THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER, PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY BY H. G. SMITH & CO A. J. STEINMAN H. G. SMITH. TERMS—Two Dollars per annum payable In all caeca In advance. . Tlig LANcASTgit DAILY INTELLInENeEn la publialled every evening, Sunday excepted, at Si per annum In advance, OFFICE-SOUTHWEST CORNER OF CENTRE I,LTARE. Vortrv, MARGUERITE Itlasfutelguselln may, 1760 Tlle.robln sane In Ihe• nrelntril, the buds Into 111”,ounns grew LittlWO! 111111111111,311,W Iln•l,n , ls and l he robin,. knew: Si Oil In 11111 11111, 'mils, hold, the poc.r Frt.nch neutral Into her lont•lionae wale( fell the light of the April cloy, 'Through the ilte.ly window, euntulnerl by the s Alder's warp aid WWI!, On the loose lohl floor of hemlock, 1,11 oaken rills or roof, The bod.rnilllls faded palchworit, the teneope on t 'dent!. The wheel with flaxen tangle as IL dropped 11 . 0111 her sick lintel! What to hor coin of the robin, or warm morning-light. As hho lay In till; !rime, of the dying, hveillois of sound or night Done tvas the work of her hatol,shelool eaten her 1,11 ter bread ; The world ofte alien [work) lay 1).•111.1)1 her lint and dead. Het. her well xven , hurl< 10 Its e1.11.1-Mule; she 51111 . 1110 5.11 Fl'ortlow With gtolil Ml too. /trt , l sot IlVer GaNporonit. The low, hare flats al f Id. Idlt , life r , lf of life stet al flood Through Intel 11 tld 11114 river, (roof dike to upland wood The gulls In 11, clot tw.rniwg,tio•ll.ll-hawlC ,, tau, The don this I, 111111 v 111.,,hine f. v, I ho voani nil. She saw the o( Ile,11 , 11114• .111Ig Sh. • Anti the off! (el o 11o! esperi rung! 113' her lied teritil,:ed Peering inin ill.••• nnd feeling the lee-veld reel. V/IL:11‘ . 1 • 11114irSi• atiming t'or liar gr ,, d 1,1,4 ;Om., Hy von. nr, y I.nr Jut, I, till• 12,11.1 . 1,4 ,eltly Ihe .ell Of I'll Mkt 1.1.111.11 over he hetet- heltril, re% erine, fai./ With 111S1 hands anti Sveitt. litilmrthe I h.. moth., svitlcht..l ly. %ell h helm a Irown. " Mint ! 1..%, y... 1 th, the eharge 11. , town?'' "Ilt• papkt, or hvgir.ar, vlllr.. 11.1., II Itllllll 141/,I I.IIIIWS 1 10V1% lo•r, and lulu would Ly) sail I. 13, whorl.. UN NIII• 14M, Ilit• 111/ . 1 1 1 1 111111• ; Vol; mtw lout 111.• I.IwIT-1;11;Lrgy; I lolvw her (Jim's angel ul lust Shaking lit•rw;ily howl, the wl , rrn, hushed ilt4tvti I. loil tcr vry .11a, it,vvil by I nit.•two. !Ind .1”1.1 , •,, ninth ilrawltig nigh, She 111111 . 111111 , 11 IL but ymlng ulrl j'rl 'I it \1 • Illi Iht• last of Io•r III.•lit li,•r llng,s, I he ITUSN to her hrel.t. en • ae IIIV.I.V,“1,11 . 41 (111, 111 , 01111% her 1 . 1 . 111•112,1 , ,1'II 1 , , Ili, 114 BLit k !Wit SL llhla h.LIIti lit•r fort•hetid Ilps to 11., car, An.l vitll,ll,:wlt th.• Ilmt was pus,ing (1“)4,11 het, ?" the •111 . jorki . . I4•11.1..1% eyys. \V1111111,41, , ,1rt on I,lv II 1 ,, 111 ,, e , 1 1 ,, 11 novvr 11,1 . c•11,•••1; And 111 , W01 . 4 1 / 1 I ili• 11t In: he , iake lu 11, , , ear eft1)•• elevu 1. A /111 tin/ I . IIIIiIIN Sinn: In Inn 1/1 . 1111111/ Will / 1 . 1 / 1/MIN 11, WI/NV/1111N gr 4.15 )1 /14/11/I, 111141 sii ll sirl//1 . //, llnVer 110 1.1•,‘ I+llsrrlancotts 1 For II lulrlllgrur,l. Talloriana : Or. Scintillations from the Shonboard. e Jim! Irabloag NO. I EIMIT=I From " time immemorial," the idea of " calibaging." has manehow been as sociated with the " art and mystery" of tailoring; and perhaps, nearly ILII the world" think it originated with the " professors" or that w..oroi, but much maligned art. Whether it orif/ineterd with them or not, it is very certain that, before tailoring assumed its present dis tinctive commercial eharaeter, nearly all its suhjeets Idol: lu eabilaging, al most as natural as ducks take to water. There were two terms aniong tailors, of nearly equal significance, Hutt expre-s -eil the Sallie idea ill their results. The 01.110 l°b"!/ 1 ”'/ 111111 the other crib -1,,i Ilivt,t them of all the sanc tions or long established custom, 1111(1 Of legal quibbles about their definitions, they both procti,,,/tg meant illegal sel f appropriation ; or , in plainer language, stralittg. So inextricably had the idea of cabbitging been ingrained into the mental " warp or woof" ofs.nne that we . liave known many very excel lent men—otherwise honorable men— men reputed 111 4 good Christians— who would cabbage without the least conscientious compunctions, but who would at the same time no more think of perpetrating what the world regards a //up, than they would of throwing themselves Irmo the rock of Gibraltar. So powerful was the sphere which cus tom had established, and which custom- Cr. 4 themselves had encouraged—if not sanctioned—that a boy who had never dreamed Of appropriating even a mar ble or a top that was not his own, as soon as he became a squatter on the shopboard, would, instinetively as it were, take to cabbaging. So that, by the time he had reached the end of his ap prenticeship, he .vas as great an adept in this art, as he 00115 is forming a la pel, or working a button-hole. lie had seen it justifiedly perpetrated before his eyes; talked orcr it; laughed or it; jested about it ; and participated in it, for a period, of four, five or six years in succession, by both master and man ; and Is it ally wonder that he should become proficient in it We. have said that customers them selves have encouraged this practice among tailors, mi many occasions—at least they have manifested no special objection to it. lint, it is doubtful whether this was not only an appear ance, for no man, no matter how lib eral he may he, could be expected to sanction such a practice, without yield ing to an influence which he did not wish to openly oppose. here, was an other evil—perhaps the greatest evil— of the system of cabbaging, and that evil Impressed itself upon the character of the tailor, and Ills most intimate as sociates. The customer who insisted upon a return of the overplus to him self, was considered iwnurious, unrea sonable, and mean. This aspect of the subject continued the tailor—his jour neymen and apprentice--in the practice of this species of pilfering, and blinded them entirely, as to its moral quality.— As a general thing, men prefer to act in freedom, in the hestowinent of their gills, and not under the coercion of a doubtful custom. l'hcre nmy be Indi vidual cases in which the customer would beperfectly satisfied if he got a garment that suited him In every re spect, without desiring a return of what the superior skill of the tailor may have saved in cutti Ig his cloth. But the evil, in even this aspect of the case, Is, that It may tempt the tailor to make those shifts and substitutions, through which one man's garment may contain scraps of sonic other man's goods, in order that the tailor, or 801110 Of Ilk employees, may indulge ill the gratuity of a hand some waistcoat, a cloth-cap, or a superb pair of gaiters. Besides, it may be an invasion of the privileges of the eco nomical house-wife, who may desire the surplus fragments, to make repairs in the family wardrobe in a time of need. In purely commercial tailoring, how ever, there can be no such thing as rub &wing, unless the jours or apprentices practice it upon the " Crooks ;" and then it is generally called cribbing—but, perhaps we ought to define more clearly what cabbaging is. In localities where it was the custom for people to carry their own material to the tailor to have it cut and made, no more was usually taken there than what was necessary to make the garment, or garments, which the patron desired ; and therefore, the merchant from whom it .was puohased, cut off just such quan tity as -was thought sufficient. Mer chants themselves were sometimes sel fish In this matter. If they sold the material at a lump bargain, they would give the smallest possible quantity out of which a garment could be made; but if they sold by the yard, they would cut off a large pattern. After cutting out the garment, the overplus—if any—was claimed by the tailor as a sort of legiti mate perquisite—unless there had been a distinct stipulation to return the atie 7 gan?Otet sllittettiviter. VOLUME 72 patches—and this overplus was called cabbage," and found its way into the tailor's cabbage-box"—sometimes also called hell. The term cabbage, was not usually applied to any act, save such as could properly come under the above definition. Crib, cribbing, or cribbag ing, was, however, indiscriminately ap plied to this overplus, and also to a species of small stealing. Therefore. it will be seen that, although tailors could not, in a restricted sense of the term,cab bage from each other, they yet might crib from each other. But, according to the quotation from the old song which we preface this pa per with, we think we can show that— " Tailors are not the only folks who by cabbaging have made"—nor has the term originated with them. Although vegetable eabbayes, or kale 4, were known among the Romans as early as the time of Col umella, and probaoly were in tro• duced by them into England at a very early period ; yet, the particular close hearted variety, that now goes by the name of cabbage, came originally from Holland ; and Sir Anthony Ashley wits the first man who introduced its culti vation into England, and made his eou 0- try independent of the hutch for its " sauer kraut." According; to Ritulli "this planter of cabbages rendered his name famous, but was also known by other deeds less credita ble to his character." It appears that he had a military command at Cadiz, or Cales, where he got much by rapine, especially front a lady who entrusted her jewels to his hon or. "Front this, originatire jest (.11 him, that ''he got more by C.th., than by a and cabbage." This not only demonstrates that tailors are not the only people who have acquired property belonging to others by oribbailitly, but also that Ihcy are not the only ones who has:y.)o:6bl/ ever such acquisition. This great cabbager has a monument erected to his memory at Winiborne St. (tiles, in I torsetshire, England; and there is said to be a cabbage sculptured on it at his feet. There is no doubt that from this circumstance comes the term "cab baging" as applied to similar acts of sel appropriation among tailors; and furth er, that If the act is not stealing, it is at least a breach of trust. From England, the introduction of the term and the act to which it applies, would have little difficulty in finding an easy transition to America, a country so dependent upon the mother-country for its early artisans of all' kinds. But how insignificant do the very worst camesofa cabhaging appear,wlien compared with the official and other acts of cathaging which have taken place In our country during the last ten yearn, in National, State, and Municipal ( lov ern ments A good story, exhibiting the strong temptation, and the conscientious scru ples, involved in cabbaging, is related something in this wise, by a friend : Au old tailor with strong calitinging osopen slties,was brought nearly to oath's door through a severe attack of fever. Int r ing a delirious period, a long scroll pass ed in vision Lefore hiui, composed of pieces of all the cloth he had rabbaged during his life. Feeling great remorse, he promised, that if he recovered, lie never would cabbage more ; and fell ,. f his recovery, he told his journeyman to admonish him, if he ever saw him do the like again. Ile resisted the tempta tion for some time; but finally he saved a vest-pattern, from an exceeding line, and beautifully colored piece of cloth, which straightway was transferred to his Box. Ins journeyman reminded him of the "fatal scroll" he had seen in his fever-vision and the vow he had made. "Ali," he replied, there was nothing on that scroll, fib', or that will eompo color and quality with this.” Si,, we may see how difficult it is to "work out of the flesh, what is bred in the bone," for no doubt this anecdote has been, in some sense, realized, on many occasions, by those addicted to similar retaliations. What is it, in the political world, that makes necessary such an institution as a "Corruption fund," for the purpose of advancing the claims of aspirants to (Alice, but that said aspirants, if success ful, expect to enjoy opportunities to both- Intyc the people's money How could a azure possibly irhtord to pay the whole salary of an office, to obtain possession of that otlice—unless he is rich enough to forego the sslary for the mere honor of serving his eountry—if he did not contemplate going into the ivbba,q , business, and illegitimately making a sell-appropriation of material means that are justly due to his constituency, or his country:' If there is any truth in common rumor, in newspaper :faro graphs, and in Court proceedings,oh:cial eabbaging has been organized into regular system, and has its sanctions in long-established precedents- precedents which modern i ncu in ben ts regard NS COO sacred to evade, to oppose, or to over throw. Never was a tailor more fully under the conviction that he had an inalienable right to the surplus material of his customer, thew aspirants to office have, that those offices were created for (lent, and that they have a right to make a self-appropriation of emolu ments and perquisites, that never was contemplated by the laws limier which those offices exist, and have their au thority. Phut eabbaging is not confined to the tailoring and political worlds alone. It more or less pervades the commercial, the social, the literary, the scientific, and perhaps also the religious worlds. Any system, whether sanc tioned by custom or not, which makes 11 self-appropriation of that which right fully belongs to others, is pravticully a system of eabbaging or cribbing, no matter how plausible the arguments of self-justification are With the same breath that the frugal customer asserts his claim to the overplus of his garment, in possession of his tailor, he may also be asserting his right to the property of others in his possession. If we properly reflect upon these aspects of the case, we cannot help coming to the conclusion that— "Tailors are not the only folks, who by cabbaging have made." l i i:.\ x`l' IS 1.1. l • 8y.ti0..1,3.. to Ire a good iintiliager required sonic el: ill in economical drafting Lind cutting; I ecause, If the iiverplus tas not In one piece large enough to Mane a vest, IL cloth-sup, or a pair of gullet's at least It Wits comparatively worthless; and When It was 111 ninny small Moves, It wits sonic( Imes locally called " odd claw." Thort•lOre It Was liSmUllltql, that If IL shiftless eilltel'eollid MIIVe sufficient material, In Lanny pieces to make any of the aforesaid articles, my superior skill In "laying oaf," it could ho No managed as to concentrate them into one large ply.. On the same ground It Leas assumed, that If there was sufficient ma tenni In a 1111,0 Of cloth to cut a coat, iir of her garment, with piosiug, by superior Skill It !night In. cut gat/tout piecing, and this skill VOtletllllted a man a good, or at least uu eve. 110111fral, Mater, or "crook." It Wile more or less a 011OSt11311 Of frugality, for In t•ut ling the haute quantity of clot 11, into garintlito id the Maine nre., flue cutter might have the overplus la the toms or carpet-rags or ' cold-slaw" ly ing at his feet on the tloor, whilst another more ecommileal operator might. have It stowed away In his cutiliage-lox or hell, in the l i arm of rent-put terns; and Oils elreumetance went far towards Justifying the system of cabhaging ; because In' would have been considered a Mean customer indeed, who would have cialmed the carpet-runs ; and yet, abstractly speaking, one 18110 more our Ives his property than the oth er. This term cold-slaty (as often /10t as cold) more prupi • rly Lvritten rub'-slow, Is it derlent lon front the Saxon knit', or role Windt, and literal ly rendered is:cob/my,. s a lad tir cob . , be ing the Saxon name Iml cabbage, Front this also 00111 es the name Ma culinary preparation of cabbage and potato., culled " kale cap 011" or "kale canew," which Is volleltiOred by Its Dllllll OppOOPIIIN, an I.IOIIIIng Init all "Irish mess. It a taller therefore eschews the system of cabliaglng altogether, and relinquishes his tight Lo the cabbage entirely, unless he sweeps Ills shop ' b ully, and turows sweepings Into Lhe streets, he cannot discontinue Or abjure his accumulat lons of slaw, and hat' rOnell', more popularly known under the name id rol . - p t 0.11,1 Public Taste In the East No amusements are tolerated In the East of an indecent or immoral nature. In Australia Catharine Hayes made a fortune; Lola ISlontez wasa dead failure. In Calcutta, not long since, a Gernum dunsemqc made her debut and her fare well appearance in the towu hall on the same evening; the authorities prohibited a second appearance, and yet she wore an amount of clothing which 00 the stage at home at this period would he considered abundant. lu Bombay some people declined to subscribe to the Ital ian opera on the ground that it was im proper for a woman to appear, for in stance, as Ilfeco, iu Lucrezie"—a singular objection, as was pointed out at the time, to be taken in an Indian city, where the natives frequently go about nearly naked.--Cornhill Magazi?le for February. Dinners—for lawyers, suet-pudding; for financiers, mint's meat; for clergy men, soused sarmon and sweet amens; for sporting men, steaks, trotters and sago; for Crispins, eel sand soles; for carpenters, aplane meal; with perhaps a bit of sawsage. History of the White House 1711= Corre.pereleuee of the N. Y. Eveulng /V11..1 WASIIINUTON, Feb. 1871. The history of the White House is too generally known to need much com ment here. In 1790 and 1797 its walls reached only to the level of the ground, and when Mr. Adams, whose term of office was then nearly completed, re moved here in 1900, the house was not ready for him to occupy it, and he took lodgings at a public house in George town. Before he retired from the Pres idency, however, he and his wife re moved to the Executive Mansion, and lived there in great discomfort. It was much injured, but not entirely destroy ed by the British in 1814, and though repaired, some of its apartments were not entirely completed until General Jackson's time, when the East Boom was first used. Neverthet&s the early Presidents lived in style, and knew how to entertain so sumptuously, that an old servant of Mr. Madison's is moved to indignation when talking of the past and contrasting it with the present. This old Mall has his own ac count to give of most things, and espe cially of the means by which the city fell into the hands of the enimiy during that invasion to which I have had occa sion more than once to allude. Uncle Paul is a most interestingacquaintance. Ile WiIS born a slave in the Madison fam ily, mid raised as a pet. lie stood always, alter he grew large enough to wait at table, at Mrs. Mad sari's left hand, and poured out the tea and coffiee for the guests. lie Wtl:; Madison's conti dent bit messenger, and carried the notes folded lengthwise to all imch or two n Width, and then by a tWi,t and turn in the centre made to form halfa rectangle --for envelopes were not then—to the Cabinet officers when special meetings were called. I could read writing," says l'nele Paul,"before I could write a word." When the Cabinet assembled the boy had the daring to remain in the room often during the meeting, and un noticed, or if noticed supposed to be too I young for his presence to he objection- able, he listened to the councils of war. Of a special meeting which took place just before the brittle of Bladensburg lie particularly speaks, and gives the name from memory, ()revery Cabinet. Minister present. "I heard," he says, "Mr. Mad ison say to Gen. Armstrong, the Secre tary of War, 'you must give arms to those men living down by the arsenal,' and Gen. A rinst ro g said, 'lt shall be', done. sir;' but it never was done, for' that Armstrong was traitor. Yes, I don't care who says rirrl, know he was a traitor," "And I tell you what I saw," con tinues l'ncle Paul, on " the 2:41 of Au gust, the day before the battle, 1 saw an old woman conic through the hall of the White Ilouse, alld she wore a black dress and a black silk handkerchief over her head and spectacles, and 1 ran after her, boy-like, you know, and pulled at her skirts, 11.1111 she shook me oil', and said, (lit away, you little scamp ;' and that old W0111;111 was Cock burn, the Antniral of the British tleet! I know it was ; and he went through all the departments and saw all he wanted to see. The next morning 1 was standing by Mrs. Madison at break fast, and all the Secretaries were there, and some more, and Mrs. Madison said to General Armstrong . , ' l leneral, do you think the British will come to-day:"— And he said: Ily no means, Madam,' but he knew it all the time." The Whole party who rode away after breakfast were expected back the same day to dinner at 3 o'clock, and Paul, who prided himself on his ability to set as butler, had the preparing of the din ner table. At 12 o'clock, he says, he put his wines in the coolers and at the tattle, and the cook put the "stew-pans" on the stove, and then Paul amused himself with a game of marbles out of doors. Pretty soon he saw a black cloud in the direction of Bladensburg, and heard the caution tiring, and pres ently people began to run past, then a messenger came to AI rs. Madison, warn ing her to hurry from the city, for Gen eral Armstrong had ordered a retreat: l'aul betook himself within, and saw Mrs. Madison come down stairs with a reticule in her hands and till it with silver, "but she never looked at nothing else," says Uncle Paul, alluding to thestory of lier cutting (;eneral Washington's picture from the frame and carrying it with her, "she just went oil in a hurry." Left behind, the boy enjoyed the sport or seeing the people run through the streets. Never was there anythino . like it " Dere was old bonnets, old Eats, old dresses, old carts and feather beds lashed on behind." liy and by Paul, who had once in the meantime refined to leave, concluded to with another boy. and went, saving nothing, " forgetting even my two vio lins down in the cellar, - lie says dolefully. Ile reached the ferry at teorgetown just as Mr. Madison was about to erns; it: going to N'irginia, but was unseen by him, so went his own way. After some adventures he reached, about dusk, a farmhouse where a Methodist minister lived, and found many there before hint. For there was a crowd everywhere, " hen houses and chicken coops were full of people." The minister gathered all assembled on his premises about him in prayer, and while they were praying art awful noise was heard and everybody rushed out of the house, "and we saw," says Paul, "the public buildings all on fire in the city, and When I saw the NVltite House burning, I just cried out, " Dere goes my poor fiddles. I was only a boy you see." A few days afterwards when the panic was over and al! were returning to the Capital, Paul met Mrs. Madison in her carriage on the road, " and when she saw me," he says, "she just learned half her body out the carriage window and caught me in her arms, she was so glad to see me and know I was safe. Well, I went back with her, then, and when I went to the White House, what do you suppose I saw ? It's the truth and no one, living or dead, can deny it; I saw written everywhere on the walls, in big letters," General A rmstrong sold the Capital for one million of dollars,— Yes, I saw it, :not plenty more saw it tom,' Uncle Paul continued to live with Mr. anti Mrs. Madison after they mt.! red to private life, and after the death of Mr. Madison remained with his widow for many years while she was living in the house. till known us the Madison House, on the northeast corner of Lafayette Square. In this house Mrs. Madison continued her reign, for never while she lived did society forsake her. It was customary until her death On New Year's day for all the grandees, after calling upon the President, to call next upon Mrs. Madison. In her parlors political enemies met as on neutral ground. Often as I have found it necessary to mention her name in the course of these ,letters, I have heard it still oftener from those who have kindly furnished me with facts and in cidents. Of her grace much is said; much, also, of her conversational pow• era, of her dignity, and, in spite of the last, of her wonderful ability to put everyone around.her at ease. "Never," Uncle Paul declares, "was a more grace fuller lady in any drawing room. We always had our Wednesday-evening re ceptions at the old Madison House, and we had them ill style." Of Mts. Madison's high white turbans much is said also, for they were much. It is supposed she spent Slob a year in tur bans. She wore one to her latest day, long after turbans had ceased to be a fashion. These turbans were made of the finest material, and trimmed to match her various dresses. Her old servant speaks of one of her dresses of purple velvet with a long train trimmed with wide gold-lace, with which she wore a turban also ornamented with gold lace, and a pair of gold shoes. With a white satin dress she wore a turban spangled with silver, and silver shoes. She sent regularly to Paris for her grand costumes. Her tea-parties and her " 100 " parties are mentioned as features of the past. Cards were the great resource of middle-aged ladies at that period, and a certain circle, of which Mrs. Madison was one, met reg ularly every day at the house of some one of the circle to play 100 or whist. Since her death Commodore Wilkes (the same who captured Mason and Slidell) has owned, and for many years occupied, her house. More recently Mr. and Mrs. Chanler, of New York, have resided in it. .Though altered and remodelled since Mrs. Madison's time, the glory of the house is very evidently in the past. Before closing the:recital of Uncle LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING MARC Y 1, 1871. Paul's reminiscences It would be well to add his account of the rescue of Gen eral Washington's portrait, whose pres ervation has very generally been cred ited to the forethought of Mrs. Madison in cutting it out of its frame. " sow does it look reasonable," says the old man, " that she would take down that picture of General Washington, six feet high? I don't care for history when I know what I saw, and I told you I saw her leave in a hurry, just taking some silver with her. 1 disputed this point once with a gentleman long after the war was over; and when he doubted my word. and talked about his tory, I went and found John Susa, the French door-keeper who used to live with us in the White House. When he saw me coming he ran to me, and threw his arms around me, and says, ' Oh, coon cher Paul ! Mon Dieu! Paul!' And here he who was thus vehemently welcomed gets off a surprising quantity of French expletives. When I asked him, ".John, who took lien. Washing ton's picture away when theßritish was coming?' he says, ' I did; 1 took him clown. And so he did, anA one of the other servants helped, and they carried that picture and one or two more, arid smnesilver, away in a cart, and hid them in the woods till the trouble was over, and then brought them back to the house." This story, which is no doubt correct, as Uncle Paul is considered re liable by those who have known him longest and speaks well Ihr the patriotism and honesty of those em ployed in the White House, :tt a time when all missing articles would have been laid to the account or British Van dals ' The Itheen's l'ay." What the Royal Family of Eoziontl What it workingman at a late meet ing, more probably from paucity or language than disrespect, called the "Queen's l'ay,' or the sum fixed by Statute 1, 11137, " lor the maintenance of the Queen's household and the honor and dignity of the Crown," amounts ilk gross to .085,000 a year. Besides being sovereign the Queen is also Duchess of Lancaster, and derives from her• well managed ducal possession a further va rying annual income, averaging, say, r. 2.3,000. It is, however, the former amount only that conies out of the con solidated fund—that is out of the rev enue of the kingdom ; and from the U 115,000 so derived must first be fairly deducted, before estimating the Royal national Income, the charge thrown on the civil list, for pensions, at the rate of .1;1,200 a year, for with these pensions the sovereign personally has really nothing to do. What their amount now reaches does not appear. The civil list of L. 35.1,000 is also charged with 1:13,01111 a year for '• royal bounty, al ins and special services," whh•li fall on the Queen as representing the nation, and diminish the income personally enjoyed by tier Majesty. Whatever the act income of the Queen under the act of 11177 may be, it is no torious: I. That it is less in amount than that of her majesty's predecessors for the last one hundred and seventy years, and in purchasing power than during by far the greater part of that period. :1. That it does not reach the income possessed by the other great sov ereigns of Europe. ::. That Queen Vic toria hits not exceeded in tier expendi ture, as most of her predecessors in that time did, her civil list ; and 4, has not had the other pecuniary resources which they one and all had, from Queen Anne down to William I V. Queen Anne had an annual provision front Parliament of ..t: , 00,000 a year, whereon debts accumulated during the twelve years of her reign of £1,21)0,11(0, which Parliament had to discharge. George I. had H. civil list of similar amount, but in a reign of twelve years Parliament had to pay its debts to the extentol £1,000,000. In the thirty-three years of the reign of (;surge 11. the debts on his civil list of.tC in oo,ono wer e 1.:4.51.;,000, which were also discharged by Parliament, and in the latter years of his rule the taxes assigned to him for the civil list, there being then no con solidated fund to charge it on, produced more than the .000.0110 by about half a million. The civil list of George was originally .1.:%;00,00) a year; at the end of seventeen years it was increased to Entoo,ooo, subsequently ..C960,000, and in the latter years of his life it was aug mented to .E1,030,nu0. Nevertheless, in the course of his reign of sixty years debts on his civil list were liquidated by Parliament out of taxation by the large sum of X:l,sll,nua. In his reign, too, the casual revenues and debts of the (Town which had not been surrendered to the nation produced 1:P2,111111,mo, of which .C-1,4n0,000 were received by the King for his present use. And until majority, George I 11. look for himself the income irf the Duchy of Cornwall. 'file civil list oil leor g ,• Iv. was L. 1U eon and that of \Villiam IV. the same amount. Neither of then• monarchs incurred dclit-i that rarlianient had to meet, but both, in addition to the civil list, were in receipt of the revenue, of the Duchy of Cornwall. • No doubt the Civil lists of the first four of these sovereigns were charged with sonic public liabilities and abused by unrestricted pension, from which the present civil list is free. But the value of money was generally in those reigns, part of that of George HI, excepted, much greater than it now is; the sovereigns of the house of Hanover had incomes derived from that kingdom, which the Queen has not; and they all had inherited private fortunes, while her Majesty inherited nothing, and had her father's debts to pay on tier acces sion to the throne. During all these reigns Parliament. made separate pro vision for the members of the royal In the former reign the privy purse appropriation included that of Queen 'Adelaide, who, on becoming Queen Dowager, had a charge on the consolL dated fund of .1:100,000 a year; whereas the grant to the late Prince Consort was only .c 30,000 a year. And as the for mer sovereign had no children, while her Majesty hail nine children, who re mained and remain a charge on the civil list until otherwise provided for, the burden on her civil list has of course been much greater than that on the civil list of King William. Notwith standing the greater pressure, and by means of order and economy, the pres ent civil list has been sufficient for the Queen's expenditure : and the nature and education of the royal and out of its economies Osborne has been purchased and built, and is maintained. These civil lists bade been granted to the four last sovereigns on their surren der to the nation of the royal hereditary revenues, the casual revenues and droits of the crown excepted. This arrange ment, originally pecuniarily advantage ous to the sovereign, has, by improved care and management of the royal prop erty so surrendered, now become profit able to the nation. Thus, in the ac counts of the receipts and expenditures of the commissioners of her Majesty's woods, forests and land revenues for the yqar ending 31st March, 186 f), there will be found two Items paid into the consolidated fund—that is, to the na tion—amounting to £458,21)0, or £73,206 iu excess of the civil lint of the Queen, paid out of the consolidated. fund ; and already In the course of the present fi nancial year the crown lands have con tributed to the revenue of the kingdom the sum of £331,000. This considerable pecuniary balance in:favor of the nation on the arrangement of 1837 for the main tenance of the sovereign and the honor and dignity of the crown is, moreover, irrespective of the other substantial ad vantages the country derives from the arrangement, to the great pecuniary detriment of the sovereign were no such arrangement in existence for the he reditary possessions of the crown in chide the ancient parks in and around London, which, devoted, in con sequence of their transfer against the civil list, to the nation, are applied towards the health, the recreation, and enjoyment of the population of the metropolis. Without a civil list charged on the consolidated fund, and thrown on the hereditary posses sions of the Crown for the maintenance of her household, and to support the honor and dignity of the throne, the sovereign would be free to utilize all royal property after the manner in which the Marquis of Westminister,the Duke of Portland, the Duke of Bedford and other great metropolitan proprietors have utilized their estates in and about London; and the result would be, that while London would be deprived of its ancient parks, Queen Victoria would be in possession of a much larger income than £385,000, and be in a position to amply provide, without the assistance, NAN DOMINGO. files. The staples of their diet are phintians of Pat liament, for her family. Which are excellent when fried, yams,sweet The civil list arrangement puts the What the Reporter,. Sat, potatoes, coseoa-nuts, pines, bananas, or public In full possession of these metro- -:. angel, tomatoes, egg plants, and sometimes politan amenities, and a large annual The Island—lts People—lts tqww salt fish. Fresh Itch is lever seen—whether the , profit out of the hereditary possessions tions—.ll:e., A7e. waters do not supply it or the people of the Crown after payment of a civil : We make the following eopiotis eXtraels from the very full correspondence furnish- cattle being raised are too lazy to catch it, I cannot it The better eht•iseS have !neat about twice a week list of 1:383,000 a year. But it throws on in small numbers on the the nation the obligation of providing ed to the different New York papers: high lands; but beef sells f,r eight or ten for her Majesty's children on their nut- The Tennessee first en tied thel ce.ebrated , ,•ents a pomid - which is tar beyond the jority or marriage, awl that obligation i harbor of Somana. The portico of territio'y Means of the poor—and besides it is hard to Parliament has unhesitatingly perform- i embracing this bay is represented on th e keep in this climate. Everybody keeps ed in reference to the Prince of \Vales maps to be a peninsula, but is said in real- poultry, and when there are ships in port the Duke of Edinburgh, the Crown; i ity to be separated from Hayti and to be an cliii•kens are worth 50 cents a piece, and Princess of Prussia, Princess Louis of I island. 'Lim special correspondent or th e eggs ilu cents a dozen. ISM as soon as the New York TiVoirie gives the following last vessel shows her stern to the rickety Hesse, Princess Christian of Schleswig- , description o f oescription ot Mtle fort at the end of the village, down If olstein ; and will shortly be called on , TOE TOWN or SANTA BARBARA DE SAMANA, troubles all (.01111110,e, and the people be to perform towards the Princess Louise , antana is a poor, little, dirty place come frightfully lavish in the use or their and Prince Arthur.-- Lund'', / 1,7 ., 1 enough, for all its romantic and picturesque remaining stook of beef and eggs. appearance. It is built in a random. hap- THE CLIMATE AND v u emocrioN. ~. Rocky Mountain Faille A correspondent of the Cincinnati (;..t.z,t7te gives an account of the large herds grazing in the West, and the man ner of breeding and feeding cattle and sheep. lie says : I cannot begin at a setter place than the Laramie plains—t he paradise of cat tle raisers. It was late - in the afternoon of a chilly day that Dr. Latham took me in his buggy and started for the grazing grounds south of the city. In an hour's time we came in sight of the herds. First were a few stragglers or warders, who seemed to be the sentinels of the great herd, and looked not unlike Indians as they raised their large heads, with wide-spreading horns, am) peered doss : n front the hill-tops to see who and what we were. Next we came upon families of into, four :Ind six head ; then groups of a dozen, and lastly, avast mass of cattle, stretching in all directions as far as the eye could reach. I fere was a stalwart Durham calf, who, with mas sive head erect and staring eye, at us, wondered what on earth no strange a thing as a horse and buggy could be.— There was a big bull that had cost his owners hundreds of dollars in the east, and who hardly deigned us a look as we drove by. Near him was a mild, demure looking cow, with three calves, one a two-year old, another a yearling, and the last, a fat little one, only a few days old. :ski we drove on for nines and miles, I young bulls bellowingaround us, heifers kicking up their heels and scampering away, and old dames hastening to their young as if we had come to rob them of ~..their pretty calves. I t was a grand sight, this single herd of fifty bulls, three thou- I sand cows and eighteen hundred calves. It seemed an endless mass of beef.and I large fortune for one man, yet I was told I that the gentleman who owned this herd I owned three others equally large. . We saw a little Id low just brought , into the world, and stopped to observe' hint take Ids first steps on tile prairie. I The dam ran away, but immediately canoe back and stood resolutely by her young; indeed, so wickedly did she look that the doctor drove hastily saying it was not safe to go too near these cows when they have calves.— From the lire in the beast's eyes, I be lieve she had determined to charge upon us, and the pony seemed to understand this, for he reared, snorted, and was anxious to be off, having no relish for a goring front a pair of sharp horns. It was curious to observe the habits of these prairie cattle. They run in fami lies like the buffalo, their cows keeping their calves with them until they are three or four years old. It frequently happens that the mother has under her protection sons and daughters larger than herself. The dam watches over her ofr:pring, and, when they disobey, punishes them, to which they submit like well trained children. In the mid dle of the day the cattle leave the L igh ground and go to the river bottoms for water. About four o'clock they go back to the high ground and graze on the rich gramma and bunch grapes until night, when they lay down on the warm sandy soil and sleep until next morning. They graze in families and little herds of six, eight and ten, anti these stick to getherlike chosen friends. hi travelling hack and forth to the water, they march in single file, and follow the same path, like the butralo, wearing deep ruts in the earth. The cattle frequently go four or live miles to the water, and, having slaked their thirst, nearly always return to the place from which they started. The total number of cattle 1,11 the plains of the Platte river is 18,200; total of sheep, rityon! grand total number of head, 'rhe number of cattle on the plains more than doubled during the year 1: , 70 ' and it is fair to presume that the herds will quadruple in Is7l. great facilities for raising cattle on the plains of the Platte have attracted the attention of the clock growers throughout the Iltion , and those who have visited the Rocky- mountain pas tures went away expressing their satis faction and intention of thriving in a portion or their herds next spring. pct the pasture lands are mostly unsurveye, government any :,ant gem t" any one who chooses eonie and ‘wetipy them. They will not Corte in the marl:et I'm years yet, and \viten they dm ,toil: raisers, who hegin nuts, trill he amply able to buy :ill the land they need for (MM. H erds. Last winter, Mr. 11111 tried the exper iment of shipping dressed cattle to Chi cago :Ind New York markets. For want of suitable cars on the Union Pacific railroad, and an easy mode of transfer ring across the Missouri, he did not suc ceed in a pecuniary point of view, but Mr. mu . himself told me he washy no means discouraged and would renew his eflbrts this winter. He assured me he could lay down plain beef in the New Yolk, Chicago and even Boston mar kets two cents per pound cheaper than it could he brought from any other part of the I'M tell States. This year the Union Pacific railroad is building a number of refrigerator ears, and as soon as the bridge across the Missouri at ()Inaba is completed, the winter trade of dressed cattle for eastern markets will begin in earnest from the plains. l'at's Veit} Pat was but an idle buy ; one day be wassuddenly called up :Ind the question propounded by the pedagogue: '• Patrick, how many Gods are there*.'' Pat %yam not a distinguished theolo gian, but h' promptly an.. " Three, sir." "Take your seat:" thundered the master, "and if you don't answer in five minutes, I will welt you" The probationary period passed, and Pat taking the floor, hesitatingly stated the number of ( ;oda to be " five, sir." Ile received the promised "welting," and returned to his seat, ten minutes, for consideration. Ten minutes up Pat was up, WO, and satisfied that he hadn't fixed the num ber ~ e tifilciently high before, shouted There's ten, sir." He saw the ferule descending, and broke out of the dom., he cleared a five rail fence and run like a quarter-horse across the meadow. Panting with ex ertion, he met a lad with a book in his hand, and with a look of one in the pur suit of knowledge under difficulties. " Where are you going'."' " To school yonder," - was the reply. " I low many Gods are there " One," answered the boy. " Well, you'd better not go down there. You will have a good time with your one God. I just left there with ten, and that wasn't enough to save ute from the darn'dest licking you ever heard of." If timorous On Ids late return to Salt Luke, Brig ham Young found his wives drawn up in a hollow square to receive him. They tell of a farmer in Kentucky who was so lazy that when he went to hoe corn he worked so slowly that the shade of his broad-brimmed hat killed the plants. A countryman who had attended a race said he didn't see why the sports men should be so particular to a quarter of a second about the end of it, when they kept the public waiting half an hour for the beginning. • Justice Thompson, who was immedi ate predecessor of Judge Nelson, of New York, on the Supreme Bench, was prone to excessive libations. One morning after a carouse he was promptly at court, and, before taking his seat, entered into lively conversation with some of the guests of the previous evening. One of these fearing that the good Judge might have "suffered from the hospitality' (as Mr. Webster once quaintly observed), said to him : "Well, Judge, I hope you are feeling well to-day." "Yes, sir, thank you; quite well, sir. I have just taken a gin-cocktail, sir, and it has acted like a Beire-facias—it has 'revived any judgment 9''' I hazard sort of a way, along half a-in ile of curving shore, et the hit ofa ridge of high wooded hills, and what, with its ,ram Kling lanes and grotesque huts, think is one of the most absurd places I ever saw. There are 00 or 90 buildings, all told, rain slating for the most part of a light frame work of scantlings brought front the States, and clap-boarded with bamboos split In half and pressed flat by.piling stones else' them while wet. The rude planking ninth' in this primitive mariner is front four to six inches wide and half a quarter of an, inch thick. Paint is almost unknown, but most of the huts are whitewashed. The roofing is of cocoa leaves bound together with vines. 'rhe flooring, when thew is any, which is not often, consists of rough , hewn wood, or bark, or boughs, or the same leaves that are used for thatch. Nona of the houses—or, perhaps, I should say cabins—have more than one story; few have more than one, or, rerhaps, two rooms.— Doors and windows are luxuries , which the majority of the people have learned to do without; but there are moor three houses in the village roofed with shingles and sup • plied with all such modern conveniences :us plank doors, partitions , and doors 81111 win 'lows. In the centre of the settlement i. the Plaza, or square, without which no Spanish.built town is thought to be cow -1 plete, and hero is a Liberty Tree, of the royal palm species, planted by the village's live or six years ago to replace one vet down by the Spaniards befrire they were driven away. We landed from the ship's boats on a wretched wharf Which runs out about 100 feet into the shallow water; and I if the village looked comical from the frig- I ate, what shall I say of the nearer view? The platform swarmed with men, women and children, of all shades of color, gazing open-eyed and open-mouthed upon the strange arrival. At least half the children under eight years of age were as naked as when they first mule into this wicked world. The offspring of this innocent pop ulation usually begin to Viddle about the streets when they are little above the size of a large sweet-potato, and it is not ens ' totnary to clothe them In so much as a lig leaf until they are at least live years old.— Clothing, even at that age, is looked upon as superfluous, as often its lea, d u ll 1 keel' ' seen sortie pretty well advanced ehildren with nothing on worth mentioning. It seems to be one of the unwritten laws of fashion that the young shall never wear more than one garment at a time. If a mother has given her child a shirt, that is enough ; if a coat is more handy, let a ',oat suffice; and, indeed, it is not uncommon for all the purposes of convenience and adornment to be answered by a hat or a pair of shoes. Among the louver classes— if I may be pardoned the expression—econ omy in costume is not confined to the ehil drum There are men whose whole ward robe consists of a pair of pantaloons, and women who boast of no garment whatever but a torn calico gown—not so much as a ragged handkerchief. One of the members of the Commission assures me that, in the interior, the full dress of a gentleman sometimes consists ofa broad-brimmed hat and a rusty sword, tied about the loin with a belt of bark. I don't wish to be under stood as making this statement on my per sonal responsibility; but evidently we shall have a great deal to get used to in S n Do mingo. There is no tavern, or hotel, Or any place of accommodation for strangers, una far as I marl' been able to learn there are Ilia more than two Or three bedsteads on the whole peninsula. Those who have no hammocks sleep on rude bamboo frames, or on improvised pallets of leaves au ra l bark. It is a curious feature of Santana life that almost everybody keeps a shop. 'if the se houses in the place, more than hall are in some way devoted to trade. I low 40 shop keepers can be maintained hi a village of so houses is a problem in political econo my that I shall het athilllet. to solve, but so it is. All that 1 have seen sell liquor, and beside this staple of COIIIIIICree One can boy common calicoes, groceries, tobacco, veg etables, and fruit. ekortk. ',C here the earth yields so Creely of her store, awl the artificial wants of civilized lift are unknown, it would be unreasona ble to look for a very industrious popula tion ; but I must say the people of Samana impress rice as all uncommonly lazy set of vagabonds. They are irresistibly good humored, and certainly intelligent beyond their station. They have capacity for ion provement and wore general information than onewou Id naturally expect. But where property is insecure, and fruit always in season, and riven pantaloons not an abso lute necessity, whiat is the use of work? The women are more industrious than the men, and Whitt little labor is performed is nearly all dine by them. I 'mule a little inland, yesterday, in company with one it iny fellow-travelers 'teach of us mounted oti a bull, accordiugtothcens tom ,if the country,) and everywhere we were struck by this inversion °tithe sexes. Near the top of a long hill we met a man and woman returning from town. They had evidently been to barter their print 11,0 for sonic, family necessaries, and the wile was staggering Under the load 01 two heavy bags, while the husband walked gaily ahead with empty hands. We 0101 sever al women leading bulls to and from the town, and children carrying burdens, b u t not a man doing anything. •Vito lords of creation lounge about the shops, suck oranges and look at strangers ; but, during our stay at this port—and I have been con stantly ashore—l have seen hardly a man at work, except six or eight. ha n dy negriies who are kept busy on the Methodist Church. The population of the y Hinge is Mama 2. - e. and of the whole peninsula about ii,ooo. A inajority—at any rate, of the villagers -- speak English. There are very few white men—Mr. Burr, a live Maine Yankee, of whom more hereafter; Mr. Horan, a sort of Spanish Pennsylvania Yankee cif you know what that is), who has spent many years in New York; Price, formerly purser of the Tybee, and now building up for himself a wod business here; Mr. Mar ciaque, a French merchant, formerly of New Orleans, but store recently a partisan of Salnave in Hayti. These, with three or tour more, are all that 1 havo heard of. >I r. I•'abens, Judge USulli van, and some others, spend a great deal of time here, but ran hardly be called inhabitants. All the coliir ed residents speak Spanish, many speak French, and certainly a majority of all— men, women and children—speak English. Very few are natives of the island ; indeed I have not thus fur, to my k no w ledge,met one who was not an immigrant or the immedi ate descendant of immigrants. Probably a half of all the blacks, or their ancestors, came from Philadelphia. The earliest of the colony settled here in 15124 under Presi dent Boyer, anti others have been sent liy colonization societies subsequently, or have lied hither from Hayti. As there are no roads there are naturally no wagons, and the only thing approaching a vehicle, that I have seen, Is a wheel-har row, brought from the United States. The only mode of land transportation is on an ox or bull-I ack. The loads of course are small. They are packed in bags made of hark, and slung across the animal's back. Water transportation is done by means of clumsy "dug-outs," or boats, fashioned from the light and soft trunk of the cellar tree. Rude and awkward as they are, the negroes brindle them with great dexterity, and manage to urge them at considerable speed. The price of labor—such as the labor may be—is $1 or $1 25 in United States coin. But this standard of value Is entirely the pro duct of the annexation scheme. Before the excitement on this subject sprang up ono could hardly say that anything had a price. Labor way either borrowed and returned in labor at some future time, or repaid in produce or store goods. There was no cir culating medium, practically speaking. The currency issued by Baez and his pre decessors can be bought by the bushel at the value of waste paper. Den. Boynton obtained for one good dollar about $l,OOO in Haytien and Dominican paper curl ency. He bought a few copper coins, also, as cu riosities, and the shop-keeper scrapped them up in $2O bills of Santo Domingo. Another man said he had possessed about $15,000 in bilis, but lie had used's good deal of it for wrapping paper. So you see what ever else the people may expect from the United States, they evidently don't expect us to redeem their paper money. The price of fruits, vegetables, and all products of the country are governed entirely by the mar ket, and the market, depends entirely up on the ships. When there are no vessels in the harbor, the cost of everything is mere nominal. At such times speculators buy up everything at low rates, for the people must sell their fruits or see them spoil on their hands, and as soon as a cargo is col lected, it is shipped to a northern port. Thus,when the market is good, coacoa-nuts sell here for $1 •25 or $2 a hundred, bananas for 50 cents a bunch, each bunch containing from 70 to 110, pine-apples for 5 cents a piece, coffee for 20 cents a pound, sweet po tatoes for $1 a bushel, rice in the husk for $3 a barrel. Wheat is not raised, and the flour sells for five cents a pound: Wheat-bread, therefore, is comparatively rare, but when ever you get it, you get it very good. The people generally live on fruits and vegeta • The correspondent of the Nets' York /ter. Oil, says: Almost everything has a rose tailored line to the l'inicuissioners. Most of them have never seen a tropical country before, and this looks like a paradise to them. 'l'he sudden transition from cold ; and dreary winter at home to this warm elittiate and luxuriant verdure has made them very enthusiastic. Even the naked , or halt', clad, lazy natives appear to them a ; charming sort of people. It amusing to I In,' them as they return to the ship ex claim in glowing language about the beauty and richness ,if the Lid:incl. The English , language is strained to the utmost to rind superlative adjectives with which to ex ! press their impression. (Me 11E111 reports that he found a mahogany tree its the almost impenetrable interior worth as it stands. .knother avoivs that ati acre of land will support a family al ity,st ,vithout labor, tool that there is wealth in aboti dance to be notde Nvalt scarcedv any effort. All is gorgeous, splendid mid marvelous. tf i•ourse the tie,ple of 53111.111.1, interested in the question of annexation, or in the proteetiotate of the l•nitial ./Stir till . lll, make the best of everything. A II I.Tit 1.1. Am% According to their account there is no ; sickness here worth speaking about.. one mail, an industrious still enterprising, white • the rnited States. who has set tied and acquired property here, declared i this country the healthiest in the world, . while in the room adjoining the one in which we sat and where lie made the re ' mark his only child ,its lying sick with let or. Then, the peoplesay this is the hots Lost season of the year, though the sun is fifteen or sixteen degrees the other side of the equator, and in June it is right over head. This is rallnd the dry SI•104011, al- though it rains every day and often many times a day. NVe may imagine what Hoods 1•01110 IiONVII in the wet stasis. heavy and :Mutest constant rains may, however, modify the temperature and inure the sea son ..f the sunnnet•-..h.,th•e cooler than it would lie ”thi.rwi,e. Looking, then, at the motive the people of tianiana have fur , Making a lavorable impression upon Lim Umitinission and those accompanying it, I and the natural entlitenasin of nearly all in this expedition over 21 eritintry so luxuriant and a climate so much in contrast with that they hail just left, it is not surprising that everything is viewed hi 11111,I • lie NM' \Viand it be 100.0111 , i111114 should every -110104. he ,•01,1/11,1 • 111.1 . 11 by the Commission and correspondents. THE CLIMATE. S till, With all this exagvvration, the .•li ffiat, In most agreeable. the breezes 011 the bay and along the shore are balmy and re- Ireshing, and the surrounding scenery is charming to belio:d. It is not an Arcadia, It.lr there lire no flocks or herds, no varie gated hindscapes, with cleared and highly eultivated lauds, beautiful gardens and shrubberies, handsome residences and comfortable cottages, line churches and other things which make the civilized coun tries of the temperate zone so delightful. With the exception of a few poorly culti vated spots an acre or .40, or of a lets acres lit most, with a rude hut on each for a residence, widely apart., all the rest of the soil, and even 111/ to the crown nr the Lille is covered with a dense wood, interlaced by shrubs anti-vines. x*F.orr.vrioN. There is little raison fur market, except a tole oranges anti cocoa nuts. The soil almost everyirliere is rich, and this is seen liy the abundant and rapid growth of veg etation. Even on passing along ordinary bridle roads men invariably carry the machete lit clear away the brush andvines that. grow Sll rapidly. Different varieties of the pall'', including the moon-nut tree, grow abundantly, and where the latter are cultivated in little groves in the indenta tions of the bay 11101 along the .+ll.lre, think id by the thick and dark green forest rising up the hills, the scene is beautiful. 'fliers, is 110 llOtlbt that the sugar cane, a.lfre, , 01,1•11 a, oranges and all the products of the tropics would grow here abundantly if there were labor to cultivate the soil :mil non could be kept at work in this lazy cli mate. WILIIOIIL that the 1 . 011111.1 . V Must cc umiu It i•oniparative wilderness. Corn, probably, can be raised with little labor and great yield, It is said there is an 111)0101- O.llCe lit inahogativ and other valuable wood in the interior. .13tit, after all, to improve this country, is is question ill labor, and the first thing is to ascertain when , that is le isane Irmo. There are no roads hotter than rough bridle paths in the country. There is nothing on wheels to be seen here, not even the retest sort .1 cart. Everything is ear viva on oxen, asses, ponies or mules, or by hand. The 110,1 4 , 11111,11 of I,rden or riding on by the people of the in terior when they •' a small Lull. 'l'm: rider, who is Often a WI, Mall or girl, sits astride 011:1 rude wooden saddle, without stirrups, the naked Feet and legs hanging 11:111141i11)4 110W11 nearly to the ground. In phu•e ,d'a bridle or other head gear to guide the bull, there is a ring in the nose of the animal, with a single cord at tached to it. literally those stunted and docile little bulls are led by the nose. One of ,air party was so 11.11111S1011 with the comi cal sight of a half-nude young woman sit ting astride one of these animals, :is she rode throughlthe village, that he declared he had seen Europa. 101= The magistrates who administer law awl justice in this favored quarter of the world seem to have no respect for any known rude but proceed in a summary wanner ac cording to their own crude notions of equity. As a specimen of thequeer things 110110 sometime, under this system, I !nay tell you a story that has just been told to . A b u tcher suspected a man of steal ing Irnm him the sum of $1.7. lie mention ed his Sll,l,i , • ionS to n magistrate, and, al though he did not invoke the aid of the law, the zealous functionary took the re sponsibility of ordering out the guard, ar resting the supposed culprit, and organiz ing a court. After a farcical trial the pris oner WaS acquitted, and the butcher called upon to pay &SO costs. lie demurred to this, Mitt for eoutem pt. Ile asked for a copy of the proceedings and was charged 810 more. Then, being a British subject, he applied to the British commercial agent who was here at the time, and so he expects to obtain re dress. But I must say, that, considering the strong inducements which the people have to abstain from going to law, nets of violence and dishonesty are wonderfully few. The only revenues of the lravernment are derived from an ad valorran customs duty of .10per cent., a small tax on busi ness, and the Imposition of lines and pen alties. The receipts, however, aro very small. The imports are of trilling amount. There is no poll tax, no school tax, no property or other tax, except the fee for licenses to carry ,in business. The military consists of a sort of na tional guard, serving without pay, meeting regularly for fluster, and fir rn ishing details for guard duty. We Mend no prisoners in the calaboose— perhaps they had all been released in honor of the United States—but the vigilant and imposing aspect of the guard WILY worthy ,if the highest admiration. It was a military guard, detailed, I believe, from the stand ing army of the Republic:. The troops were barefoot and half clad. Their arms were various. Some had knives two feet long, with a blade front two to six inches in width. Monte had swords, of all manner of odd patterns. At I crust One carried a musket without any luck. A bout a dozen of these troops lolled in the dirty guard-house, eat ing bananas, drinking cocoa-nut milk, and smoking dirty pipes. The calaboose con sists of one room, amply ventilated, though it has neither door nor windows. There is neither dark cell nor gallows; but Samana has a fine set of mahogany stocks, whereof one of the correspondents iu our party will lung preserve a pleasant recollection. Like I/r. Riceaboeca, this in quisitive gentleman wanted to know "how the thing worked," and the guards were delighted to show him.' lie sat down on the ground and placed his ankles carefully in the holes ; the upper bar wan let down ; arid then all the young gentleman's companions sat on it, to the unspeakable amusement of the spectators, until the prisoner had bound out a good deal more about the stocks than he had any de sire to know. Judging from the appearance of the wo men, from fourteen years of age and up wards, and the numerous children here, the human family is as prolific here as the soil. As in all tropical countries, females arrive at puberty at an early age. Consider ing the large families women have, and at the same time the very limited population, it is evident there aro causes at work to cut °tithe people rapidly. What are these? The frequent revolutions and intestine wars contribute undoubtedly to keep the country depopulated, but there must be other causes. The ignorance of the people, and their mode of living, may account for many deaths, still the country cannot be as healthy as has been represented to us at Samana. White people, particularly those of the United States and Northern Europe, could not labor in cultivating the soil. If ever St. Domingo be made productive it NUMBER '► ;oust Lo through other laborers. Thu q uo don is, when, aro they to come from all how are they to be controlled Or induce to labor ? It Is all very well to talk of th teeming soil, and the beauty and gut geousness of this tropical country, but th practical question ns to production is ,net labor. From the Bay Or Sala:ilia the Teurie,o , sailed round to the Capital or the 1,1.1 The correspondent nit the - Santo Douningo Pity is nothing Ina ruin. I have been here ninny t‘,o day, and have searched vainly tar a Ilva' house a fresh brick, a nowlyoputrried stone, or lately-sawnsiseantlinn.t. Apparently them is not, inn the whole city, a n.trueture that is not 200 years old. .kII the holn,ei bear Ihr proof el g rent aze. Crain Ming stoneN, con crete Idling to deeaN, ivy and other vine. clinging to the walls, moss :tad ieohl and discoloration everywhere. Every street iv but a copy or it 4 fellows. lo• lealsea nro like prisons, with thick doors, itild barred window.•.. Tile (tottntlissittners are It tented in :1 house rented of liner for trine!' they pa) forty dol lars a month. Itaez is described by the lice (ild correspondent, who says "iten. It tt z , velet.illed Ill° French un,l spoke had 1,1-.2 slight-glade own s of tttrdt• ts,dtt ttr tiny years or ant, apparently, .11 . 05,, 101 l an,l has 1 gracious IS .1 11,....111 Ills lath°,„oth 010 kink of ltd,r. The,e is ettssi nature anti entinitutt Mended in ins vxf,..es-.L..11. i,11,11114,111 111111 ilia, I It. e s as 1.1111.11 . 11:arl)• mt. It 111. the 1...1111.11,- 11:11111'ul 19.111.1r . 5 . , nl th.• 9. 1 11, (Ile 01 . 11. rot lan' :uuu•s;uiou ;.1111 1.11.• ;11.11 :1)111. , A 111,,1i11,4 ;1,1 51:1:4 ., in 51. 1.1.1111,1 g.. If Ivo .11111 ex thu 001111Iry. - I'llo IN 1,1111 II formal illterVIOSV NV:ls had kith Iti, lla principal toper it rvruvv.sl Lrinq III.• ol itri•orthoLt 1,. rorrespolltirot, IM=SEII Avbole negotiation, from the voininenev !tient, has not been %, ith our mtn pe.pit.. At the list mention of :uniexatoui they were AS ell pll'ased ; but not .o our neitzln hors. We found that we lilt at i!llct. Intro to defend the I)ominn•an 11'0111 a I laytiell ill °lid 4,11011 repealed MOUNT nr trouble. The I tat tier, weredeterniine,l to prevent, if po..e.thie, our alliance or uuiou With 010 Skin, Nlr. Wade—A re not many of lii, Domin ican people with Cabral President Hue'', -Far 1u nit it. 1110 Wil ask Jr . .. NVIly ? Nut to protect fruit Domini cans, but from Hayti, which ~utnuw bens its unit is litistili) tin whom so much iv.Saidl nl tlu I . lllll'il and sun little hero. iv ri.ally nut al the head of hilt lie is with a fm . co of lluy rises, a In In and a very small number ui I , crsune r,bkloti to or rnunectuJ kith Ilinl~ol f. Ito iv ul lit the iiiiiiortaaeo. The I luclirn ; its ollievrs are I laytich,. lle 11411, it, ill ; Intl a !kph II 1;1'111'1,i le ill I . llTlllllllllli. 1 . 110 liayiil.ll by his ;till, is particular time, in order l.n affect the 1'44 , 1.10 till. Ullilell Mutes, unit !woven( the 'Will:111.W -boring Dominican Republic 11,1111 twin:4 united with a stn,ing MR. WADE—Your statement is smile thing new to MO, and will be now to Most of our people. Is it entirely certain? Pitt:slut:NT ISAF.z —Beyond question, and perfectly well known to us here. I Jere are several letters received from there recently. [lle showed two letters lately repel ved frion the llaytien frontier, and confirming, his statement.] These and plenty of similar crooks that you can have at any time, slime that what you hear Ma, Cabral's movement so far from being an insurrection of the Do, minican people, is really a war neon that people by a Ilnytien invasion, I 'aiiral hiss a dozen or two of men whom he has gath ered from abroad, and perhaps as many from this country; but he is with a I laytien force, which is commanded by a Ilaytien General—Gen. Camollien. We ascertained on the frontier that an envoy i'aine from Nisage Saget, who is at the head ot the Ilaymin I,overnuuatt, to Cabral, bringing word that this time had been selected for a demonstration against the Dominican Republie, in miler to pre vent the consummation .1 the friendly ro lationS between the Donlinican and in,- lean Republic. This Elnbas,ador John Lynch, a cOlored luau or Aincrican origin ; he carried instrnctions to Cabral to make the greatest ellin't he could to row., some of the Dominican people, by the aid of the Hayden force, appealing to them with the idea that this MI Ilt•XialI /II Move ment was a mask ; thus its real 1111911,1. Was to take all power from the black S 31111 td - "red people, and Ida, MI in the II MI s of the whites. The //,,,,/,/ correspondf.n! Sncy Though there may he no johs, as f,,r 11.1 nor government. officials are coneerned ill land speculations at the town and inner hay of Samaria, the lease or iho I ittlo t•ottl ing 181111111 slid pH,' ileges of tho uly to the lotted States for :61. - 0,1/1/1/ a tear loot:, very much like a jolt. 'lids is 101 ellen:001s 811111 of 01,1111-y for such property :Intl privileges. Fifty thousand dollars a year WWII,' be tee 11111111, 11101 OW 1 hllllillll,lll )2,10 el"11111eIll 111,11i8141y Weill.' 11 IVe 18,11 glad to have got I, s•-•. "(hers hushes ltd, 7, there is reason le sus pert, have their 1181Ols ill this ieh, - craw's rent of tins lease ought to Ito enough to Idly up iie.trl,t, all the noel around the !tart tor. The oviJ cure the Ws that .1. Sullivan has a lease for tiso fort !relit ell Li, inner has ur harbor, in ivhich the town of Santana is situated, and adjoining the ivest end of the LeWirl. This lease is for twent2,-- tl ye years, at sixty-tine dollars a rear rent. Ile, has also it lease for tine LOVII lets, Will water front, one SI lilt frontage and the other 111 feet, The rent for each is four dol lars a year. Sullivan has Lull right of re 110Wal Or those loaves, With 1108111081 eel) ditions. ' , abet's has, 111 the Immuntil ford S. CO., a perpetual lease for I,lisd feet water front adjoining Mullis an's, rod o•v tending round to the west point of the in ner hay, or harbor, to the land on which Is Spofford S Co.'s wharf and store, at a 1,111. of St I:2 a year. 'riles° leases run httek to the main rote', and vary in depth from two b, six hundred lisst, spoitord (..., the l'ybee steamer which trades regularly between Doilittigo and Nein fork.— habeas WAS, 11101 may he still, the agent the company here. Ile has, no douht, large personal Interest. in the lase, It he does not Ills, the wh• de. I 'Mess Ifrueral grant, Italteocli or others have a ' , hell! iu- Cerest in 0110 or 1101.11 the 11,1808 of Slllll,lll and Fattens there is Ile reason t.." believe they have any interest at all at SilleaLlll., Se far, the evidence goes to sII.PW that they have no interest in the lea•-es. I called the President's attention to the enormous grant or tand—ooo firth ofall the public land in the country—as a survey grant to I•hbens. lie seemed to regard this as a valid giant, and argued that the ser vices rendered and to he rendered by bens and the company aSSOCialeti Willi him aro a quid pro 11110 for such u vast lerriti-ry. In a conversation I had with Mr. Delmonto, the M inister of Justice, who Is a white man, I found that he also regarded the grant as valid. .'dr. Delinonte said, however, iv nen I remarked that this stupendous grant of a tenth or the whole territory of the Repnblic might prove an obstacle to annexation, that President Baez regretted it hail been made. Fabens has taken care to keep up a show, at least, of fulfilling con ditions of the grant. for he has here a geologist and surveyor from the Cnited States. This has all the appearance of a stupendous job, and it is hardly to be sap• posed the shrewd men at the head of the government would concede so much a large personal interest in it. Surveying the rountry Is a vague sort of matter, and to get an lifth of the public lands, which amount to a tenth or the whole country, if riot more, for keeping a little surveying party in St. Domingo, must b 0 all exceedingly profitable business should annexation take place. Well might Faber's w rite a book and work like a heaver for annexation. 'This Is one of the embar rassing legacies that would Le entailed upon us if we take St. Domingo. Why. is it that General Cazneau, Mrs. Cazneau, Pidgins, Sullivan and other speculators, who have been so active in working up this atilieXit scheme, are out or the country jit.l nt the time the Coinmission is here? Alt are across the Flea, in one place or another. THE COST OF ANNEXATION. The Herald correspondent, after noticing the tierce opposition of Cabral and the lay dens to annexation says, there is eisoron to fear very serious trouble from that source, and that in that ease the United States government would have another disagree able and costly legacy turned over to it by annexation. Military operations would be very difficult to carry on, and it would Coot a great deal of treasure and blood, to say nothing of disease, in prosecuting a war amid the jungle and dense forests or this tropical country. It is evident, too, there is an influential party of Dominicans against annexation, at least against annex ation through Baez. To-day a gentleman, a foreigner, who has been here some time on business, though not a resident, received a printed manifesto from the Dominican exiles at St. Thomas, signed " A 'I lam sand Voices," against liaez and annexation. This gentleman inunediately destroyed the document from fear of being compromised. I inquired of another gentleman, a mer chant, who is here to collect debts, about the Dominican exiles, and he assured me that out of some twenty-four debtors ten had been exiled by Baez. These exiles are for the most part, the intelligent men of the country. The case of David Hatch, an American, which was investigated by a committee of our Congress, shows what the Baez party will venture to do when their schemes are opposed. I understand a great number of these Dominican exiles EMI= BUSINESS ADVERTIMEMSNTS, U 2 a ypnr square of ten Ilue4; SS per year for cash ad Uonal square. REAL ESTATE A STERTNESII, 10 cents a I, the first, and 5 vent.. for islet? Sillime4ll., Insertion. GENERA?. ADVRIITIMING, 7 cenla a line I. firnt, and I vent,. fur each nu bnequenl li Lion. •. SPECIA T. NOTICK . 4 InKetted In 1.4 - ,eul Co' t 15 cents per lino, SPECIAL NOTICES preeed Ing marrlave 4 deaths, 10 rents per line (or first and 5 cents fur every subsequent lu.rri LEGAL AND °TILED Ntertms— Executors' notices Administrators' notice Assiwnees' notleeN Auditors' Dot It`i•S Other " Notices," ten linen, or lens three times are seatteretl over different islands \Vest Indies, Every 0110 %VIM let. dar.,t ed I oppose annexation has Ireen exile l sr . he [narked 1113?). I hOW, then, mold LI, .! )r- have been a lair expression to' the pretended vote was taken on in , of '11110,6011? Still 1 think tilt'. Illilii.rlty annexation. Vet WiLil Itny considiti, • I latent and suppressed opposition, oi the ellaneo of a War With the Ilactieu sI eNperinlont 111kZilt. be a dnu Ceru u..ne•, • UNI'AV”It \ I:1.1: A:` , .: , 1.X.‘ ltsPt I alter lo,iniz thotimitilds of lives and .14 ei;.000,o00 eNtatili,di a gitVeril Int. !, Wit, tiriVell :May -yes, after thug 11,1 inlited here to Min ils'of a pOnnie tit 1)1111 is earn: tli iliCtilisitierainly !lint tins 0 , 411111101111 S al. Itettitde allitliinr 11111/Zilagl. anti 1)111 eat rat' 10 I inlst' ..r stnte, , it is not known yet what tho 1)l the rottitili. , ,iotiers will lie. The 1111'111st`11•I'S tit' lint kilts. 11:11'n 11 greal many things I" see and Inv, tig.itloils I,ffioro they t'all I W, mistake 1101, 1110 Impression is in 'l , klN'ttrilbil• In alinettatit/11 as it /11 , 110:11, hi' ,it Th.. c.lrre.p.lhielit 11 the New 1".$1 mud.. expothtiong iu L. the omntry ,11 ushers out, r , illrotinir nows nhuut Ili a. ,, crts (Ina are It in I.ls ~,, x ation, am! that 11 , vic.• 11 , 11 1111 , 1 liar/ 111,1,1,1,1 hold nvt, 111 , 4 letters We inalsi• Ili 1,4 ex I 1 . .t01z• : .1 . 11. 13 , 3'.11 ,, 11 1110 1111.10i:1111, 01 /1, 1;,, 31'0 l'3llllll . 11010 Jr l .l, Illt• n• s 14.1.1 111%. pt..11.1/.._;,11,311y art , aver I 111,11 1 1.1..z0, that i1111'111.:Iii. 1111 . 111111 , 011,\ had 111.in).•.1 .1% Ill' t•X1.1 . 1•,,,1 1: "t 1 jp• 11111 ho 1.11,‘ os or 120 ••o, Itn vi runty. I 11111 111 lil t lln 111116 Ow! Iho ‘ , 1ti,•11,11..t.t,t0r the i11.krrim.v.,0.111.1, , .•• .I iho .‘, tii iit it it the Sit Mill. hull tlit• 71.11110,100. aft, .1 VIII oxammatilm, only 4111111 , ;. , .. nl ,ory 11140110. 1111414 11.41,,.” 111.1•81158 I. 11l It 11.11.1111,.. 1:1 1114 . 11 rii.imriitim Iliti 110aVell It 111110 ,111..te,i, I,T by 11.. 1.; , •1101'.11....1111:1,,),Iitig, the i , ll That rvclt 11 , 111 1111`.0 Vtiillh iit lhr Si.tli+lk War 111 i• 17. , 1, , r11,:111.1 1i111 . 4/11111111. 111111ity 1111111111111ill'iitlim ti 1.0,1 tI rlll,ll 1 , 01. , .4111,111 lilt. nL 1111 . 1' 11111 . ' lit' ' , WM.,' 111. in i• 14.,v ord.. Tht , origitinl I tilliatis i% • hy for allii rs hrn Init to It by the t•Nlor11111111(1.11. hot, /1,.,1 • Th , 'r, , t Mit,. • •Ire rOlied (ht 11 ,, r1. 11.10 f. Th, / , ,It m'! o or I. ti N”‘v Will on Ill° land, lill•I'0 iv uo Inbnr un 11, but tchrn all 4,r lat.'. llro inffiliciellt, barring lho cult, whirll thr vivilizati4m of tho a,;,• voluntary hullor ncgro ? lilt' (4. the wino( iinoi it is simply one 441 - th. need dendis in the world. Ido net 4•art. NVllllt testimony the Commissioner:l 111.1 roport ; they cannot :Liter facts. lint as a 5p..1 . 1111011 40t the ,vay they ..,,Mort it, I give you the following tarts: At Santana, Iturr. un A merle:in, testified to the health or the piano. II is child hail been siel, ;ill the time. The with a another American there told me that they hail and they did not dare to have it in Saman for rear it would take the fever. Mr. was asked in cry presence by the 'omitits sioners how Icing he had been on the 141;111.1. lie replied that it %bits over litho( month • sire, he first ranee here. WllOll the \ ;raked :miler his health, he said Ito had never had a day's siek nos... Now this w. true, but at the same time 4 . ollVeys Very fills.. 11.1111 . 1...151,.11. Mr. frier has bee:: purser ..1 1110 Ty bee for lltteun months, hic 1110 i re..l.led 111 : .. 1.1111,k11:1 rut the 1.111111 of c,il. visit 1111..111. 11 Vi . NV....1:4, that Is , niliel. 111 hest trip hat 0110 lit the Ty hoe; atill yet ;hi Cottinns,oners went it‘vity with the Im pression that he had li Veil in Stun:nut lit teen munlhs ,tort had never hail a day', sick nes+. In 1 , 111Ver..1116 1 .11 with Fred I haiglass shortly holOre leaving Slllll,lllll, 1.. .11.1 ro nvut•rd Matt Na bury has arrayed herself in all her beauty to tempt. 111..11 to here 11l their death. Beautiful as this country is, I um satisfied it is the grave of the ‘vhite 111101 11.11 a 011 111.Vr0 111.4, 1 1 . 1,1 11111 climatic inlluonres ~,y•ti•lf." I respectfully call the attention of President "taut to this retinal( of Si,. Douglas.. Tho ,itto,tion nI Iho ad‘•i•iltr,ility of pur cha,,ing Sawa]a ag n rnul ntntinn, is cutim IV apnrl I rom thutot unuusiug Son lionlll, 14., I kill th.•noloru htl ii,ro tho road, the Sim the Tidally° rest nr eri`d t 4; I, id iv:lr al Samana iu nil the p.m' 1 , 70 about . 2.,1),014,11 , 1 ,o• juet, \vide!), reek the r‘,,t, and tri.1.410. Wgetlier al $1)1 I er u,)), and addlng therel, the rent. nI thy' ;:1:,11,111) Itrior44 tlio e.,al per 1401.. At St. Thouia, Ow United State34 . ati hay , real tar stiiwrior 1•V• try rt•spf .1.1 that 14, it, w . ographical lion, wtlrlr, 111.1.11 ut alu•horaw., pt.r MIIIIIIII. lu 1!57U, 1,1 Slllll, 111 , 1,4-Will' 1/ii board at Si. Th,iav about 1,70.114,1, whio, ,0 49 t in.•luding• relit, about $12.50 per toil, 4.r 0111110 ifi7:; per 1., lt,+ than what Nva.., Om— piled at 5a11.... further r 0,01.1 that r ,, al SIIIII/11011 ill St TIIOIfIIIS, nt rat. 4,1 our 111111 , 1,cl tuns per 'lour, and that it took filo TplinesNeo live dery to talc, boar') at Saniana, I think I ',lb et . c4 , lllparl , •ll 1..4%1'4,11 OW lu c..in•lnsioti, lla arinexation of KAII Iry lla ll,ited Statf's is, :LS 1.1,14 I:a , /. Is 0 ,11 , 1 ,11f..1, a swindle fur persoit.il itgLtrandizoineili ; as far as Donn :in.:L.4 evil 1111111.11:th ly interested are collet:flid, it;, sin inurositinn U. w11.•11 they are in real, opposed, and tcbich they will resist to 11. tlf•.101; as far Its !'resident I /rant Is con. .•,.riieil, it is a inistalto into which lie ha I.i 1.11 lr.l by leis-plural I,lllltll.llCl` In sin worthy tern ; 10141 as relates to the Anion run pl , l/1,11., it is a political blunder whirl, w ill begin to bear ILS bitter fruits in Lie' ,Ilapr of decimation of nor army anTI nut V. and increased expenditures of every kind, from the very inuninnt of its c.. 1.- summation ; a blunder tvhicln l'or sill ,1111. will I•Stilli , the United State ratilc, nln 11,..,1111t ,of its avidity of cony., and 0:C110.11..1.11, WI It par tvitlt Spain In le, extermination of the Indians of this lien, isplierc, or with England In her subjlig, thin of the present subjects of her 111 (I lan Ent ['ire. But In the I 'lined States, Ifyhe perpotratii this crime, will 1 . 01111 . , a linS1!01110 to Spain, ns will most surely some day conic to :reit; Britain, the great day of atonement. Tie pour 'Donn present inhabitants or San Do mingo may lie exterminated by this great and 'powerful Republic, as easily an (Wen WO aboriginal Indians by the Spaniards but, unlike Spain, A reeriva will never, having iiiiinpulated it, be enabled to re. peeplu it. precludes the la.Mibility of ; and aft , , having ex terinined the present occupants of the land, and after having held it for term of years, see shall at last Is, forcisi the 11111110111,11 IS voice of an indignant peo ple to 10011110 km what olight, never to hasc been annexed, and which will have Is • •• during the whole of itsoccupaney one va charnel house, for the civilians who hay.•beeu speciously beguiled to ltsenchanl ing hut deadly shores, and for the 10r.0.c soldier. and sailors to WhOln Will race Li ra recklessly vontided the keeping of a tai - named jewel, which the experience Spain, Fran, and England should i taught our state,onen was not worth 1,0 1,1 Public Mel. NIIIVNIMper WrikterN Many of our it Wit• inen,,tys Col. Form y, in his " A needotes," are capital innate, editors, lie gives the following examples: "'I lionue-r H. Benton was a valuable anti vigorous contributor to The Globe, in the w:tr upon the United States Bank. His style Was trenchant and elevated, and his facts gmerally impregnable. James Hu clialimi was a frequent writer in toy old pa per, The Lanea.Nter Intelligence,. and Jut,- nal and in 3/,'• Peal/Ay/I:anion. His diction was cold unsympathetic, but exact, clear, and condensed. II is precise and ele gant chirography Was the delight of the compositors. Judge Douglas wrote little. but suggested much. His mind teemed with 'points.' 1. never spent an hour with him which did not furnish n o t With now ideas. lie was a treasure to an editor, be cause he possessed the rare faculty of throw ing new light upon every subject in the shortest possible time. Es -Attorney-Hen eral .1. Is. itlaek would have made a superb journalist, and was a ready and useful cou• tribe tor. His style Is terse, fresh, and scholarly. What a pity to see such gets wasted in astride over the grave .1a former associate and friend ! Caleb Cushing is another statesman who once delighted in editorial writing, and still occasionally va ries his heavy professional toil by the same agreeable relaxation. I have known him to stand up to his tall desk, and dash oil' column after column on foreign and domes tic politics, on art, ou finance, with amen ishing rapidity and ease. Th- Doylestown Democrat favor: Capt. J. H. Cooper as the Demoeratitt nominee for Auditor-General.