veil. Am) encouraged by the'genti & cents, sue raised her tear-swoll en eyes In his face. As she did 'the vicaar-g'eneral lifted off his brow, his plumed c p, and re vealed the perfect outline of his features. And Amelia gazed as if spell bound, until gradually shades ef doubt, of wonder, of recognition came struggling over her coun tenance finally in a voice of passionate a inazement fllie exclaimed, 'It is the same I It is our sick soldier guest 1' Eevenso' said Lord Cromwell, 'even so tny dear and gentle nurse. He who was then b poor dependent on your bdun ty, receiving from your charity his daily brtad as in alms, hath this day presided oyer the issues of life and death, as your judge; but fear not Amelia t the sight of thee, gentle girl, comes like the memory of youth and kindly thoughts. It may be Providence has sent thee to melt me back again into a softer nature. Many a heart shall be gladened, that, but for ray sigh of thee had been sad unto death. I bethink me gentle gitl, of the flowers laden with dew and rich in fragrance, which thou used to lay upon my pillow, while this head throbbed with agony of pain upon it, fondly thinking that their fragrance would be a balm; and how thou wert used ts steal intj my chamber and listen to talcs of this, the land of my home? Thou art here; and how hast thou been welcomed ! to a prison and Well nigh to death. But the poor sol dier hath a home ; come thou and thy father and share it. An hour who dare prophesy its events? At the begining of that hour, the merchant and his daughter had been the sorrowful captives of a prison at the close, they were the treasured guests -f a .palace. TARIOTTS MATTEESu From the Dcdford Gazette. LET THE PEOPLE CALL Jl CONVENTION To lake into serious consideration the Sitipension of Specie Payments by the Hanks J The suspension of specie payments by the banks, which took place on the day af ter the electiou. appears to us to be a fatal measure Alter a suspension of several months, in violation of law, they resumed at a time ev idently calculated to operate improperly on public opinion. It appears they were too anguine of the success f their plots -they thought they had carried a majority in both branches of the legislature that the State was in their hands, and again subject to bank control. They however have been deceived, or deceived themesclves, as to Jhe opiniea of the people relative to their acts and designs. How far the Hank of the United States, by its illegal acts, may have tended to pro duce the unhappy results which we an nounce in the caption of this article, will be the subject of future deliberation perhaps -of present condemnation. At all events there appears to be but one sentiment a rnong the men whom we have the honor to act and to think in relation to this insti tution, and that is stern uncompromising hostility, and a determination to repeal its charter. The charter was obtinsd in fraud bribe ry and corruption it has been exercised injuriously to the interests of the people. The bank has proved itself a manfacturer of rags mimitaiion of money of a haughty purse proud Scrub Nobility and has made paupeis out of honest laboring men. We look with apprehension to an ap proaching convulsion worse, more indus trious and more purging than that of the 4th of December last. All judicious men ought to uuite to avert such a calamity. The people will no longer bear the imposi tions of banks, brokers or shavers. They demand of them fulfilment of their con tracts. Individuals are compelled to ob eive their contracts arc corporations a beve the law? The banks have placed themselves in a position hostile to the in terest of the people. The people made them they now asume to be the masters of the people of the very power from whence they emenated. Ther must be a corrective somewhere. We propose then, to our fellow-oilizens of Pennsylvania to hold county meetings in order to appoint Delegates to a State Con vention to be. hehl at such time and place as may be agreed upon by the majority and then and there take such measures as the Convention may think necessary on the state, of the currency and the action of the banks of the general welfare. We have no doubt that every eour-ty in the Slat will be represented in the convention, & t will adopt or recommend beneh'cial mea sures. The operatives the actual produ cers men who work the soil, and produce all that their impcriou would be masters consume the mechanic and day laborer may perhaps become informed of their rela tive position with the bankers, stockjob bers, brokers, shavers, and gamblers. It is a consummation devoutly to be wished. Let all the substantial and considerate men take this impoiunt matter in hand, and wake such a report as will be satisfactory to the c tizenn nctually interested in the well being and progressive improvement of tho Commonwealth, and let that report be widely and extensively circulated among lh pepla. Give them the facts and they will d right " The banks, aral present conducted may raise one lordly palace, filled with luxury rnd pride but they fill twenty cabins Willi Wretchedness and tiespair. If propeily managed the bank will be useful to the I ti . ... pcopie. i ney ere not so under theif pre sent management. Wexall the attention ofour fellow citi zens to o Stale Convention to tako this matter tn hand sternly and strictly The people will not endure a new emission of those who issue them they are destruc tive to the farmer, mechanic to the labor ing ma.i which class of people are the land marks and standards of Popular Liberty and Freedom. Gen. Washington's Opinion of Paper Currency Wo publish the following let ter from Gen. Washingto addressed in 1787 to Thomas Stone, than a membar of the Senate of maryland. The opinion of Gen! Washington in this instanca was called forth by the lollowing circumstance. A bill had passed the House of Delegates of Mary land, proposing the issue of bills of credit bv the state to the amount of 350,000 to be loaned in various sums, redeemable in ten years, and drawing the interest of six per cent. The senate unanimously refustd thier assent to the hill. In the controversy which ensued the opinion of 'General Wash ington was asked, who returned the answer subjoined. It may be found in Spark's Life of Washington, vol. xx. page 231, The circumstances of that period were in many respects similar to those we are now par sing through. The country was already flooded with paper issues, and specie had been drawn almost entirely from circulation. What remained uncxported had been chief ly 4 locked up,' as staled in the letter.through the fears of those who had already suffered by the depieciation of the paper currency. So small was the proportion of specie to paper money that whilst scarcely sufficient of the former could be procured for the wants of government, the abundance of the latter had raised the prices of every thing far beyond their actual values, thus open ing the door for speculations by which the least designing, and perhaps must valuable, part of the community wero preyed upon by the more knowing and carfty specula tors.' Such is the language of the great Washington. Such were his reasons for advising a curtailment of the paper circula tion, and placing the currency of the coun tiy on a more stable basis, Let every vo ter read this letter let him mark well its contents. The advice is applicable to the country now as in 1780. Post, To Thomas Stone, member of the Senate of Maryland.. Mount Vernon, Febuary 10 178G. Dear Sir : Your favor of the 30th ult. came duly to hand. To give an opinion in a cause oi so much unpoftance as that. which was warmly acritated ttfc two branch es of yuor legislature, and which from the appeal that is made, is likely to create great anu perhaps dangerous divisions, is rather a delicate matter; but, as this devrisity of opinion is on a subject, which has, 1 be lieve, occupied the minds of most men, and as my sentiments thereon have been fully and decidedly expressed long before the as sembly either of Maryland or this state was convened, I do not scruple to declare, that, if I had a voice in your legislature, it would have been given decidedly against a paper emission upon the general principles of its utility as a representative, and the necessity of it as a medium. To assign reasons for this opinion would be as unnecessary as tedious. The' ground has been so often trod that a place hardly re untouched. In a word the necessity aris ing from a want of specie is, represented as greater than it really is T I contend, that it is by the substance, not with the shadow of a thing, we are to be benefitted. The wis dom of man, in my humble opinion, can not at this time devise a plan, by which the credit of paper money would bo loug sup ported; consequently depreciation keeps pace with the quantity of the emission, and articles, for which it is exchanged, rise in a greater ratio than the sinking value of the money. Wherein, then is the faamer, the planter, the artisan benefitted T The debtor may be, because, as I have observed, he gives the shadow in lieu of the substance; and, in proportion to this gain, the creditor or the body politic suffers. Whether it be a legal tender or not, it will, as has been ob served very truly, leave no alternative. It must be that or nothing. An evil equally great is, the dour it immediately opens for speculation, by which the least designing, and perhaps most valuable part of the com munity are preyed upon by the more know ing and crafty speculators. But contrary to my intention and declar ation, I an: offering reasons in support of my opinion; reason too, which of all others are least pleasit;g to the advocate of my pa per. I shall therefore only observe gener ally, that so many people have suffered by former emissions, that, like a burnt child who dreads the fire, no person will touoh it who can possibly avoid it. The natural consequence of which will be, that the spe cie, which remains uncxported, will be in stantly locked up. With great esteem and regard, I am, dear Sir, Your's, Geo. Wahhinotok. Resolutions have been introduced into the Senate of Tennessee, recommending Martin Van Buren for President, and Gov ernor Pelk. cpthat State for Vive President, YVom the Wabash courkft MISS FRANCIS SLOCUM, A friend, writing to us from Peru Indian- na, gives the following interesting account of an interview on the 1st of this month, between Francis Slocum, a white woman taken, when only 6 years and 8 month old, fiom near Wilkesbaire, Pa., (sixty-two years ago,; by the Delaware Indians, and ner urotiier and two nieces: "Peru, Inpianna, Oct. 3, 1839. " uentlemen. In my trip out from Pennsylvania, it was my good fortune to bo thrown into tho company of Joseph dlocu.m. Lsq., of Wilkesbarre, Pennsylva nia, and his two accomplished dpughlers, who where on their way to the neighbor. hood of this place to visit a sister and an aunt, who was captured by the Delaware Indians, in Iter sixth year, (sixty-two years ago,) in the neighborhood of Wilkesbarre, Pa., and carried West by that tribe in their retreat oeiore the march of civilization, un ;l !,.. .... a .uuui iunj-iivc .years 'Since, sue was carried to the neighborhood of Fort Wayne, at which place jshe resided neai fortv vcara. She was taken -immediately after the mas- nacre oi wyominr, the horrors wh ch nr so faithfully pictured in the poem of that name by the Poet Cashphell. After her capture, -she was adopted into the family of a uciawuo uiuci, wno IUU lost Ills dauirh. er, and who, after much persuasion, inrfu. ced his wife to adopt her as a substitute. minis larauy, she resided until she got married to a Delaware, with whom she lived for a number of years. Afier that a portion of the Delawares joined the Miam ies, and among them. Miss Slocum. She being then a widow, or deserted by her hus band; she married a Miami, known in his tribe by the soubriquet of the " Deaf Man." With him she lived till his death, the fruits of their marriage being two sons and two daughters. The sous are dead but the daughters arc now living nine miles from Peru, at a place called the Deaf man's village." Tho mother, and daughters are very much respecled,.own a section of land and are very well oil in horses, catile, stock ifce. One of the daughters has been married, but lias lost hor husband ; and the oilier is married to a half-breed named liuouiu.ETTi:, one of the most noble look ing Indians 1 have ever seen. The mother daughters and son-in-law, live in a comfort able log building, and their houses hi lite a bode of hospitality and kindness. The progress of civilization, however (strange to say,) has not been able to win either the mother or daughteis from a strict adherancc to the pnmhivo manners of the Indian race. They arc, in every respect, completely Indian in theii dress and habila muiiis ; preferring the loose Indian blanket to the neat dress of the whiles. ' The Slocum family foi upwards of 00 years, used every means in ilietr power to learn the fate of this unfortuuata member of theij family offering large rewards, and expending much tune and money in fruit less search, until Col. Ewing, discovering a white woman in the tribe, who could speak jusi English enough to tell her name, and thai sliu came from near a river called the ' Susquehanna," attempted to get the tacts published in the Lancaster papers a bout terco or four years since. The pub lication, not appearing for a year and a half afier it was first wrmen, it only came to came to the notice of the family about two years ago ; at which time two of her broth ers and her sister paid a visit to their long lost sister, at this place- They found her not only entirely wedded to the Indjan mode ot life, but as utterly ignorant of the sounds of her native language as if she never spoke a word of English. On the present occasion, she immediately recogni zed her brother, (who had visited her be fore ) and appeared to be hiahly delighted at seeing her beautiful and accomplished muses, whom she had now, for the first tune, seen. The beminiscences of some early incidents which the presence of her broihef called up, (who was three years old when she was taken away,) was truly in teresting. She recollected, particularly, the circumstances attending her capture ; and of her being taken from behind the slair-stepts, (where she attempted to hide,) by the Indians. Whilst tracing the very striking resemblance between this woman and her brother and family, I was forcibly struck with the effects produced by intelli gence and civilization upon the expression of the human countenance as well as upon the manners and character of tho human family. Excepting her complexion, there is nothing about tiiss Slocum that indicates her origin, or that distinguishes her, in the slightest particular, from the aborigines with which she lives in contentment and peace, She spurns the idea of abandoning her present mode of life, or exchanging it for what we call the comforts a-d enjoy ment of civilization." Her ideas of happi ness are so inseparably connected with her present mode of life, that she considers any change as only productive of unmitigated misery and wretchedness." To ofTend any person is the next foolish thing to being offended. Politeness is not always the sign of wisdom, but the want of it always leaves room for a suspicion of folly, if folly and impudence are the same Polite, ness has a high advantage on all occasions Well bred men require it md let it passjihe ill bud catch at itgrceddyas fishes are at tracted form the mud and netted by the shine of flowers nd shells. OUR, XiO& BOOSE. Strange Fancu. Recently In Emrlaml o j man announced that ho would ascend in a balloon, mounted on -a pony 1 Prenera tions were made for the ascent, but when the balloon was nearlv full, it was hurst bv a violent gust of wind, so the' public were disappointed. A negro boy, slave of A. Fulton & Co. merchants of New Orleans, lately fell from the third story of their wardhouse npon the flagging beneath, and with such force as to break a largo flag strange to say, ho was not killed, but escaped with a sever concus sion on the head and shoulders. Mostof the professors and students of bpringheld Colledgc, Alabama, are down with intermittent lever. . Some apple trees near Newburvnort are in full bloom, and a pear Irrc is said to have produced a second crop of fruit. The small pox prevails at Thomaston, Maine. A colored man named Anthony Jackson. between 00 and 70 years of age, committed uicidc at Albany, a few days since. The Peoria Register of the 12th, stales that the Illinois river had been low. but a late rain had nrobablv raised it so m tn ail. mit of boats ascending to Peoria, although none had anived. The Ohio river at Maysville. was so low a few days since, that the smallest steam boats were able to navigate it, only with great difficulty. The St. Louis Republican of the 19th inst. says About $70,000 in spocie arri ved in town yestorday from the Springfield (Mo ) land office, in wagons." The total number of prisoners in Sine Sing on the 22d ult. was 813. The office of the collector on the Morris canal, at Newark, was broken open on Sat urday night, and $3000 stolen therefrom. 1 he whole amount was in one, two and tluee dollar notes of the Morris Canal Company. The (Wilmineton Gazette states that in order to make change in the market of that city on Saturday last, a number of the one dollar notes of the new Union Dank were cut in two to make fifty cent tickets. Shun Idleness. A shilling a day is bet ter than nothing. The very act of being at work will procure employ by and by, at a fair rate. Men avoid him who is always strollinc apout the streets he is indeed un fit for any thing, and may die for want of employ. " A dreadful little for a shilling," said a penurious fellow to a physician, who dealt him out an eraetio " can't you give more i" We have seen enough of this world to lead us to exclaim in the laneuaee of the scienced nigger, white folks very un- sartin. ' " Ah, John Slocomb. mv uncle has been in New York, and yours hasn't." Well what of that? My uncle has been in jail and yours hasn't." A physician latelv learncdlv asked an tin- dictionaried nurse, attending oti his patient, "does he expectorate?" " Exotct to eat " she hurriedly replied that depends on yourself, doctor." Had Thines. An unfaithful servant, a smoky house, a stumbling horse, a scold inn wife, an achinir. tooth, an emntv nurse. an undutiful child, an incessant talker, hogs that break through enclosures, a dull razor, mosquitoes, a fog, a fop and a subscriber that donU pay for his paper. A sheriff in Mississippi went lately to execute a writ. ' What do you want ?" said the defend ant in the suit, to the officer of tho law. " A part of your property," said the sher iff, " satisfy the amount claimed in this writ." ' A part," said the debtor, why take my better half at once." ' No," said the sheriff, ' your rib is not moveable properly." A book was published dilrin? the time of Cromwell, with the followiuS title : " Eggs of Charity laid by tho Chickens of the Cov enant, and boiled by the waters of Divine Love. Take ye and eat." Jl good reason. A Methodist minister in Vermont forbid any one to play a bass viol in his church. He says however seri ous his thoughts may be, the moment ho hears a fiddle, he goes to thinking holb he Wtd to danec A largo number of dfeis makers froin ths Northern cities, are about to go wesi.-. Westward the star of hemUo takes it, way I Jl Paradox. The larger a paper is, the less it contains. This is an assertion of the editor of .the Baltimore Sun, and it may b said to be bourne out by fact. "If you have a good wife, take rare ef her, and if you huvo not, get ono immedi ately N, Y. Sunduy Visiter. If you have a bad oue, what then t Louisville Bui, A, Why get rid of her as quick as possiblt. Clipper. A body of young men, thirty strong, were arrested in New York on Saitmla,, ;.v. for rowdyism. Progression. We learn i i. keeping our eyes on the mountains that rise bctorc us, and not on the hills that lie behind. Measure of Character AH men htm rit. tor than their ebulitions of evil but they are also worse than their outbursts of nbl entnusiasm. A Southern Merchant, in Albany t... ped to say some tender things tn a colored lady in that city, the other evening, and while be was hpldinr his sweet disen.tr.. she stole his pocket book containing four thousand dollars, and run away with it. Old Men. An aereeablo and elcrani. mannered old man will always' be fa...,. ito with a young woman who is neigther a inn nor a tool, whether her sphere be a cat. tage or a court. " I love the still" as the ouiet rm!,,.t said to the chattering wife. Life, like the diamond in the- min. U sometimes valueless to its owner until it In comes estimated by another. No glasses affect the eves more unfair- ably than glasses of brandy. Epitaph on the grave stone of a vnun- lady. Died of thin shoes, Januarr. I829-. ' " Hear me for my caws." as thm rmw said to the old horse. " I'm going it on the fantactic toe." . the chap said ven he stepped on the danc ing master's foot. I wish vou'd n your own fooling," as the latter observed to the lormcr. A new paper has been started In Mam chuselts, called the Cabbage Stump."-. It is edited by a tailor. " I'm a walking sweetmeat," as the fsl low said who had been heels over heads in aJiogshead of molasses. It is rumored that the Susquehanna Tide Water Canal will be ready for boats on the 20th; when jt will be opened with a graarj. ceremony. The residence of the Hon. S. S. Pren tiss was destroyed by the late fire at Vicks burg. It is stated that a meeting has lately bsia. held in Mobilo, at which it was resolved' that if the incendiaries who infest that city should be caught, to burn thorn to death by; a slow fire. Fatal Fall. Daniel Reifsnyder wa late ly killed in Berks county,Pa.,by falling froa a hickory tree, while engaged in gathering its nuts. Important. A. rein of black lead, it is said, has been discovered on the farm of a Mr. Whitehead, in Coshocton county, O hio, which, on examination, provss u ba of an excellent quality. This, if true, is of greater value than a gold mine. Suicide. On Saturday last, Mr. Ilenry Unangst, of Williams township, in North ampton county, committed suicide, by hang ing nimseii upon an apple tree in his ow orchard. Hp is said to have been, laboring under a degree of mental aberration, which was doubtless the canse leading to this dis trcssingjovent. Love of Duly. A schoolmaster in Ver-' mont lately flogged a disobedient damie! attending his school, to whom he was en, gaged. He said, though he kissed her an a lover, it was his duly to lick her as a tiV tor. Speculation A younir m ; . .j. joining town was mightily smitten with the oeauty oi a lady whose father had a suit at law, which must forever make or break him, and popped the oueslfon ' ...... odin.lhe affirmative, and was expressing ......,CH,,t0 marriage, when lit (bus interrupted her, I can have thVrefusal r you for six monlhi, can't 1 1 Chicago EemocPkt, Jl