©iscDo 35 i 3£ , 2 , £nsj®>x§i£ & ipirisnansiuisi&gs, Whole No. 2746. Lewistown Post Office. Mails arrive and close at the Lewistown P. 0. as follows: ARRIVE. Eastern through, 5 33 a. m. '• through and way 4 21 p m. Western " " " 10 38 a. rn. Bellcfonte " " " 2 30p tn. Northumberland, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, 6 00 p. in. CLOSE. Eastern through 8 00 p. m. •* " and way 10 00 a. m. Western " " 330 p. m. Bellefonte 8 00 " Northumberland (Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays) 8 00 p. in. Office open from 7 30 a. m. to 8 p. m. On Sundays from Bto 9 a in. S. COMFORT, P. M. Lewistown Station. Trains leave Lewistown Station as follows: Westward. Eastward. Baltimore Express, 4 40 a. m. Philadelphia " 533 " 12 20 a. m. Past Line, 626 p. m. 350 •* Fast Mail, 10 38 " Mail. 421 " Through Accommodation, 2 35 p. m. Emigrant. 9 12 a. m. Through Freight, 10 20 p. m. 120a m. Fast 3 40 a. tn. 8 15 Express " 11 00 " 235 p. m. Stock Express, 5 00 " 9 05 " Coal Train. 12 45 p. m. 10 38 a. m. Local Freight, 645a. m. 626 p. m. A3Galbr;uth's Omnibuses convey passengers to and from all the trains, taking up or setting them down at all points within the borough limits. GAZETTE FOR 1864. JAM ahy. FCBK I \ kv. Suihlrv j" 3101T24 31 [Sunday j ]714 21 28; Monday ! 4 1118 2.) [! Monday ! 1| 815 22 29; Tuesday ! 5121# 26 j .Tuesday 910 23j Wed'.-day 61320 27 .'Wed'sday 31 10 IT 24 Thursdayi 71421 28 I -Thursday 411 IS 25 Friday " 1 815 22*29 Friday |5 12 10 26 Saturday |2| 916 23 30j 1 Saturday 16113,20.2T MAKCH. APRIL. Sunday ; i 61320 27 : Sunday I j3lO IT 24; Monday : jT1421 28 ! I MOB day , ,411 IS 25 Tu-sdav 1 81522 29 HTwsday ; |51219 26 Dk'ed'sdav 2 916 23 30; \ . WedVday; 61320 27 i Thursday 310 IT 24 31; j iThursday j i T 14 21,28 Friday ' 4 tl'iss 11 Friday }1; BJIS 22;29| Saturday !5 12J19.261 ! IjSaturdiiy |2| 9J6,23|30| MAY. Jl Ml. Sunday 1 815 22 20; Sunday 512 19 261 Monday 2 91623 30 Monday 61320 27 Tuesday 310 IT '24 31 Tuesday 7 ,14 2128 Wed'sdav 4 11 16:25 Wed sday 1 8.15,22 29 Tt ja'i-.-i 12 l0.:'/>' : Thursday 2 9,16:23 30' Friday !* 18120J27 f ] Friday 310|17i24; Saturday Tl l4:2lj2S| j [Saturday |4jll|lßi2s| |_ JULY. auoust. Sunday • :310IT 24 31. iSuihiUty | 1T1421 28 Monday ' 41118 25 Monday T81522 29 Tuesday ! 61219 20 Tuesday !2j 91623 30 Wed'sdav 61320 27 I !: WedVdky 31"1724 31 Thursday, i 7,14 21 28 j , Thursday 4,11;18j'25j Friday 'l' 8 : 15 22129; Friday ,5,12 19,26 Saturday i' 2 9|16;23;30| !|Saturday iil3 20j27| SEPTilMllKll. OC I'dBKK. Suiidav" 411 18 25j Sunday ii 2916 23 30 Monday 5 12 19 26; : Monday | ; 3i51724 31 Tuesday ■ ,61320 27 j I • l'uesday j4ll 18 25i Wed'sdav! i 71421 28 i Wed'sday j512 19 261 Thursday 1 81522 29 Thursday !613 20 27j Friday "12 9 16;23;30 I Friday 171421 28 Saturday jaTo|l7|24! j j Saturday Jl, 8j15j22 29| amyginßEß. DKCEMBEB. Sunday | 61320 27 Sunday 411 18 25. Monday i 71421 28 Monday 51219 26 Tuesday jl! 815 22 29! jTuesdav 613 20 271 Wed'sday 2916 23 30, Wed'sday 714 21 28j Thursday 3 lo; 17 24 Thursday 1 8 15 22 291 Friday 4'i1;1,25| Friday 2916 23 30| Saturday |5j12;19,26| [Saturday ;3 10;1724 31} County Officers. President JmUic, Hon. S. S. Woods. Lewistown. Associate Judges, Hon. Elijah Morrison, Wayne township. " James Turner, Lewistown. Sheriff. I>. M. Contner. Esq. Deputy Sheriff. Jolm C. Sigler, Esq. Prothnnntary, Clerk of Common Pleas, etc., Nathaniel C. Wilson, Esq. Register ami Recorder awl Clerk of Orphans' Court. Samuel W. Barr, Esq. Treasurer, Amos Hoot, Esq. Commissioners, Samuel Drake. Esq.. Newton Hamilton. O. P. Smith. Esq.,' Armagh township. M. Miller, Esq. Derry township. OoumissoMrs' Clerk— George Frysinger. Auditors, H. C. Vanzant. Esq. Decatur township. H. L. Close. Esq. Armagh township. M. Mohler, Esq. Derry township. Deputy Surveyor, John R. YVeokes, Esq. of Lewistown. Coroner, George Miller. Esq., Lewistown. Mercantile Appraiser, Jamei M. Lashelf. Superintendent of Common Sctoxjls, Rev. J. Williamson. LIST OF POST OFFICES. Offices. Postmasters. Lewistown, Samuel Comfort Decatur, A M.lngram. Strode's Mills, Jos. Strode, Jr. McVeytown. J. Cri.-well. New on Hamilton, 8. W. Norton. Atkinson's Mills, R. S. Gamble. Reedsville, Samuel M Greer. Milroy, A. W.Graff. Kishaooquillai, E. XV. Hill. Locke's Mills, E. E. Locke. Belleville, W. C. Nelson. Menno, Benj.Groff. AUeuville, N. Hartzler. CLERGYMEN. Presbyterian—Rev. O. O. McCLEAN. Lutheran—Rev. H. R. FLECK. Methodist—Rev. JOHN GCYER. Episcopal—Rev. JOHN LEITHEAD. The Rev. J. 8. Mc-Murray, Presiding Elder of Car lisle District; Rev. S. Lawrknc£, and J. B. Strais, Pres byterian ministers, are also residents of town. African Wesley Church—Rev. Williams. African Bethel Church—Rev. John Henry. THE 111 11REL PHANTASMAGORIA. Tell me not in flowing numbers, Things are always what they seem; Oft beneath the surface slumbers, Things of which we'd scarcely dream. 'Neath thejdark waves of the ocean, Lie ten thousand things unseen, Countless shrines of love's devotion, Hidden by the liquid screeu. Myriads of gems are gleaming In its deep, unf'athomed womb ; Diamonds with bright lustre sparkling. Light the darkness of the tomb : Still its waters give no token Of its treasure hid below— So sad hearts by sorrow brokeD, Oft a cheerful surface show. Mark yon laughing, rich-clad maiden- See feigned joy dance in her eyes— Ah, I fear her heart is laden, With a grief her mirth belies! Mark the man of wealth and station, Whom the world thinks free from care; Or the ruler of a Nation, Who can all its honors share? Have they not each some emotion In their breasts to give tnem pain? Yield tiiey not the heart's devotion To some end they cannot gain? Malice lurks in human bosoms That to us seem meek and mild; And they woo lest they should lose them Every passion fierce and mild. Then sing not in graceful measure Things of earth are always plain; For we oft pursue as pleasure, Things that bring us only pain. w. t. B. Lewistown, January, 1564. We are indebted to S. P Hates, Esq. for a report of the Superintendent of Common Schools of Pennsylvania, for the year end ing June 4, 18tj3. From the report of Azariah Smith, E; q , late Superintendent ol this county, we make the following ex - ' tracts: Houses. —Only one house, and Miat a very plain, though a commodious one, has been built the past year. There are some ten school houses in the county, too un comfortable and inconvenient to he tolera ted longer. Some of them are ventilated 'not wisely but too well a few are badly located, oil a pinnacle, in a den, or by a marsh ; and ethers are, apparently, as well devised as possible to thwart a teacher's normal management., and provoke pupils to idleness and misbehavior. In some instan ces directors can not procure suitable grounds owing to the selfishness which prompts some men to refuse to sell a lot for school purposes. The Legislature eould easily remedy this difficulty, and should do so itnmedi tely. Furniture. —Nearly a third of the school houses are improperly furnished ; some having benches which pupils cannot occu py for any considerable time without tor ture, having hacks too nearly perpendicular, or too low; others with desks inconvenient and unsuitable for writing, being of im proper height or inclination, or bearing too many specimens of jack knife sculp ture, practiced through several school gen erations. But in most of the houses re cently built, the furniture is comfortable, and corresponds lairly with the general style of the buildings. Apparatus. —Of the 82 school houses ol the county, HI are sufficiently supplied with black board surface, 29 have nearly enough, aud the remaining 22 have an amount al together inadequate to the warts of the school. Of the 91 schools, 58 are furn ished with outline maps; 1U have outline maps of the United Sta'es In a very few schools there are globes numeral frames, and other articles of apparatus. In most of the schools the black-board is used largely, the extent and successful!)ess of its use in creasing yearly; and the maps are, by many teachers, used with much skill. In all schools, blest with teachers who know how to instruct by means of black board and map, these articles are productive of intel ligent interest among the pupils. Sejiools Graded, L mjraded and Uuclas sijied. —Sixteen schools were graded more nicely than ever before; in M'Veytown and Newton Ilami ton, by the principals; in Lewistown, by the county superintendent, at the request of the directors. Tiiesohools were giaded according to their attainments, after examination, when necessary; hut the gradation was imperfect in Lewis'own, in consequence of the fact that the schools are in several buildings, located in differ ent parts of the town. To render a per feet gradation approachable, all the.schools of the town should be in one building, which the directors ought to construct forthwith. Then a regular course of study should he adopted, a:.d each teacher have a specified p irtion of their course to in struct sehVars in. In spite of existing disadvantages, the schools were better than any previous yeir. Nearly every country school was Weil classified ; .-ome verv skill fully, a few quite clumsily, and hut on • or two so badly as to merit special d spr.i se. Very satisfactory improvement, in this res pect his hen made within a few years Teachers —Of the 90 teachers whose sci.o 1 visit< d, 13 holding professional, aud 47 provisional certificates, gave good WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1864. satisfaction. Some of tliein were highly successful in their method ami spirit, evincng marked fitness for their vocation, working the sort of miracles which only true, full teachers can work, in the tone and aim of individual scholars and entire schools. Were it not for exciting a new envy, I should very gladly name those whose success has been m >st distingushed. The number of ladies teaching the past ye.r has been 25 percent, greater than the year before; and their general success has bee:i quite satisfactory, in some in stances their success has been so great as to dispel the deep seated preju lice against lady teachers, which many of their pat rons harbored. I regret to fie obliged to s ate that few have not been nearly so sue ccesstul, though none of them have been as unsuccessful as some of the male teach ers. Public Sentiment. —Probably the senti ment which prevails uio-t extensively, respecting schools, is placid indifference li taxes arc uot made very heavy; if schol ars do not confiscate fences too liberally; it teachers are paid moderately, work a little more than full time, do not punish any out other folk's children, most people ate well satisfied. They probably think schools good things in tl e abstract, well enough in the concrete, so far as they enatle chil dren to 'read, wiite and cipherbut tf the higher branches, many are implacable foes, for the sutlieient reason, that tho c branches were not taught when they went to school. One r*t ! ur important premise, not axiomatic by any means, they take fl r granted; namely, that they themselves know all that is worth f flowing The num ber of those who rightly value good schools has been, and is, steadily increasing, and quite a respectable minority of the people ol the country are thoroughly alive to the importance of excellent schools, and are anxious to procure good teachers, energet ic officers throughout the domain of idu cation, and are willing to use their money o accomplish these esults. '1 he emin nt success of some teachers, and the manifest usefulness of their efforts, have doubtless done much to win this greater ia\or to the c- mmot) schools. Lectures before county and district institutes have contibuted to this end. Educational journals, principally the Pont sylvan>a School Journal, have done not a Htfh?. Possibly the education al article that hire appeared iri the coun ty papers, and the lectures of the superin tendent, have not been wholly ineffectual IALEI & SKETCHES BOOTS AND HIS BROTHERS. Oucc upon a time there was a man who hail three sons—Peter, Paul, and John John was Boots, of course he was the youngest. I can't say the man had any th ng more than the tinee sons, for he hadn't one penny to run against another, and so he told his sons that they must go out in the world and try to earn their bread, for at home there was nothing to be looked for but starving to death. Now, a hit of the man's cottage was the King's palace, and you must know, just against the King's window's a great oak had sprung up. which was so stout and big that it took all the light from the King's palace. The King had said he would give many dollars to the man who could fell the oak, but no one was man enough for that, for as soon as ever one ch : p of the oak's trunk flew off, two grew in its stead A well, too, the King had dug, which was to hold wat< r lor the whole year; for all the neighbors had wells, but he hadn't any, and that he thought a shame. So the King said he would give any one who could dig s.it'h a well for lim that would hold water foi him the year round, both money and goods; hut no one couid do it, for the King's palace lay high upon a hill, and they hadu't dug hut a lew inches before they cauie upon a living rock. But as the King had set his heart on having these things done, he had given it out far a r, d wide, in all the churches of the kingdom, that he who would fell the oak in the King's court yard, and get him a well that would hold water the whole year round, should have the Princess and half the kingdom. Well, you may easily know there was many a man who came to try his luck; but for all their hacking and hewing, and all their digging and delving, it was no good. The oak got bigger and stouter at every stroke, and the rock didn't get softer either. So one day those three brothers thought they'd set off and try too, a'd their father hadn't a word against it: for even it triey didn't get the Princess and liaif the k ngdom, it might happen they might get a place somewhere with a good master; and that was all lie wanted. So when all the brothers said they thought of going to the palace, their father said 'yes' at once. So Peter, Paul and Jack went from their home. Weil! they had'nt gone far before they came to the fir wood, and up along o e side of it rose a steep hill side, as they went, they heard something hewing and hacking away upon the hill among the trees. 'I wonder now what it is hewing away up yonder?' said Jack. 'You're always so clever with your won derings,' said Peter aud Paul both at Once. 4 W hat wonder is it pray, that a wood cutter should stand and hack up ou a hill side!" 'Still, I'd like to see what it is, after all' said Jack; and up he went. Oh, if you're such a child, 'twill doyou good to take a lesson, bawled out his broth ers after him. But Jack did'nt care for what they said; he climbed up the steep hill side towards whence the noise cotue, and when he reached the place, what do you think he saw;' why an axe that stood there hacking and hewing all of itself at the trunk of a fir. 'Good day !' said Jack. 'So you stand here all alone and hew, do you?' es, here I've stood and hewed and hacked a long time, waiting for }ou,' re ! plied the axe. 'Well, here I am at. last,' said Jack as he t ok the axe, pulled it off its shaft, and stufled both head and shaft into Ins wai let. bo when he got down again to his broth ers, they began to jeer and laugh at. him. 'And now, what funny thing was it )ou saw on the hill side?' they said 'Oh, it was only an axe we lieatd,' said Jack. bo when they had gone a bit further they came under a steep spur of rock, and up there they heard something digging and shoveling. 'I wonder now,' said Jack, 'what it is digging and shoveling up yonder there at the top of the roek ' 'Ah, you re always so clever with your wonderings, >ai. 1 Peter and John again,'as it you d never heard a woodpecker pecking at a hollow tree.' 'U ell, well.' said Jack, 'it would be fun just to see what it redly is.' And so off lie set to climb the rock while the others laughed ami made fun ol him But he didn't care for tfoit; up lie climbed, and when he gut near t e top what GO you iliiuk lie saw ! Why, a spade that stoo l there digging arid delving. 'Ciood day ! said Jack. 'So vou stand alone and dig and delve?' A es, that's what I do,' said the spade, j'and that s what I ve done this many a long day, waiting for you.' 'tt ell, here I aiu. said Jack again, as he took the spade and knocked it oil the han die a'nd put it into tiie wallet, a.id then ; went down again to his brothers. 'W eil, what was if, so rare and strange.' said Peter and Paul, 'that you saw thereat the ruck?' 'Oh,' said Jack, 'nothing more than a ! spade; that was what we heard.' bo they went on again a good hit, till they iane to a brook They Wore thirsty. ! all three alter their long walk, and sothe\ lay down besides the brook to have a drink •I wonder now,' said Jack, -where all this water comes from?' I wonder if you're right in your head.' said Peter and Paul, in one breath. If you re not mad already, you'll go mad very 1 soon, with yotr wondering. Where the brook couies from, indeed ! Have you ; never heard how water rises from a spring I in the earth?' '\es! but still I've a fancy to see where this brook comes from,' saiu Jack. So up alongside the brook he went in j spite of ali that his brothers bawled after him. Nothing could stop him On he went. So as he went up and up, the brook ; got smaller and smaller, and at last, a lit tie way farther on, what do you think he saw?' why a great walnut, and out of that the water trickled. 'flood day!' said Jack again. So you lie here, and trickle down all alone?' 'Yes I do,' said the walnut, -and here have I trickled and run this many a long ! was, waiting for you.' 'Well, here I am,' said Jack, as he took i up a lump ot moss, and plugged up the I hole th at the water might night run out ; : then he pu the walnut into his wallet and j went, down to his brothers. 'Well now,' said Peter and Paul, 'have you found out where the wafer comes from? A rare sight it must have been !' 'Oh, ajter all, it was only a hole it ran out of,' said Jack, and so the others laugh ed and made game of him again, but Jack dyJnt mind flint a **After all, 1 had the fun of seeing It/ said he. So when they had gone a bit farther they cime to the King's pajace; but as eve ay one in the Kingdom had heard how they might win the Princess and halt : the realm, if they could fell the big oak j and dig the King's well, so many ha i eoue to try their luck et the oak that vas now twice ~s large and stunt as it had lie □ at first, for two chips grew for every ot e they hewed out with their axes, as i dare I say you all bear in mind So the King had now laid it down as a punishment, that it any one tried and couldn't fell tie Oik, he should be put an a barren island, aid both his ears were to be clipped off Bit the two brothers didn't allow them selves to be scared by that; they were quite sure they could fell the oik, and Peter, as he was the eldest, was to try his I and Sis'; hut it went with him as it did with every one else who had hewn at the oak—for every chip he cut two grew in its place. So the King's men seized him, and clipped off both hij ears, aud put biui ou the Es'JrWESUO'iSfS'j EEEKKI-IBJ (D'C,"'sJS^r s IPIEX'SEo island. Auw Paul, lie was to try his luck, j but he la red just the same; when he had hewn two or three strokes, they began to see the oik grow, and >o the King's men seized hitu too, and clipped his ea-s, and put him out on the island; and his ears j they clipped closer, because they said he ought to have taken a leasou from his j brother. So now Jack was to try. 'lt you will look like a marble sheep, we re quite ready to clip your ears at once, and then you'll save yourself some bother,' said the King, lor he was angry with him tor his brother's sake • Well. I'd like just, to try ti; sfsaid Jack, and so he got I leave. Then he took his axe out of his wallet ami lifted it to his haft. ' Hew away !' said he to the axe, and I away it hewed, making the chips fly again, j so it was not long before down came the j oak. \V hen it was done, Ja'k pulled out his I spade; so the spade began to dig and delve J till the earth and rock flew out in splinters, and so he had the well dug out, you uiay think. And when he got it as big and deep as be choose, Jack took out his wallet and laid it in the corner of the well, and pull ed the plug ol uioss out. ' 1 rickle and run,' said Jack ; and so the nut trickled and ran, till the water gu-died oit of tiie hole in a stream, and in a short ! time the well wa* brimfull. Then he ha I felled the oik which sha | ded the Kin.-'s palace and dug a well in the palace yard, and so he go' the Prin cess and half the kingdom, as the King had said ; but if, wa* lucky for Peter and Paul tba they had lo>4 their ears, else they j had heard each hour and day, how every i one said, • well, after all Jack wasn't so ; much out ol his miii 1 when he took to his j wondering.' MOMUftgMiijs OXE BWRCTLV MOI.EMX THOUGHT. One sweetly solemn thought Comes to me O'er and o'er: I'm nearer my home to-day Than I ever was before ! Nearer my Father's house, Where tigf iiany m.* isions.be; i i-urtfr the £.••■•>• white*ta-uife, Nearer the crystal sea! Nearer the bound of life. Where we lay our burdens down; Nearer leaving the cross, Nearer wearing the crown! But lying darkly between, Winding down through the night, Is ttie dark and shadowy stream That bursts at last into light! Father, perfect my love ; Strengthen the might of my faith; Let me feel as I would when 1 stand On the roek of the shore of death— Feel as I would when my feet Are slipping over the brink; For it may be I'm nearer home, Nearer now than I think! "A Book of White Paper" It is a great advantage to any one, and especially to a Sabbath-school j teacher, to keep a little blank book, in j which to note down useful .suggestions, j anecdotes, illustrations and reflections i which he may meet with from day to ! day. If he will but make a habit of j following Captain Cuttle's direction of'! 'when seen make a note of,' he will be surprised to see bow rich in these treasures even a common-place day may be. The notes should be written ; fail ly, in a book set apart for the pur pose; and when an item has been used j once, it need not be cros-ed out, as the j same one may come in place many limes in the course of one's life time. ! The fact may be long treasured up, yet j the right time and place be found lor ! it at last. Daniel Webster was once compli- | | mented by a friend for a very happy ' illustration lie used in one of his ad- j dresses, and asked where he found any- j thing to his purpose. 'That incident,' he answered. 'I laid away fourteen years ago, and never ; had occasion to use it until to-day.' i Old fashioned economists tell us to 'keep everything seven years, and it is £ure to come useful.,' But here >vw ' something worth laying by for double i that many years, it costs nothing to ! save up knowledge, but vast stores of | it are wasted by us all, and often need ! k ssly. • When one asked a celebrated man ! to recommend the best treatise on a ! certan subject, he answered, 'a book of ! white paper.' His advice was to take such a book. ! and note down all that came under j his observa ion and experience on the : subject, and be would have a work of i t ie greatest value to himself of any j ho could obtain. Nothing comes home ! so forcibly to our minds as that which ) has been a matter of personal expert- j ence, and the very act of writing down the thought makes it doubly ours, i We seldom retain lung in our memo ries that which has not been made a j subject of some reflection. It was the ; cusiorn of Philip Doddridge to make a note of the most re markable providen ces of his own fife, aud often to review j them. I New Series—Vol. XVIII. No. 11. No doubt you have met with this Suggestion of a note book a great ma ny times, and you have readily absent ed to the idea that it would lie a very good thing. But will you not now bo persuaded to put it in praetire —to really begin such a book? You will soon tind it the most delightful hook you ever take up, and one which will enable you to increase your usefulness many fold. You will tind it a storehouse from which you can draw something new and fresh every week for your Sabbath class, which shall help bring home the truth with power to tie heart, and on which you may hopefully look for a blessing from iho Master. Will you not he persuaded, teacher, now at the beginning, of the year, to adopt this suggestion ? jpCEEEMEOtii | Women under Difficulties - The first sentiment thai gam-expression when A female convict tin Is herself HI the reception room of the penitentiary is that of regard for her personal appearance. It happens thus} by the rules ot the prison the hair of the inmates is cut to the regu lation length, and this operation o bsfoith from tlie unl'o.tuiute woman curses and prayers, tears and wheedling entreaties, sometimes even the lierec.-t resistance. She may have plotted murder, uiay have pois oned her own child or committed any oth er crime, without the quiver of' an evelid, but she cannot submit to the indignity of having her locks reduced by the shears of the penitentiary Less painful ami often amusing instances of vanity are seen later in the women's prison life; and the mat ron, who accompanies us, ss-ties Us that it is one of the most serious duties of her class to check the love of display which shows itself even here. (Joe woman, ap peared one day with hri.i.auilv p,ootid cheeks} tlie whole ward was it once • i less with envy ami curiosity; the cm < I linmenl was a decided sifo-e--. ami tie 8 crcl irritated the feminine mind alu o t beyond endurance. '1 he prison authorities were ut fault also; there ua-> n,,coloring matter in the woman's ceil, or about the building at any "rout to wlt+cii she k ) a - cess. At f*fct, alter the closest watcho g the secret of ihe art was i-Al open. The woman was at work, in c union with the Oilier convicts, upon the hiue cotton shirts through which a red stripe ran ; she was accustomed to pull out, here and there, a thiead of this last tnetitiewoi color, and when a sufficient quantity hud accumulated she would soak theui in water, and thus obtain the substitute for rouge. Other women scrape the whiting from the wails, and grind it hue t mgli to use us powder tor the lace The windows of certain cells had wire netting before them; from these Bail would abstract stiff tiers to serve as substi tutes for hones. The wires being with drawn with discretion, here and there, l ® their absence was not discovered. One Sunday, however, the ingenious woman fainted away in church, a victim of tight lacing; so the trick was detected. The same woman was the inventor of a favorite kind of p. made, made from an oc„ casional candle, or from the grease of her dinners, and with the aid of this she would turn out in the morning with her ha'r roiled in the highest style of flash art. ller prison bonnet would be fashioned iri the darkness of night into shapes totally unlike tlietr original form ; and she was the leader ot the ton in the matter of the caps furnished as a part of the regular custom. All the women, indeed, show a high de gree of ingenuity in making the ugly arti cles last mentioned into presentable affairs. The matron telis us that there is quite a series of fashions during the year with them. One woman will start a new hor der, nr new tucks and plaits behind, or in troiuce a piece of wiie to give the th nga semblance of comeliness; if the new idea meets tlie approval of the other women it becomes • the style,' and is at once adopted with more or less success. Ao savage eouid value a piece of glass more highly than does the average female convict. She will break her window— the ceils of Miilbank have glazed siper tureslufHght—lament over tlie accident • with well acted grief, and most cunningly secret a bit ot g where the close t aeaich fails to discover it; then smoking one stdi over her lamp, or nuking ira back of black cloth, she will exult in secret over the miserable apology for a mirror, and, as the matron says, will behave with proprie ty for weeks, only because she has tlie weil spring of joy in her cell. — Jfirp-r's Mag azine. r>su To the lover tii re are hut two platen in the world—one vvheio Ins sweetheart is, and the other where she I*ll t. A liiith'. Girl* Diwturxs.—ln a lec ture at Portland. Maine, the lecturer, wishing to explain to a little girl the mariner in which a lobster easts his shell when he has outgrown it, said, 'What do you do when you have out grown your clothes? You cast them aside, do you not'Oh no.' replied the little one. 'we let out the tucks!' The lecturer confessed she had thead vantgo of Uiui there.