,l, jai he dill nut ear., 1110 ,111311 I. 110 .141 0110 ~ I . t hci.El N 4 1110 111411,1 0 I'l'l , l4lola what I roodmn inoant tt In : 10:11110 to :%1 . 104t)111 . 1 111 Dill, Ilel•htr1//1: 111i4 NV:1I • 1110allt 1110 111.01 . :111 , .11 15 . 0.4 110 tv.mld strip sir his t•panli•Ill , 'Aibl this slurs i 00; that 110 111101111,1 I. .11 him Inrlhor that Irt:otlinn tnomil II atin of all th , wliiln 51591 thi.. 34 Wi•1I as III( 111/1.1,1111.11..1 . ;1111110 011 151 thin nation ; and that he emll.l haul: tualcr this trip polios upon this, Irani Ist ohh.•ohi• an still, basin;; 1100111111/li , lloll 1110 11 , .1111,1 this lihtel: man. M r. Itrow it thou pint et,slc.l to oay that his myn I,irt ho de , irtni here :eel nell t• thr.,w .In . ll the L.:a11:44.4,f hattlo lion,. In. Mem et . the 1 Mao.l Stan -4, and In itn it , him to the cilcottliters, alll.l 111, Ili Issue in 11l titatn"f m :mil 111,1 vnuhl ri , t his rcinitati , m 1111,1 'Phut he wlllllll Ii oh that Iho people ul lit. t,tate Were men mintinr to low he ; :1.1141 that. .4 ItiajirritN'a:Zaill , tallyqll 4. lt milikter 111111111! ulntiun Of fifty thollxand Cotes. \I r. ltreN, ,111111,11 that if the President snlme,es 111,1 he cn uld pnrch:c..a ri.ii , olllll:itiml fruut I h.. Itemtblieatt party by a system of inliln•- datinn and reltioVal I'llllll 11l hi) had 1110 110111111' the Statt., That tho Prsid,ni ,Jr st:u would find that in :\ I Issmiri at loast frrrninnlnn hail been ticelared, and there any .laves, either 14,1101101111 re 01 ' 1,111 ,, 1.0 the tenure of properly; that for !lig i., part, he simply out, :inn! for all tr. hll :w elleetioo tints W 110 1 ,4 • n• Wu, on (1, or the oral iiivernlll4.lli, and ..ay to the and Cnntlfxron , nsionntl Cnmitnitteos, awl 1%11, net nntlit•inr., hvalls , nr 1101114111 , 4 ,•411•11 lilt' ,10111 of his lioger their in the Sii‘lo of N I issouri, ho wanted to add that, if any iiitheint,•aiii. to try Nvi•lcnnitiodllin in to thin 1,1111111 U1141111,110 , 1110'111 10 111 . 1 . 4.1, nml if 111' 411 , 1 1101 •111.1,11 e 1.11011111 ,4 1 . 01 . 41 110 4•4111 4 :11,04 Wlll-11•1011,1111111, t.hev 111141 111141.111. , 41 111,1 r ivartnol. 1411011 110 WOlll , l never 111,1 i, 11.1101.11,1 • 11141 ,0 11/ 10 1110 111,,p1, ,If N 11,1•101 1 .11 111111110 101.11 0111 y 1.0 101 , 1 111 1111•4 4 . 011114 , 11 , 0 111111,1.11f11111 , 1 of a. l're•iiderit of t h e I' tnml' Srate,i undertlilcing to intltionce tho vote In norerciqu Slat, in a great question of ill lernal junlin•y li•11.9 simply itannloralnlv. \\inn, 'nail" I; On. I;ratit, and what Nva, Lon, that. be %Vise? NVlnn, Lilt , war began Ino was ono Htizoto4 or thin country, ('mire 111 , 1 Wllll , lllt 1111111 , 00 ,4 , 0111, 1001 c 111•04•114,111411110 11111,110 41[11131011 Of U o ' 14'1' 11011,1111 , 1 lip \nil:11.1 - 11_01141100S 110 11,4111L11 ,4 11" 11 , n('? 1)0,4 lie stand :14 (QUI Lll , l 111•I•reiliti• I eaders ..f ptll,li4, thought.? 1,01,4 lie LS .110 “I lAI,IIIOII \VII,II3Ve vith tho triiimpl, lime loos hi• (171 n r4l (hi, 0 ,,,0 0 1, 0 nI hat Ile havo boon arotiNtomill to look t..s 'or our it•oriptiitsuf iroodont horoloforo: If not, thou I havo only to ,ac it wollhl 10 wive and well for snob moo to leave tlo• •ompletion if the froodoin or this oonotr, tho aoli11,1•111011t ut tin , moo %do, ha‘o oolorta.kon it, :Ind h.tvo :1,...,0111,1i:410.1 Ii vithont interference on tho part of ti: ,o viii, have simply reaped its rewards. 'Phi. I mrticm Cho speech (vas roc, vith thunders of applause front the wholo oolionon, and ereated all iIIIMMIHO fir none No‘vhere, perhaps, says Prot'. A the physical:tn., moral deterioration ol 101 races WI clearly shown as in Brazil. hyl.rid I.ctAvecn the Indian and Lilo 111 1,1111 . 11 1 . 31 . 117. 1 0, 11:1S 110110 of the cfclica,y the mulatto; his complexion iv dark, hi hair long, wary .L.l curling, ainl biA1.11:11' flier instead or bring confiding, hut indo lent, is 111,cribed by ,kgassiz as exltibitin: a happy ooluldnation betNvorn the jolly di position of the negro and the during powers of the Indhtn. Tito hyl.ri , between the whites and halr.hreed rnanieltien, and is described as being pall. effeminate, feeble, lazy ratheroleitinat the Indian influence having apparently , d , tained the higher characteristics oi th• white, without imparting its own effete, to the offspring. Noticeable exception, t• this picture may bo found in Lilo breeds of the seini-civilized cominfinc.. of our southern Judi an s. It is very r markable that the Indian, crossing , ,• • either negro or a white, makes a ii.••• 1, impress on his progeny than the other lac es, and, in aecordance with this fact, it observed that, in farther crossings, th• pure Indian characteristics aro resin. , and those of the other races thrown en " Let any one," says Professor Agassi, "who doubts the evil of the mixture of rat os, and is inclined, from a mistaken phi lanthrophy, to break down all barriers I,c tween them, visit lirazil.—Public color Makes All the Difference ( of the skin makes all the dilrereni in the world hi the Radicals, its will hoses by the following instance at the election I Swanton, Pa.: :\ very respectable mid influential (ft man, who was naturalized smile timrsinc and who had as much right to vote as a, one in the county, presented himself hci to vote, with regular papers, but havinga; parent thaws in them, which a Republic., officer could invent, if not PM 11 is was refused; but he knew he had a right t vote, and deterninied to vote. wheres he went home, blackened his fare, made negro of himself, turned his florman into English, anti his vote was receiged the Republican officers without a word dissent. Then, to their astonishment, II voted the Immoeralic ticket, lie is throat rued with prosecution, but ho thfeah•u; it return a prosecution f•,r depriving lino • his eight to vote. Tho following is the official statement the Land Department, Union Pacific Rai road, front my SS, 1069, to October 4,1071 The Union Pacific Railroad sold 2.10,31.1 1! 100 tteres,:cor which they received 31,106,0 S 32, or no average of tz4.100 per acre. The con piny cancelled $OlO,OOO of their land gnu bonds, received in payment for their land Tho trustees hold $400,000 In settlers' note secured by mortgage on land sold, an $50,000 in cash, to be appropriated to furthi purchases of land grtuit bonds, Tho Unio Pacific Railroad have 11,750,000 acres land remaining. unsold.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers