Post ami Present. Tina *t:o i" wilh wn-rf.Mii slowly called, Au*p 11 cwg of t\, ;tb eight an duiled, O'tt Utoop. lint when ous futli. . - trod iHp lei.-l plain*, Tlio *Ur* shone brightly 10 the gentle •lrc*u*, Tlie rainbow arched al>o\o the summer raiu*. Anrf sleep brought happy dream*. The world i roiling swift and far away From morning tu .-teanrfeatly morning light. And in tlio fnihu .v. of Uie middle day No shadow* meet the aighU Rut reaching from that soft and shifting shy Of early dawn a radiant path way shone And augels In the morning ventured nigh. Who in the morn are gone ! They Two. A reader of • magazine fell in with the following line* . lnaxTtTt. Somewhere in desolate, wide swept spare In twilight land, iu uo-tuan e land Two hurrying eha|>es met face to face. And bade each oilier stand. " And who are you ?" cried one. agape. Shuddering in Uie gloaming light. tdo not know," ea..l the second shape, '• I only died last nig hi." After {Hindering them for three daya his muse began to hum iu the same time, atnl the following was found upon his table the morning after he was sent to a private asylum : ooria>s v T rui. Nowhere in the midnight, wind-swept street. In Muddle town, iu No liura town - Two staggering shapes, colliding, meet. And knock each other dowu. • Say. who are yon ?" cries one, when up. Hiccoughing, with a diuukeu face. I don't (.hie) know," says l other chap, " I'm a stranger "n this place." MY AUNTS STORY. "Oh, Aunt Fain, how sliall I make Jack a little more dignified f I want to be proad as well as fond of him. He's t.xi silly, too demonstrative; how can 1 cure him ? Auut l v am. advise me!" Aunt Pamela look.xl at lh-lte irreso liiU-ly for a m-unent, then beckoned to Hannah to take the tea away. * " I'll tell you a story, B<'lle," she sud, "if you'll listen to it. I'll tell you liow aomooody you kuow came to In- a cross, queer old maid—a whimsical, spiteful, lonely, desolate old woman. " " I don't know auv such jH-rson," cried Belle. •• Yea, you do, child; you'll recognise her |xvrtr.t wheu it's drawn. But at your age, dear, she was, 1 think, jmssa i-ly jiretty ami attractive; in fact, you won't Wlieve it, but this heroine of mine was Tory like you wheu she was iu the liev.lay of youth." *• Hail she red hair, anut, like mine 1" " Yes, aud the brilliant complexion and high temper Uiat go with • it. She was only eighteeu wheu she became the defendant iu a care where all the litUe property she had iu the world was at .-take. She was already an orphan, and would have, been a Ix-ggar hail it not Kvn for the wonderful zeal aud ability of her legal adviser—Mr. Reginald Vic*, rs. L->cg before th- case was de- cided i:i h-. lie half she had grown to look forw.ird t-i th- ne vssary legal con .- ul:ation-as the brightest moments of her life, though tiot a word of love had passed l>etw.cn them. In truth. Belle, the lady of our story, whom we will call by my own old-fashioned name of Pa mela, had a warm h< -art under a very cold exterior, and although she knew how to love well and devotedly, could not sliape her sentiment to suit the somewhat ener igetic aud passionate devotion of the young barrister. " ' Yon are so cold, Pamela,' he would say; 'cne might as well have a bit of archaeology in the shape of one of the mutilated Grecian goddesses for an idol. I whisper ever so many pretty thiugs in yonr ear. and oue woufd think they stop jxxl at the tympanum, for not the faint- st blnh tinges your marble cheek, and the chiseled splendor of your profile re mains as if carved in stone." " And all this time. Belie, every won! of his had beeu like an electric shock of bliss to her enraptured soul, and she scarcely knew whether Rhe was in para dise or upon the eArth. " When n->r e* gagement hatl reached an epoch devoted to the bridal trous seau, she became very much the proper ty of certain relatives and their chosen seamstresses; there was so much of try ing on, of comparing and choosing, that very little time was left for Reginald, of which he complained most bitterly ; and when the convention adjonrned to the i-ountry to arrange further preliminaries for the coming happiness, Reginald de clared he would follow her very soon. "It was weather such as this Belle, in the month of May ; and the very morning of her journey the luckless Pamela offended Reginald by repulsing him in what she held an unliefittmg lev ity and familiarity. He had but twirled her ids*ut the room two or three times, caroling out in his gleeful way. " Pamela bade him somewhat haught ily to desist, which he did, with a frown, aud went immediately out of her pres etfbe. nor did she see uiin again until he 1 >ade her a cold farewell at tho window of the railway car. So she went upon her way almost broken-hearted, and had no joy in the verr.al landscape, nor, in deed. eo|jhl she see field, or ;xMt, or fly ing bits of beanty for the bars that dimmed her sight. She took herself to task, and vowed tliat. come what would, when Reginald should meet her again, she would welcome him warmly, even should be enter the house byway of a somersanlt. " Nevertheless, she found herself hop ing tliat his first visit among tiieee sim ple country folk would prove to them that he was altogether a sujieribr being, not fashioned after the same elav as fheroselvi'S—picturing him as she had so often aea him when deep in leg*; con troversy, his high white brow bent into a frown, his eya glowing with a secret fire, wnrils falling out of his mouth like molten coals upon the heads of his ad vcrsarie*; only Home honest, faithful hearts that loved her far beyond her desert " Reginald reached the farm one hsi! my evening, riding from the train in n convenient ox-cart, bis traveling suit of gray and broad straw hat. his flowing necktie and the air of easy nonchalance and careless simplicity about him, gravely vexing his betrothed. He had not been half an hour with Pamela Vie fore he was on intimate terms with the whole of her ancle's family. There was not the hint of a frown en his brow, and no trace of legal lore or dignity of state embai fan mi his intercourse with her simple relatives. "To hear his talk as he stood there by the five-barred gate, swinging little Elsie to and fro, one would suppose that he hail never pleaded a case, that he had never quoted a poem, or delivered an oration. Paireja's uncle drawled to him in his provincial dialect, her aunt joined iu the conversation without even drop ping her sun-bonnet, and Cousin Eph raim, the Imshfulest of mortals, sat down to tea with the stranger guest. The supper the young lawyer devoured that night would have honored the appetite of a laborer in the off kitchen. Pamela looked with dismay at her Olympian, wondering if that could lie the way the gods dined upon ambrosia. Ho, wound ed and disappointed, scarce knowing why, she sat silent anil cold by his side when they were alone together once more. They had the whole of the grim parlor, with its whitewashed walls, its hideous portraits, its horse-hair sofa and chairs, to themselves ; but the door of the sitting room stood ajar, and Regi nald looked lopgingly thence upon the gay rag carpet, the well-polished stove, with its grab' aflame, the warm cush ioned chair where her aunt nodded, and the bit of holly-crowned glass, where Ephraim made himself suiart to visit sweet little Jessie Downes. " ! She is the loveliest creature, Regi nald,'said Pamela, ' that the sun ever shone upon.' " ' Except one," said Reginald. • But K r irr/. Kilitor imtl I 'ropriot* >1 VOL. Mil. II don't Isdieve old Sol's rava olteu reaeh yoit, my Pamela.' "The very next morning, at the coun try church, he saw iVuisin Epbraitu* swiet heart. As was her wont, slie ties tied in her father the deacon's |hw, and looked with rapt eye* to the gixxl old minister, while lvcgtnal.l'* eyes, once fastened ou her primrose face, never left !it throughout the servieo. Ily some magnetism their eyes met, ami jskw lit tie Jessie's rapt gaze Uft the face of the miuieter to feast shyly upon the elawioU allnromonta of the young l>arri-ter. " Reginald walked homeward by Jes sin's aide, while F.phraim and Pamela followed after, both proud and please 1 tliat the little maiden had found favor iu the Sight of so distinguished a guest " Reginald prulouged his stay in the country, d.N-laring tliat he neetted a raostion, and was out iu the morning be times. Ashing iu the neighboring streams for sunflsli, and gathering wild flowers and ferns ; coming Imek at sundown xomew hat abstracted in hia manner, - but sallying forth again the next day. " i'amela declined to join these ex cursions, as th." suu and wind together would liave made sad havoc with her complexion as they would with yours, Uiy dear, you very well know. But then- are complexions, ladle, tliat tlie > sun lakes to kindly enough, and paints with a magical brush, the wind putting iu a crimson that was never found even upon the palette of Sir Joshua Rey- I uohls. "Upon the May festival, which was arranged late in the month as a farewell celebration for Pamela and her be throtlied, the beauty of aweet Jessie Dowue* seemed to onr pole |xUrician of the city like something almost super natural. She called to Reginald time and again to tell her if he had ever con ceived of so glowing and vivid a loveli Hess, and could not take her eyes from a head that made the sweet blossoms with which it was crowned seem faded and dull bv comparison. " The day grew somewhat chill toward evening, and in the hollow of the wood, where Pamela wandered alone, it seemed to her that the wind whistling among the trees arose to a kind of sob tliat was al most human iti its intensity. And as she walked along, half anxious now to escape from a solitude that seeim 1 peo plod with melancholy sounds she heard a murmur of voices close at hand, just beyond the little thicket that barred her progress. " * It is so hard to say good-bye, my sweet child,' said a voice that was the one voice in the world to Pamela. ' You have crept into my heart, wanning and blessing it.' " 'And shall I never see roti again V sobbed httle Jessie lh> wiies. " 'Nay, darling, how can I tell i Pcr haps when this sweet madness is cured'— " And then, 1 telle, poor Pamela heard no mun>. A bless.-.1 unconsciousness seized her, and for the tirst time in her life she fainted. Not the last; alas since that moment of agony her nerves have ma Ixm so strong, and upon the recurrence of certain sounds or certain remembrances she loses hi rself for a time. A little while ago, when yon pic tured that scene in the woods, it put in to words that bit of the past; I saw again the nnsees and ferns at my feet, the little black pool of water half cove red with withereil leaves, and I heard the dull thud or discorilant crook of the frogs. "When, upon that time long ago, 1 awoke to con-ciousness, Reginald was bending over me with a white stricken face, and all the rest were busy with jxssets and restoratives in my Ix-half. " When we were left alone together, and I found that Reginald hoped I was unconscious of all, 1 was tempted to ac oept this negative happiness held out to me by a niggardly destiny; but he 1 logged of me, writli a persistency which I interprets! in my own way, to follow him as quickly as possible to the city, whither be was going the following morning. '•' Yon may as well remain," I said,cool ly ; 'a cowardly retreat now will avail nothing. Seek yonr happiness where yon may, Reginald Tickers; it has never been dependent upon mine. I ln-urd your words to Jessie ' — " ' And if you did,' he broke in, ' what then ? Tliey were the first fond ones 1 ever said to her, and these were wrung from me by her sorrow for our parting. I never meant to do you wrong, Pamela, and was not disloyal to von in heart. It was a mad, foolish impulse ; forgive it, I prav you. Do not let this oue fault make misery for both our lives. I will promise never to see her again.' " * And do yon think,' I <*ried, ' that her agony will mend mine ?' " ' Nonsense, Pamela.; it is not in a nntnre like hers to sufT> r long.' " ' Rut it is in a nature like mine,' 1 said. ' Nevertheless, Reginald Tickers, your jpa|h and mine he apart henceforth and forever!' " • Rnt it an, theii,' his face white ning to his lip*. ' Let yonr pride lie the cause, as it has always Is-en. Hud yon beeu less cold, I liad not sinned against a love strong and perfect at it-> birth, but stinted and starved every day that 1 lived. I beg of you, as yon at least value the |X"UCP of others, to br atbe no word of this to your cousin Ephraim ; he is a good fellow, and deserves well of happiness. Let him win and wear his wild blossom, as pure and swret, so help roe iieaven ! as when first he found it. A* for me, I will trouble atl of you no more !' " He w.-nt, and with him went the rest of my life ; for th mgh I am nearly fifty years old, I only lived to the age of twenty. Jt was fortunate, nt least, that mine was the only life 1* reft ; for Regi nald married five years after, and Jessie took up the thread of her love for Eph raim where it could lie so readily mend e demonstrative. '■ How jolly it in bore, Aunt Pamela!" Haiti that ardent young lover. " Belle in like a blamed icicle at the house yonder, and I never bid any yearning toward the polar regionß." TnEin Cr.AIM. —-The managers of the Pacific mills at Lawrenoe, Mass., arc likely to have a claim against the city for damage to their new mill and inter ruption of business, occasioned by the undermining of the mill foundations by the construction of the new main sewer, which was rebuilt last year and carried under the mill into the river. At the time fears were expressed by the officers of the corporation that the sewer might some time 1m the cause of damage. The tower of the new mill has settled about two inches within a few weeks, and a part of the work at the north end of the mill has been suspended on account of fears of further injury. THE CENTRE REPORTER. Iu English Court*. A recent English case of extreme ern elty, passing under the guise of justice, has Usui much is'liunelitsl on iu Uie liajw-rs oil Itoth sides of the Atlantic. There aeetned to tw something |ws'iillarly revolting in the circu nstatice that a lit tie girl of thirteen, who had plucked a geranium bud in an almshouse garih n, should t*< sentenced to imprisonment for a fortnight in jail, ami for four yearn longer in a jwiial institution all t.s mild ly termed " reformatory." Hut, as a matter of fact, severe sentence* such as this are ty no means rarely |ipui.Miui*vl from Uie benches oeeupic.f by the " un liaiI iai,I magistracy "of England. Justus,, in the hamls oi the gentlemen who are called ii|su to administer punishment to 1 ictty offenders in the English rural dis tru ts, is esjHs-ially stern with those who in any way invade the Kacrml rights of " prooertv." Theft or tresiM***, in their eves, is t.s, apt to be regarded as worse than wife beating, or slander, than j*r jury og murderous assault. Such seii tenoes as that accorded to poor little Sarah Chandler are far from being as uncommon as the ooMpii'Uoiunww of her case would imply. The very same clergyman who sought, in lus capacity as a magistrate, to brand her for life as " jail bird,'" because alie plucked a flower, sentenced, not long ago, a small tviT scarcely out of his pinafores to prison for a month, because he scrajs-d the leavings of a discarded toboooo cask, and sold his scraps for a half-penny ; and Ciunlemue.l a young servant girl to six weeks in jail for putting some photo graphs, which she found in a waste pajN-r basket in the house where she served, into her pocket to show to some friends. Not long agosixtet u tlshermea and women, living ou the Northuiuhriun exist, were cast into jail for a month for picking up mussela on the shore, with which to liait their hooks. It was an audacious assault ujniu the property rights of the squire whose estates ran to the water's edge ; and Uie clergymen and squires who administered the law without jy in that region rsnld not let the flagrant defiance of the rights of property pass. In Essex three very reputable and not disorderly lads, aged about sixteen, sallied out for an after noon walk. In crossing the fields th,-y came to a brook ; a graasy knoll ou its banks tempted them, and they threw themselves upon it and Iwigan to read some books they had brought with them. Suddenly up rode the owner of the ti hi on horsclmck, ami roughly demanded their names. Soon after they hud re turned home they were taken in charge by a policeman, brought la-fore the magistrates, accused of tmquia*, and heavily thud. A little girl of thirteen wits recently condemned at Dorchester to twenty-one days' imprisonment at "hard lalKir," and tlve years in a re foruiakory, for stealing an eartheu milk jug. It turned out thaWtho jug, which was cracked, had In-. ii giv.-u to the girl without authority by a servant. The supposed thief, t.Hi, was ascertained to have the l*<*t character tor honesty. Aft/tlf ton'* Journal. A bridal Tour. There came one day to a little inland b>*u m Kentucky a young rural couple who had jnst lx-en IKIXUII Ty the "silken bonda." Their destination was the dejHit, mid the bridegrixim was evidently quite impatient for fear the train should arrive t>efi ire he could reach the office, buying one ticket, they stood on the platform until the tram had stopped. When they entenxl the car the bride groom fotmd his bride n seat, kissed her most affectionately, Iwde her " gotxl lye," and going out, ReaUxl imuself on a (six and commenced whittling most vigorously. He witched the train out of sight, regret depicted ou his fa-', when a bystander, thinking the whole proceeding rather strange, resolved to interview him. Approaching him care lessly, and oh wing a straw to keep up his courage, he said : " lb-en gettiu' married lately 1" •• Yes," said he, "me and Millie got spliced this marnin'." •' Was that her yon put on the train?" " Yes," with a sigh. " A likely lookin' gal." said our ques tioner. "Any laxly sick, that she had to go away?" " No;" but here he grew confidential. " You see me and Sallie had heart] that everybody when they got married took a bridal tour. So I told Sallie I hadn't money enough for Ixith of ox to go, but she shouldn't lx- kin* kcl out of hern. So I ji*t brought her down here, bought her ticket and sent her on a visit to Home of her folks, and thought I might get some work harvestiu' till she got back." That afternoon found hnn busily at woik, and when in a day or two after Sallie came hack, he welcomed her cordially and affectionately, and haud in hand they startetl down the dnsty roiwl to their new ham" and duties. A Monster Turtle. The fishing smack Sylvan Glen, Ketuey, muster, captured a monster animal resembling a turtle, off Montnuk point, and brought it into New Lon ln. The animal is etven feet long and two through. Unlike the ordinary tur tie, this animal hH no feet, but large fins projecting ou either side which measure eight feet and six ine.hes across. The head is unquestionably that of atur tie, but is crowded with U-eth which are of an elastic texture. The animal is in capable of drawing in its head. Its neck is atrnut a foot long. The hack l* jet black, and ridges run horizontally at equal distune s apart. Its shell is not thick, and resembles guttn perebn. Old sea isiptains, who have traversed the was for life, Hlnxik their heads ami declared they had never seen its like la-fore. It appear* to be >t variety of tnrtle well known in the Mediterranean, and is called the leathery or trunk turtle. It is distinguished from other R|ssneß by hav ing its shield overlaid by a leathery skin instead of homy plates. The shiohl is smooth in the adult, but tubercnlaUxl in the young, and has wveral longitudinal ridges, with its anterior limbs twice us long as the hind ones. It is the l&rgeat of the turtles, and nttaius a length of eight feet anil a weight of more than half a ton. Its flesh is of no value, but its shell IIOR been used along the Medi terra man for small imnts, drinking troughs for animals, and bath tubs for children. It is found on both Glides of the Atlantic, specially in the tropics, coming north as far as Massachusetts buy, and following the Gulf stream across the Atlan'ic to the coast of Europe and tho Mediterranean. Sail Wafer Ilay; Salt water day in the grand day of the year for the people of eaatorn New Jer sey. Stalwart youths and blooming maids, whose cheeks were like " fresh blown rosea washed with dew," at this season hold high holiday. Half a cen tury ago some farmers of Middlesex county, New Jeiaey, having collected their oropH and finding thair purses full er than usual, determined on having a grand " harvest home " festival. South Amboy, on liaritan bay, was the nearest town on the bay side, so thither they went. That picnic has lx>en yearly re- Isided ever since, the second Saturday in August being the day for its occur rence. This year over 15,000 persons took part in the festival, and it was one of the most enjoyable gatherings that has been witnessed for many a year. CENTRE lIAI-1-, CENTRE CO., l'A., THURSDAY, SEPTEMRKR IR, 1875. hat llarhii Helmbold Nay*. I)r. 11. T. llelmlsild, who was known four y.sir* ago as the most exteuaive ml verliser in America, has returned witlun a few days to I'hila.lelphia from Europe, where he has lieeu rtvildliig since lHfl. Me said to a reporter of the I'hiladclpiua Time*, among other things This i* mv native city, and it is t*i this city that 1 look more Unui to all other* for *iip|Nirt. 1 eouiiueuoed business ou fifty dollar* at the northeast corner of Eighth and Hrowu streets as a ilruggist. It was at this time that 1 dis*>verod my fltlid eX tract of buohu. I then moved to the hasemeut of the Itutler House, Tenth and Chcatuut strtx ts. Afterwards, in 18.M. 1 ope nod Uie flllesl drug *U>re in the world ou the properly of F. N. Slier rerd, on Chestnut, Is'twiN-u Ninth ami Tenth. But mv huoovss here was so questioned on tlie opening night, a dis la-lief was sa of strug gIM I failed, an.l my projH-rty jaissed into Uie liauils of an assigms.. Nothing was ever realized by any of Uie creditors from this assignee, but prior to my ilo porture for New York these obligation* were discharged by me, throiigh a busi utwts 1 commenoe.l milter the thrN< huu dred dollar law and coudticted on this very spot, No. MM South Tenth street; thos.. who di>! not prosecute mie were j>aid in full. Then 1 conclude.! I would remove U> New York, and compete with the leailiug druggists of America. 1 opened at No. fe.U Broadway iu lMflO the largeet and handsomest " jNila*N'" drug store iu the couutrv. It was twenty eight feet front and two hundred and rtfteen feet deep, and in a tlvr story building. Ou the ojwnting night I tNk ill §ti,(kkl cash, and before one month hrt-1 expired 1 was owner of the building. It-fore another month 1 was owner of a residence on Fourteenth street, where 1 resided until 1871. My auuuud profits, after taking th ' store in New Y'ork, were never 1--MS than SIOO,(SW, and often ex cnnlnl $-!-o,l**>, and lmd 1 disoolltinn.Nl my atlvertismg at this time would have exceeded STon enterprise, and the preas and the men who writ> for it are the machinery, and those who sit iu their chairs com plaining " that things are dull" must Is* dyspeptic, or " waiting for something to turn up," like Micawtier. They'are un worthy of a cletui shirt or the love of woman ! A Terrible Scene. John Webb, the murderer, was hanged at Knoxvillc, Teun. He maintaiiuxl wonderful nerve to th- last, ami when nml-r the gallows continued to nfllrui his innuoenoe. An imm-oae crowd from the surrounding is mutry, .srtimatcil at from l'l.itJU t 15.00U, awremhleil to witne** Uie execution. Webb jwu-t hi* new Milt of black clothe* taken him by hi* brother. At luvlf jHist eleven A. M. the death warrant was read to him, when he asked to read it himself. After finishing, he ruis.*! his huml, ami said : " Iteforo God my execution is unjust," ami kissed a crucifix lie had given him by the priest. He also added that he forgave everbody, but that it was unjust to luuig him an innooent man. lief, .re leaving the jail he told A vera, by whom he writs employ Uulothed , ed: "Good bye, obi fellow, you will liave to pray mighty har.l f>r forgiven.-*a of the mur ders you have caused if you want to get to heaven." The prisoner walked promptly with his wife accompanied by the sheriff, las deputies and a priest. His wife v% much affected while Webb was trying to console her. The pro ocasiun tnoved to the gallows, about n mile, with the sheritTa posse, fifty strong, an immense crowd following. Arriving there a circle was formed by two military companies and a posse. The wagon was driven immediately under the gallows, when at the prisoner's request the sheriff called Wehli and the State Counsel to bid adieu. He then briefly addressed the crowd saving : "The statement I made in true. I die au innocent man. They are killing me for nothing. I put my trust in (tod. I think I have been forgotten." He then requested the sheriff to call others, Mr. Huskies par tictilarly, to whom he said : 44 I want to say to you it in a serioti* thing yon have done. Kill a man if you want to, hut don't swear his life away. He then do nouaced the whole partv as having sworn lies. Amid the agonising screams of his wife he mounted the rear scat of the wagon teliiug the people to look, slid saying: "I'm thclxwt piece of furni ture you have s.cn in many a day-" His wife wan then led from the horrible scene. Tim block cap was then drawn over his face and the noose adjusted, when the wagon moved off, and at lialf pa-t one o'clock 1m was swung in the air anil pronounced lifeless in twenty minutes. When he was taken down he presented a natural apjiearance. SI range Occident to SII Klephant. An unfortunate and unprecedented ac cident occurred at the Zoological Gar dens in the Regent's Park, Ijondon, to one of the elephants. The female African elephant, being very fidgetty and rest less, is usually tethered by a ring round one of her fore find to the corner of her stall while the elephant house is Is-ing cleaned ont in the morning. On the day in question, about half-post eight A. M., the keepers were alarmed by this ele phant calling out suddenly, as if in great pain, nnrl on miming to the spot found that she haecially of alcohol to drink*, haul* at length to ail accumulation of the specific jxiison of al cohol within the system, no that the Ixxlily tinnuc*. which include the brain, IxxMimcn no impregnated, no charged with the JHIIHOU, or no affected nomcbow, a* to pnxluoe a degree of oravuig which the unhappy dipaomanUMV--for nolle in rightly .4hlxl i* utterly unable to renin! OontroL. Ho imix-rative in thin morbid craving, that in no toe instance*, by hi* own confexxtoii. he could not refrain from swallowing the customary xtimulu* even if he Were certain that death would I*' the niHtaut result. Now, of nuch {wraotin, it i* found that, if they can be strictly deliarred from all a**ee*a to alco holic drink*, they will surely, though ■lowly, recover from thi* form of mania ; that the incorporated |x>i*on will lx< gradually dislodged and elinanatcd from the nywteiu bv the *i lent and *olc efficacy of that Wueficeitt force which we uiedi cal men ackuowlmlge no lluuikfully, the vii uunln'Mtrix uaturie ; and the wretched man or woman will become once more aide, and in no ntuall jxiroeutage of cane* williug, and even anxious, to alnuulou the \ toi< which had been the first ntep to ward the induction of the maniacal dis ease. Now, if thin tx no—and from all tli*t I hu\ e **-ti and heard and mail ou the subject, from expericno* gathered u a large scale in America, from the teach uigs of some of our oa-n lunatic asylum*, and from the to*tiiuouy of private ob server* lam fully jx-rsiuuled that it is *o; 1 might even appeal on thi* jxiiut to some mciulx-r* of the deputation now present—then 1 conceive tlrnt the ainr ilouing, by Mime legialutlVe mcasum, of retreats and reformat*rien. wherein, at the instance of hi* r*l*tiou* or friend*, or by hut own wish, or by the sentence of a magistrate, nuch a sufferer could IK* legally detained for a time (which ha* been extimatixl to lx> between three and twelve month*, though, in my judgment, three mouth* would (** fartx> little, and, of course, ample proviaion should !*• male against any fswaible abuse of such dctCUllou), *ucli legislative action, 1 say, could scarcely (xi regarded an anything lean tlian a national blessing. JirifiJi M- mc light wash goods over a wor*t>xl akirt, ami, by wnr of taking all romance out of the matter, carries a little lunch done up in a paper or pinned up in a red napkin. Neither do all 44 Treasury girls" preserve the lines of beauty in form or face ; on the contrary, there are thin, angular, and pcqiendiculor women atu<>ug them, and there are some who are burdened with flreh ; most certainly there are many who evidently did not win their position's by means of personal liennty. A Treasury Incident. The Washington ChronivU contains the following : A rather suspicious cir cumstance occurred in the printing bureau of tlie Treasury deportment, which resulted in the dismissal of the principal actress. It appear*,that one of the young lody employees wne ! Missing from one room to another, when our five-dollar notes fell from the folds of her dress, to which they had nooi dentally adhered, or in which they had leen oouoruled. Two other young Ifulics engaged in the same room, who were following almost in her footsteps, observed the noU-s fall and picked them up. The fact being reported to the chief of tin- division, he confronted the nnlneky girl and demanded an explana tion of the circumstance. Bho asserted her iunooonce of any guilty knowledge of the money luring at suit her peraon, and stated that she believed it must have Htuck to her ilress as she brushivl by the tables on which the notes lay piled, previous to the accident. Although the belief wns generally outertainod by the nttnchcH of tlie bureau that the girl's story wns truthful, the rigid rules of the office required tier dismissal as n warning against tin- recurrence of similar mis haps. Seaside Lore-Making. A watering-place letter retails the fol lowing : Last night a correspondent s curiosity was aroused (an nwful thingl, and I overheard the following : He—" You have ensnared me in the meshes of your golden hair and drowned me in the liquid depths of your violet eyes! What am Itodo I" She—" What a jolly death to die for a young man ; you should recommend it!" He—" Yon doubt my sincerity ?" Bho—" Nay, nay, Clarence, you wrong me! You are too sincere." He—" Don't you think just a little of me?" Hhe—" Y-e-s." Ho—" And may I—may I kiss? She—" There comes 111a!" He—" Dura the darned luck!" Lines composed 011 the foregoing : Oh! yon naughty, naughty boy, Don't you wish you hint that kiss? Do you think it Initio# Joy V Fading ptnasurs nimply this-, Mighty nioe; Awful nice, But it only transient is. TWENTYNEVEN tat A I>KN. A NUhas • Ifc* a*Wwl Thlrl*a—Mb ISma at Ik* SaklKl glalaly TM. Hishop Clark, of Kbod* Island, lias an article in the Isdyrr on the subject of "Htealing." He nays ther.- are twonty aeven names by which a thief is desig nated, ranging dl the way from the petty Uiief to the aristocratic uufortuiiaU.. He says: luatead of using tlio good old Saxon, which meant something, even if it was course, we say of one who lias rohtted the Istlik that " tliere is a deficit tu his accounts," and of the man who hjk-uiU money that ilom not lieloug to huu, that h is " oblige. 1 to oomprouiiae with his creditors." If a man has robbed uie, 1 do not f.N-1 any Iwtter to be told tliat " he has appnu.riated my pnpwty to his own use. Let us call a spaile a spade, and a rascal a rascal, and we shall kuow tletter where we stand. • • • A lawyer in Boston oucw aaked the cap tain of a band of English burglars if, with his skill as an accountant and other accomplishments, he could not do IwHU-r by earniug hi* living iu some honest way, to wliich he replied: "Certainly sir ; was it not njion the whole a |eying business ( but do you supissie that it ia the (Mwuniary return which make* it at tractive to me f by uo means ; it is the pleasure that 1 Lake in bringing my wits to twar, so as to circumvent Uie plans of oUterw for the pi urn* ulimi of their prop- erty." 'the elevation of burglary hi the rank of a mental science ia somewhat novel, but the intellectual pre-eminence of the professional reldx-rs may justly dis puled by Uie accomplished swindler, who never breaks a lock, or strikes a blow, or uses a Uh4. House breaking requires only a certain amount of tnechaniaal skill, but to g.-t |Niswessioii of anoUier man's pro]>ertv by hiKxlwiukiug him, or playing u|niu iiis feelings, it is necessary | that one ahould study something more than the mysteries of iron bolts and bars. Take, for instance, the mendicant thief—not one of the ragged regiment of beggars who are alwava ready to pilfer whatever ia not to lie liad in other ways —but a well dressed traveler, who has lost his wallet or had his pocket picked, or failed to collect a bill U]s>ti wliich be relied to meet Uie exjieuses of hia jour ney. Now it ia onlv t>y the exercise of iuaiderahle ingenuity tliat any of these stale devices can lie made effective. A pleasing young uian, with an inimit able address, call* upon me to some such distress, and aska for a simple loan of b-n or twenty dollar* t reach hi* home. ."Now," he adds, "I have been anffi ciintly familiar wilh clergymen to know bow ltable they are to IM* imposed upon by such stories a* mine, and for this n-aiion 1 would nut like* to take the money without lorn mg in your hand* a few IHX ika which I brought with me from home a* security for the loan." " Wluit are the lHM>kaf' I inquired. He then mentioned the title* of three or four religion* works of tlie highest character lying at tin* hotel in hia trunk, such aa only a vary good man would lie likely to read, and the twit took. The youth kept liia books—if be ever bad them—obtain ed the loan, and that was the la*t I ever saw or heard of him. This is a very ordinary specimen of the ingenious de ceit* by which the trilie of mendicant swindlers obtain a living. Cheating the government by evading the payment of duties and tuxes, by smuggling, and buying giants known to IM* smuggled, and various other modes of fraud, is popularly regarded as a some what venial crime. So far as the abstract morality f the deed is concerned, 1 do not we the diffvreuoe Is-twecn putting nr hand into the public tr.-a-urv and taking out a hundred dollars tliat y public lands, and ftnd that it is not worth a penny. You hold a righteous claim upon the government, ninl are obliged to sacrifice half the amount in order to obtain the moiety. A Practical Farmer. Boating is no doubt a good tiling when judiciously indulged in, but an old gen tleman ri-siding in Detroit, the AVoe /Vo says, whose son was a memlw of one of the winning crow* at tlie Toledo kregntta, has rather conservative notions concerning the muscular art. On Bun day the following dialogue occurred be tween the father and son : Father My boy, how much did you weigh when you ls-gaii to train lor this regatta 1 Bon One hundred and sixty pounds. Father An I you pulled at 145 pounds didn't you t Son—Yes ; I worked down to that beautifully. Father And how much is thot badge worth that von won down there ? Bon Don't know exactly, but I think I heard some of the feljers say they cost 827 apiece. Father—Urn ; $27. Now thou, if you'll work off the same amount of flesh next season by wt wing wood I'll give you a badge worth just four times oa muali as that one, and an order on my tailor for the liest suit of clothes you call And. The young gentleman intimated that he guessed he would take a little run down to the boat house. Very NL During one of the numerous showers, a Detroit lawyer walked four blocks i through the " drips " to reach the offloe j of a justice of the peace and say: "It rains upon the justice well's the j unjust." * His honor removed the pipe from lib i mouth, looked out of the winlow, and | replied : "Gross needs it." And the lawyer went ont and kicked at a newsboy to ease his burden of mad I uess. Torrns: S'-J.OO a Year, in Advnnoo. A Horrible Heath. It is doubtful tliat tliere lias ever lawn reported a -leath so terrible a* that of John Hchoveu, which took place in New York. He waa a(J or man, over aeveuty years of age. He lived with his daugh ter, a young woman of eighteen aum mere, ui a miserable, rickety tenement hoiiae. He waa a man of unexceptiona ble moral*, and loved lii* daughter bet ter tliau hi* life. Eor aouie time back he had Imeu in feeble health, hi* disease lieing of a nervous character, which re quired the administration of narcotic* to produce tlie aleep and lest necessary for a man of hi* advanced veare. If the writer la not miaiuforuied, hydrate of chloral was the drug preaerilied by hi* physician. Or, at all events, Uie narcotic was a thin, oolorlesa tincture of the o imuateucy of hydrate of chloral and the ap|N-anuioe of water. It was kept in a httie cloaet along with other lotU"*, among which was a small vial, contain iug creuaute. On Monday evening Mr. He] ItoVMi, feeling ill at ease, requested hi* daughter to bring him the narcotic. Tlie bottle which contained the narcotic and Uiat which held the creosote were preciaely the name iu form aud wae and also in general ap|iearanoe. Neitlu-r botUe was labeled. The daughter, in stead of bringing the old man the uar cotic, brought him the creosote, and be, equally ignorant, |>oured out a spoonful aud swallowed it. The next moment Uie old man Uirew up his hands in terror and ooustema tion, crying: "My God! my God ! I have made a mistake. I sin burning nit. Help! for God's sake, help!" Tile fumes of the creosote at once led the girl to realize the situation, and crying aud wringing her hands she dashed down the treacherous stairway*, rushed franti cally into Uie street ami accosted an offi cer, who at once called in the aid of the nearest phyficiati. Meanwhile the suf ferings of Uie old man Were terrible. It was as if his entrails bad been pierced with red hot irons, or as if he had taken a cup of molten lead. H* face became livid; hia ere meimvl leaping from their socket*; hi* In sly became convulsed with sjmsms. Language cannot jsirtray Uie agony of Uiat old, gray -haired, dying man. " Water ! water ! My stomach, my heart, my very aoul ia on fire I" he shrieked in the torture of lus death Uiruea. Hie doctor came, and emetics were giv.-n in vain. In fifteen minutes Uie agel German waa dead. A re|KrtT viaibxl Schoveu'a residence. There was no cariN-t on the floor to muffl- Uie step of the visitor. No pic tures graced the dull and dreary walls; but, while Uie birtl* sung ou ttie eaves aud the ctiildren laugh.-.! merrily in the streets, a poor litUe lady sat la-aide a rude coffin iu a garret, weeping alone, and wialiiug Uiat she was aa cold a* the dead en-attire whose coffin site was enibraciug. A Lame of I>npe. Tin* beat'chnno* the duel lm* of j>er jwtuity, aav* Armo* Huumay*, in on* of it in Tribtmr letter*, i tliat it in a game of (lupM. The wit of VolUirp could not abolihli attipidity. The revolution* oouhl not extirpate preju xlioe. Equality remain* the mt stud the same of Voltaire, but he did not condescend to cudgel him with liia own bauds. The Spanish adventurer, wishing to Wloug t> the marquis's *>*t, ran away with his swiwthoart and his wife, and afterward went to him and said : "Am 1 now of your set I" They theu went out, and he leing completely exhausted, lost consciousness in a swoon which lasted several hours. IVpnlatiM ef Sew York. Tlio census enumerators axe busy counting the inhabitants of the State of New York. Thua far, says the Hrrald, we have returns froqj two-thirds of the counties. Thane returns embrace forty counties and seventeen cities. They show, thua far, a population trf IM,7W —an in crease upon the census of 1870 of 203,'201. It is thought that the hxtwaae in imputation, all told, will advance the umt of legialative representation in the Assembly hi thirty five thousand, and in the Senate to one hundred and thirty eight thousand, giving New York seven Senators and twenty nine Assemblymen. In a few counties like Chenango,.Dela ware, Livingston and St Lawrence, there is a decrease of population, but generally the population lias largely in creased," especially in Albany, Buffalo and New York. In the interior towns the advance is onlv moderate. Roches ter and Syracuse show a large increase. The gaiu is msiuly nominal in Roches tor, arising from the territories added to the city by annexation. New York gains partly* in this way on aoc mnt of the lumexation to the city proper of tin* j lower districts of Westchester county. So far as that #ity is concerned, enough is known to show that it has a popula tii>u of at least eleven hundred thousand souls, and most likely twelve hundred thousand. In Brooklyn the return is about five hundred thousand. WANTED TO MARRT.- The following advertisement appeared in the Jrinh Timr-a of July 2r " Matrimony.—A mother, suffering from a mortal disease and longing to see her two daughters suitably marriod liefore she leaves this world, wishes to moot two gentlemen, respectable parentage ; minimum income i £100; age under forty. Girls are good 1 humored, trained housekeepers, very handsome (advertisor can guarantee this), ages twenty-two and nineteen, eld est very sensible, youngest a little flighty, fortunes. £3OO each. Enclose . oarte, etc. Address Y., 72, office of this , paper." ' A QUEER EPITAPH. —A oorrespond ■ ent at Terrc Haute, Ind., forwards the i following specimen of ossuary litera > ture, copied from a gravestone in that region: Under This sOd our Bshis LieS, it Nether oßies nOr HolErs. ! IT LivEd Just twenty 7 DsyS, And loet uS 940.- —la—a— * Item# Interest. A Colorado wraMui beats the baai drum for a braaa bund. When under weigh wilnra oan fell whether or not the x<-u in heavy. Men are gceac, women are dock*, and bird* of a feather flock together. Charles I*nutria Aihun* ia the heaviest taxpayer at (Jttkuiy, Maee., hia tax being It ia a write provision of nature Hut men without brain* never fed the need of them. A if Indiana newspaper mildly tmt firm ly protest* agataat nutting a two < lobar collar an twenty Ove oeiit dog. lit the Ikuauaner proceed of making steel not ioaa than 4,1**1,000 ton* of coal are saved annually in England A Blaakfoot ludianwnnotbadivoroed from hia wife, ao he at obliged to kill her when he wishes a aaparatoon. When do fanumm beoome nursery men ! When they take lo "cradling," of niursa. Thought you knew that. In 1871 a juoose friend accused Bis marck of )e-ii>g a Communist " Only when I am in France," waa the prince a reply. The Rev. William Rand, of Sea brook. Conn., being bitten by a rabid .log, cauterised the wound with a red I hot poker. The annual convention of the Ameri •mn Free Dreaa League will be held at Lincoln Hail, Philadelphia, September 15 and 16. A fugitive from a Texan jail, having I men bitten by a rnttWmke, had to go to a physician for treatment and waa ! thus recaptured. The wivea of Ave of the ex-Preaidenta of the United Htatea are living, namely: Mr* Folk, Mr*. FUbnore, Mr*. Tyler, Mr*. Lincoln, and Mra. Johnaou. Tin* eraxy woman at Oreenville, Twin., who drove a nail into her head the other day to core the headache, haa fully re ' .wvcred her mind by the process. In 1841 the population of Ireland waa H. 171,124 ; in 1871, 5,412,877. j,, the laat census there were over 724 persona 1 returned aa over one hundred year* of ; age- Precise old party— "Conductor, do, prav, get on. I've an appointment " " All right ir I Now look alive, Bill; bore'a a kohl gent want# to meet hia young 'ootnan. A young man in California began to rand a jwrngraph aUmt a mine to bis sweetheart, commencing: "Yuba mine " —when abe interrupted hia with: "I don't care if I do, John." An electric magnet weighing 1,800 Itotwds waa lately abippad lo Wed Point N. Y., by Wallace k Bona, of An i souia, Ot Tin* magnet haa a sustaining | oajwdty of sixty ton*. Tbev don't aak a woman in Wisconsin ' to teach school for any paltry 82 per week. They offer her $1.2'., and if abe I refund* |h*y nail the door up and hang [np a sign of "Oue skuli- hear." A young American girl in Paris lately slopped with her frkuda in a crowd to ; observe a carriage accident; aha had very long hair hanging down over her shoulder* which aome thief completely j cut away. i A young man, searching for hia , father a pig, anousted an Irishman as fol lows : "Have you awn a stray pig i about here !** To which Pat responded: \ " Paix, and bow could I tell a stray pig j from any other i" An old man living at Gushik, C. W., waa discovered the other day by his neighbors cbsved to the floor in a stable. Hia son had pinioned him thus because I they could not agier on aome question affecting domestic management. A Heoleh preacher, who noi long ago had entered into the happy stale of ■ matrimony with a maiden named Grace, rather snruriscd hia hearers on the en sum* Sabbath by giving out aa hia text : " Unto me ia thia Grace given." A very neat bit of satire ia embodied I in thru (dipping from tin* iMnbury .Veres : A milk pitcher, thrown by hia wife at a NVlauu Street man, missed the aim and ' ruined a handsome frame which included th words : "God bkws our home." The whole numler of ooovkts in the ! Georgia state jienitcntiary aaid to be eight hundred, onlv otic-tenth of whom am nhilc persona. ' Many young negroea , am cvmatantly sent them, ranging all the way from ten to fourteen or fifteen years i old. Madame Mar Malum tt proving very successful in collecting nthrnptwin fcr the imff< n*r by the F. eoch inundation?. She has received already about $4,500,- (100. The viceroy of Egypt sent $2,000, and Prince Henry, brother of the King of Holland, $500." A rustic youngster being ifked out to take b* with a friend, waa admonished to praise the eatable* Presently the butter waa panned to him, when he re marked: "Very tuoe butter—what there i* of it ;** and obeerving asmUe, he added, "and plenty of it—such as it is. A Bridgeport man has a habit of carry ing cartriilges and tobacco promiscu ously in his pocketa; he loaded hia pipe with tobacco, aa ho supposed, the other (lit, and lighted it. The fact that a loud report, a scorched face, burned tongue, and a broken pipe followed lighting, ocwrinoed him that he bad abo rammed a cartridge into the pipe. During a dense fog a Mississippi steamboat took a landing. A traveler anxious to go ahead, oanw to the unper turbed manager of the wheel and asked whv they much fog ; otftt aee the titer." "But you can see the stars overhead." " Yes," replied the urbane pilot; " but until the biler busts we aint goto* that way." The passenger west to bed. A small image of a human head carved in stone, which waa dug up in a farm in Webster township, Michigan, some years ago, waa exhibited at the Detroit meet ing of the America,. Association. It ap pear* to be made of Potsdam red sand stone, which does not exist in nature in that part of the country. The features of the face are of an Egyptian cast. A new prophet has arisen in Europe. He is a photographer. By means of his camera he made visible an attack of smallpox twenty-four hours before it out. Although no one could as yet observe anything on the skin of tho patient the negative plate showed stain* ou the face which perfectly resembled the various exanthem, and twenty-four hours later the eruption became clearly i evident In Providenoe, R. L, a fellow collel at the house of a uaau who was out of town, and told hix wife that the captain of a vessel in port—a particular friend of her husband's- had AT© gallons of rare wine on board for him, and wanted some demijohns to put it in. His store was so plausible that she went to the store and purchased the articles for him. Ho disappeared with four demijohns, and has not been seen by her since. Mr. Jacob Keller, of Pittsburgh, Pa , while dredging the Monongahda river, has taken out of the mud tan-oral pieces of a skeleton which are thought by local scholars to belong to a mammoth. A tooth weighing ten pouuds is the speci men which attracts more attention than any other. Mr. Prauklin Piatt, the as sistant geologist of Pemuylvanin, is de sirous of unearthing the whole skeleton, and will probably interest himself in the work. The late Swiss Gen. Dufeur was noted for liis pluck on the field of action. In a little bout with an enemy on ono occasion, he exposed himself and his staff to a rather keen fire, when an aide-de-camp remonstrated, with this remark: " General, dou't yuu hear the bullets whistling about n*; wo liad certainly better retire !" "Yes, sir, I do; and if I should retire, as you re quest, I would hear my soldiers whistling." In Paris there is a very wealthy mis anthrope who never smokes anything bnt the vilest cigars—those which are sold for a sou. The other day a friend asked the cause of this eccentricity. "It gratifies me in this way. I arrive at the theater in my carriage. The prancing horses are palled up, and I alight with dignity, at the safhe time throwing away my half-smoked cigar." "Well, what then t" " I think now badly sold the fellow is who picks up the stump, think ing he has bold of a fragrant Havana!"