THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCE& PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY BY G. SNIT"( de CO. G. SMITH. A. J. STEINMAN. TERMS—TWO Dollars per annum payable In all cases In advance. THE LANCASTER DAILY INTELLTTRICER le pnblisbed 5 per u el u 'er l y n e a v d e v n a i n . evening, e eel Led. at • OFFICE--SorrawasT CORNEr. OF CENTRE QUARK. Vottry. =1:12 Oh, I lints beloved, who shouldht have been Mille Servilely 111.1/11l I nil and wise and strong. Consoh, whom ITIV life lulls never known, How. havel Inlssed t bee, seek log thee alone All my life long? Somewhere opal 1111• wide and misty irark I ..tra)t..l Intl not wait 101 . Arid Faust always loom, my hitter lack hi. on t lils weary road we go not sack. (VOL is me! (ine,, with aunty 6urJcurd 114.mrl and !II 1111, none to aid or understand I low I linvi•Urnp.•d wl Lit learn, alone at),L blind 111 Ihl thlol: 41,1'11111,5, 14.Tiglug but to Ilticl Thy 11,.1pr111 Lund For I Ir:Ilevo that I.vl. IS doubly armed Ag.onsi all W.S, .111 OM hipr.. through pain :Intl suffering ULM -11,111.1 ( ~ 11111 okonous things and not be harmed, IM111111!1111!11111111111111 ..A1) , 1 JIM,. Shall I,llVe, 1111111011:II 1 S/11 , 1, 111 . 11111.11 . 1,1 llCht I,lals By :1113 111.11 y vlianso Is I Alas ! ha. I"st ll', (51,11e5! ri And st ill I Ivlllt.. llolr l•aultftll ~ 11r mlugled lIVI,IIO/110 .•11, 11.111 %V.• tiLlt !M.!!! 1•111•111 Ili her iu our yl,llllO Wllll , llllOl hrtilvil, ticspite Ilcht,lll :Lllll,Oll, SWCeti•l• 111•0:111,• IWII II:III 11 VE•il 111,0111 (till otter truth. T 111•11 I lily rlml ills 'which Farr .. vont, \V111 . 1,,, Itil 1./111.11111'11•Klivaris,t.isha ... .11,..11 11111 11,14, nlotig 111• :N:ktp,4lll • 1.111 , 1 t• 1.11111 . 1 i 11`4, 5111,44 I II.• till is, 1,1.1 lII' Had htil s11.1€•11.-(1nr.r.".- W 11 4 .1•0 art ii , F11.1., 11,1+1 I hcril, I II:1.1 lwell Into, V,P1 . 111 S.I .•1111rulv 1111, ~i... 1111 ,1 ill, II•••• ill rtly 31111 . 1.11.,r All my 111. 1111,141 i. lII' Lll',. 1:1 , 1 :41mittit•I 1.1 , 1 Il• 1 . 1 . 11111 •I I.ll'l t 1 1.1 All Ilit• s:11.• I :111 ‘,111•1 , 111,,:' 'Ft. 131..! 1.1“ ' I li.• g:il h 1. 1 ,111, Illy 11,11 i 1,1 , 11, 1.11th•...1 , 1 111111.111; I 1111111111 1,11 , 111111 , II 11111111,11111]1,11•41111 . 1,111 1:1/1 ull. - II I ,111111 111 , 111111•1 . •1111• 111•,111, Wlllll,lllll/1 1,1111,... II %v. , 11:1 , 1 1,111 1‘11..,v11, if N 1 1• 1,111 IC 111,1'11 In 11..• VVI v, I I . 1%,1,V I /i• . \V1111,1,11111i•••:111.li.. 111 1 1 ii11.1 1• .lil. W:li,•11111.4 111 , 0..11, su:11 . 1.1 ; •11111,,•.kit,111:t. 111 tug 1 AII.I III: • II 11$4 1 , 1 . 1 till , • Pli /1,1,V11. II 11.11/ 111 I I. 1..1.1 I,lil ‘,I • 11:1.1 1.111 1.11.,vii. If ‘,.• 1,41 hill !1g.., .1 ‘v micl . lllllll , I. 11.. r, /11/,‘ 1/111• IVI/11/(1,11 1111• 111,1111111111111% 111111 t• 111•V1 111.1•111111, V. .1111 , 1'; \Vll.l', %,11 , 111.111114k• , 111` , 1 111111r , ,1,11"11 11 liiii-dr,:11111i,t111....,111 1,111.. Willlllll itiltlllllll 11,11' 1 11 4/ :111111. .1 . 11111•1111114111111111//111,.14111 , 1• 11111/ 1111 V, \ 1111 . 11 w til .111..11 ti31,11k1.111111k111•. 11 11.11/ 11111 1,111i,11, 11 I 11• 11.111 11111 ,Vi• 101 10111 ,k . r• 11:1.11 Lug WISII.• Ito•r. 4. I:Li . Oddii..tut . till r.l 1110 1.11,111,4 1:1•,, I , 1111.:, •III• 11 1 ., ~rey 1111:111 , S,•1 X\ .• 111 1111, - , :5 hill:: 55.•,..1, \viillt• lits• XVo• 111,.•1 . 4,11 51.111 , 11 Illt• ,1 I.lllld hat :oh .1, \V11.1.• 11 t•11:1111 , ••I I "I, ,11 . 11..1: II 1:1.1. 1 , 11, lilt. ionlit•III . 11 II ~1• 11,1 111 1 1.10111 II V, t• 11,1Lul 1:11 , 51, 11 W.. Old 11.1.V11, IC NV , hail 11 , 1.11 LlO,ll \Vt• Ilu.l .Ilull xlll Ilit• hill r, Tlii• Ir:11 11 I,lm , 110.•5•111%•.1 A :11 to • i's‘ \Vo• ,1,4.11: III! I hs• t.:1 0 h VAN 1 • 14 , 1,: 1 , 1111.1.1 0 :11 ,, d , ,a :111•1 C.llll, 111. 1 hit And 0.0rt . ,,,,,t11.1., , ,t1,1111,, hat.; II It Ills' 10,111 11 NV.• 11:141 /Mt 1,11",,11, ss.• 11.1.1 1.11 low,vu &il, Clad ICoUa. An Essay on Newspapers It,lore 1111• I.l.Morin! Am•orloi lot 01 1 . 4.0....y1v00i1. I,y .1. 1,0110, Itlog o silt, of 1•111111111rIgokia. LerdieN nu,l (:r : hi rising In alitin.S..Voll, I feel that tw,, of the greatest difficulties involved in That undertaking—knowing where to begin :ml where to cud—are intensified by the fit (hat I ant to talk of news papers to :in atidietler composed With (110 that they can each say newspaperilian : of it I saw, and part vf it Inns. The question Was :1,1,11 a few years ago, in the Ifritish Parliament, what a newspaper is, and, in the absence of a precise legal explanation, it was an swered by the statement, that the terni carried with lithe best explanation of its mettiiingair,in other \ ror i k, that, tows paper must be and is a 11 , S raper. The postal lawsof the Hailed Stales are more explicit. Theyileclare it to be any print ed publication issued in flotilla con sisting of not more than two sheets, and published at short stated intervals of not more than one month, conveying in telligence of passing events. Publishers may look with the greatest favor upon columns adorned With advertisements ; politicians may read with the deepest interest stinging editorials, telling how the country is to lie saved, or how it is to be lost.; lovers of light literature may regale themselves with poetry or tales —but the staple, indispensable, mill universal featu r e of these publications must still be sought in their prompt dissemination of every important lite seriplion eurreffi intelligence. Tili• is based 011 1 his tilt•Ory. It W:1,41110 derived, as has been (.011 . 11'ClIII . CII, 1110 initial letters of the points of the compass, but from the word 111•W', used in its p re sent sense in the English lan guage longbefore the first English news paper was printed ; while the German Zcitany has the similar meaning of tid ings, and the I taliall WO! Spallish Mt leas I iii• still Ilion. COIII - ;Old appropllal, I iOll Ica , tiry lIVWS." Same Wits ilaVe tutu Wirktti v . 111111211 to Sag ryst that the 11;11(311 WOI.II !RC, (ii de ived from , Illy:Ming a Magpie chatterer ; but tilts idea ilas, at best, very slight couinlation, and it is , ot eoni,e, unworthy (4 an instatit•s eon skier:aim' in an Editorial convention. Whales-el' eke in con section With 111•WripapOrS, they must contain al l ahtllldallee ul titles. I t haul better be [roe true enough, if possible, to justify the traditional confidence of those who believe everything they see in print hut tam tainly true enough to avoid the adoption, in this country, Of a phrase formerly common in ( ierniany, that descrioed the worst form of false hood, by saying " it lies like print." The Chinese are said to have a printed newspaper which is now nearly a thou- Sand, yCal'S ; bat it is 110 W, and always has been, made tip exclusively. Id such news as the court wishes to communicate to the people—being a sort of Heathen Chinee compendium of associated press despatches, adapted to latitude of Pekin instead of the atmo sphere of Washington. This journal begun its existence as a purely official budget, c and, in the land where nearly everything has been invented and nothing has been improved, it remains a. mere official budget still. • The Germans were the first European people to print current intelligence or to discuss current questions; but eves among them no such application of printing is known to have been attempt ed until near the close of the fit teenth century ; and the first modern European approximation to the newspaper was the gazette issued by the Venetian lie public a war which it com menced in. 151;3; but although these gazettes contained military and com mercial information, which was read at a fixed place or places by those who de sired to learn the news, they were writ ten and not printed, and continued for many years to be circulated in manu script, notwithstanding the recognized utility and employment of the art of printing in the production of books. Singular as is this long-continued avoi dance in Venice of the use of type and presses ,for the chief purpose to which they are now applied, a similar state of things occurred in Eng land ; for the people of Great Britain were principally supplied with such news as they received, during a hirge portion of the eventful seventeenth cen tury, by written; news-letters, rather than by printed newspapers. The first European attempts to estab lish printed and regularly published newspapers were made nearly simulta neously, In the early part of the seven- tx I,lakaotet VOLUME 72 teenth century, in Germany, France, and England. The first German news paper,i II numbered sheets, was printed in 1012. It was called Accountof what has happened in Germany and Italy, Spain and France, the East and West Indies, etc. The first French newspaper was established at Paris, In 1632, by Renau dot, a physician famous for his skill in collecting news to amuse his patients. The first English newspaper was es tablished in London, by Nathaniel But ter, in 1622. This name is frequently printed Butler, but is repeatedly given by Timperley as Butter; and this is most likely correct. His novel venture was a small quarto of eighteen pages, called the " Certain News of the Present Week," and the editor or publisher so licited subscribers, by the following ad vertisement at the end of his publication: "If aoy gentleman, or other accus- owed to buy the irctilll relations of newel, be desirous to continue the same, et them know that the writer, or trau ecriber rather of thiN MIMS, Lath pub fished two former 71 , 11 . 1:8, the one dated. the second, the other the thirteenth of August, all which do carry a like title, with the anus of the King of Bohemia on the utter side of the title-page, and have dependence one upon another; which manner of writing and printing he (loth purpose to continue weekly, by (;td's assistance, from the best and most certain intelligence. Farewell, this twrnly-three of August, 162:'.." Why liutter selected the arms of the King of Bohemia as the decoration of his title-page is not explained. 'l•he malicious may say that it was heeltle, he saw, with prophetic vision, that he was 10 he the fore-runner of an army el . Bohemians ; but this theory, tee, taus be indignantly rejected—in an ditorial Convention. holler's paper is considered the first because it WAS the or publicly proposed to centime, regn trly. II had heett preceded, however, a 11111111ml' Or I Llllllll/11, II VIIIIOII, cntlnU'ies, two of Nodal re th•d to the American colonies. tlneof he latter, printed May :1, 1622, waS II all d a C•otowat qf ere,,from ntl other places; anti another, issued tine 13, 11122, WAS styled A•r u•rc from Ve Cc. L . /if/fund, by John Itellantie. Al hough copies or the Engli.sh ,11crctiri , II the Itritish Museum, pimporling to be whited in 1. - eis, and formerly regarded s the lirst b:ttglish newspapers, are time ensidered, ou good authority, literary 'orgeries, yet the larger, after all, only 111.1111.teil to reproduce What probalAy cal real exi,tcuec, fur all Old writer says that in the days ..1 Pll,ll EliZaheth p:lpers Nvere printed allltirs iu Franet . , Nl,aili and 11111:1111l, :IS early as 1.)79 a small :11,1w:trill,. which re, ,V,w,s, ~ntaiiiing a shirt .if Stulu•lov anti :\l4.r Nathaniel Butler contintaal his week y newspaper Mr several years la•Mre ival appeared M the .1b r‘,/rifis /:t.iimt th•as: hut meanwhile he apparently. royal:v(1 the ire ()I' saute of the Wily ut tis time, either because the ne‘vsitaiter lay have seemed to thew likely 11l sup dant, ill a slight degree, the drama, or att.:Oise it May have interfered With =l= Mrs; for lien Jonson's play, entitled "The Staple of News," written in 11i25, :thenipts to ridicule the mode of maim lacturing IIeWH, and contains passages wiiich are supposed to be a direct attack upon the adventurous I hitter, who was the sole editor of he period, one of which accuses him of /1/1/11 1.i1,.// over neWS. 'l'lle exciting contest between the luritans anti the Cavaliers, which soon hllowed, anti which finally brought 'Lade~ 1. to the seall'old, lea to the tublietttion if many neNcs paniplets, tint to the establishment of a number o u•ecspapers. It also developed the tio it lea' organ, awl lace birth to the first ntlnential political editor in the persot if Alarelimont Needluttn, who, after •avagely ttltaelting the king and court fora b i te, becalm: nit energetic 1.11:1111 pion of:royalty, and subsequently de serted the king, when his fortunes waned, to become again an earnest ad vocate of the party titTromwell and the Commonwealth. ()iie of his elliusions, luring the int:it:cal in which he wrott in the interests of the royalists, was it. fug lows : \Vlre n lIS 1 1 .,, nl,nl wet I A. 6nig ,voutl not contcnt II l 114 . for sooth , uncg hire the ho di l'arllanient us. ,1,111 , 11 went King and Itishep , ,n 1 gees the holy wern. , Itelwlsl theta auLl the Itrethern blI w, 'lf' advance the Crosclic and 1:11 . 1:c. Inn Ichen !Intl, those had rcigu'd :11i111 It.4,lJ'd ,rl, and scdd tho t•rmvil 1. more sort up clittille, All4l Crush Lhe .lochles Poll now mu• musa have Penve 1,1 none %,:11 II fon, vt•xl : 1...1.11%1'311mM Ilie 1: Lug those re:gm lielglk cloWn gut , uk•xt. But, despite a somewhat extensive newspaper development in England during the seventeenth century, which waS htilllulated by the long war of fac tions, the repressive laws enacted after the Itestoration, the subservient severity of the judges, and the jealous tyranny of James 11., crushed out utterly all these early efforts, and at the close of his reign the sole English newspaper was a strictly official organ called the London (I,tz,ilc. It was a servile init iation of the Chinese newspaper, bein edited by a clerk of the. Secretary of State, and containing nothing he did not wish to communicate. It seems almost incredible - , but it is nevertheless true, that more than two hundred years after Caxton had exer cised the art of printing in England, her citizens were still compelled to rely up o n letter-writers for theirscanty supplies of genuine news. The result was due not to any lack or intelligence or enterprise among the printers, but to the tyranni cal spirit of the government, and the inherent difficulties of publishing, reg ularly, a newspaper which a govern ment is determined to suppress. Free dom is a necessity of its existence. 1t must proclaim the place where it is printed, - and all the mechanical and literary labors involved in its prepara tion must lie 1 , 1±1 . 1. , 111101 with unvarying promptness; so that, even when arbi trary governments fail utterly to sup press free letter-writing and the OCCU ,IOIIaI ImblicaLion ofanonymouspamph lets, they find no difficulty in suppress ing ohno.xions newspapers. During the very century that English kings crush ed out daring journalism, they Were frViluently baffled by printers of pamph lets containing violent and scurrilous attacks upon their doctrines or their dynasties; and while James 11. hail de stroyed all newspapers save his govern ment organ, his successor found it im possible to suppress the adverse ballads, pamphlets, and books of the Jacobites, which were issued in underground printing offices, in which precautions againstmletection and arrest were adopt ed similar to those used at the present day 1 printers of counterfeit money. A it newspapers had once gained a str ig hold on public favor, however, as th did in England during the closing y i years of the seventeenth and in the eighteenth century, after a gradual change in the British constitution pre vented a resort to purely arbitrary methods of destroying them in Eng land, and after they had survived the stamp tax imposed by Queen Anne, a long series of battles was waged before juries, between successive English ad ministrations and different newspaper proprietors, until finally, despite many unjust convictions, the freedom of fair newspaper cominent on public ques tions has been firmly established in England as the result of a series of par liamentary and legal contests lasting for more than two centuries. The home policy of the British gov ernment during the latter portion of the seventeenth century was reflected in this country by the summary suppres sion of the first newspaper iu America, and the determined opposition of a cav alier governor of Virginia to the estab lishment of a printing press in that col ony. The Governor of New York, in 1090, graciously caused a reprint of the London Gazelle, containing the details of a battle with the French, to be issued, which was probably the first thing re sembling a newspaper ever printed in the present limits of the United States ; but when Benjamin Harris issued in Boston, on-the 25th of September, 1690, a sheet of four small pages, one of which was blank, containing a record of pass ing occurrences, foreign and domestic, the legislative authorities at once pro hibited future publications of a similar character, on the ground that it "con tained reflections of a very high nature," and because nothing whatever could be printed withciut &license previously ob tained. As newspapers multiplied in England after 1690, in consequence of a relaxation of s'ime of the worst of the old restric tions, it was natural that the second newspaper venture in this country, es pecially as it was issued by an official, John Campbell, the Postmaster at Bos ton, should also be tolerated. It was called the Boston News , Letter ' and the first number appeared on Monday, April t 4, 1704. It was printed on half a sheet of paper, being only about twelve inches by eight, and was made up in two pages, with two columns on each page, and so meagre were its contents, that it VMS only after publishing a dull sheet of these contracted dimensions weekly, for nearly fifteen years, that the publisher proposed issuing it on a whole sheet, for the alleged reason that he found it impossible, with half a sheet a week, to " Carry on all the Publick News of Europe." A rival newspaper, called the Boston rici:ctte was es tablished in December, 1711, by a new postm aster, who superseded, Campbell ; but it was only in the . fourth newspaper, the Nciv England ('barn,(, established by James Frank lin, in 17:1I, that signs of live journal ism in this country were develoyed— the Conran?, under the management of James Franklin, assisted by his immor tal brother Benjamin, the patron saint and exemplar of American printers— being the first American newspaper that gave any signs of vigor or energy, or that was anything more than a dry rehash of safe and staple news.— The Franklin:4 speedily became em- roiled, not only With their newspaper iedecessor, l'amploell, but With the lergy and the civil :itithorities; ad, awes hying fi,rbidden to continue his tiblicarion, it was published in the ;tine young Pen, then an apprentice ill ilk teens, on Ids own ac count, but really for Ids brother. The single life of Benjamin Franklin oractically eilitiriwes 1111 epitome -Uuericunjournalism from its first estab lishment until subsequent to the Revolution. 111 , earliest elPusious ap siarisl ill the Sp iv ..England 'ourant, ud ill lii. early 111:111111/1,i hcestitiolished Philadelphia, the /',liiisgle i oaia (/a -(lc, which continued ihr a long period =co neut. lint it is a noticeable feature of the condition of the press (luring the last century, that tiotwithstandinc, the prom .llll.llte ut Fratil:lin's journal, altli his ex- re furl of his influence as an editor. lie -as content to puldish a newspaper, arely seeking to influence public opiu mby editorials When he discussed rave questions, it was generally either n pamphlets, (Jr in communications, nd a very large share of the vast Milli- ence In. exercised was personal, arising ironi his oilleial pnsitintis, and his (li rent interenurse ith the leading men of his [init. About (Ito outwit , or the last century, awl,ver, a printer of New York was ticcesi,fully tleferided iu :1 priisectitiun . or au alleg(.11 ILLeI , Which colisi,tud Of trictures upun the existing authori ies; and this circumstance exerted t powerful iniltien2e in enfranchising the whole colonial press—so that it was comparatively free to perform its great mission of awakening, strength ening and consolidating the patriotic spirit of the American colonies. If there were comparitively few elabor- ate editorials, there was an abundance of pungent paragraphs, a series of in cessant elforts to promptly apprise the people of every new form of aggrusion, and a very general republication of com munications written by leading patri ots, and of all telling aitacks upon the oppressive policy of the mother coun try. Tory journals, on the other hand sustained hy goternmeub; patronage, attempted to Oefii,l lienrge 111., his Ministers,and Lis l'olonial (lovernors, and, on a mimic scale, with a limited number of accessories, and before a comparatively small but intensely in terested body of readers, a contest was conducted, similar in many respects, to those which now occur during every - Presidential campaign. As the war waxed hot and tierce, its varying fortunes compelled the suspen sion, in one quarter, of Whig newspa pers, and in another, of the organs of Toryism. But of the latter there were comparatively few, for in this, as in all similar well-defined contests, the bulk of the press, instinctively and necessa- rily, sided with the cause of freedom— a devotion to popular rights. or what can with a certain degree of plausibili ty, be made to appear the interest of a neople, toeing essential to the life of all Journals that are not sustained by ofli- vial patronage. And patriotism:lva. such a general At tribute of the Ameri can country printer or the last century . that Freneau truly described him a. one Who In I,ls Limn. the nnlrlnt his town, With prns, and in allaclik•kl Iho Inyal side; Ina whit; Ilk. entllk: to pull I In•ir Lton down, t'lippvtlnt Ills lward,EWltelll'll hiss:l,nd hitle 11l unnn liix logs, l't 11 t'll NS I iNVI . II.I,iI 111, 01, one b 1111,1•. rtnucrd Lc ..burch or Court-I oum• rt.ad, From th•ptli of wneds I , IE. nu. nest I, ran NOW hy apriest, alai no u w solt• drac..tl \ IL Atl i., and slats to guard Ilit rights w:w: 1.41 s from thespndo, 1 ho picknx,or tho plougl Nittri . hiug :trar to flglit Ititrg•opic 11" we. Meanwhile, although the Continental press continued to be enchained by cen sorship, the newspapers of England made steady strides towards indepen dence. Wilkes, under the shield afford ed by his position as a member of Parli ament, attacked the British administra tion-unmercifully, in the North Britun ; and the letters of Junius, by their scath ing invectives, astounding disclosures, and the universal interest they awaken ed, gave the people of England a fore taste of the coining power of journalism. In France, during the turmoil of the last century, newspapers also became, for the first time in her history, vehicles of free political discussion. In the up heaval of the old social governmental system, many of the active men who aspired to power sought to gain it through the lever of the press; and Murat, through his newspaper, became the apostle of the Revolution. This, new-born liberty of writers, editors, and printers led to such excesses, that the evidence furnished in Paris of the bad uses to which free toil unrestrained printing might be applied, 11.11 d of the perils with which it might environ all interests, produced a reaction against the newspapers among timid and con servative melt in Great Britain and the cited States. English juries became willing to convict editors of seditious libels whenever they dared to indulge -in what would now be considered tame criticisms, and in this country the Alien and Sedition I, aw established, for a brief period, a similar system, under which there were a few similar convic tions. For a time it seemed that even at the close of the eighteenth century, three hundred and fifty years after ( hut enberg had commenced his labors at Mentz, the art of printing could not yet in any locality, be freely applied to the production of a newspaper. But after a few intensely unpopular attempts to enforce the Alien and Sedition Law, it was repealed, and succeeded by Thomas Jefferson's liberal policy of permitting exchanges to pass free through the mails, of encouraging the press, and leaving truth to wage a free light Wilk error. No ruler of a great country ever did so grand a service as the(Stige of Monticello, and it is fitting that the author of the Declaration of Indepebdence became, as President, the first thorough emancipa tor of journalism. After the freedom of the press was well established, newspapers rapidly multiplied in number, in circulation, and in the scope of their contents. In their infancy their mission was confined to a reprint of official news, or to a pub lication of news from distant or remote countries, exciting domestic topics be ing carefully avoided. When they ven tured to treat public questions at all, they acted strictly in the interest of one of two powerful parties, or of some po tent leader, able to protect them against censorship, sedition laws, and libel suits. During the last century the prep aration of editorials or original lead ing articles formed no part of the reg ular :duties of ttie editor. It was his business to collate the news—more especially that arriving from foreign Icountries—to keep open a poet's corner '—und to give place to such essays or communications as the wits or the poli ticians were gracious enough to contrib ute gratuitously to his columns. Local items were nearly unknown, the pro ceedings of important public assem blages were not reported, money articles had not been invented, and so much of the essence and life of all vigorous mod ern journals was lacking that it is scarcely surprising that a newspaper in those days would have been a curiosity in many households. At best, it was a thing of lirnited utility—a luxury rather than a necessity—and so small a propor- LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING AUGUST 2, 1871 tion of the masses had been educated,l that comparatively few could read. It was only by slow degrees that new at tractions were added to journalism. A monthly magazine, which was rather a newspaper, however, than a magazine, in the sense in which that term is now used, ventured at last to report an abstract of the speeches of the British Parliament. Editors slowly beean to aspire to something better than stale compilations of foreign news. A few men of real talent were at last employed to write for the newspapers in the in terest of the public, their contributions being paid for in sterling coin. 'The scope of advertising columns was en larged, until they became a source of general interest. Able and vigorous editorials, on not merely partisan buton other topics, were written. And, strang est of all, a few adventurous publishers were finally emboldened to expend such large sums in obtaining intelligence of important events that they outstripped the swiftest government couriers, and became the instructors of the heads as well as the masses of great nations.— Subscribers and readers multiplied. The old hand press, despite the dupli cation of forms and astonishing alacri ty on the pait of the hand-press men, could no longer supply the demand for journals which excited such Universal interest, and the newspapers, after making headway for so many years against ignorance, oppression and prejudice, were threatened with a lim itation of the sphere of their utility by ' mechanical obstacles. Bert a host of in ventors, endowed with brilliant genius, and a series of enterprising press-man ufacturers, type-founders, paper-mak ers, etc., have conquered each new dif ficulty as it arose, and the skill display ed in their comiuests, together with the astonishing results achieved, form the grandest chapter in the history or prin t- Mg. is nett new mechanical facility sup plied to newspapers enlarged their sphere, cheapened their cost, and in creased their attractions, until now they well-nigh absorb all other forms of printing, and embody every description of intellectual effect. As advertising mediums, their value cannot be overes timated, and they are indispensable thermometer , and barometers of c he business world. As collectors and dis tributors of news, their daily achieve ments outstrip the wildest dreams of the human imagination, and their success in telling the current history of the world, currently, to all the world, is, the greatest modern marvels. The gist of the musty record of the past, so far as it is applicable to the pres ent, is placed at the services of the newspaper reader whenever it is needed. The most carefully guarded secrets affecting public interests are dis closed—a black eat being always found to capture all advance copy of an impor tant treaty. The greatest questions are discussed with freedom, and often with profound ability, by the press. It rare ly fails to foreshadow every measure and event of real significance. In this country, especially, newspapers have exerted a boundless influence. They have made and destroyed countless rep utaliohs, elevated and deposed innu merable officials, furnished t o t indis pensableprerequisite to genuine popular govei 'fluent, raised immeasurably the standard of civilization, diffusing far and wide its blessings; and, in view of their expanding p o wer, lie would he a hold mail who would venture to allix a Unlit to their future achievements. A Visit to the Tropics Ctsstrit, Oletervaltotts Its the A visit to the tropics was, for many years, a cherished dream of the imagi native Charles Kingsley, author of "At Last, a Christmas, in the West Indies," but it was not until the I ievember of Isku that lie was enabled to carry his wish into execution. Everything was presented in the most brilliant colors to his poet's heart. The novelty and wonder of the natural scenes 1110110 m with deep enthusiasm. The strange aspects of social lift, with which he came in contact were a perpetual sur prise. He thus describes his emotions upon first landing at St. Thomas' : As we leaped on shore on that white sand, what feelings passed through the heart of at least one of us, found the dream of forty years translated into facts at last, are best, perhaps, left untold here. lint it must be confessed that ere we hail stood for two minutes staring at the green wall opposite us, astonish ment, not at the vast size of anything, for the shrub was not thirty feet high; not at the gorgeous colors, for very few plants or trees were in flower, but at the wonderful wealth ot life. The massiveness, the strangeness, the varie ty, the very length of the young and still growing shoots was a wonder. We tried, at first in vain, to six our eyes on someone dominant or typical forni,while every form Was as it were, to be looked at, and a fresh Dryad gazed out at every bush, and with wooing eyes asked to be wooed again. The first two plants, perhaps, we looked steadily at were the ipolinca pes capne, lying along the sand in straight shoots thirty feet longand growing lot fancied, while we looked at it, with large bilob ed green leaves at every joint, and here and there a great purple convolvulus flower; and next, what we knew at once for the "shore grape." We had fancied it (and correctly) to be a mere low, bushy tree, with roundish leaves. Rut, what a bush with drooping boughs, arched over and tln•otigh each other, shoots already six feet long, leaves as big as the hand shining like dark velvet, a crimson mid-rib down each and tiled over each other—" imbrica ted," as the botanists say, in that lash , ion which gives it peculiar solidity, richnessof light and shade to the foliage of an old sycamore ; and among these noble shoots and noble leaves, pendant everywhere, long tapering spires of green grapes. This shore grape, which the West Indians esteem as we might a bramble, we found to be, without exception, the most beautiful and broad-leafed plant which we had ever seen. Then we admired the Frangi pani, a tall and almost leafless shrub, with thick,ll,shy shoots, bearing in this Species, White flowers, which have the fragrance peculiar to certain white blos soms, to the jessamine, the tuberose, the orange, the Gardenia, the night-flower ing Cereus ; then the Cacti and Aloes; then the first cocoa-nut, with its last year's leaves pale yellow, its new leaves deep green, and its trunk ringing, when struck, like metal; then the sensitive plants; then creeping Hams of a dozen different kinds. Then we shrank bark from our first glimpse of a little swamp of foul brown water, backed up by the sand-bush, with trees in every stage of decay, fallen and tangled into a dole ful thicket, through which the spider legged Mangroves rose on stilted roots. We turned, in wholesome dread, to the white beach outside, and picked up— amid, alas! wreck, everywhere wreck— shells—old friends in the cabinets at borne—as earnests to ourselves that all was not a dream ; delicate prickly Plu me ; "Noah's arks" in abundance; great Stromhi,theirl ips and outer shell broken away, disclosing the rosy cameo within, and looking on the rough beach pitifully tender and flesh-like; lumps and frag ments of coral innumerable, reminding us by their worn and rounded shapes of those Which abound in so many secon dary strata ; and then hastened on board the boat ; for the sun had already fallen, the purple night set in, and front the woods on shore a chorus of frogs had com menced chattering, quack ing,squealing, whistling, not to cease till sunrise. The luxuriance of 6tropical vegetation furnishes him with a subject for many sinking pictures, from which we select a description of the interior of Trinidad : I turn my chair and look into the weedy dell. The ground on the oppo site slope (slopes are, you must remem ber, here us steep as house roofs, the last spurs of true mountains) is covered with a grass like tall rye grass, but growing in tufts. That is the famous Guinea grass, which, introduced from Africa, has spread over the whole West Indies. Dark little Coolie prisoners, one a gentle young fellow, with soft, beseeching eyes, and "felon" printed on the back of his shirt, are cutting.it for the horses, under the guard of a mulatto turnkey, a tall, steadfast, dignified man; and be tween us and them are growing along the edge of the gutter veritable pine-ap ples in the open air, and a low, green tree, just like an apple, which is a Guava ; and a tall stick, thirty feet high, with a flat top of gigantic curly horse chestnut leaves, which is a Trumpet tree. There-are hundreds of them in the mountains round, but most of them are dead, from the intense drouth and fires of last Year. Beyond it, again, is a retind headed tree, looking like a huge Nail- gal laurel, covered with racemes of pur ple buds. That is an "Angelim ;" when tull-grown one of the finest trees in the world. And what are these at the top of the brow, rising out of the rich green scrub? Verily, again, we are iu the Tropics. They are +alms, doubtless, some thirty feet high edch,with here and there a young one sm.inging up like a gigantic crown of malefern. The old ones have straight gray stems. often prickly enough, and thickened in the middle ; gray last year's leaves hanging down : and feathering round the top a circling plume of pale green leaves, like those of u cocoa-nut. But these are not cocoas. The last year's leaves of the cocoa are rich yellow and its stem is curved. These are groo-groos : they stand as fresh proofs that we are indeed in the Tropics, and as "a thing of beauty and a joy forever." For it is a joy forever, a sight never to be forgotten, to have once seen palms, breaking through and as it were, defy ing the soft rounded forms of the broad leaved vegetatiou'lly the stern grace of their simple lines; immovable pillar stern looking the more immovable be neath the toss and lash and flicker of the long leaves, as they awake out of their sunlit sleep, and rage impatiently fur a while before the mountain gusts, and fall asleep again. Like a Week statue in a luxurious drawing,-room, sharp cut, cold, .virginal ; shaming, by the grandeur of mere form, the volup tuousness of niere color, however rich and harmonious ; so stands the palm in the forest, to be worshiped rather than to be loved. His portraitures of animal life are no less vivid, making the reader familiar With every variety of strange beast, bird, and insect, that haunt the verdant spaces of the prolific clime. Here is all account of the domestic visitors which vely give you their company in the MISC. One look round at the smaller wild animals and flowers. Butterflies :swarm MUM! us of every hue. Beetles, you may remark, are few: they do not run in swarms about these aril paths as they do at home. Ilut the wa,ps and bees, black and brown, are innumerable.— The huge bee in steel-blue armor, boom- lug straight at poll—whom some one compared to the Lord Mayor's man in armor turned into a cherub, and broken loose—lget out of his way, for he is ab sorbed in business)—is probably awood borer, of whose work you may read in Mr. Wood's "Homes without Hands." That long black wasp, commonly called a Jack Spaniard, builds pensile paper nests under every roof and shed. Watch, now, this more delicate brown wasp, probably one of the Nelopo•i of whom we have read in Mr. (;osse's "Naturalist in Jamaica," and Mr. Bates' "Travel on the Amazons." She has made under a shelf of mud a nest of three long cells, spiders, and the precious egg which, when hatched, is to feed on them. One hundred and eight spiders we have counted iu a single nest like this ; and the wasp, much of the same shape us the Jack Spaniard, but smaller, works, unlike him, alone, or at least only with her husband's help. The long mud nest is built upright, often in the angle of a doorpost or panel ; and always added to and entered from below. With a joy- ful hum she flies back to it all day long with her pellets of mud, and spreads them out with her mouth into pointed arches, one laid on the other, making one side of the arch out of each pellet, and singing low but cheerily over her work. As she works downward she parts MI the tube of the nest with hori zontal floors of a liner and harder mud, and inside each story places some live spiders, and among them the precious egg or eggs, which is to feed on them when hatched. If we open the upper most chamber, we shall find every ves tige of the spiders gone, and the cavity tilled and, strange to say, exactly filled) by a brown-coated wasp-pupa, envelop ed in a tine silken shroud. In the ch an i- ber below, perhaps, we shall find the grub full-grown and finishing his last spider; and so on, down six or eight stories, till the lowest holds nothing hut spiders, packed close, but not yet sealed up. These spiders, be it remembered, are not dead. By some strang'e craft the wasp knows exactly where to pierce them with her sting, so as to stupefy but not to kill, just as lie sand-wasps of our banks at hopestupery the large weevils which they store in their burrows as food for their grubs. There are wasps, too, here, who make pretty little jar-shaped nests, round, with a neatly lined round lip. Paper nests, too, more like those of our tree wasps at home, hang, from the trees in the woods. Ants' nests, too, hang some times from the stronger boughs, looking like huge hard lumps of clay. And, once at least, we have found silken nests of butterflies or moths, containing many chrysalids each. Meanwhile, dismiss from your mind the stories of insects plagues. If good care is taken to close the mosquito curtains at night, the flies about the houseare not nearly as trouble some as we have often found the midges in Scotland. As for snakes, we have seen none. Centipedes are certainly apt to get into the bath, but can be fish ed out dead, and thrown to the chickens. The wasps and bees do not sting, or in any wise interfere with our comfort, save by building on the books. ~-Tha only ants who came into the houge are the minute, harmless and most useful crazy ants," who ruin up and down wildly all day, till they hind some eata ble thing, an atom of bread or disabled cockroach, of which last, by and by, we have seen hardly any here. They then prove themselves in their sound senses by uniting to carry off their prey, sonic pulling, sonic pushing, with a steady combination of effort which puts to shame an average negro crew. And these are all we have to fear, unless it be now and then a liege spider, which it is not the fashion here to kill, as they feed on flies. So comfort yourself With the thought:that, as regards insect pests, we are quite as comfortable as in an English country-house, and infinitely more coin- fortable than in a Scotch shooting lodge let alone an Alpine chalet. . . Au other member of the home circle is thus described: The mean of all the pets is a black and gray spider monkey from lluinea—cmisisting of a tail, which has developed, at one end, a body about twice as big as a hare's ; four arms (call them not legs 1, of which the front ones have no thumbs, nor rudiments of thumbs; and a head of black hair, brushed forward over the foolish, be seeching eyes, and mouth which, as in all these American monkeys, as fur as we have seen, can have no expression, not even that of sensuality, because it has no lips. Others have described the spider monkey as four legs and tail, tied in a knot in the middle ; but the tail is, without doubt, the most important of the live limbs. Wherever the monkey goes, whatever she does, the tail is the standing point, or banging point. It takes one turn at least round something or other, provisionally, and ill case it should be wanted; often as she swings, every other limb hangs in the most ridiculous repose, and the tail alone supports. Sometimes it carries, by way of ornament, a bunch of flowers or a live kitten. Sometimes it is curled round the neck, or carried over the head in the hands, out of harm's way ; or when she comes silently up behind you, puts her cold hands in yours, and walks by your side like a child, she steadies herself by taking a half-turn of her tail around your wrist. Her rela tive Jack, of whom hereafter, walks about carrying his chain, to ease his neck, in a loop of his tail.— The spider monkey's easiest attitude is walking, and in running, also, is, strangely upright, like a human being; but, as for antics, nothing could repre sent them to you save a series of photo graphs, and those instantaneous ones; for they change every moment, not by starts, but with a deliberate ease which would be grace in anything less horribly ugly, into postures such as Callot or Breughel never fancied the ugliest imps who ever tormented St. Anthony. All absurd efforts of agility which you ever saw at a seance-of the Hylobates Lar Club at Cambridge are quiet and clumsy compared to the rope-dancing which goes on in the boughs of the Poui tree, or, to their great detriment, of the Bou t gainville and the Gardenia on the lawn. But with all this, spider is :the gentlest, most obedient, and most domestic of beasts. Her creed is, that yellow ban anas are the summum bonum, and that she must not come into the dining-room or even into the verandah ; whither, nevertheless, she slips, in fear and trembling, every morning, to steal the little green parrot's breakfast out of his cage, or the baby's milk, or fruit off the sideboard ; in which case she makes her appearance suddenly and silently, sit ting on the threshold like a distorted fiend, and begins scratching herself, sittettig cit.& t. looking at everything except the fruit, and pretending total absence of mind, till the proper moment comes fur un winding her lengthy ugliness, and mak ing a snatch at the table. Poor weak headed thing, full of foolish cunning; always doing wrong, and knowing that it is wrong,but quite unable to resist tempt ation ; and then profuse iu futile explan ations, gesticulations, mouthings of an "Ohl—oh I—oh !—" so pitiably human that you can only punish her by laughing at her, which she does not at all like. One cannot resist the fancy, while watching her, either that she was once a human being, or that she is trying to become one. But at present she has more than one habit to learn, or to recollect ere she become as tit for human society as the dog or the cat. Her friends are, every human being who will taße no tice of her, and a bautiful little (ivaz upita, or native (leer, a little larger than a roe, with great black melting eyes, and a heart as soft as its eyes, who collies to lick one's hand ; believes in bananas as lirnily as the monkey ; and when she can get no hand to lick, licks the hairy monkey for mere love's sake, ;did lets it ride on her back, and kicks it oll'. and lets it get on again and take a half turn of its tail round her neck. and throttle her with its arms, and pull her nose, out of the way when a banana k coining; and all out of pure love; for the two have never been introduced to each other by man ; and the intinutcy between them, like that famous one between the horse and the hen, is of Nature's own snaking up. The comments of the author on Ine condition of the islands whose natural beauties aflbrded such exquisite delight to every sense, present many original suggestions, and on the whole, allowing for the intensity of his impressions, and his inclination to paradox, are of an in structive character. But the strength of his book, as well as its peculiar cliann, consists in Isis discriptions of the ani mal and vegetable life, in the luxurian t wealth of which he revels with all the ardor of a vehement poetical nature. The reflections, however, with which he closes the volume, show that his eye was not satisfied with seeing, nor the hun ger for Western travel assuaged. The mighty appetite was still upon him, and he could scarcely resist the longing to ascend the Oronoco, explore the re cesses of the Andes, and behold the wonders of Cotopaxi and Chimborazo. But he plucks up heart of grace and wisely resolves to return to his home duties, with the same content of spirit as " most brilliant of old ladies, who boasted that she bad not been abroad since she saw the apothesis of Voltaire, beforce the French revolution, and did not care to go us long as all manner of clever people were kind enough to g instead, and write charming books about what they had seen for her." Elephants. ASh p 'Load roll Ott fr Ceylon o New York. The New York papers give an account of the arrival in that city of ten elephants front Ceylon. They were brought on Saturday to the foot of Thirtieth street, :North River, on board the bark Nehe miah (tibson, Captain Smalley, which arrived after a four months' voyage from Ceylon. The reporters, of course, visited the vessel, and in talking with Captain Smalley about the elephants, he fur nished the following account of the trade in those beasts in the East In dies: ' If you want to buy elephants cheap in Ceylon," said the Captain, "you niust go to your hotel, throw yourself back in a chair, stick your thumbs in your vest, and say I want to buy some elephants. The native deal ers will seek you out eagerly and tell you yarns about the line beasts they have on hand for your consideration.- Stroke your chin musingly and tell them to fetch along the elephants for inspection, and they will do it. If you want one you will be shown a hundred. The elephants aboard my vessel, how ever, were bargained for at the jungle. They are all line beasts and no mistake. They were all trapped in the jungles of the .Nrannalt District, in Ceylon, and all of them,with one exception, a chap of thirty years of age, were freshly caught and wild. The one referred to had been about two years in the custody of the native dealers. "We received the elephants at Co lombo (Ceylon), and the beasts were got on board by means of canvas slings and ropes and pulleys hung from the rigging and main-sail boom. Eleven of them in all were safely stowed away be tween decks. Forty-live natives were employed in the work of hoisting and lowering them aboard ship. This num ber was more than was needed, but labor is cheap in Ceylon, and I thought I might as well have enough of them while I was about it. " I made good preparation ior them : I had stalls built of teak wood, strong strong enough on all sides to resist a pressure of 2100 pounds, and so con structed as to keep each animal in his place and securely separated front the others iu the roughest weather. We sailed on the :2lith of March, and expe rienced the best kind of weather until we reached the Cape of Good I lope. We had some little trouble and anxiety about the elephants. Most of them got sea-sick, which was manifested in their refusing either to eat or drink for sev eral days, but they soon got over their qualinishness and were ablo to eat as heartily as when on dry land. At the Cape of Good Hope we began to have r0ti..1.11 weather. We had three terrific gal.,: while rounding the Cape, and the rough weather continued from the 14th to the :221 of May. We all felt a great deal of anxiety about the elephants, who sometimes set up a fearful roaring, but luckily the bark weathered the gales successfully, and the elephants, thanks to the excellent precautions taken to fasten them securely in their stalls, caine through it uninjured. As I showed you when below, there were the two iron ring-bolts driven and riveted into the sides of the vessel, and the strong bar of teak wood well lashed to the front of the stalls. '• Well, sir, in rough weather we need to tie their hind legs to the ring-bolts, and the beasts would themselves wrap their trunks around the wooden liar be fore them and hold fast, and in this position the waves might toss the ves sel as much as they pleased but they couldn't throw the elephants their feet. Sometimes, to be sure, an extra ordinary lurch to one side or the other of the craft would throw the elephants buck up against the deck overhead, but this didn't happen often enough to give them much annoyance. ‘Ve put in at St. Helena to take in a fresh supply of water, and to get some green feed for the beasts. We took in soun gallons of water there and treated the elephants to a feast of green grass, which they eat with a hearty relish, and showed in their elephantine fashion the liveliest gratitude to those who fed them. They used 25,100 gallons of water on this pas sage, and eat up 125 bales of hay, aver aging 275 pounds per day, which food was in addition to two bushels of gramm and paddy; the last rolled up in the furor of little balls or cakes, and fed to them from the hands of their Singhalese keepers. "Every individual on board would oc casionally give them a sea-biscuit, which was esteemed by the elephants to be a great luxury. We selected names for some of the elephants on the voyage, which I suppose they will always retain. One of them was known as 11(11'13(10y. This animal was the king elephant of the crew of them. He belongs to what the natives call high caste, and all the other beasts were afraid of him. He was, without doubt, with the exception of another high caste elephant that was my favorite, and whom [ called Nehe4 miah Gibson,the most knowing creature in the whole lot. Mandoy was every. body's favorite, and I believe he will make his mark in the States. Another one that we called Rajah was the largest animal among them, and weighs 2000 pounds. Then there was the baby elephant, only eight years old and weighing 800 pounds. The elephant that died on the passage had everything done to save him that was possible, but nothing would avail." On Saturday the elephants were land ed. The arrangements for hoisting the animals from the bark to the pier were ropes and pulleys fastened in the rig ging, and canvas slings. There was no trouble in landing the first three. The fourth one was the elephant called Man doy. This brute became quite unruly before the sling was fixed, and roared and threw his trunk about in a rage.— The men handling him became fright ened, and the 'captain went below and finally succeeded in pacifying him. He was finally trapped, and as he was haul ed up and suspended in the air lie flap- - ped his big ears, worked his huge lep, and threw his trunk around wildly.— When he•landed on the pier he show ed some signs of rage at the jeering crowd who were looking on, and at the same time the•three elephants already landed broke from their fastening to a post on the pier. The animals were all secured again, and were led Mr toward the depot of the Hudson River Railroad, and they were lodged for the night in a yard in connection with the stables of that railway, on Eleventh avenue. On Sunday morning, about 9 o'clock, it was made known that, they would leave that place for the railway station between Ninth and Tenth Avenues; and a large crowd assembled. SOOll the largest gates of the stable were thrown open, the elephants marched out, and the distance to the depot was soon ac complished. Five large produce cars were drawn up for their reception near the passengers' platforimw h ich was sur rounded bya number ofemployees of the Company, and a few favored outsiders who gained admittance at the entrance e. The arrangements for moving the an imals from the platform to the cars were very simple. Strong planks were laid down from the platform to the cars, and the cars being only a few inches higher than the platform, the incline they had to ascend was very slight. Two were placed in each car, and then• we very little trouble hi getting the first four couples into the first four cars. The re maining couple consisted of the baby elephant, and the largest one in the troupe, called Itajah. After some little difficulty the baby wins got in, but Rajah seemed determined not to enter his new domicile. He roared and threw him self about when it mac attempt( to pull and push him in by Mrce. tic would not stir an inch. Presently lie made a sudden dart in the opposite detection to whit•h he was wanted to go, dragging the Melt who were holding the rope Willi 'din. lie had not proceeded far before two of the keepers Managed to get before him, and by the aid of their spears stopped him. Ile was brought back, and reached the door of the car, when he suddenly turned around and repeated his previonsumnieuvre. Again lie was brougl it hack, but blows from the sticks and spears could not make the unruly and obstinate bruteenter the cars. At last Captain Smalley suggested that the baby should he brought out of the car again, with the idea that whe a t Ra jah saw it come out and re-enter lie would follow it. After a little coaxing and a sop tf sponge cake and sugar candy the Captain's idea had the de sired effect- feeling every inch of his way, and not moving more than one Melt at a time, Rajah at last walked into the car. No sooner had his feat been accomplished than trusses of hay and barrels of water were placed in each car, the barrels being screwed to the sides tind bottoms. The Superintendent of the line also ordered a carpenter to !more several holes in each car two inches in diameter, in tinder to give the ani mals plenty of air. A baggage and mts senger car was furnished for the keepers tool others, and soon after they were loaded a powerful engine was attached mint the train started oll' on its special journey. A story of Western Hanging Several years ago, when the West was a comparatively new country, an indi vidual presented himself at the door of a log grocery in the settlement of which we write and asked if there was a judge iu the place. Clam being informed that the storekeeper himself was a judge, the stranger proceeded: " Well. Judge, you see the facts of the case is this: I was travel lin' idong With a pardner down here a piece, as he showed me a silver dollar which he had. Well, I wanted the money, and when he wasn't looking I popped hint looter the ear with toy pistol. Then I took his silver :mil tobacker and cum along alone; hut I got to thinking the matter over, and I don't think I did just the right thing to pardner. My con shuns has been troublin' me, and I think 1 ought to be hung. Now, Judg,e, if it wouldn't be too much trouble, I'd like to have you try me and have me hung. IC you doubt the facts in the ease, there's the dollar I took from my pard ner, and you'll find his remains down the road a piece under a log. I'll feel obliged to you, Judge, if you will ilaVe Ille hung." The Judge told the stranger to make himself comfortable over at the hotel, until he could send some men down the road and investigate the matter, and if they found the body he would call a jury and try the stranger as he was de sired. The dead man being found, the Judge summoned a jury, and sent word to the stranger at the hotel, that if he would step over to the store, they would give him a trial. The stranger appeared immediately, shoal: hands with the Judge and jury, invited the court to take a drink, and appeared grateful and satisfied with the proceedings. The trial proceeded sbcially, and the tender-hearted jury brought in a verdict of guilty of manslaughter in the first degree. A look of anxiety, which the stranger had worn up to this bole, faded front his face as he stood up to receive his sentence. " You have been found guilty," Said the Judge, " of the crime of manslaughter, for which you are un doubtedly penitent." Here the stranger again began to get anxious and uneasy. • AlOl if," proceeded the Judge. " it meets with your approbation, we will try and hang you next Sunday morn ing, at 11 o'clock A. M. In the mean time try and make yourself as comfort ably at the hotel as possible." The stranger looked a little sad, and the Judge asked him if he wasn't satis fied If there wa,4 anything he could do for him "Judge, hate to be particular and fussy," said the the stranger, " but having the agcr and fever, the chills come on at pi o'clock in the mornin" and if you could have me swing pith be fore that I should feel obliged." "Of course," said the Judge, " we al ways respect a party's feelings. No trouble at all. Come around at 9 o'clock and may be we'll get through before church time." Sunday morning nt o'clock the stranger came out of the hotel and pro ceeded to the grocery. There he met a deputation of citizens, one of whom threw a lariat over the limb of a tree, and, as soon as the stranger had taken a chew of tobacco and shaken hands all round, they hauled him up. " There, My Dear, I'll leave You." A correspondent at Long Branch tells the following good story: The wife of a gentleman at our hotel tells a good story at her husband's ex pense. It is well understood that they did not live amicably together, but evi dence of this is rarely seen in public.— The other evening, when taking their usual drive—they are both high spirited and hard to curb, and when their tem pers are aroused there is no c•outroling them—one word brought on knottier, when the husband said: " You csrTil drive me mad." I should call that admirable driv ing," retorted the wife. lly !" exclaimed the husband, " if you say au other word 1 will drive down into the sea." They were then near one of the roads, in the vicinity of General Grant's cottage, that leads down to the beach. " Another word !" screamed the Indy. "Drive where you please," she added, " into the sea. I can go as deep as you dare to go any day." He became furious, took her at her word, and drove the horse and vehicle into the ocean. They began to swim. He held in, looked into her face, and she laughed in his. " Wily do you stop? " she demanded exultingly, exhibiting not the slightest alarm. n You are a devil ! " he exclaimed, turning the horses about, making for the shore with all expedition. '' Pooh ! pooh!" laughed the torment er. "Learn from this that there is no place where you dare to go, where I dare not accompany you." "Even to . "The only exception," she answered, with a chuckle. "There, my dear, I leave you." She had conquered. The pair returned to the house, and the only evidence of anything extraordinary having occur red was the appearance of the poor horses. The lady repeated the story to one or two female friends, and of course, such things are too good to keep. The Salt Lake City Councils have ap pointed a committee of prominent Mor mons to arrange for the reception of President Grant on his, westward tour next month. NUMBER 31 Ellen Ca•ey. the Female Plekpoeke who was Shot. Mooring the New Fork Strange Story. Number 271, in the album at the Police Headquarters, known as the Rogues Gal lery, is the photograph of a full-faced handsome woman, about thirty years of age. The picture is labelled "Ellen Mall vil le, pickpocket." Superintendent Kelso, sitting in his office the other evening, said: I was the first to arrest her in this coun try. Tom Dusenbury and I were at Long Branch races, and we gave her anti her man a dead tumble. Her real name is Ellen Coffey. She was born in Liverpool, and was arrested there for thievery. After serving for it she came hero and found a companion in George Sin ith,the pickpocket. She afterwards discarded lion and sought the friendship of dim Casey, the burglar, who was shot at Twenty-sixth street and Sixth avenue by John gcl'ormick, another burglar, durino '' a quarrel over the spoils of the robbery or the Philadelphia National Bank. - . On Casey's death Ellen became a widow, and hail to look around to support her two children. These, a boy and a gFrl, she al ways supported in the most eXpensi ve way, sending them to a figthionalile school in Lexington avenue, and dressing them in the most costly garments. She 1110 a suite of beautifully iurnisbefl rooms atiltUl Eighth avenue, and later her predatory expedi tions during the day, spent her evenings there with her Family. tin the morning of the tCih she did not 'end her children to school, but handed Leto over to a 150111a11 01.111pallit , 11 of hers, vith direction that they should be kept at nom©, saying: " I'm going out to inako some money." " You'd better not go, there'll lit shoot ng," WaS thin NVOlllall'S "tilt," replied Ellen Casey, "there'll hen big crowd nu IV street, letsnl'rhaurr., and there is shooting I can R. t 1411111,1 14 , 1110 Ono else." - Site went down Eighth :tvenuo and reach ed Twenty-fifth street, itUer elitaning out live different pocket-books. While stand ing at the strider of the street she was shot in the thigh, and taken to Mount simo Hospital, and the surgeons declared that the only rlcun•e for her life was the annul tatitin oilier leg. This operation was per formed. Yesterday Nlrs. (licit' coati asked what ito would do in the future to support her hiking]. A viirlowi smile passed over hid lt!fl, and she said: uppose; that will be ; but I van gel cone one to stall for tile, ittol I guess I eau tke a trick or two yet." The following is taken front the New York .Xun Yesterday the Francis Nolan Association of Williainsburgh started on their first an nual excursion to Meyers' trove, Staten Island. The weather was unpropitious; nevertheless, over I , JUU persons embarked i/11 tiro steamer I.,rtnlutw and Irvin Larger. The storm prevented tine party front land ing. In the afternmn, bet 'I and r, o'clock, when they were preparing for home, the storm raged furiously. T. pro tect the barges from the rain, the eallVaS stiles were lowered. This offered greater resistance to the rain and wind, and des ;lie the exertions of the steamer, which as placed between the barges, they were riven ivzround nt Mariner's Ilarbur, below Elizabethport. Both the steamerand barge Durant were soon imbedded in the sand. 'file barge I lasket ;vas now free. Driven by the wind and waves she was tossed upon the steamer, inal on freeing herself, NV 1, again thrown with greater fiffee against her. Aboard all was excitement, women and children &creaming and men hurrying to and fro, Gbileavoring to allay the excite ment. The lower decks of the barges were swept b the sea, anti all had to gather on the upi ir decks. Mr.. :ones Keating, President of the As sociation, assisted by some of the members, succeeded somewhat in quieting the mul titude. In order to show that there was no ,1311ger, Mr. ratriCk Dlerghnn anti Mr. Thompson jumped over into the marsh and tramped through the tall grass tD lirm ground. Their example was soon folbnv ed by shout twenty young men. Seeing that the steamer was powerless, the captain sent ono or the deck hands ashore with or- tiers to get a tug to come to their assistance. When it was seen that then() was not much danger of being drowned, the cry was raised that the barge flask et would smash tde long to piers.. Mr. Meoghan and others of the party who did not arrive in Williatushurgh until a late hour last night, say that that is the only danger, and nal which in all likelilaHml will.a•itr. The torn, he says, was fearful, the wind bblw ng in hurri,anes, and large seas sworping .rver the lower decks. Tho (leek hand who was sent WIL, Unable n get a boat before I o'clock this morning. suffering of the women who wt re ite anlipanied by their children W 11.4 intense. Alderman Nolan, Mr. I,bert Anderson, Fire Commissioner Brown, Mr. Mark Fer mi!, and the members of the organization, were indefatigable in contributing to the comfort of the women and children. They went on shore, and after tramping for milts irocured necessaries from the farmers. In Williamsburg!' the wildest excite ment prevailed, those wino had friends and relatives aboard rushing about making in quiries concerning the extent of the leis- A LONG ISLANDER'S \VIM Far Rockaway owes iLs past and present popularity as a watering place to Richard Bainbridge. 110 was the proprietor of the extensive Pavilllon which Wits destroyed by tire about eight years ago, on the site of which ho erected a lll:tuber of cottages, all of which are now occupied by New York lawyers and brokers. r. Itain bridge Wits a very peculiar man, and of very eccentric disposition. lie amassed great wealth in England, where lie left his wife and son, and emigrated to America. Ile married another woman soon atter arriving in New York, with whom he lived for several years, but for some unexplained reason they separated. Mr. liainbridgethen took under his protecting wing a third woman, with whom lie lived until the time of his death. Ile left a will, in which he be queathed the greater part of his wealth to his last eompanion. It is thought that the testament will 110 contested by his conned wife, who is now living in Brooklyn. lie met with a severe accident last Spring, from which Id, never fully reentered, and on Sunday death ended his suffering. The Brelllng Interest—Beer as a 'rem permit, Beverage, h e. The report of AI r. Louis Schaile, of Wash- I . ington, who WWI appointed by Commis sioner Pleasanten to make an ullirial re port or the (leer-Brewers' Convention, held iu Pittsburgh early last mouth, has re cently been filed in the Internal Revenue Bureau. It touches on every subject con t erning LIM interests of brewers, and gives some interesting statistics relative to the amount of business carried 011 in that branch of trade. It states that the Beer- Brewers' Association extends over every State in the Union, and that they receive support (rout their friends in all sections of the eon n try. The Beer-Brewers' Congress, which is to be held in Dresden on the 27th of the month is expected to be largely rep resented from America, and as the 1 tengress that was to es roe Off I ant year was postponed on account of the war, business of great importanee to the Brewers' professien is expected to be transacted. The Brewers announce their intention of renewing their efforts to decrease the tax on fermented liquors, and they ad curate th at the interests of the country require that the taxing of malt liquors should entirely cease. They claim this exemption on the ground that malt liquors are known as temperance beverages, nourishing and healthful, and that by the aliclition of the tax thereon the government would benefit the people and assist the cause of temperance. They regret that the I' tilted Status has paid so littleattention to the col lection or correct and trustworthy statis tics relative to their trade, and claim that the want of such information in Congress, and of the appreciation of the necessity of the same, is the principal cause of the present unequal and consequently unjust taxation. They as:fort that they are the heaviest taxpayers in the country, the taxes paid by brewers for the fiscal year ending June fie, hsi 1 , being over $7,3011,000, or about 30 per cent. more than last year. The re port of the Chief of the Bureau of Statistics on the tariff has been prepared, and will be immediately classified under appropri ate headings and sent to the printer. Taking it Dip A seashore correspondent given the fol lowing lively " pen-picture" of a scene which will be familiar to many readers: " It is very amusing to see the various methods in which different bathers enter the water at the seashore. Some run In very boldly with a skip and jump, but are frighteqed at the first wave, and beat a hasty retreat, to be followed by a more cautious advance; some dantte about on the shore in the wildest manner, as if performing a can can, with the ocean for a partner; others walk in deliberately till beyond their depth when they turn on their backs and float quietly along till a wave lands them high and dry among the promenaders. On the shore the ladies trip down to the water's edge in dainty slippers and pretty fancy bathing dresses, and after wetting the head walk slowly and cautiously in, whilst in others it seems to produce the greatest nervous excitement, and they scream and laugh at the top of their lungs, beg to be taken out, and when out implore you to take them back again." The Postmaster-General, on Thursday, received from London the formal arti cles of a treaty for the exchange of pos tal money orders with Great Britain.— The system will go into operation on October Ist, single money orders being limited to $5O each, or £lO sterling. COL. A. K. BIeCLIIRE INTERVIEWED Hie Talk with a Reporter of the New York Herald. What 110 Thinks of the Plltnation 11la Opinion of Grant A reporter of the New York Herald Lad an interview with Col. McClure the other day, of which he gives the following ac count: Cot. A. K. McClure was for many years a leading Republican, and, prior to Grant's administration, was ono of the most active men of his party. It will be remembered that soon alter Grant's election, and before ho was inaugurated, McClure had an inter view with him, whereat the Pennsylvania politician was candidly told that his friend Curtin could not go into the Cabinet. Ever since, McClure has belonged to that class of Republicans denominated by President Grant "disappointed men." In the absence of Governor Curtin, now United States Minister at St. Petersburg, McClure is the leader of the "Curtin faction" in the State, and It is shrewdly suspected that he leis taken a hand in the "new depai tore" move ment, with a view of carrying his faction to the other side, so as to defeat Grant's re election and give Pennsylvania to the De mocracy. Of coarse , Ito still claims to be a Republican, but he makes no secret of the fact that he is opposed to the re election of Grant. - . " What do you think of tho ' now de parture' Movement unini red. "Well, sir, there is more In it than some ieople are disposed to concede. It means nischiel to the Republicans, especially if hey renominate ti runt." • "W hat do you think ol'ti rant's .•Inuieo.4 or re-nomination and ro-eleetion V '• Well, I think ho will probably bo re lominated ; but hk ro-election is allot her question... DO you think ho will carry Ponnsyl vania?" " Doubt fu 1. Tho truth is, Grunt has very hide hold upon the masses of the Repu bli am party. Outside the office-holders nobody 'aims to care much about loin. When he omen fur in . vhutce, thorn in't a dozen leading Republicans ever call mon hint. They don't sewn to pay any tdention to him. When he Was here the tel time I think he stopped with "rimy' reael, a Democrat, and went around With loorge W. Childs, another Democrat. Si itr as the State is concerned, Cameron runs :rant, and you kwon• that's enough of h ell to damn him. Cameron has no strength with the masses of the pooplo. When Inc gels into a Convention or the Legislaturo, ho can manage to carry his point; hut WO all know how he does it. Cameron has ab solute control here, now, because 0 rant has placed the wholo patronage of the Stale in his lianils. (II course ho will carry the delegation from tins Stale for I:rant. in the Convention." =Si "'rho Rcpu blicnns, c‘dgnoi, don't seem It, have any other but daunt?" I'o mu that is very sii2nitleant. I have an idea that they wilt !laminate him, and then let hint Ito defoatuil, it tivoing to 111, Lilo only wa:v to got rid of him. If Brant is re-Mooted it will ,oily bo by the most un pardonable stupidity on the part el the Deninerats. I 0 not boon deceived in t; rant. Alter he vn worked both for his nomination and elec. tion—l said to a number of our leading Re publicans, 'Wu must go to work and elect this ; but I tell pill in advance there ain't a man of you will over reap the fruits of the victory.' Washburn° was standing by, and he said, ' I pledge you lily \Nora that if timid is elected be y ilo the square thing. Now I know the loan, and I tell you he will never allow Simon Cameron to run him.' I replied, ' Politics :mud the war have bankrupted mu, and I rant afford to take any place; but I predict that Cameron will run Grant, and not it man will v,et anything except, through him.' \Vasillesrii then tutu! there promised that if rant WaS elected ho would in I Curtin in he Cabinet. - l'itTlN To TAKE A HAND IN 'HUE NEXT CAMVAION. "Is Curtin yenning Immo, ('elonel ?" "No, net tints Slimmer, except they recall I wish they would recall hint. inn Noun be bonne, though, inn time to take a 110111 iu the 110 X t. Presidential oleetien." ••linty does he stand in tine State?" "lle stands well with the people. Curtin is really the reprementattive man of his party in the State. In a con test between hint and Cameron before the people, Cameron would be beaten out of eight. Curtin, you know, tvtle twice elected Governor, right in the eeth of Cameron. Ho was declared the dioiee of the State for Vice President in sOS, against Cameron's wishes, and lie is he strongest Wall in the State to-day heron. he people. , • "Whoa side will he Lake?" "That I till not prepared to state. lln vill hardly play into Cameron's hands, hough." "Some Itepublicans, Colonel, mien' ti Link Mitt this "now departure" move mint sell! demoralize din Democracy and veaken them in the Presidential cant- That isjust Where the Republicann make a mistake. There may be some growling at first., but you will find when election day cantos around every man who is 111/W :1 Delllool - 1a Will vote the straight Democrat ic ticket. Sc, they will not use ally votes. Now, by accepting the situation, they hold out inducements for 111011 W1101110;0 hither to Voted With the Republicans, for the reit- Sena I have already stated, and Ivho are dissatisfied fir indifferent to the present administration, to join their ranks. 'chore is no telling bow many votes they will get from this class,'' 111=1 EMEEIMEI " ('ould the Democrats carry the city of Philadelphia, Colonel?" " They have the votes to do it if they could only get them counted, but you nee the election machinery is in the hands of the Republieans, and they out count the Democratic votes or ma, just as they dense.,, "Po you think the Republicans will carry the State this Fall?" "I doubt it. There is a great deal of in difference among the Republicans In Penn sylvania towards Grant, and they don't care much how it goes. Besides, the Dem minas will Make a tremendous effort," " Well, Geary is a candidate for the Pres idency, I understand, on the Labor Reform Platform. There are some people who aliect to sneer at Geary; but I tell you he is no fool. Ile hew more shrewdness than seine of those who talk about him. lie had himself nominated for ilovernor last time, in spite of all opposition, :mil was elected. The leading Men of the party didn't want hint then, and most of them would have been glad at his defeat. Ile beat the whole party. A man who can do that In our Stale is nobody's fool, and he's not to be laughed at." RELATIONS WITH ORANT. " Have you had any relations with Grant since he became President. " None whatever. I discovered at the beginning that he intended to gn back on the men who elected him, and I didn't want to have anything to do with him. I had two interviews with him after he was elected, and before he was Inaugurated. The leading men of our State grit together, and we concluded that if we wanted a Cabinet officer wo had better ask It. The question was, who would go and see Grant. They all seemed afraid of hire. At last I said, 'l'll go; some of you had better go along." Finally, colonel Forney was selected, and wo went to Washington. We wore well received, and Grant said he would consider the matter. lie assured tne on that occasion that in any event Cameron should not control the State or its patronage. My second visit I made alone. I carried a letter from Judge Read of our State to Grant. which I afterward learned contained a strong aopeal in favor of Governor Curtin going into the Cabi net. The result of that interview appear ed at that time in the newspapers, though I was represented as urging the claim of Curtin upon Grant, when, in fact, I did nothing of the kind. When I handed hiin Judge head's letter be looked at it, and, as I was alamt to depart, be said, 'Wait minute, Colonel ; this letter relates to a matter of which I want to talk with you.' That Was the first I knew of the con tentA of the letter.' Then followed the conversa tion, wherein he informed um, that under no 1;i rcu nuitances would he appoint Curtin ; and 1, in, turn, gave him a piece of my mind." A St. I.nntlry Annelle The Opelousas Journal says : It Is said that Mr. Lastio Dupre, of this pariah, owns about twenty thousand head of cattle,. ranging river the greater part of southwest ern Louisiana from Bayou Teche on the east to the Sabine river on the west, and from Bayon Chieot on the north to the Gulf on the south. 11 is principal vacherie Is on the Bayou Nezpique, al out 30 or more miles west of Opelousas, on the line between this parish and Calcasieu. Ills agent or stock keeper, residing at his vacherie, is a col ored man, who has been in his employ for many years, and in whose honesty and ability he has implicit confidence. Tim colored man is said to bo worth about $15,- 000, made in Mr. Dupro's service. From this stock of cattle between two and three thousand calves are branded every year. The stock-keeper Is compensated for his services at the rate of fifty cents In silver for each calf branded, and this is the great est or only expense Incurred In raising the cattle. The entire stock is not worth leas than $200,000. The annual revenue de rived from the yearly increase, cannot bo less than $15,000, clear of all expenses—it is probably much more. Mr. Dupre, like many others, lost a large fortune by the war in other property; but this stock of cattle has kept him rich. And no man better deserves his good fortune, which is simply the result of his industry and good management, than he; for no man is more honest and few as kind-hearted, charitable and willing to relieve the suffering as Mr. Lastie Dupre. The Amazons An English surgeon In the service of the Commune writes, respecting its last hours, as follows: "Just as the Nationals were retreating a battalion of women came up the street at a trot, and, with cries of 'Viva la Commune,' began firing. They wero armed with the Snider rifle, and hred admirably. Many pretty looking young girls were there, destined, no doubt, for far better things than killing men. They fought like devils, far better than the men, and I had the pain of seeing fifty-two shot down, even when they had been surrounded by the troops and disarmed. I saw about sixty men shot at the same time as the women, at the sama • time."