Anticipation. Whan fciting health, ar era** araat, Or dull monotony of days, Hsa brought me into discordant. That darken* round me like a haaa. I find it wholesome to recall Thoae chief est gooda my life ha* known, Those white*! day*, that brightened all The checkered aeaeona that ar* flown. No year ha* pasted hut gave tue aom# ; O unborn year*, nor on* of you - Bo from the past I learn—thai! coma Without such precious tribute due, I can be patient, since amid The day* that eoera ao orercaat. So oh future golden hour* are hid A* thoae I sac amid the paat. I.OTP t'acxprrosed. The sweetest notce aiuoog the human heart strings Aw dull with rust; The awoetost chords, adjusted by the angel*. Aw clogged with dn<4; TVc pipe and pipe again our dr> ary music Upon tin *tf-a*mf strains, TVbilo sou; d* of crime, and fear, and desola tion, Come back in ra.l refrains. On through the world we go, an army march ing With listening cars, Each longing, sighing, for the heavenly music Ho never hear* ; Each longing, eighiug, for a word of comfort, A word of tender praise, A word of love, to cheer the endives journey Of earth'* hard, busy d v*. They love u*. and we know it; this aufSeea For reason's share. Why should they panee to give that love ex jtresaion With gentle eare ? Why should thry pause ? But still our heart* are aching With all the gnawing pain Of hungry love that long* to bear the music, * And longs and king* in vain. We love them, and they know it; if we falter. With turgors numb, Aaorg the unused string* ot lovs'*xpre*ion, Tne notes are dumb. We shrink w.tliin ourselves in voiceless sorrow, Leaving the word's unsaid. And, side by side with those we love the dear est, la ailecc? on e Uead. Thru on we tread, and thus each heart in si lence It* fate fulfill*. Waiting and hoping fr the heavenly music Beyond the distant hills, The suiy diffvrwi.iv . f ike love ia Heaven From love on earth below, I*: Here we love and know not how to tell it. And there we all shall know. UNA. The locomotive shrieked and the brakes tattled. "Greenland, ladies," said th polite conductor, collecting Ihe bags, and helping us down to tbe platform. Our trunks were shot after us in the usual reckless railroad fashion, and the train moved on. 1 looked about. No "icy miuntains" rewarded the gas*?, but pretty som a voice "called m to deliver" our checks, and we were aware of the presence of a wagon and a wagoner. "For Rye Beech P'siidwe. "Yes'w." •'And do you go on to Boar's Head ?*' '"'an" (concisely). "Ah, well, that is where wc want to , . So it oerell that an hour later, as we stepped out of tbe wagou iu front of th- Boar's Head Uoa*c, wita an uncomforta ble consciousness of being eved bv a long row of well-dressed people, who were studying oat dusty habiluneuts with that calm scrutiny which is the portion ot the newly arrived traveler at watering places, 1 was startied by a sort of shriek. A pair of braccleted arm* with flapping lace under skeves were flung aroonfl mr neck, and somebody began kissing me verv hard in deed. "Oh, ton darling girl, is it rvally you 1 To think o'your tarring up here! liavr you come to stay ? What tun ! Why tee ar* here. Pa and Mrs. Ltnox and Fred and little Pbii aad me and—" The sen tence coded in a fresh volley "f kisses. Of course b, this time I recognized the speaker. S'obodv but Ethel Lenox conld possibly hare crowded and combined so many words and embraces into a single breath. I was really glad. Ethel is one ot tboae fresh-hearted creatures who wants every body with whom they come in contact. She was a general favorite at acbool: and though we hadn't met for two years, I could see by this burs: that she hadn't changed a bit. A little later I didn't feel so shure. T red as we wire, we thought it necessary to make a toilet tor tea, tf only to show tbo-e stuck-up people on the piazza that we had clothes which were not dustv, ay< which puffed aid ruffled and luop-d up bagged out and boasted as much trimming as their own. As we came down stairs, roa in front with her long black tram and floating tarlatan cap stung*, and Sue and 1 respectively in roee-culor and ps!e preen (I don't know a prettier drcs* tor the sea aide than white grenadine over pale sea green silk, and so ufiiul), Ethel passed us, leaning on the arm of a gentleman. Then I noticed she was grown, and, though not exactly pretty, had gained a err tain pictur esque effect which took the place or pretti nes*. Her hair wa always the most beautiful I ever saw—pale, rippling brown, very thick, ind BO long that it touched the floor wbeuihe sat on a chair. The gitls used to call her '"Lady Godiv a," and tn*i*t on having exhibitionsol it at bed-time; but in school she habitually wore it rolled round her bead and smothered with a-net, now it was in two immense heavy braids down ber back, the ends tied with blue ribbons, and fcer white dress had a bine sash and a little touch of blue somcwlure at fhe throat, which seamed to set ofl hir clear pale ebeek* and brown eyes. "What an absurd fashion your friend dresses ber hair in !" remarked Sue, pass ing a tinger rather complacently over the row of impossible pinned-on riDglet* which •mameoted her own forehead. Sue's bail behind was a huge crispy mass, which towered up from the nape of her neck over the top of ber head till it met and was lost in the aforesaid fringe ol ringlets. Mest •f Sue's hair comes out of creen bext-s in hi r top bureau drawer. I didn't make any rejoinor to this remark of hers, for she is "a little sensitive on tbe point, and likes to foiget it comfortably whenever she can, wbivb ser-m to be a good deal of the time! But notwithstanding Ethel's long braids | and increase of height and general improve incnt, it was not quite ea>y to understand I how she had contrived to capture the sunerb-Jooking fellow on whose arm she j leaned. We women are apt to think that : a handsome man must naturally be at; traded by beauty; and this was one m the handsomest men I ever saw—tall, dark, brilliant, with that sort of manly affection ate look which all women like to see. But there could lie no doubt ol tbe caprivation. I discovered it at once in his eyes, in the ; way be leaned toward her; and as for j Ethel, she held Lis arm with that indefin able air of possession which never comes over a girl til! alter the engaged ring is on her finger. I was sure there was a ro mance on foot, and bound to find it out. After a day or two Ethel told me the whole story. It was one evening when "Jack"' (Jack Hamilton, it seemed, was thg name of the hero) had gon* to Boston, and we two were sitting alone on the rocks close to the twilight-tinted waves. Here it is, and in her own words as nearly as I can remember them : "No, I haven't known Jack long. It is only—let me see, two, three three months and eighteen days since we met. 1 saw him first at Niagara. Juliet (this was Ethel's ycuDg step mother) "was taken with an 'enthuse' to see the Falls very early, before people got there and spoiled the sentiment of t.ie place. Pa said we were foolish snd romantic, and would bo extremely uncomfortable, snd probably catch our deaths of cold, but he made no real abjection; so we went. It was the first day of May." '•You've been at Niagara? Well, you can't think how different, and how—well, rather dreadful—it is out of the season. We got In at mldaight. _ The Cataract FRED. KURTZ, Editor ami Proprietor VOL. V, lloue looked all dark and iliirrlisl, but a man opened lb® door and took u into that Ltj: square ball, whete then? w> a huge Morning-Glory *tova with flaming itu gla-s ciM, I atmo) you the nan wleoroe, lor we were hall tr ai n. "Juliet, still under the influence of her "enthuse.' a-ked lor rooms on the cataract side of the house, lint the man couldn't tire them tons. That side ol the house wa always kept shut up in the uinttr. he -aid, ami the room* were aot let in older, lie made us comfortable elsewhere, how ever, and, tar my part, I was not aortv to tie a little further from the river. I never hears! it sound as it did that night. The ur (airly thro lw*l and trembled. It w*s like the breathing and panting of some savage animal. 1 lay awake the longest ruue, and a!l ni\ dreams seemrd to he ovvrabadowc I and pervaded by the near presence of the strong, tierce thu g. "Next morning the sun shone brightly. 1 lorgot my terrors and ever* thiug else except the beauty of the The rivci was ltd! of tee, clear green ice, which the rapid* bow along In a whirling, tri umphant wax, as if it were a load of stolen emerald*, all cut ami polished and ready for setting, lev fringed the edge* ol the show hew and there. Men with pole* wero trying to break it up, ao that the water could get in aud turn the w heels ot a mill. 1 bad forgotten that thew was * mill. Sr tnehow the sight of it made uie angry. Think of penning Niagara up and torrmg it to he useful! it U as bad a* setting Sampson to grind among the stave*. Tbe air tu warm with tun, but the i melting ice gave it a itt ami sparkle like • Obanipaignc. It exhilarated me no that I wanted to danee at every step, and t .-battered and rattled to Juliet till it ; t airly dbti acted her. She aas in a state of high prtwsute romance, and I ginned Iroru the tar-away expression of her eye* and the way she played with her note hook mat she was composing a poem, iJoint writes ready pretty veraes, did you know < I'll ahow you some, if you like). So, after a while, I mereitully took myself otf, and alter sitting a few minutes by the American Fall, I started olf on a I solitary ramble. 4 1 lorgot to say that earlier in the morn ing we had been al! over Goat Island in a back. It was rather bard to bud ane, lor ' the stables hadn't opened for ihe season : cither. Think of its being hard to act a back at Niagara, where utuallj the difficul ty ts to get away from their gaping doors and importunate drivers. And the shops, too, they had barely a thing in the windows. Iwft over fans from last year and a lew fly-specked stereoscopic views, that was all Don't toil Mr. Howelh, but I saw in ooe of them the very fan which Basil bought for Isabella on 'tbeir wedding jour ney.' You remember it, that dreadful Magenta one with the yellow bin! in tbe middle J Well, there it was, the very fan. She must have exchange.! it when bis back was turned, and trusted to his never finding out the difference. I'm sure I should hare done just the same iu her case! '•Can you fancy Niagara with no brides ? We met just out- girl in gray poplin, with ber Lead on the shoulder of a new coat. Immagitie it—only one! There weren't any peep-shows, or boy s with spectroscope*, cr any photographers urging us to po*e for our picture* with the Kalis as a back ground. Not a single pcr*o I ru*bed out to invite us to see tbe view from their back-door at twenty five cents apiece. You can't tbiuk bow pleasantly our miss** these things, though I must say I hardly knew tbe place. But here I am running on, and forgetting G >at Island, where I began to take you, and where it happened —I mean, of course, meeting Jack aud all that. "It had been so perfectly lowly there in tbe moniiag while we were driving about that, now I was left to tay own devices, 1 was seized with a desire to go over again and sit for a gO)d long while. So tew people were crossing that the gate keeper rememltered my face and let rac go in free, Toils were good lor twenty-four hours, he said. So 1 balked over the loug bridge, and in five minutes had Jot myself in the woods a* tresh and wild and fragrant as if in the heart of the Adirondacks, instead of close to a dozen big hotels, with dinner gongs and waiters in white aprons. "Goat Island, in the season, Is a civil ized sort of a place, you know. 1 here arc carriage* and people, and benches ami placard*, and you dout feel in the least alone or in the country. But that day it seemed pure country. There were no people sitting on tbe benches, and some how you didn't notise the placards. Birds popped out of every bush and tree, and chirped ami sang as if for a wager. The ground wa* just one carpet of flowers— anemones and spring-beauties and beauti ful white !ily-fbaped things which 1 found afterward were Iridiums. And all tbe time tbe deep, cool roar and rush of the rapids blended ami mixed with tbe birds' songs and tbe beauty, as the minorinstru mentsoi an orchestra mix with the vivid scintillating violins. Juliet says I haven't a particle of romance in tny nature, and perhaps she is right; but some how that rnorniug I was wrought up and exalted. I laughed, lint I wanted to cry more than t<> laugh. You know the feeling—a sort of happy pafii. "Well, at last I came to the steps which lead to Luna Island, and went down. I found a seat close to that lovely little single fall which, you remember, plunges off there. All the Great Fall was in view. I* was a perfect place, cool and yet sunny, and the water was so deliriously clear up to the very edge that I could hardly keep out of it. I bathed ray bauds and face, and then let down my hair, which felt dusty after the rail road, and wrung it out and let it float ofl witli the foam and over the bubbles ot the fall. It was great fun, like a game of play with some friendly giant. I wa* sitting in the sun afterward with it hang ing down my back to dry, and my lap full of trilliurns, when step* sounded, and a gentleman came down the stairs. "You needn't pick tip your ears in that eager way. It wasn't .Jack. On the contrary, it was quite an elderly man, with bushy white whiskers and hair tuoro than three-quarters gray. He wis wtll dressed, and looked altogether so old and respectable that I was dreadfully annoyed* and ashamed at being caught with my hair down, I repressed iny firat impulse 11 jump up and run away, and sat ■till. Oh, it I only hadn't," cried Ethel, cover ing her eyes, with a sharp momentary shudder. ' But then," smiling brightly, •'perhaps in that case 1 might never have seen Jack; so, on the whole, I ain glad I did. The old gentleman coasted rennd the island with a rapid step, looking off at the Falls. That's what people generally do. yon know, so I wasn't surprised, and thought that probably, having done his duty, lie would go away. But when he got to the place where I sat he stood still, and pointing with his cane, said, in a gruff, excited voice: 14 'Lots *f it, lots of it, ain't there?'" '" Yea,' I said, and 1 couldn't help laugh ing, his tone was so odd." '"Lotsof that, too,' he went on point ing at my hair. I was surprised' of course, but I only smiled. lie looked like some body's grandfather, and yon knew we gins don't feel it necessary to be very much offended when eld men say com plimentary things to us. •'So I went on arraging my flowers. Pretty soon I felt a touch, and looking up, there was the old gentleraau close to me, and just drawing back bis hand from uy hair. I suppose I must have looked startled, for he said, apologetically : " 'Excuse me—bnt I used to know a THE CENTRE REPORTER. girl with hair like your*. U*> loop, ao | thick, o shiny in the i>un. I hope you j don't put it up iu one of those mt**y water fAUs.?' -•No. I generally braid it," **' That's right,' he rrj ilned. 'UraLl it and hake it, and mark It with T—! I declare—What a:n 1 ayi*gf' "Now I i> really uncomfortable. My hair wasn't halt dry, hut 1 caught at it aud began to twi*t a d atiek in pin* pre paratory to immediate flight. To my horror the old man pulled the pins out a fast a* l put them in. " 'No, no ' he cried ; 'no pica, no pins! Nature must hare her own way sometime*, or she'll explode. Your hair was meant to hang. N>> pin*, po pitta !' "'Don't,' I raid; for in suiting thepina he pulled my hair dreadfully; 'yon hurt me. Uiva me hack those hair pins if you please, sir." Rut instead of giving thtrn back he clutched my wrist, and tiling hi* eye* upon tue, said, in a low, aepulchra! voice: 'Melioda consents. She is mine, hair and all. Hut how to Hud a priest!' "Ob, Soidee, if you could g-.e-* bow frightened I waa! It ws* not the word-, only, but the wilJ glare of the eves, wliieb told me that 1 wa iu the power <>f a ma niac, alone ou that dreadtul i-laud. For a minute alt grew black before uie. I *up p>se 1 wax on tbe point of hunting arvar. Then a desperate sort ol courage came to my aid, and forcing a -mils to uiy lip*—l could feel them quiver aud stiffen—l drew my baud gently away, shook down the hair, and said, " 'There, than.' "Tbe terrible old gentlemen seemed plex-ej, '.Much better, much better.' he cried. 'That'* the way we wore it in Paradise, you kuow. Let uie see ; 1 *# talking— What was 1 talking about I' 'About tbe giri with long hair.' 1 an *wered for I did not dare to remind bun " 'No, I wasn't;* and he gave me a sharp look, 'it was something eUe. Oh, Mcliu da. Did *fce promise to be mine!' ,4 * I dou't know. Won't you sit down and tell uie tbe story/' I ulcered, for I tnaught time was my best friend, and hoped each minute to hear semebwly coat ing that way. "Tha lunatic eyed suspiciously. Thoti to my dismay he caught at my hair, ami tiad it in a tigut knot round on* of the low boughs o! the tree under which 1 cat. " 'Now,' be said, sitting dawn directly between mo anl the steps—'now you're iixed, and I'll tell you the story.* 44 'But,' I *: .!—ami Saidee, i actually gave a gay little laa-c'a ; Juliet said sin cm* imagine how I did it, and neither can I now— ' Kv didn't wear ber hsir tied round a bough iu Paradise. Naiurt meant it to hang down you know.* 44 'You're nghtji ou're right; so she did,' he cried, skipping from his seat ami unty ing the hair as fast as he kad tied it up. •It ought to hang, and it •.hall,' aod ho sat down again between me and the steps. "'About Melinda,' be went on. 'She Eroroieed. you know, but the (>arr*#s, from Syracuse : "While lur—iug ulotig the Mohawk Valley, 1 learned with regret that u -oiitageoii* disease of a very serious nature exist* among the rattle there, nud that farmers and others in tore* Ud in the raisin# of cattle had endeavored to keep the matter secret, leal it slioirbl depreciate the cattle maiket in that and other motion* of the country." Of the tiimteanuiM of the Txm i-:*ttt* plague iu Ohio, the Cincinnati j CoMiHtrtiai of "We have ißolbir Texas cattle senaa ] tit'ii on hand at the twine tune of year, ami 11) the same locality, where, three yea re ago, the co urn me re of milk were alarmed at the loa* of score* of cows on dairies out <>u the Caterain I'ike beyond ! Ouuiuunavdle. The principal lter then was Mr. M("Cracken, who hwt every cow iu hta possession fr >iu the disease, ue (V>m|Mnied by ticka or con-lice, that Prof. tiangea designate* aa the splenic or K|Hirutlie fever. The prr-Mut instances of the re-api>eanuie of this fatal niaUtly are in the dairies of G W. Tullaut ami J. W. West, both contiguous to each other on the Colerain Pike, about two miles beyond Cumminvilie, or iu the immediate vicinage of Mt. Airy. A lot of Texas or Cherokee rattle were pastured on Mr. West's place. Lart week thirteen of Mr. Tullaut'a cattle died, as he thought; from the feeding on green corn ; this week the remainder of his stock of tweuty-niue took ill aud have alto died. The matter coming to the knowledge of Mr. Owen*, the City Milk Inspector, und Mr. Hinder, Inspec tor of M. at and Cuttle, thev repaired to the plax and found all of Mr. West's cattle ill, twenty-four iu number, ami all exhibiting the symptom-* of tbesiikuic fever—the drviug up of the milk, the dull, stupid look of the animal, the glassy eye and drooping head, and the hide covered with Texas cnttle-ticka or lice—an-l so pronounced it Further inquiry discovered that a lot of poor, meagre, bruised aud lm*y Texas cattle hid leen pastured on Mr. West's place, and ulao that Urge niimWrs of the Chero kee and Texas cattle were being sent here from St. Louis and Chicago. Mr. Snyder, in the exorcise of his duty a Cattle Inspector, act red a lot of 144 head, and condemned them as unfit for hutnan food. They "were lean, scabby, lousy, bruised and generally bad. The Cattle liuqwctor ordered the immediate burial of the dead cows, in order, if l>o-*ible, to prevent anv farther spread of the contagion, and tue most prompt and efficient measures will lie adopter) by tlie authorities to check the evil, at least mi fax as this community is con cerned." Why She Rrfbscd. You say you went to a party bud night, au 1 you saw Mrs. Smith, an old friend, whutu you had not sreu since she and vonr sister were at school together. Yon had a very pleasant talk until supper, then you pave her your arm and took ht-r to stipper. When some one came along with a few glasses of wine on a waiter and offered her a plans, you saw her shudder as she said. •* So !"* and vou wondered why Mr*. Smith, who didn't use to lie particular alxvut such things, not only refuted but shuddered wh n be said, " No I" Yon can not tell why ! I can tell you why. You went on with your talk, and hnd a little renewed flirt.v tion, did you I 1 won't say von didn't. She was very pay, and seemed very glad to forget herself, aho did ? Very well ! lam piail you gave her that honor of the evening. I ean tell you where she went after the party wn* our. She was glad it was late, fur her husband had not come home. She sat and read an hour and her husband did not come. She wro'e f.>r sn hour, and he did not come. Site sat at the piano for un hour, but he did not come. At length, between three oid four o'clock, there vu a noise nt the door, aud two policemen held him iu their ortns. She knew tin nt both well lv this time. It happens ao often that she knows every peherman on ths beat. They bade her good night. She brought him in. She had locked her child's room that he might not abuse him. She tock the abuse aa he flung himself upou the bed. She t>k the -o i-'.tnl li.til■ 111 II:? It g. t* in the way of business. 'l'hi* idea can be naliz I by teo'lliy'tin# liow lunch worn I>.V u-e and therefore diiuiniHhed hi vulue, the old Spanish coins knowu as | " levies" aud " lijia," used to Ik'. They ceased to eirettlale s uue four teen years ugo, and the constant wear ami tear-of circulation had won tli-i down, oft-tiiues, to the thiunes* of a bit of liu. Efllgy and inscription were us ually worn out, and at last Hit*? out of date pieces of inouey were not worth more than one half of their nominal ; value. As every oue knows, gold and silver Coiu ia not made of pure uietol. It ia ucoisisury to alloy it, by iucorperating with it iuiiuu portion of an inferior metal—almost always copper. Gold, which is the most valuable, in always one of the softest of ail uu-tala. My mother lined to wear a gold ring which utv father hail brought with him from the East Indies, and I well remember that it had a slight tinge of red (a me of the pocta mention " the red gold,") and being en tirely without alloy, was so soft, tint when worn, it did not retain its circular form, but scoouimodaled itself to the hape of the tiugcr U|>on which it haJ been placed. It ha* lieen necessary, to increase their hardiieat and durability, to alloy the precious metals. The gold acoilin of Tui key and the silver florins of Hanover stood alone, in later times, as being a) most absolutely pure. In a state of nature a certain qtiantitv of siDer is b mo*t iuvaritdy found mingled with the gold, aud where or when it is not com to separate them, tlie silver is idlowcd to remain, a* a natural allov. The gold doubloons of S nitli America have their pale apjwarance tr of Eurup#, where the gold ha* been <<:tfirrlj seperateJ, and ar alloy of cooper introduced for coining, the money na a icd tinge—not like that of the the gold in the 11*-1 India rtug I hare mentioned, bnt of n coppery hue. In the United .States Mi:it*t Philadel phia, to which stranger* were admitted every forenoon, the aim n to imitate the tru<- color of gold aa clmeiy aa poaaihle, by the u*o of an alloy of nine tenths cop per and one tenth silver—that ia, a thousand ounces of stand ird gold will con-iat of nine hundred ounce* of pure gold, ninety ounce* of co)>|er and b it of •ilver. All the gold coin of this country therefore, consists of nine hundred part* ef pure metal and one hundred |wrt* of alloy. Tliia mak*s a fltuoeas oi nine-tenth*. which ia the " standard* gold required by law. In the eagle, them must be two hundred and fifty eight grams. lu e-ctimatiug the value of thie Uat-ud contained ui coin, nothing Is allowed for the alloy. A SCRAP or HAUEH HISTOKT. —There ;i nlw.it A a ri'iUiu curiosity which seek* ih incidents of the inor life* of the harems, with an avidity which is often fully wan-antcd bv the disclosures. Tlx //Ml Tin t, umW dale of August 12, ' gives the bistory of the death of a tx-niv ' 'iful Circassian shite, supposed to IWTC | Urn poisoned. She had been purchased some time ago for the mm of £7OO by a wealthy Mussulman of high rank, a man well advanced in life, who has one legal wife and a number of conctiblues, bat no children. bhe Iwooms tlx- favorite of ber master, who was much distressed some darn ago at her faliiug seriously ill. her malady Wing characterised by thorough prostration of the system, lie had her removed to the house of one of . his dependents near his yuli on the Bos ! phorua, giving instruction* that medical | aid should be procured and uo pains or expense spared to restore the sufferer to health. The way in which the person to whom the precious charge w.ia in trusted fulfllh-d these instructions was to send for a medical man and drive a l>ar gain with him at the rate of 20 piastres a visit, medicines to lie included. It is stated, and is very prohvbly true, that the practitioner did not pay a wooml visit. A " wise woman" was then called and wrote aoino talismonhs words on a scrap of pa|u>r. The patient wat visitel daily by a uiunhcr of her fellow slaves from the ban m. who e destroyed. LAY MONKS. —In the Hotel drg Inva lid.-K. in Paris, iwnsioners who have lost the use of their limbs and are nimble to take care of themselves are railed by their brethren "Isy monks," because they have untbing to do but dose, sleep, eat, and drink. The Government allows tliein money for servant hire, the serv ants must fe |iensioners living in the hotel, and the (Kisitions are always in demand, although servants of the first class of "lay monks," according to a Into writer, receive only SI 20 a mouth, those of tiin second only 80 cents, arid those of the third class only i and feewr s/J 1 don'i kuo hitch has done the must damage iu this world, lasynra or malice, but i gueas lasynees has. If i had 4 fust rat<" dogs i would name the liest one " Doubtful" aud the other 3 " L'adcaa." Rumor is like a swarm ov bees, the more yu tile them the less vu git rid ov them. Yirtew may koesit in never sinning, but tlie glory ov \iftew koucit* in re* peutancc. Faabion make* phoolsov mm, ninnem •v other*, and alaiea ov all. A jest may be knx I, but a joke ntver is. I never l*t ; not ;> mutch tx-kause i am slrale i shall lore, as bekause i am atraJe i shall win. A phooU money is like his bruins, very oueaxr. I don't think the height ov impudence Has ever been reached yet, altlio meuuy hav inade a good trv for it The reason • hi all the works ov natore ere o impressive, is bckause, they rc| present ideas. The b.xiks whitch summer touri.its cany about with them are dmghncd more to employ the bands, than improve the branc*. The man whose whole strength lays in hi* money is a weak inau ; I had rather be able tew milk n cow suckceasfnlly on the wrong aide, than to be such a man. Honm How a strawberry flavor ia got out of Limburger cheese, or why the >lva of ladies' shoe- should tie bet ter than the sole# of man's boot*, are puxxbng. Perhaps it ia the invention ••f a 1-cent khU man to put down the five-centers That favorite syrop, straw- Kerry, which goes gurgling *u rosy e**ol uesa down the fair UmxiU of prwtiy girla. has a butyric ether bane of ranc >1 butter and old rotten cheese— ths o'dest Lins-i burger being the m>t desirable—treated with sulphuric acid and u macros.* pieces rut from aid b w>t leg* a-*d the vales of lm*lia' shoes Tsclw parts of this compound, on* jaxrt of acetic ether diluted with alcohol and water. Colored with cochindal. make what wc call straw tw-rry syrup at the leaver fonctains. lUaana syrup la compounded of rmncid butter, fermeatad starch, and acetic sther ; Hirwaparilla has a base of lom nion molasses, with a dash of wiater grrvn added. Vasilla symp is made of tonka bvnns and fresh hay. Ihneappla syrup ia made of rancid butter, sulphuric acid, glycerin* l and iwap. Peach syrup is made of bittsr almonds and acetic ether. Nectar contain* neutral spirits, logwood, sugar aud rai-ina. Lemon ia the best and moat harmless, being gen erally compowrd of citric acid and sugar. The aliovc will be reeogntted as the most popular syrun*. ami the drink, as diapvoxed at llio fountains by a large nnmlior of sods water *lealera, costs from one cent to one and a quarter per Sis**, and it ia said at from five to ten cent* per glaas, yielding a profit of from 3to to MKi per*ceoL The syrups of the tirt-ela-s establishments are >n "parol with great ears from ripe fruit and pure crushed sugar, and consequently coats more than tho chemical compounds said for syrups. The soda from these fountains costs proliably throe aud a half reats per gloss. A Hriut. Wxmuve.—One of those olJ time weddings took in roioatowu, IVnn., a few dsy* ago. A young gcntls man and lady, stranger* to everybody there, railed on the eqnire to get married. The youag man * carrying hi* shoe* in hi* hand on aceonnt of a atone bruise and iiad on his shoulder a long, narrow *ack. In one end he had something resembling wearing apparel, and in the front end he had a /tinall dog, with it* note dirking out ot a hole. The young lady had in her artn* a large Maltese cat, with a pink nb bon aroand it* neck, tatened with a neat breast pin. When they came to the of fice the yottng man refused to go in. hut, •he, taking hold of hi* coat, said: "Come en. I ain't afraid." Finally he went in. She ays: "Squire, we want to get mar ried." "Hold on," said the young man, " 1 wan't to know how much this job costs." The price wa agreed on, and in the incantime.many had gathered,and two of the crowd acted a* attendant*. While the ceremony was g' : -ig on. one of the at tendants cried oc'.. "Held on, thie fellow ain't on the right side." Hcing properly placed thi djulre proceeded, and the two were made one, and left, no one knew where, being entire stranger. A test enso was recently tried in Berk shire, England. The 24th of June a farmer had a good deal of hay down and thirty men at work. At o'oloek at nigtyt there remained an hour nud a-knlf's work to be done in order to secure the hay. A portion of the workmen refused hi "work longer, unless paid extra for it. This was refused, and the hay was not secured, a rain came on, the bay was damaged, and the farmer sued two labor ers whom he was paying by the week, to recover his loss. The magistrates de cided that the defendants were not bound by their contract to go on with the work at that time of night, and the case was dismissed. AN Ixsnuxcß CASK. —A esse likely to prove valuable to insurance offices was tried last Assizes, at Bristol,* England. A person named Bowie obtained a loan from an insurance company on the strength of a policy taken out in August. 186W, and died In November, 1871. Alter his death, the company received information which led them to lielievc that neither Mr. Bowie's health nor habit* were of the satisfactory character which he alleged, and It was further discovered that, al though himself tbo ngent of an insurance company, he had not deenred it desirable to insure in the office for which he acted. The jury at once gave a verdict for the office. A eorrespondent, writing from White Sulphur bpritigs to the Washiugtou Pit h'iot, describes the German, which lasted two hours, as " hugging, set to music" —and he hit, nieely, in his expression. EnglUh Needle women. The needle women of Liverpool have (•ecu holding tuoetlug*. for the purpose of procuring an increase of pay far their hard labor. A Mr. HUnuuti, who takes a great interest in the working-class**, preside* at their assemblies, and the facta brought to light show tlwlthe eon dition of the English needle women it, indeed, deplorable. One woman, a man tle maker, stated that she worked twelve hour* a day, with au allowam-e of an hour and a half for meal*. When the inspector came to visit the workroom the employer represented that there were fewer' people in the house than there usually were, her object being to get the establishment under the Worksbo Act instead of the Factory Art, so *s to be able to keep her workwomen to a later hour. The wages ranged from five shil ling* to twelve abilliugs a week, and for thoae sums the women had to keep them selves. The mantle makers, however would *rm to be much better paid than the' plain sewer*. One young woman, a plain aswar, said she worked eleven hours a day and received a permanent salary of seven shillings a week, and she was the beat machinist in the room. If this is the wages of the beat it may t> im agined what the bad machinist* receive. One old woman, who said she bai been forty year* a plain aewer, actually assert ed that she had worked five day* for eighteen pence. A middle-aged woman •aid abe had worked at aaeknaking from hslf-|Hiet seven in the morning till aix in the evening, with half an hour for din ner, and she got four shillings a week. A young woman said she waa a luscltin -Ist, and tnado youth's single jacket*, for which she was' paid at the rate of five pence for four. It took her half of the day to make the four. When she came out at night she added, after working s heavy machine all day, olie oould hardly stand on her feet. fl it mm tlin statement la surpassed by that of soother machinist, who make* gentlemen's troaaejw, and who aaid she was paid three shillings a doccn, or far the TrtT Ituet f<>ur shillings. "If we worked," the explained," "from six o'clock in the morning until twelve at night we might manage with the assistance of a boater to make half-a-doacn." "That ia," asked Mr. Ktimpnmi, "two shilling* for workisg eighteen hoora, and out of that kuu voo And your own thread and silk f to which aho replied " Yes." Another young women aaid ah* got three-half-pen re a doxra tor making linen enfla and collars She could earn. five pence a day by working from nine to seven. That' was aa much aa others earned. A correspondent of the Liver pool Albion, who baa been investigating the matter, confirms many of the above statements. The following is a description of one of the above establishments visited by him: "The workrooms are two cellars each fifteen feet by eighteen feet, the fl.tor* bring nin* feet sx inches beneath the level of the roadway. An opening ha been made in the partition wail ao aa to connect the two cellars. Workshops teas likely io fulfil the conditions of health it would be rather difficult to con ceive. One of the cellars contained fire onachinea and the other three. Ttie proprietor informed u* that be employ ■-I sixteen or seventeen "hands.' inclu ding bis wife and himself, bat at the time of our visit tbeie was no work going on in one of the cellars. In the other there were nine girla ami women, some at work and others takings 'tea dinner.' The countenance of all, proprietor and proprietor's wife, women and girla—bore sallow evidence of the effects of spend ing many hours a day ' in a close plaoc.' It is but fair to add that the profits of the ' sweater* appear to be anything but excessive. He ia, in fact, but a ooutrac tor for the shops, and is himself nearly as poor m those be employs. M How A Box or FARE Przzi.cn THE IXIJIANS—At dinner Whitewash ia-lua- Eve called to him a waiter.-who said • Ugh fa a delicate compliment, and banded him a bill of fare. The chieftain IKtintcd to the tlrst item, and said * Ugh!- riie waiter said * Ugh !' an! returned with a cup of coffee. Now, even though .i cup of coffee ia a good thing, it is hardly a meal for a man. So the brave said ' Ugh!' again, and pointed to the aecond item. The waiter said • Ugh !' retired, and returned with a cup of green tea. A third interchange of ' Ugha T resulted in a cup of black tea, and a fourth inaeupof mixed tea. In des pair. the brave, uttered an angry * Ugh!' that tu.idc the waiter turn pale, and pointed to the laat item on the bill, evi dentlj being anxious to get aa tar away from the teas as possible. The waiter faltered ' Ugh !' and hurried Iwck with a tumbler of iced tea. The other*, warn oil by the example and fate of their com rade attacked the bill ot fare ia madia tfg. One atruck "pay cat,' under the head ' broiled,' and had an abundant if not varied meal of mutton ehopa, seal •ntlets. broiled chicken, pork abopa, mr loin steak, porter-house steak. Boston •teak, A c. Combining their information, the remaining member* of the partv wander d over th* lull of fare, taking every division by start*, and none of them long. The result was eminently satisfactory to the aboriginal ytomach. which is capacious and has no prejndice* as to the succession and relative propor tions of soup, flsh, game, entrcea,boiletl roast, game and deaaert One erratic brave owed his matutinal distension to a judicious compound of : 1, coffee ; 2, oanteloi*; 3, ice cream ; 4, Irish stew ; 5, steak ; 6, Worcester sauce; 1, mtis urd; 8, melon ;9, fried potatoes; l'l. mackerel ; 11, Graham broad; 12, iced tea; 18, fried egg* ; 14. sliced tomatoes and 15, buttered toast, and his l>oom was Tent wilh emotion when he found that the wnitor shook his head when the li ue ncata having Irionda to dinner will fileaae give notice at tbc office-toM w*t* indicated. —St. Louiepaper. AT WENT Pot NT. —Among the jrecnliar institutions at West Point are two maiden ladies named Thompson, who eniuy cer tain privileges not possessed by any other ladies in the land—namely, the right to board twelve students of the senior class of cadets. Their father, Col. Thompson, performed some special service during the It-volutionary War, for which a novel (tension was settled ou hn widow—via., the us® of a house at West Point during her life at an annual rent of six ornte, to which was added the above boarding privilege. Ot the death of the widow the pension was con tinued to her throe daughters, and for sixty years the family have held the privilege, and maintaired themselves handsomely from it. One of the daugh ters is dead, and the remaining two are very aged, one soventy-two, the other eighty. They are very aristocratic and diguifled, and if the cadets "carry ou " too much, tliey find a polite note under their plates intimating that they can depart. They have their pick of cadets, and it is considered a great favor to get there. It is reported that there has been a tight between two factions ef tbe Creek Indians, in which 6cven were killed and several wounded. Tbe quarrel is'said to have grown ontof tue election of a negro te the chieftainoy of the Creek Nation, TERMS : Two Dollars a Year, In Advance. Tbf Horror* of a IMlr, Inspector Meßrlen, of New York, who, with nil wile, was on bord the Metis, U*lto the story of hU -<-Jpa aa follows : M I went to my wife ami quietly aid that , f lrred We were in danger, ami naked her to arise immediately. Hbe got out of the b> rtl> and aoked ma to be culm. I e*id, "Ye#, it ia oar only hope." I opened the •Uteroom door to admit the light, and I , procured two life-preservers tod threw j them on the floor. At that moment soma ] onr oame through the passageway aud •aid there wee no time to areas. lat (once pat one of the life-preservers on my wife and then another. 1 took a aheet, tore it in two, ami tied a piece of it | around my wife. Then I pulled the eur -1 lain oord off the hook and my wife took that and tied tt over the life-preservers | around her body. 1 then put on a life* : proaerrer and aaaiated her to the main > Midoon. She woe at that time vary <• jsiek. I returned to the atoteroom, got ! her eboea and pot them on. At that time 1 the passengers were crowding toward the ■ atern of the steamer. Home men were praying tn the main aaloon, and all were intensely agitated. One woman wildly cried out, "Where ie the Oaptatu if Wbere are the life-preeerrem ?" Will nobody help me ?" We then went through the to the window opposite our*, and I aJil my wife to get out of the window. Bite felt unable to do 00. bat finally succeeded, aad we went to the gangway byway of the saloon deck. I said to my wife, "fi afraid it will soon be over." ! Hbe raid, "1 pray not" I kueod her. thinking it would be our last kirn. I aosteted her in the water on a sbelf on which I bad bound her witn two pieces of a sheet, and imrae i diately followed ber. After taring in the | voter a moment I said, "Louise, I'm I afnud I made a mistake in leaving the wreck," and I immediately made on c 3 rt I to reach it, and aneoeeded in grasping the netting of the gangway. In an effort to ' get on deck 1 lost my hold on my wife, 1 and she cried out, "Oh, save me, has hand, save me. I answered, "Yea. Lou, j I'm here." It waa ao dork that I could not see her, but I knew lior voior. The j dashing wares earned what I supposed ; to be phosphorescent light oo tbe water, and by it I saw my wtfa with the red oord and tease) that I had tied around her. I grasped lier tod assisted her oo ' the saloon deck. After getting her u her Let we moved to the bow of the boat. The Captain said. "Coire this tray," ami be lowered a ladder by which !we reached the humcane deck. I placed my wife on the skylight where some ladies sad piweogen were grouped, and we remained there until we could see the breakers. I thoaght that the roof of the : burrictne deck would be raised by tbe waves and would fall flat on the beach and that we might tins get ashore. As the steamer struck the breaketw the I part that waa nearest to the* Ho re doubled I up and fell back with the IMri • ou the people on the deck, bat I still lenutined 1 near the skylight. Tbe second mate tore the skylight ironmtbe deck, to kmg | it turn a complete somersault, end throw ing toy wife and myself partially un let the frame work, tfy great efforts I got out and released my wife. 1 mmediatwij ifter regaining my feet I caught the bodies of en infant and a colored man, i and clasped my wife's left bond. My | wife cried out, "For God's sake let go ]my hair." A French woman had caught ;my wife by tbe back hair. I raised tbe j babe in my left hand aud it waa taken from me by some one. 1 caught the French woman by the waist, saying, 1 "Let go, let go." Then n stalwart man caught the French lady and seemed to I lift her as if to throw ber over his shoul ; der. and carried her to the beech. Home one caught me by tbe hand, but st this turn my strength tailed me. I saw my wife a few steps in advance. A man caught me by my nght bond and said : | "Now make an effort to get on your feet." I could make no replv, for 1 was com pletely exhausted. Be said again, '."Make one more effort !" I looked neck and saw a breaker coming. 1 made tbe effort, and they drew me on the sand, wbere I found my wife." Tt* A ST- Bor sia.- -The expense of board - ing hired men is too great for any former ! t<> assume. It to done at the sacrifice of 1 the comfort of his family. The money expenditure needed to accommodate them by themselves to far leas than wou'd he Mipposed. Two hundred dehors will build a rerr comfortable house, large enough : for a desen people when necessary. Three deeping rooms, one kitchen, and one eat ing-roem will furnish space and privacy j for a large family, or for several numarried men, quite equal to that enjoyed *by the average of our formers. A frame house I of tiro stories thus divided, with plastered trails and ceilings, built substantially,with s floor sixe of 10x24 feet, and height* be tween floors of nine and eight feet, a cellar and an outside shed for cooking in sum mer and weod-shed in winter, may be Knilt for the amount mentioned- If the farmer is handy and can put up a balloon frame, inclose it, roof it, and lay the floors, and employ a carpenter only to pat in the door* and windows and a mason to build the chimney and plaster the house, and stone up the cellar walls, the meney outlay j will be materially reduced. The comfort ! gained by the fanner and hi* family in freedom from domestic annoyance# will lie a frond a return for the investment the very first year; but the gain to tie farm |in having:" a better and, more trustworthy | kind of help will be much greater, and will rome each season in the pleain*lv tangible shape of profit# derived fim lietter work and crops more readily se cured. The employment of married men will then be pnedble, and they are found to be worth several hundred dollar* a month more than thoee not thus "an •bored." HTTDTTCO A POST BILL.—A new anec dote is told of Benjamin Franklin which can hardly be true, for he was a bright boy in the Boston schools, and must have learned earlv to road and spell. But it will do to tell, and the moral is as good : Bat there ia one anecdote which I have never seen in print, it was told me by a gentleman of Boston, who re membered the old house in which Frank lin was born. " Often," said he, " have I looked at the old tumble-down building iu Milk Street, and imagined the bare foot boy sitting on the door step, learn ing to spell from an old post bill." A young miss, daughter of a distinguished citizen, passed him-one day while thus engaged, and the boy overheard lier words of ridicule as she spoke to her companion, laughing at the eagerness of the poor lad, and derided his " beautiful spelling book." But there came another day, when Franklin was our embassador at the court of France. A wealthy American lady, was once present at one of the festive occasions made in honor of Franklin, greatly desired an introduction to her distinguished countryman. It was obtained, and great was her surprise to bear bim say, " Ay, ay, we have met before." She could not remember when ; and Franklin added. " You do not re member the barefoot little boy in Milk Street, studying his lesson from the muddy post bill !"' Although spoken good-huinoredly, the fair lady was much disconcerted at the remembemnce of the incident. It is to be boped she learned a lesson therefrom, in regard to the importance of treating everybody with respect. It is reported in Paris that the trial of Marshal Bazaiue has brought to light facts of great gravity. Farts and FtwH Ciiui are sold la Hamburg three to a cent. Fall sate of dead gold *re the last ia | maecnliu# jewel ry. Kaiwjw aversged $43 1* per sere,e*b, i.u crofahtetyear. I Missouri IsawlndM out of 5A0.000.000 worth a year by the bog* Undressed kill glnvos still seem to ba very mnoti worn on the street. Wedding carda next winter ara to ha nmmrlM, white* MRS and plain. It ia aaid that next winter a hmg dreaa on the street will be a thing nakaowo. The kte*t in handkerchief oases ia made of oanvasa, trimmed with Bosnia leather. Young lad ie bow bare their mono grama embroidered on the instep of their bootftfaao. A load of brioka pawed over an lowa Ijoy last weak without hurting him. Ho was under a bridge. Mr. Jones being aaked by Mr*. Jones to buy a thermometer, aaid bo would wait ootil they were lower. Coate of arma of "new and 'original dtejiV* aril breaking out with grants r virulence than erar this Fail. Tinted earda and note paper, light lirviwn, dark graenlah grey and atona oolor are pronounced "oorroot." An Snglhbaian who lost hia right ay# at the bsti.ls of a oaralaa* aportamao. a ronpl* of years ago, baa jwt recovered 12,500 damage*. In 165* a iw" waa proaeeated in Lon don for selling eoffue, j4 then intro dtUMMl, a* " outosnoa and prejndia# tn the neighborhood- " John Wealey preached 42.000 aeraont —fifteen a week. He never had elergy man'a tore throat, or a veer's lasve of absence with expenses nnid. Watermelons were naed to extinguish a Are which occurred in a store at Oan ton, TIL, by tit* overturning of an oil lamp. The Empress Ehasbrth of Austria offers n prise of luO florins to anybody 4 that saves n human Ufa ia Austria or 11 angary. NO. 40. Ant* Mooring to tl spedss Apbeoo ? gtaSrr. in storing seeds tor food, bite off ; the radical to prevent the germination of to* a**! } Tiw whoim Emily Gnlum was a wrecked ou Prince E Sward Wand, nod nine perrons fort,and eight of th* steam- I ship Ehtb Emily'* crow mere drown*! * by tiw nwl'i rnaning ashore. I The rattle of the rattlesnake i* for the - purpose of imitating tbe sound of the Cioula and oOwr iuroet* thai form the 1 food of bud*, and so attract tlie latter e withb fee reach of the aarpent. 1 A oodbpit near HarmtaJ, • the Meoae, * wa* emdetually fl-wded white the men 9 were at wuriL The IwutdOtoo wa* ao * sudden that twenty-dee mitten were drowned ia the bottom of the ptt i A terriW* mortality, wboae eamw i aa f yt ®nex}il*it*ed. ia reported on the Xor- I wegtao bark. from , Peruambnoo fortisa B*ltr. Nearly all g ] the erww ban died cm the voyage. J The Marquis of Bote ie said to haw* made a vow never to nd* on bone bath, 'iia Ctaawyimifieof a prediction nude to " bim by H gypsy pgDgMHCTb*! He would 1 meet hia death % * tall front a hone. | A Swedish girt in Mhmcapolw waa badly baroed a few #9* *h by *• 1 erne. The niggard for **• • h* worked Jj * charged her tT L 00. fio.tr. etc , nted § s to eaee her suffering*, and wtit hcraway. s A raw of kidnapping a Chine*# child 1 occurred at TU Tdn on the American Meaner SiiaweL Themlprit, a To T*u ; tnan, waa delivered to the American Coo -1 wil, and by him to the OHkteae euiboeittes ; wbo at onee beheaded him. The imnortari.m* of a single Beaton . honm ahw flee thoaaand dten of brown 1 trior**. Pal* MBWI la vender, peart and * ehantoia boll will be wn with drewy 1 carnage toilrtt**, while rtiU fainter ticta J and immaculate white kids appear for foil , evening dress. Thia odd adwtiaemeitt h from an Ea r gßah paper: "My tuwband • cat on a 1 strike. Be prefer* that to work. He t ain't anv ne to ma. f rae* work to keep the children MM) myself. Hl* ton shillings . gueainbesr. ITlawapttiy harttand whUe he'* on a atrik* for a aawing machine." One ef the feature* of a tendon theatre 1 ia a woman etvttog heraelt the Mexican ? albelrte. Sbe'heWe anapended by a rord ' from her teeth two 190 pound bulla, and ? at the aame time a 100 nouod ball In each I band. She alto shoulders a 900 peend r caneoa. and holds it while a round ia be- II lag fired. Alaska appears to be in a very wretched . condition indeed. Reports from that delightful land of aeeteand anow indicate ' that tiw province, secession. or whatever [ it he ceiled, ia lamentably destitute of anytiiiikg like government, except: in the jmimediate vicinity of Sitka. Elsewhere life mad property are at the mercy of the Indians. A poo* but pious young man apolo- # giaed the other evening while making a call for the muddinew of his boots, say ing be had not taken a carriage, bnt had " w!ked up srith corameodahte econo my." He waa grieved when the lovely being whom he ndotes inquired why he didn't "aak Mr. Economy in." "When waa Rome built?" asked a school committee-mm of the first class in ancaeot history. *' la th* night." an swer*! a taught littte girt. "In the night!" exclaimed the astonished es -.miner. " How do voa make that ont ?" • Why. I thonght thas everybody knew 1 that ' Rome wasuH built in a d