2 ¢ "jt sent & gush of inspiration through her be- I ———, 4 wi, ¢ De myo BELLEFONTE, t + : it— iy : OCraLie : FRIDAY MORNING, NO. 47. Iiseellaneous, A LOVE STORY. BY HATTIE TYNG. « All thonghte, all passions, all delights— Whatever thrills this mortal frame; Are all but ministers of love And feeds his sacred flame.” R_CoLERIDGE. Eva Stanley was the most superb girl in Saratoga that season. It was difficult to tell to what peculiarity she owed her decided and acknowledged superiority to all others There were others as tall as she, with as graceful! a head, as full a bust, as regal a walk ; and yet everybody said, ** the most majestic woman in the room.” It must have been the carriage of her head. There was something imperial about that, with which few are gifted by nature, and which no art ean ever attain. It comes through long generations of good blood alome. I venture to say, no peasant’s child ever had it. It is the peculiar and distinguishing "mark of aristocracy. That feeling of fam- ily pride which belongs to nearly all well- descended people—that serene conscicusness of one’s position, and that exemption from all necessity of strugaling to secure or to re- tain place, and scarcely ever fails to give a half-haughty and dignified carriage of the head, which descending through long en- erations, is discoverable at a glance in any one who possesses it. You have all seen persons who bad no pretensions to beauty, who yet possessed something which you would infinitely have preferred to beauty— something which seemed higher and rarer of attainment than any mere physical beau” ty. This is what I mean. This certain air, this indefinable something which dis- tinguishes those who come of a cultivated stock, from those who spring from the mass- es. I sm far from meaning the descendants of rich families in particular. may descend through generations of wealth as easily as through ages of poverty; and there is far less of genuine cultivation among many families of the greatest wealth than in some who possess scarcely a moder- ate independence. What I mean may be called essentially the aristocracy of refine- ®aent ; and this may be found as often in the cottage as the mansion; but in watever place it is found, it carries uw: fue races and manners of good society with it, and draws a circle around itself into which all Vulgarity cannot enter. Eva Stanley had this high-bred air, with all its untold elegance ; and the charm of it was not lost upon any one who came within the circle of her influence. Then she had one of those faces to which men how down and do reverence, [ns it were, intuitively. Pale, with but the slightest dash of color in the cheeks, and with fine, clear-cut features and with a blue eye, with a world of thought sleeping in its dark depths, the whole face had that highest of all beauties—the beauty of pas~ion. Then she had a hand and arm of magic loveliness, and a voice clear as the tone of a silver bell. Eva Stanley was not a belle nt Saratoga. She would not bea belie anywhere. She was not fond enough of general and indiscriminate admiration for that ; and sho was too proud of it, too. She scorned to be admired by the many and was proud of being liked by only the few, upon whom she considered it worth her own while to look. Eva Stanley had a sort of passion for superior men. Any man who was distinguished from the world by any talent, and who united with this the manners of a man of the world, was secure of her attention as soon as he presented himself. But talent, unless it was very extraordinary, did not make up for any deficiency of wanuers ; .and manners, however unexceptionable, for any deficiency of talent. She treated ordinary men with the utmost hauteur—a bauteur all the more freezinfi because it was patural, and sprung from a total and inher- ent indiference. Hence. she never could be a belle; and most men gazed upon her as they would upon some chiseled flower of ice, of divine workmanship indeed, but too cold to touch, and preferred some flower whose petals had more of life in them, al- though less exquisite in design und execu- tion. But when a man approached who breathed a higher air, who had any of the odor of superior humanity about him, then the icy plant was endued with life from root to blossom. Her own intellect Was of that subtle order which distinguishes at once between. genias and its counterfeit; and when once she discovered genuine ore, ing. She was, in its modest seuse, a hero worshiper. Men of genius admired her as Posy as a flower loves the sunshine. is the rarest thing in the world to find a woman who really appreciates fully a man of genics. Many women have a sort of ad- miration for them, but it is a blind and un- preciative admiration, and but little prized by its recipients. But when once they find a women with enough of their own nature to judge them correctly, and admire them at a true valnation,—to enter into their feel- ings sufficiently to appreciate the depths of their nature, with all their wants, and long- ings, and desires, then such a woman is im- mortalized in their hearts at once. This is the trouble too often between men of genius and their wives. They despair of finding before they know the wants of their own natures, and then, afterwards, in the full maturity of their powers, when their tree of life is white with blossoms, they suddenly feel themselves alone in the world, as far as sympathy or companionship is concerned. Then the infinite miseries of an uncongeninl married life begin, and end only with death. Fortunate indeed is it for such a man if, in after years, when to love is sin, he does not find the one who could bave ful- filled every design of his heart. This is the great universal tragedy of life—thle tragedy of hopeless love. ' Eva Stanley had been in Saratoga a week, and had scarcely spoken a dozen words to any gentleman present, with the exception of an eccentric old bachelor uncle of her own, who formed one of her party. This Uncle George of Liers was one of those per- sons whose hearts are so large that they can give a small portion of them to every- body they meet, and yet not scem to dimin- ish the quantity in the least—one of those persons who everybody loves, pets, and ca- resses instinctively, and who returns all such attentions with interest. Eva loved him rather more than any other person in the world, and made him the master-confes- sor of her life. Eva entered the parlor one evening, about a weck after their arrival, leaning upon his arm. Eva understood all the untold mira- cles of dress, and she knew that it was best to be dressed as differently as possible from any other lady in the room. So, while all the others were fluttering in misty white, and delicate rose and blue, she appeared in black, with splendid white flowers for orna- ments. She was looking magnificently, and every eye turned upon her as she entered. They had made half the circuit of the room, when Eva tightened her grasp upon ber uncle’s arm, and whispered : * Uncle George, who is that 2” indicating with a movement of her fan, a gentlemun who stood a little in advance of them. Lven to an ordinary observer, he was the most noticeable man in the room, and Eva’s quick eye took him in at a glance. He was a tall man, and of majestic pro- portions, with a superb bead, set splendid- ly upon his massive shoulders, and hewwore a heavy durk beard, slightly sprinkled with gray; and his hair which was thrown beau- rifully and carelessly back from his high white forehead, was somewhat thin, and also threaded with silver. Then he bad an eye with an indefinable peculiarity about it, which every one studied, and no one ever made out. It was a grayish eye, with a drooping lid ; a sofc eye, full of dreams ; an eye which almost any woman would have given her hopes of ITeaven to see a love. gleam in. It was a fascinating eye, an eve which people looked at, and then turned away, and soon looked back again, and en- ed hy fastening their gaze upon, and re- moving it no more while in his presence. “My old friend, Herbert Audley, as I live!” exclaimed Uncle George, his face brimming over with smiles, as he quicken- ed his pace, and extended both hands tow- ards the gentleman. The hearty greeting of the two friends over, be turned once ‘more to Eva, and presented hee in due form to his friend. Herbert Audley was a man of stupendous mind—a mind whose intellect grasped in, as it were the universe, and seemed to dom- prebend everything short of the Infinite; a man of such versatility cf talent, that he was a devoted lover of science, and one who had been admitted into ber inner chamber, and was conversant with all her. secrets; who was a speculative philosopher, as learned and subtle as any professed meta- physician ; a thinker upon political econo- my, second to none in the nation, and who had all the literature ‘both of the classic and modern ages, at the end of his tongue. A subtile disquisitor upon art,. a learned phylologist, and who knew the poetry of the world by heart ; he was a man of more va- ried attainments than almost any other man in the country, and the versatiliy of whose genius prevented Lim from rising to fame in any one department! And fame was somrethibg of which he never had the most remote dream—something he would not have tol could it have been had for the asking. "To be talked of by the world was something he would have avoided in every possible way. He never came before the public in any capacity, but was simply known as a highly learned, brilliant and fascinating man of the world. Io treated all women alike—politely de- ferentially, but somewhat ¢oldly—and nev- er showed distinguishing attention to any particular one. If Eva Stanley had not given herself up to him so entirely, he prob ably might have thought ne mure of her han of the rest at first. Bu he saw with this quick intuition, that she was entirely absorbed in him ; that she spoke to no one else, and this led him to look at her with a keen, scrutinizing glance, to study, and see what thera was of her. Ile diseovered, at the first glance, that she was no eommon woman ; that she had a great deal of irregonlar genius, and a na- ture which was a peculiar and wonderful study. So he talked to her as he never talked to a woman before; talked to her till he struck upon new veins of thought, which kad never opened to him before ; till he grew intensely interested in his own speculations, and was astonished to see that such a one, or, perhaps, marry too young, she was ag interested as himself, till he found a pleasure in talking, which was as new as it is bewildering—for he never had such a listener before—till, at last, he grew strangely and wonderfully interested in the woman, as he had always known them. This interest did not come in a day, it was a long time fostering itself firmly upon him, but ere he knew it, it was a spell around him, which he coald not break. Eva Stanley gave herself up to the charm of his presence, without other thougat or care than to enjoy just 80 much of his soci- ety, and be just as near to him as possible. She considered every moment lost when she was not in his presence, and grew impa- tient of every interruption of their long and bewildering interviews. She lived entirely apart from the world, though in the wildest rush, and for him, and him alone. Ske grew to have no life, no being but in his, and, yet, she lost no particle of her own in- dividuality , if she bad, his interests in her would have ceased, as strangely as it had begun. When such a man as Herbert Audley loves, it was as different from the common loves of commen men, as rare old wines, from a viotagé a thousand years agone, is different from the products of last year’s vines. And a strong bewildering passion for Eva Stanley took possession of his heart, with a hold which could never be loosed or weakened. The days sped by them like one bewildering dream, and the hours were all drowned in goblets of love. So little did the commonplaces of life en- ter into this strange absorbing passion, that no words of love were ever passed between them ; nor did they ever dream that such a thing wus necessary. Each knew the oth- er's heart as if they had read it from an open scroll, and each one was content with the knowledge, and did not care to profane it by putting it into common speech. The bright dream had gone on for weeks, and Eva had been so given up to it, that, of the outer world she had almost lost her cognizance, when oue evening her Uncle George spoke to her as she came out of her room, and she stopped half impatiently ; for she was going to mect Ilerbert, to hear what he bad to say. “ Put on your hat and mant e, Eva, and go out with me this evening.” Oh, Uncle George, I have not time to- night 1”? “Eva there was never a moment before when you had not a moment to spare to Uncle George.” * Well but it’s different now.” *YesI know it’s different mow. Your life is no longer a life by itself, it flows like a river inte the ocean of another person’s. You are too much given up to this Eva. I am sorry to see it.” “ Why sorry Uncle George ?” * Because I fear something may happen from it, which will bring you only sorrow. It is a fearful thing to place all one’s life in another person’s. keeping—to bave no other hope or promise, or blessing—but what comes of connection with that person. Think Eva, of the possibilities of sorrow which lie in such a love, and guard your- self a little more. lave some aims and purposes, and joy in life aside from this— then if any stroke should fall upon this ab- sorbing love, it would not be so terrible.” ©“ What do you mean Uncle George ?— What can possibly bappen between Iler- bert and 12” “That which happens to all. might seperate you. Eva put ber hand to her bead with a quick pang, and shivered from head to foot as she murmered : “0 my God! Uncle George I have never thought of that.” “ There are other things as bad {as that, Eva ; the object of your love may prove un- worthy—is not this thought as terrible as the other 2’ “And Uncle George took her hand in his, and looked into her eyes. “ No, Uncle George ; for thereis no possi bility of that ; that is something which I shall never have to dread, thank God !” * Come out with me this evening, Eva, I wish very much to have you go with me.” *“ Where are you going, Uncle ?”’ ‘To see a yeung girl about your age.’, “ One of your numerons protegees 2” “ Yes ; a young girl who I discovered by accident, and who interests me more than any one else I ever met. It will sadden you, Eva, more than anything you have ev- er seen. You know the ways of society, Eva, toward a woman who, in their lan- guage, has fallen. You know how she is scorned, avoided and persecuted, even unto death; you know also how the deceiver, the base, demon-hearted betrayer, is treated. You know that no mark of disapprobation is ever bestowed upon him; no frowns greet him, even upon the faces of the most sane- timonious—that is, if he has wealth and po- sition. You know the. world takes him to its arms, and, if it does not applaud, cer- tainly does not cendemn, What do you think of all this, Eva ?” “That it is the rankest and most wicked injustice that eyer cries to heaven for ven- gence. That any person who would con- demn the victim and uphold the betrayer, deserves the judgments of heaven in the most fearful degree.” * Brave words, my darling. You are one of the few women worthy of the name. And what do you think a young girl should do, who had given her love unconsciously to such a demon, and who should afterwards discover his villainy 1”, «Death © *“That she should tear her own heart up by the roots, and trample it witn a malison upon the ground, if she could get rid of her love in no other way.” A “This is the place.”” And Uncle George opened the door of a little cottage in the outskirts of the town, and entered. Eva followed him into a little room, where, npon a low bed, lay a young girl, fair as a water lily, with eyes of radiant, mouraful beauty. Nestled closely to her breast was a little babe but a few weeks old, and an aged wo- man, with the most heart-broken look ever seen upon a human countenance, completed the picture. Uncle George asked the young gir), whom he called Fanny Clements, to tell her story to Eva, who ‘sat shuddering almost as ifan ague. It sas the old story, which sad young hearts are telling all over the world, and which angels are busy writing down in volumes of white and gold, and blotting with their tears—the story which ‘| has become so common that the world does not perceive its infinite sadness, and which many, even with kind hearts, dismiss with but a single expression of pity. She told of days of careless girlhood, when, though poor, she was as gay and happy as a lark; of gentle nurture and careful culture in her humble home, and of all the innocent pleas- ures and delights of early and careless hfe. Then, how a stranger came with winning words ‘and subtle smiles, and won a place for himsgH in her hedrt. Of how gently he had wooed, and how fondly she had loved of how bewilderingly he had tempted, and how trustingly she had fallen into his snares. Then of the desertion, and all the after-misery which had worn her young life almost away, and broken the heart of a do- ting mother. Eva wept burning tears from a heart overflowing with sympathy, and her uncle stole lis arm gently round her waist, and took her hand in his, as in a husky voice, almost choked with emotion, he asked the girl to tell them the name of her betrayer. As if every syllable had a thrill of heart- break in it, she murmured * Herbert Aud- ley.” With one shriek, which it seemed would sever the cords of her life asunder, Eva Stanley sank her head upon her uncle’s shoulder; and threw her arms frantically about his neck. She did not faint ; she lay thene perfectly conscious, but as motionless as marble; and when her uncle pressed her close to his great warm heart, and imprint- ed a thouszad passionate kisses upon her lips, she was icy cold in his embrace. Ile took her home and watched by her bedside all that night. She did not speak or move, but lay there with ber eyes wide open, and her hands pressed hard against her heart. The next day, she rose up calm, but she did not leave her room ; and her uncle sat in the room and talked to her of his plans for the future ; of how he had taken the young girl and her child to his heart, and how from his Kindness to her she had learned to love him; of how he was going to make her his wife before the world, and protect her from its taunts and sneers, by his own strong arm ; of how bappy they would be in a cozy cottage-home he told of ; and how the fatherless child should find a father in him, and the young girl a father and hus- band. Eva listened to all this, and called him her great-hearted, glorious uncle, and sym- pathized in all his plans for their future comfort and happiness—bat all in a perfect- ly mechanical manner, and with the very blood around her heart seeming to freeze all the time. . She was benumbed and fro- zen by her great sorrow, and seemed not to have a moiety of life left in her veins. She passed a week in this way, sending back no answer tothe rejected and half frantic messages of 127 3ft Audley; and then she yielded to the solicitations of her uncle, and dressed to go down to the parlor one evening. They took their places bg a bay-window, which opened upon the colon nade, and stood half screened from abserva- tion. © But Herbert Audley felt that she was in the room and came toward her at once. Ile put out his hand toward Eva, but she drew back as {rom a serpent, and retreated another step as be advanced. “ Eva—Fva Stanley, what does this mean 2’ The tone was full of a reproach- ful tenderness, which went through her heart like an arrow. She drew herself up with a scorn that was perfectly regal,.and with a voice which was the essence of con- temptuous bitterness, answered : * It means sir, that I wish to have noth- ing further to do with so honorable a gen- | tleman as Mr. Audley. Never dare to speak to me again, sir; never lovk at me— to think of me. I consider sir from this moment, that I never met you, never heard your name—don’t attempt to answer me,.— Good night sir.” And she turned with an air of imperial disdain, and was about to walk away, when Herbert Audley grasped ber quickly by the arm, and gasped out: “For God's sake Eva Stanley, tell me what this means?” “ Ask the young girl whose innocence you have betrayed ; whose life you have blighted ; whose heart you have broken what it means sir. Ask Fanny Clements; ask the victim of your wiles, and her help- loss child and broken hearted mother.” « What infamous deception is this, what infernal falsehoods have some demons been inventing ?" er remote from the light. “ No demons have invented this sir,” spoke up Uncle George ; *“ we have the sto- ry from the lips of the young girl herself— as pure and truthful a girl as ever was de- ceived.” * Come with me to her instantly.” And before either of them could say a word fur ther be hurried them from the room, and nothing more was spoken till they entered the cottage door. Ilerbert Audley advan- ced into the room and the rest followed. — The invalid gave no signs of recognition toward the stranger, and after a moment’s pause, he asked her to look him in the face and tell them if she had ever saw him be- fore. She did so, and replied unhesitating- ly— “ No » IIe turned proudly toward Eva and her uncle, and they both held out their hands to bim, and Kva’s head sank in his bosom. * The infamous scoundrel has made ure of your name or, possibly owns cane like it,” said Uncle George, comprehending the whole thing. * Thank Gud, old friend, thank God !” When Eva and Herbert Audley were once moro in the air, and alone, he whispered to ber with his thrilling voice : y “Eva will you ever deubt me again?” “ Never, Herbert, God helping me.” “ And you are my Eva.” “Yours always.”—New York Mercury. VOTED IT UPSIDEDOWIN, We have heard of a good story, told by a son of Erin’s Isle, which is worth repeat- ing : Some two years ago there was quite a struggle between two certain prominent Democrats of Weaverville, as to which should go as delegate to the State Conven- tion. The evening prior to holding the County Convention, Judge ~ and Squire J , each had brllots printed- with the names of their {friends upon them. The Judges delegates were beaten, and be- fora retiring he consoled himself by loading his bat with bricks. Next morning, in good senson ; acting upon the principle that “a hair of the dog is good for the bite.” Justas he called for the decoction, B lly McBlarney stepped into the saloon and saluted the Judge, when the following dialogue en. sued : 4 “The top of 0’ the morning to ye Judge. And the moutherin’ thaves bate us intirely —the curse o’ the world light on them.” “Good morning, Billy. Yesthe Squire was rather heavy. But Isay Billy, I under- stand you voted against me. How is that?” “'Biliy McBlarney voted against ye. The lying spalpeens | By me sowl, Judge I'd ratner have my whisitey stopped for a year than to do that same thing.” “What ticket did you vote, Billy.” *“ And sure I voted the ticket with yer honor’s name on the top uv it.” * Bat, Billy, my name was last on the list—at the bottom.” This was rather a puzzler to Billy, he scratched his head, for an instant, then sud- denly exclaimed: “ Bad luck what a fool T am ! ticket upside down \”? The Judge immediately ordered an eye opener for Billy; he bad fairly beat him on the examination. —Thinity ( Cal.) Journal. 1 voted my rato SE A Fussy Casf.—An amusing case was heard before U. 8. Commissioner Ilvyne, at Chicago, on Saturday, growing out of a strange similarity of nawies, Brown vs. Brown.. The plaintiff, one James Brown complained of the defendant, another James Brown, that he had taken a letter out of the post office, which was the property of the plaintiff, James Brown, and no way be- longed to the defendant, James Brown. Defendant set up that the letter was from Buffalo, that he expected a letter from there, that the letter was from Mary Brown, who was his wife, and he had a right to take the letter and open it under this state of facts. Plaintiff insisted that the letter was from his wife, Mary Brown. It turned out that both parties had wives living in Buffalo, whose names were each Mary Brown and that the affair was a clear mistake. The Commissioner dismissed the complaint. —— eel Ge How a Mops? MaN was Misrakex.—The Syracuse Standard says: In Lowell, ata lecture a few evenings since, a gentleman, the mest modest of his eex, and no less po- lite than modest, was setting in @ pew rath- A pretty lady sat next'to him. Looking at the floor during the lecture, he espied what he thought was the lady’s bandkerchief, the lace trimmed edge just visible under her dress, Turning to his pew mate he gallantly whispered, “You have dropped your handkerchief, madam !” before she could reply, he pro- ceeded to pick it up. Ilorror! he had seiz- ed the edge of her pet— skirt, and did not discover his nmiistake until the top of » gait- er boot stared him in the face, and the faint sound of a laugh just nipped in the bud by the application ofa real handkerchief, warn- ed him of his mistake. Moral—Don’t at- tempt fo pick up anything with lace to i before you know what it is. : A tins [7 ‘Pa, didn’t T hear you say the other day that you wanted a cider press ¥ °° ‘Yes, daughter, where can Iget one ?’ ‘Why, you try Zeke Stokes ; he hugged mo the other evening at the party, and I tell you he made me grunt’ } LETTER FROMHAY OR JACK DOWN- W asHindTof, Oct 20, 1862. Surs . Wal, the Kernel has been fick agin. It is astonishing how littel takes him down, now-a-days His constitushin secms to be eenamost gone. Old Rye don’t seem to do much’ good, an I've tried all sorts of medicen, but nothin seems to work well. — This time his narves were terribully worked up, an he was so fidgety that 1 conkluded to try Godfrey's Cordial. This cobled him down a good deal but not until he tuk nigh on to four or five bottles full. The cause of all this flutter was the recent elections in Ohio, Lndianny an Pennsylyany. The Ker nel had been told oy Suwmnure, Greeley an Andrews that the only way to carry thé elecshins this fall was to issoo an emanci- pation proclamation ; that if he didn’t do it the party would be completely whipped out in every State. So he koncluded to try it, but when the returns cum in, yer never did see such a woe begone looking man. One nite he heard some bad news from Ohio, an gettin up in his nite gown, he cum to my room an axed what I thought about it. 1 struck a light and got out my slate. * The Kernel had Greeley's last year’s almanac in his hands. Ses he, ‘Mujer, lets go down to the telegraf offis and see how the majorities run an we can be able to give a guess that will cum as nigh to it as the jump of a rab bit.” So 1 jist put on my duds an off we went, The news cum in thick an fast, an as the feller at the telegrafread off’ the fi_- gers, 1 put em down on my slate, an the Kernel compared them with his own majori- ties in Greeley's primmer. 1 seed he was turnin ell sorts of colors, an finally, ses he, ‘Majer, we are gone just as kompletely as if we were up Salt River now instead of bein here, de jest like to swap places with sum hoss jockey an go into the hoss contract line.” Ses he, ‘Majer, let’s go hum, I've scen all of this elephant that I want to,” so he crammed his coat tail pocket full of de- spatches, an off we started. When he got hum, ses he, ‘Majer, my administration is the biggest failyure that ever tuk place in the history of this or eny other country. 1 now see as plain a9 1 see that bottle of old rye there. I've listened to those infernal fools, Sumnur an Greeley an a pretty scrape they have got me in.’ Ses I, ‘Kernel, it ain't my natur to hit a man wen he is down, or to hurc any body's feelins by referrin to the past.’ ‘But,’ res I, ‘don’t you rekollect the story about “Ap- plyin the Principle ¥’. Ses ke, ‘yes 1 do, Majer, I rokollect it well. «Wal,' ses I ‘now you'sce the result of applyin no. prin- ciple. 1 told you then that you'd ge scorched wus than Zenas Hunspun aid in meddlin with the/telegraf, if you undertook to carry out the principle of abolishin, but you sed the thing must tech the bettous an you was bound tc put it through. Now, you see, the people don’t support you.—- They don't want em freed to be a tax on em. A few fellers like Greeley, whose brains seem to run to bran bread, and free luv, or some other moonstruck nousetise; an some larned fools, like Sumnure, want fo try the experiment, but they don’t represent the people. So you see, Kernel, that inapplyin the principle you have kicked yoursdlf over, an T only menshin it to show that if yuu had followed my advice you would not have had these great defeats to monrn over.’ The Kernel looked very solemn, and ses he, ‘Majer, I know Ide bee & great deal Letter off if I'd followed your advice all thro’ ihese troubles, but yon see I had to go with my party, an if it carried me to the other ide of Jordon, I spose I should have gone whit, That nite I thought the Kernel would go into spasins, he was so nervous. I got sum hot water an soaked his, feet in it, rubbed his bowels with brandy. and laid flannt! on em, un bathed bis temples in camfire and rum. But he grew wus all the time. Fi nally T began to pour the cordial down him, an then he commenced to revive, But he didn’t sleep scarcely a wink all nite. In the morning he was the most limpsy piece of mankind T ever did see. I ralely believe he might have been tied in a knot like an acl, he was so limber. Jest a little while after breakfast, who should come in but Seward. He hadu't hardly spoken to me sence I blowed him up so for a tearing the Kern I's Constitushinal Teliskope, but this morning he was as per- lite an as clever as he could be, Ses he. “Majer, the elecshin news is good, and OUR party is successful.’ Ses 1, “Mr. Seward, I don’t understand you.” ‘Why, Majer sts he, an put on one of the queerest swiles 1 ever seen on a man’s face, ‘don’t you know 1 have turned Democrat.” Ses I, ‘you don’t say so.” ‘Yes,’ ses he, ‘I'm a Democrat now, an no mistake,” The Kernel looked as if thunder had struck him. Wall, ses I. ‘Mr. Seward, that reminds me of a story, as the Kernel would say.’ ‘Wal,’ Séshe, ‘Ma- jer, what is it. 1 always like to hear your stories. They are pat.” ‘Wal, ses 1, ‘meb. by this will tain out a little patter than you like, but, howsoever, as I never spile a good story fur acquaintance sake, [will tell it :— Once on & time it 18 said an old coon went of a nite to get some fodder among the corn fislds, an did not return to his hole till near wornin. When he got hum he saw a skunk bad taken possession of his hole. Ilo went up, an ses he, ‘who's there © The skunk replied, ‘a coon.” ‘Are you a coon ?’ ‘Yes,’ said the skunk, ‘I'm a coon. ‘Wal,’ sed » the coon, ‘You don’t look like a coon, you don’t act like a coon, an L'll be darned of you smell like a coon.’ * Now,’ ses I, ‘Mr. Seward, you may be a Democrat, but you don’t look like one, nor act like one, nor smelllike one, an T'11 fo darned ef 1 believe you are one.’ ’ Ses he, ‘Major, you are rather perdous!’ ‘Wal,’ ses [, ‘I don't mean eny ofle ses I, ef yon really mean to be a Den let's take a drink of old rye over the v tics mn Ohio, Pennsylvany and Indianuy Soh cam ap and we both" took a good swig of whiskey, The Kernel looked at us, an grit his teeth. *Wal,’ ses he, ‘ef yor zoin to rjoice in my defeat I'll go call un Stanton an see ef he'ean’t che up.’ A gone, Sewa d an 1 tuk another old rye, an purty soon we fasted of ; The Secretary is a capital drinker, and he knows what good licker is as well feller T ever saw. Finally he gat in a good tumer, an ses he, ‘Majer, we'v¢ been bad friends long enough.’ So Le actually hued me an sed there warnt & man tha! ever lived that he loved so much as the old and next to him his friend Majer Downing. When 1 thovght T had got hian in a good i: mcr an he was very talkative, ses I, “M; Scckretary, kin you tell me how John Van Buren got that letter from Gianeral Scott ¥' Ses he, ‘Yes, Majer, IT kin. You know don’t want that teller Wadsworth clecied for he's my bitter political dnemy, so tho way the letter got ont was this. Weed you know is my. chun, have an understandin that everything that | can’t tell him T pat inamy right hand cos: tail pocket. You see then Tecan deny { made it public. That pocket pocket, and he always goes to it [or secrets. he had £5 t, : a So the Kernel went oft. #3 eny Ginnera! Now wg is Weed's Wall I put the letter in that pocket an Weed got it from there, Weed, also, has just such a pocket. All smart politicians have such a pocket. Now, Weed's cham is Ben Welch, Cominissary Giuneral, an Ben got it out of Weed’s povket. Now, has long been a chum of Ben’s, and he got it out of Ben's pocket. That's the way tl this letter got out, that there is so much mystery about. ' Rite off, after this, the Keenel came in, an we had to drop the conversation, for & gave me the wink as much as to say tha d dn’t want Linkin to know anything about it. Then 1 asked the Kernel what sed. He sed Stantin was iu favor of | ing a proclamation, over the great of the administration in Ohio, Pennsylvania an Ioway. Joha Stantin Indizny. He sed the paople didn’t put any faith in newspapers eny more, an a proclamashin declarin that the elecshing had all gone fivorabul woul believed withont winkin. Stanton iS there aint nothin as powerful as a prociama- shin. Seward sed afore it was done, Cabbynet had better be called together. — Here the matter dropped, an as the looked oncommon blue, T left him to his own reflecshinsaan went up stairs to ry room. Yours till deth, Masor Jaci Dowxiya, » eB OB rem * HOW & LAWYER HEADED OFF A DRAFT COMILISSICNEER. bo the Horned Sass the Reading (Pa.) Times—1t is well known that Commissioner Kupp was very precise and exact in his proceedings : al ways keeping an eye to th¢ interests of the country, while dealing honorably with all Now it happened. that among the abicbad ied men drafted from one of the Heideiberss there was an obese specimen of humanity, but whom the chanzes hit as one of the elect. When he received his “ticket (or soup,” he hastened to Reading, and now. ing where lived the cutest specimen of a lawyer, he went straight to his offic. If said : $ I'm drafted U7 +: The deuce you dre ; it wust Faye Loon a strong man that drafted you !'’ «Well, I'm drafted, and I want to «i out. Can’vanarch. I'll pay youu well.” ¢ Very well.” > The twain proteedel to the offic of thn Comm’ssioner. «¢ Here,” said the lawyer, er. [ have got a substitute, Commissioner hoked at the wheeay spec imen for som? time. “He won't do ; een’: march.” « But he must do,” bhisterad out the law ver ; ‘and you know he will.” : “Me can’t march ; he won’! do ; can’t take him.” This was what our smart lawyer want. ed. : [Te won’t do, eh 2” ‘ No, he won't.” ¢ Well, then, scratch his names off of the list 5 ke is a drafted man, and warts toh exempted I” ? The Commissioner looked at’ the lawyer for absut a ‘minute ; then regarded the fu draft, and, without speaking a word serat h ed cff his name ! : We don’t voush'for the furegoiug 177 A Banger paper says that a pig lately walked into a tailor’s shop there, and beory he was notic:d by the proprietor, made « his way toward the cutting buard—att luo doubt by the smell of “‘cabbage’’ in cality. “Llommission. and | ( GO eee 175= A pedlir being asked by a long, won dle-shanked wag, if he had any tin ovurdlls, answered, ‘No, but I have a paiv candle moulds that will just fit you.’ |