r „ ; ” 1.4 04' :C4Pa"- '' . • . . . . 111 •,.; . _ . . . . . .1 • . • ; . , ,• ; • • • k " • A. J. GERRITSON, Publisher,} For the Montrose Democrat. The Great Conflict Between Democ racy and Abolitionism—Or be tween Liberty and Despotism. Henry Ward Beecher, in a thanksgiv ing sermon in 1861, says : "If the Constitution of these United States, fairly interpreted, gives us the power to bring slavery to an end, God forbid t4at we should neglect such au op portunity for its exercise. But, if that power is withheld, or can be exercised on f pp by the most doubtful construction—by a construction which shall not only weaken that instrument, but essentially change its nature, withdrawing from the States local sovereignty, and coact-ling upon Congress those rights of government which have thus been withdrawn from States—then will not only slavery be de; stroyed, but with it our very govern ment." In Nov. 1865, in a speech at the Coop er Institute, Mr. Beecher says : "The North is more jealous to-day of State Rights than the South. &a e Rights came of old New Eng'and. We have no disposition to take advantage of our victory over the South by changing State sovereignty or local independence. The North have no right to impose re strictions upon the South which they themselves are not subject to. The North must remember that when the South lays down the sword, the war is at an end." On the 10th of June, 1866, he says: "I consider the doctrines brought for ward in the Hole*, by Mr . Stevens, to be doctrines of Belial, leading to de strection—phat is, destruction of the government.] If the power to abolish slavery can be exercised only by with drawing from the States local self govern ment, and conferring upon Congress tbore rights of self-government which have thus been withdrawn from the Si at es —then will not only slavery be destroyed, but with it our very government ; and not all the mischiefs of slavery rahoutd tempt us to usurp it, but freeing our selves from one evil,-it should open the door for innumerable other ,, , and 6:I our future with conflicts and irremediable troubles. Slavery is not the otry danger. With such armies, it is a matter of deep anxiety what effect this war will have,up sm our government itself." Henry Ward Beecher has some concern and anxiety, it seems, tin the iiherij t .s of white American citizens, and it is this fe-.in,T, that mnpels him to stand by the President, and receive the censures of the other Abolitionists who care only for ne y,l'oes. To illustrate the difference be tween them, and to show the determina tion of the Abolition conspirators against. the government, and their resolution to accomplish its overthrow, the same au thority—the Amencan BapiLt—is brought furward again. .It says: "Among the clerical clogs against the abolition of slavery by Congress, we are lorry to find the Rev. H. W. Beecher.— Mr. Beecher strikes off the Tight arm of Congress the moment it touchis slavery. He says: ' The Constitution of the Uni ted States stands upon tbe plighted faith' of all the States, and Righted faith is in itself the nature of a sacred moral princi ple. Our fathers signedl the bond and we accepted it. Can we afford to break it for even so magnificent a result as the emancipation of the slave ? Shall we rend the crystal instrument—the joy Of the world, and our pride ? Our faith is giv en and roust be kept. We, who boast of oar Constitution, must not, violate it our selves, in putting down those who violate it. We are not ourselves in a state' of re bellion., "Mr. Beecher says : 'No central gov ernment must be allowed to usurp the power, of the State government.' But those who oppose the action of Congress on this subject, are the opposers of eman cipation, either now or in the fa nre, the abettors and supporters of our country's grand enemy , . If Congress cannot use the war power to abolish slavery, there is no authority that can so use it. We are determined to have this government made what, it was intended to be—just and free. We want no St. Domingo ghost, stories .to guide us, no talk of Constitu tional.compacts that have been rendered null and: void by one of the contracting parties.. Slavery must be swept away." Here let - aim noted, that the South held that th e c onetiffidonet compact was bro ken by the North in refusing to carry out its provisions in regard to fugitiv e slaves, and that they were no long er under obli gations' to remain i n the lclnion with a. peopi e who'had vicilaterrthe'•contra c t made bytheitfathers. The South had as much right to go but of the• Union : as the North had to meddle with slavery.' In Feb. 1862 the Abolitionistki told - the government and the people' plainly:thitt: they had resolved to overthrow.,'ilie" American Republic, and erect a-tiew . M3o' on its ruins:This organ of theirs says': " A year ago we could scarcely irive brought ourselves to set dowr? calmly the, valu e of this Republic. 'The preservation of the natiob, the perpetuity of our fedei al charters, and the Union of the States as one indissoluable.empire, were consid ered priceless; and the proposal to aban• don our national organization, to throw Laws and Conslitui ion to the winds; and then to attempt the eunstruozion ofa new Republic, or some other form of govern• ment upon the ruins of the old, was so re volting, suicidal, and repugnant to every loyal feeling, that it could not 'be enter tained for a moment. " But the case is now changed. Men are beginning to count the cost. They are beginning to ask whether the terrible farce they are enacting is likely to pay. The question is asked : How much is our government worth ? All will acknowl edge that it is worth something. It has been bought at too great an expense of blood and treasure to be relinquished ex cept for grave reasons. On the other hand it is not worth everything. The price paid for it may be too high l Ay, hear it! ye that hold council at the White House, or stand up in the halls of legisla tion, this Republic will cost too much, if purchased at the expense of justice. If it makes no effort to secure liberty to all, then the government is worth nothing, and the sooner it can be swept away as a nuisance, the better for the prospects of mankind." The wily the Abolitionists planned to sweep away the government, was to re duce the southern States to Territories, as a pretext for claiming the right to gov ern them. This paper says, in Mart 1862: " The bill for organizing territorial gov ernments in the seceded Slates has been defeAni. Those who wou!d red .es h States to the condition of Territories are at gmatized as destroyers of the Union. Abolitionists and Secessionists ought to hang upon the same tree, is the impudent langua , re wnich obtains currency even in the harts of Congress. But war knows but one la iv To the victor belongs the the spoils.' Abolitionism is a thing of life ; it is daily waxing to the proportions of a giant. Woe to the puny tyrants that stand in its path." The woe is now sent forth against Pres ident. Johnson and the other patriots who stand in the patliiif Abolitionistn, as it marches on to reduce the Southern States to Territories ; then it was:President Lin coln who stood in the path of this giant. This paper says : " Ail the proclivities and messages .of President Lincoln, from the inaugural down, have been couched in language fa vorable to the rights of the Southerners to hold properly in man. He says that, if a decree of emancipation could abolish slavery, John Brown would have done the work effectually. _Vie fear that his tory will write hitn down•among the ob stacles which the ear or freedom had to surmount, before it could start on its vic torious career. He holds, as much as any Southerner, to the sacred right of States to establish this species of property, inde pendent, of any power in the nation to prevent it. Let all hush governments be swept away with the besom of destruc tion I" In Dec. they say : " The fact that liber ty is the nation's soul, has been ignored, and an organization formed under the name of union' But Union can give no inspiration. The war has been waged on d fa ,e issue., Are we fighting for Union? Do we hope to promote Union by . guns and armies ? It is a mere pretense. We are fighting for conquest. Our aim is to subdue. We expect no Union unless it. be a Union of force. What mean these immense gatherings under the name of Union_ Leagues? They niean consolida tion. The government is being driven into centralization. We must be consol idated. It. is said by some, the assertion that we are to have a, grand consolidated nation, of which States ate merely provin ces, is not true. But we may decry the principle of consolidation ; we may pro nounce it dangerous; we may express our abhorrence of the old Federal aggressions on popular liberty; •we may start at the mention of the alien and sedition laws; but we are sweeping along on the same current, and none but a few Copperheads to give the alarm." And what was the reward of those who gave the alarm ? A loathsome dungeon in some dismal tort. Like Galileo they were thrust into prison , for, proclaiming i the truth. , The charges -upon which one of those Patriots was seized, in the night, by a body of armed men,; who bloke flirt,' the bolts and bars of. his house, and.hur• tied ofr to.prison, was, "that he address. ed 3 meeting in which lie declaredthat 'the present war is not , being waged, for the preservation of the. Union, but a war for the purpose of 'crushing out , liberty; and 1 erecting. a. despoi Imo i . a. war. - for the free. dom of the blacks anti the.enslareinent of l' I the whites.; ,declaring that, he was at all times resolved to do what-he could to de-. feat the attempts now-. being made to: rhuild up a monarchy ;upon: Abe - ruins -of ifree government ; asserting thati he, tirtn- ly • believed that the ,men in power are at: : tempting to establish a despotisin _in. this I . 'country more cruel and , oppressive -than r i ! ever existed before.' ". : ~- , ,.. , I Now why was .this. , man plain prisit4 for saying -in publiti , preeisdy: sibliethe Pi; , ..per, above quoted, published and sent 1 MONTROSE, PA., TUESDAY, AUG. 14, abroad through the land ? Simply be- cause he was determined to defeat the at tempts of the Abolitionists to build up a monarchy on the ruins of our free govern ment, and which this organ of the monar chists was determined to sustain. This martyr to liberty wrote from his prison as follows: " MILITARY PRISON, Cincinnati, 0. " To the Democracy of Ohio : "I am here in a military bastile for no other crime than the defense of the rights• of the people and their Constitutional lib erties. Speeches made in denunciation of infractions of the Constitution and laws, and of military despotism were the cause of my arrest and imprisonment. I am a Democrat, for the Constitution, for the Union, and for Liberty. This is my only crime. For no word of sympathy fur the men or the South who are for disunion, fur no violation of law, but in obedience to the demands of Northern Abolition disunionists and traitors, I am here to day, but ' Time at last sets all things even.' To time I appeal." That Clement L. Vallandigham was im prisoned and exiled from his native land for love of the Union, and disloyalty to the new consolidated Republic, which he saw was bein_T founded by the Abolition ists, in which States were to be held as conquered provinces, is proven by the tes timony brought out in the extracts above, and the condition of the country at the present time. Never was them a more triumphant vindication of a proscribed and pert•eotited people than "time" has brought to that portion of the Democrat ic pry stigmatized as Copperheads, the symbo:icat meaning of which, as will be snow!' hereafter, is that of patriots, true to their country and to liberty. Every man who refused to fight for the subjugation and enslavement of his own rac2, and condemned a war waged to free black men, and place white men in bon• dale under them, is now fighting for the freedom of the white people of America, to save them from being erni-hed and trodden under foot by the wickedest pow er that has arisen among mankind since Robezpierre, Damon and Marat met the tyrant's doom—who were the lathers of American Abolitionism- The Radicals the Originators of the New Orleans Riots. The organs of the Radical revoltitionary party in'this stction of the Union, are endeavoring by all unfair means to fasten the paternity of the recent outbreak in New Orleans upon the cornier% alive peo pe of that place. They declare that the anti-union feeling is still rampant in Loui siana, that secretly the " rebels" are plot ting treason against the government, and that a I Union men are in danger of their lives from this dangerous element. of South ern popu:atiou. Tuis position is taken by the Radicals in order to divert public at tention from their own scheme of revolu tionizing the Northern States, and holding power by force, despite the will and wish of the voters. The Radical plot, unearth ed just previous to the adjournment of Congress, has awaked public attention to the dangerous character of the faction which now rules this nation, and the fact that Mr. Bout well and other leading rev olutionist, wished Congress to remain in session until the meeting of the Conven- ClOll of 1864 in New Orleans, shows that they were in full conference with the Louisiana movement, and prepared to ac cept it as one of the means to strengthen their revolutionary attack upon the unity of the States and the perpetuity of this free form of government. As to the 'Leans by which the outbreak was provoked, the evidence isoverwheltn ingly against the Radicals, and their white and black agents and tools. The New Orleans Picuyune, of July 31st, in sum ming up.the facts in relation to the begin ning and progress of the riots, says: " Ibe sensibiiities of the people of this city have been very much exci ed by the revuiutiouary purposes on the part of ex- CJuveutionists of 1864, who had appoint ed to meet at the Institute on Monday.— A meeting of the partisans of these men was held on Friday night, at which the most inflammatory language was einp:oy ed to incite the Negroes to acts of violence. They were told it any white man should interfere with them, "kill him." It has been well understood that. arms nave been distributed among them with a view to some such use as haseccurred. * * "There was never any purpose to inter fere with Couventionists, awl none of the calamities of the day arose from any attempt . .ot the kind. There was, never theless, general uneasiness felt lest &mob spirit lib Quid be excited. The principal stores in Canal. btre4 and the were closed, uud the streets tilled with , idlers, thus faciiitating a - disturbance they' eatite , tie first to 'witness. There were taw persons except begrime, iii - front of thiii uttilotop' s on Dryades street, when the ; rump commenced their ant:l'mi ' signs Were given' 'of any atteintit 'to dis turb them. It appears, however, that relying:On the protection of the city; not It‘sking for it, they had taken a coniiict erabie n umber ofaimed licgroes,held' the. tiouseilatict:to'tbiti incident' Most - =of 'the' bloody incidents which follows are i fairly to be attributed. The disturbance out- side commenced' theiriiital Of i'gitig of arme d , negroes fitorn the town which bred into the' croWd.'at the corner of Canal street. The atone - I:need there. The:police succeeded iu arresting the Man who tired that 'shot, after sothe tuniultuutis resistanee: The. ekeitetiieiii of the negrues gi'ew to be ungot ; ernable. The police, desiring, to abstain from all appearance of intithidation to the :convO. cationists, had not beat posted in finite in the direct 'neighborhood. Just after the disturbance at the Canal street corner broke out, firing commenced at the other end of the street near and about the'eut.- ner of Common. The - Chief ,of Ponce ar rived soon after, and was *received by a volley of pistol shots, and immediately there was firing along the line. The ne groes had their clubs, and some bad.revolv ers, aridch they wielded with vigor; but the police were too strong for them. "The police account corroborated by witnesses, is, that, while they .were engag ed with the negroes in front of the build ing, they were tired on from the west win dows by :the negro party within. The Chief of Police bad been singled out for a bullet from the window, which had failed in its mission. The police returned the fire, and that was the first movement against the building. Up to that time, the police had been engaged in clearing the streets and attempting to preserve order outside. Attacked from the rear, they advanced - to take possession; and Were. resisted at first. B'ut a white. flag was exhibited iu token of surrender to the authorities; but, when they undertook to march in they were received with a volley of balls, and a - conflict ensued, in which a num her were kit led. The members of the Convention that remained were arrested by the police, and such of them- as were nut hurt in the affray, or subsequently, were permitted to go to their own hostess on parole. Some violent scenes occurred, which are to be deeply lamented as facts." These are given by a neutral journal.— They show most conclusive y that the men who called together the Convention of 1864, also made preparations for ariot. This was a part of their plot. The ready and patriotic manner in which the niassof the people of the Southern States have accepted the results of the late . coniesti, and their manifested desire to obey the laws and preserve the peace,, will:operat ing against the perpetuity ufßadieal pow er hi- the nation. - As ttmeans - olintiatn ing the passions and prtjudices of the Northern people, the - leaders of that parry resorted to such a bloody plot as that which developed its effects in New Or leans. The people of Louisiana were op posed to the meeting of. the Convention, but the revolutionists determined that it shoutd be convened, and more lives sacri ficed by their wicked and unholy crusade against the Union and the prosperity of the country. Bank Note Engraving. A description of the engraving of a bank note may be of interest. Genuine bank plates are engraved mostly by machinery ► not upon the bank•: plates but upon salad plates of softened steel. This small plate is put into a furnace, which is bertueticab ly sealed, and is heated, and with the use of animal carbon, hardened as hard as ras! or steel. Then a tort steel plate is laid on the top of this hardened engraved plate; arid then placed into a powerful transfer press, where a steel eylieder rolls over it, back and limb, with thirty or tOrty tons weight upon the cylinder, 'rind by this op. peration the opposite of the engraving is transferred to the soft plate. Thi4 plate is hardened and transferred to a softened steel cylinder, the cylinder is hardened and transfers the device to the bank plate. This is called a single transfer. Much of the engraving -is doubly transferred, and whilst all genuine engravings are transfei red, the counterfeit is not ; it is engraved directly npon the bank plate by hand.' • E:v•tt artist of the bank note has his pe culiar forte. One engraves with the geometric lathe. One with the medallion engine. One with the ruling engine. O►e engraves likenesses. One mountains and hills. Trees and shrubbery are engraved,• by another. Animals are sketched by another. And letters are engraved by another.." ' Now, a hank note consists in the en graving of likenesses, mountains,' hills, trees, shrubbery, animals, and:. letters, so that a dozen or more,artists are reqniredt, eaeh one in ,his specialty, to. produce a, bank note engraving. For •these reasons, a bank-note artist can never, become a counterfeiter, since the whole of his art is comprised Within, the engraving of one only niche many Oils to a The followingstrictures, upon : karat:note detection are well,ivOrthy of perusal: , It requires twenty thOnsaM l :4 4llo "! worth pf,machinery, and from Afteen i y,t, twenty artists,,to. produce , genuine banlt ? plates; each' artist Standing at, the head of his profession, writ excel the counter feiter, who is late from State prison, v ery business yersnn may beoptiie an SR pert, anti the time is awing and Row is, : whenhttsineas, Olen learn: r the,;trite art of,iletectian„ or'-pay the' itetial,ty thiti; thouiatidttritre payilie tot; their eeited wisdom of Judging notes. The lIEEM '"hooded • h country.mt tons ofd anger r fivei, fifties; and' hUndreds,, legal tender notes; also . with onetundred Awl -fifties .compound interest notes, so well ;executed as to defy detection by nicety-fire per eunt,,,of i the .buskness pub `Bit, 'hauliers nOt excepted. 'rrtip 'subject is worthy of t he most brilliant business mind, and yet millions, are lost by those incom-, petentin jndge and too `wise' to' learn.— CURIOUS WILLS. SoMe Who inlife would not give a 'cup of water to a beggar, by their wills leave 'enormous Berns to oharitres,4644,ere themselves a kind of ppsthumous reputa tion. Others allow not their resentments to sleep with •them in the grave, but leave behind them wills which excite the bit terest feelings and animosities among the surviving,relatives. -Some wills are remarkable for their conciseness and perspicuity g others , for their upprecedented length,end contents. One, man provides for a college, another to a cat i one leaves a, legacy to . provide bread and 'herrings foi the poor 'th:Lent, and kid gloves to the minister •-wbileoth .ers provide for bull-baiting, Ae welfare of maid servants, and promotion of ,mat rinormy. John Budge has kept his name out of oblivion'` giving twenty Shillings a year tow poor man'to go about, therr iab church , of Ttysul , duEing sermon time to keep people awake and dogs out, of the chitich. Henry Green, of Melbourne, Derby shire, gave his property - for providing for green waistcoats tor four poor women ev e y year, such,waistcoaqi to be lined with green galloon lace. In the same neigh borhood, and inspired with a similar feel ing,,•Thomas Gray provided grey waist coats and grey coats. John Nicholson, a stationer of Lbndon, was - so attached to his family - name that the bulk of his property. was given, in char ity for-the support and' maintenance of shah poor persons iti England as should appear- to be of the, name of Nicholson. ,David Ildartinett; of Calcutta, while giv ing. directions tolls' executor, said ! " As to this fuleothe e'arcass; having already seed enough of•Wiirldly 'pthiip, I desire no thing' relative to - it to be done, only its be ing stowed away,in my old green chest to save expenses." then bequeathed to one than all the debts be ()Wed, and to his sincerity. A Lancashire gentleman in the last cen tury, having given his body to the worms of the family vault, bequeathed an ounce of rnodeity to the authors 'of the Free Briton and London 'Journal,' giving as his reason for the smallnese of the legaoY;tbat he was "convinced that an ounce was more than they'll ever make use of." ' Another testator , . after having at great length in his *ill the number of obligations he was tinder, bequeathed to his benefactor ten 'thousand - [here' the leaf turned over and' the legatee turning to the 'other-side fotitid the legacy Wai]-- thairks. ' A testator who evidently' intended' to thwart his relations aid be a benefactor to his lawyers,gave a certain person "as many acres of land as skill be found equal to the area enelosed by the centre of os cillation of the earth in a revolution'tound the sun, supposing the mearfdistanee of the sun 21,600 semi-diameters Of the earth from • • An uncle left in his will eleven silver Spoons tohis nephew :adding, " I have wit Itot . the dozen, be the - reasoli.". Tire fact was the nephew bad 'sometime before stolen - the .- twelfth spoon . il'em :his relative. • , Sir Joseph Jekyll left his fortune to pay the national debt. When Lcird Slati,fiekl Beard of this he said,' " F ir JoSeidi, Was' a very ,good 'Than and a gnod lawyer, liui his . bequest . . w . .is . a very' foolish' one he tnight'as well, ti6ve attempted 16 stop the Middle arch of: Blickfriar's Bridge With his full-bottomed wig." Lord 'Penibrokii gave_"riof,htitg teLord Say, which legacy I beqtieath hitt! becanSe I know he will bestow it i on"thepopr';" and then after giving °tali; 'equally pe culiar legacies, he finished With;," I give. up:the ghost." Dean Sitift's elaiacter was 'exeMplifieW in his wilt. Among Others . , h*be d cpleatli ! : ed to Mr. John. dratted, .of Clotnethan,''a silver box, "'in which '1 deifire the, Said; John to keep '-'the 'tobacco be tbiaally, cheweth, called pigtail." "'The celebrated Sarah, DuChelti s of Vtt.' borough, left Pitt ' ten "thOusatid 'pound's for the noble defence be made 'Or support' of - the laws of. England' Mid:to, present the rein'ef his country A Some'. What' similar' bequest was`keeeittliteatiq -" ' . pc ,on left a mill aptionintig execu tor:4, but no property except his name and memory, Finch fie bequeathed amen , vti3i table ape~ctiee, ' to,totergn nations andi the'Veit - ' ~,t; "Lard charendon baddnotbing to Naye l , hie daughter but lie 'exeeutoPe kindneee; 1 and)letird'Nelsedieft - ueither pfrn-'1 at oi-persoutil estate behind hebeqUelithed;" hie' 441,44 ',o4bgliter, 'to, `I thVbeiiiiieenelof isouritTy. ' " "Mitten's was itunatipaii'velititie,,`4 l ;word of viituith.4e' beiat 4 — the time be made it.. I VOLIDIE XXIII NUMBER wit; made - in Byron%. ' •'-; Others wrote their wills in Vitae; ries specimen I.we will give do' of William Jacket, of the pariah of 'laliogton,i which was. proved in 1 ( 787, ;when no, Wit 00,10.0,11 'were reguired . to a, will otperaonat ciliate; I give and bequeath"... • * When I'M laid underheatit '' 1' To my two loving.sistere Most The whole of my store, . . • We.re, it twice as much More. Which.gpd's goodness boa givco, me hero. And that none may prevent, :' , ' •Thih'ink will 'and intent,' Or occasion the least of law rabieti''; With a-solemn-appetd, • I confirm :sign and seal: 'This the act and deed of Will ,Jacket_.,, , .: , Some Wills contain a kind of ausoMot raptly of the testator, as well is ina thdaghts and opinions. Saab' watt . 'the will of Napoleon, which gave a hiindsomi legacy :to; the wretch Cantillion, -" who . had as much right to assassinate thatr,oli, garcliist, The Duke.o.f . Wellington, es tho ititier had 'to 'Rend' me to perish on th. .rock of St. Helena." ' Such, , alsO, was Petty's, -whteh,,states, with a 'Certain amount , of self -pride, that. at " the full age of fifteen T bad obtained the Latin, French sod Greek langulges," and "at twenty yestris of age'had gotten up three-score pound, with as much mathematics at any of my sze weref known to have." - - For months past the Government baa been making efforts, to deteet the parties engaged in the manufacture , counter felt national money: Detectives ,Ifrere - postedin New York and other cities; iio every place in fact where there" was 814- picion their being, and the work aid .vestigatitm and discovery has been going on. A 'few days ago the first arrest wee made in New York. A young man earned Thomas Wilson, who was suspected Of being engaged- in printing counterfeit ctuk rency; ;was taken into custody. He stout ly denied, any complicity in the business, but being inforined by Chief Detective - WOod that - his business was knOwn, and that hehad-been watched, he made a furl confession, and turned over everything .his ,p,ossession to the government: :This consisted • of : nine finely executed; steel fdrprin'ting'fractionalmurrency and ten daar greenback notes:, and five &tee for manufacturing the lc.ng, fifty cent stamps. 'Dies, rolls, presses, and all the appurtenances were taken into custody. '.. Another den was broken up ontsidethe City, toivard Long Branch, shnrtly idler the above, and' everything connected with the manufacture of 'counterfeit' 'inoney found there, was boxed up and, sent into the city. (.3 'thean•este in the . city still sOntione t Idirid-the eonsternationamont,the counter, feitersis intense. This fat, eleven of thip most ,notbd' man afitnenters of con national 'Bid:irides have' been taken int.? ensindy, and the amount of plates, kest es, dies, rolls, printing 'apparatus, cone. terfeit, money, Ro., seized by the deteci- Lives,' is immense, and shows boar Arvely the work was carried Opportune appearance- of 'Ow •Dttek; Lorenzo Dow, being belated' one'tiight in his. travels, , unceremoniously entered an out-of 7 the-way house and requested ludging,s. The woman of Abe house ob, jetted, having for a friend a' man whom Lorenze soon ascertained was not her husband. But Lorenzo insisted, andliihe at last consented--immediately fastening, against fitrther :unwelcome- visitors,. the only outside door of the house. Soon .0 loud knocking was heard. It ;was bet inobancl, unexpectedly return'ed: Unable to leave the house, the friend; to conceal himsetf, :jumped into a box conveniently at limit:l, - Bnd hastily covered himself :with the hatchelings of flax it con tained, by which time the,wife , bad anft fastened the door, and admitted, her, httan, band. • Hupidg spent • the evening at the telt, ern, he was just tipsy enough to be both' boisterous and courageous. .11e soon marls tbe actlnain,ta,nce of Lorenzo, whom. ba t had heard - inuch of but bad nevet fie had 13ei , n' that h dnuld, raise dis t devil, aid hi; insisted upon hisAinatedV: atelyldoing: so.--net that lie , believed RuYi:bAt :if there was any he 'mita& to' 84 . 9.4 1 0., ,/0 ;fain Lorenzo objeatedi'prch; testing ins unaillinguess, and the danger ! . atteitdineit, 4tc., but the,:inoic thaihsdf.,. drunken htisband inSiated: ' -•- ' •-•! At 'last said Lorenioi44,lr you are deoz terththed to! gee • , himi opptu.tlua door c put OP PO ,atan.d out of the Nab \ or be may ta . ke you with hith ; for When; liki'dbineslie'scfill 69 'in fleizies,oftlie,"a44 - Iwirn you brae eonsegueneek" ing a. buttehanfmatches, that tberenughti 1 19 grenyllunell of brithstvnett.andfmutpi tering ,oveict few unintelligible sunterma k i. Lorenze s fire to the hatehelings, died' out; reoinefoitb, thou evil one4id i be goneAvaver 1 0 ' when out iipiaagoorie', malYeeptilletely enveloped. in.datitekandr 11!'!t• ithP (Pm, APor, leaving 41!0:lutuat with n-rpost pneaithly, yell., -To,hts 4zula was. ready t%teet,ify,,thaa Loritii(Yitet , only road,' devil, for be " had seen and smelled Wis.° Raid on the Counterfeiters. T T_T