THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCEIL PUBLISHED avast WHDNEEDAT BY EIKE= A. J. STEINMAN H. G. SMITH TERMS—Two Dollars per annum payable In all cases In advance. TEE LANCASTER DAILY INTELLTOHNERR la published every evening, Sunday excepted, at por annum In advance. OFFlCE—Borrruwarr Corm= or Cloorraz SQUARE. Voetrp. (From Frazer'e Magazine.] THOMAS HOOD— IWO I'NPOBLISFIED 00NO3 nY II I M There In dew for the flow'reti And honey for the bee; And bowere for the wild ,'rd, And love for you and me! There are tears for the many, And plenmure for the few; But let the world p.m on, clear, There'x love for Ins and you! There Is Care that will not leave iry And Pala that will not flee; flat on our heart unaltered kilts Love 'Motu you and me! Our love, It ne'er was reckoned Yet goo d It la and true; ICH half the world to nu•, dear, ICH all the world to you! THOSE EYES THAT WERE SO ISRICHIT LOVE." These eyes that were no bright, love, (lave now is dl muter .blot'; But what they've lost In light, love Wax what they gave to mine. And still those orbs reflect, love, The beams of former hours; That ripened till Inv Joys, my love, And tinted sill my dowers. These locks were brown to Mee, 10,, That 110 W are turned to gray; But the years were spent with Me, 10Ve, 'Platt • tolo their hue away. Thp locks no longer share, l n /r• golden glow of noon ; But,l've seen the ward look fair, So love When sllverol by the moon. That brow was fair 10 HIP, love, 'l • haL loehx nu shaded now; for roe It bore the e.tre, hive, That tiprolt a bonny brow. And though no longer then•, love, The ttheet It had oi yore, 81111 11111 i nntex, Illy 11, livre hope admired before, itlisccliancous. The Malls and the Telegraph Haring the !siege of Paris. M. Charles Boissay has rendered a real service to civilization, and made an agreeable diversion in the black monot ()nous current of " war literature," by preparing a careful, lively and interest ing account of the devices and inven tions employed by the scientific defend ers of Paris during the great German siege to keep the communications of the beleaguered city with the rest of the world. No one feature of a siege makes so slight ail iinpression on all the rest of the world, and no one feature of a siege so profoundly affects the people besieg ed, as the sudden isolation of a great community front all its habitual rela tions with other communities. Ti, com pare great things with small, it is as we may suppose it to have been with Sel kirk on his island. Doubtless it was a grief in its way to the friends of Selkirk to lose sight of him. To his creditors it was probably an inconvenience, which with :natty people is worse than a grief. To Selkirk himself it was the crowning, constant, remediless misery of his situ lion. When the Parisians began to be pressed for food they felt this isolation, of course, in a hard material kind 01 way. But it affected them morally much more from the very outset; and the investment had hardly become complete before the wits of the whole m'cientilic population were set at work to find out means for piercing, over shooting, or under-running the implac able wall of bayonets and spike-hel mets drawn about the fair Lute tia by the methodical Von Moltke. It is com mon, particularly on the other side of the Atlantic, to translate the scornful lines of Juvenal, "Gro,ffius osuric•n4 In en taw, na jIISNIN by the left-handed compliment paid our OWII people In the saying that if a half penny lie on one side of the infernal pit and a Yankee stand on the other, the Yankee will unhesitatingly contrive to get the half-penny. hut the difference is that whereas the needy tireek of an tiquity " went for" money and for nothing else, the modern Yankee goes not only for money but for the pleasure of conquering a diniculty and exercis ing his native ingenuity. Had the sci entitle, resources of - Paris been wielded by Yankees, we are very sure that the results which M. Buissay has to record would have been far worthier than they actually were of the impulse given and the machinery at command. Three elements offered the beleaguer ed Parisians avenues of access to the outer world—the air, the earth, and the water. Much has been already pub lished of the efforts made to utilize the air by means of balloons, and we shall confine ourselves to noting what has been less noted or noted at all in the un dertakings of the besieged by land and water. Yet one striking fact M. Boissay men• lions in connection with the balloon service which we have nowhere else seen published, and which possibly may contain a germ of practical value In the application of aerostatics to navigation It was easy enough to send balloons out of Paris. Itut could balloons begot back to Paris'? Admiral Labrousse and M. Dunn} , de Lome, the great naval constructor, thought they might be. Aud in this wise : In all the cities surrounding Paris in a circle of l'rom one hu tidied to one hun dred and fifty kilometres, which were lighted by gas, so as to make it possible to use the mirrors by night as well as by day, mirrors were fixed horizontally ill the open air so as to reflect the clouds which passed above in the zenith. Oil these mirrors lines were traced with a diamond exactly bearing hi the direc tion of Paris. The mirrors were set up near a telegraph office in constant conn nection with the provisional govern ment at Tours. Whenever the clouds should be seen In the mirrors to he mov ing parallel with the lines traced upon them towards Paris, balloons kept in readiness were to be prepared for de parture, despatches at the same moment being telegraphed from Tours. When the angle made by the wind with the Paris-bearing lines should be Inconsid erable, the balloon could be easily trans ported to a point from which the wind would drive It straight to the capital. Work . was beginning on these bal loons at Tours and elsewhere when the sudden and fan-like development in all directions of the German invasion put an end to the project,the intended points of departur: being all occupied one after another 6y the hostile forces. In this, as in so many other cases, the French got to the ferry just as the boat had put ME What they themselves call the "wit of .the staircase" was never so signally illustrated as by theirown performances Miring the whole of this astounding con flict. They were perpetually thittking iu the doorway of the repartee which would have humiliated their enemy had they only thought of it in the drawing room. COW MUleatiOn to and from the Cap ital by land and in the ordinary ways came practically to an end on the :30th of October, 187 U, at which time the ex lent of the territory wound Paris occu pied by the Germans made it hopeless. During the preceeding month eighty five pedestrian postmen, variously dis guised, had tried their hands, or rather their feet, under the direction of the general post-otilce, at going and coining with despatches. Of this number onlyelght, or less than one in ten, succeeded in reaching their points of destination. Only three succeeded lu reaching their points of destination, and returning with despatches. Four teen were captured, of whom two suc ceeded after all in getting their des patches through. Two were reported missing, one 0f scllolsl, named Brare, was shot by the Germans. All the rest were forced to turn buck to Paris before reaching their points of destination. This will sound strangely to those who know how constant a correspon• deuce, both public and private, was kept up between Richmond and the North during our civil war, But It must be remembered that the besiegers and the besieged of Paris spoke differ ent languages, and that tile country which tile Germans occupied, being highly cultivated, populous, and full of towns, offered then' an easier task in the way of surveillance and control than the vast, sparsely settled regions of Northern Virginia presented to our own officers. When the surface of the earth became impassable Paris tried her burrows. On the 10th of January, 1871, the Director- General of the Postotlice signed an agree ment with live persons, who undertook to quit Paris and return to It through the subterranean quarries on the left bank of the Seine. These persons were forced to abandon their attempt, as were also several independent adventurers. One of the latter miserably perished by suffocation in a huge mass of mud which hachsettled In the Catacombs. That something of the failure of the °Metal attempts to keep open land coat!. 34ixirti:Otiet VOLUME 72 munication ought to be attributed to the stupefaction engendered by officialism may perhaps be inferred from the fact that a larger proportion of private than of public messengers succeeded in get ting back and forth. One such messen ger, named Bantle, made two success ful journeys out and home, taking and bringing many thousands of letters. The artifices used by these messengers were as manifold, as dark, and as pecu liar as the tricks of the "heathen Chi nee." Despatches were carried in canes, in knife-handles, in the shanks of keys, in penny pieces hollowed out, in watch chain charms, in coat buttons, in sleeve buttons, In boot soles, in neckties, In little silver sheaths which the bearer in some cases swallowed, and in other eases Inserted In incisions nude in his own skin. One, supremely in genious, curried his despatches in three hollow teeth which he had filled with them ! Of course such refinements as this could only be attained in an age of photography. The extent to whlell the art of photography was pressed into the service Is one of the most striking fea tures of his scientific fight of l'uris fur light tol air. M. Bolssay himself, M. Lacoin, and M. Cadlon I were the authors of the plan by which photographic correspondence was made accessible to the public. They were ably seconded at Tours by M. Steenackers, M. littressaud, M. d'Al mei da, and others. M. Steenackers con ceived the happy notion of causing all letters and despatches to be printed be fore they were photographed, thus se curing clearness and economizing space to such an extent that it became possi ble to send 240 despatches of Li words each on a piece of paper 3 centimetres wide and 4 long. 'l'hese despatches were sent at the rate of half a franc or about 10 cents a word. The govern nimit also sent post-office orders in this way up to IMO francs for a charge of three franc, per order over and above the usual charge of I per cent. These despatches were eventually printed, at lite suggestion of M. d'Al ineida, upon thin plates of collodion much lighter than paper. In this way it became possilile to send a much great er number by the pigeon expresses- -ol which we shall presently say a word. The art of inieroscopic reduction was also called in and worked wonders. By printing the despatches in three col. Inn Ile HO fewer than forty-eight printed pages, containing Limo telegrams of fifteen words each, were eventually got upon a single sheet of collodion twenty I-en timetres square! At Paris these despatches were read with a photoelec tric microscope, and so transcribed file enlarged image of the photograph was at first projected in a dark chamber by a ray of electric light upon a wl ire hoard, from which it was read oft' and copied. Afterwards with the help of the electric light, enlarged photographs of the microscopic {photographs were made on glass at first, but finally on paper. These were easily read, copied, anti sent to their destinations. La this way the pigeon 3 brought to Paris de spatches sent all the way from Constan tinople. The total of their despatches, exclusive of official despatches, was more than one hundred thousand. M. lioissay puts it down at 1n0,053. One single pigeon was known to bring .500 pages of official despatches and 15,100 private despatches! How did Paris get thesepigeons, which did her more real service thathall her eagles of the empire? From no other source than the innate love of !nail for betting! The keeping of carrier-pigeons long ago fell out of practical use in Europe; but it appears that it has lingered, particularly among the well-to-do classes in Flanders and Nortnern France, as a pastime. There exist at Roubaix, at Ton reel ng, at La val, at Lille certain pigeon fancying clubs lino vii as ,Sbciefrs• Wombophite, Two or three such clubs existed also at Paris, though but for the war the fact would probably never have been known outside of the world of pigeons. The Derma n two-headed eagle "fluttered these dove-cotes," and in at winkling made them famous. Carrier-pigeons, like a navy, are not to be created suddenly. They have to be trained in a very particular manlier, and accustomed by degrees to fly back to their home, first from a distance of ten or twenty miles, then front a greater distance, and so on, till at last they will and their way safely over a space of ltin or 200 miles. A few days before the siege of Paris the Prefect of the Depart ment of the North and the President of the Chamber of Commerce of Lille had the foresight to send to Paris, where they were put in the Jardine dc Pluntm 11)00 pigeons from Roubaix and Tonn, ing, with 100 from Laval. These were all racing pigeons, accustomed to tly back from Paris to the Provinces on wagers. More than .till of them carried valuable despatches safely to the north and east. At Paris the pigeon fanciers were less numerous, but not less patriotic. Some twenty dove-cotes of the Societe Culotn hophile Parisienne supplied AU pigeons to the service of the Stute,and the Pres ident of the society, himself of Flemish blood, M. Van itoosbeek, (11(1 not hesi tate to go out of Paris With some of his pigeons in u balloon on the 10th of Octo her to superintend the pigeon-posts in the provinces. Of the 309 pigeons 01 Paris, sixty.five alone returned bring ing their collodion leaves with them.— Eight inure got back, but without their despatches. The Germans sent back three more which they had captured. bearing fabricated despatches hi place of the French originals. The pigeons bothered the tlermans so much that they imported trained fal cons from Saxony to catch theta. It is curious to see the sports of the middle ages and the science of modern times thus mingled and confounded together in the terrible melee of a war waged with all the appliances of modern intel ligence and with all the unscrupulous ness of medlieval ferocity. The pigeons carried their despatches in goosequills fastened under their tails. When each pigeon reached its dove-cote in Paris its owner, always on the look out with a post-office carrier, took the bird to the General Post-011iee ; thence they went all together to the Governor of Paris, thence the private despatches were sent to the telegraph orrice, where the replies to letters were sorted out and sent buck to the General Post-Office, which then distributed them to the public. As M. Boissay observes, " thi's was the perfection of red tape." water played a less successful part in the schemes of Paris fur correspondence than was to have been ex peeted.— Messrs. Venoven, Delort, and _Robert, indeed, on the 11th of December, made a contract with the government for sending down the current of the Seine hollow spheres of zinc metal con taining messages. These were to be rigged to avail themselves of the cur rent, anti to be caught at Paris in nets. But the German spies were on the alert, and the Germans put out their own nets higher up the river and caught the hollow spheres. A certain M. Bitylard undertook to remedy this by using small tubes of glass slender enough to pass through the the of the German nets. But the frost-king came and put an end to the project. A later device of M. Lacoin would probably have been the first to be thought of by an American. It was to use small elastic balls of iudia-rubber. This plan was never even tried. Still more ingenious was the Idea of one M. Duchernin, who suggested the hollowing out °fold corks. His notion was that a people so fond of beer and wine as the (termites would never think of suspecting a cork. Un luckily some eager reporter of the press got hold of the notion and made himself very amusing with lt, at the expense of the public service to which It really might have proved very useful. Towards the end of the siege a sub• marine boat made Its appearance. It was too late to be tested as It should lie. But with many another outcome of this tremendous excitement In men's minds, the future may perhaps put It to profit. The " struggle for life," after all, seems to be the natural condition of develop ment. Another Feint'le Po!owner At Baltimore, on Monday night, Mrs. E. G. Wharton, widow of Major Harry Whar ton, United States Army, was arrested, on the charge of poisoning Gen. Wm. Scott Ketchum, a retired officer of the U. S. Army; also Eugetie - Van Ness, bookkeep er for Alexander Brown & Sons, bankers. General Ketchum arrived at Mrs. W har ton's on June 23d, was taken suddenly 111 next day, and died on June 28th. Profes sor Aiken examined his stomach and dis covered there 20 grains of tartar emetic. Mr. Van Ness was taken ill during Ketch um's sickness, and la now in a critical con dition. New Foundland Interior Explorationti--•A Daring and Perilous Journey [Correspondence of the N. Y. Everarg Poe.] ET. JOHNS, - NEWFOUNDLAND, 1 June 24, 1871. It Is curious to find that the interior of Newfoundland, the largest island of America, is at this day almost unex plored. Travellers have been searching out the mysterious sources of the Nile, and endeavoring to pierce the ice-har rier that guards the open Polar Sea, add solving the problem of centuries—the Northwest Passage; and yet here is an island considerably larger than Ireland, nearly four times the size of Belgium,the most ancient of Britain's forty colonies, lying within easy distance of America and England, and far less Is known of its uninhabited interior than that of Africa—lts internal lakes, plains, moun tain ranges are unmapped, Its river courses undetermined. About 146,000 people are sprinkled around its thous and miles of coast, living chiefly by the harvest of the sea; while the inte rior is left to the deer, wolves and beav ers. Scenery the grandest and loveli est may be found within its bounda ries. (lame, too, for the sportsman, In profusion, together with the charm of gazing at scenes on which humanes ly may never have rested before, an of making possible discoveries in natural history, in geology, in botany, the importance of which may be very great; and yet no adventurous Baker conies to pierce these solitudes and tell us what they contain ; no Agassiz, to sketch its natural production ; no Livingstone, to open up a new portion of the earth's surface. Beyond all doubt, discoveries of great intestest await the first cour ageous explorer. One and only one, white man has ever ventured into the primeval forests and broad savannas of the interior. Al most tiny years ago, in the Autumn of 18_3, a courageous traveller named Cor muck, attended by a single Micmac In dian, accomplished a journey from the Eastern to the Western shores, through the very centre of the island. (...lormack was a licotchman of good family, intel ligent and well educated, engaged in the business of Newfoundland. He was in every way well-fitted for such a per ilous enterprise, being possessed of great physical powers, indomitable resolu tion, and that love of adventure for its own sake, which is essential to consti tute the genuine traveller. Fortunately, too, though not a scien filic man, he had a fair acquaintance with at least the elements of geology, botany and natural history. He pos sensed, too excellent powers of observa tion, and a conscientious regard for ac curacy. This was the mail who deter mined to penetrate the internal wilder ness, braving all the dangers and hardships of the journey that he might determine for others what those un trodden wilds contained. It might be supposed that the government of the day would have entered heartily into such an enterprise, and aided the spirit ed explorer. But for some reason or other they set, their faces determinedly against the undertaking, anti refused the slightest assistance. Nothing daunt ed, the daring ninth determined to cope with the difficulties single-handed. In addition to the gratification of a legiti mate curiosity, he had the further hope of discovering the retreat of the red In dians, the aborigines of the country, and opening up friendly communica tions with them. The record of his extraordinary journey was first publish ed in the proceedings of one of the Scottish philosophical societies, and afterwards reprinted in pamphlet form. It is now rather scarce. A copy is pre served here in one of our public libra ries, and front it I have constructed the following brief abstract, which I think possesses a permanent interest. Cormack commences his narrative by referring briefly to the opposition of the Governor, which deprived him of the services of a European, a volunteer on whom he had reckoned. but this only made him the more determined to carry out his plan. Being a bachelor, he con gratulated himself that no one could be injured by his death, and this, he says, "was a cheering triumph at such a mo ment." He had fortunately secured the , ervices of a Micmac Indian, a noted hunter, and with this solitary assistant he commenced his journey. His plan was to penetrate as n ear as possible to the centre of the island by water, and then t once strike into the trackless ,forests. Accordingly ire proceeded by boat to the head of Trinity Bay, and ascended Ban don' Sound. Having landed his travel ling equipments, lie dismissed the bout, with the party Which had brought him, and prepared to bid farewell to the sights and sounds of civilized life. :co human habitation was to be seen ; and as the bunt slowly disappeared into the gloomy gut, and the reports of the farewell guns died away in faint echoes, all the diffi culties arid perils of the hazardous un dertaking passed before his imagina tion and almost staggered his resolution. Here were two human beings, one of them, "a poor Indian, with untutored mind," armed with a couple of fowling pieces and a small supply of powder and shot, carrying, only a few pounds of pork and biscuit, two blankets, a tin kettle, and a pocket-compass as their guide, and they were about to plunge into an unknown wilderness, on a jour ney of three months, where they must depend entirely on their guns for food. What rivers, mountains or forests they had to cross, they knew not. What wolves and beasts of prey, or ted Indi ans, more savage still, they might en counter, they could not conjecture. They might perish miserably of hunger or be devoured by wolves, or set upon, in the darkness of night, by the treach erous red man. It needed stout hearts to confront such perils—but the die was cast. There was no time for in dulging sentimental emotions. They turned their faces resolutely westward and struck Into the dense forest. Cur mack had prudently waited till the be ginning of Semen) ber fur the commence ment of his journey, as then the wild berries were ripening,. and the plague of dies and mosquitoes was not so intoler able as earlier in Summer. The first forty miles of their journey was through a dense, unbroken pine Mrest, with here and there a bold, gran itic pup projecting shove the dark green surface. Owing to the thick underwood, the fallen trees, the brooks that lay in their way, the sullhcating heat of the woods, and the torment caused by mos quitoes, notwithstanding their utmost ellbrts. their rate of advance was only from live to eight miles a day ; and the fatigue of boring their way amid such difficulties was very trying. Occasion ally they ascended one of the insulated granite paps in order to have a view of the country or to discover .a more open track; and Cormack declares that the prospect of " the ocean of undulating forest around, of the highlands on the seacoast and the Atlantic Ocean to the northward" was most' enchanting. The very thought that it was all his own—that the eye of civilized man never rested on it before— no doubted added much to the charm. The death-like silence of the forest through which they were forcing their way was almost, oppressive, only the light tapping of the wood-pecker, the oc casional croak of the raven, or the chat tering and fluttering of the jay and tit mouse being heard. At night the wild and varied notes of the loon on the lakes were audible, sometimes like the bleat ing of sheep, and again resembling the lowing Of cattle. All night long these nocturnal clamorers were heard front every lake as they swain about In search of food. No game of any kind showed Itself In the forest, not even a handful of wild berries could be found; so that but for the small stock of pro visions carried by the travellers they must have perished at the very outset of their Journey. The dense forest was composed almost entirely of trees of the pine tribe, firs, black and white spruce, lpredominating, with a few birches and urches, but neither beech, maple, oak nor ash. Countless lakes and marshes lay hidden In these " forests prime val "—the former shining brilliantly with the white and yellow water-illy, the marshes, when dry and elevated, glittering with the brilliant Kalmla Augustifolla, and the Push's delicate lilac blossoms. The wet marshes, on the other hand, produced lark's spur, Indian cap, cranberry, marshberry, bog apple, ladles' slipper, white violet, gold thread, and here and there magnificent wild grasses five or six feet, In height. On the skirts of the marshes were seen the wild gooseberries and currants, yel low-flowering honeysuckle;. Indian or Labrador tea, Indian peat• poplars, birches, and a vast variety of trees and shrubs. At night, the lonely travellera camped' LANCASTER, ,PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING JULY 19, 1871. in Indian fashion, kindled their fire, cooked supper and slept in their blank ets. After toiling for six days through this immense black belt of forest, the distance traversed being forty miles, the aspect of the country began to change ; the trees became larger and stood apart ; spacious tracts of rocky ground, entirely clear of wood, were tossed ; and at length, to their great joy, they found themselves on the summit of a great granitic ridge. Looking back towards the seacoast, they discovered that un der the cover of the forest, they had been uniformly ascending ever since they left the coast at Random Sound, and that now they had reached the summit of the great mountain ridge that served as a barrier between the sea and the Interior. The scene, as they gazed towards the sea, was magnificent —the dense black forest spotted with bright yellow marshes and a few glossy lakes in its bosom, stretched away from the mountain ridge to the shores of the Atlantic. All around them partridge berries, whortleberries and beautiful lichens or reindeer moss loaded the ground. Ptarmigan, or grouse, the in digenous game-bird of the country, rose in coveys in every direction ; wild geese and ducks were dying over head in flocks ; and the tracks of deer, of im mense wolves, of bears, foxes and mar tens were seen everywhere. Away to the westward the mysterious, untrodden interior now broke upon them, to their inexpressible delight, iu all its primeval grandeur. The eye glanced over a vast basin consisting of a succession of northerly and southerly ranges of green plains, marbled with woods and lakes of every form and size, till the view was lost iu the undulating horizon of vapor iu the fur west. What a contrast to the waste, howling wilder ness which the imagination had hith erto pictured as the interior of the island! "A new world," says Cor muck, " seemed to invite us onward, or rather we claimed the dominion, and were impatient to proceed to take pos session. Fancy carried us swiftly across the island. Obstacles of every kind were dispelled or despised. Primitiveness, Omnipotence, tranquility werestamped upon every th i ngso iorcibly that the mind was hurled Lack thousands of years. Land-berries were ripening; game-birds were fledging, and beasts were emerging to prey upon each other. Everthing, animate and inanimate, seemed to be our own. We consumed unsparingly our remaining provisions, confident in our power of procuring supplies. There was no will but ours. Thoughts of the aborigines did not alter our determina tion to meet them,as well as every living thing that might present itself in a country yet untrodden and before un seen by civilized man. I now adopted, as well fur self preservation as for the sake of accomplishing the object of my excursion, the self-dependent mode of life of the Indian, both in spirit and ac tion There can be little doubt that these savannas are capable of drainage and culture, of being reclaimed so as to yield abundant green crops. In tact, Con , mack's account of the interior of the is land shows that it is at present very much what Britain was in the days of the Romans—full of swamps, marshes, forests, bogs and lakes. In the savanna plains the peat is of great depth, the sur face moist or wet even in the midst of Summer, but hard underneath; the principal rocks arc granite, mica, chlo rite and clay-slate. They exhibit evi dent proofs of having been once wooded, roots of large trees, with portions of the trunk attached, being seen open occupy ing the original savanna soil on which they grew. Doubtless the primeval for ests have been destroyed by fires, anti at least a century is required to reproduce them on the same scale. The proportion of water to land in the savanna country is very great, being at times half and seldom less than one-third. The mar bled, glossy surface, as seen from a ris ing ground, is singularly novel and pic turesque. Experiment alone could de termine whether tillage would reclaim these savannas. But, however this may be, there can be no doubt about the possibility of utilizing these magnificent herds of reindeer, were communication opened between the coast and the plains. their flesh, now so largely devoured by wolves might supply the finest food fur our fishing population. When taken young, deer become very domestic and tractable. There would, therefore, be no difficulty in rearing vast herds of tame deer, and so converting these vast savannas into a well-stocked grazing country, employing qualified herdsmen, who would make themselves familiar with and accompany these herds from pasture to pasture, as is done in Norway and Lapland with the reindeer there, and in Spain with the sheep. Were proper plans adopted for effecting this object, great benefits and comforts now undreamed of would be realized by the people. On the whole, it is evident from the observations of this courageous traveller that It is a mistake to suppose that the interior of this large island is an irre claimable wilderness! When the richer lands of the New World are occupied, men Will turn their attention to these grand savannas. The snorting locomo tive will yet startle the solitudes, and scare away the reindeer and wolves. Smiling villages will dot the plain. I think I hear The sound of that ;ffiv.trietng multitude Which noon shall iltl these deserts. From tilt ground Comes up the laugh of children, the soft voice 01 and the street and solemn hymn 01 ri.aubath worshippers. The low of herds Blend,' with the rustling of the heavy grain Over the dark-brown iurrows. All at once A fresher wind sweeps by, and breaks my dream, And I am In the wilderness alone.- Don Platt as a Drummer I)on Platt, in his Washington letter, says: I went out the other day to pur chase some furniture for au office, and having selected my articles, I turned to the man and said : "You advertise in our paper, do you not?" " No, sir, we never advertise." I then quietly informed him that I never bought furniture, and moved on to another establishment. You will think I am romancing, but precisely the same conversation occurred at the second store. I tried a third, quite a large establishment, standing on a cor ner, kept by a Christian (and I propose to advertise him now) of the Mosaic name of ➢loses—Moses S Sons, at that. They have quite an assortment in the upholstery line, and I suggested adver tising to the senior, and received in an swer that he occupied a corner, a very conspicuous corner, and had a large sign on it that everybody could read from the street, and with that it was quite unnecessary to go to further ex pense in the way of advertising. Then I said unto Moses: "Do you know, my Christian friend, that when a man, possessed of any amount of money, wishes to furnish a house in Washington, he goes to Balti more, Philadelphia and New York,and even into Boston?" "Yes," he responded, "I know that." "Well," said I, "do you know the reason for it?" " Why, of course, .1 - do," he replied, with some asperity. " These people come here front Boston and other places and are interested in the manufactories at home, and of course won't purchase at Washington." " My Christian friend," I continued, '' you labor under a monstrous delusion. These men do not own any manufacto ries at home, and if they did, they would not purchase where they have to pay heavily for transportation, If they knew they could escape such taxes by getting their furniture of you. But they don't know that you exist." " They road the papers, and they see no mention made of Moses, unless It be fu a 'Sunday paper, and the Moses spoken of Is a man dead long ago ; yet, however, no deader than you are, come to think about It. A man who does not advertise is as dead as Moses. You say you have a sign here. That is not the sign asked for. Few people see, and those who do can't read it. For one man walking Idly down the street who reads, there are hundreds who pass by with no time to read signs, or for one man who does notice your abortion In black and white out there, a newspaper would take your business to thousands." "Why, my Christian friend, immense fortunes have been made by advertising. Did you ever hear of Helm bold's Bu chu 9" He had never heard of Helm bold's Buchu. He bad seen a gentle. man by the name of Helmbold driving down the avenue during the carnival with a great quantity of horses, and thought he was a part of the Adminis tration. I gave him up in despair, and yet this is a specimen of the business men at the magnificent Capital of our great country. Orangehm Its Origin and the Vie'Weiss if Cele- Though the Orangemen espoused the 1 religious principles which placed Wil- ' Baru of Orange on the British Throne, and derive their name from his title, it) was not until more a century aftert; his death that they became a powerful, organized body ; notwithstanding the I name of Orangemen existed some time ; before. The battle of the Diamond in the county of Armagh, which took place in the month of September, 1793, ' led the Protestants to believe that un less they banded together for mutual support they would become an easy prey to their enemies, who had formed themselves into associations under the names of Defenders and United Irish- ' men. The first Orange Lodge was formed in the county of Armagh on the 21st of September, 1795. It was merely a society of loyal Protestants, associated and bound together solely for the pur pose of maintaining and defending the constitution of Church and State, as es tablished by the revolution of 1688. As other lodges were formed the moiety received many adherents from the low er classes of Protestants, though the leaders were generally men of intelli gence and position, and as they in creased in number and strength, confi dence took the place of supineness and despondency in their general bearing. The organization was nt that time conducted with so much publicity that the declaration of their princi ples was published in the newspapers. As is natural in all such cases the new organization was subject to much mis representation, and oaths to which it was a stranger were fabricated as the oblig thous of Orangemen. It professed to be instituted merely for defensive purposes, and was not introduced into counties or districts until after they had become disturbed by their opponents, and was not established in Dublin until the month of January, 1795. There can be little doubt but that the Orange lodges were of considerable service to the government during the memorable rebellion of 1795; in fact, Gen. Knox, who commanded at Dungannon in the Summer of that year, assured the gov ernment tout the institution of Orange lodges was of infinite use, and that he would rest the safety of the North of Ire land in the fidelity of Orangemen who were enrolled ill the yeomanry corps. It is right to mention that the Orange association must not be confounded, as it has often erroneously been, with the disgraceful outrages which occurred iu the county of Armagh many years previous between the lowest class of Presbyterians, under the name of Peep of Day Boys, and the Catholics under that of Defenders, fur it was not insti tuted until some years afterwards as a cheek to the aggressions of the latter. In May, 1797, delegates front the Orange Lodges in Ulster, offered to put at the disposal of General Nugent, then com manding at Lisburn, in the event of an insurrection or invasion, a force of 20,- COO men, who at four days' notice would be ready to march under his command to any part of Ireland where their ser vices might be required. The General thanked them for the offer, but trusted the& the spirit they manifested would prevent any insurrection. On the 12th of July in the following year the vic tory gained at Aughrim on that day, in 101, was celebrated by a general proces sion of Orangemen at Lurgan, which in numbers consisted of front Cloud to al,- WO, who carried eighty-nine stands of colors and many elegant devices, the whole being conducted in the most peaceful and creditable manner. The procession was reviewed by Generals Lake and Nugent, and on the same day the former reviewed another numerous body of Orangemen near Belfast. Ilow far the Orange organizations were beneficial to those who were mem bers of them is a matter of doubt. Even Sir Richard Musgrave,a staunch Protes tant, and a member of the last Irish Parliament, in his " Memoirs of the Rebellion:' says: "However useful the Orange institution may be in a country where the members of the Es tablished Church are numerous, it roust be allowed it must have been injurious where there were but few, because it only tended to excite the vengeance of the Romanists against them ; and they could not unite with celerity and in suffi cient numbers for the defence." He was also of opinion that it should not be admitted in the British army or mil itia, because consisting of both Protes tants and Catholics, it would be likely to create party zeal and discord. These opinions .vere given a year or two after the rebellion uf It is certainly true that the Orange societies have frequent ly been, the aggressors in the breaches of the peace in Ireland, to which they have been a party ; and they have themselves partly to blame for the en actment of the law which renders illegal in Ireland all party processions, the carrying of party colors and the singing of party songs. A notable instance of Orange aggression occurred in Dublin in the year 1522. At the beginning of that year the Marquis of Wellesly ar rived in Dublin, invested with the vice regal position of Lord Lieutenant of Ire- i land. Though the Marquis should na turally have won the approval of the I Orangemen by his refusal to interfere in preventing their annual celebration,still he was too friendly disposed toward the Catholics to please many of the most bigoted. The Catholic advocate, Plunkett, was his Attorney-General, while many of the Catholic leaders were cordially welcomed at Dublin Castle. These proofs were sufficient for the secret Orange tribunals which sat upon his conduct, and the result was that ' when his Lordship attended the per formances at the Dublin Theatre, on the night of December 14, he was assailed by an organized mob, one of whom flung a heavy piece of wood and another a quart bottle toward the State box. ,'Three Orangemen, mechanics, were ar ' rested and tried for the offense, but ac quitted on a technical defect of evidence; but a general feeling of indignation was excited among all classes in consequence of the outrage, and it is questionable if Orangeism in Dublin ever recovered the , di-gust occasioned by the dastardly' as- 1 sault. The annual gala-days of the Orange men are July the Ist and 12th, one or the other of which they have been ac customed to celebrate. The first is in honor of the victory achieved by V, it l lain the Third over James the Second, on the banks of the Boyne, On July Ist. 1690, which resulted in the flight of the de throned monarch to France, and the second in honor of the final and decis ive victory gained or; 12, of the fol lowing year at Aughttra, near Athlone, when the Irish wing, antler the com mand of the French General St. Ruth. was defeated by the British forces under General Gin kell. An account of each of these conflicts will be found below, As the contest which they decided took more the character of a religious than a political strife, it would have been fur better if the feud had been allowed tosub side when the military conflict terminat ed. Instead of this the anniversary of one or the other of these battles has ever since been held in great regard and as a day of rejoicing among the Protestants of Ire land With reference to the policy of these celebrations the Messrs. "W. & Chambers, who certainly cannot be ac cused of any leaning towards Catholic ism, state in their '' Book of Days," in their allusion to this battle of Boyne : "As it gave them (the Protestants) re• lief from the rule of the Catholic ma jority, the holding of the day in affec tionate remembrance was but natural and allowable. Almost down to our time, however, the celebration has been managed with such strong external demonstrations—armed musters, ban tiered processions, glaring Insignia and Insulting party cries—as could not but be felt as grievous by the Catholics, and the consequence has been that the fight begun on the Boyne Water In Inn has been In some degree renewed every year since. In private life to remind a neighbor periodically some humiliation he once sultered would be accounted the perfection of bad manners. How strange, then, that a set of gallant gentlemen, numbering hundreds of thousands, should be unable to see how impolitic it Is to keep up this celebration In the midst of people whose feelings it can not fail to wound!" BATTLE OF THE BOYNE—JULY 1, 1600. Presuming that our readers are ac quainted with the history of the revolu tion which drove James 11. from the English throne and placed his son-In law and daughter upon it, we take up the story when William 111., having decided to join the army in Ireland, ar rived at Carriokfergus on June 14, 1090, and proceeded to &glom berg's' head quarters, at Lisburn. Ens army' con ' slated of about thirty-six thousand men, Aittetti t /c/Itete. variously composed of English, Dutch, Germans and other foreigners. On his approach the Irish army retired to the south bank of the Boyne, which is steep and hilly, and had been fortified with intrenchments. When James joined them there were 10,000 French troops , under Lauzun, his whole army amount ing to about thirty thousand ; and though his force was considerably in- , tenor to that of William, and many of them only raw, undisciplined troops, he was induced by the strength of the po sition to hazard a battle. On the last day of June the hostile forces confront ed each other at the Boyne. "The gen tle, legendary river," says McGee. "wreathed in all the glory of Its abund ant foliage, was startled with the can- nonade from its northern bank, which continued through the long Summer's evening and woke the early echoes of the morrow. William, strong in his veteran ranks welcomed the battle.— James, strong In his defensive position and the goodness of his cause, awaited it with confidence." The morrow saw the conflict. "rwas bright J nrst morning clear, Of unforgotten glory, That ma re this stream, through ages dear, Renown'd In song and story. But brightly as dawned the day the sun had nearly shed its rays on the corpse of William. as, on the previous day, he was discovered while reconnoi tering with some of his officers, and ar tillery brought to bear upon him, which led to his having been hit upon the shoulder, and to his sinking for a mo ment on his horse's neck. The ball a six-pounder, however, merely tore his coat, grazed his shoulder and drew two or three ounces of blood. Both armies thought he was killed. A shout of exultation rose from the Irish camp, from which the news was expressed to the Continent that William was slain, and there was great joy in consequence ill Paris, Rome and other Catholic strongholds. A cannonade was kept up on both sides till the evening of that day. On the following morning, in preparation for battle, James drew up Iris troops in two litres, his left being covered by a morass, while in his rear was the village of Dromore, and three miles further on the narrow Pass of Luleck. William ranged his army in three columns of attack. The centre, led by the Duke of Schomberg, was to ford the river in front of the enemy; the right, under his son, Count Schom berg, was to cross near the Bridge of Slane, while 'William himself headed the passage of the left between the camp and the town of Drogheda. The battle commenced at the bridge of Slane, be tween the youngest Schomberg and Sir Neil O'Niel : the latter fell mortally wounded, and the river was crossed.— William ordered his centre to advance, under the elder Schomberg, by the ford at Oldbridge, as noon approached, while he moved with the left across the river nearer to Drogheda. Lauzuu, with Sarstield's horse, dreading to be out flanked and cut off at the Pass of Du leek, which was the only road of escape toward Dublin, and which was so nar row that two cars could not pass each other, galloped off t n retrieve the disas ter at the bridge of Stacie, five miles higher up the stream, where alone a flank movement was possible. The bat tle was now transferred from the gun ners to the swordsmen and pikenren— from the banks to the fords and borders of the river. William, on the extreme left,(his wing being composed entirely of cavalry) swam his horse across in immi nent danger. The whole Irish infantry were mars,halled opposite the centre at Old bridge. When Schomberg gave the word to march upon them his troops ad vanced to the river, with drums beating. Arrived at the brink, the drums stopped, and the men, ten abreast, descendent into the stream, where some of them struggled with the water up to their arm pits. The Boyne. for a quarter of a mile, soon became alive with muskets and green boughs. "It was not," says Ma caulay, •'till the assailants had reached the middle of the channel that they be came aware of the whole difficulty and danger of the service in which they were engaged. They had as yet seen - little more than half the hostile army. Now whole regiments of foot and horse scented to start out of the earth. A wild shout of defiance rose from the whole shore. During one moment the event seemed doubtful, but the Protest ants pressed resolutely forward, and in another moment the whole Irish line gave way." The route was complete; the Irish became panic-stricken and ran away, as many better armed and better disciplined troops have often done since that time. "It required many years," says Macaulay, "and many he roic exploits to take away the reproach which that ignominious rout left on the Irish name. Yet, even before the day closed, it was abundantly proved that reproach was unjust." The Irish caval ry made a gallant though unsuccessful attempt to retrieve the day, and main tained a desperate fight in the bed of the river, falling impetuously on some of William's forces and driv. ing them lack into the stream, and the deaths of the Duke of Schomberg and Caillemot, who commanded the Huguenots,rewarded their valor. Walk er, the defender of Londonderry, who had recently been appointed its Bishop, was also shot dead while exhorting the colonists of Ulster. The battle raged intensely for half an hour, when Wil liam, who had experienced great diffi culty in crossing the river, came up with his cavalry, and his arrival decided the fate of the day ; yet the Irish horse re tired lighting obstinately. The losses in the battle were but small, the Eng lish being only 500, and that of the Irish front liaa.) to 1300, mostly cavalry. The political consequences of the battle,how ever, were momentous. The next day the garrison of Drogheda, 1300 strong, surrendered ; in another week William was in Dublin, and James, terrified by the reports which had reached him,wus en route, for France. BATTLE OF' AUCIIIRIM-.11'1,1' 12, 1651. But the battle of the Boyne was not a decisive victory. The war was trans ferred to the south of Ireland, and con tinued till the approach of winter closed the campaign of the year, William re turning to England in September. In the succeeding year Ireland was in a very distracted state, great barbarities being committed on both sides. To wards the end of June Ginkell, who commanded the English army, bom barded and took Athlone. It was a masterpiece of audacity, as a large force of Irish, commanded by St. Ruth, a Frenchman, lay behind the town, while the storming columns had to ford the Shannon, with the water breast high, in order to gain the breach. St. Ruth now removed his camp about thirty miles from Athlone, on the road to Galway, near to the ruined cas tle of Aughrim, where he determined to await the approach of the English army. The spot appears to have been chosen with great judgment. His force was drawn up on the slope of a hill, almost surrounded by a bog, with some fences in front, with which a breastwork was formed without difficulty. On July 11, Ginkell had moved the greater part of his army to within four miles of the Irish, there lying between them the mo rass, through which two narrow cause ways ran. St. Ruth's force consisted of from 20,0110 to 25,000 men, that of Gin kell being about 5,0,10 less. Ginkell having reconnoitred the Irish position gave orders for the attack on the mor row, when every man should be under arms without beat of drum. Two regi ments were left In charge of the camp, and the rest, unencumbered with bag• gage, marched against the enemy soon after six. In the morning, but they were delayed till noon by n fog which hung over the valley. The outposts were then attacked, and the afternoon was far advanced when the two armies confronted each other, with only the bog and breastworks be tween them. It was live before the battle began. The English crossed the bog, sinking deep at every step, to the Irish works, which they found defend ed with a resolution which extorted from them praise. Again and again they attacked without success, and once were broken and chased across the morass; but they rallied, when their pursuers were forced to retreat. At seven, as the evening was closing in, the advantage was with the Irish, and Ginkell began to meditate a retreat, while E3t. Ruth prophesied he would drive the enemy before him to the walls of Dublin. Just, hoWever, at this time the cavalry had succeeded in crossing the bog at a spot where two horses could scarcely ride abreast, in doing which they severely suffered from the fire of the enemy. St. Ruth viewed the passage with little concern, until he saw hutdles laid in the quagmire and a broad and safer path prepared. Several squadrons now cross ed, and the flank of the Irish army was speedily turned. St. Ruth was hasten ing to the rescue, when a cannon ball carried off his head. It being thought fatal to let his troops know their loss, his corpse was wrapped in his cloak ' and carried from the field, so that till after the battle was over neither army was aware of his death But the crisis of the battle ar rived, and there was no one to give directions. Sarstield, who bad com mand of the reserves, with strict injunc tions not to stir without orders, waited for them in vain. The English cavalry charged the Irish Hank, while the foot again engaged the breast-works in front which were carried. The Irish being thus overpowered, retreated from enclo sure to enclosure, fighting desperately as they fell back, their efforts, however, gradually becoming fainter. At last they broke and lied, when they were pursued, and a horrible carnage ensued, which was only closed by the arrival of a moonless night, and thus closed the lust great Irish battle. The loss on both sides was very heavy, proba , ily not less than 12,000 falling in all. Uinkell re ceived the title of Earl of Athlone as a reward for his eminent services. The remains of the Irish army tied towards Limerick, where flinkell arrived or the 25th of August, and commenced a siege which lasted for six weeks, when the Irish surrendered, and thus closed the campaign. anecdotes =IS A n old story contains a lesson which many married couples have not yet learned. When Jonathan Trumbull was Governor of Connecticut, a gentle man called at his house one day request ing a private interview. lie said : " I have called upon a very uupleas• ant errand, sir, and want your advice. My wife and 1 do not live happily to gether, and I :an thinking of getting a divorce. What do you advise, sir"" The I;overnor sat a few moments in thought; then turning to his visitor said : '" }low did you treat Mrs. W— when you were courting her? and how did you feel towards her at the time of your marriage? „ Squire W-- replied, " I treated her as kindly as I eould, for I loved her dearly at that time." " sir," said the Governor, "go home and court her now just as you did then, and love her as when you married her. no this in the fear of God for one year, and then tell me the result." The Governor then said, " Let us pra They bowed in prayer and separated When a year passed away, Squire W called again to see the Gover nor amid said : 1 have called to thank you for the good advice you gave me, and to tell you that my wife and I are as happy as when first we were married. I cannot be grateful enough for your good eouu• sel." " faun glad to hear it, Mr. W-- said the (taverner," and I hope you will continue to court your wile as long as you live. Archibald Saul, the wealthy banker, was well known on 'Change in his day. He was a small, wiry man, keen and shrewd, and a great stickler for form.— His clerks were aware of his precision, and failed not to do their work accord ing to the rules and forms laid down. One day Saul called his private secre tary and directed him to write to Mr. 13—, a rising merchant and importer. " Write," said the banker, ' that I have transacted the business which he entrusted to me agreeably to his wishes." The secretary, at his desk, wrote, and when the body of the communication had been completed he turned and asked— " With what form shall I close the letter, sir?" " You may place," sail Saul, "1 have he honor to be yours." " Yes, sir." " Wait Tell ine : has Mr. B settled his accounts to date"" " Yes, sir. His accounts Were settled promptly and cheerfully." " ! hull you may place—l have the limier to be your very humble ser vant." " By the way," said the secretary, " forgot to tell you that Mr. has chartered two new ships, and his ven tures are not only brilliant, but safe. He is regarded by the knowing ones as a man of remarkable abilities." '•:\h-ha' Indeed! Place quickly— I have the honor to be, sir, with the Highest consideration and respect, your very humble and, very obedient ser vant:" I=3 Absent-minded people are funny. Sir Isaac Newton wanted his servant to carry out a stove which was getting too hot. A fellow stole his dinner before his eyes, and afterward thought lie had eaten it, because he saw the dishes empty. A Scotch professor walked in to the middle of the horsepond while pondering on Final Cause. lien. Frank lin punched down the ashes of his pipe with the linger ()f a young lady sitting by his side, aml severely burned the lily white pokbr. A gentleman in Troy, N. V., received a letter in the dark, and used the letter to light his lamp, and then looked about for it to read. Pere Uratry, one day in Paris, thinking ht. had left his watch at home, took it out of his pocket to see if he had time to go back fur it. A capital story used to be told of the late David Roberts. Au art critic, who was a personal friend, published a sharp attack upon certain pictures of his, just exhibited. "My dear Roberts," wrote the critic in a private letter, "you may have seen my remarks on your pictures. I hope they will make no difference in our friendship. Yours, &c., —." "My dear wrote the painter in reply, "The next time I meet you I shall pull your nose. I hope it will make no differeuee in our friendship. Yours, &c., I). Roberts." Boxing the Ears. Boxing the ears is an inexcusable bru tality ; many a child has been made deaf for life by it, because the "drum" of the ear Is a membrane, as thin as paper, stretching like a curtain just in side the external entrance of the ear.— There is nothing but air just behind it, and any violent concussion is liable to rend it in two, and the "hearing" is de stroyed forever, because the sense of hearing is caused by the vibrations of this drum or "tympanum." "Picking the ears" is a most mischievous prac tice. In attempting: to do this with hard substances, an unlucky motion has many a time pierced the drum and made it as useless as a pierced India rubber life preserver • nothing hard er or sharper than the end of the little finger, with the nail pared, ought ever to be introduced into the ear, unless by a physician ; persons are often seen endeavoring to remove the " wax" with the head of a pin ; this ought never to be done; first, because it not only endangers the rupture of the ear by being pushed too far in ; but not so far, it may grate against the drum, excite i Miammation and an ulcer, which will finally eat all the parts away, es pecially of a scrofulous constitution; second, hard substances have slipped in, and caused the necessity of painful, dan gerous, and expensive operations to fish or cut out ; third, the wax Is manufac tured by nature to guard the entrance from dust, insects, and unmodified cold air, and when It has subserved Its purpose It becomes dry, scaly, light, and in this condition is easily push ed outside by new formations of wax within. Occasionally wax may harden and may interfere with the hear log ; but when thls is the case it la the part of wisdom to consult a physician and let him decide what is the matter and what the remedy ; If one cannot be had, the only safe plan is to let full into the ear three or four drops of tepid water, night and morning; the salivate better still, for it imsofterand more penetrating, but glycerine he fur preferable to either; It Is one of the best, blandest fluids In nature, and very rapidly penetrates the hardest wax, cools the parts, and restores them to a healthful condition. If, in a week, there is not a decided Improve ment In the hearing, medical advice ought to be had at once, as next to the eye, the ear Is the most delicate organ of the body. A captain of a base-ball nine, and foreman of an Engine Company, Rev. Samuel Scoville, of Norwich, this State, will supply Mr. B'eecher's pulpit while he is rusticating .at PeekskilL Mr. Scoville is described a rising, young, muscular Christian of great promise. We hopelhe is as good In the pulpit as he is at the bat. NUMBER 29 The Temperance Men In the Field They Organize a New Political Party Jame,. Black and Ed. Rauch Among 111 The Executive Committee of the Tem perance men met In Philadelphia on Mon day, and determined to organize a now political party. We and the following ae , count of their doings In the Ledger : The Committee appointed by General Joshua 'P. Owen, Chairman of the Temper ance Convention held in this city in May last, met yesterday afternoon in the Grand Division Room of the Sons of Temperance, No. Its South Seventh street. The meet ing was opened with prayer by Mr. Thonia.s Rabe, of Pittsburgh, after which a tempo rary organization was effected by the elec tion of the following temporary officers: President, James Black, of Lancaster; Sec rotary, E. 11. Rauch, of Lancaster. The following gentlemen were present: Messrs. James Black, Lancaster; Edward ii. Lee, Frank ford ; Edwin U. Coates, Philadel plus ; Thomas 11. Rube, Pittsburgh; Ur. S. Stebbins, Unionville; Col. George F. Mc- Farland, Harrisburg; E. H. Rauch, Lan caster; Dr. J. P. Thompson,Willimusburg; Charles Mason, Doyle,towil ; J. N. Pierce Philadelphia; J. 11. Jones, Philadelphia. The que.uon of forming a permanent organization was then discussed, Colonel NleFarland favored the immediate organi zation of the iminnilttee and the adoption of prompt and decisive measures. Mr. Stebbins moved to make the present temporary organization permanent. General Owen objected to the passim. , of the motion, as there were only elm ell mil of thirty-three mom berm pre,t.ttt. Considerable dismission ensiled on the propriety of acting-with such a sinal I num ber of members present. fr. Minch moved to amend by substlint.• ing the name of Colonol McFarland fur Seeretriry, in place of ilia own name. Mr. Jones offered as a su batituto, that the present officers continuo as temporary offi cers until the next meeting. 'rite substi tute was carried. Colonel Mel•'arland said that the business of the committee being done under tumpo• rary organization, would be of a temporary character, and not worth more than the paper on which it is recorded. A desultory debate followed nu tine clues , Hon of a formation of a third party, a ,mn siderable difference of opinion being devel oped among the members of the Committee on that subject, Colonel NleFarland and Mr. Mack construing the resoluthins under which the cutritnittee acted as moaning that they should take steps for the organization of an Independent Temperance party, and being opposed In those views by Mr. Coates,. llr. Stebbins, Mr. Rabe, and others. General Owen moved that the Committee proceed immediately to the duties pre scribed for it by the resolutions passed by the State Temperance Convention. Mr. Kauch moved to amend by adding proviso that such action shall not he is•n strued into opposition to the CI nt von ti on called to meet in Liarrisburg, August to nominate condidates tl,r A ud itor-G merit' and SurveyorAteneral. After some debate Mr. Bauch withdrew hie amendment and the resolution of General Owen was carried, and the committee took a recess until half-past four o'elook. The following are the duties of the sour tnittee, as stated in the resolutions of the State Temperance Convention held last May. liirsL Prepare and publish rules for conducting elections ofSu,iaturial and Rep resentative delegates to a State Convention expressly defining all the powers of eel's to conduct said delegate elections, how they shall be chosen, who shall vote and who shall be eligible fur election. Second. Adopt. rules for the government of county Executive Committees, and to facilitate organization, appoint a chairman for each county, who shall, in his torn, point colleagues to act in behalf or every election precinct therein upon said Com mittee. Third. When the organization is oun pleted in a majority of the counties of the Commonwealth, the chairman of the Stata Central Committee shall all a State Con vention to revise, reconstruct, modify or adopt and endorse the preliminary steps then taken, and take other steps as they may deem advisable. On re-assembling the following series of rules for the organization and government of the "Prohibition party of PensylVUllia was submitted by Al r. Ranch : Rule Ist. The StiteCen tral Contra i tire shall be appointed in cinch manner and be emu postal of such number WI the Slats COI, rentions may from time to time determine, and shall have the care and direction of the political interests of the cause of temper ance inn the State, Five members shall constitute a quorum. The committee :nay make their own by- laws and rules of order and business; appoint their own Secreta ry and Treasurer, an Executive Committee with frill powers, unless limited by vote, and such sub-committees its may be found necessary ; till all vacancies id their own body, and in the county, borough, town ship and ward committees, in manner hereinafter provided ; appoint financial and other agents and spe.ikers ; utll State or District Conventions and public meet tings, organize the counties, townships, boroughs and wards, under rules to be adopted; print and distribute a proper lit erature, and in general do all proper Linings to educate the citizen of the Comnion wealth to the iinportanee and fluty of elect ing to public While, place, or trust, only those favorable to the passage and OsOell lion of laws for the abolition of the traffic in intoxicating drinks. Rule 2. 'the counties, townships, bor oughs and wards in the first instancy shall be organized as follows, viz: 'rho County Committees shall consist of not less than ono nor more than live persons fur each township, borough or surd in each county, to he appointed 101 hereinafter provided.— Each Committee may consist of three per SIAN, (which number shall make a quo rind.) until the Committee shall be to ly constituted, and abaft hold office for one year, or until their successors are appointed or elected. The 'township, Borough or Ward Commits ees shall he coin posed of not less than nine, nor more than live persona, and shall be appointed as hereinafter pro vided. One person may constitute this Committee until more fully constituted, and shall hold (Alice for one year or until their successors are appointed or elected. Rule 3. Until an election can he or is held, as hereinafter mentioned, the state Central Committee shall appoint somesuitable per son to be Chairman of the County Commit tee, which Chairman shall have the power to constitute his committee by appointing one person thereon to represent each town ship, borough or ward in this county. The County Committee shall have the power to fix their own number, appoint their own Secretaryand Treasurer,an ExecutiveCom mince of such number and with soda pow ers as they may designate, e-all County Con ventions and meetings, employ agents and speakers, and generally do all things neces sary, in subordination to the State Central Committee, for effecting the purpose of their appointment. Rule 4. The person first named for any township, borough or ward committee, shall be chairman of, and have power to appoint not less than three, nor more than rive, to constitute such committee, with powers within its jurisdiction similar to that of the County e 'tem/litter). Rule 5. All vacancies which may occur in the County or Township Corntnittees shall be tilled by the remaining members, in CM() of refusal or delkult thereof by the Chairman of the County or State Com mittees respectively. Rule 6. At the first meeting of said Com mittee, after organization shall be e fleeted, the members thereof shall be required to sign in the Secretary's Book of Records the following declaration: " We do sever ally pledge our words of honor that us members of -- Committee of the Prohi bition Party of Pennsylvania, acting in and for the , of County of , we will perform the duties of said position accord ing to the rules which are now or may hereafter be adopted for the government or the several departments of said party, and that we will faithfully labor to promote the success of said party by the election to all public offices only those whoshallpnblioly announce themselves favorable to prohibi tion of the traffic in Intoxicating drinks." Rule 7. Any qualified voter of the Com mon weath,and minors who are known to be prohibitionists, who will be of age before the next ensuing election, who may declare themselves to be prohibitionists and intend to labor for 1110 success of the prohibition party ? shall be recognized and entitled to Vote for committee men delegates, and to exorcise all the privileges of the party.— Total abstainers from the personal use 01 Intoxicating drinks, while ever to be re garded as a proof of sincerity of conviction, shall not be a test of membership. Rule 8. State and County Conventions shall be:called at time and place, and com posed of such number of delegates to be chosen in such manner as the Statooreounty Committees may at time of call designate. The above rules were adopted almost unanimously, with but Ilttlo debate. On motion of Colonel McFarland each member wag directed to ralao slooin bin diatriet for the mem of the 'committee. On motion of Mr. Coates, a committee consisting of Messrs. James Black, J. T. Owen and George F. McFarland, was ap pointed to draft a proper address, to bo published and circulated among the people of the State, setting forth the objects and intents of the party. The following wore appointed as the Chairmen of ,the various County Commit. tees to organize their counties under the rules adopted above. Adams, Rev.—Snyder; Allegheny, J. E. Johnson; Beaver, A. Bostw ic k; Bed for.d. —Gibson ; Samuel Isett;— Bradford, Gen. Wm. Patton; Berke, James Patten ; Bucks, Edw. Harrison ; Centre, James A. Weaver ; Cumberland, D. W. Bashure; Cambria, , A. A. Barker; Dau phin, Rudolph F. helker ; Delaware, J. S. Cummins; Chester, R. L. Pyle; Fayette. Grafton L. Reynolds; Franklin, E. W, Kirby; Greene, B. F. Heruken ; Hunting. don, J. R. Gumpruir; Indiana, J. A. Wil son ; Lehigh, Charles. S. Massey; Leba non, Rev. T. D. 'Dougherty; Lancaster, ter, Isaac H. Good; Juniata, J. H. Smith; • Montgomery, Seth Luk ins ; Northampton, William Ross; North umberland, S. W. Murray; Perry, S. S. King; Philadelphia, J. C. Garrigues Somerset, John 0. Stoner; Lyeoding, Thos. Underhill; Luzerno, J. T. Yarring ton ; Tioga, G. T. Bentley; Wayne, A. 11. Woodhouse; York, David E. Small; Law rence, Ira T. Sankey; Susquehanna, S. B. Chase; Wyoming, Dr. A. C. Biel: esli Erie, R. E. Spink ; Venango, M. R. Sharp; Washington, G. V. L. Mellinger; Snyder, M. L. Waggenseller ; Schuylkill, Lm.tier S. Kautrmann. _ On motion, the Chairman was instructed to make appointments in the twenties not provided for in the above list. Mr. Rauch offered the following: Resolved, That we do recommend the friends of prohibition In the several coon ! ties of the Commonwealth to adopt home diato measures to secure by county or dis trict conventions or otherwise, the nomi nation and election of candidates for all 0111CCH to be voted for at the annual elec tions of 1871, who will publicly announce themselves to be favorable to prohibition of the liquor traffic, and against license. General Owen opposed the passogoof the resolutions as being too fast. Mr. Coates and Col. McFarland also op • posed the passage of the resolution. Mr. Ranch pressed the passage of Isis resolution. lie thought that there were throe good months between this anti the etc:slots, the time had now come that every Mall who favored political action had to act posihrely and decidedly. Mr. Coates strongly exhorted more dis • eretion anti deliberation in reference to tile matter. Ile believed that the canoe lr.ulll be injured by undue haste. After some further debate, the question was putt by ayes anti noes, and resulted a, MHO : Ayes --NI ems rs. Ale Fad and, Pierce, Thom p.m, Rauch and lthiek— 5. Nays—Nl ussr'. Jones, Costes, Rabe and Otrett-4. So thu resolution passed. General J. T. owrn, mr. Mr. Rabe and Al r. Jones, entered protests against this action of the committee. A 100(11,11 was made to reconsider the vote by which thn resolution in favor of nominating candidates way 1111.8F1011. The I/106011 to reconsider was agreed to. submitted t h e fat lowing lot n subgitnta. ReNot,,,i, That w, reemn mend the friends of prohibition in the several. onuntics of 010 Commonwealth to adopt measure~ to seenre, if possible, the nom inlaid!) or Tom perance candidates for all tinkles to bt) lined at the etiviiing election, and where those nominations have already been made, to inierrogitte those nominntod, and secure their approval of prohibition legislation, tf posailile, and volt, accordingly. Adopted. Tho prlaust nub by General Owens idol other,, on the previous resolution, wits adopted. Alter the election au treasurer the Coln nittee toljeurned. N urn, n n ine. Fro!II the Ilaitiniore fiazette of Alumlay tee clip the folki‘viiii.; trite and excellent paper the narrow-gangequestlon, which IS evidently written by en experienced railroad wan. Avoiding all (be tbeurizing and argllllll'lll., it states the economic feels of the 'now system which is gaining favor so rapidly and so irresistibly. The results of the elrortsof the officers of the Denver and Rio Grande Hallway Coin panyi-to establish a system of narrow gauge roads, adapted to American uses, and to demonstrate the practicability of constructing long lines without Govern ment, State or local aid, premise to have a 111051 illiptatant intillelleo uu the carrying trade 11 this country. This read, which Ia eventually to he 900 MOOS long, is now under contract from Denver to Colorado City, 60 wile,. The cost ut construction and equipment 0f the Kansas Pacific road was about 1f2:1,500 per mild. The cost of the narrow-gauge will be about 313,5410. the saving in construction and the great economy in working, assure very large profits 170111 the outstart, and the subscrip tions to the stook and bonds, amounting to $1,000,000, have been promptly taken up. the gauge decided upon is three feet. The eharacter of the equipment differs little from that at present in use 401 other roads, and is chiefly in size and weight. Tho pas longer cars, with eight-wheels, neat thirty four persons. Seats are arranged for two on One side and one on the other nide of the passage. Ft eight ears are much short er limn ordinary ones, and run on four wheels. A comparison or train weights shows that an ordinary train of four pit", stinger cars, carrying ltd passengers,„,will weigh about 1-101 nll4. A train or mix . ears Carrying the same number, will weigh, tin a three Mot gauge, but 71 tons, loss than one-half the train weight on the full gauge. The weight of thn engin en on the two gauges is as I 1 tons to 121 WIN, and the weight on drivers us 20 tons to 10 tuns.— rids renders a :10-pound nail quiet as ser viceable 144 the 50-pound rail nose In lISO. A rate of speed M 25 to 30 miles an hour is easily attainable on a throe-foot gauge road. In freight trains, on the 'rid gauge, the dead weight and the freight weight are about equal. tin the narrow-guage the weight of ears to the weight of freight Is as I to 4. Thus in a loadof 1,440 tons, old gauge, the weight of are will be 720 tons, .and that of freight the same. In a load of 2 tons, on tho narrow-gauge, the ears 72 will weigh lint 206 tons, and the freight 510 ems. In other words, a small engine weighing In WIN, will hind about two- thirds he pacing matter hauled by a large engine inure than double the weight, and In each of much less costly construction. thi the full-gauge road an engine of 571 tons will haul 720 tons freight and 720 tons ears. On the narrow-gauge two engines of 21 tone each will haul 1 02-1 tons freight, with only 112 tons ear weight. (treat an is this dis proportion of dead weight, it is rendered initelt greater by the fact, that so many mire run empty return trips, If comparhonm of gross tonnage are made, the saving of- Meted by imrrow-gauge in necessarily Im mense. The economy in construction Is very great, as well as that of equipment. Thu weight of bridging, and necessarily the cost, is materially. lessened, as the weight of trains is considerably reduced. Ida• chine shops lord buildings generally can bu made smaller and machinery much lighter. linulOßlloll is reduced thirty per cent, it the lowest. In rough countries it ot re duced fifty per cent., and in mountainous regions a narrow-gauge can be constructell where a wide road is impracticable. The confidence which the experiments of thin Denver and Rio Grande Company have Inspired, ins ores the construction of narrow-gauge roads In now countries, not only its meders to main lines, but as trunk lines themselves. 'lire problem ot cheap land transportation promises now to be speedily solved. If the experience oven of a lbw months fully sustains the facts we have given, there MUSt be necessarily an immense revolution in the railroad busi ness of the country, an enormous reduc -11011 In the rust of transportation, and pos sibly a very great depreciation In rail road values. Take, for instance, the effect upon the Baltimore and Ohio road of the building, of such a read from Williamsport to the Allegheny coal-Melds. Would not a new road, the cost of construction of which was not more Mau one-half that f its rival, and the work- iug expenses of which were far less, nem - sarily attract to itself at once, by rates of freight profitable to it, but ruinous to Us antagonist, the entire business of the coal region, and would not the success of such a road immediately lead to its own exten sion and the construction of others? The natter is cne of far more importance than was at first thought, and when we reflect that experience will lead to greater perfec tion and larger economy. it is difficult to foretell what may not be the effect of the narrow-gauge on the railroad system of the country, and upon its material develop ment. Cheap roads moan cheap rates, in creased truvul and traffic, and largo divi dends, and necessarily lead to thecievelop ment of N affiable districts by the construc tion of new roads and providing additional The Nurth.Ber " Eau.le Bird." 'rho shape and attitude of the eagle of North liertnany, to be portrayed on the imperial arms, have been the subject of brisk discussion of late. By the I•ederal Council it has been finally determined that the North German eagle shall henceforth have but one head, which appendage shall look to the right, and have above It In a glory the imperial crown. CM the breast is to appear a shield, and on that shield the Prussian eagle, each wing with six broad and live narrow feathers; and, finally, the claws are to be all black, the red talons of the old device to be henceforth discarded, and the tad Is to appear in "heraldic do• lineation," which the Now York World understands to be a technical way of ex pressing that it Is to be puffed out fau•shape after the similitude of a turkey gobbler in the first flush of love. The feet of the bird wo must add, are not to hereafter grasp anything. Mimi.lrd by the Bite or in Spider Mr. William Gable, barber, was bitten by a spider, lust raturday two weeks ago, from the effects of \\ilia he has not yet en tirely recovered. lie was In the act of reaching for some nulls, on a [Melt In the Summer kitchen of his residence, when a small spider let itself down from the roof upon him right arm, half-way between the wrist and the elbow, and bit Win. He re moved the insect and killed it. Three days thereafter Mr. Gable's arm was swol len to such an extent and the wound was co painful that he wait unable to attend to his business, aud was required to keep his arm quiet for a week. Several large lumps were raised on the arm above the elbow, and In the swelling below tho elbow, whore the Insect bad produced the wound, a largo quantity of pus was fOrllled, Willeh way discharged the maineam from a largo boll or carbuncle.—Reading lagle. Tho Kentucky Nutt Product Some tirno ago, says the Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal, several salt wells were discovered in the vicinity of Brandenberg, Kentucky, which, upon being worked, proved very profitable to their owners. The news of the discovery spreading abroad, several other wells were sunk, all with a successful result, furnishing each a aulli clent flow of brine to manufacture, by evaporation, from eighteen to twenty bar rels of salt per diem. Besides the great yield of saline water, each of the wells that have been as yet bored also furnishes gas enough to run the two furnaces and boilers required by each well. As the gas is very abundant, it has been proposed to imitate the example of Erie, Pennsylvania, and conduct it in pipes to the town, there to be used for culinary, lighting, and heating purposes.