Youth and Age. While yet my blood rn foil *®d free, Gay girls the Mu*e* seemed to mo, "* Torover young. forever f*ir. Wtth laughing ey that eholUng* ero. No twfr wi.* ftoy gaint Together, triumph : singly, pain. Gold ami Silver. Lifr ha* two ages : The silver and jovhlcu; A book with I wo page*, A new sad an ohk . Now eland* before me A litßo ebiM, peewit fcir; /X \ Laugh'?** htff of efrr, • Peach check* and golden hair. fihe think* lif - ll '* she#?#. And ahdf hoar* She sunbeam*, Aud gather* Life"* faireat flower*. Near to that golden head Silver i* shining, Wita IUNUV pawing rare; Jk * iAretanuj # There thev are, youth and age, Long hour* beguiling With stories and maxima aage. Talking and sauting. My fife book's two page*; Tho new and the oklen, i The boauufcl pagva. The ailver and golden. The little Brown dual over the brow ot ihe but. Overlooking the valley below. Where the feathery piae* are all tipp'd With crystal* of beautiful snow; A liUtte brown cottage doilt Hand, And route at the ma a lee 1 know. There"i Jemmy a red-headed lad ; roll of buatnees from wonting tail night, Mieefy Idettdiug hi* work with his play. And seeming in both to delight, Willi a motive that's higher than they— An earnest desire to do right. There 's Annie, a gay he tie witch; With round roay cheek* and Mack eye*, With a voire that w sweet a* a hrrd's, fluid lips that wottid sc >rc to lei! he*; With hands always ready to help— la not little Annie a prize? The grey-beaded grandfather ait* !n a chair by the warm-glowing Are; Half aaleep in the eoft light he aita, And the ehihlron draw m ar to admire The Hiin snowy locks and white beard Which mark the long years of the aire. The dear mother's grave, pleasant fare, For a moment a dull shadow wears; But shadows are there oat of place. And the wj& ha* forgotten her cares : hart lot 1* *1 • Her hnsband's qnick footstepa ahe hears. Tbeco i* p vurt j, *p says the world, ' Fd the litilcbrcvril house on fta iiul; There are riches of value untold. That the heart with contentment doth All; The wealth that is better than gold. That all acts may have if they will. ■r A MARVELOUS EVENT. Mrs. Janet Mowbray and her four sons lived in 182S at Uartriek Hall, in tberoun- tj Durham, England. Mis. Jli>*brj vu a (all, power! u! w >m:u of great ener gy anJ bravery, in her fifty-fourth rear. Her sons were aged respectively thirty four,, twenty -sever*, twenty-four, and twenty-one. H-*r besb-md had bey* dead many rears. Her two eldest sow were married, and their wives and families lived ■ with her. The youngest, George, was wild ami dieah ated, and had given hi* mother much trouble. He was deeply *d debt, and had been repeatedly threatened with wrest. Mw.Mowbrgj wps wealthy, j an 3 kept in her bedroom, besides a quantity of valuable plate, a large sum of money. ' i j Ota rhrittxiwsetc Mis. Mowbray V sons and daughters -in-law paid a visit to the . residence of a relative, Mr. Chiker, ol Chatersburg. The domestics, relieved! from duty, were in tlreir own pcrtion of tUo dwelling, enjoying tire festivities of the season. Tie watchman, who was ordi narily cu duty in kitchen garden, took a " hty survey ol Jits beat, and joined the roveUefu in th# kitchen. • > On Christmas sight they were to have' a small gathering of friends and neighbors, and Mrs. Mowbray her an t> consider thc neeessay arrangements. She would re quire the old punch how I,and the ladles and goblets which she kept-m tbo closet of her beiregg She Went, accoidingly and enimMytei ciqsftaud took out tit stiver, j ; stwTmirl r lser sjiectacles. She could not find there, ard at length remem bered that she lad left them on the shelf in the closet. She at once returned for there. Entering her,.bedroom, *le placed the candle on the drwinjj-tablc, and light th ahe.entered , As whe took tlrf first ►top inside the eloMt, she beard the sound as of some one breathmg heavily. She looked up anil saw right be/ore her the face of a man. She waa a brave, resolute woman. She advanced a step, and observed that a man V head, tm- afid b *dy were tbrotieh the small wiudqw at the end, as though in the act of wriegling himself through the open ing. In the man's right hand was a pistol, and bis loft band had Loldof ash -II which ran along the side of the Closet. The man raised the pistol and fired. Mrs. Mow bray mi on instant seized the huge carving knife which lay on the shell, and advanced toward the ruffian. lie- was struggling to withdraw himselt from the window. Uis bauds were on the sill, and bis head some what raised, leaving his neck exposed; Being unable to work hfreself out ol the apertnre, he raised the pistol as though to hurl it at Mis. Mowbray. The cour ageous old lady made one step forward, and dashed the keen blade across the man's throat, layimr it open from ear to ear. She then calmly retired, Hosed the closet door; blew out the lamp, and t&kiog op her candle returned to the parlor, first hiving satisfied herself that not a drop of blood bad stained her dress or bands. Hall an hour after midnight her children retamed home. They fimnd their mother seated by. the fire, serenely reading fbc Bible. They greeted her affectionately, and prepaied to retire forth# night. Mrs. Mow hi ay said, *' Boys, remain behind a little. I wish to speak to you. Yon, iny daughters, can retire." When she was alone with her children, ■ho said, with d'gnity and calmness, M My children, I have killed a man. You will find his body fast in the small window of the closet off ny bedroom;" Her sons stared at her in amazement. Tkeyt at first imagined ttat she most be 1 iboricg u iid ald, ill her old, well known tone of authority, 44 stand aside and Ist me ree the tare or the villain 1 have slain." With that ahe put her son* aside a* | though they were" mere lads, ami walked, | through the slippery pare that lay upon ' the fl.w lip to the body. She tu!d be ; aloae that night, and that she had a large I uin of money and valuable jewels in her j room. The old nurse who had held ; George hi her aims when he first saw the ' light, took care of the body, aud prepared it for the tomb. She dwelt tenderly an the familiar marks upon the limbs .ad face which she ! knew *o well, each of which had a story 'of youthful dating or foliy connected with it. In due time the tuneral took place. . The corpse was laid in the family vault. | Only the family and one or two relatives f attended. Mrs. Mowbray spent the best I part of each day by the side of her dead | so*. She showed externally no signs of emotion. Before the lid was closed she kissed the forehead and cut off a lock of tip hair. The dav after the burial she gave direc tions to her eldest son to par all the doad man's debts, which was done at once so [far as known. Gloom settled over the t hall. The wing of the bmluing In which ! the tragedy occurred was el *ed up, and Mrs. Mowbray removed to a bedroom up jstrirs. On tka fifth day after the funeral a po*t -1 chaise drove up to tbo dour ol ilai wick ; Hall, and from it stepped George Mow bray, looking better than he had looked for many a long day before be left home, j i The servant who opened the ball door started back, and almost dropped with | fright. Hi* exclamations caught the cars j il Mrs. Mowbray and hit sous, who j j eensed to be dumb-founded. George was as much astonished as any of them, and gated from one to the otbei, perfectly lost in bewildered surprise. there was no | doubt of it. George M -wbray. whom every body believed dead and in hi* grave, was living ami before th* m. - Mother,'* said George, advancing to j wards her, "what is the matter? My j return is easily accounted for. Gu reach-! j ing Taw vale, I found that my uncle's j family bad been unexpect ally aummoncd to Loudon, a* my eldest cousin, Sir John ! •tray's wife, was thought to be dying. I | tpqk a night's repose, and then started J ha^agAgain, and here I an," Mrs. Mowbray walked up to bim, gazed into his face, ami then, without a word, | folded him In a passionate embrace. Each of his brothers gra*ped bis bands and kiss- j ed bim, as tliev were wont to do when be j waa a boy and the pet of the family. The old uurse, aroused from her neon-day | slumber, embraced and wept over bitn, land tha servants gathered around with wet eyes and congratulatory expressions. AH this time George knew nothing ol j the true reason for this singular reception. ; Soon, however, the mystery was explained Ito him. The effect upon him cannot be • described. Measure* were immediately taken to bate rhe body of the uao who had been buried as George Mowbray disinterred. This was done, and ss the living George i Good Wide the dead man, the resem j t dance was seen to be ihe most extraor j dinarv. The marks on the face and hands corresponded with those otj George's, the scars on the legs were similar, a.' >o, and ! the bair, eye-brows and linKer-nail* were ; marvelously alike. Who the dead man was, wa* nerer afeertaioe-i. After George's j return, bowerer, inquiries wen-made, audi as it wra never deemed medial to make so long as the dead mad was supposed to be Mrs. Mowbray'a youngest son. These inquiries led to the discovery that; the day bcloro the tragedy three ntco, snp Hjuartcrs atsu inn in a neighboring village, one of them the Ismlioni thought he recog- 1 nized a* fcsviae been in Mm. Mowbray's | service as a groom. The footsteps of three j ; pcilion* were also discovered in the gnr ( den, and tune time after a rone ladder . and a borsc-trouffh, wlncir ha ! apparently I been nsed to lay upnn the spikes at tin j j top of the garden wall, were discovered in the neigh hiring oojeo; but the name ol | the dead man whs never discovered. WHAT m INSANITY ?— At a murder trial in Memphis, wherein an attempt jto establish insanity was made on the | part of the defense, t)r. J. K. Allen was | called as an expert, and testified thus | briefly and rationally : J have boon a j practicing physician for nearly thirty years; I have hud soma experience in coses of Insanity, having l>een for ten years medical superintendent of the Kentucky Lunatic Asylum, and during that time had over 2,000 crazy people under my charge; I have heard the hy pothetical case read by Mr. Plselan; I am here as an expert, aud before answer ing the question I wonld like to sav that tbo wore I studied the qnestion of flic Teas I understood it; end, if yon ask me where it begins and where it endß, neither I nor any pliysici in in the world could tell you; m fact, ou oc casions like this, lawyers make fools of themselves in trying to make asses of doctors." - The frankest medical profes sional testimony ever given in court. DIAMONDS,—A. leading diamoml/mer cbaut cellmates the value of the known diamond* in the world ot SIQO.OCO.OOO. lie. sjiyo that there are in the United Sinter diamonds wortji in the market no less than $10,000,000. and that half this value is represented by the stones owned in New York city. Many of the gems woru here by effete politicians, or sold by them to pawnbrokers after the de struction of theTaiiimuuylling, are said to have once lielongcd to scions of the noblest houses in Eurojie; but the pro bability is that the greater part ate of an inferior quality, and were bought in that city of the peripatetie speculators. BADLY FOOLED.—GOV. Safford, of Nevada, in n letter to the San Diego (CaJ.) Union, ' tells his experiences in gathering diamonds and rubies. He went out with a friend, and finding rabies as plentiful as blackberries, they picked np the value of a million or t wo, and had them tested. Of the result he says: "They proved to be garnets, and of no valne, and the beautiful dreams of schools and colleges we would build up, and poor people we would make happy, all vanished, and we found ourselves as before, struggling to make both ends meet *' THE. CENTRE REPORTER. FROM TIIE OL1) WOKl.n. Antwerp I Ita Ohr*rlrlUM -- Calhe dr&la—tlubena wad hla Kamoua Paint Intra Arrived In Parte Our interview with the Cualom Houae. Antwerp, like all the old oltlea of the region formerly known a* "the l.>w I'ountrter," abound* in work* of art. Hero the painter, lVter l'aul Kubett*, achieved hi* grandest triumph*, and here • hi* descendants are liviug in great wealth and rrsjnotability. The labor* of Ruben* and seen and admired everywhere; and j you are pointed out the originals of hi* genius in every gallery of Europe, you are impressed a* much by his fertility and j industry a* by his conceded genius. Our hotel wa* close by the I'lace \ erte ! on the opposite aide of which i the Cathe dral, and to this wo went the following . morning, anxious to see the principal at traction of the place, Ruben*' " Hesoerit from the t'ro*a." We found the iminliugf : covered with screens, which wonld not he | removed till noon, after tuasa was over, j The Cathedral ia the largest Gothic church in the Netherlands, and it* spire i one ot the highest in Europe, in part ot it isau 1 iron covering to a well, raid to have been the work of Queniin MuUys, who, for love, left the hjtnmier and the forge, placed a palette oil his dexter thumb atul became . a painter. We noticed a tablet on the wall of the Cathedral, which is said to i record the fact. Having nearly three hours to wait betore we could see the j j paint ing*, we drove to the Citidal of Ant - } werp, where the general of the Hutch forces sustained a aeige In and from thence across the esplanade, and around the boulevard*—which have taken the place of the original fortification*, and ar | j rapidly becoming a new Antwerp—to the Grand and Petit Basin opening from the ; Scheldt, and thence along the noble quay* ; that line the bank of the river. We then visited the Church of St. Jaques, and saw the tomb of Kubens and his family, and |on our way back to the Cathedral we passed the statue* of Rembrandt and that of hi* pupil and rival Yandyck. On en ! tering the Cathedral we found quite it large number of perron* viewing the paintings on the walls, but nearly ail were grouped in front of the 44 Descent from the Cross." This celebrated painting, I like 44 The l ast Supper," by Da Vinci, is | familiar to all the world. There arc few who will not recollect the figure of our Saviour, relieved agaiust the white cloth, one portion of which, the man leaning over Uio arm of the crosa holds in hi* teeth, that he may freely use his hand* in aiding to lower the body. Sir Joshua j ! Reynold* paid it the highest tribute ot' praise, saj ing, 44 Kubens' Christ is one of the finest figures ever invented; it i 1 :no>t correctly drawn, and in an attitude ■ most difficult to execute. The hanging of | the head on the shoulder, and the tailing ot the body on one aide, give it audi an , appearance of heaviness of death that j nothing can exceed it." On# of Kulsrns" characteristics was to ' paint h'. relations in nearly all his sacred j I pictures, and his first and second wiva, his children, his father, hie father-in-law and even his uncle, are respectively made , to tignre as the Mary'*. tLe Infant Savionr, j f Joseph, the Wise Men of the East etc., j etc.; and in one of his master piece* i Rubens has painted himself as the Cm- i tariou. The interior of this great temple, divided into seven aisles, is nearly four hundred feel long and two hundred and ' fifty wide, and the vast and lofty choir and ' nave, with the*e great divisions on cither side, is very grand. We afterwards visited the silk fact cries, where we saw the process of manufactur ing the celebrated Antwerp silk, which jis very wide and can be washed like a piece of muslin. We must do Cologne justice in saying, that the dirtiest city we were in on the continent, is Antwerp, and if the river Rhino ran near it, it would ; !do good service in cleaning some of its | filthy streets. When a citizen of Antwerp j ' arrives in New York, the dirty condition ot the street* there, must strikingly re- j mind bitn of his own native city. We left on the 6r. train for Brna- j i -els, where we arrived after a quick run of nn Itonr, and Wire corn fort ly located j in Hotel de {'Europe. Rru -tls is a great relief to those who have ieen passing throngh the narrow streets and dirty thoionghfares of many |of the Continental cities. As wo drove ' through the city by their noble parka,! with their majestic elms, making gigantic avenues aud alleys of shades ; the round* of music from the concerts in the gardens, the monuments in the squares, the high bright houses, and the broad and busy streets of trade gave it quite a Parisian , look, and justified the strong compliments the guide books, that all name it "the j little Paris." On onr way back to the ! I hotel, after having drove through the' ' principal streets, we stopped at the Galarie j >t. Hubert—inferior to the grand Galarie j ,at Milan, to be sure, but a very nice i 1 affair notwithstanding. Arcnnd the en trance to Galarie were a number of an cient news-woman, wearing sabots aud . yelling out in stentorian tones the '"fourth cditii n" of tho Brussels Ttlrtjrnm orafbsnc other evening paper. The afternoon was devoted to a drive through the new park, which is in progress of construction, in chiding a part of the forest of Soignies. When completed, it will le a most royal domain. The 27ih ot July wa* pusscd in Brussels; and so much has been done during the preceding dny, and while we were here last May, in the way of sight seeing, that we were comparatively at res' nearly the whole day. We left at 0.05 A. M., for Paris, in the ex press train, fare for my wife and myself SIO.BO, and our trunk 70 cents. As it was only four weeka since the city had ; been open to the world a.ain. after the defeat of the Commnnists, wo heard bo fore leaving Brussels the most exagger nted stories about the difficulty in procur ing anything to cat in the hotels or res taurants, and as to procuring a earrisge to take us from the depot on our arrival, that waa simply an impossibility, as there were no horses in the city to draw the carriages, they having all been eaten np, during the seige. Having made np our minds to go to Paris, we paid no attention to tho travel ers Atorie* but started tor it, as mentioned above. On leaving the station we crossed the Boulevard, catching a glimpse of Port de Hal on the left, and traversing the iiver Senne near the forest of Soignies, and after that rode through a highly cul tivated country for some hours. At Quevy (the Belgian Custom-house) anp at Feignes (the French Custom-house) the traiu was detained twonty minutes at each place, while the officials examined our baggage. They were very polite, merely opening the lid of our trunks, and then closing them, without further exam ination. After reaching French territory we noticeda large number ot German Aoldiera a|#very station until we were, near Padk The French passengers who wcrttfulSb ainne carriage with ns, wore very-Much excited every time we stopped at a KuCnt, when they caught sight of the 44, Germnir army of occupation." The nearer we approached Paris the more signs we saw of the great destruction of property that had taken place. When we had cotne in sight of the city, ruined buiidings were to be seen on every side, and they were on each hand as the train ru?hed into the depot, where we arrived at <5 p. M., after a long but highly interest ing ride of nine hours. We were detained by tho 41 octroi" officials for half nr. h'uir, when we procured a carriage and by 7 v. u., we were comfortably located in tlie Hotel l'Athoncc in the Rue Scribe, directly opposite the Grand Opera Houae. B. M. . t CENTRE HALL. CENTRE CO., PA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER I, 1872. TitftNont X D.H. The followiug is (loiu the Fort la til /Ve*: A. B. New man, as it*nt light keeper at Mount lr*rt, i* tho owner of a tlno Newfoundland dtig, of which wo are tobl the lollowtug auec ' dote : One Sunday Mr. Ncwuian'* little U>y, nine teais old, *lrate-l away ami wt HI in* i tig lor al*tt two hour*. Tire uiotlier went out of doors aud called tu hint, when : tho dog, in tesjonae, ran up from the nltore with tho hoy'a wet e*|> lit hi* mouth, and ligniiicil by hla actlona that he denlrvd In r to follow him. The mother, alaitued, called the lather, who '■> h-e|itng iu the house, and thev followed the dog a* quick ly a* posvihlo. Down by the shore, on a rock, the little boy wa* lying insensible, bw clothe* wet, ss if he had be.u ilrneeed I Irotn the water. Alter long efluita, in which the dog rendeii'l all t!.u x*it*itcu he could iu bt* mute way, the biy wa* , resuscitated, and afterwards told hi* stauy. Ho wa* on the licseli gathering shell* wheu a large wave came in and carried him off itt the undertotv. The dog jump | ed in after him, but tho wave* prevented . him lroni reaching tire Iwy fir route minute*. He seized hui by the leg *1 hi* j trowsers and tried to drag bim ashore, ! but the cloth tore in hi* teeth ; and the hoy *id that he had an indistinct recti!- i lection of the dog coming dowu below the -urtace fir hiut again ; and that * the last thing be wa* couroiou* ot. It seetn* i (hat the d.ig b-td the fluid Up ou the rock out ot the reach of tho wave* and ! had tried to restore hint. When b<- heard the mother'* rail he took the cap to her to infirm her, well a* he could, of the atl.-ur, ; aud hasten assistance. J "Hxt A" ON TUK FAXAMA HAT. —Are ! you ntvare of the hea tlie* of a Panam* ; hat r It it of fine straw—straw so fine -nd so exquisitely plaited, that it appear* i:o he of one united glossy nature. It i* I a* soft a* silk, and a* strong a* chain-mail, and a* elaattc a* caoutchouc. If you are | . aught in a shower of rain, and your Faiixtna get* wet tkrough, you have only to wring it out a though it were a towel, 1 and hang It on your walking stick to dry, I and in a quarter of an Wtir it will have , regained Its priL : n shape. The Spaniards declare that a Fnuiuua is shot-proof, and | an infalltbl* protection against utwtroke; hut of there assertion* 1 have my doubts. The lif* ef a Panama hat may he measured by that of a raven. It l supposed never to wear out. At all events, there is a cunning hatter in New York, who, for $lO, w ill undertake to return to you, a* good as new, a Panama hat, which is twenty rear* old, and has been in the wars, and ship-wrecked, and thrown into a lime kiln, a tan-jfll. aud a bucket ol tar. This peerless hat U not to be purchased at a mean price. It is the d-are*t head gear manufactured. Red-kinned maiden*have intoned whole canto* of Indian epic* while they plaited and reweJ together those minute circle* of straw. A good l'ansnia will stand you in from fifty to seventy-five pesos de oro—from titty to one hundred dollars. THE I'SETTL. —Tin- much neglected hcuilock of our luutlnr country has found a value iu the bark alone beyond the richest pine wood of the country, and now we h-ar of a company of S2SJ -000 capital, whom- btutuetsa it is to util ize all flic old tin and iron reraps hither to thrown aside n* sortlib-ne, tliuugh in amount ef all tbat ia used. This city alone would fotui*b nt least 10,000 t<>us a year of iron clip pings or scrape, and now all this vast material can le utilized. For every ton of clipping* can lw- mode, l*t, 500 |K>umlz of hydirochloric acid; 2d. 10 jn r cent, of the waste made in manufacturing the iron obtained by hinting it with notable glass to prevent rusting; 3d, the employ ment of the remaining honor for useful purposes and a gmit Mtvtug of labor. So advance*science. The scoria- of iron, one© wasted, are now used in making glass nnd cement*, which in turn make artificial stone. Cotton seed, once want ed, is nutde iuto the bo-t oils for all pur pose*, and is a gre at fertilizer ; the once ttselesz residum of go* nod Ute moat in jurious gases are made into snlpliutic acid, or oil of vitriol. The aniline dyea, the green oil, the modder red, c-me from coal tar, and $3,500,000 worth has born sold of the aniline in nyear. There IB no end to facta like throe, aud tliey are aa encouraging as tltey are instruc tive.—.Y. Y. P'lper. H.\n CASE.—A respectable tnan came to Memphis from New Orleans a few month* ago, and established himself on South C->urt street, adjacent to llteGayeso gas office. His wife was nicely circumstanced, enjoyed the comfort* of well furnished rooms and an easy life. Being called away an business, he found it necessary to absent himself from the city a few days. Those proved days of min and disaster to him. On his return be found bis little lmnte broken np, furniture sold out, nnd wife fled to parts unknown. He wont crazy.and was picked up by the police and placed behind iron bar* in tlie Adams street stattn-honse. That night, in his demented rage, ho attempted to break his head by knocking It against the iron grating of his prison door. When found l>y Mr. Forrest, tlie station-honse-keeper, the blood was flowing in tarrents down his face from the woands in his head, and ho drank the ruddy stream aa it fell. He would pauae occasionally in hia suicidal operation to catch the blood In hb mouth, crying ont with a demoniac satisfaction. "I'll drink my own blood." CUKE ron THE Orttix IIAIUT.—In a recent report on the condition of the English hospital at I'ekin, Chins, the attending physician gives a formula for "anti-opium pills." The remedy is com posed of extract of henbane, extract of gentian, camphor, quinine, cayenne pep per, ginger and cinnnmon, with castiV soap and syrup to form the mass, nnd licorice powder to form the coating. The efficney of these pills in overcoming the opintn habit, nnd in preventing the suffer ing on giving np the use of that poison, i* stated to have been proved in numer ous cases. The native remedies, it is said, contain opium in some form, nnd most frequently tho ashes of opintn al ready smoked, nnd consequently aro in efficacious—it being ns difficult to discon tinue the use of tlie med'eine as of the drug itself. ABOTJT JEWELRY.—Cnnteos, which are ever popular with the Indies, take tut un usual high stand this season, combining rare stones with exquisite workntnnship, nnd elegant settings. Ktones adapted for enmeo-eutting ore dense, thick, and consist of different colors. The stones most valuable for this purpose are the oriental onyx and the sardonyx. They arc also cnt in jasper, green chrysoprnse, and amethyst. Tlie sardonyx gives tho white figure upon tho pink ground, and the chrysoprnse upon the green. Min crvas, cut in stone which lias four par allel layers, are very lieautifnl. The ground is dark gray, tho face light, the bust and helmet black, and the crest over the helmet brown. Cameos cut in coral, set in diamonds and pearls, are very elegant. Since it is demonstrated ia Wisconsin that certain marshes, by judicious cultiva tisn, can be rnado to yield from 150 to JOO bushels of cranberries per acre, the market value of which Is from $2 to per bushel, the land has risen in value from a trifle more than nothing to, IN BO wo instances, $750 nn aero. The cost of putting a marsh tato first rate hearing condition it from 920 to S4O an aore. The l.lghtulng Rod Swindle. Ho many jteopl* have uffered front u crowd of swindlere who do Icmiure* in ligbliiing ICHIB, that we give the follow ing *!ot \, in unlit that you may judgi the awiudh-i* fiiiiu tire holiest men. A matt of good ad drew, iu fact what may W termed a good talker, inakra hi* appearance, driving a smart turn out, atid engage* tire owner of u liouro (if a new one, so much the better,) iu couver satuai, aud expatiate* on (ho advantage* of having one s house or barn probated from liglituiug. He ha* a collection of uew*|>aper *lip cotthuuiug account* of buildings that have been struck by lightning, and in part or wholly de itroyed. If any of the.-c have occnrted within a comparatively abort distance of the lo cality where the agent then i*, *o much lire Wtter. He so work* tip'ti lire fear* of the houae owner, that the tatter, if of a nervous temperament, fully expect* to have hi* building* destroyed by the elec tric fiuid the next time u thunder shower eomMtfcal vv. He, fiually, usksto aee tire price list of tire agent, and the latter exhibit* it, and show* that for a com paratively small sum, lighlutug rods, with the necessary attachments, can be erected- A bargain is airtn-k, aud it ia agreed that for a sunt ranging from to SSO, the house will be made safe *g*iw>t electric fluid in whatever shape it may com*, lh-fore tearing, howwver, the agent look* over the building*, and Miggcat* one or two additions, without mentioning, bowevct, that it will incur additional expense; or, if the purchaser ; i* cautious enough to make an inquiry, | is Hssttted that the additional CXJH-UJM will be trifling, and la a* nothing com iarH! to the additional security tltat will 1 W afforded. The agt nt drive* away, and in a few day* thereafter, two men arrive, fully provided with ail the nsrea *ary implement* and material*, and itro | i-eed to erect the lightning rod* and at tachment*. The work it done, and the men drive awny. In a short time, a bill for the work done ia sent in, ant! tin house owner i. atoundid to find that be i called upon to pay, not 825 or (£SO. as he had KtippoM-d, bat from $125 to $250. He call* at the office of the company, and demands an explanation, lle.i* as sured that the bill )• a rtim-ct one—that the itcuu are pnqrerly tvmlaml, and that payment must fa- made. He in stance* the lwrgain originally made with the ag' nt, and is told tltat that is of no account, U-cnusc of the additions after anrd made. Iu a rage, tire victim de clare* that he will never psy the bill, and is assured that Ire wilt Ire *ucd for it, and that be will merely have the rx|reuse of the suit, itt addition to hi* bill, to pay. If he still refuse* payment, iratt t* brought, and by dint of swearing to each individual item on the part of the agent and employer, the victim ia beat en. and comjrellet! to pay, not alone the swindling bill, but the orats of tbe suit —no *mall amount. He ha* Won swin dled throughout the whole tranaactaon, but he baa no remedy. This i* but a sjvcctimui of aeore* of well atilhcuticated caaesu Doos.—According to tlie Ixodon Kcko, the F'reneh Society tor the Frotection of Animals i divided on the question wheth er dog* should be made to work or not. Tlie tslitor of a journal published by this Society considers idleness aa injurious to dog* a* to men, and a* a contrast with what he eon*idert the wretched existence of unemployed dogs, quotas the instance o| four honest workmen he LM seen at the marble quarries of Uagnere* de Bigorree, earning their livelihood by turning on immense wooden wheel, which is the motive power of aotne machinery used for sawing marble. Tlie eldest of there good dogs, and truc,i* lV*ar le Grin, a brown bull-dog, wh canity off" his twelve years, seven of which have been spent in his present employment, remark ably well. Hi* master tanght him hi* business by himself turning the wheel on all fours. Negret b almost as old a* hi* comrade, and poreesrea tbe same estimable qualities. He belongs to the respectable corporation of shepherd Jog*. Cesar 2e Noir b in the ptinte of life aud something of a rireitr, bnl a pood workman. Faraud. a shepherd's dog of uaexeeptionally happy diqtoi-ition. b extremely intelligent, but hasonefault—be "attitudinizes." When, spectators are present be b apt te turn the wheel with breathless baste, only to let It rest when li ft to himself. Iwtch of the comrade* works four lieur* a day on two mea* of dog bieuit. Tho fraternity have not yet learnt to strike, and any met niter of it when taken by the paw and interrogated regarding his connection i with the International, invariably makes no intelligible reply. On OF THE PKSSt.TIttS OF GAPJtrMTT. —The Boston f\>*rier re late* this of Mrs. Lirabarjtw: The other evening she stopped a Norfolk House horse-car at the eorner of Essex street ami Harrbon avenue, and, turning to a iaranlc friend who aeooro paukd keft -aha rah! **• e economi cal. Hhould misfortune overtake you, retrench, work harder, but never fly the track ; comfort difficulties with un flinching perseverance ; should yon then tail, you will be honored ; but shrink, anil you will bo despised. The tricky, deceitful and dishonest, are rarely pros perous, for whore confidence is with drawn, poverty is likely to follow. Rest satisfied with doing well, and leave others to talk as they will. Never speak boiuitingly of your business ; keep your own counsel about the management of your affairs. Bo charitable according to your means. To compote successfully with a neighbor, participate in the facilities to go ahead. EPISCOPALIAN CATHEDRAL.—The?Epis copalians of New York arc contemplating the erection of it grand cathedral in that city, at tho sugg. sriou of Bishop Hottur. It is intended that it shall surpass in sizo and beauty any chuish edifice in this country. A KMRood Decision, A decision waa reoeeUy rendered by a Superior t'rimiual Court Judge in Muosachnrotta, which ia calculated tct have a very aerioua eflect upn Ure Hun day travel. Home two month* since it appears that a Mr. Weather bee, of ton, hurriedly made up hia mtud to lake a Holiday trip uit the country. Having b.vrulv fiad time to catch tue tratn at the oid Colony Dejxd, he was uuable to proenre a ticket. It ia a rale f tire company that un addition of ten cent* alial! ire collected under such rircum- Ntancca, but Mr. Waatlierbee believing it to be unfair, declined to comply with the conductor'* demand. The matter auhaequeiitly come before tire Municipal Court, and rraullcd in the impoaittou of a fine of five dollars and c wU, the Magiatrate holding that there had Irecu an e vac ion of fine. The oaae wa* then ap]H*tld to a higher Court, on tire ground that compauira running train* ou Houtlay, except where there ia an absolute neoeasitv for the aame, violate a well-known statue of the Common wealth, and, conariuently, have no legal right to collect farea. Judge Dcveu* imuretlinf* ly recognized Ihe force of the argtimcnt, and the jury, acting on hia ml vice, brought in a verdict of not guilty. Under this decision, the railroad cotn psuic* will he uuable to collect even the ordinary fares from paaacuger* who may succct*! in getting UJMIU the cars without having procured tickets. At the Boston depot* it is jvwnoble to prevent rough* from jumping on train* ; but the rural station* Wing completely open, oauuot lie guarded without the aid of a force, to muiutain which, would coat more thau lire profit* of the Sunday traffic. In any event, the dilemma ia sufficiently grave to puf director* to their wit*' end, if they do not decide to discontinue the running of Sunday trains until the diffi culty can W met by a legislative enact ment,— -V. I*. I'nptr. Tpz Aaouft"* or Sxaoir Tax**.—The only United Slate* Government stamps necessary w> be tured are for tobaeoo, tor mented liquor*, proprittarv medicine*, match *, and for checks, in fact, inter nal revenue hueineo* will be hereafter strictly confined te eoUeettng licenses and ioxos, and aelling stamp* fur the manufac ture sad sale of tobacco, liquor* and im- I (tost* on bank* and bankers. It ha* been stated that paper* issued October 1 or after, no matter when they are dated, ' arc ! no stamp, and on thi* point tbe Jour nal of Commuroe quote* an officer of the Government a* reasoning in this wire. If a man draws a deed of trust or promis sory note, and doee not deliver it for a year afterward* because the transaction he intended to make hang* fire, or for acy other reaoon, the date of delivery of the doenment la the date of Irene, and lite date (if at all) a stamp ia required, ll a man arracnla a ranee of note* fur sale, only the note* sold, and they only when sola, need be stamped. The note* returned to the drawer do not require stamp*. Bat, if be should take the some note* sad hypothecate them, they would all require -tamp*, because they are "issued" for use, snd are as much notes In Uv as if they were sold ; and the date of hypothecation must be the date of stamping. If a docu ment upon which a stamp is now required, and would not lie required after the firat d*y of October, should be Issued then and dated bock to a Period when stamp* were required, it would not need a stamp if a person who Irene* it can show that it was ' not issued till after Oct. 1, 1871. BE N'ETOHBOWJ.T. —Be sociable ; strive to be ou nailing terms with the fatuities who live nearest rem, and to gain on iuflucnoe over thctn ; this can be the more easilr done if yon are- rich ; in this reiae. wealth b a talent: it ban instru mentality for good which every man and women ia bound to tine to advantage ; for a talent nutmed or tirtemployod, brings the disapprobation of tne infinite oue. Aa long a* the world stands, the maosm will look np to wealth ; thev will do thing* to please the rich : will le at pain* to get their commendation, their recognition. Suppose tlie rich m u and women of any clntreh were- to culti vate a certain degree of socbblcucre and fiicnditticos. of neighborly courtesy to ward all living within a mile or two ot the meeting houae, it is perfectly certain that that ltotua would le more encour nginglv filb-d on Sunday* than other wise. Bnt then a good, a physicial good, would come to the good doer. The vlait to the poor man's dwelling involves exercise in the open air ; by talking with lib family, we get new view*, new ideas ; have different phase* of life presented to no, and new feelings and new emotions come serosa the mind to wake tip the power* within us to health ful activities. In the name connection it is advantageous for all. sick or well, to mix among stranger*. It break* np Ute wearing monotony of home life ; break* up that stagnation of thought and feeling and emotion which attends a life of aamenere and inactivity. A BTIUWOE DTSEABE.— lntense radia tion of heat iu the great desert of Huhar* produces extraordinary effect* on in sec Is aa welt a* animals aud men. When a caravan start* out to traverse that wide waste of desolation, flies follow on in Srodigioiiß multitudes, attracted, no oubt, by odor from camels, but they ooott drop dead by the intensified heat. Fires burrowing itt hair, straw, or sacks, are killed f! rapidly. But the most sin gular of all b the malady to which men arc incident after luting exposed a short time to bunting samls and a vertical-sun on that arid nnd life-forsaken region. It is called raglo—a kind of brain fever. The stricken traveler is delighted, amused, and made extensively happy by exhibitions of fantastic forma. He see* mirages, palm Ircos, groups of tents, shady mountains, sparkling cascades, and "misty forms dancing delightfully Itefore hi* entranced vision. Front all that can IK- gathered upon tbe snbject it appears that a certain condition of at mosphere wholly free from moisture, with intense solar heat, produces effects on the brain very similar U> hoshereh. Both exalt the nervous system, and speed ily destroy all desire to exist, deprived of that unnatural excitation of the brain. BAD.—A correspondent of ths Bostos Gloiu writes: 44 The traveller Is surprised in Alcppa to see *vcry one's face marked with an ugly scar. This is the "Aleppo Button." it is not confined U this city, but i < qtmlly prevalent in Bsgdad and the cities w>etwecn. Every resident has sores oomo out on him—on his face, If he be a native, elsewhere generally If lie lie from some other place. These are very painful, and lost from one to two years. After they heal, they leave an Indelible mark in the shape ot an ugly looking scar. The phyricians have not yet discovered tho cause of this thing, uor any certain remedy. I have known one person to have ninety of these boils. Did Job ever live ia this placet" THE "FCXKKAL" or Psnx HYACINTH*. —Ths " funeral" of Fere Hyacinthe took place, according to the Loudon Echo, on September 5. It ia the custom among Roman Catholic communities to consider any member that deserts them as dead, and the oeremony of burying him ts gone through, This was done at the Convent of Dtuninioaus, to which M. Hyacinthe Loyson belonged. A coffin was placed in the middle of the chapel, and the ous towary burial service chanted. It is said the aoonh was 44 most Imposing." i •..( f The fialfr'tilrWA Among the near kindred of tbo whale ia the famou* nuicorti—not the compan ion of the lion on the Uritiab coat f --nrma, but ita eonnteroart among tbo youilen of thedoep. Inferior ot size !o the right whale, it lu the advantage of a moid formidable weapon, with which Nature has provided it for at yet un known poraoMt. This i tb monafrtma tooth wiiirtt pr rjerta from the apjror Jaw of the amimal; it U aa large aa a man'* thigh at Ute INMK-, turned in natural, and khnrrily jaiinted at the end ; lroftuw with in. it aiiowa externally the fiueet and w lutret ivory known to the trade. The Narwhal, or no*a-whale, wna so colled ixx-auro the Dutch, who mrem to have hail the ehriateuiug of moat quaint tlung* in the northern region a, at tinit took this horn, jirojertiug atraight ahead, leu or even fifteen feet, for n groteaque long nunc Home any the animal mrea this odd appendage to jiieroe holea tlirougb the ice when be conn-* up toLreathe ; others, that he mow* off roaaced with it, on which he grazra. There ia no doubt that s a! timt-a. ha tranaffxra fian with hia gigantic stiletto, *o that he may be able to devour them at leisure. The legend ha* it, that a king of , Denmark, wishing to make aowebody a 1 present of a piece of the horn of the I unieorn—for ztteh it wasloeg l onstdcred 1 —ordered ohe of hi* high officials to cut j oil a piece of the thinker end of a fine : q red men which ha potneasniL The officer did ao, and, to hi* asluaishmcut, found what he Ired looked upon a* a solid horn wa* hollow, aud in the con cavity he discovered a smaller hunt of ; tho une dtajre and the same *ub tance. Tbe Utter wa* about a foot long, and this resemblance to the teeth •if men first led, it is thought, to the idea that the unicorn might after all be noth more than a gigantic tooth. In those day*, however, the superstrtxou* people rt inched marvelous power to the wonder ful horn, and a brisk trade was carried •m in fine specimen*, aud even in broken ; fragments. The male alone posnaaara this formid able weapon ; the female having, instead, two small teeth, of little use for the pur pose of attack or defense. In tbe male, however, ene of these two is dispropor tionately developed, while the other re main a of diminuitve auu-, or disappear* gradually altogether, very murk aa in the cast- with the claw* of certain Crus tacea-. At first aight, it wonld appear a* if this giant of the deep, with hi* terrible awottl would be the terror of the seas, killing and devouring all tbat came near him. On the contrary, huwevi-r, the narwhal is a very harmies* animal, and generally hi* own enemy more than that of other*. Hi* month ha* no teeth, and immovable lips, and i* > small that Ire o*u swallow little else bat molluska and little fish ; *nd Score*by, who found in the stomach at one ot them strange Wings a ray of two foe* in length, came to the conclusion that the fish mo*t have been find transfixed by the tooth, and killed before it wa* devoured. Other wise it would be difficult to understand how an active flab shook! have allowed i itself to be caught by an animal unable to seize it with the lips or ret-in it with the tongue, and in a mouth which had not even teeth to tear it to piece*. Their aa titne**, when they are alone, i* mam loo* ; and their capture wocld be almost impaasible were it-not for the rurtou* halut lhay have of travebng in immense troops, and of taking refuge in kill* buy*, from wkifh they cannot easily j escape. Small boats approach them, in ! snrh caao*, with preestnUon ; the poor animals begin to crowd upon each outer ; they prras their ranks *o riooelr that j toon their movements are impeded, nnd their enormon* weajxm* becrrue intor- i laccd, a* each one tries to raise the bead high in the air. They can neither es cape nor defend themselves, and thus fall an easy prey to the lances of the 1 whalemen. "CHu are told to play You ask for a choir; ere is no chair. No one cv(*r nt* in presence of his highness." M. De Mey er suppresses one detail, however. Hi played a long fantasia on his knees, and when at tho end, the Sultan said he must lie very tired, he oouvinced his high ness of the contrary by moving around the gallery on his LanJ*. OFTEURA) HIS HantT—At an interview, with the Fre-sidcnt of the United States, of the Sioux Indians, Medicine Bear opened the "big talk" with a speech bnt before doing so, laid hishage calumet on the mantle-niece, nnd after removing hi* feather head-dress dehlwatoly proceeded to nnsbirt himself to the no araail aston ishment of the pale face* present After divesting himself of his nether garment he advanced towards the President, snd holding it aloft, was about to put it over the Great Father's bead, whoa General Co wen took hold of it. and placing it on a chair, told Medicine Bear, through tin interpreter that the Great Father would not wear it just then, bnt wonld accept it ss a proof of his (Medicine Boar's) good will. It seems tbat it was Medicine Bear's war shirt, adorned, iu which lie had lifted the linir of many a hapless vic tim, and that he desired to present it to the Great Father iu token or the estima tion in whieh he held him as the big chief of the pale face*. Among the Teton Sioux, nnd in fact among many other Indian tribes, similar garments are highly prized, fabulous values being set upon them by the wearers. BENNETT'S WILL TO BE CONTEHTSD. — James Gordon Bennett, the late editor of the New York Herald, left a large be quest to his wife, but only on condition that she remained a widow. This condi tion wili,it is said, be set aside by the courts. It has been judicially decided over and over again that all conditions in restraint to marriage are opposed to public policy and are simply ntdl and void. Mrs. Bonnet itt mnah younger than her late husband nnd may many again. TERMS : Two Dollars a Yoar, in Advance. fid* and Fancies. Retottv# Bwuey.—A pretty eow, Ttie mourning rotor of tka Turk* is blue. It ia atid flvvm are to U> cheap this j winter- , New Orleans U suffering from a water famine. , A mitwr f* far bom for fatting than for firing. : The season ia taking ft* leaves with much a daw. YVvmoat nteV 19.000.000 of stole j penoila yearly. Vaoderbilt'a income U twelve thousand ' dollars a dsy. * Cashmere geata do bettor to Calif or |ma than toka, i ; What ship dors a literary jwivato to i vsde? AiiUiorabip. Carpets fhougb bongbt by tit* yard are worn by the foot IhftasoMtetttos to be worn at tb* belt, bsv* bees introduced. A civil marring* tow to to be Intro. 1 need into Germany. Miss Nihson received £3OO • night at Drury Lane Theatte. "Doctor, 1* tight lacing Injurious?" " Of com t w. Madam." A sorts! gtoa* to which the lsdtos are ddieted. -A flilfwr. Though a pawnbroker's to crowded. It ia always a toaaaome place. A new style of card-receiver ha* a va* attached Ibr holding dowse*. An exchange any* that Kansas Ktowas would scalp a seal skin trunk. Home peojdc at a crowded evening party bud lttttoa on their tost A promising ywsng man to all vy i well; liettor bare a paying one. a* I Tb* frtfit of K*aaa* this rear ia cat*, i mated to be worth *2,H00,0U0. When maV* chair be said to dislike a pereoot Whan it can't beat him. Oateaay wtfli aoon atnre and die of I itaelf it no one takes it into todgn. Ex-Emprets Eu?oali beautiful hair b beginaiag to show threads of silver. Good temper is like a sunny day. shedding brightness oti everything. "Going out with tha tide"—oeeoapa nying the bridal party out of altajrh. Praise tiie sea, aald wise old George j Herbert, but keep upon tb* dy land. The fashionable tohabiteats of Murray t Hill have retarned to their eityottedas. Mrs. Laura D. Fair's mother attempt ed suicide by polaon, at Sau Franoaaoo. Whisk quadruped* aw admittad to boll*, operas, and dinner parties? White kids. Vice stings na even to our pleasures, i but virtue consoles us,even in our patoa. I The Danish women pride themselves in being the beat laundress era fu the world. |-,-r ; ®" ■ Leudon bakks ood operatives agtea upon n 12 hour syrtem, from < A. M. to I4P. BE • '■ An Alabama tody has worboa a silk j auilt tor the State fair, with fiOjOOO piecas in it- . i The Hew rtvle ol dreasrag the hair tw the top of tha head caltod the wAore pbine." ■ *' A Kstoastto lmTy says the only thing i hiek keep* Lout to her bast silk tim | brella, 'ULI *i!j ni a,,. ,i * ' Book-keepers are said to be like ehik oa motive like love? Becamee it to a tender attachment. Crows and bUekbirda are the bravest creature* thaAfiy; thev never show tire white feather, . When s Kansas Indian dies, hto friends choke n pour to death and bury it with the deceased, Young ladies who lace themselves tight ly, when dressing tor dinner evidently pra ter greet More meat. The suitorsdMilwaukee, Wis., struck tor $4 a day, and refused to ship unfil theii terms were Oonceded. A horse In Bartow connty,Ga.,kuo*ked over a be* hire the other day and was btuag to death by the boon Tha character ia conversation which commonly passes for agreeable is made up of civility and fmlshood. The Louisville Exposition contains lock of hair six i with an abundant bay cqpp, range oae half Una than they did tort year at this time. The potato wop will not he heavy on areoont of the Urge quaniitv of nan that ha* fallen, wbtete in m any localities bad occasioned ret. lhere to a huge erep of apples. The Gmmbweh omH+ to responsible for the fotiowMNT A prominent citizen of this village went home a few night* since at a tote hour, and gently Urered on the door. "Wire i# itP inquired his better hslL to which very propel in quirv the hearUesa man replied by ask ing "who do you expert at Una hour of die night?" I*T * J TortoteeabeU jewelry, dt, and to sate* made my plain, arc greatly to *m*ajb 7 faahkmsbVtodies. They are StsklnkH with esqntotcly cut monograms, which are cut out of hcil.and placed on each article of the art. The engraving of the monogram* make these seta quite expen aire, imported shell lewelry i erl y mounted with cokawi stone*. * -n* ety.e is well suited to young todies. Trat TtTMtß*.—Frederick Douglas tells this, good Story : I was hungry once, very hungry indeed, and I hadas little conference with a brotbw store on the subject °* helping myself to a taritey that I saw fluttoruig in one of U hot bousre. I told Bandy (for it was Sandy that I was hungry, wanted sonsettiing to eat, but that 1 had religious scruple* against helping mjrseiy to that taiCT JW that he w a praying mm,, a Oxl-fmring man. and I wwitod b advice on the •object. He told me that it w*s rather a UekHA question in ethics. There was some risk about it, but a* tor as the act iteetf waseoncerned, it tu perfectly legitimate. He said you are vour master's property ? Tea, seid I. Unit turkev to your master's property ? Yea. II you put that turkey into you, that turkey does not oenee to be the property of your master, but only adds to the value ot the property to another form So it was simply a question of removal. I said that it stood to reason, the whok thing was clear to reason, and I helped myseff How to Choose a Wot-W# ven ture to give the following recipe for the selection of a wife; "A place for erery - tliing and everything to its place, said an old man to hi* daughter. "Select not a wife, my son. who will ever step over a broomstick. The son was obe dient to the lesson. "Now," said be, pleasanUy, on a May day to one of his companions, "I apiwtot this broomstick to choose me a wife. The young tody who wft! not step over H shall bnve the offer of my hand." They passed from the splendid saloon to the grove. Some tumbled over the broom.itick, .others jumped ovei it At length a young tody stooped ami put it in its place. The promise wan fulfilled. She became the wifeof an educated and wealthy young man, and be the husliand of a prudent, industrious, and lovely wife. He brought a fortune to her and she knew how to cave one. It to not easy to decide which was trader the greatest obligations; both were rich, and each enriehad the other. A New Game,-A new game of otitis called Pedro, a modification of the game of old stodge, is now Played on the rail road trains. The Ronton Trmmript reporter who has evidently been practis M ing the game, describee it thus: The five spot of trumps is Pedro, and scores five in the game to whomsoever holds it at the conclusion. It can bo taken by the six spot or higher card. The s, um ber of the game is raised from seven to eleven, and the rest of the count is unal tered, they rating to this order; high, low, Jack, Pedro, game.— The lat three counts to the final winner, and if he be fortunate to have all fire,he scores g in the game. ' Mohawhr —A book has appeared em tepilnfl all the destructive traits f rulers, Jgoe the foundation of kingdoms to the bud of the eighteenth centary. Altogether Iherc hare been 8,542" sovereigns, reigning ovftM nations pof these m were de throned, 64 abdirst3d*p committed suicide, 11 went mad, 505 were slain in combat, i2S made prisoners, 25 martyred, 151 murdered, 62jioisoned, and 108 con demned to deathg" France includes 83 of these monarch a, of whopi 11 are alas ted as idiett—a number no otlter state stir passes—ore only as "learned." two were dethroned, five restored, and W# W! abdtotttod—Napoleon 111.