She garnottr pint!lligturer, PISIILDMED EVERY yiEDNICEIDLY HT 11. G. SMITH * CO. H. H. 82.11T11 TERMS—Two Dollars par annum, payable all oases in advance. TIIE LANCASTER DAILY iNTELLIGENOZI/ II published every ovaning, Sunday oscopted, at 15 per Annum in advance,. OFF/OE-BOUTIIWEAT CORNED OE °ENTRE 841:1A DE. iaiiiiiiiMi Wittclianumo. The Ocean and Some of Its Products. The ocean bed Is supposed to be as di- Versified as the solid earth, and maps have been prepared exhibiting the character of the submerged land at dif ferent localities. The most thorough soundings have been those made in the Atlantic ocean, which show it to be a long trough or gush extending probably from pole to pole. The division corn. monly made between the different oceans is a purely imaginary ono, as they are ill fact ono large body of water, different portions of which aro known by different names. The regular awel ling and sinking of this vast fluid mass, called the tide, Is caused by tile com bined influence of the sun and moon, and is supposed to originate in the southern polar seas and thence to roll around the globe. The attraction of the moon le threefold theta the sun, owing to its greater proximity to the earth and the ocean is so constantly and strongly drawn to the point over which that satellite stands as to rise toward it, forming an accumulation of water, while, at the same time, a sort of sec ondary swelling takes place on the op posite side of the globe. The interme diate points are left at differen t stages of low tide, according to their distance from the watery elevations. Although the sun exercises an Influence far less potent than that of the moon; it still produces a visible effect upon the waters and modifies their 'movement. When the sun and moon stand directly in a line, the combined attraction of the two raises the tidal wave to the greatest possible height, and causes the spring tide, which occurs every full and new moon ; while when they stand at right angles to each other, the effect is parti• ally counteracted, and the result is a low tide. •As the moon 'waft' on, the tidal wave follows her, always aboutl three hours in the rear, flooding the different shores ash rolls by, and rising to a greater or less height according to the varying character of the coasts und other controlling circumstances. In the South Sea Wanda the tides scarcely reach theheightof twenty inches, while the highest tide known, wh I ch occurs to the Bay of Fundy, attains forty, fifty, and even sixty feet. The ocean covers more than seven•tentlis of the surface of the globe, and contains a much larger number of living creatures than can be found on dry land. The minute beings, visible only with the microscope, which exist in its waters are alone sufficient to form the subject of a separate science. Lowest In the rank of animal life stands the sponge, a creature which has been known from antiquity, and whose na ture has always been a subject of dis pute. For HOMO time it was classed by naturalists among vegetable produc tions, and only receutly has it been as signed a place in the animal kingdom. It is undecided even yet whether each sponge is a single individual, or u con gregation of minute creatures living to gether hi a community like that of the coral polypi. Thu most important sponge fieherles are those in the Grecian Archipelago and on the shores of Syria, although the commodity Is also ob tained from the lied Sea, the Gulf of Mexico, and to some extent along the whole Mediterranean coast. Thesponge has become so valuable as an article of commerce, that the fisheries have been nearly exhausted in order to supply the demand; and unless artificial cultiva tion is resorted to, it Is probable that the sponge wilisoon entirely disappear. The poorer qualities are found la shallow water and torn from the rocks by means of three•forked harpoons ; but the finer kinds, which grow at a depth of from twelve to twenty hahoms, and brought up by the divers, and have to be care fully detached from the rock by means of at knife. Closely allied to the sponges are the corals, %chose rank In the order of creation was for a lung lime equally undetermined. The plan t!like appear - mice of the majority of corals caused' them to be classed among vegetables;' and Peyssonnel, the lirst to discover I their animal nature, was met with such ' indifference and irony, that he became discouraged and retired to the Antilles, where he spent the remainder of Ills life as a naval surgeon. Subsequently the naturalists who hail opposed his the ,cry became convinced of its truth, and introduced it into established science, Coral Wild to be a stony structure compened of the caleareouscel is of Innumerable little creatures called I polypi, whose abodes formed a compact 1 1 inass, and whose shells, when the living animal within died, became a foundation I for the homes or their successors. The polypi increase by budding, the young creatures springing from the sides of the order animals, and there remaining fix ed to grow and harden. Although the angle animals are exceedingly minute, they increase in such immense numbers that they soon fill a large space, and numerous islands have been formed by the slow and constant upward growth , of the coral until it ilas reached the sur• face. Then the consta4 action of the waves breaks off large portions of the manes from one place to pile It upon au other,and brings drift wood to be detain- ed by theobstacle and make a foundation for the solid earth which finally accu• mutates. As It is impossible for the coral animals to exist iu very deep water, it was at first difficult to account for their rearing islands from the bot tom of the ocean. The first supposition was, that they built around the craters of extinct volcanoes; but the latest theory advocated by Mr. Darvin, at tributes the fact to the gradual subsi dence of the bed of the ocean in certain localities. According to this supposi tion, the corals most begin their struc ture at a time when the ground upon which they build Is sufficiently near the surface to suit the necessities of their existence. Gradually the slow growth of the coral keeping pace with the equally slow alteration in the bed of the ocean, the dead portions of the mass sink, leaving the coral always in a favorable condition. When the inun dation becomes stationary, the little creatures finally attain the surface and cease their labors. The coral fisheries are situated chiefly in the Me diterranean, where the red coral, which is considered the most valuable, grows In great banks. An engine, its it call ed, composed of tv,o bars of wood and a network of lines, is let down over a coral bank from the side of a vessel, and dragged along the bottom of the sea until it catches in the rocks upon which the coral grows. It is then raised by a violent exertion on the part of the crew, tearing up blocks of stone together with the coral, which is collected and cleansed before it is handed over to the jewel ler. Pearls are the third great pro• duct of the ocean for which regular fish eries have been established, the most important being those iu the Bay of Ben gal, Ceylon, and other parts of the Indian ocean. Here the pearl oyster is procured by divers, who sink to the bottom with the aid of large stones, and remain there for about 30 seconds gathering all the shells within reach. The work is ex ceedingly severe, and the men are fre quently devoured by sharks. The search for pearls always ends at noon, when a gun Is fired, and all the boats return to the shore, in order that the load my be examined and cared for by daylight. The shell-fish are piled together, and the heap is left for about ten days, by which time the remains becomeentirely decomposed. The shells are then easily opened, the round pearls, which are found in the body of the oyster, are collected, and the valves of the oysters, which furnish nacre or mother-of-pearl are cleansed and sold by the cask.' The pearls are sifted to separate the different sizes ; the smaller ones are sold by weight and the others singly, according to their value. The nacre and the pearl are formed of essentially the same material, but the nacre is deposited over the whole shell In layers, while the pearl Is the result of an effort on the part of the oyster to free itself from the irritation of some foreign substance which has penetrated within its valves. As the animal is in capable of ejecting any intruder, such as an unwelcome grain of sand, it ren ders it less obnoxious by depositing around it the smooth and lustrous sub stance which is so eagerly sought for by man: The Chinese are so well acquaint ed with this fact, that they force the oyster to form pearls, by thrustingemall figures of tin between the valves, and then returning the creature to the water whence it is finished up In the courstiOf a few. years, and a pearl extroated . M- , tattling the shape of the tln: TherO to butMle kind or oyster. which possesses thelOowet of Prodticliklearls to any cOrislderahle extent, although they can Micadipualt be 'found In Other :speofee. of Oka* and even In mussels. .... • • . . . . ' .'. ' ' ‘ S . r. ,' C l . ‘ .; ' ''''' ' •• ' 'k , 1 ' :i .. A ' ,J ..' ... i 7 . ...: ' . J .. .. ' t . . .I. * ~ . k t ' . . . A ... • .. ..„ . '---... . • .. • .., ... . • .. . . . . . .. . ... , . .• ... . . .: . . .. . • ... ... '. f ''-1 '.' •111 : :.. .: j 10 , . an .•, , . • . • ~ 31:9 • . 1 11 .. . -. • : ii F.: 9: , - ... . ... ,I, r 1 .. . liln 1 I ' , • Z.:: • A r, i.,... : : ~. r. • ~ ~. . ~,. IIIV ' .•• . i.J. .• . . 11 , r 9 . - . 4 . A . . • . A. J. STILTNDIAPi VOLUME 69 American Saigon In Italy. Bayard Taylor writing to the New York Tribune, gives the following ac count of American Sculptors in Italy: I first came upon the track of onr artiste in Venice, where I found Mr. Yewell making an admirable copy of a very lovely Madonna of Padovanino, and Mr. Loop similarly employedhefore the noble Santa Barbara of Palma Vec chio. I only saw the first of these works completed. The coloring of the original was reproduced with great truth and purity of tone, and the picture shone like a star among the plentiful crudites of the Italian copyists, who arc equally deficient In color and form. These latter, however, seem to paint simply as a business; but the marvel still remains —whither go those never-ending cari catures? Wise buysthem? Whathappy Ignorance rejoices in their pdlisession ? I have tin Idea that some of them find their way to America! I looked upon the canvasses of two men who were painting before Titian's "Assumption." Verily, a sight of them would have been a draught of poison to the old master. The glorious coloring of the Venetian school was not only wanting, with Its harmonies striking the sense like grand chords of music, but the copyists had somehow man aged to suggest discord, Instead. These are probably the pictures bought up by dealers at 40 or 00 francs apiece, and they are painted in a manner to corres pond with the price. Here, in Florence, an altar-piece of Fm Angelico Is con stantly surrounded, three or four paint ing at a time. Fra Angelico's angelic musicians are fashionable just now, and there is a thriving trade lu brilliant copies, on a gold ground. They are not bad, ther—the originals being fiat, and chiefly painted with unmixed pigments. I recognized no'American artist copy ing in the Floreritine galleries, except Miss Lee of Philadelphia, who has since goneto Rome, where ourpainters mostly congregate. I was about to say that we are represented only by sculptors in Florence, but must not forget the ex ception made by Miss Alexander, who takes up the art which her father seems to have relinquished. I had the pleas ure of examining a large collection of exquisite pen-drawings made by this lady—studies from nature, portraits, and Illustrative sketches—alishowing an eye of rarest keenness for seizing form and character. The artists who have seen these drawings are delighted with them. Holman Hunt, especially, was quite unreserved in 1118 praise. I have seen but one picture by Miss Alexander—a peasant.glrl of the Apennines—but it was enough to show a genuine feeling fur color, in addition to her other fine qualitles , as an artist. Six American sculptors have taken up their residence in Florence—Power, Ball, Hurt, Mead, Connelly, and Jack son. Powers, in fact, has becomea part of Florence to every American traveler. When I entered the well-known base ment halls in the Via de' Serragli, breathing once again the old atmosphere of marble dust, hearing the delicate click of a dozen hammers and chisels on growing busts or statues, and seeing around me the plaster records of 30 years of; steady labor, it seemed but a day, instead of 11 years, that I had been away. In the inner sanctuary, Powers, In his cap and apron, was working with the same earnest absorption in his face as when I left him In 1850. His hair is thinner, his beard grayer, since then, but his hand Is just as firm, his eye as wonderfully luminous, and there Is no trace of age in nuy of his works. Since he first came to Florence, in 1838, Powers has made fully five hun dred portrait busts, beside a number of Ideal works, all of which have been re peated. The bust of Progdrpine, for In stance, enjoys such a remarkable popu larity, that It has been reproduced in marble more than eighty times I The Greek Slave exists in six repetitions, the California in four, and I think there Is none of Powers' works which stands alone, except, perhaps, tha Penserosa. Of the sculptor's place and fame, I need say nothing. They have been fairly settled by this time; the judgment of :10 yearn is generally equivalent to that of "all time." No artist before Powers ever overcame to such an extent the re sistance of the material in which he works. Marble, in his hands, becomes as plastic as clay. His execution is so entirely admirable, that It is much easier to say what Ills works are than what they are not. His Ideal works, in addition to their anatomical truth, are characterized by grace and sweetness, and the absence of all attempts-at start. ling effect must be counted as an unusu al In this generation of art. I find no echoes of former masters In his works Powers is now employed upon a statute, to which he has not yet given a name. It might be called "The Last of the Race." A tall, beautiful Indian woman is represented as In the act of running, but with a weariness of body and limb which indicates that the end of her llightis near. Her head is turned to one side, as if listening to the sound of pursuit. The face expresses both fear and pain, not sharp and desperate, but dulled by the knowledge of an in evitable fate. The figure is not only very beautiful, but it fully expresses the sculptor's intention. It promises to be the very best of his statues. He has modeled it in plaster, by his new method, which 1 had never before seen In actual practice. Its advantage over clay, especially in figures which express motion, is very marked. Powers's studio comprises five or six halls, in which a dozen skilled work men are constantly employed. The cast aids busts and statues, and the repeti tions in marble which are being wrought out, form a tolerably complete gallery of his labors as a sculptor, and many a less earnest man would here be satisfied to pause and rest. The sculptor, how ever, has one of those fortunate natures which are only happy in creative ac tivity ; and he will work while he lives, which, let us hope, will be for many a year to come. Mr. Ball has been In Florence about three years. In addition to busts, for which our American people seem to have the same passion as the Romans of the Imperial time, he has two im• portant works in his studio, one com pleted and one still in the clay. The former records Lincoln's decree of Emancipation in a simple yet express ive manner. The President, *holding the shield of the Union in his right hand, extends his left over the figureof a kneeling negro, from whose wrists the broken chains have just fallen. His head is slightly bent, and his eyes are cast downward, which, nevertheless, does not in the least lessen the force of the portrait. It is one of the very few heads of Lincoln I have seen which gives the beautiful, sad benignity of his face, as in life. I should object to the word "Liberty" on the negro's Phry gian cap, as being unnecessary, and I am not certain that the introduction of the shield, though correctasan emblem, does not detract from the telling sim plicity of the group. The head and fig ure of Lincoln, however, are very nobly and successfully done. The other work is a figure of Eve, just awakened to life from the hands of her Creator. Her attitude is original and strikingly graceful, the body slightly bent forward and resting on the right foot. The head, lifted, Is turned to the same side, with an expression of ,inno cent wonder, in which there is a trace ofjoyons sensation. One hand plays, abstractedly, with her long, rippling tresses, held there simply by the feeling of their soft abundance. It is a pity that the conventional stump (rendered i • necessary to bear up the weight of the marble) cannot be spared from this figure. Its pose is light, aerial, glad some; one sees the mature, perfect mother of men, taking Masan incred ible gift. She is not the tragic Eve of the Fall; but on the other hand she never could be mistaken fora nymph or a bacchante. Her nudity is inseparable from purity. This beautiful work will add greatly to Mr. Ball's reputation. Mr. Hart's residence in Florence, in cluding his temporary sojourns in Eng land and America, dates trona 18 years back. He is best known at home by his statue of Henry Clay, which has been erected both in Kentucky and New Or leans. He has been employed, for two years past, •in modeling a group repro. renting Woman, as she is in our day, not to be stricken by every random Cu .pid, but herself holding and containing the full might of love. She, has taken the laet 'arrow from- the. quiver of the little Amoret at her side, and holds it archly above he head. - The pose of the figure is very good, and the masses of the form ((t is notyetdeveloped further) broadly and harmoniously indicated. The Cupid saves . the introduction of a stump or pillar, whereby the grotip ac quires a freer, simpler air. Mr. Hart is Such a patient artist, so little hasty to see his conceptions oompleted in marble, that I fearsome time will yet elapse be fore this work earth° given to the world His ingenious machine—which might be oalled aoompound system of callipers —for taking two or three hundred meas urements of head at the same time, is a great , saving Of labor to the sculptor, in cases where - he must work rapidly. A tolerable likeness may be blocked out by it in a very short space of time. It cannot, however, succeed the intellec tual labor of sculpture, any more than the photograph can supersede painting. Expression,reduced tone final elements, may be simply material form, but it cannot be caught by merely mechanical agencies. The same remark will apply to what is called photo-sculpture. The technical term of the artists—Vesting " —expresses that tine and subtle repre sentation of character which comes from a spirit not to be measured or maculated, working from the artist's heart and brain through his hand. This spirit will always elude machinery. Mr. Mead has a large studio, or series of studios, and employs eight or ten men. For so young a sculptor, he has been very fortunato,in making himself a name and receiving the commissions which follow thereupon. 'The most im portant work he has on handle a figure of America, for a soldiers' monumentin Vermont. It is a proud, defiant Titan ess, with the eagle at her feet and a sword in her hand. The profile of the face is superb, though it belongs to the Southern rather than to the Northern ordei of beauty. The shoulders are thrown back, the bosom slightly ad vanced, and the whole figure thus ac quires an air of power, of majesty, of fearless independence, which is truly imposing. It seems to me that the dis position of the drapery does not quite bear out this character; but I ought not, perhaps, to criticise a work which is not yet f ul l y completed. Mr. Mead nas a group of a Union sol dier telling the story of battle and suf fering to his little daughter. The head of the former Is particularly good. Two statuettes of Echo and the Mountain- Boy show a more ideal tendency, which rises to mysticism in a figure called "Mystery holding the Lamp of Life." Here he has passed out of the proper province of sculpture Into that of poetry. The temptation to do so isgreat, because there is always a class of admirers for works of this kind, which may be as beautiful in form as mistaken in con ception. The imaginative element in a sculptor is severely restrained by the character of his art ; but in every branch of art, allegory is dangerous ground. I confess I like Mr. Mead's soldier best. He has undoubted genius, and evidently great facility in giving form to his ideas, which ought not to make difficult to him the stern conscientious study that leads to the highest success. Mr. Connelly was a young painter of great promise, whom Mr. Powers's en gagement turned to sculpture, and he se already, atthe age of 20, distinguish ed himself in the latter art. He Inherits much of the antique sense of grace and symmetry. In looking at his works I felt the presence of the great andjoyous activity. My chief fear, In his case as in Mr. Mead's, is that he may be temp ted to work too rapidly. I see, also, the same tendency to trespass on poetic ground, "The Silver Cord and the Gold- ' en Bowl" cannot be made evident in sculpture withdut a good many words of explanation. But he hasan exquisite figure of Arethusa, and a group (not yet finished) of two Spartan warriors, which has most admirable points. In portrai ture, especially of ladles, he is also very successful. There is, evidently, a great deal of "Greek fire" in Mr. Connelly. I no ticed, however, but one specimen of re semblance—that of the Venus of Milo in his " Diana." But it is a like spirit, working in modern ideas and concep tions. I n losing the mythological world, sculpture lost tenfold more than the other arts. The beautiful Nude is not found In our life, scarcely in the figures of our religion. Perhaps the tendency to representabstractimaginative fancies comes from this. But the sculptor should always remember that he has least liberty. He cannot throw a fleet ing idea into a pen-drawing a lyric or a sonnet. Humor , except in its subtlest and archest form, is excluded from his realm. His draperies must speak, equal ly with the trunk and limbs; the very accessories of his figures assume a new solemnity, as a cup transferred from the banquet•table to the altar. I have been greatly delighted with my visits to the five studios. (Mr. Jack son is at present in America). So much more is being accomplished than ten years ago, and the most of it is so ex cellent, that I feel sure our American era of Art has already dawned , An Authenticated Story or the' Super A late French paper published the following, and vouches for Its truthful ness: A young German lady recently ar rived, with a party of friends, at one of -the most renowned hotels in Paris, and occupied an apartment on the first floor, furnished with unusual magnificence. Here she lay awake, long after the hotel was wrapped in slumber, contemplat ing, by the faint glimmer of her night lamp, the costly ornaments of the room, until suddenly the folding-doors op posite her bed, which she had secured, flew open, and the chamber was fill ed with a bright light as of day. In the midst of this, there entered a handsome younc man, in the un dress uniform of the French navy. Taking a chair from the bedside, he placed in the middle of the room, sat down, took from his pocket a pistol with a remarkable red butt and lock, put it to his forehead, and, firing, fell back, apparently dead ! Simultaneously with the explosion, the room became dark and still, but a low soft voice uttered these words—" Say a word for his soul." The young lady had fallen back, not in sensible, but in a far more painful state —a kind of cataleptic trance, and thus remained fully conscious of all that she imagined to have occurred, but unable to move tongue or hand, until 7 o'clock on the following morning, at which hour her maid, in obedience to orders, knocked at the door. Finding no reply was given, the maid went away, and returning at 8, in com pany with another domestic, repeated her summons. Still no answer, and again, after a little consultation, the poor young lady was delivered over for another hour to her agonized thoughts. At nine the doors were forced, and, at the same moment, the power of speech and movement returned. She shrieked out to the attendants that a man had shot himself there a few hours before, and still lay upon the floor. Observing nothing unusual, they concluded it was the excitement consequent upon some terrible dream. She was therefore, placed in another apart ment, and with great difficulty per suaded that the scene she had so min utely described had no foundation in reality. Half an hour later, the hotel proprietor desired an interview with a gentleman of the party, and declared that the scene so strangely enacted had actually occurred three nights before. A young French officer had ordered the best room in the hotel, and there ter minated his life,—using for the purpose a pistol answering the description men tioned. The body and the pistol still lay at the dead-house for Identification, and the gentleman, proceeding thither, saw both ; the head of the unfortunate man exhibiting the wound in the fore head, as in thi,vision. A Deserved Eulogy. Mr. Johnson All deserves that just and beautiful eulogium :pronounced upon him by Governor Seymour, of New York : "I have no political prejudices in favor of Mr. Johnson. I have never seen him, and he is not one I helped to Voce in office, nor have I ever advised him or been counselled by him as to his policy. I said he had been cheated and betrayed by those about him who plotted his destruction from the outset, but while he -has been unhappy in his friends, no man has ever been so for tunate in his enemies. They have given him .a high place in history, as one who suffered for the rights of the American people, and when he shall go to his final account and his friends seek to say in clear titles and lasting terms, that he was a man who loved his country, and was bated by the corrupt and treasonable, they have only to chisel upon hie tombstone that he was impeached by this House of Repre sentatives and condemned by this Senate." LANCASTER PA. WEDNESDAY MORNING MAY 6 1868 An Old Story Many years ago a celebrated Italian artist was walking along the street of his native city, perplexed and despon ding in consequence of some irritating circumstance or misfortune, when he beheld a little boy of such surprising and surpassing beauty that he forgot his own trouble and gloom in looking upon the almost angel face before him. I 'That fade I must have," said the artist, " for my studio. Will you come to my room and sit for a picture, my little man? The little boy was glad to go and see the pictures and pencils and curiosities la the artist's room; and he was still more pleased when hemp what seemed to be another boy looking just like him smiling from the artist's canvas. The artist took great pleasure in look ing at that sweet face, When he was troubled, or Irritated, or perplexed, be lifted his eyes to that lovely image on the wall, and its beautiful features and expression calmed his heart and made him happy again. Many a visitor to 'his studio wished to purchase that lovely face ; but, though poor, and often want. log money to buy food and clothes, he would not sell his good angel, as he called this portrait. So theyears went on ; oftentimes as he looked up to the face on the glowing canvas he wondered what had become of that boy. "How I should like to see how he looks now I I wonder if I should know him? Is he a good man, true, or wicked and abandoned? Or has he died and gone to a better land ?" _ - - One day the artist was strolling down one of the fine walks of the city, when he beheld a man whose face and mien were so vicious, so depraved, so almost fiendlike, that he involuntarily stop ped and gazed at him. " What a spectacle? I should like to paint that figure, and hang it in my studio opposite the angel-boy,"sald the artist to himself. The young man asked the painter for money, for ho was a beggar as well as a thief. " Come to my room, and let me paint your portrait, and I will give you all you ask," said the artist. _ • The young man followed the painter and sat for a sketch. When it was finished, and he had received a few coins for his trouble, he turned to go; but his eye rested upon the picture of the boy; he looked at it, turned pale, and then burst Into tears. "What troubles you, man ?" said the painter. It was long before the young man could speak. He sobbed aloud, and seemed pierced with agony. At last he pointed up to the picture on the wall, and in broken tones which seemed to come from a broken heart, he said "Twenty years ago you asked me to come up here and sit for a picture, and the angel face is that portrait. ' Behold me now, a ruined man ; so bloated, so hideous that women and children turn away their faces from me; so Send-like that you want my ploture to show how ugly a man could look. Ah ! I see now what vice and crime have done for me." The artist was amazed. He could not believe his own eyes and ears. " How did this happen?" he asked. The young man told his sad and dreadful story ; how, being an only son, and very beautiful, his parents petted and spoiled him; bow he went with bad boys and learned all their bad habits and vices and came to love them; how, having plenty of money, he was enticed to wicked places till all was lost, and then, unable to work and ashamed to beg, he) began to steal, was caught, and imprisoned with the worst criminals ; came out still more depraved to commit worse crimes than before; how every bad deed he performmed seemed to drive him to commit a worse one, till it seemed to him he could not stop till brought to the gallows. It was a fearful tale, and brought tears into the artist's eyes. He besought the young man to stop, offered to help him and tried his best to save him. Butalasi it was too late. Disease, contracted by dissipation, soon prostrated the young man, and he died before he could reform. The painter hung his portrait opposite that of the beautiful boy; and when visitors asked him why he allowed such a hideous looking face to be there, he told them the story, saying as he closed, "between the angel and the demon there is only twenty years of vice." The lesson of his tale is in the tale It self. You who read it can tell whatit Think of it often, and heed it always. The Valley of Death A correspondent of the Philadelphia Pram, with Gen. Palmer's engineer corps of the Kansas Pacific Railroad, writing from Camp Cody, on the Mo have river, California, gives the follow ing description of a remarkable valley in that region: Eighty miles northwest of this camp is the well-known and much-dreaded "Death Valley." It is said to be lower than the level of the sea, and wholly destitute of water. Mr. Spears, our intelligent guide, who visit ed this remarkable valleyseveral times, gave me the following account of it, with the reason for its terrible name: The valley is some 50 miles long by 30 in breadth, and save at two points, it is wholly encircled by mountains, up whose steep sides it is impossible for any but expert climbers to ascend. It is de void of vegetation, and the shadow of bird or wild beast never darkened its white, glaring sand. In the early days, trains of emigrants bound for Califor nia passed, under the direction ofguides, to the south of Death Valley, by what is now known as the " old Mormon road." In the year 1850, a large train, with some 300 emigrants, mostly from Illinois and Missouri, came south from Salt Lake, guided by a Mormon. When near Death Valley, a dissent broke out in a part of the train, and twenty-one families came to the conclusion that the Mormon knew nothing about the country, so they appointed one of their number a leader, and broke off from , • the main party. This leader determined to turn due west ,• so with the people and wagons and flocks he travelled for three days, and then descended into the broad valley, whose treacherous mirage promised water. They reached the centre, but only the white glaring sand, bounded by the scorched peaks, met their gaze on every hand. Around the valley they wandered, and one by one the men died, and the panting flocks stretched them selves in death under the hot sun. Then the children, crying for water, died at their mothers' breast, and with swollen tongues and burning vitals the mothers followed. Wagon after wagon was abandoned, and strong men tottered, and raved, and died. After a week's wandering, a dozen survivors found some water in the hollow of a rock in the mountains. It lasted but a short time, then all perished but two, who, through some miraculous means, got out of the valley and followed the trail of their former companions. Eighty seven persons; with hundreds of ani mals, perished in this fearful place, and since then the name of Death Valley has been applied to it. Mr. Spears says that when he visited it last winter, after tho lapse of eighteen years,-he found the wagons. still complete, the iron work and tires bright, and the shriveled skeletons lying in many places side by side. Home after Work Hours. The road along which the man of bu siness travels in the pursuit of compe tence or wealth is not a macadamized one, nor does it ordinarily lead through pleasant scenes and by well-springs of delight. On the contrary, it is a rough and rugged path, beset with "wait abit" thorns, and full of pit falls, which can only be avoided by the watchful care of circumspection. After every day's jour ney over tnis worse than rough turn pike road, the wayfarer needssomething more than rest; he requires solace and deserves it. He is weary of the dull prose of life, and has a thirst for the poetry. Happy is the busines man who can find that solace and that poetry at home. Warm greetings from loving hearts, fond glances from bright eyes and wel come shouts of children, themany thou sand little arrangements for comfort and enjoyment that silently tell of thoughtful and expectantlove, the gen tle ministrations that disencumber us into an old easy seat before we are aware of it; these, and like tokens . of affection and sympathy, constitute the poetry which reconciles us to the prose of life, Think of this, ye wives and daughters of business men .1 Think of the toils, the anxieties, the mortification and wear that fathers undergo to secure for you comfortable homes, and com pensate them for their trials by making Mr3rEffs:MffMMWlrffM them happy by their own flre•eldes. The sober and Industrious man's home should be made a happy one. Where the Capital Might Hare Ikea The original Sites proposed for the capital city were Germantown,Phila delphia, Havre de Grace and Ba ltimore. Garman townaa many may not be aware, is a hill-top village, seven or eight miles interior frum Philadelphia, founded by Dunkers, Quakers, and Hard-shells of every denomination. It was once ao •tually voted to be - the site of the capital, and during the interval of a year Wore the repeal of the act, the staid popula tion of Germantown was violently eon avulsed. The old Quaker woman grew I refractory, and ordered new bonnets. The good old Dundor wives expected each of their daughters to marry a mem ber of Congress. The young men stop ped ploughing, and expected tO'be de partment clerks. Ale houses opened in wonderful excess, and every German towner took to reading political papers'. It was a year of decadence and delirium tremens. The graveyards got fat that year. They thought of giving up the orthodox meeting-house for a War Department, and stopped the cannon ball cracks in the old Chew mansion to lit it up for Gen. Washington, Ger mantown has never recovered from that blow. Ever since the act of repeal the Friends' meeting-house has been empty. Philadelphia has been partly described by Jas. Parton as "Quakerism modified by Franklin." It was the great city of the country when the nation began, be ing at that time about the size of In dianapolis at present. Whiskey was known to be good there, and hotel room ample. No man could lose his way home after a political caucus by taking a crooked street. So it had many friends to vote it the permanent capital city. In the Senate, when the matter was pro posed in 1790, ...twenty-two voted for Philadelphia as the capital, to thirty nine against it—the came figures as those which lost Germantown.— And Philadelphia died bard. It felt that indignant sentiment of the boy who was rejected for the captaincy of the corn-stalk military company: " My mother says I'm the biggest, and I ought to be captain." Consider the present circumstances, if Germantown had become the metropolitan city. We should have had the Congressional de bates printed only in German. Every Senator would have had his desk full of pretzels. The Hole-in-the-Wall would have run lager everlastingly. The Speaker of the House must have sat in the gallery, so that the debaters could see to address him covet' their enor mous abdomens. Sausagfiwould have been franked to all parts of the country, and sweitzerkase by the ton, charged to the item of stationery.— William Penn and Gambrinus would have been perched together on the dome of the capital. The journal of Congress would have been dated "First day of the seventh month." All the President's receptions would have been held in drab coats, and Gen. Grant would have worn the uniform of a perpetual Saengerfest. Every Senator would have addressed the chair only when the spirit moved him. What a lot of public print ing we should have spared ourselves. Havre de Grace would have made one of the most beautiful sites in America for the capital city. High blue ridges of wooded mountains Ile in its perspectives. It stands at the head of the noblest bay on the Atlantic coast, with the valley of the Susquehanna, opening communication with the North and the West; a great city suburban to it, coal and lumber flowing naturally past it, and the garden country of the Middle States for its lawns. It would have made, as it may still make one day, a situation worthy of a vast popu lation and a vast trade. Baltimore, in possession of the Capitol, would have had to-day four hundred thousand 'peo ple and been the favorite dwelling place of Le most lelsurelyand reflnedAtneri- Can S. A Japanese Belle. Every Japanese girl, of no matter what class in society, appelars inspired with an innate love of coduetry. The daughter of the humble at tradesman loves to pass whole days in shopping and takes. the greatest delight in pre paring long before It is needed, the dress she intends to display for the first time at the next fete. The day arrived, the happy girl rises early in the morning, and while her fresh new dress lies In one corner of the TOOM, impatiently submits to the dilatory labors of her hair-dresser, in whose profession there are some artists so celebrated that they' devote whole hours to the study and toil requisite for the composition of some graceful or fashionable style, where the hair, carefully dressed with the brush and pomade, half hides a piece of crepe coquetishly chosen and fastened by heavy pins of tortoise shell or coral. The chignon, it must be confessed, is not altogether of Nature's growth, and if, after the hair, we examine the face, we shall see that Madam Rachel her self could not teach the Japanese much In the art of making up. On the dress ing table stand a perfect collection of little boxesjust drawn from some hiding place; there are whites for the neck, the arms, the bust; reds for the mouth and the cheek ; black for the eyes ; some times gold for the lips ; and yet, with all these aide from art, age is unable to conceal its decrepitude, while strangely enough the children are the most laden with paint. Putting aside this coquetry, universal in spite of its bad taste, the dress is very simple and invariably well chosen. A Bilk robe, generally of a dark hue, covers a chemise en crepe made of small patches of every color, a perfect harlequin's mantle, where bright green is placed beside a lively red. In Winter the costume is completed by a short mantle doubled and thickened according to the season. The dress is long, without, and open from top,to bot tom ; the upper part is confined by a belt broad enough to cover the breast and the lower part of the form, and ter minating behind in an enormous knot ; to tie which with more or less elegance demands a careful examination and many retouches. The sleeves hang like large pockets. To the belts are fastened a pipe in a velvet case and a pocket book containing two chopsticks of silver, if it is intended to do honor to the host who may offer refreshments. In one cor ner of the pocket-book sparkles a little mirror, a European innovation, for our civilization has made this slight breach of Japanese manners. During the greater portion of the year the feet are bare ; in Winter they are clad in white cotton, and rest upon sandals of var nished wood, kept by wooden supports high enough above theground to escape the the mud and damp. The sandal is ornamented with braids of straw, or sametimes of velvet, and held to the foot by a strip of cloth passed between the toes. Occasionally it is recovered with leather or paper, but is never hon ored by being worn In the house. Intelligence of Animals Borlase says he saw a lobster attack an oyster, which persisted in closing its shell as often as the lobster attempted to intrude within it. After many fail ures, the lobster took a small stone and placed it between the shells as soon as they were separated, and then devoured the fish. Mr. Gardner, in his "Curiosities of Natural History," states that he once watched a crab enlarging its burrow in the sand, and about every two minutes came up to the surface with a quantity of sand in its left claw, and by a sudden jerk, threw it to the distance of about six inches. Having a few shells in his pocket, he endeavored to throw one of them into the hole ,• three of them fell near, and the fourth rolled into it: Five minutes afterward, the animal made its appearance, bringing with it the shell which had gone down, and carrying it a foot from its burrow, there depoited it. Seeing the others lying nedethe mouth of the hole, it immediately car ried them, one t one, to the place where the first hadbeendeposited, and then rearmed its original labor. Duges saw a spider which had seized a bee by the back, and effectually pre vented it from taking flight{ but its legs being at liberty, the bets dragged the spider along, which presently suspend ed it by a thread from its web, leaving it to dangle in the air till it was dead, and then itWas drawnup and devoured. An individual living in the square at St. Marks, Venice, has been in the habit of scattering grain every day at two o'clock, previous to which hour the birds assemble in one place on the cathedral, and, as the clock strikes, they take wing and hover round his window in small circles till ho appears, and dis tributes a few handfuls of food. This at:ail evens, indicates the facility of noting time, and may be placed on a parallel with the story of the dog which went to church regularly every Sunday, at the proper hour, to meet his master. Animals are prompt in using their ox. perience in reference to things from which they have suffered pain or an noyance. Grant mentions an ourang.outang which having had, when ill , some media Gino administered to him In an egg, could never be induced to take one after,. wards. Le Vailfant's monkey was extremly fond of brandy, but never could be p °- veiled upon to touch it again after a lighted match had been applied to some it was drinking. A dog having.great antipathy to the sound of a violin al. ways tried to get the bow and conceal it. Plutarch tells a strange story of a mule, which, when laden wlthualt, fell Into a stream, and finding its loadtherd• by lightened, adopted the experiment, afterward, and whenever It crossed a stream slipped into the water with its panniers. To cure it of the trick, the panniers were filled with sponge under, which, when fully saturated, it could barely stagger. Lilo In Japan Correspondence of the New York Times FRIDAY, Feb. 28, 1868. The weather here is certainly very pleasant for winter. Occasionally the atmosphere is sharp, and the mercury gets down to 82, but this les° seldom that it does not interfere with the char acter of the climate. The Japanese ap pear to be singularly indifferent to the cold, at least when we consider that they are called to endure such extreme heat during a large part of the year. I have often seen them when water was freezing, running round barefooted and barelegged, and Invariably bareheaded. Their style of dress is the gown, open in front, except when folded, and this, of course can afford but little protection from cold.. A young Japanese interpre ter told me that they all suffered from such exposure, and that he never knew what comfort was until he adopted the European costume. To make things worse, they have no fires for the sole purpose of warmth. The " hibachi," a low bronze pot, contains burning charcoal, and Is used for cooking, and the surplus heat is improved for com fort; over the " hibatchi" one always ipaa a group endeavoring to keep warm. Their houses are very open, with thin paper windows, and their rooms are di vided by sliding partitions, which are very loosely arranged, so that It would be most difficult to heat them, even with an ordinary coal stove. The floor of each house Is raised about two feet from the ground, and is covered with thick, soft matting, laid down in regular parallel ograms and edged with black. The san dals are always left at the door, and they never walk on this with shod feet. These sandals are the clumsiest foot gear Imaginable and It le surprising that a nation so ingenious as the Japa nese should not have discovered some thing more comfortable. The sandal of common use consists of a straw sole, with a thong starting from between the first and second toes, and bound around the foot'and ankle. Another style is to have the straw sole rest on two small slats of wood, to raise it from the groud. This kind is commonly worn by the women. Besides these there are sandals with solid soles, rounded at the toes, and ornamented with some degree of taste, but all are of the same clumsy pattern. They are exceedingly inconvenient for females, who walk almost as clumsily as the Chinese wo men, and appear not a little deformed. It is no matter of surprise then that the Japanese seize on English shoes with great eagerness, and I -.notice many of the officers and even soldiers of Satsu- - . ma's army have adopted not only the shoes, but also the coats, the buttons, 'find even the pantaloons of foreign pat tern. These they put on without regard to propriety, and hence frequently pre sent a most ludicrous make-up of odds and ends of civilization. Our shoes,our neatly fitting gloves, our caps and but tons are to these natives a matter of general admiration. The Japanese, though possessed of no little mechanical skill are chiefly agri cultural In their pursuits. The wealth of the country is rice, and every officer is paid a portion or all his salary in that commodity. The people live on rice and fish, and such vegetables as carrots, turnips and spinnach. One would im agine from appearance that they are generally honest. There is certainly as little apparent caution with respect to the exposurt of wares along the street, as there is lack of what we call delicacy in the exposure of the person of either sex. One of the most pleasing features in Japanese life is childhood. Little children till the streets from morn to night, and are full of those juvenile sports which delight American youth. They are playing ball and flying kites and driving shuttle-cocks with all man ner of glee, but their greatest pleasure is gambling with that petty coin called " cash." They are always fancifully dressed, and are well bundled up, and with their little eyes and chubby faces they present an amusing spectacle. To add to the oddity which marks these little Japs their heads are invariably shaved closely, with the exception of a tuft on the very crown. The popular beverage in Japan is "saki,' an alcoholic distillation of rice. It resembles the Chinese " sampahu" and the "arak" of Hindostan. Concern- ing its use among the Japanese, I have never seen anything unpleasant result from it, but its effect on the European sailor is invariably pernicious in the highest degree, and whenever he passes a certain limit in its use he becomes a madman and a fiend. We may pre sume that the natives avoid drinking it to excess, or if they do their dispositions may be of a nature too quiet to show similar effects. The great centre of all authority is the Mikado, who is generally considered the spiritual head of the nation.. He resides at Kloto, (or Miacho, as the capital is sometimes styled) about 40 miles from Osaka, the latter tdwn being only 14 miles from our. present station. The Mikado is visible-.,t0 only a few of his Court and to a small numper of the higher Princes. The office ishereditaiy, and the present incumbeffra youth of 16, is under the control of a Regent.— The present line of the Mikados is as old as Japanese history. It appears that his authority is similar to that of the Pope in the middle ages, and, like Hildebrrind, he takes precedence of all temporal powers. He is honored and obeyed by all classes throughout the Empire, while the ignorant yield him almost divine honors. At one time the gov ernment of Japan emanated from him directly, but about three hundred years ago the Tyconate was established. It was a position either won by some vie. torious Prince, or was established in, order to relieve the Mikado of his too arduous duties. From the commence. ment sprang the present system of gov ernment by means of Tycoons, or, to speak more properly, Shogeons—a sys tem which is likewlee hereditary. The relation of this officer to the Mikado is something of the nature of Prime Min ister, but to the people his station is that of a king. The Empire of Japan is divided into sixty Provinces, governed by satraps or viceroys called Daimios ; each of whom maintains an army. These Daimios are of course subject to the Tycoon, and yield him, however unwillingly, a revenue from their respective territories; but to a certain extent they claim and exercise an independent sway. The present condition of Japan is well Illus trated by the history of England during the reign of King John, when the barons were in ; perpetual conflict with the monarchy. These Daimios are in like manner feudal lords. They have kingly control over their subjects, who obey their laws at home and uphold their honor in the .field. Each Dalmlo has his chief officers, next to whom are the priests,. and lowest in the social grade are the common _people, who are the abject servants of the Daimio and arenotpermittedtowearm orda.Hence, as 'one may easily perceive, , tbe posi tion of the Daimio is one of great exaltation, and he exacts the greatest possible deference. Coolies and aim. moners drop on their knees when he makes his appearance, and Whenefer he is to visit a town the streets are swept and especial preparations are made to yield him honor. It Is particularly dangerous for foreigners to meet him or any part of his retinue. His advance is preceded by a herald, who gives warn ing:of,his approach and notifies all who are on horseback to dismount or to de part." Disobedience to this order has often resulted in bloodshed and death. This was illustrated by the history of the unfortunate Richardson, of Yoko hama, who, while riding with a friend 1883 on the Toesido or public drive of Yeddo, fell in with a Dalmo preces slob. The attendants assailed the of feffding strangers and out Richardson to pieces while his friend was severel y Wounded and narrowly escaped death. film English took up the cause of their Unfortunate countryman, and so force wee aetit againet Kagosima,thentimio's possession, to obtain redress. The as sailants lost sixty men, but they blew up the Dalmio's fort and did much damage by way of avenging the wrong. On this account the Japanese are very fearful lest any injury should befall foreigners and thus bring trouble upon themselves. An officer of distinction in the native government latelyentered Hiogo. The vicinity qr the house in which he stopped was atbnce surround• ed by guards whose chief object was to request foreigners not to pass lest un pleasant consequences should follow. The Mikado s Court is composed of nobles who are called Koogas. Their costume is peculiar to themselves and was never seen by foreigners until the recent Ambassador from the Mikado wore it in his pablic reception. The superior order of the Koogas, as well as the Mikado himself, stain their teeth black, a privilege which likewise is ac corded to all married women. The Japanese, though brought up on their, "saki," are still very fond of ochampagne wine, and at all:entertain ments given by foreigners this is fur. n !shed. Japan raises large quantities of tobacco, but it is very mild stuff indeed. Give a native smoker an ordinary cigar and it will nauseate him before one half of it is smoked, and yet smoking Is an almost universal habit here ; and, what is very strange, they call their own tobacco by the same name that it bears in the English tongue. The pipe and pouch are carried at the girdle, the former holds a mere pinch of the weed, and when it is ignited they take two or three deep inspirations, drawing the smoke into their lungs ; by this time the tobacco is exhausted and the smoker refills and continues his fumigation. As regards our position here. T may say that one is never safe in Japan. There are bands of freebooters or hire ling soldiers who wander over the coun try, ready to enlist in the service of whichever Daimio will offer the high est pay. They are a murderous set and Hence wenever under good discipline. we are constantly liable to such attacks as that made on us on the sth of Feb. ruary by Bezen's men. One sees troops of soldiers always on the march, and it was one of these roving bands serving the last-named Daimio that opened fire on us, and occasioned that excitement which has already been described in your columns. I was at that time in 'Dego, two miles away from the American vessels. As the ex citement spread, the people crowded the street, and rushing toward our party cried "Noka I Noka I" "Pigi / Pigi l" "Go! Go l" "Clear out! Clear out!" Away we went skirting the shore as rapidly as dignity , would permit, and passing crowds of people who were hastening off toward the boats with their household goods, for in Japan the soldiers I n:ease of war, generally finish their work by burning the nearest town. After the trouble was over, agreeably to the state ment made in previous letters, we would have continued to hold the town had not the Mikado, who up to this time had never condescended to treat with foreigners, sent down an envoy. He came in great state, robed in magnifi cent attire of white silk, and attended with a standard-bearer and armed suite. We received him with presented arms and the mArtial glee of the bugle. The result was a satisfactory assurance that the Mikado would afford protection to all foreigners and establish government. Everything is now quiet, butwe do not trust ourselves at any distance from the shipping, and always go armed , The English Success In Abyssinia. After all the dissertations upon the im- Eracticability of a successful result of the nglish expedition to Abyssinia, it has been accomplished, the stronghold of Magdala taken, the captives releafied,and Theodorus killed. The London Times and other mar tial journals, which have boon criticising the slowness cf Napier's movements, will perhaps be inelluedhoreafter to "leave mil itary matters to military mom" With such results as the above the most grumbling British tax-payer will acknowledge that Napier has given him the worth *his money. The obstacles which had W'be overcome before the actual figlier* com menced were very great. The. mxrcl.r.of the army was often on narrow and tortuous paths, along the beds of torrents, and some times on the sides of the lower part of mountains. The sappers and miners were at times three days ahead, clearing the road along precipices of • rook like petrified glaciers. The numbers engaged in the late contest there are no means as yet of knowing, but a corres pondent of a New York paper, travelling with the English army, wrote on March-CI, that Sir Robert Napier said that the enemy numbered 7,000, all told, and Brigadier General Morrlwether estimated them at 15,000, both of which the travelling civilian considered much beneath the mark, and was evidently of opinion that Sir Robert would soon have reason to repent his ruah nese. That General has added new laurels to a name renowned in the Indian, naval and diplomatic service of England. The whole expeditionary force with which he sot out from India was 80,000 Britons and Sepoy allies; and this one battle ' doubtless ends the war, indicating that much that has been said concerning there sources and lighting qualities of the Abys sinians is apocryphal. The dead king Theodorus, however, was a man of mark, of enterprise and bravery. He was a usurp er, having overthrown the former Moham tnedan " King John," against whom he commenced to war by the aid of some tribes that he gained to his tilde, aster back as 18,50, but it was not till a number of years alter that he finally overthrew John. Mean time Theodorus had indulged the idea of even greater things than this, having twice invaded the Egyptian Seudan, in which enterprise be at last ineffectually sought the aid of the governments of England and France, with the view of re establishing the ancient Ethiopian empire, but though he gained victories, was unable to bold the country. Theodorus had been dissatisfied with a treaty made before his accession, favoring the residence and business of' foreigners in the empire and die regarded it so us to plunder the British and other European residents, and finally Mr. Plowden, the British consul who negotiated the treaty, was killed by a predatory band. This Theodorus pretended to punish his subjects for by slaughtering a number of them, and a Mr. Cameron was appointed as the consul's successor. ' but he was maltreat. ed, and finally all the English missionaries also imprisoned. All negotiations for their release falling, the war ensued, and the re sult is that Britishaupremacy is established in Abyssinia.. The London ~Spectator , months ago, gave out that England would hold what Napier would win. The king dom of Abyssinia is, tberistbra, probably as dead as Theodorus, and - the land will be come as India, a dependent of the extended British empire. It Is stated that the dead Theodorus was 47 years old, was of average stature, Imposing presence, and of an irreg ular hutatot unimpressive physiognomy.— His halite were those of an astute dome gogffic. It, is repreoented that at court he revelled in luxury and show. In the field be affected simplicity, as well of dress as of diet.—Ballimore The Ex-Empress of Mexico The Brussels correspondent of the Lon don Post writes: The royal family are taking daily drives and horse exercise among their loyal sub jects, and it is.most touching to see the Empress Carlotta of Mexico seated in an open carriage, driven by the Queen, salu ting with graceful but sad smiles the eople, whose idol she is and always has been from her childhood. The Empress is looking very pale, and is dressed in deer mourning. The attention paid to her by the Queen la beyond all praise, and there can be no doubt that her recovery from the mental prostration brought on by the sad events so well known to every one Is chiefly owing to the energy and devotion of her royal slater-in-law. The widow of the late General liiiramon, the bosom friend of the late Emperor Maxi milled; has arrived' here with her children within the last few days, with the intention of making Belgium her permanent home. It is said that she has had an audience at the palace. The body of John Williams, one of the proprietors of the Spottswood' Hotel, was found In the canal at Richmond, Va. ki% Williams disappeared over a week aincet after telling his 'friends " they would no, see him again." The baby woman has gone to Jefferson ville, Indiana, on exhibition. Asentimen tal reporter says: "She is not three years old,yet as perfectly developed as a maid of sweet sixteen." "'fluff ced ;" she has a waterfall and.. a sweetheart. It is said that the late Bing Louis of Bavaria, left eight coffers, the contents of which' U emystery. One Is to be opened in 1883, and the °therein 19181 At that date it is more than probable that the presefit generation will have joined „King Louis. How Mr. Darts used up Butler and Nativell. The speech of Mr. Everts has attract• ed unlverial itteutiou and elicited the most flattering comments from the press of both parties. Ho uses up Butler and Boutwell completely. The following extracts will show how it was done : orscossron vs. concriyupy... In paiiiirir..;;;,o:ot6 to Butler Mr. Everts maids the President is to be tried on charges which aro produced here and not on °out. Mon fame. Least of all b ho to be tried In your judgment, av ho has been arraigned, hour after hour, upon charges which the Impeaching authorities in the Douse of Representatives deliberately throw out as unworthy of inipeitehmeno and unsuitable fur trial. We, at least, when we have an indictment brought Into court end another Indictment ignored and thrown out, aro to ' be tried on the former and not on the littler, and if, on, the oth of December last the House of Representatives, with which, by the Constitaßon, rests the sole Impeaching power under this Uovernment, by a veto of 107 to 07, threw out all the topics which make up the Intlamatory addressee of the Managers, it is ouongh for me to say that for reasons satisfactory to that authority, "The House of Representatives," those charges wore thrown Out. 80, too, If this be a trial on a public prosecution, and with the ends of publiejustice alone In view, the ordinary rules for the restraint of prosecu ting authorities apply here, and I do not hesitate to say that this trial, to be in our annals the most conspleions In our history, to be serutinited b,y more professional eyes, by the attention of more scholars nt home and abroad, to bo preserved In moro librri ries, to be judged of as a national trial, and a national criterion forever, presents the unexampled spectacle of n prosecution which overreachea judgment from the very beginning, end invades, Impugns and oppresses at every stage the victim which it pursues. Now, the duty of con• straint upon a prosecuting authority under a government of law pursuing only public justice is scarcely less strict and severe thau that which rests upon the judge himself. To select evidence that is not pertinent to exclude evidence knowing that it bears upon the enquiry; to restrict evidence k now fug that the field fa thus closed against the true point of justice, N no part of a prose cuting attorney's duty or power, whatever may be permitted in the contests of the forum and the zeal of contending lawyers for contending clients; there Is no such au thority, no such duty, no such permission for apublic prosecutor; much loss when the proofs have been thus kept narrowed when the charges aro thus precise and tecuical, is It permissible for a prosecuting authority to enlarge the area ordeclamation and In• ye:Mire ; much less is It suitable for u pub lic prosecutor to Inspire in the minds of the Court prejudice and extravagant jurladle• lion. Now, it has usually been supposed that on an actual trialinvolvlng sorioue eon- sequences forensic discussion was the true method of dealing with the subject, and we lawyers appearing for the President, being, as Mr. Manager Butler has been politic enough to say, "attorneys whose practice in the law has sharpened but not enlarged their intellects," have confined ourselves to ' this method of forenele discussion. But we have learned here that there is another , method of forensic concussion, Now, I un ' derstand the method of discussion is to peno• t trate the 'mullion, and if successful, capture ; It. The Chinese method of warfare Is the method of concussion, and consists of a great blowing of trumpets, sounding of gongs, and shouts and shrieks in the neigh borhood of the opposing force. When all this rolls away, and the air is freer, the effect it to be watched for. But it has been re served to us in our modern warfare, as illustrated here In the rebellion, to present a more singular and notable instance of the method of warfare by concussion than has been known before; a fort impregnable by the methods of discussion—that of penetrat ing and capturing it—has been on a large scaleattempted to be captured by the method of concussion, and some hundreds of tone of gunpowder, placed in made near the walls of the fort, has been the means to the concussion of this vest experiment. Dis satisfied with that trial and its results, the honorable Manager who opened this case seems to have repeated the experiment in the vicinity of the Senate. [Laughter.] While the air was lulled with epithets, the dome shook with invective. Wretchedness, misery, suffering and blood were made the means of this explosive mixture, and hero we are surviving concussion, and after all reduced to the humble and homely method of discussion which belongs to "attorneys whoseintellects have been sharpened but not enlarged by the practice of law." [General and continuous laughter.] MARTEL DAN;IIHMENT OR TUN PIINSIDNNT Alluding to tho foolish flight of Boutwoll Mr. Warta disposed of it and him as col If, therefore, this Interpretation of law and duty, by their act required, unqualified, unserutinieed, unweighed, unmeasured, is (vima the necessary occasion of a vordlel cam hmentdt must beconsldered under the‘e ear bright light which true statesman ship abode upon the subject, I may as conveniently at this point us afterward, pay some attention to the !astronomical punish ment which tho learned and honorable Manager (Mr. Boutwol.) thinks should he applied to this novel ease of impeachment. Cicero, "I think it is, who says that a lawyer should know everything, for sooner or later there is no fact in history, in science, or in human knowledge that will not come into his argument. Profoundly sensible of my ignorance, being devoted to " a profession which sharpens and does not enlarge the mind" I can admire without envying the superior knowledge evinced by the honora ble Manager. But, nevertheless, while some of his colleagues wore paying atton tion to an unoccupied and unappropriated island on the surface of the seas, Mr. Man ager Boutwell, more ambiguous, had dis covered an untenanted and unappropriated region In the skies, (laughter) reserved, ho would have us think, in the lima councils of the Almighty, es a place of pun ishment for convicted and deposed Ameri can Presidents. (Laughter.) Now, at first, I thought that his mind had become so en larged that it was not sharp enough to ob serve that the Constitution had limited the •nrushment. But on reflection I saw that 0 was as legal and logical as he was am biguous and astronomical, for the Constitu tion has said "removal from office," and has put no limit to the distance of removal, [great laughter] so without abedding a drop of his blood, or taking a penny of his prop erty, or ironing his limbs, he is sentenced to removal from office and transportation to the skies. [Laughter.] This is the great undertaking, and if the learned Manager can only get over the obstacles of the laws of nature, the Constitution won't stand in his way. [Laughter.] I can think of no metnod but that of a convulsion of the earth that should project the deposed Prost dent to this infinitely distant sphere: but a shock of nature of so vast an energy and so great a result might unsettle even the firm members of Congress. [Laughter.] How shall we accomplish it? Why, In the first place, nobody knows where that space in but the learned Manager bitnself,—[laugh• ter]—and be is the necessary deputy to ex ecute the judgment of the Court. Lot it then be provided that in case of your son • tones of deposition and removal from office the honorable, the astronomical Manager, shall take into his own hands the execution of the sentence. The President made fast to his broad and strong shoulders, and hav• Ing assayed the flight by Imagination, better prepared to execute it In form, taking advan tage of ladders as far as ladders would go to the top of this high Capitol, and spurning then with his feet the Goddess of Liberty, let him set out upon his flight, [langliter,l while the Houses of Congress nod all the people of the United States shall shout "sic slur ad agra." [Laughter long and con tinued.] Here an oppressive doubt strikes me: How will the Manager get back? How, when he gets beyond the power of gravitation to restore him, will be get back? And so ambitions a wing aside could never stoop to a downward flight. No doubt, as he passes through the expanse, that famous question of Carlisle, by which be points out the littleness of human affairs, "What thinks Bootee of them as he leads his hunting dogs over the zenith In their leash of sidereal fire?" will occur to the Manager. What, indeed, would Bootee think of this constellation (laughter) loom ing through space beyond the power of Congress to send for persons and papers? (Laughter.) Who shall return, and how decide in the contest there begun in this new revolution thus established? Who shall decide which is the sun and which is the moon? Who shall determine the only scientific test which reflects hardest upon the other? (Laughter.) A Stupendous Tunnel The most stupendous tunnel enter prise has lately been accomplished at the silver mines in the German Hartz mountains. The mines were over 3,000 feet deep, and sparsity of fuel prevented the use of steam for pumping, which was done by water wheels, aided by tunnel drains. But the great depth reached In 1859 precluded further pro gress in that manner, and a tunnel was commenced for deep drainage which Is Just now finished. The tunnel is twenty-two miles long; two, million cubic yards of solid rock were excavated, ten thousand pounds of powder used, and the linear extent of blasting holes drilled is 180 miles. Natu rally, on the. successful completion of this colossal work, thirty-two thousand miners, whose livelihood is now assured for twenty years, celebrated the event with grand rejoicing., The' mines can be worked till 1887 without steam, and they have been operated since the year 928 in mutinous profitable production. NUMBER 18 tho angel of hop. fled when Idtahler's Herb Bitters came to and closed the gaping Jaws of the monster death—and bid defiance to disease. and throat It Is a specific. Ministers of the Gospel, public speakerti, slogan and auction ears use IL as a remedy for hoarseness cholla palm; of their children. For noneral debility and nervous complaints It excels ell other remodlea. first buildup tto ganoral system and corroot M. I 8 Il L E R ' 8 GREEN LABEL BITTERS to counteract and entirely eradicate the Beret ulnae diathesis or tho secondary and tertiary °Mote of delicate diseases. It will speedily enre any sores on any and every part or the body. It 18 the great 13160 d Purifier, where Mercury, lodine of Potaan and all ol.lier al- terntlyos hays failed In thoso °nimbly° die eaaes whletuleatroy the palate and bogies of aliould begin by taking the find Week a table spoonful three times a day. The second week a tableepoonfal anu a half, and the third week tablespoonful every three hours, and thus con- Untie to Increase the dose until a very large time ban been taken when It nhould be gratin ally dirulnlahed for a Woek or two, and then again Increfuw. When too large a doe° la taken of the Green Label linters, or they have been too Jong continued, the throat will become somewhat Irritated, and a Ilttle uneasiness felt, u the stomach. The patient should at 01:100 rapidly diminish the dose when the above ymptoms are ex perlencetL As soon as they lave paased oil; begin again. There lino danger n taking the Cireen Label Bitters, If only as much is taken as will make the patient feel comfortable, neither will they Intoxicate; but to ttio contrary, wo will guarantee that If an habitual Inebriate takes a witieglaalfal of it three times a day, he will acquire 'such a Ws- gust for 1 utoxicatlng drinks that In a short time he could notice Induced to taste lt. above directions we will warrant &perfect cure In any form, stage or condition of Scrofulous oridelleate diseases. Old Sores, Swellings, d.e., inside or outside of the body, no matter from what cause, if curable at all. The Green Label Bitters are sold everywhere by all Druggists and Country Storekeepers at $1.50 per bottle. Is the ladles' friend, and is unequalled by any other preparation, Iu Chtoroth; or Green Sickness, Irmolartheel Painful Menstruation, Suppression of the Monthly Flow, Uloeratian of the Meths, Whites or Lenoorrhasa; In the decline or change of life and all complaints incident to the sex It Is a PERFEer PANACEA. Sold everywhere at 111.50 per bottle. LANCASTER, PA., AND CHICAGO, ILL, MATE OP Anyzarriente. BMW= ADexaTilreeteria r ple • year pc% rim Or UM thaw; per 7 fey i ad- R&M TOWS ADVlontiolo,lo MUNI& liniVor Um Clint, end 6 cents Mr 111031111quent In. • GICZCZIIAL ADYMATIIINCI 7 cents a line for the first, rad toeitta for each entuequent haw. SPROUL Nauss/ Inserted In Looal Column! 16 cents pee line. OPZCZAL NOTI01:11 preceding sruorliarari en d deaths, 10 mats per line itir nisi InserUon and 6 Cent/ for every spbeerputnt Insertion. LorriAL AND misnaming—. Executors' ..01.10ea .. LID • Adnindstralo7ll. Lea Milanese' auditors' asthma,.. E Ism% three UMIMI, News teems The San Francisco papers publish lists of unclaimed telegrams. The Roy. Dr. Maud has announced his acceptance of the ollico of Bishop of Ver mont, Tho Woetorn skating rinks aro to be kept open all summer, parlor skates on a smooth floor compensating for the veritable stool and ice. non. Hhorman, writing to n friend says of the Kansas hotel., that "their price la $3 a day —board cud lodglugoxira." Thotutands of birds, dead from starvation, hf assachtutotis papers report, hays been picked up In the western part of that State. " Loftin the road by himself" lathe phrase employed by Sun Pranolaco papers to an nounce the execution of horse thieves under lynch law. A movement In on Mot to form an imm olation of the Alumni and other friend, of Princeton College residing in Now York and Its vicinity. Wm. C. Rives, fbrmerly United Slatee tolniater to France, and Senator from Vir ginia, died at Churlottoavolle, Va., lain Saturday, at tho ago of sevonty-five. Fat in uow the rage In fashionable oireloa. Ladlea cultivato it. They are devouring vest quantities of butter, maahed ?one leaven, and ouch like. An editor in Algeria was recently pun abed by the If ranch authorities fur jprediet nir the famine, In relief of which the Leg. Mature has appropriated (180,000. The vice principals of tho New York Liraininar schools havo rotinivod that It la expedient to abolish corporal pu htnent In those Institutions. A trial In tho Sussex County (Dol.) nurt has resulted In the acquittal of a tleafmnd dumb man of murder. Plea, non-amount tibility on account of dofielunt mental ea parity. In Alexandrln, Va., the forty-nluth an iverdary of Odd Fellowship wns recently elebrated. An address was delivered by '. A. Sweat, Grand Secretary or the Grand IJotigo, or thnt district. 'Homebody writes about the " slivory" voice of the Lowell Cynocophalus. Nibbles says that if it is so, the creature must ovl dently gargle its throat with a solution of Southern forks and spoons. Speaking of starving Indians. Prentice says: "The question is whether wosball lot them starve or feed and keep them alive until wo shall be under tho necessity of shooting them." The Deseret Nowa is alarmed lost Paris fashions should be introduced among the Mormon women, and is startled at the pos sibility of n saint being obliged to pay the clothing expenses of a dozen wives. Pears are said to be suocossfully shipped front California to Now York by way of the Isthmus of Panama. Grapes nro also ship pod in this way, and the California fruit growors are rejoicing at the high prious realized on their ventures. Vtiolder's gittero. pROPHYLACTICS Tho via mm110(1012 natural In man la that providoutlM protootion from alsome, IrMola ho God of nature has Implanted In every tie sue, nem and (Himont or our ontlro organlza lion. Were it not for title Invlelble Innate power In man, nature he would be eon• Bluntly toned like a frail bark from health to sickness, and often from sickness to dissoin Lion. At every little change hi the tempura• taro of the atmosphere, or from the least no gleetin the tweet food or clothing disease would begin its work of destruction. It is this prin. olplo widen prevent& disease under ordinary oireametanoes, and often Indeed, when It ham pretty thoroughly loan:mated heel! Into the Htrncturo of the body—baffles It for a long time until at !eat the long bent bow become waak, annulated nature sinks, tho body emaciates— Reader, tho object of medicine in diseneo lAI not in Reel( to cure. The most that medicine oan do In any case Is to namist the ♦la medico trLx natures In =sting off the broken down Um Him °film body, and buildlug up trio now, and that romedy wblab done Wm most, to build up and Invigorate the various (=tattoo,' of the animal moottantim (loos too most to itaikt ilr uro and heal dinette As vaccination Is a protection against van olold or small Pox 110 ho MISHLER'S HERB BITTERS I protootlon against all ill/masa; whether Ito rodltary, ondemlo, or oplllomlo. Never bolero In the hlatury of man has there been produced 6 oomblnation of remodlem ■o ~otottt for good, w untogontatto to disoano The medical profession evarywho:o hag tent, ed and knows well Ha remedial powers, nal witlastandlas M. D,'e disguise Mlsbier's Herb Bitters with aromatics before atimintstoring 4. They. dare not do without IL whom life and death are at stake. Thousands upon thous- ands of poor flutterers Lave been solemnly and with a great show of professional dignity told tat the closing soeno was near at hand, that Everybody takes U. In dleensee of the longs Mothers keep It for croup, Bore throat and For scrofula, delleate dilemma and weak- moo arising hom exoesxes or Indiscretion, ho sluggish functions of digestion with the 'orb Bitters, thou use lio umo, tho Uroou Label Bitters act like Tho close of unfortunate.' referred to nboito If these Bitters are taken according to the MISHLER , 8 RED LABEL BITTERS, B. B. HARTMAN (40., PROPRIETORS,