THE LANCASTER INTELLIGE • NCER. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY DT H. G. SMITH & CO. H. G. SMITH. A. J. STEINMAN. TERMS-140 Dollars per annum payable In all calks id advance. THE LANCASTER DAILY INTELLIGENCER Is published every evening, Sunday excepted, at $3 per annum in advance. OFF iCE—SOUTIVASST COlOl/Elt or CIONITHE WY ARE. Vortrp. THE WEDDING-RING Only a well-warn hoop Of gold, ITnlit by any glow, Of rainbow-gent, a ring that told Ita ntory long ago. o[ll - a elrelet.llynm'dowl th!II ,il• %Vim.; /111.1110ri141 cloud iny nokil within norrow•shadol hlrile. Only a Ch ehaTi int fast Two xt•pit al I. liveh That a • Iln to Itilud .t:ltly Vast Yet leaves ill,: Min 1114 ale. Only 11 rent! Or tto jr,y In r.ttyS 110 1,0)11 to he, Of Ihtmg,htn It. gret olone 4,11 Never ugaln tur me Only n Irvasure from I hi. band Ni, IWO ,. 11l It. 111111, Blli ful..ti • ll HILO t 111• Viiil . l . ll:, 1:i11d Ih•y Dull tlic hunt ORA... pledge of luul4ul love, 1)1 love that ne•l hole. Though Deal lola d hone hp , nhov That. Ngcl ed I light lugs oule. Only nit ettrEent Ilia troth Nor l'lnnt ttnr Hugh! elm Itinnl Bul over trill Moil its I,lllil 111V11., ring to tile 111 eln•let 1 , . II hintrol 11, 11,e to NOVI nivotlhnst rout kl p etlgol Nov, ogallt Ils gold shall thread yJohllng Novo r 1• . 1•11 Whell Slav! , 111.11 . • Ii 111111 trio. N 1,1.1, 111.1,11. Nevor mill n: But as mi. I Ituttglit, I wain, tof perlt•ot t Ito ,Ital I ir..111, rapt tire Ira %Vital) Oval II Ili Ill.! I+liscellancous How I Rode !rem tit. slue to SW Imp Illy Few English traveler , have ever visi te.l St. Joe ; few perhaps hay.• ever hoard or its eXislentst, awl yet, it is It 111 it'll or sotto! note --a town Which stands Its the (attn.:4 of eiViliZation anti Anglo-Saxon siiprenincy, far (tows ill lonely KiLlisits, far down in the turbid, surly :SI issouri. (it, one side of it stretch sway fur thow-sruk ,01,1 thousands or miles the federated Slates of the (treat Republic; on the other side lie the broad prairies, the grassy pampas and the grim and I...aimless Ne h t , R . the Red Indian still holds his lordly sway—the Rattle-grow lid I/r the Coinali- Cites, PaWlives,('rue's, IllavlL feet, As sinilioities Sioux. Times have (dimmed since the days when the st. Joe of tile present, WILS the Hall Jose , : of 1111. part; whet( the II:a -ro/if haciendas or the opulent American dolled the green slopes !side t lie town and the shovel-hatted priests and Mli- Intl pretty litirt—necked, hare-armed little poltlaitas With the ii earthen pitchers poised so graveltilly on their, phinip, nut-hrown shoulders, sauntered along - the pavements, or gos sipped lit the fountains; When the .\bi gelus so sweetly sounded from the great gray tower or Hall Putiro, and the dtuu•e anti the song, the twinkling of the gui tar, and the clash of the ,ssolist wel comed the soft light or the warm Staab ern evening. Lids passed away in it single night; kir between sunset:lnd sun rise, live thousand hlooil thirsty, howl ing Assinilmines and storm ed, pillagell anti tired the city ; and or its inhabitants, neither Man, nor woman !sir I),y-tweak discov ered a plain of levelled, blackened, sin toting ruins, where the 'tight before at lair city had stood, anti IL fete miles distant an army or itillage•lacieli, biotal. liall-ITestateti savages, each red skinned druiuu staggering tin with a great bunch of gory scalps dangling al his waist-belt. Fifty have come and gone since that terrible night. Not one stone ill the old Han Josef remains upon anoth er, but :1 busy town occupies its site—a long, straggling place, with almost as many streets as houses, but presenting not one single objeyt, 01' interest to the peel, the Vitiate . , Or the architect. \\*hat brought me to St. Joe I can scarcely reuleni br r. I know I !Hut been a Wanderer Col' years over the face (it the earth, and had won illy daily bread with my ride in every State of South America, from Patagonia to l'ananta.— Ou particular oveasion I had made tracks froth Denver Creek, on the other side of the Itstiky Mountains, :mil as the season was early Spring, and game very scarce on the road, I liad half starved on the way, and entered the town limit less and almost lifeless. Though weak in body I 1)101, however, plenty of pluck left, awl having bargained lily rifle for a week's hoard and lodging, I began uL mice to MI about for means ill subsidence idler that wetilt should have expired. Well, luckily the St. Joeites don't set much value upon a suit of broad cloth awl it pair of kid gloves. ' Seek a situation in tags, and they won't mili 'tate against you getting it, provided you are the proper tiling in yourself lap plied for a latrtli„where a resolute brow, an eagle eye, a broad chest, a strong arm, and about five legit four of firm Ilesh, good bone, blood and sinew were the chief reptirentents, and from a hundred and twenty 4 . alolitiates I was seleeted as the most titling. The questions 'Hit to lie wire pretty curt, anti any answers just as brit'!'. "Cal you ride."' —" I have lived all my life in the saddle." " (lan you light " I believe I've fought a representative of every nation, Republic, State,;and tribe (in the Ameri can continent." "Are you 177rittely acquainted with every caravan lir mail-track between this and the It >city :\ lountains I."' As perfectly as I tel With every patch and rent in this old jacket of mine." " Can you endure a lift, of continued hardship, danger, anxiety, and broken rest',"' " Better than I could one of ease, affluence, luxury, and idleness, for I have never known any other." "'Then you're the man to suit us. I won't ask you whether you're honest and trustworthy, because Ftl Soon take that for granted as trust to a man's word; anti here, in St. Joe, tee set no value in characters or test inittnittls (nn thlrerellt Stales, dial, for alight We know, may he forged. You will go at olive to the ( . 0111p:illy's outliner Johnson street, :toil order your Uniforill, arms and account renient,, to lie ready by Monday morning, or witteh day, Si loam, you will attend et the post.olliee, to enter Upon volt' duties." Anti with those instructions I was dismissed. The reader may, by this time, he cu rious to know what service I was engitg(al and who were toy employers. Both questions :ire easily answered. I was merely appointed a postman, and all that I had to do was to carry the mail-nags ell I he back of a strong, sturdy pony, a tifty-mile stage to Swamp City, a dreary collection of log huts, built on the edge of a vast morass, and constitut ing the first transfer nlati.ll 011 the lung and weary track to Salt Lttke City, or the Oregon. My employers were essrs. Russell S • CO. a. first well known in both 1 . .1111505 and Texas, and indeed, for that mat ter, through the whole length and breadth of the union, in every hank in which their hill for tell thou sand ddllars would have been deemed as satisfactory as the currency itself.— They were at that time the most ex tensive carriers or goods and passengers in the world, often starting in one year from St. Joe, Lmven worth, and Ne braska City two hundred and eighteen trains of Wagons, t Wenty-six Wagons to a train, Making it, all five thousand six hundred and sixty-eight, each drawn by twelve bullocks, eonsequen thy requiring between sixty and seventy thousand bullocks, besides relays and substitutes for those breaking down. This firm executed larg e transportation contracts for the United States government,their business with it prior to the formation of the great Union Pacific Railroad, sometimes amounting to $5,000,000 in a single year. In 1801, the year in which I entered their service, they employed no less than 5,0110 men. Near tile footof the Itocky Mountains is a place called Denver City. Large deposits of gold and silver exist in its neighborhood and as several thousand persons live there who produce nothing but the precious metals, the _whole of , the supplies had to be carried in these .• wagon trains. This was a large portion of their business during the Summer, but snowdrifts cut oar this digging city from all supplies during the Winter months. Before the opening of the railway, St. Toe was in fact the great eastern ter minus of the various overland expresses and the principal point of arrival and departure of the vast overland traffic to and from the eastern and western terri— tories of the Union ; for these wagons not only went to Denver Creek, but to et)e XantOtet VOLUME 72 neylng even as far as the Oregon In one direction, and California in another; over thousands of miles of prairie, wood and mountain. • For mutual protection the wagons traveled In trains across the plains, from sixteen to twenty making up a train. Each large wagon carried about six thousand pounds weight, and was drawn by oxen or horses. They started early In the morning and traveled until mid day ; the cattle were then unharnessed and allowed to graze on the plain in charge of a herdsman, while the trav elers hunted and shot, plenty of game being found on the prairies, as well as deer, elks, antelopes and buffaloes. At night the wagons were placed together, So as to form a square or triangle, the cattle being kept within the enclosure. The camp-tires were then lighted, and after eating and drinking their till, the men slept on the ground around them, wrapped in their blankets, sentinels be ing first dilly posted, who were relieved at intervals during the night, the great est caution being necessary when trav eling across the plains, as tribes of wild Indians still frequently traverse them, who steal, kill, and scalp, wherever they have a chance. They are, however, afraid of the terrible weapon which white men carry, and will seldom at tack them unless they can effect a sud den surprise, or are immeasurably supe r rior in numbers. Besides their great wagon business, M'essrm. Itussell at Co., were the mail contractors and the originators of the celebrated "Pony Express, ' by Ineans of which a frequent and rapid commu nication was maintained in dozens of dillerent directions between the for di vided territories of the Rocky Moun taim the longest and ino,t perilous of these routes being that to Salt Lake City, the abode of the Mormons, and 110111 liwn,o on to cidiror lila, or in other words, right across the greal Northern Continent; the whole journey, with the exception of when limti ',lain ranges or other diffi cult ground, being p erlornmd atthe rate of nine miles an hour, or two hundred 11.1111 nixlrrva milesin the twenty-four horn's, and necessitating upward or n hundred relays of horses anti wen ui rota,. The first stage on this wonderful line cif communication it was henceforth may , duty to ride, St. Joe being my port, of departure, and Swamp City, sonic fifty miles distant, my port of arrival. This stage was perhaps one of the least dam geriffiS ones along the whole line of the route; and yet, inasmuch as never a a yetis• passed without one "Pony Ex press" man insetting a violent death, while on the spur het wee!' t h e two cities it may be concluded that the trip was a hazardous one after till. Peril, however, was toy natural heritage, so I took no account of it, and as 1 had about forty hours to spare before I mast hetalte my :elf to boot and saddle, I determin 'ml to have a good built at the town into which rate had cast ine. There was not muelk to he seen—nn ugly, dingy town, straggling and scat tered, built on the red sandy banks of a red, turgid river. .A hotel, or Tale: !louse, with the - only goods-shops in the place clustered closely around it, a busy market place, no end of gin-palaces —though they don't call them that there-1111d a great wooden bridge cross ing the Missouri to the village of Pem broke, constituted the chief features of the svelte. There were some trees, too, looking weak and sickly, probably front being treated like spoiled children, which they undoubtedly were; clouds of sand and dust to any amount, myr iads of mosimitoos, and every other winged and unwinged entomologieal abomination that could sting or bite, and last, but by no means least, for they alone seenleil 'to give it tran,ient life rirol spirit to lite ,teioulioar tahhittt on its passage tip or Nvii the river. Well, that forty hours passed slowly turd wearily enough ; and I was not sorry When the Monday morning earns, :mil I found myself mounted on my steed, which I judged to be a cross be tweeffa Norway pony and a 'Mexican mustang, outside the door of the wood en post-olliee, and only waiting for the mail-bags in order to he off. I presented a very different appear ance now from what I had done in my. rags iind titters two littYK previously. My uniform , which was both handsome :ind serviceable, titled to perfection. In the broad, silk sash that girt my waist was stuck both knife and revolver while in addition there was slung at my hack a short, carbine shaped, six-cham bered revolving rifle, that I. doubt not would prove a right trusty friend in time of need. Five minutes later the mail bags, by no means a. Weighty load, were thrown across the pony's broad back, and se cured to the saddle behind, and I was trotting down M'Ailam street, fairly ert route for Swamp city. It was one of those lovely mornings so , onitrion in America at that period of the year when nature wears her fresh est and most delicate tints—when the Spring flowers exhale their sweetest odors, and the wild birds warble their most joyous strains. I was as joyous as either bird or flower, as most men would be who suddenly found them selves well clothed, well fed, well mounted. and well paid, after lighting with cold and hunger and grim want for many long and weary months. I therefore rode gaily along, whistling as I went, and ere I had left St. Joe nine miles in the rear, I entered upon a wild prairie, which stretched away be fore me as far as my eyes could reach, like a sea of waving grass, without a tree, bush, or undulation to vary the level monotony of the scene. • I had now to be on the alert, for I was leaving Kankee for Indian territory; to fact, 1 was already on the debatable Ground of seven distinct tribes. Hun dreds of battles had been fought on this very prairie between rival Indian forces; and about noon I came upon a patch oi barren land of about six acres in extent, tilled with hundreds of holes about two feet square, and five or six feet in depth. I learned afterwards that this spot was known as "the battle-ground," and that here some nine years previously astrong body uC Sioux had dug these holes and hidden themselves in them, to lie in wait for a smaller body of Pawnees, whom they knew to be approaching front the southward. The unsuspecting Me drew near and encamped iu the neighborhood for the night, and when they were 11.1.1 asleep the crafty Sioux left their hiding-places, crept into their camp, and slaughtered and scalped the greater number of them. In crossing this prairie live express riders bad at different times been killed ; two of them by white savages, for any treasure that the mail-bags might con tain, and three by red savages for the sake of their scalps. I did not at the time know all these dislnal records of the track that I was pursuing; bad I done so I might not have taken mat ters quite so coolly, and I certainly should have been more on the qui cive; as it was, however, my faculties were destined soon to be aroused by dangers in the present, if not by knowledge of perils in the past, for as I was speeding along at an easy-hand-gallop, en arrow suddenly whizzed by my ear and quiv ered in the ground some fifty yards ahead of ate. My hand was on the stock of my revolver in an instant, for I did not care to drop my reins in orderto un sling my title carbine, and, quickly glanchtg around, I saw a clump of tall tussocky grass slightly moving on my left. 1 tired three charges of my revol ver right intu it, and was rewarded by hearing a smothered groan. Rather incautiously, perhaps, for the bush was capable of concealing half-a-dozen sav ages at the least, I wheeled round, rode up to it, and, dismounting, entered it on foot. As it happened, no one had been in hiding there-Mit the victim of my bul let, who lay stretched ou his back, with his glazed eyes fixed on the blue vault of heaven, and his dark red skin already growing pale and ghastly beneath the blue and red streaks of war-paint. A stream of blood was welling forth from a hole in his naked breast, through which the leaden messenger had sped straight to his heart. I knew by the way that his scalp-lock of coarse black hair was twined and braided, and by the colors of his war paint, that he was a Pawnee, by his bat tered and broken eagle plume, his richly embroidered wampum belt, and his heavily fringed moccasins, that he was a chief, and by the raw circles on his wrists and ankles, and two or three very recently received wounds in different parts of his body, that he had taken part in some great fight, had been made prisoner,and escaped. I had never before; beard of a single Indian attackin: a single white man and only have been attempted by one who of two deadly perils chooses the least. I therefore concluded that the Pawnee, under the impression that his blood thirsty and remorseless foes were close on his track, had been In hiding, not to waylay, me, but to conceal himself from them, and seeing me unexpectedly pass had dischareed his arrow, hoping to bring me down, and then escape on my horse. • . This conclusion once arrived at deter mined me upon pushing on as speedily as possible, for if this dead red-skin's foes happened to be Assiniboines, the best mounted Indians on the plains, I should stand a very good chance of falling into their hands myself, and as these inhuman fiends always tortured their prisoners before they killed them in order (so I have heard old trappers say) to make them tender for eating, it was clearly unadvisable to let the grass grow under my feet all the way to Swamp City, from which I was still dis tant about twenty miles—open short grassed prairie all the way. I must say that I felt rather nervous for if I had u dread of any-thing it was of Indians; so, us I galloped along, I kept continually looking over one shoulder or the other. Suddenly my ponied shied at something and then stood stuck•still, trembling like a leaf. I was not long in discovering the cause of its alarm, for the skeleton of a horse and Its rider lay right in our track. I knew by the ghastly grinning teeth of the latter that he had been a white man, for many of them were decayed, and an Indian's teeth never decay. I knew, too, by the skeleton of his steed, that it must have been a pony of about thesize of mine, while a round lisle in the dead man's skull, which the birds or beasts of prey, or probably both, had cleared of every vestige of flesh and hair, indi cated that he had met a violent death. Neither arms our fragments of apparel Icy about him, IN might he expected; tut there were plenty of pieces of cut earlier scattered about lice grass, some laving blotches of sealing wax on hem ; so that I pretty well guessed hem to be fragments of a mail-bag, such us I myself was the bearer of. " What was your fate yesterday may oily be mine to-morrow, old-fellow; and so good bye," I muttered, halt' ad dressing the bleached corpse, half in mental soliloquy as I forced any pony past. Again l pursued my course with a b t I was destined to meet with strange adventure: on this particular clay, and presently, upon glancing be hind me, I saw about a dozen horses about two miles in my rear, coming over the level prairie, right cm my trail. Now, 1,:u1 I been a green-horn, I should have imagined these horses to have been riderless. 1 ,certainly could perceive HO OHO On their backs, but I could instantly tell, both by the way they galloped and the steadiness with which they held on their course, neither diverging to the right not; to the left, that they were guided by invincible and yet tirm hands. Their riders were lying prostrated along their backs to escape obset vation, and they were all in pursuit of one scalp, and that scalp was my own. I knew that no men could ride thus but Indians, and no Indians except Assiniboines, the boldest and most brilliant horsemen in the world. It' I felt into their hands the chances were that I should lie butchered without pity. But I Wasn't in their hands yet, that was one comfort; and though their lung-bodied, long-limbed 113US tangs were fleeter of I,lot titan my own little steed, yet they had not the strength and endurance in them that the Norway-cross . gave to the: pony I bestrode; and as a stern chase is pro verbially a long chase, whether on sea or land, except perhaps when a loco motive under high pressure of steam is in pursuit. of a black beetle, I didn't give up all hope of escaping from their knives. " (to it On; pace, old girl ! there's In juns after us," I cried, patting toy poney on the shoulder. As if she understood my words, she bowled away right mer rily over the soft prarle, and after a lapse of tell minutes or'so I came to the conclusion that if my foes were gaining 011 me—a fact 1 almost doubted—it was, at all events, very slowly indeed. The Indians were not long in observ ing my increase in pace, and knowing tlierefrom that I had not been deceived by their ruse. they quickly assumed an upright position in the saddle, and treated me to a terrible war-whoop, that made my blood run cold, and every hair fairly rise on my head,although in :anticipation of coming which they undoubtedly would do within the next hour unless my usual good fortune at tended me. In the midst of all any danger I could not help admiring the lira centaur-like and yet graceful riding of the pursuing Assiniboines.whose naked bodies shone in the sunshine like statues of bronze! Broad-chested and powerful fellows they were, looking warlike and pictur esque enough, with their head-dresses of gorgeous feathers, and their brightly colored mangas or cloaks floating be hind them on the wind, Over the right shoulder of each appeared the barrel of a rifle ' for the Assinibeines are the best armed Indians on the American Conti- cent, aml have discarded the bow for nearly half a century. l'hus we swept on, pursuers and pur sued, for more than one hour, and then the prairie was nearly crossed, and as the sun sank below the vast plain I saw the wooded country just in my front, a seven miles' gallop through which would bring me to Swamp City. My foes had, however, by this time, gained upon rue very considerably, and I they would not he shaken oir until the town was fairly in sight. Luckily my pony showed no signs of distress. I therefore had still a hope left of saving my scalp, though it grew fainter and fAinter every minute. At last I was fairly among the trees, but the track was perfectly plain, and so had not to draw rein for a moment. Little did I think that I had foes in my front as well as in my rear, yet of the fact I was somewhat abruptly con vinced by several men springing out of the bushes on each side, and forming across the road. I saw at a glance that they were armed to the teeth, and that four or five revolvers covered me, yet I felt delighted to see these men, rascals though they were. " We don't want your life, stranger— we want the mail-hags ; but if you don't give them up quietly, why we'll pre cious soon take both," shouted a fellow, who seemed to be their leader. " Don't ask for the bag, or talk of tak ing my life," I answered, " for in a few minutes' time you'll have enough to do to save your own. lam dying from the Indians, who are close behind; so let me pass." " njuns ! " said they ; " that's a like ly yarn. I njuns don't come within live miles of Swamp City, so none of your tricks upon travelers. I f you don't drop that mail-bag before I count three, I'll shoot you us dead as a clam ; there now! One" These fellows had appeared so sud denly upon the scene, and now covered me so completely with their weapons— their leader especially—that I saw that before I could handle my own rifle or pistols I should be riddled by a dozen balls at the least. Luckily however, at this critical moment the Indian war• whoop rang shrilly out close in my rear, and that wild and terrible cry pro duced a magical ellect upon the white banditti• " Now will you let me pass?'' I cried. " Pass?" said they. "Yes, why of course, but surely you won't leave us to the mercy of these internal red-skins? We've no horses to escape ou, and your rifle might turn the day in our favor." " I don't know why I should risk my life in your defence, for you would have taken mine without a scruple," I re plied ; "yet as I'm dying to have a shot at these dogs of Assiniboines,who have worried me so, I'll stop and empty one or two saddles for you, at all events. There was no time to say more, for the Indians were upon us. They seem ed surprised at perceiving our numbers, but they had no thought of shirking the contest on that account. We were seven to twelve but our revolvers and my six-shooter rifle, especially, gave us great advantage over them. Directly as the red-skins came within range, the robbers fired a volley at them, not a shot, however, taking effect. In return the Assiniboines drew rein, and un slinging their rifles, brought them to present a calmly and collectedly as En glish soldiers would have done on parade; but before a single trigger was pulled, two had fallen victims to my rifle carbine, and of the remaining LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING JULY 12, 1871 other killed one of the robbers—that was all. I had by this time worked myself in to the rear of the half-dozen rascals on whose side I was fighting, and again taking deadly aim, I brought down an other Indian, and then shouting, " Now I guess you're an equal match, for I've wiped out three redskins, and having kept my word, will leave you to fight it out fair and straight; " and wheeling round my pony, I once more struck out Into a gallop for Swamp City. For several minutes I heard shots and cries and all the noises of a desperate conflict, but I never stopped to listen or look round ; and in less than half all hour I saw lights gleaming ahead, and presently drew up before the wooden Post Office in Swamp City, where I found another expressman ready mount ed and waiting to carry on the mail to the next stage, Sloman Town. I was in the Pony Express service at St. Joe for five years after this my first ride, but I don't remember ever encoun tering so perilous a ride affair). I dis covered, on my next journey, that the Assinibolnes had beaten theldwhite op ponents, and killed and scalped every man of them. Seeing the Sultan Oliver Optic, who has just returned from an extended tour in Europe, writes a letter about the Sultan and the Turk ish ladles, from which we give the fol lowing extract: Ditnetrl Informed us on our first day In Constantinople, that we were to see the Sultan ; It being Friday, the Mo hammedan Sunday, when his Majesty went to the mosque in state. We were rather pleased with the idea; in fact, we were curious to see the sovereign of the Turkeys, and the husband of from live hundred to fifteen hundred wives. Ditnetri assured us that a carriage was a practicable thing, and we took a car riage. We drove through the Rue de Dem; and we passed other carriages, though how, it was done we can't exact ly say; but there was a scattering among the foot-passengers whenever the feat was accomplished. In some places, it could not be done, and in nine-tenths of the streets there isn't room enough for even one vehicle. We met donkeys laden with panniers, donkeys laden with rocks ingeniously tied ou with ropes, donkeys laden with furniture, and donkeys laden with boards, planks, and joists, hail the load on each side of the saddle, with one end dragging on the pavement, the other projecting far be yond the beast's head. There were strings of donkeys loaded with dirt, mud Mild, in panniers. W e drove through an old Moslem burial-place, where the march of im provement had cut a road, without re• gard to the ashes of the dead. Descend ing a steep hill, we came to a fine ma cadamized road, between which and ' the Boa phorus stands the magnificent palace of the Sultan. Several battali ons of troops, in full Turkish costume, lined the streets on one side. We wait ed an hour, in the rain, for his Majesty to appear; but the hour was well spent, for it would have taken three pairs of eves to see all the " Cow" that was pre sented on that road during this brief period. We cannot describe it. The beggars are worth one page, the paellas another, the soldiers a third, the Sultan's guard a fourth, and the ladies a fifth. As we have beenpaccused of catering too ex clusively to our boys, we must speak of the ladies for the benefit of our girls. They were in carriages ; some modern, stylish carriages, others Turkish. Each contamed three or four " fair beings," closely veiled, and dressed in loose robes of black, white, brown, or yellow. One carriage, containing three ladies, passed our position not less than a dozen times. On the front seat sat a very pretty lady, young, with intensely black eyes and very pure complexion. Her veiling ar rangements were very thin, in fact, next to nothing. We have observed, that, the better looking the ladies were,'the thinner were their veils. When we could not see enough of a lady's face to form an opinion in regard to her beauty, the conclusion was inevitable she was old and ugly. This particular lady on the front seat looked at us—the judge included—very earnestly every timeshe passed. Finally she smiled a little ; and we smiled a lit tle, and touched our hats ithejudge is the essence of politeness). The lady was pleased, and we didn't think we hail done anything to merit the bow-string, or a bath in the Bosphorus. Of course, all the ladies in each carriage belonged to the same family in half a dozen of them, for aught we know. We felt then and there that Christianity had done a vast work for woman. 'l'lle music announced the approach of the procession The line of troops at the side of the street presented arms; and two squads of horesemen advanced, one on each side of the way, so as to be in front of the royal personage ; then a portion of the body-guard, divided in like manner. Next came the Sultan mounted on a splendid horse, the sad dle cloth and other trappings covered with gold. He is rather stout. with full beard sprinkled with gray. In fact, he is a very good-looking man. He was dressed in military clothes, his breast covered with orders, and wore the fez. He was followed by a string of pachas, high officers of the State and the army, on foot, each with his suite. Not far behind the Sultan rode his son, a boy of thirteen, bright and intel ligent. We took off our bats to him, as we had to his pa ; and he, with better manners than his sire, looked at us, re plied with the military salute, and smiled very prettily. The soldiers gave a single wild shout when the Sultan ap peared ; but he only looked at therm and " made no sign." He even glanced at the judge and our humble self ; but no bones were broken. He held his head up, and seemed to enjoy the page antry, evidently feeling that he was of some considerable consequence in the world. We don't know what will be come of him now that France is crush ed; for England only uses " moral ef fects" of late years. The rest of the procession was made up of Albanians, dressed without re gard to expense, and other soldiers and officials. On the whole, it was a mag nificent exhibition, and really surpassed any circus-show we ever saw. Waterlog-Place Fllrtatlonp. "The doves are at the watering places," and flirtations will be the or der of the day and night for some time to conic. This, according to a pleasant writer, is about the programme: The lightness and flightiness; the ad vancing and retreating; the flight and pursuit; the half-averted glances that go the swifter to then mark ; the co quettish ways with dress and smile and look and speech ; the tantalization on the one side and the desperation on the other; the skillful interweaving of moonbeams and music into the cam paign ; the delicious torments and the lovely cruelty ; the affectation of indif ference where all is passion, and of pref erence where there is nothing but the cold mockery of pride and pique ; how will not these various aspects of flir tations present themselves to the quiet observers this season, in the deep parlors, in the retired places on the lawn, on the tenches that face the serpentine paths, on the moon -14-verandahs—and everywhere, where opportunity opens to those who know how to put it to prompt service. No body flirts on the sand. If the wave and the burning sand were not the sure death of even an affected sentiment, that harlequinade of flannel, and bare foot at that, would help the solitude to choke it completely down. But at the hotels the flirting is positively despe rate. Missher in bathing-suit little re alizes how much of her power she owes to the lingers that have fashioned her wardrobe and distributed it over her lovely person. And poor, bewildered, bedeviled Benedick will tremble with the emotion some little dancing witch has kindled within him for her own amusement, and will run up his motto at once, "'Death or a double life." They will fly from Saratoga to Newport, and from Newport to Long Branch, as birds hop from spray to spray, she calling him on with her little low whistle that has such magic for mischief in its compass. They tell us that actual ,marriages sometimes grow' out of these flirtation cam paigns; we should as soon look for fruit where the thistledown went dancing from the stem, instead of the prickly spines which we know to be there still. Yet grapes made by some miracle can be gathered there. The landlords care not, so that the fun cop tinues fast and furious enough. to swell their charges and make bank accounts fat and substantial. No more do we, tion in a term of almost dissolving heat, these little offaires de cwur come in•. with a picturesque sort of appetite to enliven hours that would otherwise be claimed for slumber and dreams, per baps more Idle than even these unreali ties. :For the Itelligeneer. Tallorlana; Or. Scionlllatlons from the Shop•board. Broth-Houses and Broth-Bosse. I vlqh I had a drink, for I am NO hungry that I Coot know where to hop to-night." Who the author of our quotation is, is beyond our ken ; nor are we able to tell whether It is poetry or prose. It is certainly very unique—very expressive, and very significant. Of one thing we are quite certain, however,—it la u scin • [illation from theshop-board, originated there, and Is as " Spokeshavian" in its originality as "Spokeshave" himself. It is said to have been an application, or an appeal to a " Broth-boss" at one of the " Broth-houses" of the craft, by a "strap'd jour." If the questions should arise, what arc broth-houses, and broth-bosses? the very " sbortest cut" to an answer would be—boarding houses and boarding-housckcepers.either male or female—otherwise landlords, or landladies, whether they were keepers of a great hotel, a- common tavern, or a private boarding-hoase. Five and forty years ago, and also at later periods, in sonic If nut In all great cities, tailors had their special broth-houses; if not established expressly for them, they at least monopolized all their accommoda tions, and no other mechanic could get boarding there if he would, cud per haps would not if he could. Now, bc• cause they chose to call these places hrolh-houses, It must not for a moment be supposed that they were a sort of asylums where cheap boarding, in the form of literal broth, was dispensed to famished dependents. Not at all. They were regular bona tide boarding-houses ; and If, in the expressive phraseology of the shop-board, they chose to call them broth-houses, it was a matter entirely of their own concern—they knew what they meant, and that was sufficient. Of course, these houses were not all of equal sumptuousness, of equal respect ability ; but were graded to suit the graded pecuniary abilities 01 the craft; and it• any of them were degraded, it would only have been a contingency that was common to artizens of all me chanical professions, and perhaps seine that were not mechanical. Of course, also, the system of e.cr•luoieencs.c referred to did not obtain in hotels and tat-erns, in this country, as it did In private broth-houses. We have used the term hru!ii thus far, principally as all adjective to qualify the houses and the busses, but this was not the only term by which the shop board designated boarding. It was also known under the elegant and euphoric ous names of /cut, ,grub and dog's-hood —and when of a very inferior and un satisfactory quality, it was sarcastically called grurol-hash. Time and place, sometimes suggested the relative use of these terms. Nor instance, it was com mon for a jour to go to his "grub,' but to return from his "feed;" amid if, front any cause, he brought his dinner to the back-shop, to be eaten there, It was call ed his "dog's-head," and, 1w:till/I, also "cow's-heel." This latter name was probably taken from the famous J ini- Crow-Rice's wog of "Lidy Rose"— which was introduced about forty years ago—and in which Sand)°, in the plenti tude of his affection, promises his nose— Possum-fat and hominy, persimmon pie :ma Cow let and sugar-matt, and evorythintt that's It is not to lie inferred that the terms used in this and other papers or this series, were in universal use among tailors, everywhere and en all occasions, but only that they were common to the shop-board, and some of them also of only local value ; for when occasion re quired, tailors used the same language that distinguished other men of equal intelligence. ~.Nor yet that boarding houses were always called broth-houses, or that tailors boarded only at those which had been established exclusively for their use; for, as a general thing, they were distributed among houses which entertained people of all mechan ical, and other professions. Still there were houses in which none but tailors boarded, and into which perhaps none others would have been admitted—in which other mechanics, and especially shoemakers, were proscribed, no matter how respectable they may have been ; for the wont tailor was falsely consider ed better than the heal shoemaker, or the heat of any other craft. This of course was a morbid discrimination, and although many tailors themselves may have so regarded it at the time, yet they did nit possess sufficient moral power to break through such a groundless preju dice. If error mon report be true, some comic scenes were enacted at broth-houses, where tailoristic exclusiveness prevail ed. These scenes were no doubt tragic, or at least meld-dramatic enough, to those immediately concerned in therm but they were sometimes so " preposter ous, absurd and ridiculous," as to be comic to outsiders. For instance, some old " Flinty codger," whose character and perhaps whose person was by no means as fragrant as •' Araby the blest," would suddenly discover that the new comer who sat beside him at the break fast, dinner, or . supper-table, was a shoc• maker—a decent, intelligent shoemaker perhaps—when he would jump up from his seat, and with a storm of overwhelm ing indignation, would declare that lie had been most grossly and wantonly in sulted. And if the broth-boss should approach him and apologetically inquire what had been done to insult him, he would furiously retort that they had seated beside him a " d—d snob." 'Phis term snob, by-the-way, is not used here in the sense in which Thackeray used it. It was a term of reproach, applied to shoemakers by tailors and others, forty and fifty years ago, and perhaps, also, la ter. if the broth-boss did not immediately " knock under by forth with discharging the aforesaid shoe maker, he or she might " count on los ing a good boarder in the tailor, and perhaps also a good round boarding bill. The absurdity of this false dis tiuction may be further illustrated in the following anecdote: A tailor had becbme converted and turned to preach ing, and as a matter of course, it may be supposed that his former views on this subject had undergone some modifica tion or change. After some years of absence he returned to preach iu town in which he had formerly worked as a tailor. All the tailors in the town docked to hear him, of course, and took seats as near as they could get to the pulpit. The shoemakers,however, who may have had no special regard for him —or, indeed, who may have been as proscriptive as the tailors themselves— contented themselves by peering into the doors and windows of the meeting house. The tailor-preacher seeing them, and perhaps recognizing some faces among them, stopped in the middle of his discourse, and thus addressed them. " Come in here and sit down, you yel low-bellied snobs, you have souls to be saved, as well as these genteel journey men tailors." That certainly must be regarded as a very liberal concession, and at least one peg in advance of Is lamism, who regard some people as be ing destitute of souls. The relations be tween broth-bosses and their guests, were sometimes very cordial and amicable—especially if the latter " paid up" promptly—even paternal and filial ; but they were also in some cases, cold, distant, and mechanical —especially when they didn't' pay up" promptly—When these houses were remote from the back-shop, or when the weather was bad, or the boarders much_ pressed for tithei., the boss would condescendingly "-ifix-up" a dog's head for him or them to take to the shop, for the noon-day meal. Almost anything at all, palatable, was sufficient for a dog's head, except, perhaps, " dried apple-pies ;" that is pies made of dried apples. This may, however, have only been a local discrim in ation,grou n d ed in prejudice. The professed reason for this, is appropriately expressed in the following linear "The farmer takes his gnarliest fruit, 'TN wormy, bitter and hard to boot:' ' He leaves the hulls to make us cough,? And don't take half the peeling on: Then on a dlrtycord they're strung, And from a chamber window hung ; And there then serve a roost for flies Until they're made in apple-pies." "The greatest "sell," we think, we ever experienced, was in a dried apple *, In our boyhood ; but since then, we have often eeen this much slandered de fully *indicated ; nevertheless, as a ijatelligeitte house, they might be objectionable—or not considered ' good grub," at least Thesedistinctions between broth-houses and broth-bosses, it is presumed, existed among all kinds of mechanics, and not among tailors alone, and were no doubt governed by the grades of the houses, and the price.; of the boarding. At all events, we :are cognizant of the fuel, that, us a general thing, the character of these houses, and the conduct of their Inmates, was as respectable and as orderly among tailors as they were among every other class of mechanics in our whole country. Perhaps the good crumple of five men —three of whom were tailors—dur ng six months of the earlier and more ductile period of. our manhood, had a greater influence upon our after-life, than the bad example, of all, we ever afterwards encountered. It was at a private boarding-house, in the City of Brotherly-love," during the winter of 1833 and 1834. We all six roomed to gether, in the third-story of the build ing, and our own immediate bed-fellow, was—like ourself—a " jour tailor." The other two tailors also " bunked" to gether, but they were both foremen, or " crooks," in the employ of large estab lishments on Chestnut and Market streets. In the third bed, lodged a hat ter and an engraver—a student, under tim celebrated John Sartain. The con duct of these men, during all of that period, was most gentlemanly, cour teous, social and harmonious, and we have reason to believe, also christian ; and we have often felt a degree of self reproach, that we alone seemed to be an oubdtle Gentile. Those men never retired at night, and never went forth in the morning, with out first addressing themselves in sup plication or thanks to the Deity, and notwithstanding the perverseness of ou spiritual state, we became accustomed to them, and felt a sort of protection in their presence, although, when occa sion required, they would indulge in the technical phraseologies of their respec tive crafts, and at proper times, and tin der proper circumstances, were "right jovial." Yet we never heard an obscene word, or an indecent allusion, nor an objurgation, or imprecation of any kind, from any of them, during all of our in tercourse with them ; and this w: s pretty much the character of the whole house, which contained some thirty boarders. We make Luis record, as an admonition to young men, who go forth to battle in the field of life, at the early and most formative period of their man hood. Seek a good boarding-house, w here there is sufficient moral influence, to straighten, In some measure, the path before you, and to keep you away from the "sinks of iniquity," however urgent may be the persuasions of professed friends. The practice of mechanics of our spe cial calling clanning together, and mo nopolizing one particular house, is a relic of old English habits, and perhaps still exists in that country. It is true, that men following the same occupation and feeling a common interest in it, when going to a strange place, will be come more or less clan ish, and will naturally resort to such houses as may furnish them the greatest Chances of in tercourse with their fellow-craftsmen. This is natural, if it is not, liberal, and tailors, like other men. being " birds of a feather," will "flock together," as a means of advancing their own special interests. For that purpose they may as legitimately band together in social and domestic intercourse, as they do in their spei2ific mcchuni,a/ calling, if such exclusiveness meets the approbation of their broth-bus.ses. Social exclusiveness, based on identity of occupation, exists more or less among all worldly pro• fessions, although it nay not be the highest type of social affinity. We think, however, that any system of social exclusiveness among men, con tracts their minds, circumscribes their experiences, and curtails their general knowledge of men and things in this world, without making them any flitter for those spiritual affinities which roust exist hereafter. True, social affinity is not founded upon sameness of ()mina tion, upon similar pecuniary standing, nor even upon blood-relatiouships, but I upon congeniality of minds and temper aments, and the more the world breaks ,through those false distinctions, the nearer the millenium will be. But the discussion of this question is not altogether germane to tnis paper, any further than broth-bosses may find it profitable to conduct their broth houses, exclusively in the interest of tailors. We sojourned some three or four weeks in such a Louse, in a Western city, and although the price of board was almost double that of the Eastern houses, alluded to before, in every other respect it was far inferior. We do not think the broth-boss recognized any other relation between him and his boarders than—ficcdolictrsa tecck, never theless to "strangers in a strange land" the fact that all who assembled around the "festive board" were tallorA, incul cated a sort of "home feeling." Parisian Beggars Among the curious stories told of Parisian beggars is one concerning a blind man—really blind—who is always to be found near a certain gateway on the Boulevard Sebastopol. A passer-by, who was in the habit of giving him a couple of sous, one day dropped a double louts in the fellow's hat by mistake. On discovering his mistake, some time after lie returned to reclaim his gold. The blind man ?vas gone, but a cripple in the gateway directed him to the Rue du Petit Carreau, where he said "Monsieur Benjamin" lived. The inquirer went to the address indicated. A nicely dressed servant came to open it. "Monsieur Benjamin in '2" "Yes, sir." Our friend is shown into an elegant, ante-room, through which one could see into a dining room, where there was a table admirably appointed with tine wish e linen, crystal and silver. The maid came to say that Monsieur Benja min would he glad to see his visitor, and at the same ,lle opened the door of au apartment furnilivil 111 the 'Fmk ish fashion, in which the blind man was seen settled on a divan. " Yes, indeed, sir," replied our friend rather embarrassed. " I am very sorry to trouble you, but the fact is—l believe —I rather think—that In passing along the Boulevard Selia,toool this morning I gave you by mistake two Louis for two sous." The blind man said, with the Mums coolness, " That is quite Possible— haven't looked at the cash yet; and i there is a mistake, nothing is easie titan to rectify it." He rang a bell, which was answered by the maid. " Ask M. Ernest," lie said, "if in the receipts of this morning he has found a piece of forty francs." The piece was there ; the maid fetched it; and at the bidding of her toaster pre sented it on a tray of Chinese lac to his visitor. The visitor pounced upon his coin, and without more ado proceeded to take leave. " Pardon, sir," said the blind man "you forget something, "there are two sous to return to me." Good Dog F tory Mr. Beecher, in his Cliri.ltian Union, vouches for the truth of this story :—"A narrow log lay as a bridge over a ravine. From the opposite ends of the lug at the same moment, there started to cross it a big Newfoundland and a little Italian greyhound. Of course they met in the middle ; of course there was not room for them to pass; neither could they go back. The height was a dangerous one for the greyhouud,and to the waterat the bottom tie was extremely adverse. The New foundland could have taken the leap in safety, but evidently did not want to. There was a fix ! The little dog sat down on his haunches, stuck his nose straight up in the air and howled. The New foundland stood intent, his face solemn with inward workings. Presently he gave a nudge with his nose to the howling greyhound—as if to say: "Be still, youngster, and listen." Then there was silence and seem ing confabulation for a second or two. Immediately the big dog spread his legs wide apart like a Colossus, be striding the log on its extreme, outer edges, and balancing himself carefully. The little dog sprang through the open ing like a ;Sash. When they reached the opposite shores the greyhound broke into frantic gambols of delight ; and the Newfoundland after his more sedate fashion, expressed great complacency in his achievement—as he surely had a An Old Controversy Revived Never was a secret so well preserved as that respecting the authorship of '• The Letters of Junius." It should be premised for the benefit of those who have not read up the subject, that these famous Letters, bearing the signature " Junius" were published in a London newspaper culled The Public Advertiser. The first of them appeared on the 21st of January, 170, and the last on the list of January, 1772. They attacked with great severity the ministerial measures of the Duke of Grafton and his col leagues, on account of their arbitrary high Tory tendencies. There were sixty-nine letters in all ; of which twenty-one were addressed to the prin ter of the Public .. , I(ircrtixr:r, eleven to the Duke of Grafton, five to Sir William Draper. three to Lord Chief Justice Mansfield, and thezest to a variety of persons. They are remarkable for the elegance of their language, the force of their arguments, the bitterness of their reproaches, the keenness of their satire, the extensive information they display, their fearless tone and their at tachment to the great principles of the Constitution of England. In a word, they must have been the production of a profound scholar and of an enlighten ed; statesman. Yet, with all their merit, they might have passed into the category of works known only to the learned but for the impenetrable mys tery in which they have been shrouded. The name of the author ,or authors of. them, if there were more than one,) though known to several persons, was never divulged. If It had been, it would probably have subjetted the owner of it to the vindictive hatred of the arbitrary ministers of George the Third, who would doub,less have found some pre text for crushing him. But all efforts to discover the author proved unavail ing. The secret with rigidly kept, and it died with those who knew it. There have been countless edbrts made to dis cover it, but though some very plausi ble theories have been advanced, and supported by what, appears to be fair evidence, nothing certain has come out of all this controversy and research. 'l'll, , negative evidence, indeed, is un deniably strong, and when it is fairly weighed against the positive, the im partial inquirer will find himself in the condition of the donkey between two loads of hay. Dr. Allibone, in his Die tionary of Authors (title " Junius,") gives a list of forty-two persons to whom the authorship of these celebrated let ters has been ascribed. The weight of testimony has been considered to pre ponderate in „favor of. Fir Philip Fran cis, a dissolute Mall and a rancorous politician, who reviled friend and foe alike, with the exception of the profli gate John Wilkes, another notorious politician of that day, with whom "Ju nius" seems to have been on the best of terms. Among other proofs adduced in favor of Francis has been the evidence of, handwriting, and the professional expert has been called in to decide the question. There has been no lack of materials of this description to operate upon. In the Chatham Corres pondence there are many words and sentences in the known handwriting of Francis, and they closely resemblesmne of those in the manuscripts of "Juni us." But Francis was the hired aman uensis of Lord Chatham for more than a year, and therefore wrote many things of which he was not the author. He was also a servile tool of Calcraft, Wood, Ellis and other prominent politicians, and played "jackal" to them. The first formal introduction of the professional expert into the controversy arose in this manner: In 177 c or 1771, when Junius was in the fullness of his fame, and Francis was at Bath, a Miss Giles (after wards Mrs. Kingi received a copy of verses ,about sixteen lined, accom panied by an anonymous note, both of which came, a., she believed, from Francis. Itetween forty and fifty years afterwards, when his name was publicly associated with Junius, she produced these documents, and the re semblance of the anonymous note to the handwriting of Junius (specimens of WhICII had been lithographed by Woodfall, the original pubLisher of the Letters', induced her brother to get it lithographed for private circulation. It attracted some temporary attention, but it was soon forgotten, and remained so until IH6H, when the documents came into possession of Hon. Edward Twis tleton, who submitted the note to Mr. Nethercli ft, an expert. That gentle man at once declared that it was in the handwriting of Francis. Mr. ,Twistle ton then till bmittedthe verses to anoth er expert, a French gentleman, named Chabot, who reported that they were not, and could not have been, written ry Francis. The history of this inves igation has just been published in Lon ,on, and it reopens the doubts about , rancis being the real author of Junius. Regarded economically, a railway is a hauling machine. Every unnecessary ex pense put upon this machine adds to the cost of hauling done by it. This cost comes out of the people. Every unnecessary cost in the construction and equipment of rail ways is a public evil. It mattters not whether this cost results from blunders in engineering, blunders in management, or rascality in operating the road or watering •the stock, the people have to pay the inter est on it. In this view why should wo pay fur building a broad-gunge if a narrow gunge will do all he work likely to be re quired ? Evidently it would be a public wrong for the owners of railway franchise to build a broad-gauge a hen a narrow gauge will do the work; and the public gave a right to see that It is done, and to hold those who thus prepare needless bur dens responsible for it. The question comes up, therefore, with every new rail way line, and should be asked by the peo ple, Will a narrow-gauge do the work ? The data for this answer aro to be sought in reason and experience; but I will ask, Has the most crowded four-foot-sigh t and a half-inch gauge railway in the United States more work than it can do? If that line of road with this gauge, which hill the great est traffic in the world, does less than it rian s , , ,and yet carries live times as much freight over each mile as does the 1111151 heavily-worked road in the United States why does the latter need so much more ca pacity than it has work? If the heaviest worked road in our country has ten times as much to do as the average of roads in The Old Liberty Bell." new countries can expect for the next A cortespondent suggests the pnbli- twenty years, why should they be made cation of au account of the old "Li her- cost so much? Why should our new road be constructed with a carrying capacity lit ty Bell," now in Independence Hall, L times greater than the Work they will la and in conformity to his request, the ?ailed up o n do? Any man who can show following extract from " Watson's An- that they should be so construc'ed, cal nals of Philadelphia," is furnished to- prove that one ought to got a six-horse day : Concord coach to give a baby an airing. " The fact concerning the bell first set W. S. Bus cc RA up' ii the steeple if we regard its after- San Rafael, June, 14 Iti7l. history) bus something peculiar. It was How to get Hick. of itself not a little singular that thebell, In a recent speech at the Cooper Union, when first set up, should in its colonial in New York, Mr. Peter Cooper, its Mon character had thereon been inscribed der, gave expression to sonic sound ideas as its motto—' Proclaim liberty through- about the accumulation of property, which out the land, and to all the people there- Ivo commend to the attention °lour readers. of:'But it is still stranger and de- He said that he had early learned the lesson serves to be often remembered, that It that "the hand of the diligent maketh h " and proceeded to ascribe the posses was the first in Philadelphia, and from s r i c on ' of the wealth heowned primarily to the the situation of Congress, then legisla- habits of patient industry which he bad Ling beneath its peals,it was also the first formed at the outset of his career. ' , rem in the United Mates to proclaim by his early youth he had avoided, lie affirm ringing the news of ' the Declaration of ed, alchoholfc liqnors and the Incurring of Independence !"Fhe coincidences are debt, and ho had always made it a rule to certainly peculiar, and could be ampli- endeavor to keep a little ready money on tied by a poetic imagination into many hand. In addition he bad essayed to ad singular relations. vance himself in knowledge, and asserted that it was in the efforts that he was txmi " This bell was imported from pelted to make In this direction in his land in 1751. for the State House, but youth, that he formed the resolution to having met with sonic accident in the found an institution at which the young trial-ringing after it was landed, it lost people of the workingclasses could acquire its tones received in the Fatherland and that acquaintance with their business and had to be conformed to ours by a re- with science which is absolutely indispen casting ! This was done under the di- sable to success in life. He paid an exceed rection of 1 . -sac Norris, Esq., the then ingly warm tribute to his wife, who, he d had been industrious , wise, to of the Colonial Assembly, and sa .. • . to him we are probably indebted for the faithful and a ff ectionate; and he gave al sreo earnest counsel to his hearerson evils remarkable motto so indicative 'of its salting from the combination of capital future use. That it was adopted from lets and laborers, when arrayed angrily Scripture Lev. (XXV. 10) may to many against each other. He believed that re lic still more impressive, as being also form, to beef any permanent value, must the voice of God, of that Great Arbiter, be based on personal virtue, and bethought by whose signal providence we after- that the millennium would not be far off wards attained to that 'liberty' and self- when individuals set about attempting to government which bids fair to emanci- reform themselves rather than society pate our whole continent, and hi time to influence and meliorate the condition lie was never suspected by his contem poraries of being so. lie was first put forward as such in 1513, by Mr. Taylor after which Francis " played Junius" to everybody. But Pitt had long pre viously told Lord Aberdeen (the late Premier of England) that both he and his father Lord Chatham) knew who OMR= le author was, and that it was not rinds. The Right [Lou. Thomas Grenville told his nieces, as a matter of personal knowledge, that not ow; of the persons who had been mentioned as J unius was that writer. Soon after the publication of the Diary of a Lady of (pality—a short time ago—Lady Grenville sent wort to the editor, who had mentioned the su hject therein, that Lord Grenville had told her he knew who wrote the Junius letters, and that it was not Francis. But the strongest evidence against Francis is that he did not pos sess learning and ability sufficient to en able him to write the letters. But why the mystery should still be maintained, now that a century has elapsed, and all the parties concerned have long since died off, is inexplicable.—Philadelphia dyer. of the subjects of arbitrary government throughout the civilized world. * "It was stated in the letters of Isaac Norris that the bell got cracked by a stroke of the clapper when hung np to try the sound. Pass & Stow undertook to recast it, and on this circumstance Mr. Norris remarks: `They have made a good bell, which pleases me much that we should first venture upon and suc ceed in the greatest bell, for ought I know, in English America--surpassing, too (he says), the imported one, which was too high and brittle [sufficiently emblematic ] The weight was 2080 lbs." At the time the British were expected to occupy:Philadelphia in 1777. the bell, with others, was taken from the city to preserve them from the enemy. At a former period, say in 1774, the base of the wood-work of the steeple was found in a state of decay, and It was deemed advisable to take it down, leaving only a small belfry to cover the bell for the use of the town clock. It so continued until public feeling being much in favor NUMBER 28 former character (as seen when it be came the Hall of independence,) a new steeple was again erected as much liita the former as circumstances would admit. The chamber in which the Represen tatives signed the memorable Declara tion, on the eastern side, first door, we are sorry to add, Is not in the primitive old style of wainscotted and panelled grandeur in which it once stood In np• propriate conformity with the remains still found in the great entry and stair way. On the occasion of the reception of General La Fayette, In 152.4, all the former interior furniture of benches and forms occupying the door were removed, and the whole urea was richly car peted and furnished with numerous mahogany chairs, ea.—Phila. Lrilgr r. Spirited German Girls A charming way to ring out an old fashion and ring in a new, was that adopted by some young ladies of Berlin with reference to the chignon. The na tional spirit now at white heat In (ler many Is, If anything, more ardent among the women than the men, as in deed It always has been and will lie the world over. So the fair patriots resolve to reflect more of the fierinan national ity In their dress and abandon and henceforth ignore Freneh fashions, but more especially the really odious chig non. Accordingly the sixty young lu• dles,daughtere of the wealthiest citize n s, who wereseleeted to welcome the return ing army at the Bradenburg gate, had a meeting In which the question of their attire was settled. It was that of Mar garet In Kaulbach's sketch of her first meeting with Faust, which has been thoroughly identified with the Germain maiden in all art and especially familiar ized of late by the "Margueritas" or the stage. Two plaits of their own hair hanging down the back was to be indispensable, and they were pledged mutually and to the municipal author ities on Ito account to use false Indr.— Thesesixty wealthy young ladles ought certainly to be more than a match for one Empress, and she not so nmeh of an Empress us she was, arid they will receive the congratulations of the entire world if they carry the day against false hair. The impression which generally prevails that clerical gentlemen, as a class. are sadly deficient in worldly wisdom, is hardly borne out by facts. On the contrary, scarcely a day passes that we do not read of some noteworthy exhibition of business capacity by a clergyman of one denomina tion or another; and now from St. Louis we get an account Of a stroke of brilliant livanciering which Is certainly worthy the genius cif a lick or a Vanderbilt. There has been a great mercantile excursion from lowa to St. Louis, and the excursionists had a very nice time of It. The business men of that ambitious and enterprising city are fully alive to the advantages to be derived from extending their trade; and when it was announced that the leading merchants of lowa were to visit them in a body, the most extensive preparations were made to give their mercantile guests such a reception as should leave a lasting and favorable impression on their minds. In due season the excursionists arrived, and certainly they had no reason to find fault with their greeting. They were wined and dined to their hearts' content, driven about to view all the lions of the city, and not allowed to spend a dollar while they were in town. It is true that the citizens were a little disappointed in the appearance of the mercantile represen tatives of lowa. Some of them were very young; but then they considered that in new countries enterprise shows itself early. Some of them were rather rough ; but the refinements of cities were not to inc expected from the den izens of a newly opened State. So the good people of St. Louis laid them selves out to make their visitors happy, and succeeded admirably. After all was over, it was discovered that an enterprising cler gyman of Bloomfield was the originator of this very successful affair. There was a debt resting on his church edifice, and the happy thought struck him of organizing a mercantile excursion to St. Louis at so much per head, devoting the proceeds over and above the coots of the train to the liquidation of his society's indebted ness. By making public the informa tion that St. Louis would throw her doors wide open to the party, the Rever end gentleman had no difficulty in get ting up a larger crowd than he could well provide for, including clerks, shop-boys, farm-laborers, and every body else who could raise live dollars for his railroad ticket. As has been said, his success was triumphant ; he realized full fifteen hun dred dollars from his novel scheme. But the St. Louis folks say the next time the reverend gentleman wishes to raise money, he will oblige thorn by stating the amount, and they wid immediately send it to him, and so save him the trouble of getting up any more excursions.—S. Y. Sun. Gen. Roneerana on the Narrow-tionar [From the Alta California. J A Moo Shoots Himself while Demo striding How Mr. Voiloodighom Hi ed Himself. The Cincinnati Gazette of the 29th ult. says: A messenger arrived in great haste at Hamilton yesterday, abont 1 o'clock, for medical assistance, stating that a German farm laborer had shot himself in the side with a pistol, and that he was In a dying condition. He said the accident occurred at the residence of Watt Carr, about three miles east of Hamilton ; that Mr. Carr was doing some harvesting, and the hands about noon were sitting on the porch at their leisure, just after dinner. The man who shot himself had a -pistol belonging to some one, and was flourishing It around In a careless manner, when one of the boys remarked to him to be careful or he would shoot himself. He replied by saying that he would show them how Vallandigham shot himself, and immediately proceeded to illustrate the manner In which the pis tol was held, with the hammer raised and half out of his pocket. In an instant the weapon was discharged, the contents lodg ing in the bowels of the careless demonstra tor.. He fell as one dead. His companions picked him up and carried him into the houte, the' crimson tide flowing in torrents The Hurdle Race at Long. Ilraneh*llow the President Spent the Fourth. 4301,cr i rrant spent tbe Fourth In attend - mead ti the' races 'at tatuitl hratibh.— The hurdle race was very exciting, two of the riders being thrown and some of the horses much injured. it Is thtisdeacribeti. The start was in the field, , behind the judge's stand, and the horses ail , off in a southerly direction; Oysterman Jr., taking the lead, Vesuvius second,, , ft. B. Connolly third, Duffy.fourth, Tammany fifth and Julius sixth. The first Obstacle they met with was a formidable wall,. made of sod, but looking very much like a stone wall. Oysterman, Jr., Was first over, Duffy sec ond, R. B. Connolly third, Tammany fourth, Julius fifth and Vesuvius sixth. They then jumped a fence, Oysterman be ing the first one over, closely followed by Duffy, Tammany third, Julius fourth, Ve snyins fifth, R. B. Connolly sixth. The horses then crossed the track and entered the outer field, running to the north. They met a tones and then a wall. Vesuvius was now leading, Dully second, Tammany and Oysterman head and head, Julius fifth and It. B. Connolly sixth. The horses then run ou down a hill to a ditch in the hol low, and acending the hill had to encoun ter a wall. Vesuvius leading, Tam many second, Dully third, Oysterman fourth, Julius fifth and R. 11. Connolly sixth. They then went down ft , hill and Jumped another ditch, where Julius threw his rider, and that finished him in the race. This ditch is out of sight from the grand stand. After this they came into the Inner field. Vesuvius leading, Tammany second, Duffy third, Oysterman, Jr., fourth, R. B. Connolly fifth. 'They then had two walls to jump as they faced the grand stand, and there was no change of place. The next was the greatest jump of the race, a brush fence and water leap. When they came to this Vesuvius led three lengths, Duffy second, Tammany third, Oysterman, Jr., fourth, It. B. Connolly fifth.— The horses all passed over safely and bounded off to the south, where they pass ed over the wall, then the two fences on each side of the track and Into the outer field, when they closed up finely together. They then passed user it wall and wont down the hill to another, when Vesuvius struck it and threw his rider, which put all end to his chances ill the chase. Oyster man now went to the front, and passed user the two ditches In the hollow, and en tered the Inner field again on the lower turn. They then coursed up towards the stand and Juan pod two walls, at the hod fine of which Tammany tell heavily and lay there leaving the race to be deckled by Oysterman, Duffy and Connolly. Duffy now went to the trent, followed by Oyster man, Jr., anti they emus up anti took the hedge and water leap in fine style. Dully then went away and took the wall, and then Jumped the fence into the regular track leading Oysterman two lengths, the latter being three lengths ahead el B. 11. Connol ly. They ran along the track until they rams to the hurdle stationed near the ball mile polo, Duffy gelng.ever It two lengths in advance el Oysternian, 11. 11. Connolly half a dozen lengths behind. Oysterman 111011 il)rel.4l the pace lied tried to overtake Dully, and lie succeeded 111 closing up some of the day-fight, bill 15 aura they got lido the hour stretch Deily shook him off again . - ud aireirml tiro ;zap wider than It had boon rerwttsly. It WILY ovitiont that Unity Wri4 Ira best horse at I.llls 111011101 It. Ho carno up the hotnekt,tch seemingly a winner to all eyes, but ns ho approached the hurdle about midway tip the stretch, he olouocl so near the fen,' that as ho jumped the bur die his near fore leg wont over on the wrong side of the fence, which broke down and tumbled the horse and rider to the ground. The rider was stunned, but not U red, while the horse was bud y and, it is feared, fatally wounded, the broken rail cf the (once having pone• trate,' his breast. After the fall of Dully, uysternian canto on, jumped the hurdle and went in a winner of the race. It. It Connolly rail in aecond, about fifteen lengths behind. When Um rider of Tam many discovered that Duffy had fallen he again mounted the horse, and taking up the rare where be fall, he wont on, and go ing the rounds over the walls and fences 'sine home soils to win third money. Time of the chose, hale. El= Many of our roadors are acquainted with Dr. 1l um uumd'a rocent valuable paper on . . - " Confession as a Test of Crime," to which we called attention at the time of Its pu bl I cation. A case which recently occurred In England curiously illustrates the position taken in that essay. It was a murder case tiled before Mr. Justice Bytes. The pris oner was a mere lad, Claude Scott NVorley, who, on March 17, had surrendered volun tarily, admitting that he murdered at trout pion, on August 13 last, an old pot unto, known as " old Jack." Tho prison er's physical antecedents induced a NUSpi - don or mental disorder. Ills family were hypochondriac, and lie hlinself bad an attack or brain-fever ten years ago, There were no corroborating circumstances of any value to support the confession and opposed to it there are HUM() strong facts. The only corroborative circumstances wore that the potman's book was rollild doubled up as if the quarrel in which ho died were about 5011113 accounts, and Worley was in his debt, a fact which agreed with the pris• oner's statement that the quarrel was about some food and beer supplied to him by the murdered man. All this, the Spectator points out, Wan known at the time of the murder, and would have been fixed on by a morbid mind. The other fact is that about the time of the murder the prisoner was II unit of cash, but this is satisfactorily ex plained on other grounds, so that Mr. Jus tice By ins, who regarded the verdict as sound, declares that except the confession there was scarcely more than a suspicion against the prisoner. The strong point against his con fOSSiOII wan that the plaster er's hammer with which the murder wan committed COU Id not be found at all, much less in the place where ho said he left it— that is, in the grate of the room in, which the man was killed. Another object was that no blood could be traced on his clothes, although there was evidence of a terrible and bloody struggle at the scene of the murder, and the prisoner was a weak lad, entirely unable to cope in a desperate "trugglu with the murdered man. Further, the footsteps in the room did notagree with those the prisoner. The whole case against him is wel ‘ l summed up by the Sprrtator, which maintains that while ono cannot allirm that he is innocent no one can say that his uncorroborated confession is evidence of his guilt. Prom the days of Calphurnius Fiaecus to those of Dr. Wm. A. Hammond such confessions have been always looked on with suspicion, and Lord Stowell declares that " confession is a spe cies of evidence which, though not inad missible, is to be regarded with great dis trust. Cason of this kind of hallucination are extremely numerous. Ono was fur nished in the ease of the murder of the Cap- Lain of the Ilermione frigate, when six sailors asserted that they struck the first blow to the murdered officer, although It was demonstrable thatthoy never even saw him. In the Talbot ease very many of these cases have been mentioned, and there seems no reason at all why the confession fml Worley should have been received with out corroborating testimony. '1 he Prexbyteriwn llottpltal On Saturday afternoon a large number of ladies and gentlemen assembled in the beautiful grove in the roar of the grounds lately owned by Dr. Staunders In West Philadelphia, for the purpose of witnessing the transfer of the property to trustees rep resenting the Presbyterian churches of our city. The occasion Wittlone of unusual in terest to our community at large and espe cially to our Presbyterian friends, as It Is proposed to establish n hospital under the auspices and control and to be sustained by that largo weaithy denomination. The imam of the institution Is to be "The Pres byterian Hospital of Philadelphia." Whilst it will be Presbyterian in name Its doors aro at all times to be wide open for the sick and sidloring of all denominations without regard to nationality or color. It will be organized on principles of the most liberal and large-hearted Christian benevolence. Its field of usefulness will be widely extended, and the resulta or Ita uharicy will undoubtedly be moot bone- tidal. With perhaps but one exception, the Presbyterians as a denomination have no other institution of the kind under their control. The individual members of the Church have contributed largely to the building and support of such charities, but until recently the Church, as an organized body, has not felt called upon to occupy this field or benevolence. The movement is, In all respects, commendable; and It should be a source of pleasure and pride to the people of Philadelphia that this Impor tant movement has been inaugurated In our city, where its blessed work will bo to "heal the sick" and pour the oil of Chris tian consolation into the weary heart of many a poor wanderer and outcast, who, her from friends and home, must nuffer and die among strangers.—Phut. Evening Tele graph. I rE=3 The Ex-Polltlehane rand the People of It=l The attempt of the northern Radicals to manufacture political capital against the South, to be used in the approaching cam paign, out of the egotistic utterances of a few ex-political chiefs of the past period, has been signally foiled by their Inability to produce train Southern Journals or any other manifestations of popular (sentiment, the slightest evidence of approval of these omissions of ancient politicians, who have been long since consigned to history. On the contrary, the tone of the press and the people in the South has been condemna tory of these infelicitous declarations. They and their titterers are respectfully disown ed as authorized exponents of the present sentiment of the people. They till niches in the temple of history, not places in the present movement of popular ideas and re gards. The people of the South area gallant, generous and magnanimous race. They are charitable, considerate and tender to those whose past services have evinced earnestness and devotion to their Cause and rights (often however marred and mis directed by human weakness), trut they are also independent, sell-reliant .and jealous of all attempts to lead them against their convictions and honest impulses. Hence the connset and appeal of such distinguished ex-chiefs as 'Davis, Toombs, and Stephens have not been accepted by . them. They have not the slightest idea of reviving the dismal past, alighting over the ancient ;Issues, or re-opening old and cicatriced wounds, and of placing thousands at the beck and command ot ambitions chiefs, to be led into and 'through another wretched and disastrous cdontest with the inevitable. During a serenade at San Francisco on Saturday evenlog to Newton Booth, the Republican candidate for Governor, Charles Hind was run over and killed