H r ca'h ho|>e to get th© 1 a• rj- -nihcv. And lnske ssoit hit t.l and 1 uUer In meal and creara slip's tIK-w deep. And cannot stop (,i putter; But says if ho * I sow and reap. She'll make lna htxa 1 aid t utlT. Lite daiiy maid, t! o farm,.,„,f„, Sliall 1* ihe toast ,„„, r . Alone man I sad* , ont „ iT l;fp ' iMtli-ti! tread and hotter. The First Lfmon. Th* - y fit i. 1,1 (her. On hr knee The open volume --, Hex dimpled Anger point*. and he Looks on. ailh ( 11 doling up*. To eoe he r name. w.;h childish hire. The pntiUi.g letter* o'er ai.d o or. Around tin tn si- tit: utaratr turtle . Tlie sumiuri au.de hi, n tusil; The sou hp an;* through t! <■ hram he* flip Te ta inkle ut the i*sl; Ami atssliaint t-U f . uis li.l them look On Nature * glo: uu P ;, t tuie I-, k Vet otiU Ou-.r euui.y I, .l* Wild ha. The mi otic page to scan . And gently fi l. i "je*. or "no," Whene'er the littl, u.an ltrjvat*. he guiding tit go: lt d. Tlic a. her facet you; g voice has fa- " A ta;i.ls for an,,.far at . \r\ >. ' II .land* for hliic the ivl.t, .I*it, Of liraie.i at-d of v. tir . *,■ i-icari '* C stand- f r curia ujv-u your t.caJ , II ia for dimple* d . p . E fur your ear. *o soft i tr* 1. F for nmr 1.l J© fe. t; O i* Ihe gold :S ' ■ \s-nr i.jnr . H i* year hand, o small a>. 1 fair. " I is fm pretty Iat <■! J i* i* for J. .u an.' Juu; Ki for Kary,- 1 3. v!. ra well . V ou oft.-u *;■■ ak lu h.tc , I. is fur ks. f. i ll* li.vl it came M is fvir ui. lii, r sw.-ctCBl " Ami thus her put)* voice p- on a'.i th. ; 4 She uami * the latteis, one t\ one, And. lei he ahoulJ foiy. t. She naaie* wi i each s vm* simple word By her young. j> U r. f;. u heard. And often, a. she *;vks. he tends To ki.-s foretjead fair. Or wu ■ i ay. ut {, rr htlle hand B"f; and shiuiug hair, " r r iu hi* pearly ear. tlli tender look. " I iove you. dear! " Be:!ia{ when far .c future year*. With care* and sorrow* r.fe. lie corns the le*on all must team From the stern teacher. Life, His aoul will gather faith and power Front thought of thi* calm childhood hoar! SERSII'S R VZOriOF. Some friends had induced me to visit Ostend. I was passing my last evening at the Kunsaai when a man whose aspect contrasted strangely with the commonplace faces among which I had lived since my arrival came and sat down a short distance from me. As he did so the people who sat nearest to him poshed their chairs awav, and a murmur arose among the ladies; eyts were directed toward him, and even fin gers were pointed sthim; bnt the new comer did not seem to notice the stir, br.t remained motionless in his chair. A friend of mine passed by. I painted out the unknown to him. "Do you know that man?" I in qnirsd. " Sergius Ilizenmof. A queer fel low." " Ton know Lis history ?" "So so. A terrible history. You must get Philippe to tell it to you." I went at once in search of Philippe —s Russian whom I had met at differ ent watering-places, and with whom I had a speaking acquaintance. I found iiim in the Princes' Pavilion. " I want you to tell me Sergius Ruz"nruoFg history. "WeJi, let n* go to supper, and I will te.l it." I led him to the Pavilion de 1 Lists cade, and at the second course he aegan his narrative. " Sergiu* and I wre fellow-students at the University of Moscow. We both came from the country, and at home we w.-re neighbors. He was like a young maiden in swe tness of disposi tion and in timidity. His timidity was of snch a nature that one could discern in him the presence of a trouble that had weighted him down from infancv. He spoke but seldom, kept himself apart from others, and studied dili gently. "We liked him as one likes in offens;ve beings, inspired by that senti ment, in which proud pity has always pJ'jre or less a share. In fact, Sergiits had experienced a hard childhood. His father resided in the governorship of IK . He was a rich man, miserably stingy, and frightfully rude. His fno vas yellow and bony, his eyes chilling in their looks, and with the sly and suspicons expression of a miser's eyes. His wife had died two years after the birth of his son. It was said in the country around tLat he had killed her. She ws a girl of good family, and had been delicately nurtured. She wished to rear her child iu eaae. The ©ld curmudgeon objected, but she paid no heed to his words. From this moment the mother and child were subjected, with an inflexible rigor, to the lot of serfs. She was shut up, treated like a servant, and the poor womau died from the effects. " The child grew np nnder this terri ble master, who, from the time Sergius was six years old, compelled him to rr.ke together the rubbish in the yard, while he beat him unmercifully. *• It was a dream of the father's to make bis son a sort of bead man on his estate and to extract from him all the money that he refused to spend for his education. He sent little Sergius to the field to dig, to hoe, and to labor. " But one day the brother of ltazon mof came to the old house which, from neglect, had nearly gone to decav. He was a very rich bachelor, and Sergius was to be his heir. He was a some what cultivated man, and he could not comprehend the neglect with which Razoumof treated his sons. He insist ed that the child should be sent imme diately to Moscow to undertake his studies. * Unless he does so,' he added, ' he will inherit nothing from me.' The father shuddered at this last remark as much as at the thought of the expense which would be entailed upon him by the education of his Son. He wept, entreated, declared that be would give bis son a brilliant elocation at home. The brother persisted, and the child was sent to Moscow. "He remained eight years at Mos cow. At the age of twenty-one he had completed his studies, in which he had distinguished himself, and was prepar ing for travel in foreign countries when his uncle died. At the moment when he heard of the death of his uncle he was ordered by his father te return borne forthwith. Submissive boy as he always was, he obeyed. He found bis father dryer, leaner, more yellow, and more of a skinflint than ever. He saw the old houso with its narrow win dows and greenish window-panes, some of the latter gone and the holes which they bad left stuffed with old dish cloths and shreds of paper. The planks ol the roof, once red, were sprung and worn-eaten. He saw in the large yard the same puddles in which when a child he had dabbled with ducks and geese ; the same garden overrun with weeds and nettles. He went into the antechamber and aroused a swarm of ilies which buzzed about, knockiug "gainst the wall and ceiling; in the :oom were old shoes run down off the heel, bits of leather, rakes with broken tcetb, battered spades, scraps of rusty l' KMU. KV li'iyj, If leases! it out, and immediately placed a spade and a plow in the hands of Sergttis. These hands, like his mind, had become delicate. This paternal persistency and self will was a terrible blow to Sergiu*. He **w crushed to earth all hi* dreams of a higher life which had already began to dawn study, the interchange of thought with distinguished minis, poetry—but he did not dare to revolt. ' v ' Whatever may !*• (he misery of the remainder of my day*,' he said to himself, 'I at least will have lived eicht vears. "He had brought a few book* with him ; his father opened hi* trunk, saw them and earned them away. Au hour afterward Scrgiu* detected a strange smell of burnt paper. Roxonmof, who had for a long time done his own cook ing, wa* warming over the flame of the bunting bo. k.s a dish which he had cooked on the day before. Sergius Mimed his work in the fields and kept down the bitterness of his sorrow. "And thus two years passed away. * * * * • ft. " One autumn morning, with pickaxe on shunlder. wearing a shabby black coat, the ©o'e remaining garment left from his wardrobe at Moscow, he was passing through a grove of fir tree* on his way to the fields. He met a youug girl who was gathering mushrooms. She wore a white ami blue stripped petticoat, a cloak of dark cloth, and an embroidered apron. Her blonde tresses escaped front under a wide-brimmed straw hat. The lightness of her move ments, the graceful curves of her young form attracted him. She was Dot a peasant girl. He paused in his walk, blushed, and saluted her. She also blushed and returned his salute, and then they stood for a little while gaxing at each other like two children. The young girl first turned and continued ou her way. Reaching the verge of the woods she disappeared iu a hemp field. "The same hour on the next day found Sergius at the same place. At a distance h© reoognixed the young girl'* straw hat. Hanging to her ana was the little basket which he had seen on the morning before. She waa stooping and ws* gathering, or pretending to gather, mushrooms. He walked toward her, lifted his hat, and passed quickly ly without turning around. This manoeuvring lasted for eight days. Tuen he said to himself that there would soon be no mushrooms left, and that some morning he would find him self alone in tbe woods. On the fol lowing day, as if actuated by a despair ing resolve, he spoke to the young girl. He learned from her that she was a poor orphan who had been adopted by a childless widow residing in tho neigh borhood. R ~td in a convent, she had jnst left it to !ive thenceforth with her benefactress. "Tatiana, without being heatttUnl, possessed a certain charm. As is gen erally tho case with Russian women, the animation of her features contrast ed with the fixity and depth of her gaze. Endless dreams passed a TOSS her face. Her eyes were green, with a shade of gold in them ; her ehap© undu lating ; her extremities delicate. " Sergias soon made the acquaint ance of Thecle Martinovua, the mother by adoption of the youug girl. From that time forth he pa*ed hi* days not in the field* bnt with them. " In the morning he would go to Thecle Martinovna's house, and would find Tatiaua in a grove of willows on the border of a pond near the house, whence she was watching for his com ing. From there they would go into the woods, breathing tho rosin s deli cious and peuetrating odor, listening to the dramming of the green wood pecker, and gathering mulberries and hazelnuts. Sometimes they would sit in the clearing* between two birch trees, and while Tstiana would make necklace© of wild berries, which resem bled grains of coral in the moist ver dnre, Sergius would cut Tatiana'* name with a penknife in the silver bark of the trees. " Then they would return serosa the fields, enr. loped in the luminous an tnmnal snn. at every step searing np innnmerablc crickets. Beaching the bouse they would follow Thecle Marti novna into the barns, among the chickens, in the enclosure where wete ranged the bee-hives, from which they would takedeliciouscombs of perfumed and transparent honey. " In the evening Tatiana would serve the repast in a clump of raspberry bushes. The bowla of cream were sur rounded with branches of holly, the cheese and butter were spread out on vine leaves ; there were golden cakes, amber-colored honey, dried figs. They weuld eat heartily, and laugh without the shadow of care upon them. "Sergius permitted himself to be overcome in all his being by the sweet ness of his impressions. Late at night, and when he thought his father was asleep, he would return home. "Two or three happy weeks thus fol lowed each other. " One morning, just as he was about to pass through the gate of the yard, a garret wiudow opened on its rusty hinges with a grntmg sound. A yellow, unwashed, wrinkled face appeared at it, and a harsh voice made itself heard. " ' Sergius !' " Sergius, who had half turned, shud dered iu all his limbs and looked at his father. 44 ' You are going to the fields—to the neighbor's—are yon not ?' said llazoumof. Then he suddenly added, with a wicked grin : 'Liar, hypocrite, varlet, brigand ! If that hussy Tatiana has given you a rendezvous this morn ing. she must do without you. Come back this instant!' " Sergius remained for a moment rooted to the spot. The father, accus tomed to obedience from the son, closed the window, persnaded as he was that Sergius would leave the place where he was standing only to oumo into the house. But the young man contined his walk, went through the gate, and directed bis steps toward Thecle Mar tinovna's house. When he had walked about half a mile from homo he paused and questioned his heart. He felt that he loved Tatiana, and that it was im possible for him to live without her. He resumed his walk and went as far as the pond, where he was certain that he would find his well-beloved. 44 She was there. He took her by the hand without speaking, led her up to her mother by adoption, and abruptly said to the old lady : " 'I ask Tatiana of you in marriage.' " 4 But your father 1' said Tbecle Martinovna, surprised. 4 Tatiana has no dower. 4 44 4 1 am twenty-four years of age,' THE 'ENTKE REPORTER he replied, • ami 1 have tnv uncle'* estate.' The good I nly, weeping, gate them her blessing. " I'i " his return home, Sergius t>Kl tiia tat hi r what lit' had done. Kaaoiimof, stum tied by this audacity ill aue who had so long yielded lo las tyranny, first stepped ! ack a pice or two ami then bntst upon his soli with teriihle uiipre cations. Ha cried out, howled, con ducted himself like a maniac, threat ened him with interdiction hy the law, and dually seised an old gnu and point ed it point blank at the young man. " ' Rogue, will yon obey mo?" he vociferated. " Sergius shook hi* heed negatively, for the first tune looking his father fill! ill tlie face. 1. >vo lad at la-st given him courage atul the consciousness of his rigid*. " ' I drive you hence, accursed ! 00, I drive you hence !' " Sergias left hi* father's presence. He passed tlie night uuder a sited, and when the day came he repaired to the farm t :at he had in, erited from his uncle. " Arrangements were sxn made with the lessee, who surrendered his lease, ami from that time Sergius devoted himself to repairing, arranging, ami adorning the solitary house which was •vhiu to be tilled with his love and with his Tattaua's presence. " On the eve of his marriage he wrote to his father : "' Mv Fatuiik : 1 am to lie married to-morrow. Your paternal consent would make my happiness complete. You will he ir rue witness that up to the day wln-n my love gave birth withiu in© to will, which is also a meritorious im pulse, 1 had always rendered to vou the respect and obedience that are due to a father. Will you pardon me if you think that 1 have failed in my doty to ward yon ? Will you see your son again and permit him to pres. ut to you her who also desires to call yoti by the name of father? She is a pure, loving, and devoted young girL She will love yon and will brighteu your old days with her presence. For the sake of my mother, who was, I have Wen told, a gix.H.l soul an.l a Christian ; in the name of your child's happiness, do not refuse as yonr blessing. " Raxonmof burnt his son's letter as ho had burnt his luniks, gave himself up to a towering rage, l>eat his ser vant*, who fb-d in terror from his pres ence, and shut himsetf in his room for three days. On the third day, when he emerged for the first time, he extended Li* Laud toward that part of the coun try where dwelt the rebel and his wife, and exclaimed with a threatening ges ture, " ' I will have them vet !' " Scrgiu* at last knew what it was to " A loving wife of sweet disposition and sufficiently cultivated in mind to •hare the theught* of her husband, who wo nt back to In* cherished studies and to the higher life wbich he had thought lost forever; independence and soli tude for both ; what a dream—unex pected and yet made reality ! '• He took his wife to the house which he li.kl prepared for her. It was a small white cottage, covered on the outside with virgin's bower and ivy. A little glazed portico, crowned with flowers, gave HC ss to a dining-room furnished with carved maple fnruittire and rusli matting. To the right was the nuptial chamber, bide and white, a true silken nest. To the left was S*r gins's study, hung with brown drapery and the furniture of which was bound with old leather, broiised. In the rear was a small parlor, upholstered in white and gold, containing Tutiana's work table and two large rosewood bookcases filled with books. The two young people passed their eveuings there beneath an alabaster lamp, tter gins reading aloud and Tatiana more ahsort>ed IU looking at Hergitis than in using her neixlle, Flowers everywhere, and everywhere joy. •' How unlike the gloomy paternal house was this! " The garden was as yet only planned, but every day they received parcels of rare plants and seeds. Ser gius never le'* the house except to ut tend to necea iry matters absut his es tate, and if at times he hunted—for he loved the chase—it was in his garden. "As for Tatiana, who expanded with love into all those riches of a hea ■ which nntil then had Wen able to a'- j tooh itself only by memories to her p - I rents, who had died when she was v< young, and by respect to her benefac tress, Theele Martinovna —hc had grown beantifnl. As in this solitude sho lived for her husband alone, every day she dri ed I.e. i pecially for their eherisheil evenings, and thus offered him daily tho renewed charm and feast of a new Tatiana. " Nevertheless, Hergius thought of his father. To endeavor to sec him once more was absolutely useless. He knew too well tho seventy of thnt na ture; but he inquired ataint him from the servants. They told him that he had grown more morose, harder, and more miserly than ever. " After having grieved over this rup tnre, which seemed to lie forever, Her gius had finally decided upon his course, when one morning, exactly ten months after his marriage, he received the following note: "Mr 80s :—I am growing old ; I snff.-r from my isolation. liring your wife to me. I will warm myself in your youth and happiness. 1 wish now to pardon and bless." "Sergius tittered a cry of joy, hear ing which Tatiana ran to him. Hc showed her the letter. The two chil dren fell into each other's nrras. There would be 110 more clouds in their skv. They felt their hearts to bo singularly lighted. Theso good souls had suf fered more from the cruel severity of the old mis •- than had appe >red on the surface. " ' tie will at leunt ho there when onr child is born," he said, kissing his wife. "Ou tint same day they hastened to Irtohe, and, wn leaving the carriage, they knelt before the terrible old man. He embraced them, blessed them, and proved cordial and afficli lu'e. He entreated thera to pass several days under his roof. In the evening the re past was nearly preseutable. It com prised a enenmber omelette, hnck wheat cakes, some butter, a botftlo of wine, nearly all of which the old man drank himself and which made him quite gay. Sergius did not recognize his father. "Tatiana experienced a gloomy un easiness in this dilapitated house, which was dirtier than ever. There was not the smallest cranny in it that was not sticky with roaches or (lies, lint she feared to cast a shadow 011 the recon ciliation so long hoped for, and she "did not dare to speak of uu immediate return home. " The day after their arrival Sergius was aroused by a gentle tapping at his window, it was his father who rapped. " • Come quickly,' said the old man, ' one of the servants has just seen a magnificent roe-buck in the clearing 1' "H rgius dressed himself in haste, kissed his wife, who was still asleep, provided himself with a double-bar reled guu, slipped bullets into it, and went out. ■' The day was a fine oue, the atmos phere balmy, and tho white fleecy CENTUM IIA EE. CENTRE CO., PA.. Till KSDA Y, JULY 30, 1871. clonda which allowed themselves on the horiroti ro*e onlv to disappear. "With a sentiment of I >ve fWgius saw the wood* m which he had uu-t Tatiaua for the tlrnt tune. The odor of too*?.: * and mushroom* waa ill the air Under hi* feet cracked the fir colics and the dry brush wo>J. A har< started Up befori him. He gave it it* life, he wan so happy I "He made (tie tour of the clearing, *aw no roe-buck, wandered here ami there, and began to think that he had barely kissed Tatiaua at parting. What was he doing, hunting the roe-buck only a few hour* after lit* arrival at his father's house? Why leave his Wife alone iu that melancholy house, the sight of which seemed to chill her ? "At tins thought he retraced Ml steps, hastened his walk, sml finally commenced to run. When tie came in sight of tho house, as if ushauicd of tills somewhat girlish lmtmlse which had carried him awav, he slackened his *|>eod. llis wife doubtless Still was sleeping. " Suddenly a piercing cry reached his ears. lie felt a cold perspiration tr cklitig down his back. With a few Uuuids he reached tlie Yard and run toward th© door. It was fastened ou the inside. At that moment, the cries, pit r"ing in their inteaity, recommenced. " It was his wife who was uttering these shrieks of agony. With a kick he bflrst the dtnir open. " In the middle of the hall, Tatiaua, half dressed, was stretched ou the lhor. I'wo valets held her feet and hand*, ami two others showered blows on her with sw itches. The fsther, with blood shot eyes, and with his month foaming and working convulsively, leaped like like a deer around the victim, crying out: "•Harder! Harder!' " Bergins put his gun to his shoul der and fired. The ball eutered the mouth of the howling old man and he dropped dead. " The valet* threw them*elve sob bing at the feet of Sergius. He rVpelled them, and lifted Tatiaua, who was in frightful convulsions. " When au hour had elapsed death came to Tatiaua'* relief. " Ou the next day Sergius went out and gave himcelf into the hands of jus tice. He wa* tried and acquitted. " Notwithstanding thi* acquittal," added Philippe, " vou perceive that this affair has given iiitu a bad reputa tion here."' At this moment a party of the bath ers approach. At the same time Ser gius HaZ'iumof passed by u*. and his old college mate turned las back on him. Rat llattues. The cellars, drains, and slaughter houses of l'aris contain a dense popu lation of rat*. They may be killed to any extent, but are never got rul of. It is stated that in all France there are upward of two thousand millions of rat.* and other rodents, that i, animal-- who gnaw with their front teeth. The Paris rats take ttie lead iu audacity, and, a* a specie* of game, are hunted for their carcasß, their skin, and their fur. During the recent siege of that city rats figured publicly a* a market able commodity for the table, aud they may do so again. As an encourage ment to their increase in numbers, tln-y are allowed to make nightly visits to th© depots for dead horses, the botie of which they strip to the required cleanness. The depots are surrounded bv walls, to which they gam access by hide* bored all round, every hole l>eing exactly the length of a rat'* body, leav ing the tail sticking out. Once in every three mouths there is a grand battue. A* the assailants, with noise of tin pans and drum*, rush into the enclosure, the rat* rush into the holes, and the collec tor, making a tour of the premiers, seizes rat aftei rat bv its tail and trans fers it to bis bag witli amazing dexteri ty. We are informed that " the privi lege of gathering rats on the battue days is farmed out by the authorities, ami a profitable business it is. These rats, sleek and fat as they Urors, used to be compelled to stand upon a block in the market-place, with a heavy stone dangling fmtn her neck, shaped either like a buttle, a loaf, an oval dish, or representing a woman putting out her tongue, unless she hap pened to bo rich enough to buy per mission to exchange tho hateful stone for a bag of hops, tied round with red riblion. In 1/537, a woman of Sandwich, in Kent, venturing to take liberties with the good name of " Mrs, Mayoress," had to walk through the streets of the town, preceded by a man tinkling a small bell, bearing an old broom upon her shoulders, from the end of which dangled a wooden mortar. Stafford* shire scolds did not get off so easily. They had to follow the lx-11-man until they showed unmistakable signs of re pentance, debarred from giving any one a bit of the r miml by tho bracks, fir •colds' bridle, nn ingenious aiTange ment of metal hoops contrived to clasp the head and the ncek firmly, while the padlock behind remained locked, while a spiked plate pressed upon the tongue, so as effectually to preclude its owner making any use of it. The branks, how ever, was not peculiar to Staffordshire ; it was in use in Scotland centuries ago. Destiny Did It. An instance of " destiny." Not King ago an English mechanic having vainly used all his ingenuity in endeavoring to get him a wife, advertised for one in a tit of despair. 110 was profoundly in earncßt, and so was the dame who re sponded. They met, bnt whether it was the color of her hair, or the shape of her nose, or her disposition, it is not said—but be didn't fall n captive to her charms. He advertised again, varying the form of his announcement, and when he had an answer went to see his correspondent with a heart beating high with hope. Alas ! He found the equally persevering spinster again. A third time he wooed Fate with a yet difl.rentlv worded begnilement. He reached the appointed place of meeting —'twas Hhe 1 Crushed to tho earth, and convinced, like Mr. Sniveller, that destiuy was full of staggerers, ho smiluu, he conversed, and meekly at last wedded the determined woman. A I'l.KlMlsr EXPERIIEJir. Itruoi kolitf '!'■ car itir lit ul U Sunk* tlllc, l>r. Axhbel Hmitli, of Oalventon, Texas, while ou a visit to the oouutry was bitten by a snake, Mud this is the account he give* of it iu a litter to u flit-lid t " Mv liK.tn 818 : 1 can't walk, but, with help, have hobtdeil to the table. If I improve reasonably in hobbling by Friday night 1 shall in- at my post, in your city, on Saturday, My lameness would deserve but the shortest men tion but for some facts connected with its cause, which may, perhaps, be of interest to others in similar circum stances. Alsiut dark Saturday last, as 1 was walking up the hill from the buv shore, 1 fell a lnavy scuffling about one ul my legs, and at tlie same instant the hlLa of sharp teeth. Reaching the house, ! saw by the light three several little wounds with blood exuding from them on my leg, three inches alntve the ankle. 'l'llet© were two punctures to each wound, made by the two fang* of the snake that had bitten me. .Swell ing had already cutumeuccd, less than five miutiles from the biting. Still 1 determined to do nothing, fur a while ut leant, iu order to observe the effects ot the |H)ison unmodified by treatment. The swelling increased rapidly, ami in fifteen minutes more the pain had be come excruciating, and 1 cotihl not bear my weight on the leg. I was obliged now to lie down. 1 now took, in a wine-glass of water, a half teu siHiouftll of saturated tincture of iodine. About fifteen minutes afterwards I re peaked the iodine- slmtit twentv drops. A short time atter, perhaps fifteen or twenty minutes, a tliird dose of iodine tifleeu drops—in twmty-five or thir ty minute© after, the fourth. Tlie length of these several intervals is Con jccturaL 1 had the orifices of the wounds several times touched with the tincture of italme, and the leg, which was now swollen front the ankle to the knee, was painted with iodine. "The punt was excruciating, but by 10:30 or 11 o'clock two and a-haif or three hours after the bite—had abated sensibly. A)>out 1.30 in tho morning 1 fell asleep, and awoke at sunrise with complete f and superficial sere nes* of the ltmb on touch, now swollen to double ita former sire, but with ©o pain worth mentioning. Nor have 1 since had any sufTi ring, further than complete disease of tho leg, till this morning, and lieing obliged to have it all times elevated. The foot partici pated in the swelling ; and if the leg hung down it became < and, indeed, still doe*) in a few minutes perfectlv livid. " The interest of the matter in ques tion lies in the use, the efficacy, of iodine a* a remedy for venomons totes. Nothing else than iodine was llt-d ; UO spirits, no hartshorn, not the least pos sible tluug iu the world, internally or externally, except iodine, and one small drink of water Former experience had given me confidence in iodine, by its use with other*. 1 was determined to give it a fair showing in my own ease, unaided and unobstructed by any other mediation. I have attached the greater Intel est to this case t>ecau*e, though one is seldom a safe judge in Ins own ease, the present bite has lccn bv long odds tlie severest snake bite 1 ev r knew. If left to tw If it would, in my opinion, have been fata! in a vary few hours. That the snake wa* a large one I knew from hi* heavy scuffling altout my legs, and 1 may add, from the depth to which I felt his fangs enter. My instantaneous suspicion, from the weight and severity of th< biting, waa that my ussailant was a wildcat or some stich animal. Tho cxorueiatiug pain felt subsequently, as before mentioned, si eDied to me like the ferocious cramps of the muscles iu malignant cholera, except tnat they were not iu any de gree -pasinodn*. " Tlier# tr< n* other circumstances, iTmptomi which I should detail wen* 1 writing to * physician, bat they would only at ill farther bore yon. To act forth truly the efficacy of iodine moat excuse my length. Ido uot know what k uid of a snake it wa*. hut suspect it to h-oJ Wn a rattlesnake. '■ Very truly yours. "Aminßt. Surra." Cause of Sleeplessness, I)r. Duckworth, in the BrliUh Medi cal Journal, eal's attention to some causes of insomnia which he thinks are hardly sufficiently recognised or ade quately met by the resources of practi cal medicine. K- cent researches have clearly shown that the brain is com paratively aniemic daring sleep, and that the blood thus removed from the head is more freely supplied to the viscera anil in teguments. The most constant cause and certainly the most frequent accompaniment of sleepless ness is au opposite condition, or one of active and increased cerebral circula tion. A spi vies of nocturnal dyspepsia, mild in its character and producing no actual suffering, may som> turn s give line U> persistent insomnia. There may be no symyturns beyond dryness of the month, burning of the soles of the feet, and heat and throbbing in the head, and the** are probably due to a tiro acid condition of the contents of the stomach, and upper part of the small intestines, caused generally by excess in fatty and highly-seasoned food, in fruit, and in various wines. Sleeplessness may bo due to bodily and mental over exhaustion, which re sults in nti increased flow of blood to the brain, consequent upon vaao-motor paralysis. Again, it may bo the result of a mere habit, as in those eases where there has been a long course of broken rest; it may be caused by persistent odors, by certain effluvia, by the nb sence of moisture in the air of a sleep ing apartment, or by nn improper eleva tion or depression of tho head. The treatment in most of these eases should of course be directed to tho removal of the cause, btit. when it is found neces sary to give drugs, bromide of potas sium autl chloral hydrate are probably the best, both having been shown to diminish the amount of blood circula ting through tho brain. Itestliq; One's Hones. "Well, Missus, Is going to leave you," said Molly to her mistress, whom "she had loved and grown fat with for a good many years. "Going to leave me, Molly ? Why, where are yon go ing?" " Oh, I s going to get married ; I've worked long enough, and I's going to ri st mv bones." Of course Mrs. Jones could make no objection to this common and natural femalo frailty. Ho Molly went, and nothing was heard of her for a year or two, when she came back, poor and emaciated, having lost her husband, and all the rest of ills human nature is heir to having fallen upon her. Mrs. Jones was much sur prised to see her coming, and said to her : " Well, Molly, have von rested your bones? "Golly, IVtißßUs I's rested my jaw bones, and dem's all the bones I've rested." THE PR\AI.TY. —The penalty of pa triotism, says the New York World, re ferring to the Fourth, is as follows : A rough estimate, with several of the upper wards yet to hear from, put it at 2 xt (1 tigers, 97 hands, 80 eyes, 17 arms, 9 legs, 14 noses, 48 cases of hair all off, and 30,000 druukß. M A It 1 K T T F.. Mariette Dubois was thn undoubted belle of Diunu. Moreover, she was credited by o<<:umoii report with |mibs< s sitig a larger d than any girl in the village a reputation not without value even iu no primitive u society as that o! Dmau some sixty five yearn ag- , The effect of Ules© combined attrac tions was that before Mariette was seventeen years old, various offers haoor wizened creature always smelling of his own vile drugs," she declared turn to be, with many expres sions of distaste. The inn keeper, a burly, well to-do |Mod-for uiutlicr-lU law. Hut iu vain. " Dost think I know no better than to give my pretty Mariette to a weather beatru old savage such as thou, Paul Lemair© 7" said the old lady at la*t, by way of cliuchtug the argument " And thou old enough to lie her grandfather, and a cripple besides! Hah!" The hero of a doxeu battles was not uunaturally somewhat offended by these personalities. Hut lie was too much a man of the world to lose his teui|H-r visibly. He only shrugged his shoulders witn an air of disdain. "Bo tie it than, madatue, but"—and this ho knew to be a grand stroke of rt-veng©—" if it is indeed upon that young ne'er do well, Jean I*erou, that you have fixed your heart for a son-in law, 1 would have you take care. A brainless youth, such as he, is no fit protector for mademoiselle, your daugh ter. And if, at the next conscription, hi* name should be drawu, that would be nice for her, would it not? Ah! 11a! a cripple, indeed! It is somethiug to have fought the battles of one's country. It is uot every man whore turns to tell the tale. Jean Lerou! Ugh'" The widow was for a moment startled by this sudden attack, but quickly re covered herself. . " And if it is upon Jean Leron that my choice i* fixed, what business is it of thine, Monsieur Fire-eater? - ' she retorted, angrily. " And if the poor lud should Ih< unlucky enough to be drawn for the next conscription, dost think I have not a little bit of money put away somewhere, in an old shoe, I* rhaps—eh? Just euottgb to pay for a substitute, or perhaps a few sous over ?" And so th© old soldier was fairly beaten off the field. It was as he had said, however. By a peculiar sympathy, not perhaps unprecedented between mother and child, the widow's choice had fallen on tlie man whom her daugtit* r would cer tainly have preferred had the matter been left to her. And the sympathetic chord must have had a good deal to do with it, for, with the txosptaou of a handsome face, and a fine manly figure, Jean le rou had little to recommend him as au -ligiti!e />orti for the young heiress. Hut youth and good looks have won their wav with pretty maidens and romantic mothers both before aud since the time of Widow Dubois and Marietta. , At leaat they were a handsome couple ev ry one *id that, when the whole village turned out oi /r/< to celebrate ttie wedding, and Jeau waa pronounced on all sides to lw< a fortunate fellow ; but one who at the same tune would no doubt prove a kind husband to Mariette, and a g<*d sou to the widow. Indeed, a hspj •ler trio, a* time went on, it would have been difficult to find, until the trto was one fine day turned into a quart* t, aud the happiness so increased by at least one-fourth. Surely never la-fore had there been such a delighted laiy fatlier, such a contented child-mother, and snch an absurdly happy grand mother. Bnt, unfortunately, it is given to few in this world to live in a state of bIiHS, snd soon after the birth of the little Habette, au occasional cloud ap neared ou tlie the small household. A .N'rtsin change came over the good mother. Dines of care and anxiety fixed themselves upon her face. Her very ehsrseter seemed to change. From the most open-handed and generous of be iugs she lavaine close and parsimoni- , on, always preaching economy, and urging upon lar.y, light-hearted Jean the necessity of working and providing for Ids wife and family. Humors went abroad that this change in the widow was in some war connected with a scapegrace son of hers, by a former marriage, of whom no one had heard for a long while. But of this the widow said nothiug. "It was vexations, this freak of the ; good mother's," said Jean ; but lie wan mneb too easy going and good-natured to have any quarrels on the subject. He would listen to all that tho widow had to say, make the best resolutions, and for a few davs carry them out ; working very steadily on the little farm which was now, by the widow's gift, their joint property. " Times are bad," he would aav. " The mother is quite right." Of course he meant to work ; and he would, nutil the next fair or pilgrimage proved too strong a temptation for his new-horn industry, and tiie good reso lutions were forgotten. Then, too, her fit of depression past, the natural light headedness of the Frenchwoman would return to the good widow, arid rejoicing in the happiness of her children, she would join in their small pleasures and excursions with all her obi zest, the lit tle ltibette her constant and moat cher ished companion. So another year passed on happily enough in spite of occasional clouds and threatenings of storms, until one day a terrible blow fell upon the little household. The health of tho widow, never very strong, had been uudor tniued by secret worry and anxiety. An epidemic startled the village, and al most before her children could believe that she was ill, tho good mother lay dying. Then she spoko of this trouble which had se oppressed her. "It grieves me, children, that I do not leave you as I could wish, rich and independent," she said, holding a hand of each. " But the last few years have been sadly disastrous. We have lived ; we have enjoyed our life, it is true; but the times linvo been hard. War, scarcity ; you know of these things, and then my poor boy, too, must bear his share of tho blame " " Dear mother, do uot trouble y ur self now about these matters," inter rupted J.an. "Wo have been so happy," sobbed Marietta. " lint 1 must speak, my child," the wi low went on feebly. "The little that r. main* is yours. There is the farm. You inn t exert yourself now. Jean— y. it must vork for—for her sake. Will you not?" "Y mother, yes," said Joan, press ing tho dying woman's hand. " And then see in that old bureau is a little sum put by for thee, Jean,if thou shouldst be drawn for the oonscription, 'Forms: 52.00 a Year, in Advance. three hundred franca and more. Hut if thou shouldst escß|H-, then it is to b© a dot lor the little Hsbette. Dost hear, my sou? Here is the key of the bureau. I'ul it by the cord about thy neck." " 1 will do all as yon wish, good mother." " Ah, thst is well." A few more words of tender loving counsel, and then death came, with a voice not to Ik! denied, calling th© good mother from her weeping children, and from the little home ul which she had so long been the center and support. • ••Ass • Mariette and Jeau had Keen married just five years, when, in the year 1813, an order for raining a fresh conscription of one hundred and twenty thousand men was issued by th© Kmperor Napo loon. Each new conscription put the rural districts of France into a yet greater state of excitement and agita tion ; and Dmau was no exoeptien to the rule. The law waa rigorously carried out, lb© exemptions allowed so few, and th© difficulty of obtaining sub stitutes so much increased, thst each little household awaited the result with fear and trembling. Mariette, of all th© young matrons of the village, was p<-rh*p* the most un moved. For, she argued, if the worst should come, there was at least that little board of the good mother's in the old bureau. Jean was safe. Hut as the time of the conscription approached, Jean himself ws* strangely restless and discomposed. Mariette observed it, and diil her beat to rally him oat of his depression. "There is no doubt thst thou wilt be stile to get a substitute, Jean ?" she had asked one day, a little anx iously. " No—no—" with a sigh. " Ah, that is well! Then cheer np, rnon bravr ! Yon are thinking, I know, about the poor Habette and her dot. Well, it would be a pity, truly, that she should lose it. Hut she is youug yet, yon see ; and if we take this now, we must save her np another dot by th© time she wont© it Most we not ?" "Ah ! we ar© bo clever at aaving money, Mariette," returned Jean, rather bitterly. The next day waa the one which was to deeide so many fates. The whole village was swarming and crowded with gendarmes. Mariette dismissed her husband with words of cheer. The little Habette was that day cot well, so her mother waa forced to re main at home as nurse. Hat when Jean was fairly out of the house. Marietta's hsart failed her. "If he should be drawn —if a substitute eonld not b© found— if—but no." One look at th© old bureau reassured ber. Th© remem brance of her mother's loving car© seemed to stand as a bulwark Iwtween her and ail possible trouble. " Thank* to the good mother, all will be right," she murmured, though her tears felL She was almost a child still The two years that had gone by since the mother's death had not produced any great change either in the yonng oonple cr their mode of life. Eaonomy and industry were not natural to cither of them, and for the rest if they were happy and enjoyed themselyes, and entild only find money enough to pay those dreadful war taxes as the time came round, what did it matter whether thev were rich or p#or? So Mariette argued, when sometime* Jean looked serious and complained of the hardness of the times. If the sun would shine always, and Bsl>ette be always smnsing and good, they oonUl want nothing mors, Marn tte thought It was late in the evening before Jean returned home, and the first sight of his wan, white face almost frightened Mariette out of ber aeuaea. " What * it ?" she asked. " What has happened ?" " It's all over, Mariette. I must go —I am drawn." "You go—you !" echoed the young wife, "Are you mad, Jean? la it poaaible that you can get no substitute? Jean, answer me, for pity's sake," a* he still made no reply. " Yea —yes, if 1 could pay him, there is Joseph", the woodman's son, would willingly take my plaoe, but " "But why talk of money. Jean? Where ia the key of the bureau ? Don't dvlav a momeut," cried Mariette, ex citedly. " 'l'Le key—oh I yes—the key. It— that is —I forget." " No, no Jean, here it ia. What are yon thinking of? Here it i round yonr neck." But as her fingers touched the key, Jean's hand grasp* hers, and holds it so tightly that bo hurts her. " Jean, what it it ?" For a second their eyes meet, and then there crosses ibc young wife'e heart such s spasm of Wrrwr and doubt that she calls out as if in pain. Jean drops her hand. " It is no good looking, Mariette," he said, after a moment's pause, in s strange hoarse voice. " Yon will find nothing. The money is—spent." Marietta could only gaze at him in a kind of blank stupor." "Spent, Marietta. I>o yon hear? Do you understand ?" and suddenly Jean* leaning his bead on bit hands, burst into a storm of passionate tear*. " God forgive me," be cried, " I hare robbed the child and ruined us all. Why don't yon speak. Marietta? Say something, if only to reproach me." Then Marietta* found words—not of reproach, but of loving wifely counsel and help. In a moment she seemed transformed. A child no longer, the old things were put sway forever. The old spirit of careless happiness, of blind reliance, was indeed fled, but in its place a nobUr rp'rit had taken up its abode within her- .sp ; rit that could suffer and dare and endu. . She was a woman at last. A woman very fnll of strong earnest purpose, any one would have said who HAW her the morning after thew eventa, leaving her hotiae at daybreak, Mealing away from her still sleeping husband, her child by her aide, and on her arm a haaket in which were carefully atowed away all the email treasures which ahe ]to*se*aed —her croaa of Breton work, her gold earringa, and her ailver chain. "Jean, we muat And the money," alio hud aaid to her huabaud the night before, when he had beoome calmer. " Where ?" Jean had aaked drearily. On© hundred, ay, even perhaps two hundred franos it might be possible yet to raiae upon the farm, he had aaid af ter awhile, but three hundred—no — there was no help for it, he muat go. " For the sake of a hundred franca? No, no, Jean," Marietta had returned cheerily. " I will get yon that—leave it to me." But to her consternation, when all are disposed of—croaa, earringa, chain, and even her wedding shawl—ahe is not yet half way toward the hundred franca. What can ahe do ? To return home without the money is impossible —impossible, she repeats, as she walks wearily up and down the one street in the little market town where she has taken her wares. Bhe stops opposite a window that had attracted her more than once. It is that of an artiste en chcveux. Mariette's liair has always l>eeu considered one of her especial beauties. Now the thought comes to licr again and again that by it ahe might raiae the required snm. But could ahe possibly bring herself to NO. 30. make this sacrifice ? She hesitates ; draws back ; it is to save her husband. Hbe will! Clasping her child'* hand tightly In iters aa if for protection, she enters the .hop, and liefore the old artiste can ask her pleasure, lets fall a mass of soft brown silk atmut her shoulders. " What will you give me for it?" the asks, with a I •eating heart. "Huty francs, madame," returns the | old man, after a critical inspection. It is the sum she wants. " Cut it, cut it, and be quick," she cries, eagerly. Ttie work of destruction does not take long. A few momenta in tbe barber's chair, a few clip* of tbe aeiaaor*. and the brown silken glory is lost to Mari etta forever. Hdently she submitted to the process with a meek patience that had some thing of a martyr spirit in it, Habetta j in the meantime making a delightful : tour of discovery round the room among the wigs and pomades and paraphernalia of the barber's art, until all at onoe the 1 child catches sight, ie a mirror, of her , mother's altered appearauoe. Hh* rushed to her with a scream of horror " Oh, inatntna ! mamma ! what baa the wicked man done!" she tried, in great distress. " Be has taken my mamma away, and left me an ugly—ok! quite an ugly mamma instead " Th-n, and then only, Marietta's heart failed her. The martyr and the heroine were all forgotten, and the iunootut vanity of tin woman's nature rose to the surface. Her tears fell fast What iia C**r danced In • frock-cost 11 in England. An ifir**lira genius In Ohio pro |k>mm t furutah horses with falae teeth, ' so as to omoMi their ago. A man went out the other night to w if he eonld ascertain the color of the wind, and found it blew. Onr Borrow* are ltke thunder clouds, winch wem black in tlia distance, but grow lighter aa they approach. It ia faahionable is England to jam fence* for exercise, bat eery rolgar iiaw wood for the aame thing. A fatal epiaootio amorg dneka ia Nometiiiog to be dsad-dnck-ted from farmer'* profits in Pennsylvania. An IHtuoie hrmwr boa two aona and three daughter*. *od the girl* help v.ork the farm while the boy* are at oollega. Oeorge logetla, Hhaker c 4 Warren rille, Ohio, Uaa spoiled hi* imputation na a man of peace by half killing two burglar* in a midnight encounter. The ooet of the new eapitol building at Hartford, with ail the improvement*. wiU lie aometbing ovar SI BOO 000, af which fl .000,000 baa already been appro prisied by the titata. The oombinad oonaeqneneea of oara leeaneaa and ignorance arc aeen in the aeorea of letter* dropped into the post offloe every d*y misdirected or without portage stamps. The English poatal ay a tens ia ao tbor ongh that a misdirected letter will re lentlessly ehaae a man from end to tad of the British dominioaa, and never give up till it find* him or hi* corpse. Oilcloth*, if well rubbed with • woolen eloth and warm water, with the addition of a little akimmed milk, if convenient, will look nearly a* fresh aa new. Scrubbing brushes and strong soap are ruinous tothem. "Do yoa understand the English language 1" said a McLean county man the other day, addressing a lightning rod agent. " I do," replied the agent. *• Then understand me, I don't want any of your rods " The lightning man somewhat electrified, drove on. It is noteworthy that in every in stance in which persons bitten by mad dogs daring the pant six months hsve died of hydrophobia the dog inflicting ihe wound baa been a household pet. The street dogs have inoculated no one with hydrophobia, ao far as known. The Urges! room in the world nnder s single roof, unbroken by pillars or other obstructions, is at Sk Peters burg, in liusaia ; and ia 650 feet long and 150 feet wide. It ia used for mili tary displays in rough weather, and can be converted into a ballroom at aigbk James Lick, who has given $700,000 for the establishment of an obaervmtory in California, has only a superficial knowledge of astronomy. He ia said to have selected that subject for bi* munificence because he thought it waa receiving leea attention than other branches of science. There was a good deal of meaning >u the old word " schoolmaster," as c m pared with the more euphonious title "teacher." An old-fatniond peda gogue expected his boys to puzxle out things for themselves. He seldom al lowed them to make use of his brain* when they could employ their own. A mason, in pulling down a chimney at Lewiston, recently, unearthed a whiskey barrel, which waa sealed up in brickwork. A brick waa ao placed aa to be removed, admitting the thirsty oomer to a faucet whence the elixir eonld be drawn. Tkere waa, doubt less, so arrangement above to fill the barrel. It i* mentioned aa a remarkable feet that Vaaasr College, designed for the highest culture of women, baa newer reorired a bequest from a woman, though wealthy women are continually extending liberal support to other and older colleges. Vasear College was founded by a man, and thus far has been aided by men only. It is not often that a brother and sister get :mk together, but Henry and Esther Maine did it in LoulsTille, their spree lasting a seek, eoat'ug two hand red dollars, and ending in Henry's arrest for disorder and Esther's almost fatal illness. Nor were they before tbeir osiouM eery low is the social scale, being the children of reputable and well-to-do parents. The Lancaster (Penn.) Examiner tells what it knows about the height of meanness. It say* : There are things in human ahspe, whom, through for tuitous circumstances si one, it becomes obligatory to class with humanity. One of these despicable blots of creation the other day emptied a bucketful of poUto-bogs on Mr. Cyrus Kleiser's lot, at Lebanon. This lot had escaped the ravages of the pest, bat that, it seemed, constituted the offense. Soeae in a graveyard. Wife—"Ah husband, do you see thia beautiful cap ping? How delicately cnt is the pure white stone r "Yes, very pretty." Wife—"Bat, William, have yon no taate for art; „ you don't enjoy these things aa I do. Just notice this slen der column of marble, with the touch ing q nest ion so beautifully carved, 'Do they mi me at home?'" "Yes. I see ; and here is her name on \ho foot stone, 'G. A. B.' Yea, I guese they miaa her if that was her name." Silence for a moment. A Blind Artor. A most remarkable fact connected with the Meiningen court company is that one of tbe principal players, Herr IVeilenbeck, who took the part of Pope Sixtns, has been perfectly blind for the last three years. Few people who at tend the performances ever imagined for a moment, however, that the actor who moved with such ease and precis ion on tbe stage before them did not see the scenes around him. Fortunately for him hi* affliction did not oome upon him until be had been for some years a member of the Meiningen troupe, so that he knew the boards by heart when blindness clhie upon hiss. His col leagues are very devoted to him. When ever a new piece is to be giw® they undertake many rehearsals m order to make the blind actor feel at home in his new rote. The drama of " Pope Six tns" was quite new to him; snd s critic who knew of his affliction wrote how he trembled for fear of the actor making a false step. But he moved about and ascended the throne with safety and dignity. " Since my eyes died," said the actor to the critic, " I see everything clearer with tbe nerves of the brain. Life concentrates iteelf in my head undisturbed by the external worla, which for mo no longer exists. Wei 1-übeck is a man ol intellect, having enjoyed a scholarly education in his youth. He is the son of an Austrian councillor, now deceased, and has al ways moved in the highest society. His father died only a few years ago, with out knowing of the sad sfflictien that had overtaken his son, who by means of a mechanical arrangement and the assistance of a servant, wrote letters to him up to his death. The Duke of Meiningen settled a pension on this remarkable actor some years ago, so that his future is provided for. A Box Trick. A seedy-looking stranger, with an innocent oountenanoe, took out a small wooden box, aDd after taking a chew of tobacco from it he remarked that the box was once the property of George Washington. The crowd exhibited a lively interest, and after several persons had opened and shut the box it all at once refused to open. " Here, take it so," said the stranger, whipping off the oover. They tried to " take it so," got mad, and when he offered to bet that no one in the crowd oonld open the box there were more greenbacks shoved at him than he could take care of. He quietly am red half a dozen bets, handed out the box, and there wasn't a man in the crowd who could get the cover ofT. They wriggled, twisted aad swore, and as the stranger dropped it into his pocket and walked off he re marked : "Very singular box—very." Nobody suspected that it was the old trick until he bad reaped his harvest.