The New York Herald Newspaper, June 3, 1872, Page 3

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NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 3, 1872—TRIPLE SHEET. 3 ‘must have been a terrible shattering of all he wi the sensation. These same letters established Mf enteen years old he saw Franklin’ ; shipped. At that time James Gord ‘whoa Bennett's tation as a light lance amo! ‘anklin’s autoblography, @ his .o t and errand boy; he tookf™as much for not writing them. When every. JAMES CORDON BENNETT, fvovat the present aration knew. as'e0 the host of fife, and he found a ready yale 10F which inspired: him to take care of himself, He! 1 ite “there. -wes of ‘oash, and he ‘had ly “except the public functlensiries was tie —_ iracerted Doetry and the love stories which flowed ted the scene of Scott's novels, and, while long- ee to ge a bell. oe oe of + at in the Grand Duke the Hsrauo fol- ed Paved i 80 pulseless, BO ‘was an ardent, from fellow, with unit pen di leigure hours. By these exer- 1 had no origi- him up and told how~he held his toh Tomantic Be a i he Te RE Re Boy Kuiorica she 'money report. He reported Ml when he shot A buftain gall, "Some editors Called trust. Napoleon’s downfall seems to have twelve dollars a week, and was an object of ad- jevery' minutely. When he was burned out @ that foolishness; butit served even more purposes: Tho Metropolitan Press on the Founder strong eect upon him; tor shortly after the retire. (lm and-envy. to other reporters who. had ‘and robbed he began again in another celiar, Here f™ than that of gossippiug about the one man Wl Ment to Elba he went to the Oatholic Semin: n him in New York. }wae @ Carlylean he: pod. some ee ‘Was uppermost in the curiosity of the peopie. It if . of the N Y k Aberdeen to be educated as a priest, There ‘ great idea, he returned to New York My fous one, Even , Who wrote a book full of M convinced the, army ener of the HeRALD’s en- lew York Herald. icked up a little Latin, enough to be able to upon General Webb, the proprietor of about everything tithe: world except only i ferDrive; It edavinced the ‘Grand Duke that, there # Ping i the original, and to quote him on oe of uniting it with the MM tand the LD, hints—boldiy for. it be great papers in America; and the 7% in life in the columns of There also fa < ‘anced with so much foree that} he learned to write and te ly carried. These were the Hit . = Shearer neg ee enna nt ta site We reproduce from the city journals of yesterday @ put the most important partothis ppg? spalmy days of that ik pare Hie ee ears: oe he wait, tnererere, rea aie ee | 2 the Bz. a cirewation was con- influence on is d enorm< of Boclet; atatues gauge on. hapa if therefore, ascrib ft inf the following editorial comments on the death o b the poten m tas foture ute wrere conoerne®, = right to read the then on ima time of extraordinary friendanip or of ex Mr. Bentiett and the sketches of his life and what @ Bennett & poetic temperament, wi T ‘that -it’ printed’ 8,600 copies ‘datly. “And it to try to find the proseiven editions#Ordinary complications between ~ Russia he has done for pf many other young men, he mistook for co: m aaver isin sound. From 1620 ta ieee ett Fe. avon othe hay "who Amerionn “overnmens “and” pone, “veceuse Journaftsm: We give them as po ity, and there can be ute doubt that bis beler MME Ine Fear Found. | From 182 to 1882. Bennett ro- hing oF ‘putifag’ neat’ Ir 'by. cotulaered anual ae” wee ceeael f ined with Senators ueni 8 : lashed, without reference to the inaccuracies and Ht Ris Bemtuary, te eciect cao nete ‘ire fy and ‘on the friendilest terms with Van Buren. The b mo ite ste cavaleade marel int ly SpParelied camels, wi errors inseparable from such notices. criticising preachers. and il fa ac d fi ith banners ed in reds and yellows, paps, earned how an edit a ws people Ver, at Beoat-of $10,000, a lost -EDPTORIAL COMMENTS. ihe Ganied. walle Nem Toeing..eeve: 3 and, like Shakespeare, ne was talking sof™ man whom the’ world by he . SS ir J ttore had the Patvonlatig a that ne. d the cro’ Those who had a prise—not steer jean) nerd meee: ite ‘araing how to make tlon. Hl cent- rorust of soclety—were delighted to jm conservatis! make the HERALD [From the New York Times.] aorind the a st Wont to Charl O, ‘fin bthat,could describe in E) ih what iio ay eg and tn the Kast, and refexiy in Ameri@s.| "The founder and chief manager of the New Yoru aie tanon on battles, and 8 Very fog poten re Court that city. ag the ia "otis, Wan. 4 og ae mba — ars Jae oe Ce a encor Onl by = ‘wae r q 0 ‘e Baaixp's dead. It was owing to tho bard work Mevitable., In Dockry where wag & bright galas : : ; volutlonary news. Je scems that I Carly telling of ‘it, whion makes all ‘the M™ HxnaLg sm,” IEA “will uot be defeated; id > ‘and steady application of James Gordon Bennett een ete, prr an» cheats Me "at to gall out tenea to. board: , it Smith did not want theM#it continues act on the principle Benne! E that the newspaper with which hisname is so closely itive poems, which appeared in the e nel “ews ct which he ward o ke < Bicmry a No loot qe Phliaeippia “ edt “5 sablecg identified the tion which it pies, ff Stire county paper and still-born upon iene i aid to remember. At Charleston] re raat Ipout. But the HERALD gy Ww rome erybod: what everybody wants Ho oarriea tuo tndomitabie cuorgy and resolve witigg PubWo. ear, then vibrating to’ tho im , i to advocate | non-tn' z in-those ola ties suytuing but sentiment and vance of tho peoples Heit wil, with comsuunmeta Characteristic of his countrymen into all that he fq 2'rains of be a by the } Hilo volley “Let it alone,” An: f fact. is, Bennett Sense nalbee adroitnc ah ky Ry did, and the measare of success that he cared he gg tis, wonderful, Shelley; and, spell-bound by. the igentioman. at A ,, WhO worked. slongaida| ! ngO. (0, aay ho aki phot: the: Ticgast “awe wok roneetny eRe Cole yond these ¢ oe A et aetna eal afronstic and he” did meant things—tie litnatp. will know no. ‘limit may bac Hany to have deserved, He | a the New York Preas attain a degree fig bee he did nothing. His Feicereny active mind, low q of in earl: if condemned to enfor and Be has loft betta a ce news y atles: Bl for two years. when twonty years of age, which ® striking testimony to the Pala his darkn affords material of the last thir are. edition of ography’? Buccesstul journalist and man of business ae in Scotiand and fell into his handa tne eneroUs, 6nd, strange to say, he did pot ti pre. to . He was sometimes _ witt and Mts influence in ¥ ORS pee erie X con oe wanting o Poetical; that is, he had Hj eer- mye yole, tempere dy ths Teartler: wontueene. 0 | be are fh tne Button Street Dutch Shareh Som the showed the bruaqies sents neneke! in erg haar, tt hop vennett ey tt ia 0 ‘economy, but soon found that he must MM of Scott; frequently the grotesque fancy ‘of Hyron, influential. ‘This ia, even to think o Pe marvels hack writ the newspapers, The guccess of the HERALD, how: / Sone nt cS aee™® BANE ena Saad Sh tot he hart ha py Mn no ees neh en taping enone ata pda rong ag ice ase d rinter’s boy, friendless and penn! : it, but he shortly restored it to the Ml the alba (am attack on Jj not without hearty sentiment, but with one lost positic Pope 0 hav a [From the New York World.] eee ery, his ren! abilities, from the ro owner, He reported trials, wrote—Mtended as a hugo ~ 6, and that none "ot ine relgin & cellar sss inuneadacaaaplse 09 Bat though we are constrained to be discrim- posi pal criticlams and to be known. satire was ever ing. “He never could un- 43 i ® Jackson democrat, He 5 faithful to his was scn-Miderstand why people took offence at it.” In- inating, let u3 also be just. In the chief function of| (From the New York Sunday News. a after- Mj deed, those who objected to anything in the ir modern journalism, that of promptly supplying the fil mone°%, : oe pened hares epesiened the tions in which he usually returned to it. Personally te was an i James Gordon Bennett, the greatest journalist public with important news on topics of current #™ without imbibing some of the irreligious notions he seengaged ot qe on which Mj tremely shy and modest inan; publicly he sald, I the world ever rod was engaged ceased to support the democratic #™ “We have never been ina minority, and we nover ghana pbb Seenpisen| interest, Mr. Bennett stood not merely in the frat wiich the Philosopher of Ferney seattars so candids Yet Parton sa Wasa man with- Meh Ube age, uas Kept his word. "He concentrated residence, 425 Fifth avenue, at twenty minutes past rank, but at the head of that rank. In worldly moeay olaasion, para caainaen heed pipes ue ote. re 0 pouton. convictions, Le had many charac- fini "4 ties on always giving the best report of the J 1V@ o'clock P. M, ) 5 shrewdness and business sagacity he had no peer fm the hands of youth in Catholic seminaries, Frank- in the profession, either here or in Europe. The gg in, the self-taught, was a friend of the great Vol- vigor and boldness with which he taire, and besides this there was broad under- wi led the way in current of keen practical sense which appealed to Gemenstrating that the first requisite of a success- [the Scotch in: its that he had derived t from his fal journal is a copious supply of fresh, interesting fm 2880clations aud surroundings. There was also an news, almost entitles him to the praise of a dis-gaceotsm that charmed him, and a superficial coverer, aithough the thing ems obviousmSvety that completed the conquest. From that enough’ since demonstrated it by hisg™moment young Bennett dreamed of the New success, All other journals have learned thisi@ World, and looked upon it as the | ore “open secret,” but they would have come to itm theatre whero he was to win fame and es its ever, ” was his motto. ish the success of the MH Of the history of the HERALD from 1435 until now fl US lsedae. Ho wab'selzea with sonie sort of con- pape Cnmmocra party. One of his recent sayings Mwe have. littic materials; nor have ‘we. much fl Vulstons-on Saturday; May 25, but these occastoned, ‘= reg * rtd is so brave that it is just; mae A PT ET g ee te ped or Mino serious alarm. A recurrence of the convulsions! ine: he Was twenty-eight years old Bennett Ml reached twice that number, We believe that t haagl O@ !a#t Monday, Nowever, excited apprehension, remarkal Journalism. It created half that number from among those whom aud from ‘that time he gradually sunk, and on® ndent Ofmwould read nothing but the HERALD. Its ‘Thuraday received tho last sacrament of the Church ‘ork Enquirer, A of Horace Wal- Mi reports races polo’s “letters” hail introduced bas to ooo ae tere ok prize AgRES And horwe races Hl at the hands of Archbishop McCloskey. in with Jackso: and. waa & demo, t affair, in good and on. as to oe with Jackson, and was large pe good: paper. HF It was dimoult to determino the exact nature of 4, - e rohy t inter bod bea eccentric and py style of correspondence, an new a vi rt He i ‘ opens acre bat door "wauld have Cone teatro “where "he was to wi ne eutr 08 , ery pious man who. said that he ‘Was quite conscious up to Friday evening anit ymiiwwa nog wa obey ma en tee oan, onan ay rai oe a f Seve iru cet Bur ace Pe tc eaca arte Madan ames men meray mo our to Yo Tce eminently successful career. He has left his im-j™‘00Ugh America was CS ggieets oh nis oneness; to this, " 41 loan of Ss raes for two years. “Help me to the became he Fach Gulivenk tiamecs teams bons; "and made feeble attempts to articulate ; bus unt ¥ Ly 4 ,”” he sald, “an r. Enquirer n, Wore Miread, although he always did read them. Every- Brea his ustipiow an in ite, United States. a We nin 6 of deare anatire eas the until the begin: eapporting beath " it “iver polly be fc a eae conte’ ; arenas ae ee Bee al tea thing was Ininutely described, arith ‘a detail of tts @ little later he passed into a state of unconsclous- life Of every modern journal. News, news, news; with $25 in his et, @ valise stuffed with Pen 6 way of Grove. os tegen e desert! He was not aman who MM cict: * ler-carrent of 80- fi ness, in which he remained, gradually sinking until all meaas fresh news, at whatsoever cost; fore: fq 004 comfortable clothes, a brain full of poetry, andpg sus made Bennett almost despair. He had iM would lot these effects escape his observation, “In BMldltion vo a payee trey er eee Valuable AAA geath entered upon the scene | ! ht in finding out where thi ‘@ heart that contained @ resolution su) fought so hard for the party that he could not bard dition toa paper that, serves a people who love tol™ ip ie scene last evening. He to take place in any part of the worl interesting Js rebuffs of fortune. There he gave betes poke bear to be rejected by them in this fashion. 2 egy be “ oscar! kere o Soe ies a riod coe ease and dog fights, Be- Passed away quietly, without any outward indica have {t reported and transmitted with tho utmost i keebing for a few weeks just to get acclimatized, andj son | Mumford, he knew, had | been df success or the HEBALD. The: papers of theMM wealtuy by selling tobacco and railwey totes, py UoD Of sudering. nee ae! pe mete eveti one: hour: jn zt possibie to plok iu en Aes “7 perry oe Bat Nfld ie ine nt pln ambit oF Crop and oa days of Jackson were neavy lumbering i whose tas are Tarsentlios who pdontiy tor heme The remains will be preserved in ice until the the maxima which Mr; Benuots, brought invo rorae(m death, he spoke French like a Parisian and English fg 88 much for them, a paltry $2,000, It was gail and Molo ommonpluce® polfeica Seana trv. when BUlatantUasgn OF ia eaSeGR Soo naar oe cree eratere OF is Tamily, who are dew incon & newspaper, and with a success that fy With the broad brogue of a Highlander, From Hail-j™ Wormwood. He wrote toa friend in tho follow! Of that day saw that such was not the method best fy on thelr way home from Europe, in obedience to @ Har cnn ak sorry fra ex Maa ye ate ayes ee eal tha hr Sahu i pares soins goeeei nga eon wes ose ugandan “aamnet do "en frmmmons ty ekeeraph e ey anc e other was Benne’ Bennett for- — e Hs YouTH. Ron dad raises? Mea aa"uiicts ytd mei tpon Ae eve anne a Et npn anon, i edacgen a" founalst nad da cea atta tegerteogege oa ahs man 9nonor, an, fh aneons ay ane Henne rag rh, 4, at ov studied the strength and resources of the countr, e: L eith, Banfishire, Scotland. r have been abies after the great extension off Dut Which may be fairly deacribed as poetic rather fq been completed. He had cut loose from party dis- while Bennett pictured the weaknesses ead. tis Iedaee ta, rammaaDy, Toh ae p widalnba ng Freheh Catholics, At au ey ae crtetaby Bho nical Knowledge, even if Columbus had than poetry. He entered the bookstore of Wells & fm Cipiine, and he revolved to cut loose from party @ manners of the day. Greeley longed for and de-Mfunmistakableness constitute tho vajue of a good fq M42 Catholic seminary, in Aberdeen, with a view f never born. But if we were to deny praise on fm Lily, who ‘liked his demeanor and engaged him, mcltogether. And now, at last, in his teeming brain MM veloped, but Bennett's policy fed him to criticise and i Ate Of taking holy orders, 4 a - artyr of the barricade—a man fl with the gisty head lines. "have been tasteml to the great journalist, race have. done to be a Ittle in advance tude, so lic was transferred to the publishing houso fj ould have no master but the public, and should MM who thought much about the conditions of thin, To thi and at . the eof = fourte he ef 7 of their to selxe improvement ‘by “tho pM of the firm as a ‘proof reader. Aud here he began gg stand by pubite favor So he returned toNewM of uma. sutfering, of ttle children, of poor PM played journal oc clee vac eran oats ds- me speedy ellison % poor layed a journal which seminary, and e ‘ated. to this count 2 forelock, bridle, saddie and mount tt before Mt 8ee With the eyes of the mind and to under-—e York in t 1 eantse Of 1834, after battling with hisBi women, of the laws that enveloped honesty and hee ook cheerful news fe committed Noms shortly ‘afterwards, Tanding at Halifax in 181 : slower people perceived how far it could carrygstand, to observe and to store up for msyloa: for nearly two years, and expend- good; & man with human zeal for better things; af err In very light spirits and with a ver hema Me rack Mr Doone! wan ine Cova a!” ly Bl Mt eg Mood *ttae Abn te eof May aah Renee wit tho aia orf purty, onsonventonal conservative ut uaancr was Sind and courteous une waa Se.cge rapper nee In ae by toacuig. Modern journalism; the first man to put himself suited them. They were refined and scholarly. ‘Wo young printcrs, published the first number off the streets there was none so brave to” mest i iis on Ore rear ne athe ae OIE Boston, A out the ist oe pectin at pe went Om abreast of the new agencies for circulating intelli-fg Naturally the class they appealed to at that gs the morning HERALD, price one cent, It was writ- Ml the ‘enemy beyond the barricade as. Mfe-lovingl more espace sag eta ee tberty that wae tained a altuation in Bosto as proot reader is tuo Bence and to move on the foremost crest of the pg time Was very scanty, even in the intellectual g™ * Dublished and sold in @ cellar in Wall street, Bl Jean Prouvaire, and the last words that came out than if it. Pit een ene mere dangerous to violate Hl printing house of Wella & Lilly. 1 ho ah Wave. For this he will always deserve recogn! “(Hub of the Universe, and bankruptcy was the in- gg Whose sole furniture was a counter, which served ¥ Bs han if it had been called an absolute tyranny, yet Be iy._In 1823 he 4 and although all journaliste have now Yeamnea'cee evitable result, ‘Thelr dhélves were loaded ‘with ad- (8S & desk, consisting of @ plank stretched across hh xr anid the rattle of she muskctry that i there were men around fim who loved nim 86 In- He managed {) attape wD M connectign with} * v were, ‘Long live the fature!?’ We know Im t secret, there is no abatement of his merit. In ail{| ™rable works, far in advance of the age, which(™*¥° four barrels. There was a chair in the centre, Hino oxi more pleasing than that of a man who halle or hie tele wat? eaniee andpe tee , press of this ‘city in that year, and future time public journals will be fewer in num-(g20b0dy bought, while meaner men made fortunes fg 00 Which sat Mr. Bennett, now thirty-eight years o: fights his. own conserva ‘and knows how to be lived by his earnin; 1 ‘ Br atte on treme o conte OLnGae "way Ta at St, Once tarienen atest wing earah nae trareantomactnt~ ecg, Wetletn Gower mal 'as" Haven’ wt “No, Sted fs sian ator of aptamer first requisite for establishing a su 1 news. learned that he who wishes to be known as a pro-(qtisers who had not the faoulty of composition. But M thonghtiul Highlander, a8 pale as death, charmnchl woe ast s Was | 80 certain for some dit wad Lieve he dirse learued the Ides Of oping ee aa bc - phet must prophecy what. is going to happen to-—m 1 that dingy cellar, and behind the chair of that a siaiter ahead/of his collimn. ‘aren y toonetne ang ag Ae Hees eee ete nd board ing ships for news, aad wilck nese rutly let of Mr. Bennett in acoomplish- fg 2°rTow, not what will happen next month or next jm Sturdy battler with the world, stood Success, in-Mlold style of discussion and put, soul invo it. Ben. apolitelan fi coe Sani Mak ot ok Pie aedal Om the HERALD alterward. Not ming Yor! © aignal success ing this revolution, and the rivairy which has grown Pest. He also learned that the man who caters form Visible to the common herd,’ who had neither MM nett despised it, she two were the Progenitors of Bfsutire aud lampoonings and devltries geew tap t eee ake te Charleston. he returned to New mon : among dere the public must have for them what they like, notmeyes to see her radiant form nor ears t f tended to lone it demon ‘ho sole nant ae pee tees ea eee Lae he saw this ‘exemplified in the Sand bg rustling = her wings. The Pa er Picesd wants scious eile Maron, ena in the roe cakgroweripin the eran the ‘ecrat iny tu thal He then delivered lectures tb the ola Butal Bait ine sare cast Sst re hes ui” unio nassed Jono Haker Haakingnane’ fhe ox Bh aper, out pore much ety lato and cher: CuehcaaangDe” Re" Whaat Rowe, ame we oats of Walp leitrk which he ht read ia Mae Ram, as o8 Pouloa eeomony, p> sources and enterprise enable them to give all im-(gs0n ‘id not fall upon @ heedless mind, .and the news. It wi 1 _of short paragraphs, Sa Seep end ; + be plage Of Bick. be or ote wh a Suniay Puper, bul Was Unwuocesatul | ‘tant nows; and ae future journal ‘wsuuther coat Dring ke ment termes 3 arenes be tre rot « journalist, Punky! wn correspondence; besides, hi specu o J “ Brot noni ote rope scat a wes oe ens tre aa Win, oa og, 1 ll, iA ag, at et ose, oa Man ee ae, oy hol Raa py aida | foe ean ‘on the intellectual vigor I drank little, he smoked less, When young i time. ‘The extreme cheapness ofthe paper political debaters whom we have over had. On theMll brought his ready made: He chronicled ea or OF thi V.ittonat ad ‘active, ey Di to the discursion of public questions, and jy "22! le, he smo! jens, en young men Mi ron Gored him absolutely dependent won eo e 5 e ought his ready made. chronicled the weak. Muy Hic, and vehement\yo fe taritt: i the ity, skill and cou with which ‘they fg ered him dissipation he hurled Roman epothegms his * advertiser and y ¢ n° Rated ml [ae tide of a public gathering, in the midst Of dis- Hj nesses and mistakes of politicians with an ease an Hn 1697 b ane counccted. With the New ‘York (2) * art the public mind in needed retorme (at thelr heads. “I eat,” said he to the dumb-—ghis Advertisers, and, yet he dared | hoti™ tracting antagonlsms, he was as calm nnd as fortu-(Mindifference of manner that surprised men whe - went te Waanieee aa te’ out, s ai UW les) . a eC a ‘ eo SCHOO e * po - De ciaracted to road the news in one rather than MM Wien such a temperament saving waa © matter. of tile expenses to, 8 miniinum. | He did every-MM papers, and he was #0 thoronghly the master ofthe qualification "without which’ no Tochuical meted Babe sell kept his copuection with —— ontrary, an open one; but a I. >, carl A [From the Sunday Mercury.) mnoney Was never Wittered away in small. wants| eres Se Sie caceting, eee ae aitorlan, have been preserved for his paper. - Other JM bland smile to his smallest enotay find there ar heneleseeta: ou Washington artis 2 $1 DRATH OF JAMES GORDON BENNETT—cLOsE opfy NEG, Mean habits. So the “slller” stayed by him. on4 "iny” nookkeeping—all, in. fact, that Was fll edessed a bronhen wee etlOn ee tae Menthe oe Te he ate rho remember hus getting struck om do York, aud efter erent trouble ana} Being thus forehanded he resolved to leave Boston e Del eo! 1 fact, that was sessed a broader conception of thé depth f e head with a cane, and hearing him say, as they! 4 a r great trouble and) . AN EMINENT AND SUCCESSFUL LIFE. and visit New York, which, even at thatmcoue. He sat behind his barrels and his plank, Mi human life; Bennett had a keener fancy snd a fur-[Mtenderly wiped the blood from his white) Iyainp arted lis #econd paper and called) | day, had acquired ‘prominence as m-faDiacidly writing, and when any one came for afi ther-reaching genius; Godwin Was more masculine & that that not the first th ve. He was agaln doomed to James Gordon Bennett is no more. He passed aay, hs or on y ee te inf Paper he never looked a but Just sald, “Bat phe and scholarly: Sout none excelled Ra; mont ine Ba hair, at at was no! ie firs ime hi for, Huatwithstanding all bis efforts, 6 ig re- Ma life had been apyed by the direct interpost- . ‘ from this iife yesterday afternoon, quietly and re-Hithe city and presented the {etters of reoommen- jm money on the counter and take one,” fils wor Caton, In advoltnesd, In emergoncles, or in thefMtion of God. ‘fo° thal our aay it - $ lived thirty daw. Defeat appoara signedly, amid the pena surroundings of an#Mdation which he had received from hig old 9m- be Gay Was st ne une nthe hot apirit which, without distracting conventionalities, fMstrange to learn that tlére Were pall ot suck pm only 0 vo Red the effect of ins m with 7 Ee ng, . ployers than he was introduced to the publisher to eight, he wrote editor! his bedroom. Dur- in, in the same ye afiuent home, by his genfus,.tircless indus- Bi PCy rr eston paper_—the Courter--who ening hiss 2 3 5 e < 3S etn fins coualotipidge, Calm in his pg of the elderly man to ve a delusive wis worn for the| Retbepes. iscipline, clear, neat, and thorough in whatever he Mjonly purpose ot Ing tl length of orn! * mitt a. andertook, he Was never #0 severe as to excite dis- fm He} o Woe 8 ogt-fempered man who was the Pa whey me [Meg Be hy edad of Cals 2 trust of his motives, and never go moderate jn his Miquin of his age. Pollticlans were no sooner dona may ge 1834, ie aed hina hao 7 ce ae criticism as to be Vague and unspirited. He was [Mm laughing at and gloating over their neighbors whom—me ‘omort to be ape? Ul tila elk ich gh naturally aman for the fireside, and he published MM the editor had mercilessly dissected, than they Bi wal knowing that thete was wean aumieae @ paper to be read quietly by-ordinary women asf found themselves dragged, without the covering of mdence in store for him if it would succeed. He well as by ordinary men. He never spran; a single fig-leaf, before this high critic of the weak- ih st with disappointment and coldness on all sider upon his ‘readers ‘With sparkling rhetorical ,™ nesses and follies of men, He was predestined Mang Wot! sabi so To ansehing “antl tae echded, surprises; aud while he had a cool, calm#™ sometimes, unconsciously, to spread consternation or ‘May, 1886, when, with Vibe “uid, of 600 70 lay: way of turning @ subject from one side tofMeverywhere, with the swift fatallty of the bird of MO. 10%: Vo tsgued” fed the other, according to the temper of thefMthe Orient, which is fabled to kindle conflagration P gist FIRST NUMBER OF “THE HERALD” hour, as the sunset shows its crimson colors for fair Mfrom forest to torest, by Lhe the Nameé on his a one-cent paper. He had $600 only in his pocke: weather and its grays to the coming storm, he al- splenaid plumage. His style of writing was that Lt bis Gaon Wav a kanil caitat, io. Wall abcOut, aa ways remained the same, sure, steady, careful and#of a French comedy, in which all the characters i desk and counter were a plank, 6u orted on almost indifferent to the loud ‘clamors of frightful Speak as ir they were’ perpetually shrugging ther Hee oie ie oor ald ail the Pasinses, Wiecabile ont times, In the later days Greeley spoke to the—™shouldcrs, It is as clear as air, as colorless as worked Dard end long. dust. as he was. gotein school house and the lyceum, Bennett snow, and he made the bitterest assaults in a man-(M WOrked MAN Bod Ong. el Oe out of che ol to the masses of hurried men, and Raymond ner ag graceful as Hume's. When he chose to be- I Sang dite Sutnr! Y dimmbed,, waaaoen aaverk Ue to the family. To this day the 2riwne—stow a warm and generous compliment he had all jg °° ther, tae ie the 6th of May, 1835, he has quotes history as @ cause, and the HkRaLD—m™the poetry of am icicle. One of his frienda ue Saito Oa Dre ante a tips an iets " uotes it as an illustration, and perhaps the most (i says:—“He had a keen sense of- humor, and en editor wl deackal, ae dnicat distinction that can be made between their was quick to see the ridiculous side of any 0 ix feet and an inch in height, broad shoul- styles is that the Trivune gives intelligence and that [question or person. There was nothing Mf 4, Se ai id of Taton, siWa. _ cate, ae eneel the Hexa.p gives news. Bennett had learned in af Mephistophilean about him.” This is the testimony #00” ich hair ar ponin ee aEE Beanett wae Boston bookstore and in his letters what would MM of a man who sat beside him during a quarter of ajg So wo trast, Reotontie he waa. veaned. on ae take, Greeley did not seem to care whether what [™ century, who opened all hia private letters, and jm Sure to uttenct Attmmaion ts te Wee Panis ili. He he wrote “took” or not, and he was fond of saying, fj knew all the secrets of the office, and never knew pm Street or eg tdacn tanperesan “Trath is as old as the hills.” anything that was bud, and who, when he wasgg nad the alr, if not ot an oe amandand prone ‘While at Washington, in 1828, Bennett was read [iM forever separated from his practical service of the fort racetully. ‘There ‘wore few-certainly none 30- ing Johnson and Leigh Hunt, and if he had the love paper, Tetained so great affection for ne En, ‘1 to study physiology—who could pass him to read them through he could not have been avery@™his old chief that, rather than WE Ottnoue scthuay’ Gad ® deare to know lis same bad man. ‘They must have been an antidote to the: it him, he refus the splendidly Fitiout Whole atinosphere surrounding hin ant fafiuence of John Randolph. - On his return to New Mambitious chair of the editor of the Times. We mm fr ined that he was 4 oaniaol Diath York Bennett suggested to Webb the union of the [have said that Bennett was great in little pangs. nat pe o were of the keenest. grayish-blue, with a Courier with the ‘Bumutrer, Nor was he die among We mean more. He had the faculty of seeing the Tint toate davving, oo eigen the. intensely his old friends, the technical politicians, who, he fm cloud no bigger than a man’s hand, that to-morrow can Sod ex sneak seauied normal t0-che thonght ought for his party services to start a paper fm may cover the whole heavens, though sometimes, whole pe aba Ovat ihem wire two. litte benches for him to edit, But Spe when he had the pationes to picture only the Be sapurer’’ hed Of Joke aray esabrowscoul General Butler could be tnduced to appreciate the Mcloud, men called him mad, and when | the DScaot tn Tenach by. Capea. cb ahs hawanceowttol olicy of doing so, notwithstanding that he was the [storm deluged them they charged him with fa Pace ot 4 ‘ee De. OOM ats Ehadineaeet riend of Senators and a visitor of the President. (causing it. Satanic influences were sup-j ater Rees wnen is, tone ty a aoa cat In the midst of his trials he wrote:—*I am sorely [posed to control the office of the HgRaLD; there fade Mir wae in the lorebiea (Fl mer oes muzzled to know what todo.” The next year [im Were men so enthusiastic in piety as to think they igen | or toms "ae woashaed to the, wine fe souls thirty, and would crystalize. There was) maight do she, world. a rpeaemnnesiog ifs. ob oF Ein. 8 v Pp no journi m outside of t} plitics. A newspaper Mj tor road day ht; was caricatured, eve ry ' cad not known, but Pegs Werd as thick: asi tho Limes, With hoofs and horns} and, speaking of| er Aiaany Sarai taceny eames Pe yo blackberries. Meanwhile he was @ hackwriter forfmthe World, Wilkes’ Spirit ‘and ' the Hrx- jg orlgio, ey “¥ sitoe bloandvania ox pd. es aliving. In 1832 he left Webb because the paper ALD, young Bohemians used to pass about im, on ae the Serta Tae ~ lathes cori would no longer support Jackson. Yet Parton##the Witty saying, over their cnps, that B uc! wine atais OF, ban mreaetn Fh tan, thinks that this sentimentalist had no convictions. Mj we are now journalistically ruled by “the world, eet he ‘i anes a pr ’ eat rr If he had not resigned he would not have been—Mthe flesh and the devil.’ Yet he fot what he jg journal ive on Weed same rehire was t abused, nor have been called “the foreigner,” norfm™ wanted. There came a day when the politicians jm l&ve ona ved Sten tot tol ot grea tenon of have been announced as “anti-Jackson and anti-™™ despaired if this man whom they bad derided and fap than ce ee a oe ee c journal- republican,” nor have been disgusted with the very fm mistrusted would not give them his support. He t it — ry tthe He e attacks upon people he ‘had resigned for. He was beginning (iM determined to have power, but no man set so little jm Mm in the bet! a ne BRALD, We younger not to be credulous, and he had the audacity tof™ value on what {t would bring. When men charged jg Journalists know only by what may be called journ- write, “I was the first editor in this State who inf™him with wishing to see the American flag trailed (i @lstic tradition, 1827 nominated Jackson and Van Baren together. in the mud he advocated the policy of Lincoln, Mi. 1. . y, 4S AN EDITOR. If Imake up my mind to establish a paper I wish#mand when the grateful President offered him the in ERALD office he was prompt, brief and you to understand that I shail ask no man the lib-I— miasion to France, he refused It. He had but one gm energetic as an experienced general in the midst of kn revent ordinary sub) fr ious zeal that they firmly believed the wi courage, for agat we find we So we B Ya ing the business hours he was in the cellar engaged elas i ay ow a sor" ‘ *e PF ey y hite hatr a? The Pennsylvanian, lla ‘ fry and indomitable perseverancé. In him the Mit, make translations from French an jpanish fg {n ordinary routine of editorial work. About one Journalistic profession of the country has lost one off papers. This wasin the beginning of 1823, And peo’clock, having provided abundant copy for the its most conspicuous ornaments, one of its most jy 20W he was at Jength embarked in that. carcer or gg Compositors, he sallied forth into Wall street to . > journalism in whjch pe jas to atta! Sich oininence fm Compile stock tables and to get matter for spicy successful representatives; and we doubt nok that Bland to work sucn changes. ‘Tho editor of this(™Patagraphs. Krom four to six he was at his omce friend and foe, auxe Will hush the emory 0) oer southern parper was, in his way, @ man of enter- again, winding up the business of the day. In the contesis Sad rivalries and join tet orf Prise. He hada inst sailing schooner in which he 4g evening he was abroad—at the theatres, or concert, ot | rivalrieg and. j 8 Pred to meet Vessels many tiles from the harbor tof Pall or public mecting, which were faithfully written Bier gtave. His remarkable career is aM cet their files of newspapers. This was young pp pe anded to the Pies before he went to bright. examplo of what’ tho unfettered freedom Bennett's work. After the French or Spanish Nee oust Cook dia ona Biers Fed oe of may achieve when coupled with intel- {MM vessel had been boarded and the files obtained, hes upon his vit bac ob anti 4a , Mgent individual action. Though not “to thef™mhe ensconced himself in the cabin and worke Dee ee Te TT tikatee Ce manor born,” but coming from the rugged hills of Maway at translating the subjects of interest which sensation, an id he ‘a be repre eres of the Soot’s romantic home, there was, perhaps, in#M™his principal had indicated. This made a deep im- gm Stending among bro ers a vankers, It told them all this country not @ journalist who cntered so™ pression on his mind, and years afterward, when pgJust what Me wanted to Ae ak but what no other into the independent spirit of thei the victory had been Won and the Hrratp became gg Journal had thou bn of a hem. At the end of| < ‘people, and who was possessed to such {Ma prominent paper, he established a steam yacht jm (he third month e recel pee wore dergater than the @degree as he with the almost prophetic gift of [for the same purpose. In Charleston he stayed agg expenditures. But during the fourth month the forecasting changes of public opinion on passing [lm yeat—observant, reticent, but not quite so isolated, jg Printing office was burned down, and the printers, Senta. As a Journalist, he ‘cast, loose Ml for he received considerable attention at the hands(™ U8 partners, Were quite discouraged, and aban: ‘all trammels and shackels of party, endeavor-(M of the wealthy aristocrats of the South, who rel-ggdoned the enterprise. But not Bennett. He felt: ing to give expression to what he concelved and fished his conversation and appreciated his light, that he had touched bottom, and that the worst believed to be the promptings of the popular sarcastic wit. | His wages were, no doubt, not very was over for him. He “raked the HERALD out of the heart. Often, while still personally active as afm magnificent, but certainly very much higher than gm ite,” to use his own language, and issued it alone. my cheer ‘of the public sentiment fm they had been as a proof Treader, for he had to keep fm Fortune was now tired of persecuting the brave nau, was first by Bennett as ifby inspiration, and [Ml up the appearance of a gentleman and to associate gg 9nd turned in his favor. Four months after the ¢ to general notice by the force of his’ pen. with gentlemen. Altogether considered, this was(™ HERALD fire came the great fire which laid Wall ‘This rare natural L git amounting almost to pre- probably about the sunniest part of the first epoch fm Street and all the adjacent business streets low in selence, exposed many attacks from parti- fin Mr. Bennett's life. one common ruin, And here Bennett at onoe senopponents, whostyled him a “political weather- Returning to New York in 1824, he found no open- fg Showed the world what he knew about journalism. eock,’* bending to overy wave of the public current, ing on any journal and determined to teach. Hem He engaged every reporter whom he could come of opinion, devoid of all consistency as well as of f™ advertised his intention to open near the site of the jm *Cross (and there were not many iu those days), courage to stand by his opinion and to defend his present HERALD office a permanent commercial fm M4 be spent half the day himself in the ruins, note own Judgment t the clamor of the multitude. school, in which all the English branches and sci- fg 000k in hand, writing down what he had gleaned But in tl Very secret of his succeas. He fences were to be taught, and also the French and gm during the other half. He spread before the public tly conceived the mission of true jour-—™ Spanish languages if required. Application was tog™ 4 mental bird's-eye view of the whole scene, with to run in o peta altogether dtf- be made to J. G. B., 148 Fulton street. It would jg Such happy descriptions and in such easy language ferent from the hackneyed course of the oldj™seem that neither the English branches and sci-(™ that it was a grand success. He went to the ex- style “organs,” whose chief duty lay infMences nor the French and Spanish languages were qm Dense Of getting a woodcut of the burning Ex- up the vapid eloquence and shallow preten- [mM required, for not a solitary application was made, fm Change, and presented a map of the burned dis- sions of some crossroad politician in whose pay they fm and young Bennett in disgust gave up the idea off™ tTict, which made a sensation. It is simple jus- eked out a existence. With this conviction fM being a pedagogue. Then he tried his hand at lec-gmtice to say that the spirit and enterprise firmly and terably fixed in his mind, he suc-(™ turing, and advertised a course of lectures upon jm “splayed upon that occasion hag always continued ceeded in making his journal a popular conveyance MM political economy at the old Dutch church, inj™t® mark Mr. Bennett's paper. This dashing jour- for news—a true mirror of the daily history of the[™ Ann street. But Shakspeare and the musical j™ 2alism opened commercial eyes to the value of the world. The public appreciated his efforts and re- pm glasses were then all the rage, and nobody came tof™ HERALD as an advertising medium, and Dr. Bran- warded him with suocess quite unparalleled there- fe enlightened on that abstruse subject. Resist-gadreth entered into a contract with the paper which tofore im the history of the American press, InfMance was in vain. He had given himself to jour- [jm ™ade ita paying concern. Bennett, in the fifteenth king thus of the departure of one of the chiefs(m nalism in Charleston and it claimed him in New ™imonth, ventured to raise the price to two cents, our craft, we feel that we perform but a sacred (fm York. Whichever way he turned there was nog™ that day the Hera.» took its place in the ence duty, imposed ‘upon us as journalists by the memory #M opening for him but in that direction ; so reluctantly jg 13m of the Ome oa and has kept it steadily, In of one to whose enterprise, peta 3 more than toMM™ he resigned himself to that tide which was to bearpmthe editorial which he wrote announcing the that of any other one man, American journalisin him onward to a success which he had neverggincrease of price he sketched the course owes ite present exalted and influential position. dreamed of in his wildest castle-building in the oldgg Wulch he intended to pursue and the ex- * + enses he was going to incur, People doubted school-boy days of the Seminary at Aberdeen. He Pien, but every Frey hy the programme was. car- became attached to the National Advocate, a NEWSPAPER SKETCHES. democratic organ of the good old stamp, on which Tied out to the letter. Finding the ordinary course, © was & reporter, paragraphist, editorg™of collecting and GC news too slow he and jack-of-all-work. 'He wrote very much gg °rganized a force of carrier eons and a staff of Mr. Bennett's Life and Services Sketched Hin iio same style as when he after- Im PONY expresses to Lent the malls, | 80, when. the fis Contemporaries, ward astounded the world in his Heraxn, but the fm Mexican war broke out, the HeRaLD was able tol orty of doing so. Offering to aid the party and es-f™{dea—tho HERALD. Europeans who see our bad-—™ 0 engagement. For “fine writing” and rounded > ca chiefs took excellent care that everything which meive the news of battles, the lists of killed and tablish 9 poper are not one and the sane thing. {ness no less than our goodness have al been fg quotations from dead Seas he had no respect From the New York Times.) would have given a sensational stimulous to their jm Wounded and all the points of the campaign not ir [see fit lam at liberty to start a paper on my Mable to understand what that paper has |. This fm in his editorials. He his editors, do- own responsibility, and leave the party to judj fs @ great faculty in an editor, to write@™>ated the questions of the day with tiem, and ‘The career of Mr. Bennett may be not inaptly[Mcolumns should be rigidly excluded. But stilig™ ly before other papers, but before the official ac- t te ach fire in thi counts had been received in Washington. This Ukened to one of those spring days whose morning enn. ‘hia ty tas vonvendibnal beats A a naturally gaye to the paper an enormous impetus, (s dark with overhanging clouds and inclement with Mj nut over him. He reported trials, he wrote dra-—g 8nd its wonderful enterprise was quoted, even in tempestuous winds and storms, while the remain-(™ matic criticiams, the latter not without value, and jm 2urope, a3 something next to marvellous. During ort ‘and bright with all the splendor of sun- fg ne Was an industrious and ardent politician. So he fmthe war of the rebellion Mr. Bennett strove to out- seins began to be known. He attached himself to the gm Strip his competitors in getting news, though ne shine, There have been few men so absolutely Mf party of General Jackson, being a democrat by con- jm “id not always succeed. idea was the ruli ge for themselves what confidence to give it.” ThisfMfor the man who has neither enthusi-™™they went to work toset the public talking of was in 1832. He started the “ah enn it lived asm nor prejudice, This is the value of thegmWuat was written. He had a@ rare ay 7 only thirty days. Then he invested his money in {iM HERALD as a political commentary—it talks past thegg of combin! Isolated facts and judging | 0 the Pennsylvanian, at Philadelphia, and advocated fM Converted zealot to the indifferent man at the door. it political events by them. He b gog civ the measures of the Cn ge party When = — igting! Va be oy oe te nae ate comers, Seovemnene. Baal Prey et bedi own ty began to 1e ve up tl ‘ties of 16 nian mind, 18 -women ase Be, 4 . Washington Market do not set down their basketa , became lindly ‘aevoved in his service to the rr telf-made as he. In the outset of his career he was {Ml viction, and a free trader by commercial instinct. It fm One in his journalistic life, and nobly did he carry | Pen New York, in 1808, the Sun, @ one-cent Paper, to applaud Demosthenes. The fruit-porter of Flor- His young pen was tate pve? habe absolutely isolated, without home, without friends, jg )29 been sald that he never had any beltets political out, : had a} pearied, to be owed in 1634, Py another ence, Phillips saya, wilt A te boy of the words boager ogee foolish, prophecies or otherwise, ant was @ Mephisi 8 one-cel r, the em Dante wrote; the rter w fi telegre without even a cent to buy him oread. But thereM iaughing at. the fools who did believe. But, this (From the New York Standsed, May 81.) scholarly, plodding journats, Bennett, with the ald M York damns "Bergh “and his horse, The in Fegard to their almost boundless results he has was within him a more than Roman fortitude which Mis unjust. He was not only heartily a supporter James Gordon Bennett, the founder of the New seen fully realized, ‘oi two you! rinters, onthe 6th of May, 1835,—Heratp could never tolerate ibili- 4 ms first’ number of the ’ third ane only facta. It cared nothing for a re-' ‘Mr. Bennett called everything to oom toin- one-cent paper, the New YORK HERALD. rter’s opinion, but everything for his news. gmoresse the circulation of his pa om Net y ‘Then began the second part of his career. judgon's greatest pleasure in the office used to be fm arst, and anything second, A dor} MD uring’ tt to the His days of sentimentalism and party fdolity Mito make up the foreign malls, It was a custom of im wan political power except to Dring It to the were gone by. Nobody had any use forfithe ofice to pay aman three times as much as hege HERALDS 4. and oe hm sy vo them, and iy! should he have? He was thirty-five expected in order that he would know where to’ ities to enliven and st public appe- years old; he had five hundred dollars; his offce—itake his news the next time. Men’s salaries ite for news. ‘ 2 MF ‘was acellar in Wall street; his desk, counter and—jseldom grew; they were sometimes doubled . ais A nerous features: were folding board were a plank resting on twoempty#jim a day. Nobody could so easily man: Mr. Bennett's - — od meeps barrels. Some one said that one man and God ona squad of reporters as Bennett could. ‘te: fully Geveloped. dia ie hed’ oat une 2 aa the right side are a majority. Here was @ de-Mifore the Mexipan war the Hrratp had a corres. avenue, where he dled, he hed abtrounded Mmuaelt feated, credulous and two empty bar- gg Bd ‘TeXas and lx in Europe. All Bennett's gm with the = wee al fy = rels, on no side, ge to be & majority. MM trips, of ten miles or ten thousand miles, resulted gy country then Fs best. The mid ee ok But for sentiment he substituted policy ; iM in his securing correspondents and bookfulla of ata- fi ODe <* os a é oye a} te for enthustasm, satire; for faith, distrust; tistics. In this latter respect he was as wise asim trees, where caged Macaw and parrots screed for politics, the H#Ratp. He puiled’ down the—™ Addison. It was a rule never to be more thanggand Co ay eg mente oy (A abo 4 fetish of his youthful worship and put himself ina day in advance of the people. The prih- the garden A vine, thouse - its place, Only he no longor worshi heficiple was that if you tell a man what is mnasium, = le 7 4 raat aea; ‘agro Pe, laughed. > not the laughter of @ le we going to happen, this vory day he 8 ae ASOaE him ana c bomprote Ale et h stacks of oaae but that of Voltaire. No man of his time mean’ ju & prophet. With Charles Keade Bei f his elyeiain, hed. fot only enabled him to bear privation, but alsof™ of Jackson, but he was faithful to him when others i yorx HgRacp, is an old man of seventy-two years, taught:him to laugh atit. This combination of gay- ee petrol po ee eeted tn tae aa oe and though he carefully watches and criticises the ety and steicism ho probably derived from bis Mi served so well that turned his heart intoice. When fm course of the paper of which he is still announced parents, who were French Catholics, of the town of M the Advocate deserted its old love, and espoused the Hag “proprietor” he has, so far as journalistic work ‘, Kelth, in the county of Bantzhire, Scotland, Mr, bn items, ennets, who, was {s concerned, already reached the province of that against his Bennett was ‘born at New Mills, in the year 1797, MM paper rather than earn bread by writing posterity which he thought would call him one of ‘and his boyhood was passed at a time when the gm Convictions. the greatest benefactors of hia race. His parents | terror of Napoleon filled all the English lands, when Ml Angee aaciie, Hurtieth year, having left the wore French Catholics, who lived in Scotland, the windows of overy print shop teemed with{Mence of some political friends, the Washington cor-(m When, about the year 1900, he was born, Parton caricatures of the Corsican leader of the French, mm respondent of the New York Enquirer, which was iM had the notion, therefore, that Bennett had French and when every hilltop along the coast was pro- bane io 4 oe ae Bs {nee "ane instincts and Scotch habits; but we believe that he vided with beacon fires to announce the approach his stay in this ition ben = serene af was French both in instincts and in manners, and of hig dreaded army of invasion. To ayouth off™oory of Walpole’s Letters, and resolve: try HJ that he outlived his Scotch education, very much as} warm imagination and poetic fecling the character me - oh Ie doetigh: ta te cues paveales Jackson's Indian boy remained an Indian to the end of the great conqueror must have possessed an un- Mi that the natural — and genis of the man was #Jof his life. Bennett had the Scotch lingo, but he asual charm, now unfettered, and he wrote without fear of cen-Hl gnoke correct French. We learn that be was asen-_more with asmile, He began right, for he had nofMlieved that goodness consisted in callin spades beorbing, % 1 him if] names; —minterest were the stories he then poured out to me at pvt when $40 mind takes in eager soap ana nya ate won sent et mea ant romans Yoh ena ont eons Pag yt POG oeagmer ams Mapas whey Set toca Hm A ams Mc et Sr Srila he J. impressions of good and evil, he heard tontinualiy and senaibie., These letters, however ‘Sriginated, Mastic, and, when not swimming lnstily n the river, Ma” pergdn concelves | that 10 succeed one spade, When tey heaped coal of, Ore Cate nad Oe ED gn telegraph “wire connecting with the were undoubtedly a great ey were lively, must have prominent of walnut coun- test kind. He wa Sr Si SacHk, 1s bat peeshi'ks &countiymen Bas abounded iy pefuonal iallusons, and the ee ten verano he Toten mean erie atenacd widows in era patterns I poor, bue they at he robbed, In those days diu-MoMogs no cout et ne paiae of the, Hignaio with ; of Senator. ‘This 8 c ond pin, “ne. must have ane ret ere eine he we riting such words as these :— His journalistic aud domestic surroundings, after in Fducated by his parents in the picasant French lan- Hj daughters of Senators, This sort of thing was afjatudied Virgil, and the author who first had any ity then, The discriptions of toilettes, the hi Soott. Next in guage, he doubtiess read with avidity all the rumors eect ” influence upon him was Scott. Next to Scott and the gossip and the romances that were pub" Hl saudie of Ne ieee entiokted not ony ae his love was Byron. In later years he loved Mehed about his hero, and the disaster of Moscow MJ fools, but also wiver people, who liked —j Walpole and Leigh Hunt, When Bennett was sev ermy of wrapper Meanwhile he waa Wi ch errand born cashiers, m ism. science. le was trying to fm the great itin which he built ap @ newspaper ‘a silver call bell. iJohnett wrote his own Wrappers fave tee vreatent ‘number of little facts about the —™ the most valuable in ata cue Lee 7; and 4 ody reads, and he paid a news cor- (mend of his life was the trang fay "Saverliseanoate. ‘ Ss ee — Feapondent Wad had wanted to write book notices ill morning,

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