THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCE& PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY BY H. O. SMITH & CO A. J. STEINMAN H. G. SMITH TERMS—Two Dollars per annum payable l i all cases In advance. 6 , THE LANCASTER DAILY INTELLICIENCER 18 published every evening, Sunday excepted, at Si per annum In advance. Coarrica or C OFFICE—So SQUARE. , Voettp. A SONG OF OCTOBER. October strews the woodland o'er With ninny a brilliant color; The world Is brighter than before— Why should our hearts be duller'. Horror• and the scarlet leaf, . . . . Sad thoughLa and Runny weather All me! the glory and the grief Agree not well together. This Is the parting season—this The Uwe when triends are flying And lovers now, with many IL l oan Their long farewells are sighing. Why In earth en gaily Brent Thin pomp Ghat Autumn beareth A funeral seems. where every guest A bridal garment weareth. Ruch one of us, perehance, may her. On some blue morn hereafter, Return to view the gaudy year, But not for boyish laughter. WP then shall be old wrl nkled men, Onr brows With sliver laden, Am! thou thin glee may'st seek again But never inure a Midden I Nature, perhaps, foresees that Spring' Will timeh her Ireined bosom, And that a few brief months will bring Thd bird, the bee, the blossom. All! this, wild forests do not know— Or would less brightly wit ll, The virgin 'that lolorns tits!, so Will neverrollse hither. I+llscrltancou.%. Tallorlana; Or Scintillations of the Shopbuard. Ercc• -Eavles, and I 1,1 , :t II EftS lern " Landlord, MI our t.tlassos, 'till they all rtm For Ltl l.v night we'll 111 , 1,3% Inerry he, and to morrow well lie solp,r," Forty years ago, " Free-and-Easy" organizations were elanish, eonvivial assemblies, among median ics find work ingmen. What we mean by elanisli iv, that they were excittxire —each mechan ical or laboring occupation having its own, and in which no intruder of a dif ent prolessiOn would be allowed. There were, however, - free-and-easy sovieties of a mixed character, in SOllll, of which the qualifications wore loteilectual and literary, in. others merely social, and perhaps, in some, only animal. The social and unisieal elements, perhaps, predominated in ;ill of them, for a tra dition had come down to the back-shop that one or tilt standing rules was that each mein her must " .sing a song, or L It a tale, Jr drink a pint af salt waar."--• They usually ovetipied a secluded upper 110111 ill 51/1111' in which was a 10Ilt! table, 11.1111 " (.11:lir, all round ;" and had it President, Secreta ry and Treasurer. The President either occupied air Linn-ehair at the one end, or iii the cen Ire of the table, and with a gavel in hand, announced the routine of bus' !WHS. The hill of fare was different in different clubs, according to their re spectability and pecuniary means; hut the business vonsisted mainly in eating, drinking and smoking, interspersed with songs, anecdotes, tales, toasts. Wit and repartee. The wily alternative from Lire above reviled rule, was to retire from the remit, unless the party was exile'- crated by the whole club, or the throe fourths of those present on any occasion ; but it Was rarely that any (me drank the saltwater, or retired; tor, if all could not sing, they could generally "Spill a varn," especially, among sorb roving blades as tailors and sailors then were. So popular, so well-organized and sir ef ficient were these free-and-easy-assem blies at one time, that songs, interludes and farces representing them, were of ten enacted on the stages of theatres and concert rooms; and songs and recitations illustrative of the Free and-Easv-Clubs, found their way into the popular sting books of the day. 'fire st2iigH' usually sung, were either sentimental, comic, melodramatic, or love-ballads, and some of them were most excelleyily rendered. It is true, that the meetings would sometimes open a little still' and constrained, but when the members had about. three "rounds" and a few whl fs of their pipes or cigars, the avenues of sociality would be open ed, and every one would become free mut easy in the truest sense of those terms; and limier such circumstances, we have heard singing, recitations and dedlamations, on the stage, where we paid from fifty to seventy-live cents fur the privilege, teat fell fur below the quality of these heard in the free-and easy clubs. As a general thing, the rooms occu pied by the free-and-easy clubs were fur nished rent free, and well they might, for often these meetings would be con tinued as long as there was a shilling in the pockets of any of the members, all of which ultimately found its way into the till of the landlord. l'opularity in the free-and-easy required a peculiar— indeed we may say a very peculiar kind of talent 47 and therefore we might often find men who could "shine" there, who were as inefficient in any other sphere of life, as a " 11. h out of water." A good talker, a good singer, and a good &hiker and smoker—especially the latter two qualities—were generally held in the highest esteem. (if course the word good is used here in its free :it'd-easy sense, and meant he who pos sessed these characteristics in the great estexcess, Without regard tomoral, civil, or domestic worth, or even to artistic skill. The President was generally noted for the above qualities, and. if to these he ridded a large and portly form, $lll.l the power of prolonging these orgies until the gray streaks of Morning be gan to appear, he Was considered the very perfection of an officer, and - one whom the members 'night honor with credit, to theinselVeS. As a moderately convivial and social organization, the free-and-easy, no doubt tilled up an im portant Vllelllllll ill the crganic struc ture of human society, so fur as it related to tnech (ides and workingmen. But ,there is reason to believe that they all became excessive in their In anifestations —that men contracted a hankering after them—spent there, not only all their (tine, not devoted to labor, but also their ',unity, to the injury of themselves, tun I their families, when they had !Lily. A. n u ll eXcill,iVely I ail./f iSI I 1, , 11 1),..•-alodeasy possessed soine ry p e culiar phases. Sometimes the • lurk-steip )wail be temperarily con verted intos , a free.and-easy—especially where such n club had not an.indepentl eta or separate existence—on holidays, or when a "big footing" Wilt , called in, or when a popular jour was about to leave fur other parts, ituil the ocea,ion Was honored by a gl':11111 "I,IOW out."— On some occasions, the tailor's society —where one existed—after the t thin of the ordinary business, would be converted into an impromptu free-and easy, and spend the balance of its ses sion in singing songs, relating anec dotes, drinking toasts, and discussing debatable questions, more or less pro found, and often considerable ability. in these exercises would be exhibited by the members. At these gatherings each member would take at least one drink, for, on paying in Iris weeklydues, whtuh wan generally twelve and a half cents— but called by different nanies in differ ent localities, such as a "Shilling," a ' Bit," an "Eleveripence" or a "Dime" —for which the member would receive a "check," which was "good for one drink at the bar." Although these so cieties, as u.general thing, us we before intimated, paid no rent for the rooms they occupied, yet, like the game of Keno, the financial arrangements were such, that the landlords ultimately got all the money, for nothing could be con summated without being baptized in "another drink." ' These drinks were various in composition and name, and the old stagers knew exactly what and how to drink, to enable them to hold out the longest, but novitiates were often compelled to "knock under," and make au inglorious retreat from the field.— Brandy Smashes; gin cocktails; apple, lemon, or plain toddies, either hot or cold; blue mountain; gin or whiskey slings; whiskey, brandy, rum and other punches; plain old rye; Irish whiskies; old Jamaica ; old port ; brown stout; Scotch and other ales ,• porter; ogee; Tom and Jerry; and dozens of other compounds, villainous and otherwise, constituted the fluids freely Imbibed on these gala occasions. Now, lucre is just where the great moral 0 rule" comes in. The human family seems to be so constituted, that • it needs relaxation, recreation and Amusement. The what, the when, the where, and the how, has been a subject that has exercised the efforts of moral reformers for the last fifty years or more and it is exceedingly doubtful whether any real advance has been made or not. Man cannot live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth or God," and if he cannot legitimately avail himself of this, ,will •• he not resort to that which " proceed- 01c' 16. 44/an?i*Oztet VOLUME 72 eth " out of the mouth of Satan? If man's 'twat mature has not been culti vated, th%re will be no security for him in the mere cultivation of his intellectual nature ; for the world has witnessed ten thousaud times over and over again, that intelligent people have succeeded to very little more, in subordinating the sensual principle to the mental, than ignorant peoplehave. Indeed their intel ligence often hasafforded them addition al opportunities to indulge iu the more sifctle and refined sensualities, and has produced a greatermoral fall. The inter diction of rational amusements,whether by family government,thecivil law,pub lie opiniou, or the church, drives man into those extremes which exist outside of the pale of all these restrictions, and he feels that he may as well suffer the penalties for the theft of a sheeP, as for that of a &ant. We have been writing of the abuses of forty years ago, but sup pose we bring the matter down to the present time, and how does it stand? to'the libraries and reading rooms of an afternoon and evening, and then go to the eating houses and drinking sa loons, and mark the difference.— Don't stop here, but mark the contribu tions made to the advancement of 'science, of literature, of benevolence, and of the church, and then cAnpare them with those made to the stomach, and to "the lusts of the world the flesh and the devil" and note the difference again ; and then it will only become manifest what advance has been made in forty years. But we have been inadvertently di gressing, and our digressions have been forced upon us by the peculiarities at our own experiences in relation to our subject. We have to mine extent, been "a stranger in a strange land," where no door of social ingress was open to us hut teat of the " baek-shop " and the " fret-and-easy." Yes, perhaps one other door was open—the church-door-- lint that was only Open on Sundays, and ttn Sundays there were no meetings of the " free-atid-easy." • Man, at a certain period of his lite, is a gregarious being, and, when in a normal (onfalon, is ut. ways more or lees of a social being—and especially so when he is" far, faraway'' from home. Unless he is one of those " whose mind to hits a kingdom is " or has t.upplanted an old alfection by the " expulsive power of a• new one," he is likely to fall Mto one or more of those social and convivial traps which are set for him so numerously and so blandish ingly throughout the civilized world, and therefore it Was not to be wondered at that the tailor or other mechanic should 'have made, so frequently his orizonslat the shrine of the " free-and easy." lie could even find an excust: for the frequency of his potations there, us the following anecdote will illustrate: A"free•and-easier" having returned to his home, in the morning afterithe sun had risen, thoroughly saturated with the previous night's carnival, his wife re proached him for his excesses; and while doing so, a cow quietly left her pasture, went to the brook, took a drink, and re turned again. "See there," said the woman, "you haNdlit us much common sense as that cow, Mr she takes a drink and then gots about her business. "Ali wife," said he, "that's all you know about it. Suppose another cow had been there, and she Lind said—here's to you Mrs. _Brindle, do you think she would have been content with one drink.... That contains the whole philosophy of duplicated drinking, in a nut-shat, and that was the philosophy of the free-and easy party years ago, nod perhaps is the spirit of all convivial occasions at the present day. We know not what the character of the free-and-easy may be in modern times. Perhaps the changes and innovations of forty years may have rooted them all out of our land. lint suppose they l o ire, modern ideas of relaxation, recreation and anmsement not having been elevated, or made any special advancement—like the fabled hydra of old, for every head that has been lopped off, it is to be apprehended that ten others, even more dangerous, have sprung up in its stead. From what we have seen of the gastro nomic assemblies of the present day, they are not so much a " feast of reason and a flow of soul," as were the free-and easies of the olden time except it may be those of purely literary or collegiate institutions. The contributors to the free-and-easy were less selfish, and had more regard to the social enjoyment of others than themselves. None of the members had "axes to grind," and if they were bent on having a " high old time," they meant" a high old time „for all around," and at the common ex.- pense. Even Tree-and-easier, we think, might have been reclaimed and elevated, and we know that there were some of a pre dominating intellectual character in days of yore. On proper subjects, and with proper sentiments, the sone, the anecdote, the recitation, the declamation, arkd the repartee and wit, are inure phy si&ally and mentally healthy than spend ing all the time,,lit eating and drinking and gossip—but even gossip, when sub ordinated to charity may be socially and morally useful. True reform consists in elevating and purifying th ngs essential to man's nature, and not in totally de stroying them. GRANTELLUS. • System In Brain Work. A correspondent of London ,SJcidg says: " I know a remarkably able and fertile reviewer who tells Me that, though over his midnight oil he can lucubrate orb cles'with a certain' sharpness and force, yet for quietly looking at a solo ject all round, and doing justice to all its belongings, he wanted the quit morning hours. Lancelot Andrews says, he is no true schidar who goes out of his house before twelve o'clock. Sint- • ilarly an editor once told me that though his town contributors sent him the Brightest papers, lie always detected a peculiar mellowness and finish about the men who wrote in the country. I knew an important crown official whose hours were from ten to three. He had to sign' his name to papers ; and as a great deal depended upon Ins signature, he was very cautious and chary how he gave it. After three o'clock struck, no beseeching powers of suitors or solicit ors could induce him to do a stroke of work . . He would 11,01,COlitalllillilie the 1111,1104 or his work by doing too much of it. He would not impair his rest by continuing his work. And so he ful filled the duties of his office for exactly fifty years before he retired ou full pay from the service of the country. And when impatient people blame lawyers for being slow, and offices for closing punctually, and shops for shutting early, and, generally speaking, the wider :Map ' tation of our day to periods of holidays I and rest, they should recollect that these things are lessons of experience, and the philosophy of society and life." Wonderful Preacher A correspondent or the St. Louis Ad vocate gives the paragraph following, concerning a new star, which has just been discovered in the galaxy of South ern Methodist luminaries: " On Saturday there came to the meeting from a mountain circuit, On which he is a ' supply,' a man of most wonderful powers. Born in the mountains of North Carolina, the son of a Methodist preacher, surround ed by no other refinements than the true refinements of religion, he grew to manhood without education. At twen ty-one he purchased his first English grammar. He studied it and mastered it. Rhetoric, logic, natural sciences fol lowed. God called him to preach. He refused. Affliction came—long, severe, intense. It passed, and he yielded to the call. lie began his ministry. Prov idence threw him in the mountains of Georgia, on missionary ground and there he has a circuit. He came to our camp meeting. Plain, unassuming, deeply de vout, he catnet to work for his Master. He preached for us three times, and of thet, three, two such sermons I never heard. The writer has heard Punshon without enthusiasm. Ele,,bas heard all the modern peachers of great note in our Church ; he has heard Bishops Elli ott and Beckwith and Johns. Has heard Stephens, Toombs and Douglas in their palmiest days, but never did he hear from mortal lips eloquence that thrilled like the eloquence from the lips of that mountain missionary. Without a single grape of elocution; without any pretence to polish or elegance, his grand thoughts were like huge nuggets of pure gold thrown out by the rude miner from a California vein. The very remem brance of some passages of the sermon on the spirituality of man's nature, and God's response to it, causes my nerves to tingle even now." General Butler, in an address at Phil adelphia, on Monday night, tartly criti cized the great treaty of Washington. The General denounced the omission in that celebrated instrument. "Muriel, Muriel !" , The tone was sharp and authoritative, and Madame Thorne's smooth white brow contracted into a half-frown as she leaned out of the window and repeated her imperative summons. A foam bubble sparkling on thebreak er's brim—a butterfly poising in mid-air —a thistledown careering in the breeze —how shall I describe the airy lightness, the perfect grace of Muriel's motion as :she came dancing, floating upthe broad lawn, and stood before the open win dow! "Well, auntie?" "Come in, Muriel: I wish to have a little serious conversation with you." The limpid gray eyes shot one rebel lious flash from under theirsilken lashes, and the rich red mouth took on an un mistakable pout. "Is it about Lawyer Grant ?" "Yes, Muriel. That worthy gentle man has magnanimously overlooked your scornful reception of his avowal of love, and renews his offer of hand, heart and fortune." "And if I refuse?" "Then the mortgage which he holds on Buckdale will be foreclosed immedi ately, and you an'tl.. I will be homeless outcasts." "And so you propose to sell me to Lawyer Grant Even madame's well-bred composure was not quite proof against the bitter scorn in the question, and she flushed a little as she replied: " Don't be vulgar, child. That ques tion showed the tint of your Irish blood. Mr. Grant oilers you a .home, riches, and an honorable name." " An offer that I despise and reject." Madame Thorne's snowy eyelids went own, and her snowy hands went up, in token of her horror. " I ngrate! Traitor! I sheltered and cared for you in your infancy, kept you from the almshouse—and now you will not make this trifling sacrifice to save my old age from want." Not to save your life of mine !" the gray eyes glittered now, and the quick blood burned like a crimson stain iu either girlish cheek. Not for \ our sake, Aunt Muriel, mir tosave the whole world, would I thus degrade myself." Mrs. Thorne's cold blue eyes fastened themselves on Afuriel's glowing face in iitiless scorn. " Will you tell me, Muriel Vance, how you propose to support yourself? You have no money, no accomplish ments, and no special aptitude, that 1 have yet discovered, for making your se!f useful in anyway whatever, Muriel gave a littl sigh. " I am a sad silipea . race, aunty—l or knowledge it. But it is said there is a special Providence tha t watches over fools. On that I place my reliance. But there, I see you are angry, so I will say no more.'' And to Mrs. Thorne's infinite disgust she began caroling a wild, rhythmic melody, her little slippered feet keeping time, as she whirled down the long piazza in a perfect Melee of whirls, pi rouettes, and impromptu "pai de ftm einatiun," till at last, with a grand flourish, shestood before her aunt, flush ed, panting, and smiling. "I have danced away all my ill-hu mor, dear auntie—" "Encore! encore!" etled a wheazy, cracked voice behind her, and Muriel turned to see the wrinkled face and leering eyes of Lawyer Grant. " A light heart makes light feet," he said, chuckling and rubbing his with ered hands in ecstasy; "eh, Miss Mu riel But Muriel had fled to her room, a secluded little retreat in a remote wing of the great rambling farmhouse. Whemafter an 'Sour's patientwatching from her window, she had seen het all- Opiate(' lover disappear down the shad ded path that led to the highway, she prepared to go down to the parlor to practice smile new songs. But to her dis may she found the door fast locked and herself a prisoner. That night, while she slept, a plate containing food was placed iu her room and with it a tiny slip of paper, bearing these words: "You shall never leave this room un til you yield to my wishes. I.llcamr, TitousE." To which she returned this character istic answer : ' Without wishing to be impertinen I may say that there is a fair prospect my outliving both of you. 1. defy you until your death shall release me. MuntEL VANCE." For four days she bore her captivity admirably. She leaned from her win dow and sang snatches of gay songs when she was sure that her aunt was where she could hear her, and affected the utmost nonchalance when she saw Mrs. Thorne and Lawyer Grant watch ing her from the lawn.. But on the af ternoon of the .Tith she • began to give way, and longed with all the intensity of her nature for freedom. bile saw the shining river, free and unfettered, winding between the feath ery willows that lined its banks, and could almost hear it as it gurgled over its pebbly bed where the cool woodland shadows lay thickest; and the words of the bravpra she was singing died in all illartitulate sob, though her aunt was ill full view, strolling among the flowerbeds on the lawn. At last she wiped away her tears and clenched her teeth firmly together. " All's fair in love and war," she said resolutely; "and a masterly strategy must accomplish what resistance would fail to do, even if it does 'involve some deception.'' She watched long and anxiously for Lawyer Urant that night. Finally, when the shadows of the gloaming lay thickly among the tre • she saw a tall form coming up the p th toward the front door. . _ She leaned from her window, and calf:. ed to him in a suppressed void:: " (Jo to the kitchen porch and get the long ladder you will find there. Climb to the balcony under the window at the back of this room ; I wish to speak to you." A few moments elapsed, mid 111 oriel Beard cautious footsteps on the balcony, and then a light tap tm the window. rihe gently opened it, aml stepped out. Without raising her eyes, she began iii a faltering voice: " Lawyer Grant, when I requested your presence here, I intended to pro pose an elopement, trusting that an op portunity of regaining my freedom might occur. But I cannot do it. Not even to regain my liberty will I sully my lips with a lie. But, oh, sir, think of my cruel punishment, and pity me. Think of one who has always been free aud,untrammeled(as the very blrds)con demned to this captivity—and if you have a human heart, intercede with my aunt. Think —" but sobs and tears finished the prayer she would have ut tered, as she threw herself at his feet. The tall form came out of the shad ows, and as the light from the room be yond fell upon Lim;. Muriel started to her feet in mute surprise. It was a stranger's face she gazed up • on—a face which invited confidence, nevertheless. There was something about the mischievous gray eyes, cloud ed, just now, with a slight shade of ser iousness—au expression about the finely cut mouth, which, though parted at that moment with a smile of blended amusement and pity, seemed to her ir resistibly attractive. "Do not distress yourself, I beg," said he, as he gazed upon her agitated coun tenance; "and believe me when I say that I will willingly afford you all the assistance in my power. But before you accept my assistance, let me explain my presence at this house. My name is Fen ner Rossmore,and I came here to-night to see Lawyer Grant relative to :certain unclaimed estates in Connaught, Ire land. If one Michael Vance, who came to this country , some twenty years ago, since deceased, died without heirs, the property reverts to me, as next of kin. I have written to Grant repeatedly, but failing tozet a satisfactory reply, came over to see if I could not find more defi nite information regarding the heirs of this Michael Vance, who had the honor of being sixteenth cousin to my step mother—God rest her soul!" " Michael Vance ?" oried Muriel, her embarrassment lost in surprise; " why that was my father's name," " And his birth-place?" " Killaroy, Ireland." " Accept my congratulations," said Rossmore ; " for you are not only the most beautiful young lady in America, but the richest heiress in Ireland. And I hope," he continued, as he saw the rosy flush upon her cheek, that since you have deprived me of my inherit ance, you , will at least grant me the liberty of a kinsman's kiss. By my faith, it would be cheap as the price of LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING OCTOBER 25, 1871 Rossmore estates even. I assure you it is a national custom." 8 Muriel's refusal was accompanied with a laugh of mirthful incredulity, that was so irresistibly contagious,that the blend ed tones of merriment reached the two Plotters below.• We pass over madame's incredulous scorn and final belief, Lawyer Grant's gratitude at escaping the cowhiding he so richly deserved, and the details of the courtship between Rossmore and Muriel. But when the sumachs burned like firey torches in the woodland glades she loved so well, and hickories and maples shone golden in the uplands, Muriel, her claim to the Rossmore estate duly recognized, became Mrs. Fenner Ross more. And I am bound as a veracious chron icler to record the fact that neither party ever regretted it. flow to Get a Berth In a Sleeping-Car. I never left a depot yet that somebody was not put in my care. I don't know why this is; I suppose it is something in my countenance ; if I knew what, I would have it extracted. I don't like having unprotected females and school boys and girls turned over to me. It's a little hard on a man. And what is the good of it? Nobody needs protec tion ; if any one does, it is a benevo lent, good-looking, innocent sort of a man—such as the writer of this. I was reminded of this by an adven ture that happened to me the other night in New York. I was about leaving on the nine o'clock train for Washington when a man who was in search of me approached. I knew he was in search of me. He was in search of some re spectable, benevolent individual to put a woman under his care. And he did. She happened to be rathergood-looking, and I didn't object in a violent way,but I was neither very graceful nor gracious over the compliment. When I came to secure a section in the sleeping-car, I found that a delegation of pious people was going to Washington on some char itable business and had taken nearly all the berths. I secured two—at least I thought I had--and marched my female with her two carpet sacks, strap satchel, a mocking-bird, and a silk umbrella, with a waterproof and two slyxwls done up in straps, into 161. When we ar rived inside, I learned for the first time that my unprotected female could not abide the sleeping cars. She said she felt like sufficating, and I wished secretly she would suffocate; but when we came to occupy our berths, I made two disagreeable discoveries. The first was that the two tickets called for the same berth ; the other, that this berth was the upper one. My female friend said positively that she could not get into that berth. I informed her that it was her only chance to sleep, and she told me that she would rather sit up. I then gave her the fuRDIE information that that was all very well, but in a sleeping car there was no place to sit except on a wash-basin, and that I thought would be rather inconvenient, At last, with the aid of a step-ladder, the steward, and two pious old Pumps, my unprotected female was boosted into her roost and the curtains closed over her for the night. Then came the question as to what had become of the undersigned. I con sulted the conductor and the steward, and had the satisfaction of hearing the fact stated that if I had told them ear lier the blunder might have been reme died. But as it was, the pious delega tion had retired for the night, and all the berths were occupied. The conduc tor, however, told rue he would try and makesome arrangement, and then went off about his business. A drunken man had been captured on the platform as we started, where he was found addressing the stars in a vo ciferous way, the sleeping-car ticket fished out of his packet, and the inebri ate fellow chucked into an upper berth. I was leaning against the washstand of the car in a very melancholy way some time after, when this intoxicated fellow stuck his head out, and, addressing me, said : " I would like to have a drink." " Water ?" said I. • " No, darn water! I want some whis key; I am dry as a chip." "Well," I responed, "I am sorry to say that I haNk none about me." " Ain't,you the conductor ?" " No," I responded, " I don't believe I am." " Nor do I. IP you were the conduc tor, you would havesomething to drink. Where is the conductor? I told him that be was in the next car. "Nell," said he, "I have a great mind to get up and hustle round till I get a drink." "My Christian friend," I said, "there is nothing in the Constitution nor in the Sixteen Amendments that prohibits you from getting up and hunting a drink if you want it." "Whereupon the inebriate individ ual rolled out of the berth. He rolled into several others and was promptly ejected, and at last, getting his legs, dis appeared at the further end of the car. I took in the situation at a glance. Here was a berth vacated. Above it was a white hat. I immediately removed that white hat. I carried it along and put it over a Christian Association, who . _ was lost in the sleep of innocence and 'Aare and then returning I ensconced myself in a berth vacated by a man who had a constitutional right to a drink. I was dropping into a slumber, for I always sleep on a car devoted to that business and invented by Mr. Pullman; the motion has the same effect upon my brain that rocking has upon a child,and I not only sleep easily but profoundly. In a few seconds I should have been be yond all disturbances, but it happened I was awakened out of my first wink by a row in an adjoining section. There seemed to be a pitched battle going on between one of the delegates and a gen tdeman who claimed the berth to be the one he had just vacated. I heard him say, "Is;ow get out of that; " and he called the goodman the- ottlipring of a female dog , adding thereto some very profound language. The conductor came to the rescue of the weary dele gate, and when the man called atient ion to the fact of the white hat, he puzzled him sorely by showing him two or three white huts further along in the same car. At this the inebriate passenger desisted, but as soon as the conductor's back was turned, renewed the tight with the next white hat, insisting just as positively that that was his berth, and with the same profound and violent language and scuffle. He was repulsed only to begin again, and he kept righting these good Christian gentlemen who were so unfor tunate as to have white hats, until I fell asleep and dreamed till morning of my earlier youth—of the church not around the corner but in the glen, where the forest trees brushed against the windows, and the sunlight came down as if in re sponse to the prayers of the beautiful maidens, dignified matrons and snowy headed fathers of the land. I only awoke when entering the sinful city of Wash ington.—Donn Platt. The " World" on Women A Chicago girl last week had a young fellow beforeaJusticeof the Peace for im posing upon her, and the official, by way of improving the occasion in the inter est of good morals, remarked to the af flicted damsel that she should remem berthe maxim, "Familiarity breeds con tempt." "Alas, sir," she replied, "if that Was all it had bred I should not be here." Such perfect love as this is seldom witnessed in this selfish world. It was developed last Summer by a conversa tion in a dark corner of the West Point Hotel piazza. The Interlocutors were a young married couple. " Who's tweet ?" "Why, oo's tweet." "No! oo's tweet." "Whose little birdy is you ?" "Oo's little birdy." The re minder could only be expressed onoma topoetically. .Tbe Devolution, having learned that pretty lady canvassers for woman news papers are going about hugging the men in order to obtain subscribers, says : -" If any one connected with this paper ever resorts to such a course to obtain a subscriber or an advertisement, we beg to be apprised of the fact, that her con nection with it may be cancelled at once." Thus It is that poor girls are checked in every attempt to help them selves. But why couldn't a fortune be made by starting out some of the long, lean, bloodless, scraggy woman-women with directions to threaten to hug any man who refuses to " come down."— There's money in the idea. A women-woman who has started a paper at Portland, Oregon, opens her salutatory with this sharp broadside: " We have served a regular apprentice ship at working—washing, scrubbing, pat Ching, darning, ironing, plain sew ing, raising babies, milking, churning and poultry-raising. We have kept boarders, taught school, taught int.sic, written for the newspapers, made speeches, and carried on an extensive millinery and dress-making business. We can prove by the public that this work has been well done. Now, having reached the age of 36, and having brought up a family of boys to set type, and a daughter . to run the millinery store, we propose to publish a newspa per. (From the Kansas City TM", General John B. Magruder. This old warrior sleeps the sleep of a soldier in a rude Texas grave, over which there is no monument. The grass was growing about it in the early Sum• mer, and there were some flowers there, withered and faded, scattered by a wo man's hand. A votary at the shrine of nature and a finished diplomat at the Court of Venus, it was fitting that there should be largesse of green-growing grasses and love-flowers. If roses are the tear-drops of angels, as the beauti ful Arab belief puts forth in poetry, then is the lowly mound a hallowed spot, and needs not the sculptured stone, the fretted column, the ivy and the obelisk. Magruder was a wonderful man. He stood six feet four inches in height, and had a form men envied and women adored. His nerves were all iron. For eign travel and comprehensive culture had given to his wit a zest that was al ways crisp and sparkling. He never lacrerated. To the sting of a repartee he added the honey to the clover. He could fight all day and dance all night. In the morning a glass of brandy and a strong cigar renewed his strength, and caused the cup of his youth to run over with the precious wine of heailth and high spirits. He loved magnificent uniforms, and magnificent horses, and magnificent women. Gifted and grace ful in conversation, he was a poet in the boudoir and a logician in the barracks. He had studied French in Paris, Italian in Rome. and Spanish in the Halls of the Montezumas. The sabre exercise he learned from a Turk. His horse manship was of the English kind, that is to say, not graceful but impossible to be surpassed for firm riding and endur ance. He wrote little love songs that were set to music—one of them, " lino gene," had in it the plaintive melody of a lover, and the sad rhythm of buried bugles. In the Crimea, he astonished the French officers by sleeping at the front with Chasseurs under tire. In Mexico, he sent back to the Archbishop a lady's perfumed glove lie had found in his palace when the city was won, and NV ith it a note which read : ''lt is pretty enough to have belonged to a Queen. Would she have pardoned me if I had appropriated it ^" As the Archbishop sent him the next day a basket of deli cious wine, it is supposed that the fair owner of the glove must have looked leniently upon the handsome American soldier. „Later, he was riding with General Scott down the long street of Iturbide, General Gar nett joined them, and Magruder drew a little back for his superiors to confer to gether. A white puff of smoke curled out from an open window, a sudden re port followed speedily, and Garnett and horse fell hard and bloody. An ounce ball, intended for Scott, had broken Garnett's thigh and killed his charger. Fearing another fire, Magruder gallop ed to the side of his chief and covered his body with Lis own. The old man's eyes never drooped nor his voice changed an intonation. " HOW long will it take you to batter down that; house ?" he spoke curtly to Lieutenant' Magruder, pointing with a sweep of his linger to the one nearest and from which the bullet came. "An hour by the watch, General." "Then open fire at point-blank range and leave not oue stone upou ‘ auother!" It was done, and well done, and those who saw Magru der soonest afterwards noticed that lie had another bar on his epaulets—he had been made a Captain. War was his element, the bivouac his delight, and the battle his perfect happiness. Reck less, prodigal, fashionable, foolishly brave sometimes, a spendthrift, geuer ous,true friend and staunch comrade,the surrender of Appomattox made him au aged man in his prime, and wrinkled the features which had before resisted all the attacks of time. One who wandered far and long with him in other lands, in sweet and sun shiny weather, relates how, from Vera Cruz to Chepultenec, he went with Ma gruder all over the battle-lields of the Mexican war. The light came back to his eyes and the fire to his face when telling of Contreras and Cherulausco, and Perote, and Molino del Rey, and the Belden Gate, and Chepultepec, and the City of Mexico. His talk never end ed of Scottand Twiggs, Wool and Worth, Smith and Pillow, Taylor and Quitman -and all the young subordinates who afterwards played such bloody parts in the greatest of American dramas. Of M'Clellen he told this incident, among a thousand : "The fire from the hill of Chepultepec was terrible. Fifty pieces of heavy artillery were maased against my fourteen battery at a point-blank range, and in the valley below a regiment of Lancers were forming for a charge. Our fire had been slackened, and the men were lying down. A young, man sat beside one of the guns amus ing himself with picking up pebbles and shooting them out from his hand. The Lancers came nearer. I called to the young officer, whom I had noticed, and he sprang up saluting. " Your name .. ." "Lieutenant George B. Mc- Clellan." " Very well, Lieutenant.— Take command of one of these guns and disperse those Lancers." Thegu LF tiers rushed to their pieces. All the great cannon about Chepultepec went to roaring. Tke battle began anew.— Worth was sweeping up the acclivity, the Lancers were routed, and the next 1. saw of McClellan he was smoking a cigarito iu the palace of Santa Anna, his face as black as a powder keg, and an ugly wound in his arm." What a book his life would make in he hands of t , ome men. He once M ended to write an auto-Mography. Whether it was begun cr not, we do not know—most-certainly it was never fin ished. The brave, fond heart is pulse less now. The form of the stalwart sot- dier is dust In its far-away - grave. The laurels that he gathered . and wore so well are faded and gone. Back from the unknown land no voice will come to tell of what rank he takes in the spectral columns, closed up and silent, waiting the resur rection-day. Yet God deals gP , itly with. a soldier. When,he is brave, and noble, and courteous, and merciful, he has those attributea which assimilate heaven, and,therefore,is he fore-ordained to hap piness after death, It may be late in coming; the bivouacs are right cold and dreary, we know, for some, but after the night the morning, and after the Judgment Day the New Jerusalem. What Becomes of the Coln In the reign of Darius, gold was thir teen times more valuable, weight for weight than silver. In the times of Plato, it was twelve times as valuable. In that of Julius Caesar, gold was only nine times more valuable, owing, perhaps, to the quantities of gold seized by him in his wars. It is a natural question to ask, what has become of the gold and silver? A paper read before the Poly technic Association, by Dr. Stephens, recently, is calculated to meet this in quiry. He sr - vs of our annual gold pro duct, fully fifteen per cent is melted down for manufacture; thirty-five per cent. to Cuba, fifteen per cent to Brazil; five per cent. direct to Japan, China and the Indies leaving but five per cent. for circulation in this country. Of that which goes to Cuba, the West Indies, and Brazil, fully,fifty per cent. finds Its way to Europe, where, after deducting a large percentage used in manufactur ing, four-fifths of the remainder is ex ported to India. Here the supply, how ever vast, is absorbed, and never re turns to the civilized world. The Orientals consume butlittle,while their productions have ever been in de mand aMOLIE the Western nations. As mere recipients, therefore, these nations have acquired the desire of accumula tion and hoarding, a passion coaimon alike to all classes among the Egyptians, Indians, Chinese and Persians. A French economist states that in his opin ion, the former nation alone hide I away $200,000,000 of gold and silver annually, and the present Emperor of Morocco is so addicted to this avaricious mania, that he has filled seventeen chambers with the precious metals. :The passion of princes, it is not surprising that the same spirit is shared by their subjects, and it is in slittictitqat& this predilection that we discover the solution of the problem as to the ulti mate disposition of the precious metals. This absorption by the Eastern nations has been uninterruptedly going on since the most remote historical period. Ac cording to Pliny, as much as $100,000,- 000 in gold was, in his day, annually exported to toe East. The balance of trade in favor of those nations is novr given as $50,000,000. flow Young Rattlesnakes ire Born Interesting Studies In Nashville About the 10th day of May last, Doc tors Cardwell and Westmoreland cap tured, at Prospect, in the lower edge of Giles county, near the Alabama line, a rattlesnake four feet three inches in length and five inches in circumfer ence. The snake was sent to the Expo sition, but the managers not deeming it proper to receive it, It was sent to the Drug Store of Messrs. Berry & Demoi ville, who declined to give it quarters. It was then sent to the Drug Store of M. C. Cotton, in Nashville, where it has been since the 15th of May. When captured it had eight rattles and a but ton. Since that time it has been con• tined in a glass case, and has not partak en of one particle of food, though it has been tempted with mice and other small animals on which the reptile is accustomed to feed. The snake mani fested no inconvenience from its con finement, nor did it lose any in size or bodily vitality. Its eyes continued to glisten like maahetic steel, and its Is ll cinating tongue ready to protrude at the appearance of any one near the case.— Dr. Cotton thought all the while it was a male. Though small rats and mice have been confined in the case with the snake until their own hunger urged them to bite at its scaly hide, the ser pedt refused to give them notice or to partake of food. On two or three occa sions it has taken small quantities of water. On Thursday, at 1 o'clock, 011 going into the back-room of the store, where the case is kept, it was dis covered that the snake had given birth to four young ones, and by three o'clock she had given birth to three more, making seven in all. The young snakes made their appearances one at a time, and in a coiled or striking position, their eyes glistening and their envenomed tongues continuously dart ing out. The young ones are each from nine to fifteen inches in length, and in a state of perfect development. They are quick of motion and possess no or dinary spinal vitality, as they crawl readily to the top of the case and move with celerity across and around it from end to end. What is the most singular and contrary to all the resolved notions concerning the reptile, each of these young snakes has a full button on the end of the tail, which clearly refutes the idea that they have to be six months old before the formation of the button. The old snake was lying in her cage in a lethargic state with some indicationsoas the Doctor thought, of increasing the coiling family. The young snakes coil around her, and un der and over her, and she seems to have for them the natural maternal affection of instinct. This snake has been in captivity nearly six months, yet during all that period of time she has partaken of not a morsel of food, and has brood ed her seven young. As to exactly how long from inception the process of gestation or incubation has been going on, there is no means of ascertaining as we can only date from her captivity. Dr. Cotton informs us that he once before kept in the same case a large sized rattlesnake for three years and nine months, and that he studied closely its various moods and changes. This snake, he says, did not partake of a particle of food for the first nine months, arid but little water. He then gave it mice, rats, &c., putting the same into the case alive, and it com menced devouring them voraciously.— It never would touch a lame mouse or a dead one, fresh as it might be. When a young rat was put in the case, it would plant its unerring fang in some part of the limbs or body, and then wait until It died from the thorough Inoculation of the poison. When quite dead it would turn it over, take it head ,foremost and swallowed it, evidently drawing nutri ment from the poison its own fangs had infused. It shed its skin twice a year, each Spring and Autumn, a new rattle appearing at each shedding, which ex plodes the popular notion that but one rattle comes a year. Yesterday morning the Doctor took the case and placed it in the sun. From the effects of the sun three of the young snakes died. Two others became stupefied, but recovered their vitality on being removed into the shade. The circumstances of the birth of the young snakes, and the time of the captivity of the old one, attracted large numbers of visitors to the drug store to see the venomous family.--Vashrille: American. The English Langnage The words of the English language are a compound of several foreign lan guages. The English language may be looked upon as a complication, both in words and expressions of various dia lects. Their origin is from the Saxon language. Our laws were derived from the Norman, our military terms from the French, our scientific names from the Greeks, and our stock of nouns from the Latin, through the medium of the French. Almost all the verbs in the English language are taken from the German, and nearly every noun or adjective is taken from other dialects. The English language is composed of 15,784 words, of which 6,735 are from the Latin, 4,315 from the French. 1,095 from the Saxon, 1,669 from the Greek, 691 from the Dutch, 211 from the Itali an, 106 from the German (not including verbs), 90 from the Welsh, 75 from the Danish, 56 from the Spanish, 50 from the Icelandic, 31 from the Swedish, 31 from the Gothic, 16 from the Hebrew, 15 from ihe Teutonic, and the remain der from the Arabic, Syriac, Turkish, Portuguese, Irish, Scotch, and other languages. A Miniature Skeleton A physician in Nevada is said to have au imitation of a human skeleton' only four inches in length, so perfectly form ed by a Japanese workman 'that closo examination is needed to discover that it is the work of a carver. The Virginia Enterprise says : So perfect is the skele ton in every detail, that at the first glance even a physician is liable to be deceived by it. The teeth, the mark ings of the skull, the curved and flatten ed form of the bones of the fore arm, the pelvis, and, in fact, every part is fear fully and wonderfully perfect. The doctor:says the carving must have been done by a person well acquainted with anatomy. In its right hand the skeleton holds a staff which reaches as high RS its head, and around the bottom of this staff is coiled a serpent (the well known emblem of the healing art), which rests its head upon the knee of the figure ; its left hand holds a string of beads. Those acquainted with the hand iwork of the Japanese carvers can read ily imagine how hideously minute in all its details is this bit of fancy work. The doctor declares he would not part with it for $5OO. Accompanying the present was the following note from the gentle man who sent it: "What I would have been but for you." The doctor carried him through a severe attack of paralysis some three years ago. The Old Times The "Fat Contributor" has seen a great deal of this world during the past three thousand years, and his personal recol lections of men and things are interest ing, if not valuable. In his last con tribution to the en:tell:mat! Gazette he tells what he knows about Alexander, Nero, Diogenes, Socrates, Columbus, and Shakespeare, from personal ac quaintance. Of the Bard of Avon he writes : " I knew Shakespeare as long ago as when he tended store for the Merchant of Venice, and sold the Prints of Den mark by the yard. He was an honest lad with the yard-stick, giving Measure for Measure. He always wanted to be an actor, and was perpetually quoting Shakespeare to customers. People used to Lear at him for it; I have even seen the King Lear. Shakespeare only laugh ed, and said they were making Much Ado About Nothing, adding, ' you can have it As You Like It.' He was so fond of the ladies, and popular scandal, asso ciating his name with certain Merry Wives of Windsor, that his employer raised a Tempest about his ears that he ran away and joined a variety company. He made his debut as first grave dig ger in Othello." A Backwoods Adventure A Virginia banker, who was the chairman of a hotel infidel club, was once traveling through Kentucky, hav ing with him bank bills to the amount of $2.5,000. When he came to a lonely forest, where robberies and murders were said to be frequent, he was soon lost, through taking the wrong road. The darkness of the night came quickly over him, and how to escape from the threatening danger he knew not. Inb Is alarm be suddenly espied in the distance a dim light, and urging his horseonward, he at length came to a wretched-looking cabin. He knocked ; the door was open ed by a woman who said her husband was out hunting, but would soon return, and she was sure he would cheertully give him shelter for the night. The gentleman put up his horse aud en tered the cabin, but with feelings that can betterbe imagined than described. Here he was with a large sum of money. per haps in the house of a robber whose name. was a terror to the country. In a short time the man of the house returned. He had on a deer-skin shirt, a bear-skin cap, and seemed MU3il fa tigued, and in no talking mood. All this boded the infidel no good. Ile felt for his pistols in his pocket, and placed them so as to be ready for instant use. The man asked the stranger to retire to bed, but he determined to sell his life as dearly as he could. His fear grew into a perfect agony. What was to be done? :At length the backwoodsman aroseand reaching to a wooden shelf, took down an old book, and said : •' Well, stranger, if you won't go to tied, I will, but it Is always my custom to read a chapter of the Holy Scriptures before I go to bed." What a change did these words pro duce ? Alarm was removed from this skeptic's mind. Though aVOWilliz him self an infidel, he had more confidence in the Bible. He felt safe. He felt that a man who kept an old Bible.in his house, and read it, and bent his knees in prayer, was no robber or murderer. He listened to the good man and dis missed his fears, and lay down and slept as calmly In that cabin as he did under his father's roof. From that night he ceased to revile the good old Bible. He became a sincere Christian, and often related the story of his eventful journey to prove the folly of infidelity. A Beautiful Incident. On a beautiful Summer's day a clergy man was culled to preach iu a town in Indiana, to a young Episcopal congre gation. At the close of his discourse he addressed his young hearers in such words as these: "Learn that the present life is a prep aration for and has a tendency to eter nity. The present is linked to the fu ture throughout creation, in the vege table, in the animal, and iu the moral world. As is the seed, so is the fruit; as is the egg, so is the fowl ; as is the boy, so is the man ; and as the rational being in this world, so will he be in the next ; Dives estranged from God here, is Dives estranged from God in the next, and Enoch walking with God here, is Enoch walking with God in a calm and better world. I beseech you, live, then, for a blessed eterni ty. Go to the worm that you tread upon, and learn a lesson of wisdom.— The very caterpillar seeks the food that fosters it for another and similar state ; and more wisely than man builds its own sepulchre, from whence in time, by a kind of resurrection, it comes forth a new creature in almost angelic form. And now that which crawled flies, and that which fed on comparatively gross food, sips the dew that revels in the rich pastures—an emblem of that para dise where flows the river of life and grows the tree of life. Could the cat erpillar have been diverted from its proper element and mode of life, if it had never attained the butterfly's splendid form and hue, it had perished a worthless worm. Consider her ways and be wise. Let it not be said that ye are more negligent than worms, and that your reason is less available than their instinct. As often as the butter fly flits across your path, remember that it whispers in Its flight, ' Live for the future.' - - "With this the preacher closed his dis course, but to deepen the impression, a butterfly, directed by the Hand which guides alike the sou and an atom in its course, fluttered through the church, as if commissioned by Heaven to repeat the exhortation. There was neither speech or language, but its voice was heard saying to the gazing audience— " Live for the Future." New Eendering of an tpd Text. Spending a Winter as invalids at Ai ken, South Carolina, the Hon. Thuriow Weed and Mr. Thos. C. Acton whiled away one Sabbath afternoon by attend ing negro church, and were accompa nied by Mt'. John A. Kennedy, who was on a visit of a few days to Mr. Acton's. When they entered the primitive tern pie the preacher, who was a pure Afri can, was grappling with all the fervor of his race with the old, old, subject of the fall - of man. Sketching that day in the garden with its terrible results, he ex coriated Mr. Adam in this fashion : " Now, brederen, when the Lord calls Adam to 'count, did he stall' up like a man, confess his sin and ask forgiveness? He didn't do nutlin o de sort, brederen, but he say : " Lord, de woman dat Doti gubest me gub me for to eat." Then again : " De woman dat Dou gubest Inc gub nie for to eat." " Dar, ' brederen, you si.ie dat mean, akulkin' Adam was a tryin' to sneak out of it by frowin' all de blameon the Lord hisself!" 'rids new idea of an old question was too much for the distinguished "white trash " who had fortunately taken seats near the door, and they retired into the fields to indulge in irreverent laughter. —"The Club Room" of the Calory fur October. A Remarkable Blind Man Jas. Richard Golliday, of Bowling Green, Ky., is now thirty-six years of age. When two years old one eye was put out by a piece of rock, and soon after the other was put out by being struck with an acorn thrown by one of his lit tle playmates. He grew vigorously, and has always enjoyed good health and cheerful spirits. He was educated at the Blind Institute at Louisville, graduated with distinction, becom ing especially proficient ; in math ematics. Determined to support himself, he became a traveling ped dler of books. He invested his gains in a book store in Bowling Green, and was thriving until 1862, when his store was destroyed by Federal soldiers. He af terwards traveled with a panorama, and four years ago resumed his store. He is noted for foresight in business, accura cy in counting money and the admira ble system of his store. He recognizes persons whom he knows by their foot steps. It is said tnat he goes from his store to the railroad, buys his ticket, rides to Louisville, ttavels all over the city without a guide, and returns after transacting his business. In spite of his total, life-long blindness, he has q Made a small fortune, bei one of the most remarkable illustrat us on record of the power of will and to r ent in tri umphing over the most malignant de crees of luck. A. Modern Daniel Boone A Yanckton (Dakota) paper has this account of a famous hunter: "Louis Kelly Is perhaps the most daring and successful Indian hunter in the great West. He travels alone, wears a com plete set of buckskin, and has a turban around his head when out on the prairie. He is said to be a graduate of a college and hails from Virginia or South Carolina. It Is thought he was a rebel officer. He is about twenty two years of age, handsome well formed, and muscular. Thelndians dread him as much as they ever did Kit Carson or Daniel Boone. He never misses his mark. An Indian is as good as dead the moment he draws sight on him. He will travel weeks at a time through hostile Indians, and never ex press a thought of danger. Kelly is now on a trip to the head waters of the Yellowstone, a country never yet visit ed by any white man. He is alone. He has been known to dare a dozen Indians on the open prairie to fight him in a body. No Indian will ever get within reach of his deadly rifle." Eovlnn and Feline MaHeyde' Some curious recent London statistics show that three hundred horses die weekly in that metropolis, and that there are 700,- 000 cats in that city which are largely fed from their carcasses. These facts came out in the course of an investigation of the horse-slaughtering establishments of Lon don. NUMBER 43 IM2=l Maraging a Ma HARTFORD, Conn., Oct. 13.—David Kent ley, alias James Wilson, ended his eventful life to-day at half-past one, after a most desperate effort made a few hours before to cheat the gallows. Ile retired to rest at 10 o'clock last night, with the eyes of hie keep ers, Deputy-Sheriffs Finch and Lord, upon him. The former of these remained on guard until 2 o'clock, when he was relieved by Lord. tip to this time the condemned man had lain quietly on his bed, and was believed to be asleep. With Deputy-Sheriff Lord came Jailer Fenn, who entered Wilson's cell to see if all was right. The prisoner was then awake. He raised hie head and said: "hood morning, Mr. Fenn." Fenn replied, " It is rather a sad day fur -- - Wilson answered, " Yes, it must be so." A few general remarks were made, and then Wilson asked. " What time is it?" "Two o'clock." " Ah ! I've four hours yet to sleep." Mr. Fenn passed out. "GooMby, Mr.Fenn," said Wilson quiet ly. 'Good-by, Wilson. - ' Mr Fenn," lie said again, as MM=M= A short time after this the deputy on guard thought he heard an unusual breath ing inside the cell. Wilson seemed rest less, and gave other evillenCeS of pain. The watcher at once called Mr Fenn. Together they entered the cell, and found Wilson lying on his back, his right hand clasped over his breast, the fore finger pressing hard against his heart. On examining him they found a small wound over the heart. Front this hole, no larger than a shirt but ton, had oozed three or four drops of blood. Pressure on the spot seemed to cause pain, and the body shook convulsively. Dr. George F. Hawley, the jail physician, was at once summoned and found the pulse very weak, so low, in fact, that it could hardly be felt. He could decide upon noth- ing to relieve Wilson until a further exam ination was made. Later another physi cian visited the cell, and it NVI49 decided„,to hold a tnedical consultation at 9 o'clock. During all this dine Wilson was lying perfectly quiet, and to all appearance per fectly insensible. Ile breathed regularly and strong. Ills eyes and mouth;reinained closed, the eyelids slightly twitching. Ira tly lit upon his face the muscles would twitch, but this was the Wily sign of yen sciousness he showed trout the (line he was discovered up to the examination of the physicians, at a quarter to 10 o'clock. Soon after the medical consultation, the physicians' report was submitted to toe Sheriff. It was as follows : The physicians decide not to perform any operation. It is evident that the uncon sciousness is roily a dodge of Wilson's; he feigns it. The wound, however, is mor tal, and he would die from it if he had time. Moon after the physiolans left him, how ever, Wilson showed signs of conscious ness. He opened his eyes, and after a few minutes motioned with his hand for water. 1-1 asgiven hun, but the drinking of it seouted to cause great pain. Ile then nod ded to his keepers, who were now watch ing him with the intensity of cats, and pointed to his breast. lie measured on his linger about three or four inches, as if to say that the weapon used was that length. He then pointed tinder his pillow, and on looking there the keepers found a letter addressed to Sheriff Russell. It was as follows: To •S'lLe7,:iT Russell never intended to be hanged. For fear that you may blame some of my friends, I will say that the wire used to interfere with your arrangements, was procured by me In the State Prison two months ago. I took it from my ration pan and sharpened it on the stone floor. I then wrapped it in a piece of leather torn from the Bible and hid it, where I have carried it ever share, taking it out at night only. It is prober to die in the cause of humanity, but it is exceedingly improper to be hanged in any cause. Vki f Lso:v. In a few minutes Wilson spoke. lie said: _ " Man is a strange being." After this he made coins other remarks, and finally explained how he got the wire and how he used it. lie said he did not push it all the way in at first, but felt around with it for his heart. lie finally touched the heart, but as ho supposed a little too low down. lie thou depressed the wire on the outside so as to bring the point higher up, took his Testament in his hand and with the book drove it clear in till the skin closed over it. Ile thought he would be dead in two minutes, and as ho said this he remarked with a sigh: "It is too bad; I didn't iluieb the job." He states that while in the State prison he had several means of killing himself, but chose this as the elm plest, because the instrument could be best concealed. The pressure on his chest, a few moments after the infliction of the wound was very great, and the agony intense; but.afterwards the pressure stopped, and the pain in the heart began. This constantly increased, so much so, that he could hardly bear the agony. He thought that he would not be able to got to the scaffold, even with assistance. Wilson remained in bed all the morn- Mg. Ile refused to eat anything, but from time to time took a drink of weak brandy and water. Ile would not turn over in bed, but groaned and writhed with the pain, and would grind his teeth. lie in sisted that ho should say a 1 . 91 w words upon the scaffold. At 121 o'clock'his pulse had increased to IS. At 1 o'clock the Sheriff an .I his party ar rived. Thoy were ushered into the jail through the police and by the brainless and gaily caparisoned militia. The Sheriff at once went to Wilson's cell and told him that the hour had come. "Thank you," was the reply ; " anything to get out of this torture." Wilson at once arose, put on his coat and a tall silk hat, and said that he was ready. He was asked if he could walk. "He said "Oh I yes; I'll try it anyway." A proces sion was then formed, Sheriff Russell and Dr. Hawley supported Wilson on either side, while the deputy-sheriffs and other physicians brought up the rear. Slowly they Caine around the corner of the prison, and for the first thne Wilson saw the scaffold. He looked up coolly, but never flinched nor moved a muscle. Ile placed his feet on the steps, but his strength was not sufficient for him to get up unaided. The Sheriff and one of the deputies sup ported him, and sldivly the three 11101114 ((RI the platform. Here a chair was offered and Wilson sat down and looked at the crowd. He was an elderly man of about 50. He says he was but 48. Ills hair was very gray, and his face entirely free from beard. There was nothing at all vicious in his counte nance, although his dark eye was roving and unsettled. He smiled upon the crowd . . . below and on the galleries above. He was quite pale, but. nrin as rock, and entirely self-possessed. As he took his seat he cast a glance above at the rope, the noose of which the Sheriff had kindly lowered to - _ within a few inches of his head. Not a muscle twitched or a nerve shook, but the look he gave it was as unconcerned a s though it were a bouquet of flowers. Wilson arose from his chair. As he did so his head struck the rope. He did not notice it, but advanced to the railing, and in a clear, firm, gentlemanly voice said : " I suppose most of you know why I shall not have much to say. A man with three inches of iron in his heart can't be expected to say touch. It was not my in- tention to appear before you to-day, but the fates willed it otherwise; not that I fear death, but .each a kind of a death—not fit fora dog or a murderer. lam not a mur derer. I killed William Willard in self defence, and did jest right. And I hope his fate will be a warning to all other ty rants like him." lie then paused. " Are you ready ?" said the Sheriff. "No, sir ; " arid he stepped back and seized the rope, advancing to the rail again with the noose In his hand. He continued: " When a man puts this over his head, in the cause of humanity, it is not a die grace! In that cause I put it over mine. Mr. Sheriff, you may tighten It up, if you please. He then bowed to the crowd, and walked around the platform with a stately air, bid ding every one good-bye. Soon he stepped under the pulley, arid looked at the Sheriff. Chaplain Wooding asked if he should offer prayer. "Oh, yes, I don't mind," was the reply. The chaplain kneeled down but Wilson evidently did not hear a word, lie looked at the crowd, and up on the gallery where the reporters were. He seamed much in terested in their mote-books, and watched them closely. The prayer finished, the pinioning be gan. Under this ordeal he never flinched. He quietly took the chaplain by the hand, and said : "I hope, If you have the opportunity, you will tell the wardens of 'Wethersfield prison, that they may profit by the example they have had, to not oblige any other con vict to murder a warden for humanity's sake." The gentlemen then left the platform, and the Sheriff advanced with the black cap.— As he adjusted it, Wilson said: "Don't delay any longer. lam suffering so terribly [and he put his band upon his wound] that I won't be able to stand much longer." The Sheriff pulled over the cap, stepped down the stairs, and as he took his foot off the last step the platform gave way. Wil son fell at least seven feet, and being a very heavy man, his neck was instantly broken by the fall. Not a muscle moved after the drop. The man died instantly. The pulse and heart beat very rapidly for several minutes. In five minutes the heart ceased to beat, and In a moment the pulse stopped. In fourteen minutes he was pronounced dead. Five minutes after ward he was taken down, and in five min les more the doctors had him under their knives. The post mortem which was made by Dre. Jarvis, Crary, Jr., Hawley and others, revealed the fact that the sharp-points wire had penetrated the left vertlele of the heart, where it was firmly embedded. It was three and a half inches long and about the sixteenth of an inch In diameter. In his last will and testament, he be queaths his body to the Medical College at New Haven, to be used for the advance ment of science, on condition that the said Medical College shall agree to pay compe tent counsel to solicit the next General .As sembly holden in, for this State to pass laws providing against abuse of prisoners by officers, except in self-defence, and proper punishment for so doing; also, against the use of the lash ; prescribing rules for visitation by Prison Directors, and the general conduct of officers. The Pennsylvania Railroad Lease Case. In this case, to the decision in which, by Chancellor Zabrisko, we alluded yester day, the reasons stated are as follows : the conclusion at which the Chancellor arrived were stated as follows: First—That the Act of 1870 gives author ity to the United Companies to lease to Corporation of another State. Second—That their works form boll. "connected" and "continuous' lines will. - - the works of the proposed lessee. Third—That the DireCtors of these Coin• panies have power to sell or otherwise dl-- pose of all the property or the Compank except the roads and canal, and the Iran chises granted without the consent of the State, or of all the Stockholders. Fourth—That they have power, by con sent of the State and of a majority of tin. Stockholders, or of any other proportion required law, to Rea or lease or other wise ditipMe of these works, or to abandon them. • .. Py(th—That a lease made by virtue t f sucli authority is within the power dek.: led to the Directors, that no expressed or implied contract in their charters is viol a ted by it, and, therefore, the act authoriA ing it Is not unconstitutional. Sixth —That the purpose for which tin—e works are released, the benefit and adviiii tage of extended public highways controi el and operated by one head for regulm and easy communication froth and through New Jersey and other States, is certainly " a public use," for which property ton be taken on compensation. Seventh —That even if the Directors has not power to lease for a term so as to lit, i the Stockholders or their Successors. tI,AL _ . . tho leasing and delivering the woi ks to ti.o lessee, with a stipulation and obligation to have the shares of d Issentipg Stook holds valued and paid for, is not a tak lug property without first limiting emnpoh ,, don. Eighth That the Penns:ilvania Raitrend Company, the proposed lessee, has by os charter and supplements, and the pulite . Taws of Pennsylvania, as construed by ths courts of that state, power to take tholes , and bind itself to all the etipulatioe+ thereof The concluding portion of the deeision stated that ninny reasons against making the lease had been urged by counsel with great power and eloquence which were proper subjects for judicial consideration, but for that of legislators, of the companii themselves, and their stockholders Among these was the consideration as to State piney and State pride, which should not allow these works to be placed .unch•r the control of non-residents or of II foreign corporation; as to the expediency of per - matting an overgrown, gigantic corpora tion, like another Colossus, to place 0 1., foot on our shores, with another perhaps oe the Pacific: also, g as to thin lease for M.:. years impairing or destroying the right m the State to take the works at coot in IfiNf. These matters were Mr the Legislature the State. For the reasons ho had stated, the ('hai cellor announced that the injunction won hi be denied, and the order restraining the defendants from executing the lease Nil eated. etToot of lids Is to remove all. oh - stain es to the early consummation of the lease, though the decision of to day is an jeet to review in the Court or Errore Appeals, to which the whole ease will eventually ho taken. Chicago Reviving. The Timrs re-appeared yesterday niers. ing in a sheet neatturinted. Ths leaders deprecate the attempt of interested panic-• to take business below Twelfth street In South Division, and says there can be no question about the return of business hi this district. Meantime, the majority of tics inhabitants should be consulted. A despatch from New York soya the President of a bank in Chicago, which cor responds with .the Metropolitan National Bank, of this city, telegrapha to-day an follows: "Everything goes well; dopos its largely increased to-day, and money abundant. Shall need no currency from you, and our remittances will be large to your city." Every day brings fresh occasion for en couragement. The city is orderly, and re lief for the poor comes in abundantly. Busi ness is resuming, and building going on in every direction. A much healthier fooling prevails than the mrentsanguine could have anticipated. The reports from all the banks are substantially the same as yesterday. Very little money ban been called for, and the deposits quite large. The insurance companies that are solvent aro paying their looses without requiring policy-holders to go through the usual formalities of adjust ment.- The American Central Company, of St. Louis, commenced paying to-ninny. The Executive Board of the Republic In suran co Coll3Fany, of this city, at a meet ing to day, resolved to wind up: Their losses aggregate $3,600,000, and cash assets, $900,000. The Company will pay twenty live per cent., on demand. The Timr.l figures the total loon by lire at 150,000,000. The business of the Board of Trade ban been fairly resumed. The re ceipto and shipments of grain aro very heavy. A survey of the Tribune building warn made to day by architects, who report the walls and most of the floors good, and the building can bo repaired fur $50,000 'the original Coot WILY $210,000. Curious Como of lileptomitola. A curious case of kleptomania has come to light In Lawrence, Mreis. A burglar after breaking Into a house way captured, shot, and carried to the lock-up. Although j his wound was slight, was agreed that the surAlion should toll lin that he would not live more than an ho r, in order to draw a confession from his The burglar, after exacting asoiemn promise from Iris captors that all the money In his possession should be handed over to his wife, confessed that he was the author of many burglaries that had been conunitted in that region, and that he had secreted In Ash Grove Church in Albany, under the pulpit, two tin boxes till ed with gold and silverwaro,and in his room on Arch street in that city several hundred dollars in bank notes around the wainscoting of the windows, and in other places; also, that his real name was Carrel Sanborn, and that he worked for a Mr. McDmitild In Al bany. lie then handed over $l,BOO in green backs, saying that according to the agree ment that sum, with $BOO in a savings bank in Albany and some WO more secreted in his room. should be given to his wife. He had not robbed for money, ho said, but for the pleasure of It; it was a mania which came over him at times, and which he 20Uld not shake off until he broke Into some place. Tho dark lantern found In his possession is a marvel of perfection, and was made by himself. Sanborn's wife, who resides in Bristol, N. Y., was chocked when she heard of his arrest, as she supposed that he was at work In Albany. All the money and property was found concealed in the places indicated. Flearelty of Wheat The wheat crops aro short thin year in Great Britain, France, Belgium and the Rhenish Provinces. This deficiency has excited fears of a famine, and speculators in grain have seized upon it and greatly exaggerated it. There is no doubt, how ever, of a serious deficiency. England will need at least 9,000,000 quarters, Bel gium 700.000 quarters, and P rance 12,000,- 000 hectolitres. This is conceded by those who protest against any danger of famine, and who contend that other countries can easily supply the deficiency. The United States is credited with a surplus of 7,000,- 000 quarters—but the other countries which are to supply the rest, are not named. While there is no good ground to appre hend anything like famine, It is quite cer tain that the price or wheat will rule high for the next year. Such Is ever the case, when England and France are both buy ers of breadstuffs at the eame time. El= Indian women, in some tribes, are no longer treated as bearers of burdens only and made articles of merchandise, worth so much to their parents from the husband who bought them. As an evidence of the advance of civilization among the Western Indians, it is reported that on many of the reservations the courting of wives is car ried on In the same way f 1.9 among the whites ; the marriage ceremony is perform ed before a missionary or an Indian agent, and the wedding certificate Is taken, framed and preserved carefully. Only one wife is allowed, and no price is demanded by the parents or given by the husband. Washington nuttily and Relics Col. Lewis W. Washington, the head of a branch of the family to which the first President belonged, died on October 1, alter a brief illness of congestive fever, at his residence near Harper's Ferry, West Virginia. Ho will be remembered as the most conspicious of the gentlemen who wero seized and held R. 9 hostages by John Brown in his famous raid on Harper's Ferry in October, 1859. He posssessed a valuable collection of relics of Washington, among others the elegant sword ;sent by Frederick the Great with the inscription "From the oldest gentleman in the world to the greatest." Bovine Pinch v. Engine Strength. The Bulls along the line of the Perkio men creek appear to have a decided dislike to the innovation of railroading in that val ley. Twice have the engines, on the Per kiomen Valley Railroad, been attacked by these bovines. The last one made the at tack at Rahn's Station, on Friday last, and through it lost his life. The engineer gave the animal duo notice by whistling, slack ing up his train, etc., but the Bull mistaking these warnings for cowardice,plunged head formost into ths 'engine and landed along aide the road a dead Bull. Billiard player Perished. It is reported, and generally believed, that John McDevitt, the celebrated billiard player and ax-champion of the United States, perished in the flames of the late fire at Chicago. Mr. McDevitt was asleep in Thomas Foley's billiard.room, and caught by the fire before he could escape. Mo- Devitt made the largest run ever made In a public match, 1458. It is also stated that Gamier, the celebra ted French player, was injured by the fire. His place was burned out.