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' ."::_ . .. :1',1• I .:It'' ~ 4. 1 - ,1 . 7 , ;,: r ;:::.! •-:':! r- 4, - '.. - - c . 4 1- .-- •''',..? . - 1-: ',..0 1 .. '.. .. ,• 'i •:,,..: ' ; ';'..-;.: :'',. : : . ' -..! :. . 4 `...:,„_, ;,' : : ': 7,..1 - . - :"1:: : :. ,; A : t."! . . ' '-:, I P?" 7, fi . ,: c ri -.-.. ,.. • ''. ":I' , . ••••:" . 1 - • '- ..."" .r.;'; ri f• ' ''. ' I •::,t " .I.t. 4 --'`.! ..,. _; . ;,-- 7 ;,:, =.; i: ; . . ~... (~ :.: —:- , =- 77 , i i1 ~ '`ize. 4L ~ • : .; ; .: ; . i - - . .1. . . . , .. . . . . . . A. S. GERRiTsoN, Prcitiieibr,} rA T r"P'!"'"' PPe° ll "- .3Elt WM:7r 1:W. 3Eit Of the Great Strugtliv, benVeen Liberty and Despotism for the last Hundred rears., THE {VAR 'OF 1812 " Above alt," says the D e mocratic President in 81 •`eve !ewe the inest i ble couso!aiiim of Itnowtng, that, the war in which we are engaged is neither of amhitiop nor vain glory. That it is waged not, itt vi l.etion of the rights of othensbut in the maintenance of our own. Tl ish h was preceded by a patience without. ex ample, under wrongs-accumulatin.Cwith out end; and that it was finally not de clared until every hopo of averiin it-was extinguished; .brt he -transfer"Of t he' Brit ish sceptre into new hands c'inging to former councils, and until declarations were reiterated to the last hour through the British artny here, that the hostile edict against our maratime commerce would sot be revoked ;. ntly,,that they could not be-revolted without violating 'the obligationS'of Great Britain to other powers, as well as to her own interests.— To have shrunk, under such circtunstan ces, front manly .resistance, would have been a degradation blasting our best and proudest . hopes; it wou!d have struck us tram the high tank, where ► he e irt nous struggles of our fathers had placed .us, and have betrayed the inagtacent lega cy-which we bold-in fruit fon future gen erations. " It, would have acknowledged, .t hat on the element' Which forms three fourths of the globe that we inhabit, and where all independent nations have equal and com mon rights, the American people were not an indepreshmt people, hut colonists and vassals. It was at this moment, and with such an alternative, that war was chosen. Ttie nation felt the necessity of it, and called fitr it. The appeal we accordingly made in a just cause, to the aIL-powerful Being who holds ; in His hand the chain of events and the destiny of nations. Ever ready to accept peace front the hand of justice, we prosecute the war, with uni ted consuls, until per - ice' be go-obtained; and as the only means under Divine bles sing of so obtaining it." To this - address of President Madison, we give the following facts from Lossing's History of the_ sited States, every asser tion of which will •be tyroven by extracts from docuthents publiShedduring the war. Mr. Lossing7says r„. .1 •:7 "The war had been declared only after long suffering and patient attempts to procure redreds without a resort to arms. A minority of the people of the Republic were m favor of this method of- vindica ting their national honor antHmiepen ticnce, and their representatives bad made the declaration. It e was therefore unpat riotic to cast obstacles in the way. Yet it was done with fearful effect. The more deSperate opponents. of the iviir and, the administration, politicians whom true pa triots despised, formed a ' peace party,' avowedly for the purpose of einharras'smg the' government, and compelling it to make peace wilt Great Britain on any terms. They controlled the press eaten-' sivrly, and - through it -they operat cd pow erfully on the puf; is mind. They decried national. vitgorics, and magnified those of the licitist. They used every exertion to destroy the public, credit. They dis couraged public loans, promoted smug gliin and in every conceivable way gave aid and comfort to the enemy without perfltrming overt acts of treason. Many of the clergy and magistrates arrayed themselves ngaite.t, the govern ment;disunion was openly advocated, and when the brave soldier- of the %Vest had fallen at she Raisin and at; the Thames in conflict with the savages of the forest breughtlniainst them by the Brit ish, said a I..VD: at . Byfle;d, Massacitu sests, eruliingly,';: 4 There Wetite t n . States which have been rieleat for lIM3 abothina ble war of murder-,those states . ;which have thirsted los blood to drink. Their men have failed. Their 'lamentations are deep and loud.' "Thus: spike the pulpit. here aful there, whlie magistrates and public officers set the government at defiance.- Three of the New England. • governors refused to re-, spond to thecall safithle President fol. mi.. litia, appealing, to the Constitution; and the reserved rights of t he..St at es. for justi fitztion. ghefnse,of the prisons of Unst• sachusetis tint British pristmers , was re fused,.and in many - 4AV New • Ettglied stOiecrin an-attitude of • half rebellion against the nationalgovernment; during &greeter portion of the var." • ; And' these tories who "cast 'obstacles" in the way of the patriots 'who were struggling to preserve then" magnificent legacy e r freedotti pnycliasbil by the blood of tlieWfathe;s', 'and'placefillf their ha4Js in tTUSL forStuure generations"- 7 311 - ese to ries, bitaittiSeil those of thelkitisli",44lfeselo riescwhoL "used every,. exeri,ion to, de stroy the public credit, who discouraged gavernmento-loans, who promoted-smug; gling, and in every conceivable 'Way 'ga've sid and comfort to Great Britain," are the Re.oollha4* 04 1 549% r 1 - Thoidergy Who- , atrayed 'ftliefAnlipf) States, who advoca 'disunion, wit; Oz- MlM=Mai nited'wheifithet braVe'aeldititit''of newest I fell:by the fothiihaWle and scalping knitl3 , ' in the hands -, or the savages brought against theft by the British; are the cler gy who led on a crusade afterwards against, the people who conquered the British, and tried to incite their negro slavestp slaughter them in the same man ner as the Indians had slaughtered them for years before. These arc the clergy who have helped to put the same people under the heels of a military despotism because they refused to change our free government into a tnottaitchy; New England; who with her Puritan clergy iLopen 7 y advocated disunion ; who stood in an attitude of 1)111 rein-M.)li against the national government during the greater portion of the war," loves England just as well to day as then. For the love of-Englind she forced the South into seceision. ,For England she fought four years to keep the &Ault out of the Union. For love of England, and her in stitutions of monarchy and artst..craey, shy is fighting to-day against t lie free gov ernment establitatecl by Wa-Isington and preserved and perpetuated by Jefferson and Madison, Monroe and Jackson. To prove that the Federalists who op posed the war of 1812 against Great Bri tain, were tories,and that the Republicans who have put the South under a mi , itary d. Fi.cit ism are of the same party, we have but to read the sermons and docuMents writ ten by the riot sof 1176. The Re publicans have treated the Southern peo ple from first to last precisely as the Brit ish tyrants treated the Americans, and vet they demand that these same peop!e. shah live them a lid be kyal to them. Why, they themselves are the distoyalits and traitors. One . of the patriot clergy of 1776, Dr. Stites, President of Yale Col kge, says in 1783: " Oh, England, how I did once love thee! How did I once glory in thee ! I did once boast of springing from thy bowels ! But uow, fare w el,— T a long fare well to all thy greatness ! A political earthquake through the continent !lath shook off Anierica from Great Britain.— We once thought Britain our friend; and gloried in her protection. 0, how Rain ful and distressing the separation and dis memberment, Witness, all ye patriotic breasts, all ye lovers of our country, once lovers of Great Britain ; witness the ten der sensation, the sorrow with which ye were penetrated when spurned front a pa rent's love! Can we ever love Britain again? Can we forget the conflagration of Charlestown, Norfolk, Esopus, Fair field, and other American towns laid in ashes by a Tryon and other incendiaries? Were these the kindnesses American brethren received from the hands of Bri tons and their more crud associates, the Indians and loyalists? "Can we be soothed by being told that this is the fate of war? As well may in quisitorial cruelties be soothed by alleg ing that they are salutary corrections,and necessary fer the good of the church. Our enemies took occasion from this fate of war to wreak their vengeance, and to lash us with a severity too unmerciful ev er to be forgot ten." Reflections for for February. Stibteraneons Fires. There arc certain phenomena occasion ally observed which strongly .prove the exist ence of stile erranean fires. Terrible eruptions of itiflatnable matter from time to time take place. The two most known and most, -Considerable- mountains which producelltese effects are tEina in Sicily, and -Vesuvius in the kingdom of Naples. Themccounts given of these two volcanos are very- terrible. At different intervals vast eruptions of fiery matter istae.— Sometimes only .a black vapor is seen to rise, and at. the same time is bean] hollow rumbling noises,ofl eu F neccerled by stron g fl t-lies of fire, and peals like thunder, ac companied with the sensation of an earth qttake. The vapor then becomes lumin ous, and showers of stone and lava are evolved, part of which falls again within the crater, though enough of them fall without to lay waste the neighboring country; and..they.aresometimes whirled to a considerable .distance. These terri ble explosions are sometitnes even more violent. With the noise of thunder, tor rents of horning sulphur, and liquid met als, enveloped -With clouds of .ashes and stnoke,:nre: hurled to an immense &St nom ; rocks, upborue - by the force of the explos ion, fall' wi)h . drentlfatrakh ; And eatar , runs of fire pour- down the steep -of the mouittain the deluge awe* over the villages, plantations and cities; the earth rocks, and they who' escape thefall within the '7,6lphtiiiie by theiaithijitake; or tossed'from wave to wave, and are bu ried-in the general wreck. 0, hoW inYsterious are the' Urals of vine:N:44one, arid to .us tia'st 'finding out: ' WO mat,ho . still ; • and: know that Ue is , Giid.—Stiorvii Refleitlo4.• • -4the Alabama.. eleetton! will take pi t:o'oh I,ht3..,4th i 'ofTebrpary,. subject-- to as many -committeewas .may be necessary 0 Wry; *6. :brooin,itial ,- onto :Won and'eleot the Radical ticket. —"Voilikits74o:7e'reiti*.PF:lB4fAvili take rphioo,i 1,7*-w rasurnii.b ik,4011 of March: ' - • , 'MONTROSE PS., TrtSliAlt, - OEII 11 186. , 1 • 1, If there ever was a fore ordained Hach elor, that man was Major Teller.. Some men are born to old bachelorhood—Wk.: ers have old bachelorhood thrum; upon thenn and to the font& eass belOnged the Major: You could have picked him out in u multitude; if he had been labelled; like an an antedehivian fossil or a dried specimdu of entomology, there could not have been more certainly in the matter. He was a dapper, thin little man, stithe , thing under five feet high, with a gkisliy black wig, closely trimmed side whiskers' and costume so &flatly neat that he - re= minded you of a shining black cat ! He took a Turkish bath in the morning, and a Russian bath in the evening; he came home to dinnCr at twelve precisely, and' went to bed at eleven at night, his hoota standing at the foot of his bed, and his stockings at the head, and his wig eleva ted on the gas fixture, and every chair in the room Standing at right angles with the wall I It was high noon on a sparkling, win. dv, March day when Major Teller came home to the antique, down town board ing house, where he had vegetated for the last t wenty years, and went to his own room to Lrnsh his wig for the mid day meal. Opening the door he stumbled over an obstacle that Was in the way: "Oh, I beg your pardon, I=m sure," said the Major, turning very red, recov ering his footing with difficulty. It was Miss Patience I'ettit.ew, on her hands and knees, cleaning off the oilcloth at the door. Now the Major was afraid of Miss I'a. Bence—afraid of her as the pump lamb fears the gaunt wolf, or the unotlending robin the dire serpent. .Miss Patience wa4 tall, lean and sallow, but she curled her hair, and wore an art ificiaL rose over her left ear, and sang with whistlim , tones to a little spindle legged piano, and firmly believed that if she only waited a little while longer she should get married to somebody And because the Major sat opposite her at the table—Mi-s Pa tience helped her widowed sister "keep house," and served out the gravy end sauces—and regarded her artilieial rose and bear's grease curl with a sort of fear ful fascination, Miss Patience somehow opined that she should one day, Cupid wiling, become Mrs. Major Tel er. :‘ It's of no consequence, Major," said Miss Patience, recovering her piece of soap which had skirmished out to the middle of the carpet. " I hope your fire isn't out." "Thank you, ma'am, it is very good." " I do wonder, Major," said Miss Pa tience, with a premonitory giggle, " why you never get married ?" The ➢ajar retired precipitately behind the coal scuttle, and made no reply. " You'd be so much more comfortable, you know," added Miss Patience, w,ing• ing out her woolen cloth and looking so lovingly on the M j it that he retreated still further in to his wardrobe, where among the swinging (fligies of coats and trowsers he felt comparatively safe. Miss Patience hesitated a moment, and in that moment the Major felt all the an ticipatory agonies of being pursued, cap tured, brought forth, and possibly married before he could get breath to remon strate ! Bait she finally took up her pail and A.:till:died. • "Dear me, that was a narrow escape," thought our hero, emerging from his sanctuary. "Some day she'll be too much for me. Perhaps I'd better change my boarding place. Yes—that will be the on lysafet y. I suppose I couldn't very well have her sworn over to keep the peace, and really, there's no saying' what a determined woman of fitly may not do. I'd look out fJr a new place to morrow." Dear me, Major, you have no tippet it e," said Miss Patience sweetly, at the dinner t Mo, ma'am," said the Major. "i'ry to eat a little—just to please me, Major." " Don't you know, Majqr, that people will say that you are in love, if you don't rat more?" smiled the antiquated spin ster. This was more than our hero could en dor ; he rose op and left Miss Pettigrew victor of the wordy field. I won't go back to that house if I can bell) it," thought the Major, brushing the cold dew front his forehead with a dim sun silk pocket handkerchief. " her in tentions are serious, I know they are." And the Maj.tr, in his inermost soul re viewed the catechism and hymns he had learned as a child; trying to think . if there were not some invocations particularly suited to an elderly gentleman in great peril and perplexity. • Bev he could not remember anything appropriate to-. his particular case, 4 . It's twenty years since I hare been. inside of a' churith,'?•thought the _penitent 610:Sincer. " I wish I had gone a little. aioroxegularly. 4 , l:yonder:if it is too late: in .life to reform:o3! 31=== SEIM THE BACHELOR'S 'ESCAPE. For the Major poor old gentietna6, hnd a vague idea that "religion" would be a iort of safegitird aga!or.t. the 'wiles of his fair-C.IIOIT. Deliverance from Miss Pet, tigrew must; be obtained on sotbeiterma or. other. ' - ".ACTilakir Teller' was , 'frantintillt - re yolk wing these things iti , btitiltitt,'• fin ealoBl6, =!=llM ==MINEINUMMiNNI ME= MUM a midden, and,'„lnvolentary stand still. crowd gathered in the street, rirtf s terilimni us. _orse, or • an.arrested piekioeloi, SOirip Other nucleons, round tihielt,:,gather* . the.., rapidly increasing aWariti•of Metropolitan loafers. Xow, of tilkthingS,Major most dreaded was it ' cro w,' and he loOked round nervously for Soineineatis of escape. Au old fashioned church, with opened doors, and sonie_sort of servicegoing on • inside, caught . thc Major's eye.. Ile made an instantaneous dart for its huge; gothic portals,_ shielded by' the inner oors of green' baize. "It's a good char.ce to think up some thing solemn and appropriate, and that sort of thing, until the crowd gets by," Le thought, settliu hiMself in the corner of one of the softly cushioned pews to lis ten to mild; droning voice of the o!d cler gyman. The church Waft very warm, and the light, softened by purple and golden crim ' son glass, was dim, and the elerp : yman's yoke rather monotonous, and Major Tel ler was unconsciously becoming rather drowsy, when a plump old lady came in ant the sexton beckoned him from his seat. . But the sermon was over, and the peo' pie stn.:ming—down'. the - aisle, and the a:tor:tub, that-Is-didn't care to prbiong .the thing and" that,ho.ha4 done a very 'laudable act, in coming,t,g, church, and— : _Even while thezie ideal were pasieg'is• distincily through his brain, be was borne. towards the altar in art upward eddy of -the crowd, and a gaunt arm thrubt thru' his. " Protect me, Major ! oh, save me !" wid , pered Miss Pal ience Pettigrew. "I'm so 'feared in a crowd "always !" The Major strove to uithdraw his arm, but Miss Pettigrew would not leave him. They were standing directly in front of the altar arm in arm. The minister - , old and near sighted, and a little deaf, ad vtiliced—probablY cone:uding thit hisser .ices wt re rt quirt d. Major Teller's blood ran cold; he tried to protest, but his tongue seemed paral yzed. Miss Pettigrew had captured hint as a lamb for the slaughter, and where was the use for further struggle ! A few word4-7anti" appalling brief ceremony— and Major Teller was married to' Miss Patience Pettigrew. " Take the market basket, my dear," said the gaunt bride, " and stay, you had better carry the umbrella, too I NVe'll go right home. Old folks like yon and me, don't care for wedding tours, do we '?" The Major looked piteously at hi 3 bet ter half and made no answer. She, how ever, waited for none, but drew him along with a quiet determination that argued id for the future. "Give me the key to the room, my dear," said Mrs. Patience Teller, "1 had better keep it in the future." " We'd dick up things a little," said Mrs.Teiler, bundling the Major's beloved papers together, and pitching his box of cigars out of the window. " But, Miss Patience—" 44 W hat ?" My dear wife, I mean." "Ah, yes. What were you about to renirk%'"- " My ei,gars—l "Oh, well, I don't like smoke, and nev er did." " But what are you going to do with my sippers?' "Trying 'em on—they fit, me se, nicely. Guess keep 'em. Semprotthis, I wish you would take all these coats and things out of the wardrobe-1 want it for my dresses." • " Mit where shall I keep them, Miss Pa—?" " What, did you say ?" " Mrs. Tel.er, I would remark—" "Oh, under the bed, or somewhere ! Pink soap, eh? 1 preler Castile,Co'ogne, eau de Foul iI i, COW Cream. Who'd Pup pose you were such a dandy, Sempronim? You must have plenty of money. By the way, suppose you give me the money to keep, dear ! manage it a great deal more economically than you'll be likely to do." " But—" "Give me the money!" Mujor Teller meekly put his hand in his pocket, and submissively handtd over his purse. " Well, now you had better go about your business' said the gentle bride, " and not come home until tea time--I do so dislike 'men lounging ' around in the way forever ; and don't come Back smell ing of tobacco, if you know what is•good for yourself, Sempronins Teller !" The Major crept silently away, think,. ing 'how the last time he.crossed the door. sill he was a free man, and:now— " I'm married !" mused the,Majr4. couldn't help it ;.it wasn't my fault. , But here I art, no Money, no cigars, no freedomworse thttn2ll , g4lpy slave--.six. ty years old,,next month, and—married to Patience Pettigrew!" . . Re walked disconso'ately down '• the 'street, I,oth handslni his:empt rpockets; and' his. hat ;tipped down :restlessly.over: his eyes. A greater bontirdo could have linen iiiifighied than' egisied between- rtii4 needy, "wreteititql looking man, and tlia' littio r akior l .Teller of six hours ago! * 1" 41.1 ..17.i.:.1.3.1.:11:1,25 =0:11 lIMIEII He Citight A fleeting glance of himself in a mirror belonging: .t.ci some , picture frame store, as , he sauntered by—it even startled himself. , " I wont - dein, have known myself" he muttered gloomily. " Nell I'm married now, married to Patience Pettigrew !" He went:doUrn with fong, determined strides towards the shining, broad stream, where the ships lay peacefully at ant hur and the little, boats shot )►ither and thith er, and the waves' eParkling like sheets of diamonds. All these things Major Teller saw, without marking them, as he made fur the pier. " Want a boa►, sir ?" demanded a stun . dy man. " Yes,•' said the Major, "I want Char on's boat to row me over Styx !" " Don't know him, sir," said the puzzled boatman, " but, mine is sound and light." The Major waited to hear no more, bUt gave a blind, downward jump. Down, down with t hat peculas sensation offalling so familiar to us all, down, down, until— "Beg pardon, sir, but the church is go ing to be shut up, and every one's gone, Hope you had a goOd nap, sir ?" The -sexton spekei sarcastically, but in his tones Major.Telle4 reconized hope and frectlona. liu started wildly. to his feet, exclaim4lg,, .„ "Then I'M not mairia,.after. all, sexton ?" " Maraied, sir ! Nov nults's you're been married in your &tam." " That's it, exactly !" ejaculated the Major jumping up, ," I've been asleep and. dri arcing ! ' ISlajorTidler satisfied the sexton with a donation whoSe liberality astonished even that personage, and went at-once to the ---11otel,to engage rooms. send for my things," he thought ; "-I Won't go back to that lest Miss'Pat ience Pettigrew should do something des perate. I'm not married, and I don't wean to he P' The Major was right. Discretion is the better part. of valor•—and Miss Patience Pettigrew remains Miss Patience Petti grew still Mit Maj•ir -Teller goes to church very regularly now I The PresidenUil Question. The Nov York Sun , now edited by Mr. - Dana; late of the icago Republican, an extreme radical, thus speaks of the Western Democratic candidate for Presi dent. It says: "The Democracy in the great States of the West have declared themselves, with singular accord, in favor of the Hon. George H. Pendleton, of Ohio, as their Presidential candidate. It is a choice which does honor to their judgment. Mr. Pendleton is a gentleman, accomplished, endowed with tine mariners an superior abilities, bold and manly in the-,declara tions of his opinions, skilled in public of fairevand superior to low intrigue and partisan dishonesty. It he were Presi dent, he would administer the Govern ment in a perfectly respectable matfher, in accordance with his principles. He has also the great advantage of having ideas that belong to the present day. Ile does not, like so m uiy others, grind over the„ resolutions of f 798, or confine himself to asserting the policy he Eidvceated ten years ago. These new ideas of his .are briefly; that the five twenty bonds should Lie paid in greenbacks, and not in specie, and that the la hole Government debt should he subject to taxation. These are propositions that find melt favor, espe cially in the Western States, and it is not surprising that they should have added to the well founded popularity of their au thor." OUTRAGE BY A NEGRO.—Cincinntiti, Jan. FranktUrt, Ky., yesterday, - a ne gro committed an outrage on an Irish girl aged 15, and afterwards threw her over an embankment at the railroad tunnel, breaking her shoulder blade, and other wise injuring her: The negru was arres ted and lodged in jail. To night a crowd of infuriated citizens assembled and forced the jtil, taking the negro, and hanging him to a tree on the top of the precipice where the young lady wai thrown Over. Several shots were fired into the body whi!is hanging. The Governor knew noth ing of the object. of the mob ,until they had taken the prisoner from the j til, when liii,ordered this Adjutant General and as sistants to rescue the prisoner, but with out effect. Q: '°` Our intelligent (?) contemporary, the t 4 .cranton Republican, in commenting on Judge Woodward's convincing speech on the !finances, declares that his posi. Lions may be "good law but they are not good sense." We think, and it is the ac knowledgMent of all sound minds, that "gond law" and " good sense" aro con. vertible 'and•that bad law is bad sense. - . . . —The-radicals carried the eighth Con gressional District/A . .0M0 atthe lastCon greisinriM 1800, by alnajority 4.1452. •-• ALn gliecitil election recenily. Kidd in Oft:yawn° district; the radicals car ried it; by: about , one thousand majority, losing - more than ,eight , hundred , votes, and -thelvalidt. ;great victory. monumentit) tbo. te Bishowriop. Wiwi bk. uti bpi put. uplift. Tguity, Qbartil, yew ayfrik.e:. ~,r. ;ri j rri t._ 4 VOEilltr 4 ' XiV, NUMBER.I.:: , A Practical Joke . on a 4gaily.t; , A very extensive practical kohl? wu portrated yesterday on Mrs. t .Harrisoul Gray Otis, a 'lady -well' known tb the world for her numercus acts of beilevoL lence and charity. Some wag, it seems, had sent a large number of bogus invita tions to , members of the hetet. , ton asking their attendance at a reception to, giv en at her residence, - No. 41' Mount Ira= non street s yesteray afternoon. Nett withstanding the severe snook-every large number of persockresponded.to this invi tation, and at one time the street in front of her dwelling was completely, bleeped up with their carriages. But' theie were not the only people hoaxed.. Innumera• ble orders were sent to artisans of all kinds—to plumbers, painters, carpenters, gas fitters, etc.—to come and perform lit tle jobs of repairing about the house—each job minutely specified in the order. Oth er orders were sent, to coal .dealera s flonr dealers, grocers, etc., to bring. stated. quantities of their. respective kinds of merchandise, to be delivered at' stated times. , Even the services of en underta ker were brought into requisition to lay• out. the , body of a supposed, dead- cbildl, ' and in response to an ativerttemeijitin menthek of the fefifie:lribe•viere brought to fill out the misCollinetiniitind' variegated .4sortinent. Wha - tho author of this strange heait, is, we- are-tinablo to state—but all thefaote- of-the case have been ,placed into the hands of :Di lectitre Leeds and his assistants, who will probe ; the matter to the bottom. The several orders are written in as many different: stt les of hand writing. Mrs. Otis bore thiC infliction very quietly and did...not'allow' the matter to disconcert - her at la . - Two; policemen from the Third. Station were sent to the house to turn awaythometim. - ized persons as fast they arrived'. On Friday night at a late, hour, a burly negro arrived in a train from the West,. accompanied by a white Woman. whom be laimed as his wife. They proceeded to • a first class hotel and the negro dethanded • lodgings. lle was told there •-was • no, room for him. This threw him into e rage. He declared that he 'cared nothing about himself, but hie wife hadbeeti.insul ted by this refusal of a room; and he te. rented it on her part. The hotel clerk was not intimidated by the threats okhe sable gentleman, and when he bad been permitted to make as much disturbance as would have been allowed to a white man he was ejected from the botol.by the porter, and with his white lady went,in search of apartments where prejudice against the color did not exist. had this occurred in one of the ten Sates under military despotism a guard of soldiers would have been sent to take charge of the hotel and the proprietor would have been imprisoned.—Rochester Union, fan. 20. A Laughable Mistake. A lady of unmistakable beauty, but Who was evidently not a close newspaper rend. • er, stepped into one of our most fashion able jewelery establishment yesterday,and, desired to he shown some gold chains.— After a. minute and tedious .qxainination she selected bite of exquisite finish . and beauty and asked t hat it be sectireltivrapt... The coorteons clerk smilingly oboyed,.aixl handed over the article. Ilis.suiprise positively stunning, when the purcheser threw down four quarter dollar notes, and started to leave. " Filly nine dollars more, if yon please," vociferated the exci. ted clerk. " Excuse me, sir," responded the lady, at the same time returning the package, and adding " I thought this was the dollar store !"—Riehmond Enquirer. LOSING PAU ENC E.—The Newark 44- yertiser (Reptiblean) rebukes the intem perate leaders in Congress, who have ser verely tested the patience of the people rrid are now losing their confidence. The Advertiser, which is good Republican att thorily, Pays "There shou'd be less re construction;. less attempts to legislate courts into enforced silence, and generals out of command. No doubt of it. The Chicago Republican says, with reference to the reconstructin policy of Congress, that the people " will not approve th• adoption of means to trample down pres ent obstructions which may prove dao gerous precedents in the) futnr3." Nei ther is there any doubt of this. Wur.m.iNc, January 28—The election of municipal officers and conneilnien yes. terday, resulted in favor of the Deinberate by an averge majority of 500, a gam' over last year. , . Guam. ama Hartford Times learns that:ll6race Greeley, list ; week, in conversation with- . a over. • friend who ,was groaning ; over . , the, pros peel that the 'radial's . ivatihthavo.fo swab low Grant, said to him : give yourself any troub!a: about— Giant. lie stands , nokeliance.f whatever :Star that nomination at. Chicago:'. , , —Th© Springfield Republican =pate this ennundriini to CongresF,:f'lf thaSupreao Conn should cleeitlii-the4wriathirda law it• self unconst it titiona!, and-by t two4hirds vote, what's if) bu, deno next 1)11 .- 2Zi ji\I N 'd e g ' it z or e i",pti b tb i ttq a ? "- Vai;C MWM=l==M=l Miscegenation Indignant.