THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER. PIJBLIEEMD‘ZPEBY WEDNESDAY BY H. G. SMITH & CO A. J. STEINMAN IL Q. SMITH TERMS—Two Dollars per annum payable In all cases In advance. THE LANCASTER DAILY INTELLMENCER Is published ovary evening, Sunday excepted, at 5 per annum In advance. CORN= or Ozzrrna OFFICE—Bo SWABS. 1J o ettp. WAITINU. My lord, my lover went out from me Years ago oil the tossing main; And I cannot guess when the hour may be, That will bring Tile the light of his face again What shall I do with the beautiful days That are hitting by use so fair add lust^ They will nut stay while my lover stays, Nor mane og.in wt.. Ills voyage is past. I look while the sunny hours are long— ! wake for him through the starry night; And hunk heart with a blossom or song When, witu its hunger my lips grow white I blvd my brow with the poppies pole— And sometimes, in dreams, through i he Ivory gate Can catch the gleam or a roseate sail. ISM ever and ever, 11.11.1.4, (01.1 tale. 'rile eyes must not weep Ihat are watching lo 111 m, Nor the proud lips quiver that he shall press Though both would grow cold, and wiEhere. and 111 m If I.loulded 111.1 more, or multi honor 11111 less. Though never a question so cold benumbs, But MlnileS 1111(1 singing Ills 1111111 e will Walto; Tell me, sweet 1111)111e111,, he el/111eS, lie rattles Alid let my heart with Its rapture break. fain Ix no pain, that leaven litrength lo moan Nor IL in not grief that given brual 11 to sigh Looking and loving !ire We alone; Doubting or losing %veto hilt Lo (h. I eaven fitrglyo lor noel) sllt Its Ibis: I often tymtloi gl,lll away To rest lor 111111111.111, my 11111111 111 Ills, Aittl. "I) lily tlarlitig," 111 hvar 111111 haY I meet in Goloy, fave AL morning's II...II:dal evoning'h full ; Til.lllold and foroal. have link graeo• 4l iii drown them all lie Wake roblaS coma la their Wmallaml H. %Vila peas nod the 1eap...1-like eelatallte . , ' Anil berried briers — alt • spevelilt ss Aro yotir nit 1,1 :1111.14as aline? tiontollotos to tho Wllll'lol,llll ,Moro I 1 . 1 . Y. yon Itoortl, or 11,e lily ors Loh! Of 11:1.1 . 1t 10111S1 1 'WIIIIIIII WaS I1!111 . 11, t 111 . ally a 1111111111'4 lo•art In Itn azur ,• 1.1,1? H.. Sailed IL marita . , II I IIIII • Y antl bravv" Ital. as , ,, taaa,•,, ~aly I la. I/11,1 . 11/Iy, " but 11a , ,aval ~l a t , Pri4 .t'+ , "' 1.11, I,y Ila• thg, 1,.. ,v 1,1,1 yin! 111‘1. thi• i III• Who leavo s IlivNi• duly :1111 dnll I•Ver.N . i111:111ilfIll Ihlm,; II 11l Lv T.; gro,v IL g:tr.lt•ii iJi 1111111,1t•Ilk,. Myllionglitissliall turn pansies instead of Iron.; Del.l, 1110.1011 ale longings in tits., glory; A lid w lil tr wirit lug pis,. :Shall Ilia Imp,: of uurritrly sprlngtling grog' Atilt Ifsltelt blown not upon that shore liesOrown wllh slurs lln is OIL ...trill, hid. 1110 Slll3llher NV:IAV . 110 Itwr Close 1/111.),,(111., 110.11.1•3,• helm Slllll.llllllel hi' sunrise a I ropl4. 4110 . lll..+ynily nhnll 11.11 MI 1,1111 . 11 sin)" Ann) lii 3 . 1.11t11 1111111.1111, /WM./Lill Its ray Shall tv,,rk t“getlicr, lily love moil I. ittiscrllanrotts. jWl'lltell for the lul,lligourrr Ilorlamt, Or, Scintillations from th tiltoMmard. - 50.. , arc cud 11111,4.1 , e grealor Mau the 1,1 This word should, probably, be wri lea dunning or thaw, instead of our spelling of it its the caption of this pa per. It does not occur in the dictiona ry, in the sense its which iL was used on the shopboard forty years ago. J)awn Means the first faint appearance of morning light, and therefore a meridian sun, would be a nearer correspcndenee to the sense in which we use it here. Daunt, one meaning of which Is to in timidate, makes perhaps, a nearer ap proximation to the tailoristic use of this word; because, the ,Peel of a dawn. upon an inferior workman, might be of an intimidating character, but it is not arbitrarily or necessarily so by any means. A dawn or daun, then, nwant a very superior workman, or a very ex peditious workman ; but the shop-board would say, a very " fast worktnatn." At that period the greater number of journeymen tailors who were entitled to the appellation of damn, were great flints, great I tanipN, and also great d Mks. So generally was this believed to be the case, that runic, of very inferior abilities, absolutely contracted dissolute habits, in order that flay might appear to be dawns. Some jours, however, were dawns only in a particular depart ment of work. For instance, one would excel in making button-holes, another iu stitehing edges, and another in giv ing form and solidity to a job; but in dependent of these, there were those who could dawn it "till through." It is not asserting too much, perhaps, to say, that these men did impliedly claim immunities, privileges and indulgences that would by no means have been ac corded to inferior workmen ; but at the same time many of them were exceed ingly useful to the apprentices, or tile younger journeymen, who were ambi tious to excel in their profession, and who, they ( the dawns, ) sometimes would—for a consideration or other wise—condescend to take `under-teach.' They enjoyed this advantage, at least, over their fellow-workmen, they could always obtain employment, where their abilities were known, if any work at all was to be had; tend often, a medium workman would consider himself for tunate in having the privilege of work ing " on the joist" with a dawn, and would also perform the greatest amount of the labor, to enjoy that privilege. ISA there were some paws who were dawns only in the matter of expedi tious, or fast workmanship, and it was astonishing in how much shorter time they could " put, up " a job, than it re quired other jours to perform the same amount of labor. Alt hough, a// of these did not unite proficiency in workman ship, with the dexterity in "getting On" with their ~work, still, a few of them possessed both these qualities combined. nese men could, and often would, whil e away half the week in idleness,and still make an ordinary week's work. We have often thought that these men were really tailors by nature—that they were in the exercise of their natural mechanical functions, and it was often demonstrable that they were totally un• lit for any other l,ii o in life, and consequently, they remained anchored to the shop-board, to the end of their days. Asa general thing. the dawn was no further pecuniarily advanced in the world, than the ?twill am workman, or even so far its some who were only infrrior in mechanical capacity, and it was not always manifest how thisshould be so. It is true that some dawns were exceedingly slow, and others exceed ingly negligent, and unreliable in point of punctuality ; besides, there was a kind of dignity attached to the dawn, which made bins presumptuous, and therefore Ise would only make a partic ular kind of work, and at a particular wive, and there were some crooks who could allbrd le employ them, amt con silk-red them cheap, at any reason able price ; and " in a pineh," at even unrcallonabie prices. In our boyhood, for instance, we heard of 011 e dawu,who would not work on anything but blue clot/i frock-coals, nor at any price, less Hiatt sill (1011artland three fhippennybits. Not he—he would rather "tramp" than do anything less than this—it would be lowering his dignity—cud tramp he often did, money or no money. At that period, however, like the present, a great many blue frock-coats were worn, no that he could be accommodated, in a large town or city, to about as many as he cared about making, for he was a genius of that peculiar character, who depended more upon his wit than his work, to "get along" in the world. When we sand that snow dawns were presumptuons,w6 did not mean that this was their universal, or even their gen eral character; for, in most Instances, they were exceedingly modest and un pretending, for men possessing such transcendent abilities in their profes 'sion—indeed some of them did not seem to know that they were dawns. Not that they could not, and did not, distinguish between tile quality of their own work and that of their fellow-craftsmen, but they seemed to look upon the thing as a matter of course, or as some thing they could not help. Although workmen of this character were pretty certain of al ways nutting employment, yet the un reliability of many of them was so great a source of vexation and anxiety to their employers that they were compelled to restrict their work to that which would ' cause the least disappointment, in case It did not "come up to time;" for dawns, • as a general thing, had the greatest re pugnance against the limitations of time, in finishing their work. To "work • so long, and get so much," was about the sum of their ambition—indeed, on one occasion, we heaid a dawn declare that the height of Ma ambition was to obtain a situation where he could get twentyeps dollars for making a coat, and Tit)t XaititeOttit VOLUME 72 board for a dollar a week. Of course the reader will discover in this characteris tic, that peculiar selfishness, which dis tinguishes unregenerate human nature everywhere, and perhaps in every de partment or occupation in human socie ty • and which makes it so exceedingly difficult In governments where the peo ple are professedly sovereign, to adjust systems of tariff that will protect the whole people. Men's sympathies always run parallel with their own individual interests, and never athwart them, In behalf of the interests of their neigh bors. When prices are rapidly "going up," and men have anything to sell, how readily do they realize this fact and act on, it without for a moment seeming to realize that the same rule has any ap plication to what they may want to buy. Therefore these selfish peculiarities did not pertain to dawns because they were tailors, but because they were imbued with the aspirations of poor fallen hu man nature. Dawns did. in our earlier days, consti tute a sort of " privileged order " among tailors, who might do many things us we have before intimated with a sort of impunity, which would not have been tolerated for a moment in an inferior workman. in seine places they hail a reputation outside of the precints of the shopboard, and fastidious customers would desire their garments should lie placed in the hands of particular work men, and would endure any number of disappointments, in order to have them make them. Niany were the anecdotes, and extra (Hilary feats of mechanism, related of tese gilled men; some, no doubt, of hieh, were mere myths. Our recollee nt goes back to a then, rather famous two--one ;ace,' rlcst'r, and subse- imently to a Bill /,miy. It was (luring our novitiate 111 tailoring, and therefore we cantiot speak from what we know, hut front what we hC(tr(1,11.11 , 1 W:LS getler any 1..1 ieVva. Stror, ZIS " (leaf as a post," lan possessed till the qualities of I he (lawn hoth in Lite excellence of his %yolk. :111,1 the celerity with which he could eXt-4•111t• it. We remember this too--that he 11115 addicted to his "pipe and pot," and had the additional repu tation or being a "hard ease." It was said or him, by those who professed to be competent judges, that he could, and 1111l1“1 as good a job, in every re spect, with a common " button-needle" and "patent thread," as any other man of his day could with the best " six-be tweens," and " letter A. silk ; " anti a bthrt job, than any ordinorg workman of his time. And this was not all—he could make it in a shorter time. And what, was perhaps the most remarkable, in a man of his peculiar habits, he re tained these qualifications to a late peri od in life, for he was at least sixty years of age when we saw him. From the manner in which work was made Oita, this was more of an achievement than such a feat would be now; for there were no 4ewing machines, and im proved implements, and sewing silks, to assist in the execution of work, as there are 110 W. 'he chieffeat of Lang, however, was working " button-holes," both as to le and to quality, and if anything, he to a " harder ease" than Pfrder. Ilut I=M=9 nil no doubt, their betters, in every re pea, have risen in their stead. If some dawns had not a world-wide •eputition, at least it was State-wide, or tended for many miles in the cities and towns, on the line of the great thorough fares of travel; but the fame of others was confined to more circumscribed districts, or perhaps, even to the towne or cities in which they were, for the time being, domiciliated. Not that their fame necessarily extended to the 711(ISSCS of the people, but mainly to the frater nity of tailors. Among those whose reputations were tolerably widely ex tended about live and forty years ago, wits a certain Jock ll'idlucc, more fa- millnriy known as "Raw-edged Wa lace." The way he received that peen liar name, was related something in th' wise. Jack was always rather "seedy' . . in his wardrobe, and on this occasion, when his reputation was not yet so widely extended as it became after• wards, he was more than usually so.— In this condition he "kicked for a job" at a tailor-shop in Pittsburgh, and ob tained one. The "crook" not exactly comprehending his man, gave him a lasting dress-coat to make, which Wal lace regarded as equivalent to an insult, for where he was known he was always accustomed to having the best of cloth work. lle, however, suppressed his indignation, and took the job to the back-shop to make it. At that period many bummer garments were made out of " Bombazine," " Bombazet," and " Lasting,"—the last named material being the same as that used by shoe makers, for ladies' gaiters, under the name of "Prunella,'' and by far the most difficult to make, as dress-coats were then made with the waists, the cull's ' and the lappells "cut oil'," and " patuktent-nicks" at the ends of the collars. Of course, iu this kind of ma terial all the edges were "turned in," whereas in cloth-work they were all made "raw." But Jack made up lasting job raw out of sheer revenge. When it was finished he sent it to tl front-shop and immediately "tramped without even demanding his pay. was said to have been the most beau fully formed and finished job that had ever been made in Pittsburgh ; but at the same time, for all practical pur poses, it was totally spoiled. The "fray ing" or "raveling" character of lasting is such, that it could not have borne the ieast brushing or handling without all the edges fraying out and parting. Front this circumstance, he was ever after wards known as "Itaw-edged Wallace" _ . mil perhaps his chiefest and most a is• tinguishing peculiarity, was in that name, and the notoriety which attached to It; for, when we saw him, his fame as an extraordinary workman was al ready very far on the wane. Cooper Omni, the "great tramp," was also at one period of his life consid ered a grad dawn. Of him it was said, that on application for work at a shop in Wheeling, Va., a rough satinet coat was given him by the proprietor. He felt incensed, but said nothing, in wardly resolving, however, to resent such an insult to his tailoristic dignity in a manner that would be felt. Ile ac cordi ugly went to work and made up the one half of the coat, even to the put ting on half of the collar, producing such a perfectspecimen of workmanship as had never dignified satinet before, and perhaps never since then. When this was accomplished, and all the other hands in the back-shop had gone to their dinner, he took three tliq-loaded, large iron nails, and with it hammer drove them through the breast and col lar of the half-coat he had made, into the shop-board, up to the very head, and clinched them beneath, and then pre cipitately " tramped." When the half coat was, with great difficulty extricat ed, no journeyman could be found to make up the other half in a like man ner. It is said of Salter, the great English dawn, who flourished In the city of Bal timore before arid after the war of 181 . 2., that a certain employer in a country town in England, gave him a pair of breeches to make by a certain time, for some noble lord ar duke, who was to at tend a ball, saying rather roughly, "There, make a pair of bellows, or tramp." In true" glass "style, Slitter did make up the breeches in the form of a pair of bellows with two necks, then handing them to the " call boy," told Lim to tell his master that he might add the nozzles himself. When the crook, with a bailiff, reached the back shop, in a high state of rage, Slater had tramped. When Kurtz, the Philadelphia (lawn, of about the same period, applied to the celebrated Churky Watson for a job, he gave :him a; bombazett dress-coat to make, somewhat reluctantly too. Born bazett having both sides of the goods alike, Kurtz took advantage of this, and made up the two halves of the coat for the same side of the customer, and then precipitately took his departure, leav ing his chagrined employer totally una ble to find a journeyman who could make two corresponding halves for the other side, of the same workmanship, out of such material. These, and a hundred other stories, which were current and familiar to the shopboard long years ago, may be as mythical as the history of an 0 wlglass or a Munchausen, and equally as hyper bolical ; still, they were believed in by the novitiates in the craft, and consti tuted a part of the traditional literature of the back-shop. But dawns of work men were not wanting among the fra ternity of tailors, at any period of its historyand independently of the increase of population, we believe we have as many of them now, as we had in times gone by ; none of whom perhaps would attempt the pranks of their presumed ancestry. It does not follow, necessari ]y, that a dawn is a dissolute or disor derly character, any more than it does that every one of this character is neces sarily a dawn. The term dawn was sometimes used in the opposite sense. For instance, very inferior workmen as wall as infe rior and poor paying jobs, were called " crabs ;" and therefore, .the meanest among these were ironically called dawns—that is, dawns among crabs, for the term meant that which was ex tremely bad, as well as that which was extremely good. That very superior workmen should be presented with very Inferior work, where their artistic qualities are not known, is not at all surprising' for many a crook has been pained by having his work spoiled, through an excess of confidence in ,lours, merely because they were trampers or " hard cases." Nor is it at all surpris ing, on the paler hand, that a workman of real excellence should feel offended when in ferior'work is given him. These men generally knota-their powers, and by comparison, have a better knowl edge of what their labor is worth, than many of those who exercise the func tions of a crook, and who may really be no tailors at all. We have seen dawns who were timid and exceedingly modest of their abili ties, seeming to be unconscious that they were such superior workmen,— like a coy and modest woman, all un conscious of her own beauty. But there are, perhaps, more of them of the oppo site character—men who " prill" over their own work, and exercise a rigid criticism on everything that fulls below their own standards, even to a pair of " blue drill over-ails," or a " green baize m o nkey-jacket." Perhaps nothini , has broken In more upon the status of the ancient dawn, than the introduction of iinproved nettl ing ntae/titres , and by which a medium workman may produce errects that equal those of the dawns of the olden times. Nevertheless, there is a certain something—a certain "life,'' as it is called—which a genuine (lawn can im part to a coat, which no sewing ma chine that has yet been invented and manipulated' by the best operator, can impart, and we think, never will be able to impart. It is said, for instance, that sewing machines have a felling at tachment, and the ability to jell, with some machines, is boastingly placarded ill newspapers, on imposing band-bills, and on rocks and fences everywhere. This is all a mistake, if not a willful misrepresentation, for no sewing-ma chine that was ever made can Jell in the original sense of that term ; simply be cause it nuts( do "th rough-and-through" work, if it works at all. Now trod ell ing is not by any means" through-: ti through work. In (dung, except in felling and " dimpieing," the stitch ought never to be seen on, or even reach, the opposite side. The needle is set in, and when the point gets about half-way through the cloth, it is sud denly turned up and drawn out on the same side—a mere sewing of one part to the surface of• another part, without passing through. Can a & wing-inachinc unless endowed with human genius do such a thing? We trow not. What-. ever such an endowment may be worth, it is one that belongs peculiarly to the human species, and is bound to be con fined to that species, until the advent of a " ctleslial dawn." We have digressed so far from our main subject that we despair of getting back again, and there fore we may as well here conclude our paper on" dawns and dawning." GRANTELLus. The Wife of Socrates Socrates was undoubtedly a great philosopher, a deep thinker, a man of huge intellect, of purity, integrity of purpose, and unselfishness beyond most others; of unflinching honesty, spend ing and being spent for the cause of truth and virtue. But, on the other hand, he had many qualities which women are not apt to admire in hus bands. Ile was certainly ugly, and has himself drawn a comical picture of his own defects. Praising the beauty of utility lie declares that his prominent eyes are beautiful, because they enable him to see sideways as well as straight in front; his nose is beautiful, because the upturned nostrils inhale odors from all sides, while noobtrusive bridge shuts from one eye the sight of the other ; his vast mouth is beautiful, because adapted for biting large morsels, while front his thick lips may be expected soft and abundant kisses. Through these out ward tokens of his humanity, Xan- thippc may be excused for not discern ing in their plenitude the inward and spiritual gifts of the philosopher. While gorgeous sophists iu their flow ing robes, were followed by crowds of eager listeners, the poor and humbly clad Socrates was treated with ineffable contempt. He was rude and ungainly in his movements ; unlike all respect able citizens in his habits. Barefoot, he wandered about the streets of Athens, absorbed in thought; sometimes he stood still for hours, fixed in meditation Every day he strolled into the market place and disputed with all who were willing. In appearance he resembled a Silenus. llis flattened nose, with wide and up-turned nostrils, his projecting eyeballs, his thick and sensual lips, his squab figure and unwieldy belly, were all points upon which ridicule night fasten. Surely such a husband must have seen a trial to the most exemplary of And his works and ways were still more provoking than the grotesque surprises of his person. For a passion ate woman, how frightful an ordeal to have a morally and physically bespat tered and besprinkled husband say, with Victor-Hugonian terseness, " After the thunder, the rain!" Or conceive the horror of a husband who might, after you have been irritated by a long dis cussion. address you thus: " The re sult which I have acquired from my conversation with you is that lam wiser than you, for neither you nor I know anything of what is truly good and hon orable; but the difference between us is, that you fancy you know them while I :on fully conscious of my own igno rance; I am, therefore, wiser than you, inasmuch as I stn exempt from the capi tal error." Or could a wife be content to have for a husband such a social nuisance as a man who could defend himself by say ing, " In this research and scrutiny I have been long engaged, and am still - - - engaged. I interrogate every man o , reputation. I prove him to be defective in wisdom; but I cannot prove it so as to make himself sensible of the defect." Surely ton wife, as to the Athenian pub- ; lie, Socrates must have seemed an "im possible person." A person, agnin,who could address one thus : "My mission as your monitor is a mark of the special favor of the god to you ; and, if you con demn rue, it will be your loss, for you will find no other such. Perhaps you will ask me, Why cannot you go away Socrates, and let me live in peace This is the hardest of all questions for are to answer to your satisfaction. If I tell you that silence on my part would be disobedience to the god, you would think me in jest, and not believe me. You will believe me still less if I tell you the greatest blessing which can happen to you Is to carry on discussions every day about:virtue, and those other matters which you hear me canvassing when I cross-examine myself as well as others, and that life 'without such ex amination is no life at all. Neverthe less, so stands the fact, incredible as it may seem to you." An impracticable man evidently, and ode who no woman could pardon, should the story prove true that he and tianthippe had but one dress between them, so that only one could leave the house at a time. But there is still another ground, a delicate ground of accusation, which Xanthippe might have brought against Socrates. Socrates' intimacy with. As pasta might well have offended the most inexacting of wives. Plutarch tells us, for example, that "though the acquaint ances of Aspasia took their wives to hear her converse, the business which sup ported her was neither decent nor hon orable, for she kept a number of courte sans in her house. Or, again, even a reasonable wife might be suspicious of a man who went to persuade himself by the sight of his own eyes whether the beauty of Theonote, a courtesan, who sat as a model to artists, and with whom he engaged in a long discourse on the value of friends and the best method to gain them, was really beyond the power of words to describe. Western journals report that twenty three persons in the State of lowa alone have suffered an involuntary amputa tion of their limbs this season, in using reaping machines, LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING AUGUST 16, 1871. Mark Twain Tells AU About Them, Mark Twain has the following excel lent article " About Barbers" in the August number of the Galaxy: All things change except barbers, the ways of the barbers, and the surround-' ings of barbers. These never change.— What one experiences in a barber shop the first time he enters one, is what he always experiences in barber shops af terward till the end of his days. I got shaved this morning as usual. A man approached from Jones street as I ap proached it from Main—a thing that al ways happens. I hurried up, but It was of no use, he entered the door one little step ahead of me, and I followed in on Iris heels and saw him take the only vacant chair, the one presided over by the best barber. It always happens so. I sat down, hoping that I might fall heir to the chair belonging to the better of the remaining two barbers, for he had already begun combing the man's hair, while his comrade was not yet quite done rubbing up and oiling his customer's locks. I watched the prob abilities with strong interest. When I saw that No. 2 was gaining on No. 1, my interest grew to solicitude. When No. 1 stopped a moment to make change on a bath ticket for a new comer, and lost ground in the race, my solicitude rose to anxiety. When No. 1 caught up again, and both he and his comrade were pulling the towels away and brushing the powder from their custom er's cheeks, and it was about an even thing which one would say "next!" first, my very breath stood still with the suspense. But when, at the final culminating moment, No. 1 stopped to pass a comb a couple of times through his customer's eyebrows, I saw that he had lost the race by a single instant, and I rose in dignant and quitted the shop to keep from falling into the handg of No. 2; for I have none of that enviable firm ness that enables a man to look calmly into the eyes of a wailing barber and tell him lie will wait for his fellow-bar ber's chair. I stayed out fifteen minutes and then went back hoping for better luck. Of course all the chairs were oc cupied now, and four men sat waiting, silent, unsociable, distraught and look ing bored, as men always do who are waiting their turn iu a barber's shop.— I sat down in one of the iron-armed compartments of an old sofa, and put in the time for a while reading the framed advertisements of all sorts of quack nos trums for dyeing and coloring the hair. Then I read the greasy names on the private bay ruin bottles; read the names and noted the numbers on the private shaving cups in the pigeon holes ; studied the stained and dam aged cheap prints on the walls, of bat tles, early presidents and voluptu ous, recumbent sultanas, and the tire some and everlasting young girl put ting her grandfather's spectacles on ; execrated in my heart the cheerful ca nary and the distracting parrot that few barber shops are without. Finally, I searched out the least dilapidated of the last year's illustrated papers that litter ed the foul centre table, and conned their unjustifiable misrepresentations of old forgotten events. It last my turn came. A voice said "next," and I sur rendered to—No. 2of course. It always happens so. I said meekly that I was in a hurry, and it affected him as strong :ly as if he had never heard it. He shoved up my head and put a napkin under it. He ploughed his fingers into my collar and fixed a towel there. He explored my hair with his claws and suggested that it needed trimming. I said I did not want it trimmed. Ile ex plored again and said it was pretty long for the present style—better have a little taken off; it needed It behind, especially. I said I had it cut only a week before. He yearned over it reflectively a moment, and then asked, with a disparaging manner, who cut it. I came back to him prompt ly with a "You did!" I had him there. Then he fell to stirring up his lather and regarding himself in the looking glass, stopping now and then to get close and examine his chin criti cally or torture a pimple. Then lie lathered one side of my face thoroughly and was about to lather theother, when a dog fight attracted his attention, and lie ran to the window and stayed and saw it out, losing two shillings on the result in bets with the other barbers, a thing which gave me great satisfaction. He finished lathering, meantime get ting the brush into my mouth only twice, and then began to rub in the suds with his hand ; and as he now had his head turned, ;discussing the dog fight with the other barbers, he naturally shoveled considerable lather into my mouth without know ing it, but I did. He now began to sharpen his razor on an old suspen der, and was delayed a good deal on ac count of aeon troversy about a cheap mas querade ball he had figured at the night before, in red cambric and bogus ermine as some kind of a king. He was so grat ified with being chaffed about some damsel who he had smitten with his charms that he used every means to con tinue the controversy by pretending to be annoyed at the chaffings of his fel lows. This matter begot more survey ing of himself in the glass, and he put down his razor and brushed his hair with elaborate care, plastering an invert ed arch of it down on his forehead, ac complising an accurate "part" behind, and brushing the two wings forward over his ears with nice exactness. In the meantime the lather was drying on my face, and apparently eating into my vitals. Now lie began to shave, digging his fingers into my countenance to stretch the skin, making a handle of my nose now and then, bundling and tum bling my head this way and that as con venience in shaving - demanded, and "hawing" and expectorating pleasantly all the while. As long as he was on the tough sides of my face I did not suffer ; but when he began to rake and rip and tug at my chin the tears came. I did not mind his getting so close down to are; I did not mind his garlic, because all barbers eat garlic I suppose; but there was an added something that made me fear that he was decaying in wardly while still alive and this gave me much concern. He now put his fingers into my mouth to assist him iu shavingthe corners of my upper lip, and it was by this bit of circumstantial evi dence that I discovered that a part of his duties in the shop was to clean the kerosene lamps. I had often wondered in an indolent way whether the barber did that or whether it was the boss.— About this time I was amusing myself trying to guess where he would be most likely to cut me this time, but he got ahead of nie and sliced me on the end of the chin before I had got my mind made up. He immediately sharpened his razor—he might have done it before. I do out like a close shave and I would not let him go over me a second time. I tried to get him to put up his razor, dreading that he would make for the side of my chin, my pet tender spot, a place which a razor cannot touch twice without making trouble. But lie said he only wanted to just smooth oil one little roughness, and In that same mo ment he slipped his razor along the for bidden ground, and the dreaded pimple signs of a close shave rose up smarting and answering to the call. Now he soaked his towel In bay rum, and slapped it all over my face nastily ; slap ped It over as if a human being ever yet washed his face in that way. Then he dried it up slapping with the dry part of the towel, as if a human being ever dried his face in such a fashion; but a bar ber seldom rubs you like a christlan. Next he poked bay rum into the cut place with his towel, then choked the wound with powdered starch, then soaked it with bay rum again, and would have gone on soaking and pow dering it for evermore, no doubt, if Iliad not rebelled and begged of He pow dered my whole face now, straightened me up and began to plough my hair thoughtfully with his hands and ex amined his fingers critically. Then he suggested a shampoo, and said my hair needed it badly, very badly. I ob served that 1 had shampooed it myself very thoroughly in the bath yesterday. I "had him" again. He next recom mended some of " Smith's Hair Glori fier," and offered to sell me a bottle. I declined. He praised the new perfume, " Jones' delight of the Toilet," and pro posed to sell me some of that. I de clined again. He tendered me tooth wash atrocity of his own invention, and when I declined offered to trade • knives with me. He returned to business after the miscarriage of this last enterprise, sprinkled me all over, • legs and all, greased my hair in defiance to my protests against it, rub • bed and scrubbed a good deal of it out ; by the roots, and combed and brushed • the rest, parting it behind and plaster- lug the eternal invented arch of hair down on my forehead, and then, while combing my scant eyebrows and defil ing them with pomade, strung out an account of the achievement of a six ounce black-and-tan terrier of his till I heard the whistle blow for noon, and I knew I was five minutes too late for the train. Then he snatched away the towel, brushed it lightly about my face, passed his comb through my eye-brows once more, and gaily sung out "Next !" This barber fell down and died of anpo plexy two hours later. lam waiting over a day for my revenge—l am going to attend his funeral. NAM Trip over Lake Michigan Prof. Steiner, who made a balloon as cension iu Milwaukee on the 4th, and passed over Lake Michigan, gives an account of his trip, which is published in the Milwaukee News, in the follow ing shape: At quarter past six the ascent was made, the balloon going north of the Cathedral, clearing the steeple by about fifty feet. In fifteen minutes an eleva tion of 5,000 feet was gained, when the ascent became more gradual. At this time the balloon wag some two miles out over the lake. Here a most mag nificent view was spread out beneath the delighted eye of the intrepid voyag- er. The coast was visible for fifty miles in either direction ; all the villages and lakes in the interior were spread out be hind him, while before him the vast ex panse of the lake stretched away till the horizon terminated the view. The thermometer indicated a temperature of forty degrees. The current in which the journey was begun Witik of the ra pidity of about thirty miles an hour. 'Phis held good for some thirty miles when the barometer showed an eleva tion of 10,000 feet. At this point, and at this tremendous height, both shores of the lake were visible for 100 miles in either direction. The sun was fast sinking in the west, and the view was beautiful in the extreme. Here, for over au hour, at an eleva tion of 12,000 feet, the current, which had been carrying the balloon to a little south of Grand Haven, died out, and the balloon was completely becalmed, not moving a mile iu that time. Forty eight vessels were counted moving in all directions. The stillness was most in tense. The Professor says that in all his experience he never before had re alized such perfect quiet. Not wishing to remain all night over the lake, a de scent to an elevation of some 5,000 feet was made, With the view of continuing it to the water and being picked up by some vessel incase no current was found, the car of the balloon being a complete life-preserver. At the height mention ed a current to the south-southeast was struck, blowing about thirty miles an hour, and here the professor determined to remain, as it would carry him near St. Joseph, Michigan. In this current the journey proceeded for about an hour, when the sun went down and the earth was shrouded in darkness. There was now no longer ahy object to be seen with which to compare the motion of the bal loon and gauge its rapidity. In such a place, at such a time, the sensations experienced are most partic ular. Professor Steiner says that lone liness is no name for the feeling that came over him. Beneath him was the black void, overhead the stars came out one by one, and twinkled merrily in the vaulted sky. Toward the south a thunder-storm was seen passing over Chicago. At last the moon rose in great beauty, adding new grandeur to the Scene. The sight is said to have been one of the most splendid that can be conceived. At this time (9 o'clock) the balloon was 8,000 feet above the lake, some twenty-five miles from the Michi gan shore. By the light of the moon the aspect of the country was plain ly visible. Here a brisk westerly wind was encountered, which carried the Professor in an east southeast direction at the rate of fifty miles all hour. Soon the Michigan shore was reached, but not finding a good place to laud the journey was continued. Lights are seen; rockets asonded now and then ; can non was heard, anti occasionally a vil lage was indistinctly seen. About 10 o'clock a railroad train was heard thun dering along, and presently the head light of the locomotive was seen flash ing among the woods. The balloon was now going east very fast. It was quite cold, the thermometer showing 31 degrees. The Professor bundled up in his cloak and began to feel very sleepy. At length lie concluded he wou Id alight,as he was over a finefarming country, where he could make a good de scent. The valve rope was pulled, and down the balloon went till comparative ly near the ground. Here fiddling and merry voices were heard, and the tero naut thought this would be a good place to stop. So, at a little after ten o'clock the anchor was thrown out, and, after tearing up a fence, it held on to a good bottom, and down came the air-ship its a clover-field, beside a road leading to Mattawan, a station on the Michigan Central Railroad, twelve miles this side of Kalamazoo. The descent was accom plished most successfully, and once safe ly landed, the Professor heard a wagon going past, and called for help, when a number of young men came to his aid. They were greatly astonished at what they saw, and still more so when told that the stranger they beheld came from Milwaukee direct, by the overland route, ever before traveled by mortal mall. A Romance Courtship A student who had completed his studies and was commencing his pro fessional life under very favorable auspi ces, was on his way home late in the autumn to make a little visit to the pa ternal roof. It was in old times, when the only mode of conveyance for travel lers was the stage-coach. Among his fellow-passengers in the coach was a young lady of very agreeable person and manners, who first attracted his notice by her kind consideration for an old woman, who was assisted into the coach at the way-side inn. In the course of the day the gentleman became pretty well acquainted with the young lady, whose name he ascertaineti was Mary NV—. He began to feel a strobg interest in her, and it would seem front the re sult that the interest was in some degree reciprocal. In the course of the conver sation that they held together in the stage, and also walking up certain long hills, where such of the passengers as were so disposed got out to relieve the horses, they learned mutually many par ticulars of each other's parentage and history, so thatas the day passed on they began to feel somewhat like old friends. During the afternoon a rain-storm came on. The road became wet and heavy, and the progress was made slow. The sky was overcast, and darkness su pervened at an early hour, while the stage was yet several miles from the vil lage where it was to stop. As the wheels went on plowing . through the mud and ruts, the passengers becatno uneasy, fur the driver hat no lighbs. The young lady, however, evinced so much calmness and composure as great ly to increase the interest which the student felt for her. The danger was real, as the event proved, for Just as the coach reached the top of the hill the wheels on one side went off' the edge of the road Into adltch and the coach over turned. . The [Auden t called out to the passen gers to Ile still as possible, so as to get out quietly, one by one, from the open ings in the side of the coach which was uppermost. He was himself near the door on that side, and was the first to es• cape. He then assisted the others by feeling, for it was so utterly dark that nothing could be seen. The young lady came next but one. The road was so wet and muddy, he said, that she could not step in it, and she must let him carry her to the bank on the side. She con sented. So he took her in his arms and began to carry her across the muddy road, feeling his way in the utter darkness, made more intense by the trees of the forest that bordered the road. She yielded herself so readily to his grasp, and reclined her head so confidingly . upon his shoulder, that he was encour aged to whisper in her ear, " Mary, are you engaged to be married?" She an swered " No." " Are you willing to be my wife?" She answered " Yes." He sealed the promise with the usual little ceremony, and then placed his prize on a flat stone by the road-side, the white surface of which reflected the sky suffi ciently to make its form just visible, t after which he went back to assist the other passengers. They were married and the lady afterward told her friends that she always had the most agreeable anode.; tions with the idea of the upsetting of 'ts' stage-coach, though they could not imagine why. sittettigicr(?et. Dollinger Interviewed Ilts Views and Position A World correspondent claims to have had an interview with Rev. Dr. Doll ing er. From his report we make these ex- tracts : I ventured to remark that there was a very general belief that these " little Protestant sects" were about to be in creased by one more, at the head of which would be Dr. Dollinger. "No," said he, with earnestness; "be lieve me," It is not so. They call me 'the new Luther.' Heaven forbid ! have no ambition to play the part of Luther ; there is no Catherine Bora who is luring me away. am excommunica ted, it is true; but I am not a schismatic. And pray, clearly understand that I have and can have no sympathy whatever with the errors of Protestantism. I have spent most of my life in combating these error4and I am annoyed now to tied that lerotestant clergymen and theo logians imagine that I am in sympathy with them, or have changed my opin ions. Do they forget my 'Doctrine de l'Eucharistie dana lee Trois Premiers Siecles,' my work on the interior de velopment and the effects of the Lu theran schism, and my sketch of Lu ther? Ah, sir, I see clearly enough that the sudden notoriety which has been given to my humble name arises, not from sympathy with my desire to preserve the Holy Catholic Church from what I think is au error, but from hatred to her, and a desire to bring about her destruction. Vain desire; for she is built upon a rock and the gates of hell shall not prevail against her!" "But," said I, "is it not probable that the opposition of yourself and your ad herents—for already you have adher ents—to the doema of the personal in fallibility of the Pope will bring about a schism •." There is no question of a schism at present," replied Dr. Dollinger, "nor need there be one. To make a schism there must be two parties—one desiring to separate itself from the community, the other wishing to exclude their ad- ' versaries. Doubtless there is now a party which wishes to exclude us, but we have neither the intention nor the wish to separate ourselves from the Catholic Church. We are like the nun Saurin, who, in England, some months ago, brought her plea before the courts, not to be released from her convent, but to be protected against those who sought to expel her. We wish to re main in the church as a lump of liberal leaven until we leaven the whole, and we wish to do this without abandoning any of our rights. A schism in the Cath olic Church is not so easy as it is in the little communions of the Protestants, who separate the one from the other on little points of doctrine or opinion, and who then re-unite themselves as easily. No! I repeat again, we are Catholics, and we wish and intend to remain so. Perhaps we shall repeat the example of the Jansenists, who never accepted the bull onigenilas but who, for all the rest remained Cat h olics; or of the dissi dents of the excommunicated Utrecht school, who were treated tis heretics, but who rested nevertheless in the Los om of the church." - - I asked Dr. Dollinger if there was an organized party of which he was the head, or whether the opponents of in fallibility were acting without concert with each other? " There," replied he, " you touch a very important point, and one which 1 should be glad to have well under stood. When I speak, I express only njS , own sentiments. But it is evident that there is a large body of people who adhere to this movement who have nothing in common with me. I con stantly receive letters and addresses signed by Atheists, by Israelites and by Protestants, and to all these it is evident that the interior character of the move. ment which I have set on foot has not the slightest interest. They wish to at tack and overthrow the Catholic relig ion ; I, devoted to that religion, seek only to save it from what seems to be an error. Nevertheless, throughout all the World there is a hatred of ultramontan ism and a recognition of the necessity of erecting abarrier against the doctrine of the personal infallibility of the Pope. If all who share this sentiment were ac tuated by my opinions I could welcome them as allies; but as the great major ity of them are inspired by nothing better than a hatred of all Christianity 1 can have no association with them. It is certainly to be feared that the reform inside the Church will be forgotten and overwhelmed in the attack made upon the Church front without. I confess that one who takes issues with the Church, animated by the best of motives, treads on dangerous ground. In my case, I plant myself upon the position that I am not in conflict with the true mind of the Church, and that the Council did not express truly, in the dogma of the 2Sth of July, the mind of the Church. The truth is iu the bosom 'of the Church ; we must believe that, or we go adrift at once. I say to you that it is certain tl,iat when dissidents pass beyond limits' that are perhaps not well known, :they fall into the abyss, into nihilism. We have seen too many proofs of this. And I confess that while, in all the addresses I receive I easily find the negation, the denial of the dogma of infallibility, I look in vain, among elements so diverse, for au affirmative agreement. But all we de sire are tentative measures; provisional measures for repelling the dogma, and for maintaining the just rights of the civil power, which this dogma, i n our opinion, invades. In the course of the conversation Dr. Dollinger repeated, over and over again, that he did not wish for a separation of Church and State, and that he did not think such a separation in Bavaria would be possible. Said he : " Here the church is very powerful, and the peoplealwostuuiversally regard as indispensable a close union of the schools, which are State institutions, with the Church. Ido not say they are right or wrong—l state the fact." The Ex-Emperor's Intrigue with Mar guerite Hellanger The following editorial from the Lon don Tinies, on an incident in the pri vate life of the ex-Emperor Napoleon, elicited a denial from the ex-Ernpres.s Eugenie that she ever contemplated divorce, as alleged therein: 'l`owarti the latter end of November, ISW, the Empress Eugenie startled the friends and enemies of the Bonaparte dynasty by a private visit to this coun try. Although the Emperor, made aware of her resolution at the eleventh hour, so far saved appearances as to be "just in time" to see her ofrat the North ern Railway terminus, and although it was given out that the Empress' journey had no other object than to spend a few days with her former governess in Scot land, still there was something so sud den and clandestine in her departure and in her style of travelling that It could not fail at the time to give rise to every variety of report and conjecture. The members of the French Embassy in London, whom the telegraph ac quainted with the Empress' move ments, attended at an early hour to re ceive their sovereign's consort at any of the stations at which she might be ex pected to arrive. Somehow, the au gust traveller contrived to escape their attentions, and drove unrecognized, and accompanied only by one gen tleman and two ladles of her suite, to Caldridge's Hotel, whence, after a quiet saunter In Regent street, she proceeded by rail to Scotland, and was next heard of at Edinburgh, at Glasgow, and on the track of Summer tourists in the Highlands. After a three weeks' stay, and a private visit to the Queen at Wind sor, she re-appeared at the Tuileries. One explanation ascribed the Imperial lady's visit to grief for the death of her sister, the Duchess of Alva ; another to a passing fit of harmless eccentricity; another to a longing, natural in one not born in the • purple, to withdraw, for however short a period, from the weary monotony of her lofty station. But none of these seemed sufficient, and the supposition which obtained most public favor was that the flight of the Empress was the result of some storm in the Imperial household; and, as Eugenie was extremely devout, and at that moment the Emperor had just openly countenanced the Italian inva sion of the Marches and Umbria, and was endeavoring to prevail on the Pope to consent to the loss of those provinces, it was surmised that husband and wife had quarreled about the Roman ques tion. But there were, besides, shrewder newsmongers, who asserted that jeal ousy was at the bottom of the Imperial disagreement; that the Empress had taken umbrage at some indiscretion of her lord the Emperor, and had vowed not to go back to him unless the cause of the offence was removed. Whatever mystery might yet have hung upon that now almost forgotten episode in a wedded life which has been otherwise singularly free from domes tic clouds, has been unveiled by the sen tence pronounced by the French Court of Cessation in favor of M. Devienne, the late first President of the Court of Paris. It seems now certain that the Emperor bad really, some time before that short breach of his domestic peace, succumbed to the fascinations of a young lady whose beauty was the theme of much conversation in the Paris world, and that the displeasure of the Empress was caused by the reports which reached her of the degree of inti macy existing between this lady and the Emperor, and of the consequences the connection had entailed, which could hardly fail to lead to some scan dalous exposure. The happiness of the wife and the safety of the husband re quired something more than the re moval of the rival. It was necessary to obtain from her a retraction of the as sertions upon which she founded her claims, and upon the strength of which she threatened to bring the Emperor before a court of law. The Empress, generously giving up all idea of a di vorce, and consenting to a reconcilia tion with her erring husband, exerted herself to extort from her rival a decla ration to the effect that she had deceived the Emperor, and that their intercourse had no such results as she had led him to believe. We do not think that, out of France at least, people will greatly concern themselves about the part played by the Chief President of the Imperial Court in this delicate transaction. All the in terest concentrates itself on one point, and that is the wholesome fear the Em peror Napoleon entertained us to the consequences of , his indiscretion. Be was at that time at the hei g ht. of his popu larity, for his Lombard campaign had won him the applause even of his ene mies, while the annexation of Savoy and Nice had reconciled to him the ad vocates of a more strictly national poli cy. But a law-suit such as his culpable attachment so nearly involved him in, teas more than, even in all his might, he would have ventured to face. His wife, though placable to the fault,would have been inexorable to the expo sure, and peace could hardly have been made until a means had been found to hush up the scandal. The Emperor's prospects for himself and his dynasty would have lost much of their bright ness, and the nation which had condon ed the coup d'etat and accepted personal rule, would have murmured at domestic rregularities to which, generally, socie ty shows only too much indulgence, but which the high rank of the ()Wender would not have allowed it to Ignore. In our age, when we place kings and princes above us, we expect them to be the best among us ; and if they actually are not what we would have them, we insist, at least, on their seeming to lu so. Scenes In Africa An Aron I'lllr—A Wonderful Ciorn,--My4 terles of Robyn , rlean Amusements. In reviewing a recent volume from the pen of Lieutenant-Colonel C. S. Vereker, the London Examiner says: "After remaining for a time in Al giers, visiting the palaces, the monas teries, the ruins and the chief 'show places of the city and its vicinity, Colo nel Vereker set oil for the interior. On his way he was fortunate enough to wit ness the celebrated Fair at Boulfarik, which is frequented by the wild Berber and Arab tribes from the mountains.— There he saw Kabyles in great numbers selling olive oil out of wild boar skins, Arabs with their sheep and herds, and Moabites and Jews offering for safe all description of merchandise. At Blida, beautifully situated at the foot of the Atlas range, the scenery begins to be romantic and picturesque. The lofty mountains in the background are cov ered with immense forests, while here and there Kabyle corn-fields peep thro' the vistas; from the heights pour pown sparkling streams, " which feed the fountains anti irrig ate the groves [of oranges anti lemons for which Blida is celebrated." From this charming place our author rattled off in the diligence, drawn by eight-in-hand, and soon reached the steep ascents of the Clint Pass. This wonderful gorge, cutting the Atlas range in two, deserves its name of " one of the wonders of Africa."— The pass is twenty-five tidies in length, and the precipices are covered with lux uriant maiden-hair fern, lichens, and long weeping grasses. " Rock swallows skim sportively about the crags, while eagles, kites, falcons, buzzards, and rav ens soar aloft in the azure sky, and the tame black and blue thrushes dip along from spray to spray, as if to keep the traveller company." But it is not until the Ruisseau des Singes is passed that the finest scenery commences—" truly grand, and more Alpine titan Pyrenne an," as Tristram enthusiastically de scribes it. " Soon after passing the heights of Mouzaia, the traveller reaches Boghar, a town perched on au eminence above the valley of the Client', and command• ing the northern portion of the Sahara. It is situated in the territory of the Oulad Auteur, who, although moun taineers, disclaim the appellation of Berber's (iietulians or Kabyles, and boast that their ancestors came from the East with Autar, a renowned chieftain whose heroic deeds are perpetuated in Arabic poems. It is a curious fact, too, as General Baumas has pointed out, that the more the mysteries of Kabyle life and society are explained, the more traces do we find of the ancient Chris tianity of the Roman era among the de scendants of the Berbers. Thus, in many of their usages and customs, they differ materially from the precepts of the Koran, more especially in the laws relating to theft and murder. The Ka byles, unlike other Mussulmans, do not regard the Koran as the only complete and universal code, but observe, besides, certain particular statutes,called canons, which they trace to a pre-Saracenic pe riod, before the religion of Mahoniet was forced upon them. After wandering for a time on the Atlas Mountains, indulging in boar hunting andpther African ion ustime tits, Colonel Vereker found his way to Con stantine, the ancient Orta, a city in teresting both for its ancient associa tions and for Rs extraord I nary situation. Founded by the Phomiciiins, some time the capital of Syphax, the birthplace of Massinissa and .1 ugurtha, afterwards the residence of Juba, destroyed in the year 311, and rebuilt by the Emperor Constantine, it is perhaps historically the most important of all the cities of Africa. It stands on a rocky promon tory surrounded by trdmendous precip ices, except at ,the dorsal ridge where the Mile grates stand. It is said to have undergone forty-eight sieges, and it was before the invention of artillery, proba bly the strongest city in the world. The city itself, however, Is intersected by narrow streets, and the houses are low and filthy. One Arab writer de scribes it as " the city in the air," while another compares it to " a beautiful woman reclining, clothed In rags." The Roman ruins in the neighborhood are very remarkable, more especially the lofty arches of the aqueduct built by the Emperor Justinian. Colonel Vereker visited Tunis and the ruins of Carthage on his way back to Europe. Although he allows that the country generally looks civilized and well-cultivated, he protests against the disgraceful way in which it is governed. Even in the city of Tunis it is danger ous to go abroad at night. Nearly every one carries a lantern and a revolver, though it is sometimes dangerous to show a pistol, as a stranger may be mur dered by a native in order to obtain possession of the weapon. Among the curiosities which our traveller saw at Tunis were the camel-butcher's shops and the Courts of Justice. The Bey has at present one wife, and thirty or forty beautiful Circassians in his harem. His wife wears a huge diamond ring on her thumb, and has her hair hanging straight down, and cut off across her cheeks. She and all the other Inmates of the harem are enormously stout ; In deed, it is considered disgraceful for a married woman to be thin In Tunis.— As soon as a young girl is engaged to be married, even at ten years of age, the fattening process begins, and she is stuffed, even through the night, with "kouskoussou" and water. The Sheriff's posse which left Savan nah on Monday night to arrest colored rioters on the Savannah Seaboard Rail road returned yesterday morning, hav ing made no arrests. The rioters had left the cars and fled to the woods. NUMBER 33 THE STATE TEMPEHANt E'A•OIIIVEN A Lively Time among the Cold-Water General 504 i Owens and Rev. Pennell M==9 A Slate Ticket. Nominated The Convention of the Temperance Re formers amsombled in the Senate Chamber at Harrisburg yesterday 'corning. The body was called to order by E. 11. Ranch, editor of the Good Tempt". General Josh Owen, of Philadelphia, who only quit drinking and united with the temperance men a 3 oar or so since, made a speech bitterly denouncing the idea of organizing a separate party and putting candidates in the field. Rev. Pennell Coombe sustained General Josh. A sharp colloquy ensued between General Owen and James Black, it being evident all the time that the General was almost entirely without support in the Convention. Dif ferent delegates denounced the course pur sued by General Owen, and he was freely charged with a want of consistency. On motion of Col. George F. McFarland, James Black, Esq., was chosen permanent President of the Convention. Ott taking the Chair, Mr. Black spoke at some length. lie recited a largo alllOUnt of statistics of in temperance and crime as impelling to in dependent action. Ile had lost all faith in the Legislature, which even went so tar as to unanimously repeal the Philadelphia liquor law of I,Str,". Ito had nothing to hope from either of the existing parties. which wore divided against themselves on this subject. Party success was their pri mary motive, and nothing] could be done with them until the temperance non have ten thousand votes that will be east front year to year for independent w 011, w hell parties will come to recognize the temper ance power and respect it. Ile hoped this small meeting would lie the salt that would save the many. What principle have the Democratic or Republi can party at issue thin day equal to the great temperance reform conven tion would be the Bible shepherd boy \rho with his sling slew the giant enemy.— Whether we be few or many, if We aro right, we should stand by our cause. There were but thirty-five in the first meeting called by Thaddeus Stevens, In Lancaster, to send delegates to the first Republican Convention. This movement would go on until it became a mighty in fluence. [Applause.] Colonel George F. McFarland and Mr. Lichtenberg, were elected Secretaries. Captain Bauch moved that a committee of seven he appointed by the 'hair to frame a platform and name candidates, to whom all resolutions be referred without. debate. Agreed to. General Owen then withdrew, making a statement deprecating the movement. Or, Coates, Rev. Mr. Coombe, Mr. Fenn and four others also left, taking seats in the lobbies amid applause from some of the spectators. Col. McFarland claimed to have acted in good faith. lie did not love the principles of the Republican party less to-day than a year ago, but ho had repeatedly urged his party to come with him ; but they had re and he saw no other way of advanc ing the temperance cause than by Inde pendent action. Ile regretted that i;oneral Owen had neglected to api KUM a committee in obedience to the direction of the Phila delphia Convention. Time would tell the wisdom of this movement. Mr. Kauffman said the bolters acted In bad faith by speaking on the floor against the Convention, without offering to com promise or harmonize. Rev. Pennell Coombe then Calllo excited edly within the bar and demarded to be board: and, after some objection, leave was granted. Mr. Coombe charged that Mr. Kauffman had promised to offer a resolu tion to allow the seceders to be heard, but has failed to keep his promise. Mr. Kauffman replied that he was ready for suggestions of compromise. The chair announced the following com mittee on platform and nominations : I). McCaw, of Allegheny; George F. Mc- Farland, of Dauphin; E. 11. Rauch, of Lancaster; S. S. Kauffman, of Schuylkill; lion. Mr. White, of Mercer; Mr. Ange, of Montgomery, and It. A. Simpson, of Perry. Mr. Rauch moved to name candidates to be referred to the committee. Carried. Mr. Rauch named Barr Springier, or Lancaster, for Auditor-General. Colonel McFarland nominated lion. E. IL,Whceler, of Mercer, for Auditordieneral ; Mr. A mgr nominated Jesse Evans, of Montgomery. for Surveyor-General; Mr. Mctiaw, of Pittsburgh, named James M. Sharp, of Oil City, for Surveyor-General. James Black was nominated, but declined. McFarland was also 110111illated, but de clined. Mr. Lichtenberg named Robert li. Beath, the Republican candidate fur Sur veyor-General. Mr. Kauffman exel aimed that this was a wise nomination. Col, l teeth is certainly a good temperance man. A Voice. So is Governor Geary. Mr. Kauffman. Yes, over the left. Ile vetoed the Duncannon Pt ohibition law bill. Mr. Bauman, of Harrisburg, nominated Capt. Cooper, the Democratic candidate for Surveyor -general. The Convention then at Ci o'clock ad journed till 1 o'clock. AFTERNOON SESSION. The Convention re-assembled at 1 P. M. D. C. Wright, of Dauphin county, ad dressed the meeting while it was waiting for the Commitee on Platform and Candi dates to report. At 140 the Committee on Platform and Candidates entered. Mr. Kauffman, from the committee, re ported resolutions nominating Barr Spang ler of Marietta. for Auditor-General and E. A. Wheeler, of :Mercer, for Surveyor- General. The report was adopted. The following is the report on resolu tions. WHEREAS. The friends of Temperance have, for the last forty years, endeavored through moral suasion and stringent li cense liquor laws, to correct the evils of intemperance, without accomplishing all its friends have desired; and viewing with alarm the demoralization and degrading effects therefrom, not only on communities but on the nation, and still maintaining the correctness of our views as to the un- holy traffic in intoxicating liquors as a beverage ; therefore, Resoll'eil, That, called by a sense of duty to take the initial step of organization, and the continued use of the ballot for the pro hibition of the traffic in intoxicating drinks which is at unceasing war with the Institu tion of the family, the church and the school, the only true foundation for a free Christian Commonwealth—in the name of Almighty hod and for I lie honor and glory —and for the welfare and protection of our families—we set up our banners, humbly relying upon him for guidance. Reset vial, That the Government has no right to authorize any business injurious to public or private interests. That per mitting the sale of liquors is destructive of both public and private interests, theroloro it must be prohibited. itcro(vcd, That the, history of past legisla tion abundantly proves that it is impossi ble to adequately regulate by license, so as to promote the public good, it trallie so es sentially destructive in its tendencies. /10,e/reft, That drunkenness is a vice that unfits any person for ellice, either National or State, whether as executive, legislative, judiciai, military, or municipal, and that it saps and destroys the moral,socialauld finan cial interests of our emmtry; therefore it behooves every g, foal citizen to strive and remove this evil by opposing the legalized liquor traffic. Resolved, That wo invite all citizens, whether tf 'tat abstainers or not, who recog nize the terrible injuries inflicted by the liquor traffic, to unite with 11.4 ill its over throw by Elllpporting the candidates this day nominated. Resolved, That n Campaign Executive Committee of nine members be appointed by din President of this Con volition to manage the campaign and secure the elec tion of our candidates. Resolved, That while prohibition of the liquor traffic in Pennsylvania is our pri mary object, wo in common with our fel low-citizens aro interested in and shall faithfully endeavor to maintain, through our candidates, the imperishable principles of civil and religious liberty embodied in the Declaration of American Independence and our Federal and State Constitutions, the inseparable Union of the States, (the inviolability of the National and State debts), with the payment of the memo as rapidly as our resources will admit, the faithful and impartial execution of the laws and the performance of assumed duties by all office-holders, the strictest economy in public expenditures, the fostering and ex tension of our public school system to meet the object and want of general and liberal education; the maintenance of a generous provision for the care and education of the orphans of our fallen soldiers; the protec tion of life, liberty and property of all in habitants of the Commonwealth ; protec tion of domestic industry and development of agriculture and commerce, and that the right of labor should be maintained. The ticket as nominated is : For Auditor.General—Barr Spangler, of Marietta, Lancaster county. For Surveyor-General—Hon. H. A. Wheeler, of Sharon, Mercer county. Mr. Kauffman offered the following res olution : That we cordially approve the principles enunciated and the mode proposed for the organization of the Prohibition Party or Pennsylvania, unanimously adopted by the State Convention which met in Phila delphia, May the 18th and 111th, 1871, and do exhort all prohibitionists to give their utmost aid for the speedy organiza tion of the State by the State Central Com mittee. mnAdopted, a d the Chairman of the Co- mittile on Resolutions authorized to give it • iti proper place in the platform. Mr. Kauffman offered the following ad• ditional resolution, which was adopted : Resolved, Tbat we approve of Bud adopt the principles laid down in the platform adopted - 1)y the National Prohibition party at the convention held in Chicago, Septom , her, 1869. Affemale suffrage resolution was defeat ed after a lengthy and spirited debate.bte Captain Rauch proceeded to r e fol lowing letters : NEW BRIGHTON, Aug. 5, Your communication asking mo to define my position on the Temperance question, and whether I would accept the nomina tion of the convention of Prohibitionists, to be held at Harrisburg on the !nth Inst., was not received until yesterday, it having boon misdirected. In reply, I have the honor to say that, having accepted the nomination of the Re publican party, I do not feel at liberty to take any action in the matter ludependent of the State Central Committee, hoc repre sent that party, anti whose advic annot now bo obtained owing to the late date of your letter. With great respect for all earn est conscientious workers in the temper mice cause, lam yours truly, DAVID STANTON. POTTsVILLE, Aug. 7, 1871.—E. 11. Rauch —Dear Sir :—The great Republican party that saved the integrity and unity of the nation, tried through the treason of Andrew Johnson, and that has so successfully ad ministered the affairs of the State of Penn sylvania for the past ten years, having hon ored mo with the nomination of Survoyor lbouornl. I do not feel privileged toilet upon the subject matter of your communication without consulting the State Central Com mittee, St 110 represent that party, and w• 110, I feel assured, act and determine for the good of the party in its widest field of use fulnes.s, and advances all Issues of progress and morality. With the greatest respect for the earnest and conscientious workers in the cause of temperance, and sincerely re gret that your letter is of 50 late a date [hat I cannot in justice to the emiunittee an swer its inquiries more fully, I am respectfully yours, Rommy B. BEATH. A delegate wondered how it came to pass that the concluding words of each letter, referring to the temperance mon, happened to be exactly identical. (Laughter.) Another delegate hoped no one would suppose both letters emanated front the saute person. It Wits only a very singe by insumee of two mom hundreds of miles apart thinking the Onto thoughts and speaking the same words, a wonderful ex hibition of intellectual identliy. (Loud Laughter.) Messrs. and Cooper, the Democratic eandidates sent no letters in reply to the note of Captain Rauch. Barr Spangler, the candidate for Auditor-General, tieing called upon, name a decidedly v igorous speech. Ile said he Was not sure but that the Convention haul erred in nominating all extreme Radical like himself. Ile had little of the Conser vative in him had been an RbOlitiolliSt of 010 old school, and haul flinght with the Republican party until it seemed to have filled its mission. Temperance fuljert.luive nothing to hope from it it it is or t I I7MI and run in Pennsylvania. It hash mvtr for !max) than ton years, but has drtnernoth ing to restrain the liquor traflie. The professions of its politicians and newspaper editors are hollow and mean ingless. It is responsible for the ex isting condition of our license laws, liur it has haul full power to modify them, and has persistently refused to do so. It cowers before the runt traffic, and has proven to be no better in that respect than the De , outer:my. The only hope left to TOlllper alleo 111011 is in independent political action. They may not poll a very large vote this year, but they will increase it with every succeeding election until they hold the balance of power and compel politicians to accede to their demands. Mr. Spangler said he accepted the nomination in the spirit in which it was tendered, and would do all In his power 10 110.00Mplish the 110110 designs of the party which had put hint forward as a CalltlidatO. The nag of the Temperance men, which hail this day been nailed to the mast, would never be lowered until a victory was achieved, which would make glad thousands who now mourn. \i r. Wheeler, the candidate for Surveyor General, was also called out, and he nude a vigorous speech), hilly approving of inde pendent action and accepting the nomina- James Black, Esti., made a speech VOll - the delegates present on the 10.- 0011 which had heart tikes, and eulogizing the candidates who had been selected. lie adduced statistics to allow how rapidly rho cause of prohibition had advanced in other States after the formation of an I:Mei:end , ont temperanee party, and how futile hail been all efforts outdo without such organi- ZatiOD. A delegate moved that thanks be return ed to (lad and his blessing invoked through prayer, whereupon a minister who was a delegate, led in prayer. 'Such a sight in a Convention which had just nominated eau didates for noire, was entirely now, and the effect was solemn and After (ha Cralthaelhth of some unimport ant business, the Convention adjourned, with the benediction. General josh. ()won and his two vont • panions have published the following . cam , : 11a11111SIIIMI, August 9, 1571. —To Members of the May tionicution Mel (I, FriCMIN of in Pc n )13 yl runic The undersigned, momborti of the Central Committee appointed by the authority el the Convention held in Philadelphia May IStil and 111th last, being prosent at II arris• burg, deem it their duty to that body Pllll thin valise generally to enter their solemn protest against the action of certain of their follow-members, who, in violation of the action of the Convention in May, bane called and aro this day holding a Conven tion to nominate independent ea riditlunw for Auditor-General and Surveyor. C (mural, thereby ignoringf, the plan of action ;Wilms I in May loot: and having been informed the men engaged In this movement that it is purely an individual enterprise, and that no one could be allowed to take part in the proceedings unless willing to pledge him self tu carry out the objects named in the call, and having failed to obtain any change of purpose on the part of those engaged in the revolutionary movement, wo du hereby declare that the said Convention and 11111 nominations mode by it are In violation or the action of the May Convention, and with out authority from the State Central Com mittee. JOSHUA T. OwEN, I'. COOMBE, EDWIN U. CoATES. "fore of the Man Domingo Job Almost every day brings to light HOlllO new fact, exposing the duplicity of the President in regard to San Domingo. That strong word is used, because no other fits the occasion so exactly or tells the whole truth honestly. In a message to Congress last April, he pretended to renounce the project entirely, " and referred the matter to the ;judgmentof the American people." There never was any such intention, and the message was only contrived to mislead the country, so that the project could be pursued with more success, under the cover of this delusion. The scheme of a fraudu lent lease of Samana was contrived by Fabens, not only with the knowledge, but with the direct personal aid of the Presi dent, who recently recommended him to the postmaster of Boston and (Ahern, in order to raise the money for that purpose. This fact has never been disputed, and con tradiction of it is now challenged, while the President happens to be accidentally In Washington. It has been heretofore Hhown, that this Rase VMS perfectly understood on the island, and that the motley to be derived from it, together with the ships of war which aro still shamefully kept there by the President's order, wore the only means by which Baez could hold on to power.— But there appears to have been a job with in a job. The only lease ever made for Samara, which ex,pired at the end of four months by lapse of the treaty, cost tan country e,149,000, which the President drew out of the secret-service fund, and applied to that object. The speculators, who, with the President's consent and co-operation, have audaciously lei:mined to renew that lease, In order to maintain their foothold in San Dinning°, looking ultimately to nexation, borrowed money reeently in Now York, and gave t h at r obligations, founded on the loose, for $ re,ooo. They sold this contract for f'. - iii,l7oo in cash and 32.5,We In inferior anus; 'so that Baez will get one-third of the snot condition ed fur the lease, with a lot of con demned antis and ammunition, while those concerned In the job Intend to claim $150,- 000 from the United States. This In the mint of 1,118111(38H in which the President has been engaged at Long Branch. A recent letter front San Domingo, addressed to M r.I I ateh, of Connecticut, who was HO cruelly out raged, in order to aid the commiracy of an nexation, confirms previous intelligence to the same effect, as will be seen by the fol lowing extract: SAN DOMINO() CITY, July IS, 137!. No money of any conneimenco in in cir culation, but It Is reported that the steamer Pont (Spofford itt Brothern') Is to bringout llfty thousand dollars. It is certain that the Tybee brought out a lot of arms nod am munitionn.for them. It is said that Fa bens ham boeu so successful as to mortgage to some New York parties the amount due this Government tor the year's lease of Saloons, giving receipt in full, and has re ceived anti amount and arms In payment. The two chips still remain tit Somalia. I understand the Swatara WON to pass the hurricane season in the Catoleram; she is expected to arrive here soon. Baez IN going to Santiago the moment the money arrives, and without doubt will then issue him paper currency, which is now lying Lin the treasury.— Wunkingten I Patriot. Destructive Fire in neon' Mine Mallen Crimuc, Pa., August 10.—A lire broke out lu No. 6 miuo, Lehigh Coal end Navigation Company, Summit Hill, at 3 o'clock this morning. There were no miners nor animals in it at the time. The origin of the tire is unknown, as the air is so bad the men cannot go in. A number who tried were overcome with the gases, and some are still sick. If the lire is not put out great damage will be the conse quence. The vein of coal runs along the Panther Creek Valley to Tamaqua, and a number of slopes tap it. It also crosses the Nesquehoning tunnel Borne distance from the mouth of the south approach. If-the fire continues it is feared the gas and bad air will stop the work. At this time it is impossible to find out what damage has been or may be done. Submarine divers were telegraphed for today, and it is hoped that they will be able to, enter the mine to morrow. The latest to the Coal Gazette says the superintendent of mines at Sum mit Hill is stilt sick, and that men had not boon able to enter up to 7 o'clock.