Una . A- J. IHMW I, Hilar ami Pra;rMr A Journal for the People. Devoted to the Interests of Humanity. Independent In Politics and Itellglon. Wive to all Live Issues, and Thoroughly Radical tnOpposingandKxposlnethe "Wrongs ol the Masses. 1 FFICE-COB.Fw. ST WASHIXeTOXSTBEET TEHXB, IN ADVANCE : Or. year.... 'T month Tlree month. 3flO .. 1 T-". .IN FBKB BPtttCH, FHBE PmBW. FREE PBOrLK. Correspondents writing over assumed signa tures moat make known tnelr names to tbs Editor, or no attention will be given to their communication. POIIXLAISTD, OTtlCGCXX, FKIDAY, MAY lO, 187S. NTTMBER 34. ADVERTISEMENTS Inserted on Reasonable rerma VOLUME VII. HER LOT OR, Has She lreleell. BtMhu. a. J. DCXIWAY. ACTUM O "JCDITH KEID," "EIXRX DOWO,-, "AMI AXS HEXRT LEE," "THE BATPT VOJR, 0 t VOIA.VK SPHERE, "BOI MORKISON," tir., rrr., etc. fJTnleHin.au rdncl" Art ofT'oncrem, In the year Knt, by Mrs. A J. Ininlwny, Inihe oilier of the Librarian of Congress hi Washington City. fit PTKn xv. . At a round table, near by a dozen others of similar character that were! Is. ' . I lAMi i F 1 1 I, TWA 1 1 u tMi'1,tf A,. (..11- I I a r . . . , i I Door, put Gerald, niv tiimliatMl. hi nrtM t unsteady, his eyes inflamed, his features bloated I could with difficulty recall a single trace" of the l-eauty, grace, and Stril?lltllllP44 that h.t.1 cntiti v-ntsii mpnn that Well-rememhered mornin i.. I Both wick meadows when he led the rlw n.. H.P ki,lritl . .lfrV ,rf . 1..1 of Both wick. I coud not trace in sinele feature an v ,., t ti i.,, i lectual promise aud goodness of heart I with whieh he greeted me on that never-to-be-forgotten afternoon when, as I verily believed, in answer to a prayer to Almighty God, he had brought me a slaughtered hare as evi dence of his skill in the chase, and, In proof of bis respect and admiration for my humble self, had presented it as a tribute to my mother. I thought of ail these things as I watched hitn at the gaming table. Op posite hiiu sat a woman in exquisite ap parel, her faultless attire of soft gray slufl" set off by filmy laces, contrasting t-caliariv uiih th II iif til I h Biirriiiiiiil, it.es. r l.lv-l-.l ....... ..H ft , pcilii-lii-l flag stones, men and floor alil.e covered ill uneven patches with a lih eial Mjpply of dirty saw-dust. My heart stood still. Iu spite of my-s-lf, I was as though riveted to the spot. Beside them, on the table, were several coin iu ns of t lie lifty-dol'ar com, at that time peculiar to California, and known as "tiug." K.u-li pHrlii-r was playing an earnest game, hut the woman bad the steadier hand aud cooler head of the two. I do not pretend to understand the intricacies of even the most simple game of curd-., -o I cannot descrllie to you, neither can I recollect, the terms they used, nor .lo I know the name of the particular-game they were engaged upon. I only know that the throbl.mg arteries of my husliaii'l's .'eatple were corded into knot, and his heavy breath ing was painfully audible. His com panion as as serene as a summer niorning. Willi her soft, white, jeweled hands hetrajing never a tremor, she play pi! on and I could no more move than if I had beeu iu the f iM-mating to, 1.-of a serpent. knew the Makes she was w inning were my own hard-earned quintuple eagles, aud I knew she was ulaviiiz to win. be- cause I felt the fact iu every fiber of my inner consciousness. The play went on lor half an hour, though the time seemed to me as an age. Then my husband saw that he was beaten. For an instant he seemed to realize the rum he had wrought; for he made a de-perate clutch at the hex- agonal colonnades of com, and glanced about him m a frightened way, as though seeking some mode of escape. Ah, the silv. ry, rippling laugh of that snbtlesireu ! Ilsstingiug melody hauuts , me yet ! ! "You ought not to mind losing, since it's that wins, my merry Caplaiu," i the exclaimed, as, ordering an express- ; man who bad stood watching the game , to take charge of her treasure, and de- ' nianding a receipt therefor with a busj- ness air, she turned from my huhaud , aud glanced uneasily at the door. Never have I seeu a more voluptuous-looking woman. Sometimes I wonder greatly at the in nate stupidity of otherwise sensible men who become fascinated with shrewd,-well-preserved, and affectedly j resort. Once only, on tbe door-step, woman-like wautons. Such a man may she paused to look np in his down fancy himself iu love with such a worn- Ltiirned face. It was a look nf triumph, an. Indeed, few men, or women, in-I sudden, decisive, aud full of meaning, sanely peijure their own happiness or' And I knew that Captain Gerald firey, resiiectabilitv for another's sake, except without money, would hence forth be to ulii.,1 illlu'lul u'i.li mm or n.tf.PA atutvu. ot the love malady. But when thus fascinated, they are fit subjects for hos pital treatment, and ought not to be al lowed to run at large, imperceptibly scattering Uie infection in the com munity, any n. ,re than a patient af- mcie-i win. mik.ii ,,)1X Mlou(, tM! mitted to go a.M.m unrestrained. er The principle In both C!tBtt! , the arae Tbe causes and enVoi, alue are differ ent iu kiud, though parallel in degree. Tbis womail was a blonde, with l,ia,.k eyes, and she was as plump, j i,tff alll, babyish in her pcreom tic as any .. f the many men-supported Women one oiteu see. at note.., wuo manage lo n.t- ter meuof mean, aud position into the e.ie. mat ney are poor.y appreciated , .,-.rary pallet, and wi.U my little by their wives and beloved by them- , "p held eWly , B,y arms, I fell iuto selves, and thus m.atuate their pa,iou- , deep, refreshing sleep. eii.laved du,ss, t.ll they fancy thesireus The sun was shining brightly when I arc t them. awoke, and a pack train, composed of a , ' ' .. loDK liae ot 're,Kht nml. was halted JJ'n vtr?r ,Te f Vtl,,edoor- l'ccustome.itol.,,,, V' T"2 : " y e h ' Wbere ' ,nUle ,rain8 iU lbe cHy' fr ,hi' "m , . , , , '"et" ... .a...... -..oU. me only killed a fine jack rabbit and served its ennobling pastime myself; so redoubling Ubii.ka one the miners had yet adopted; so the ham for me in tempting style; but the my kieks and otitis, I finally Induced c.i wi .. un.awiu, loveshouid presence of this one awake, ed no M.r- sight of it recalled the memory of the my charge to make some show towards i.. ...'j.ci,t ti.l the disease is prise. Yet I stood in the doorway, gaz- , hare that fJeruld. mv- l, i.,i t .il IH. bis fore le. . i. plication o man alllo-t have like cured. But I wit not thinking of these practi cal fancies then. Ah, me! That woman, who had won my own hard-earned gold from my hard-earned and poorly-paying husband for surely be liftd proved a worse than dead invest ment! that woman, who "toiled not, neither did she spin," yet Solomon, in II his glory, was arrayed to compare her; that woman, for whose baseness I have no adequate words, took my earn ings without a.perceptlbie shudder, and fastening her great black eyes upon the arbiter of my destiny, made him ten- ' fold more her slave than Itefore. You will wonder that, seeing all thii, through the intuitive knowledge that God siives to all women, I did not then . T ' 1 and there ru.h to mv husband's rescue. ! and beak the awlul spell that bound I I did not because T could not. I was "tupefle.1 with horror, shame, mortifioa- i lion, and the fear that 'the geueral dis- nJ acknowledgment of n.y husband sguilt would bring inetrievable disgrace upon my children and dishonor upou ln',M;,f- Then, I have told you that I feared my husband; and Uod knows tile reverential love 1 brought him as a holy sacrament when iu tuy chiUlit.li exHrience I became his wife, was iMit dead, and scarcely even slum lie red. Though, during his long alseuce from Melbourne, I hail well nigh wrecked my ideal self r.s-et by a passing fancy for Rev. Cvrus Stivdeuham. and though i felt as badlv self-condemned over tills one brief mental lape from the strictest and straightest line of rectitude as the pure in heart mut ever feel when they have met and successfully reoi-ted temptation, I could not forget that (ier- aid was niv husband, tbe father of mv children, and the one man of all others for whom I ws- in honor bouud to keep myself so long as we Ih.Hi should live. I am ii"t a new-fanhioued woman. To this day I deprecate, detest, and utterly repudiate the "affliiily" doctrines of cer tain latter-day reformers, who attempt to palliate and excuse Iheir own ler llctjom. I.y accusations, no matier how truthful, against their erring lor.!-. Two urotKj never did make one r'njhl, aud, iu my liumb'e judgment, never will. I did not, as I have said, eonlront and denounce my hiMiaud and his evil genius simply because I could not; and I could not .lo it simply because be was my husband, and I felt that any mr-li accusation againt him would doubly react upon uiyneil and his children. So, as they arose from the table and prepared to leave the building, I bowed my head and stole silently away, with a feeling that Gerald's guilt was n.y condemnation also, and I must conceal a" "r perish. You may ask, good reader, w hy I see proper to ili-cloi-e these humiliating facts at this time, since I wis so anx- to conceal them then. The adventurous manner who lias guided his ve-sel tlirough a long-continued storm, pat rooks and shoals aud breaker1-, striving vigilantly tbe while to keep his traveling companions iu hii.-sful ignorance of tl.e common dan- ger, does not forget, when the peril is l"'. ,u place lacons iu the great high- way of the ocean, as a warning to those who may come after him, that happily they may steer clear of the difficulties that once beset bis way. So I, by the experience light ot my three-score years of trial, hope to make life's roadway pWner for those who are to come after if, in so doing, I am compelled t reveal the suukeu crags that wrecked my happiness. I turned a corner and sought a narrow alley, where I took refuge, like a guilty creature that seeks lo hide from ooscr- vation, behind some blackened adobe walls, from which the wooden frame- work bad beeu burned by the recent coufligration. I watched my husband and the siren, aud saw them enter a uameless jalace of ll.-r A Vtr v .1 1 ilerel. I iHtrwiii frnm fnttlsin I Gerald Grey, with abundance of cash. But, ob, (how eye! They were tbe same I had seen in my dreams! They were the same I had sometimes encoun- tered when my own were shut! Ah, roe! It was uight when I again crowed the hay aud sought tbe bumble abode of my . Sisters of Charity could not have treated , Nimrod were not particularly Hatter Spanish friends, where my children j me and mine with more respectful ten- Ing, but from my rickety perch I could were. I was like a wrecked ship with , denies. A tent was pitched for our plainly see aud greatly enjoy the anl rudder and mainmast gone. But I was , especial use, in which an army bed, a mated scene. At times I could discern conscious of only one impulse. I must camp stove, crick chairs, and Kanaka ' a nude savage totally hemmed on all tlee. My lii shand must not find me. caret were placed as furniture, while sides by the frightened aud Infuriated How I was to get away from bis water, soap, wine, towels, food, every- beasts, apparently In Imminent danger vicinity was not vi clear, but I decided t !.. tUm Mm, mWnrAml wmtm bnunl iuI 1 nf lu.1 n mrwl or t n. 01 oll .!..-.!.. - rf , j l wul, do it. So. with this reso- , '' firmly taken, I crept Into my i ing earnestly about me. "Good-morning, Mrs. Grey," said a familiar voiee. I started like a gollty creature, for I felt like r fugitive from justice. "Have you forgotten roe?" was the nest query. And Mr. Lilllenlhal, the good-natured German friend who hail given me my first ft art In business, flood before me, proffering bis hand. "I believe God vent you, Mr. Lillien thal," I said, bluntly. And then, in spite of myself, I sobbed hysterically. "What's the matter, little woman ?" asked my friend, bis voice betraying real emotion. "Again I am penniless and destitute, and aniii I wai.t to go irtto a busino copartnership," l said, .rolling through te,r" tbe urdily of the propo- "Would yon like to run h pack train?" be asked, laughing aud rubbing liis hands, as though tbe idea were a good one. "Xot that, exactly," I answered, my spirits rising; "but I want to go with you to Nevada City; and when I get there I waut to keep a restaurant; and,. if you will supply me, I will give you half the profits of my latmr." "But how can you gu with me? I have nothing but freight mules and p.ick saddles for riding." "I don't care," I said, stoutly. "I couM ride a tlaxbrake or a saw-horse, or " ,,M"' " 1 w "" ' "K fr niy children at the end ot the jour- ney. " "Did you ever ride a-mule-back?" "No; but I will learn." "But the kittens. What will you d.1 with them ?" I really did uot know. But while I was considering ways and means M manage this new dilemma, my Spanish hoMess kindly loaned advice and aid; and in a little while I was mounted on a clumsy, sore-barked mule, my chil dren swinging at my side in panniers, and myself seated UKn a Spanish saddle-tree with a protruding horn, to which I clung uneasily, while the bur dened Least trotted along afan uneven jog that cut my breath short at every Jolt. But the chililreu enjoyed the rhle, au.l I wns too happy at the prospect of escaping from San Francisco to heed my own discomfort or consider the pos sible consequences of the fatiguing jour ney to myself. The first day's travel was accom plished iu comparative comfort. Kverv hour was widening the distance Ik?- tweeu my liege and I. aud I thought of liltle else till uiaatifU!. Then web died on the bank of tbe Sacramento Ui-er, in a clump or overgrown willows, with a One grove of live oaks near, to which we were comi-ellcl to remove at dark to escape the hungry horde of rousquitoes which attacked us in myriads, stamed- Ing the mules, and almost destroying my chililreu, iu spite of ray continued ellorts to keep them at bay. But for tru- musquitoes, my benefactor said be would have tarried a day or two, to give me opportunity to rest lefore trying the broken ridges of the Sierra Nevada; but the pests proved lutolera- ble, and we aJvauced our columns the next morning, as soon as the stampeded lrall be collected together. The agonies of that dreadful second .lay's lide I never shall forget. Only those who have encountered likeexe riences can form an idea at all approxi mating to tbe situation. I was in agony in every nerve and fiber of my brain and body. During tbe forenoon the fierce sunshine beat upon us with j jnsuflerahle beat. But at one p. M. we began to aicend tbe mountains, and goon the rarer atmospherewas more en- , .titrable. But long before night I was ( lne victim of a racking ague. Not j wishing to discommode my obliging benefactor, I would uot complain, but endured the torture until evening j landed us in the heart of the great i mountain gorge, where Fortune played . wjt0 tDe fateg f thousands as with a worthless toy, and reveled alike in tbe success of her favorites and the despair of her victims. When I alighted from the jaded mole I was far more tired than be; for, as soon as he was released from his trap pings, be began grazing upou the bill side, while I fell sick and exhausted to the ground. ! My children were cross and weary aln, and but for the great-hearted men I who ministered to our needs, we must I have ierished, for I was utterly uuable 1 to help myself or them. But a bevy of ,UIU IIIB V ..-J' ....-.., I ' " " ,n profut,0. One kind old gentleman in corduroy aml demlns, with a knife and brace of ,,,, ,t bis belt, and more grime and ; wou,j been required to sprout a hill of pola - ! toes, washed ami drewed the children, ' gave them their supper, aud put them ,0 i,. Auolheri & y0ling man iu ! oeer-skin aud shabbier hickory, tributed as a peace oflering to my poor mother, and the old scene eame op so vividly before me that I could wot est. After a while the children slept, and I was left alnne with them anil theangels. Then I rote and, closing my Usit door securely, availed myself of the eoii veuleneeat.batMl; ami though the ef fort cost me excruciating torture, I gave my body a vigorous soap-and-water and towel bath, after whieh I slept soundly. To he eon tinned. IBOHTIEK SOT0HE8. NO. 4. BY M. O. ft. RETM1A. Knowing that a bountiful repast gen erally conduces to cheerfulness and lo quacity, I attempted another assault i.,-.11 il.e imperturbable French: an'a , breastwork of reticeuce, after seeing The proximity of the enemy was an him retire in perfect coniHwure from a j nounced early iu the moruiiig by the full feast of delicious bollalo hump, but ' sentinels that were fiosled around our I found it invulnerable as before. But camp, and the utmost consternation after quoting an old French maxim for seemed to sieze the whole lrty. But my delectation that might l rendered, j no time was to be lost. The horses were "one fool can ask more questions than forthwith brought Iu, and either securely a score of wise men can answer;" as tethered or caprisoned for service, ami if to illustrate its truth, he turned the warrior, hastily denuding himself of querist himself, ami never was a diffl- j hU every hutilimeut,8trapped his trusty dent bumpkin forced to pa a more bow upon his person, ami shouldering trying ordeal at the bauds of a self-con-1 his lance, stood forth ready to "door ceited jietttfogger than I was while uu- dergoiug his searching examination, And since, for reasons that will heap parent to-the reader, I would just then much rather ask than answer questions, I was at times sorely puzzled how loan- , flashing iu the bright suuiight, and J ffxy with such of his political brelh swer. He -impounded his Interroea- j watch their trained steeds frisking, ; rel, are regponsiWe for his humiliat- iions in rrencii.anu immediately trans- lated my answers when I gave any to bis swarthy comrades iu a language that elicited frequent grunts of satisfac- lion or astonishment fiom them. Dur ing the evening he drew nut of tue that I was diaiis; fugitive from a village of In- thai I was lost upon the prairie, without chart or compass, and that I J felt the urgent need of sympathy and I aid; and, although I waxed eloquent iu j my appeals to him, as an Influential j representative of my own people and I race, who could succor me In my il-s- i p. rate situation, lie sal as impassive as; a stone, evincing le interest in me , ami my condition than tne untutored ; savages by his side. Iite at night, however, I retired to i r'" be had coolly handed me for a bed, heset by the same vague feeling of uu rest that hail been so long the compau ion of my every waking hour. How ever, I awoke early next morning much refreshed. After a hearty breakfast I was shown '' " ancient horse, which I was informed I would have the honor of rid- lu "" I remaineilith them. If, as son.e say, we may judge of a hors.. on- "dinacy by the shape ot his ears, the animal before me was certainly endowed wl11' po"'"" "r exceeding any of the species it had ever been my fortune lo n,ect. But I mounted my charger with tne rest. was WK" " way In l"est of buffalo. As I have said, my '"r,,e w9 ,a,n of " le" ",,u ,ook mincing, shuffling, hobbling gait with tbe other three. In addition to this, he '"" "" s. "ow" peculiarly ins owu-a uan.i i.e indulged in to great excess. To offset l',eHe rare qualities, however, he proved , " ""'y " a Krixzly bear, and as uutir- ing as a stagnounu. ine-iatter quality might not have been constitutional, bnt the result nf the rigid system of econ omy practiced in disbursing his strength and speed regardless alike of blows, kicks, and emphatic words. After traveling rather leisurely over a prairie for tiiree days, the cheering cry of "buttalo" was heard along the line. Directly ahead, on the right and on the , I. ft, small tdaek objects could be seen, j more resembling sluitiii than aught else. As we slowly approached them they became more distinct, gave signs I of life, mid could lie seen slowly moving ' about on the interminable plain. We ' continued slowly toward them, "in the ! teeth of the wind," until within a dozen , rods of the nearest, when, with deafen ing yell, the cnvnleuije dashed up to them, using their lung lances with tell- , ing effect upon the immense Animals. Never Iwfore had I beheld n scene so full of .excitement. We had not ad- vanced u mile alter reaching their out- KMits before we were in their nuilt, see ing the uncouth animals speeding along in wild eoufiision Iu every direction, while In the distance, and far away as the eye could reach, large numbers were quietly feeding, nil unentiseinus of the wild riot that stirred their fellows an near at hand. Mounted as I was, mv chances for winning laurels as a mighty " ll ' .-.-...J..V,. 1 W anon the blade of a savage lance would glitter in the hrighlauiillght, the victim would be seen to totter, his tall lashing : tl.e air in furious circles, and then to tuinuIe hettdloaf; to the earth. At an- . other time one of the lordly animals, ! rendered furious by pain, would rush blindly nt his pursuer as though deter- n,ie.l to sell his life us dearly nspos.1- ble. But I must taste the sweet8 of this I he went, throwiug me over liia head 'sprawling on tin ground. I really hoped the superannuated old hack had broken his neck, but, after emitting a most pa thetic groan, he slowly gained his feet and very complacently proceeded to nip the growing grass. This was my first ami last attempt to slaughter buffalo, and I here record It as my deliberate opinion that nobody should be allowed to kill a single one unless in self-defense. Darkness at leugth put an end to the slaughter, ami the party made camp on a small hrook near by for the purpose of curing the meat. But they were doomed to sad disappointment, for enemies, jealous of their invading the buffalo range, were hovering on their track and ready at a favorable time to pounce upou them. die." But liehold the threatening col- u in u marshaling for tin dread affray on yonder kuoll but a single mile away. Behold those gaudy streamers shooting iu the wiud, those glittering weapons plunging, ana uancing auout, as mougn eager for the impending contest. Now a wild and deafening warw hoop cleaves the air, and see the cloud of dust awak ened by rushing feet, as, all come madly dasihug toward ourdoomed camp! Com- pletely surrounding us, they halt at two I hundred paces' distauce, aud offer a fa- vored few a chance for life. Two stal- i wart savages, accompanied by the negro that had met meat the Waco Village, ! slowly approach for a parley. Ou seeing j Sambo as one of the high-contracting parties, I immediately rise to the dig- ; inly of the occasion, astride my noble charger, and ride bravely out to meet mm. ne gave me a con.iai Ria-p n the nan. I, aud, aiinougn 1 oeggeu pit- , eously, if not eloquently, for the shriuk- ing vagabonds that had lieeu kind to! me aud my noble dog, he was iuexor- j able. His ill tonui turn was that one-half j of the Osages should forthwith meekly submit to death as an atonement for the crime of iuvading the country of the Wacoes and slaying tbeir game, and tbe ebony-colored chieftain sol emnly assured me that, were those mer ciful terms not accepted, tbey - would proceed to dispatch tu w-!io!tf hsod ff hated Osages. I returned at ouce to the terror-stricken camp, aud when I in formed them tlirough the stoical old Frenchmau of the ouly conditions nf mercy, they all honor to them he it said unanimously rejected them and dared the tyrants to strike. And there, under a blazing July sun, hand to baud, the horrible combat raged, until of the fifty faithful Osages less than a dozen remained alive. But the victory was dearly bought, for quite as many of the assailants fell during those two eventful hours to rise no more. But why should I attempt to portray the horrors of that day, for no simile can give tl.e reader :i fair conception of the awful scene, and the most graphic arrangement of words must fail far short in describing the soul-harrowing atroci ties that that noon day sun looked down upon. Yet, strange to relate, while the tell spirit of revenge aud hatred was im pelling these savages to deeds of the , darkest diabolism, uot a hand was lifted against me from either side, while often I stood where blood flowed fastest, and once or twice interposed to shield the wounded from the murderous bauds up raised against them. But not so for tunate the impassive old Gaul, for he was knocked from his feet early iu the engagement aud left securely bound until the combat ended. But the most sickening and savage scene of all to a civilized eye was the deliberate slaugh ter of the wounded foe aud friend alike at the close of the battle. Ah, mel War has horrors enough when all the merciful provisions, of civ ilized nations are faithfully regartled, but the revengeful heart of the savage invests it with many additional horrors. After such of the wounded had been slain as were uuable to ride, night very appropriately draped- the heuveus in black, while we, one and all, watched upon the gory field. To be continued. A President's Widow. It li a sad fact that Mrs. Abraham Lincoln, the widow of the late President Lincoln, Is living a secluded life in au Interior town in France, and declines to return to America, lest she may again he plaeejd In a lunatic asylum. It is said that in Frauee she still indulges, to a moderate extent, in her propensity for buying things for which she has no use, and filling elo-ets with articles wholly unnecessary. "Marriage," twys George Eliot, "is promotion." And this sort of promo tion makes seme young men so proud ami stuck up that tbey won't do a stroke of work afl long as their wives are able to make shirts and take iu wash lug to keep them. 'T will not learn a trade !" exclaimed a young city blood to Ins father. But tills business of learnings trade Is only a matter of lime; lor within a year that young man was studying harness-making iu the State prison. OUB WASHINGTON LETTEE. To the Editor or the New North west: A new door-keeper presides over the destinies of the House. Colonel Polk, the former incumbent, was unceremo niously laid on the shelf on Monday last, and General Field Is the wearer of the official honors of the position. We have seen nothing more entertaining tbis session than the right over Polk's sueceeeor. Ben Butler moved to elect General Shields, of Illinois, and tbeu argued In his peculiar manner that the gallant war record of Shields gave him precedence under the law, and by right over Field, who had perjured himself by going with the confederacy after a West Point education. This onslaught ou Field of course iuvnked bitterest per sonal discussion, in which there was as much eloquence, sarcasm, wit, aud re tort as we have ever heard in the hall in one afternoon. Butler, of course, had to bear the brunt. But his master' of taunt and satire renders him a match for any one iu the House in ability to give a Rolaud for an Oliver, aud we Here gratified with the spectacle of a battle of the intellects. These contests are oases in the desert of legislation, for they are tbe only means of relief given to the dull monotony of ordinary busi ness. Mr. Polk is of course exceedingly sore over this misfortune, and lie has gone into our papers with some crisp cutting letters, in which he deals nuite ing downfall. But he is au "out," aud that suffices iu Washington to bury a politician as effectually as sis feet of earth. Improvements and embellishment of the grounds ami buildings are constantly made at the Soldiers' Home. These, unite! with the natural beauty of the place, reuder it the most beautiful of all our resorts. It, of course, attracts little public notice because it does not call upon Congress for its support, being sustained wholly by the assessments made upou tbe my ot all regular army soldiers of 12) cents per month. Yet, were our economical legislators asked to appropriate a lew inousan.ts annually tor its repair or improvement, tbe howl nf protest would be alarming, and it would become at once the subject of constant investigation. As it is, a pres- itieut can leave the miasmatic White House and resideat the Home asquietly, yet as grandly, as Queen Victoria at Windsor Caatie. Mrs. Hayes is having the cottage that she occupied last sea sou out at Soldiers' Home refitted ami brightened up in very pretty style for another summer's residence, awl will, as soon as Leol is over and our warm May sunshine has put the grounds and gardens iuto their brightest trim, re move there with all her family. Of course she will take Mr. Hayes with her, for she undoubtedly thinks lie is like the ancient woman's man a good thing in tbe family, even if his political brethren are somewhat Inelined toward excluding him from their fold. The Soldiers' Home is a grand plaee for a presidential resilience, aud it is fitting indeed that Mr. Hayes makes It his home during our summer heat-, ratber than some ocean resort with its accu mulation of evils which curse all so called fashionable resorts. Our i-chool authorities have beeu greatly excited over the strong prospect before them of having to close all our public schools at the end of April, aud have been busy devisiug ways and means for their continuance. Congress lias drawn a check ou the disbursement of moneys by our commissioners that acts tsaniewliat similar to that law which bars Chicago authorities from expendiug lieyond a stated amount, and tbe consequence is, no provision is made for exigencies. Owing to the gen eral delinquency in payment of taxes our treasury has become depleted, and our school lioard rind themselves neces sarily short. We have one jieculiar feature here which does not obtain else where. One-half the pupils of our pub lic schools are children of non-residents who are in government employ, and few of tbein pay any taxes. Tile burden of tbeir support ialls, necessarily, on the one-half of our community, and yet, the most intense grumbler over any failure to build costly school-houses. furnish constant teachers, etc, is lie who Is here temHrarily, and who boasts that hu votes and owns property else where, The Senate judiciary committee's fundi ug bill was passed by the Senate on Tuesday evening, after a prolonged ami able discussion, and by a decisive vote of forty to nineteen. Some seven teen Senators were absent, but had each one been present and voted no, the re sult would have been the same, inas much as the forty voters were masters of the situation. The lobby gave up their fight after a test vote on Mr. Blaine's proposed amendment, though it had prepared a doseli others all look ing to the same end the protection of the Union Pacific Interests, rather than those nf the government. Tbe bill is now before the House, which, we pre' ilict, will make short work of it, as there Is undoubtedly a strong feeling among the members adverse to the Union Pa cific schemes and its prince of lobby Ists, Jay Gould. Party I!n? were ig- noreti in thisimporUtntdBbate and vote Blaine ami his old opponent in the House, Hill, of Georgia, fought side by side against Messrs. Edmunds ami Thur- man, and the ayes and noes throughout display the same singular sandwiching of llepublieau and Democrat. The country will, through this anomaly, be compelled to saddle whatever responsi bility is iuvolved upon the Senators, in dividually, aud we should uot be sur prised if there would not be to some of the participants in this debate a calling to accouut in the future, pretty much as with the credit mobilier matters. Our past letters have shown our sym pathies to he wholly with Messrs. Ed munds and Thurman, aud the tiual ar guments have only served to strengthen oar convictions. The Houeeis moving along as serenely as a summer s calm, after IU storm about tbe new door-keeper, Field. Both parties tried bard to make iiolitical ap ital nut of it, and, from tbeir stand points, seem to have succeeded, at least each Is crying victory over the other by the matching of Bbh Butler's strategy in comiielltug the Democrats to ignore General Shields with the adroit flunk movement of Mr. Bragg, by which all parties voted to put General Shields oil the retired list. Considerable mud was thrown during the debate, aud it was a difficult matter to determine who got the worst of the war of words. Mr. Blackburn said that tbe only confeder ate ever hurt by General Butler was the) one eiviliau hanged iu New Orleans. But it was diamond cut diamond. Mr. Butler is a roaster nf sarcasm, and par ticularly so when after Sunset Cox's ,-cnlp. The wit aud drollery of Mr. Cox is not a match for Butler's sarcasm, and, as a consequence, he is nearly al ways worsted iu au encounter character ized by the personalities aud K)lftlol mud. flinging after debate upou Mr. Field's election aa door-keeper. These wordy duels, however, are intensely In teresting to tbe non-participants. Tbe members are all iu their seats aud eeae their turmoil, which makes tbe floor usually akiutoa bedlam.audtbey tangb and applaud every hit as heartily as tha spectators iu the galleries. Fbi.IX. Washington, I). C, April 12t 1S73. i I l.ncT Won t Have It" A Washington letter hi the Philadel phia Prett contains the following ac cniiut of how Mrs. Hayes entertained a euchre quartette.: It is said that early iu his reign Kutherford had invited some of the boys up for a card party, and the thing was "set up" iu advauce. The game was to be euchre, although Sherman aud Thompson were yearning for a little draw poker. The guests came, and were ushered without ceremony into the President's library. Kutherford was there, aud so was madam, more inter esting and winsome, if ixsible, (ln.il usual. She was particularly solicitous about the health of each and the taunly of the same, hoped Uncle Dick Thomp son wouldn't work himself to death, and 'bade Mr. Kvarls beware how he look fried clams on bis stomach at mid night. Mr. Sherman boied they were nut detaining Mrs. Hayes from receiv ing other friends, or from the pleasant duties of the domestic circle. Ob, no, indeed. Tbis was her hour with her husband and any of his intimate friends wbo bapMiiel.t drop iu. Thompson looked at Sherman and winked. Sher man remarked: "Ah, yes, beautiful thought, madam; beautiful thought." Kvarls emitted a wordy eulogy on the beauties of home life aud the President yawned. Kleveu o'clock eame, aud the visitors withdrew with the sweetest of parting benedictions from Mrs. Hayes. The next day Rutherford was obliged to admit to his disappointed friends, "It's no use; Lucy won't have it; she don't say a word, but you see how she works it." There'won't beany wicKedne-s at the White House If .Mrs. Hayes eau help it. There is a great deal of intriftueiy which she knows nothing about, but that doesn't count. When she sliikes anything ou color. she 'shoots it ou the spot." UsHAPpy Marriages The univer sal ex MfCtaliou of married people is, that their lives will always lie happy ones. Deluded dreamers! They Iniagtue that they are dillereiit from other people. and that when they enter the portuls of matrimony, love, (leace, aud prosperity will ever lie their attendants. Such had better consider themselves the same as others, but form iron resolutions to do differently from oilier married people resolutions that will keep them Irom the duugerous coasts ou which so many have beeu wrecked and ruined. Un happy marriages depeud upon many causes. Previous to marriage, many try to appear more intellectual, more amia ble, or more accomplished thati they really are. Depend ilpnu it, that love brought into existence by a moonlight stroll, strengthened by deceit and fash ionable displays, and nuaiiy consum mated through the lulliieiice of Intrigu ing friends, will fade iu after life utmost as fast as. the flowers which compose tue unuai wreain. A literary society at Delaware. Ohio. has a letter written by Horaee Greeley iu IS 19, in which he thus refers to his educational attainments: "I know a little newspaper Latin and French, and might nave mastered a little (Jreek tbe same way, if the barbarians had known enough lo ussau Intelligible alphabet. ui matnemaiics, l learned what Is con tained in Adam's arithmetic; of gram mar, just enough to see clearly that Litidley Murray knew very little and blundered shockingly. As to ehirog raphy, mine speaks for itself, not clearly as to matter, but quite distinctly enough as to manner." If a man is to tie baptized It ought to be done thoroughly. The other day a convict was immersed, and when he went home he took with him tbe min ister's pocket-book. If he had been held under water for half an hour this accident would never have occurred. Heading makes a full man, and so docs whisky. An old settler a piece of codfish.