1 Bonder Why. I vondn why Tlip whit dead- t*y up in ti)* ky ' The birds lisht low thst fly i fast ; The downy thit.Ua f -*1 I* t: Bnt the clon•> alwaya Ui^li. I wonder *hy' I wonder liow The UtUe bird cling* to ih bough' Sometime* at night when I *- *lo And hear tlie tree-tope moan and ehsVe. I think, " flow sleep the hmliee now t" 1 wonder how' I wonder why We leave the fair earth for the sky! I wish that we might always atay; That the dear Lord might come some day. And make it heaven! Yet we mnat die. I wonier why ! —Mary A. Lathhury. In the Shelter of the Fold. Tli.re were ninety and nine that safely lay In the shelter of the fold ; But one wae out on the hiila away Far off from the gate, of gold. Away on the mountains wild ud hare. Away from the tender Shepherd's oars '• tiord. Thon hast here Thy ninety and nine ; Are they not enough for Thee V" But the Shepherd made answer *' This of mine Has wandered away from me ; And although the road be rough and steep, I go to the deeert t J find my sheep." But none of the ransomed ever knew How deep were the waters oroeeed ; Nor how dark was the night that tlie lewd ;eased through, 'Ere He found lite sheep that waa loat. Out in the desert He heard its cry. Sick and helpless, and teady to dia " Rird. whence are thoee hkwxi tracks all the Thai mark out the mountain's track ?" " They were ahsd for one who had gone astray 'Ere the Shepherd could hung him hack. " •• Lord, whence are Thy bauds so ran." and torn r " They are pierced to-night by many a thorn. And all thro' the monnUuna. thunder riven. And up from the rocky steep. There roee a cry to the gate of heaven, " Rejoice 1 I have found my sheep 1" And the angels echoed around the throne, " Rejoice ! for the Lord brings back His own —Moody and Sanixy't llyn is. WILD ROSE OF CAPE COD. Nearly all the rosea in Massachusetts aro born in June, but Wild, the little daughter of John Rose, WAS born in • IVoember, and on Cape Cod, too. Well, on Caje Cod. as I said. Wild Root was born ; but that was twelve years ago, so, this last December, was celebrated her twelfth birthday. It wasn't much of a celebration, to be sure, for there weren't many perms to cele brate it—only Mrs. R.se and Johnny, and Wild herself, for Captain Rose was gone on a fishing trip. At tea that night there was upon the table a big load of ginger-cake—frosted, too—and around altout it—not on it, mind rou—twelve small tallow candles. "Twelve dips." Johnny said, "that male as much light as the Highland it self." And Johnny ought to know, for the keeper of Cape Cod light is a great friend of Johnny s and often in summer lets the lad go up with hiai to sis.- him ** light up. " This Highland light stands out on the bleak cajx-, and is oftentimes the first light that greets the sight of seamen when approaching the coast of New Eng land from over the Atlantic ocean. Even in summer the wind blows so hard at the Highland that it blows the wings of young turkeys over their heads, and in winter it blows nobody knows how hard. I am quite certain yon never saw a home like Wild Rose's home. It is hid den away in the very bottom of a big hollow in the sand, and is protected on all sides by a high fence to keep the sand from covering it np. In the first place the house had been boill upon spiles driven into the sand, but the fence was afterwards added, and outside of the fence WAS a barricade of seaweed. Over the stilts, fence, sea-weed and all was the fisherman's cabin, as snug and warm and comfortable as anywhere on Cape Cod could be. Not far away on the Atlantic coast was a charity house, not a poorhonse when- i>oor folks could go aud live when they hadn't anywhere else to lire, bnt a rude room, inclosed by a rude outside, into which a poor shipwrecked mariner might crawl and possibly keep himself from freezing to death until help should drive. Wood and match**, aud straw are supposed to be kept in every charity house along the coast Johnny Rose was two years younger than his only sister Wild, but a ten year-old lad on Cape Cod knows more of the sea and ships and fishing than the wisest grown-up man in the world who lives inland. The Little Katie was Captain Rose's fishing schooner, and the Little Katie waa frozen fast in* the ice right in sight from the land up the bank above the cabin. Two weeks pa—l by and still the ice held the fishing boats anil would not let them go. Stout little sb-am tugs went rasping away with firm bows ami good intent at the ice day after day in order to break it up and tow the boat* out of danger, but the cold came down stronger tliau ever and knit the ice cake firm*r and firmer. Every day, Johnny, bundled np until he looked like I don't know what, made the toilsome journey over to the Highland to look through the "glass" at his father's schooner, and, every night for two weeks, with a fAoe on fire from the fric tion of the wind, he came back with the good news, " No signal up yet." "No signal up y-1" meant that there was still something left to eat ami wood to burn on the Little Katie, and hopes also of getting free of the ice without sinking. Now and then a neighbor came down :'nt > the hollow and walked in without knocking at the cabin door, to inquire bow Mrs. Rose was getting on, and to raj yet again: "Cape Cod lias seen harder times than this, Mrs. Rose. Keep np a stout heart, and well have the fl -et safe into Providence harbor be fore many days." And then Mrs. Rose would put on a bright look and say, in a cheery voice, "Oh, I hope no," bat in her heart she fear*-. 1 all things, for did she not know that every dwelling on Cape Cod had its widow aooner or later ?" At last there came a dav when Mrs. Ross said that Wild might go to the light with Johnny to learn the news. The two children set off in high glee. The sky yas clear, and the wind was blowing from the west. The Highland lighthouse was not more than a mile away, aud "what could happen to the children ? Nevertheless, Mrs. Rose gave them many command*. They were to return as soon as they found out what news from Little Katie, and, if it should snow, they were to go back or forward, whichever way Bhould be the nearer, and, if near the coast, they ere t® go to the charity house in the bank, ami wait there for rescue. The wind helped them on their way, and, to write the exact truth, blew so hard and so fast, that it came very near blowing them past the lighthonse over the high bank into the ocean. " It s a tough day, a tough day, even fortheCape," said the lightkeeper, when they reached the lighthouse, " and the boats have drifted, Johnny. For the the life of me, I can't make out the Lit tle Katie." But Johnny made her out without the slightest difficulty. Of course he did ! Does not every Cape Cod boy know his father's boat ? More than all, there hrng the signal of dis tress. The light-keeper saw it, and Wild looked at it, and Johnny looked again, and declared that: " Come what would, he'd get out there, and find out what the matter was." Thou the glass was put away, and they all went down, and the children, thoroughly warmed, started for home. A little cloud over Cape Cod bay grew and came nearer aud spread more and more, and at last began to drop down like white snow on the sand. " Come ! pitch into it as fast as you KHKT). KTirr/, Ktlitor mul Proprietor. VOL. VIII. can while wo iwu Haiti Johnny, seizing Wild', liatut and bowing to the wind. " We're thr— quarters home ayd we'll tuako it iu uo time." It was not dark, ami Johnny kuew the land marks well. Here a bunch of por erty grass atnl there a forlorn clump of buyK-rry, wlnmc outline* he knew juat as ho knew tiie outline* of the l-oat* ami sails, served to guide him when the air was thick with snow. "We're lost!" said Wild, pulling back and trying to stop Johnny; but the sturdy little fellow declared that they weru't U*st at all; didn't he know all alaiut it f Hadn't he "fogged" it many a time to the light aud t-aokf Why, there, right ahead, was a pole that he knew. Of course it was, right on top of home; and there was mother calling this minute, not fifty feet away. All of which statements were quite true ; and in five initiates they were safe in the cabiu, and had told their news from the toe U-uud l*oata. "Nothing to eat, maybe, aud i>>ld, perhaps. Not sick, I hope, ' said Mrs. Wild; and then, in rather a dismal way, she set forth the little table for their evening meal. " 1 should think you'd feel gladder about our getting home safe, mother," said Wild ; "for just see how it snows."* " I am," said Mrs. Wild ; " but 1 was thinking of some way to help your father." "Do you think there is a wav f" asked Wild. " Yon know the tniats can't get there, and the ice isn't safe." " If I was God," said Johnny, " I'd fetch a big wind along tliat 'ud crack that ice up small as fish scales in no time." "Yew, and sink every boat in no time !" suggested Wild, with scorn. "Oh, dear !" said Johnny, "I guess I was in too much of a hurry ; but some thing's got to be done!" The wind had been blowing two hours after dark, and the snow and sand wore whirling about iu a long, round ilauce. after the fashion of Cane Cod sand and snow, when Wild called out of the dark ness to Johnny: " Are you asleep I" Johnny guessed he wrsn't asleep, al though he had been fast asleep when Wild's voice reached him, and wanted to kuow w hat was the matter. "I've thought of away, I guess, we can reach the Little Katie, Johuny." " How f" Johnny was np in the bed, 1 -auing on his hands, interested, iu a im-ment. "You know that big hank of net twine of father's ?" " What of it I" with disappointment. " Don't you believe 'twould reach f" " Whose goin' to reach it, I should like to know f" " When the wind blows right"— "What, then. Wild Rone f Are you talking in your sleep I" "Send a kite over!" suggested Wild, not heeding the interruption. "Whew !" exclaimed Johnny, sinking down into bis warm bed again. He didn't sjx-ak, aud poor Wild thought he held her scheme in extreme derision ; nevertheless, Johnny was thinkiug, even after his sister was sleeping. Tlie next day it snowed all day. There was no chance to hear one word from the fishing fleet. Johnny declared that he must go to the nearest neigh bor's house. He knew the way well enough; but it was after nine o'clock before he set forth. Presently he returned with his friend, Peter Petit, and the two lads spent tlie morning, with barred door, in Caption Rose's net-room. Wild peeped into the place when the boys were out of it eating their diuuer, anil beheld, to her amazement, the skele ton of a huge kite. "Oh. Johnny! are you going to try it r she cried, running out to him. At first, Johnny was vexed that she had found it oat, but iu a minute or two he was all over the pet, and was in high glee when Wild and her mothei joined in the work. An hour before the sun went down across the l>ay, the kite was done and the snow eeaa—l to fall. It was too late to go to the Highland light b> see the signal on the Little Katie ; it was too late to do anything with the kite, even had the wind Iwen right. The next morning the wind blew just right, and almost at the break of day the boys set forth, aecompani—l by five or six men. for idlers are 'always to bo fonnd on Cape Cod in winter. The kite was made of good stout ;>a jier, and was covered with messages to the captain of the Little Katie, or any other captain over whose Imat it might chance to fall, or get entangled. Tlie wind was ofl shore, and away went the kite, the men paying out the seine twine; bnt alas! the kite went high als>ve the (mat* and did not reach them. It was oil nhout twck, l>ut the wiinl earn—l their voices aero MM the bar * Within the Uett tweutv four hour* the cord had Ix-en doubled, and food tti ami 1 j-ookago* went along the novel roadway from hour t" hour, until tuil<* of seme twine lay on the deok tf the Little Katie, and many los*e of bread, with Htuall jiaokag—i of " aalt meat," sugar, tea and coffee, had la-en secured from the aea. The next morning the wind blew again on Cape Cod. The inhabitants were on the watch for the kite, ami, lo ! it was seen rising iu the nir. On, on, it catue. It sailed over the heads of the group on shore ; it went right across the ••Wrist of Oa|e Pol. It would have gone out upon the ocean, but for the Highland lighthouse, that caught ami held the great fluttering bird of man. Wild and Johnny were the flrst to reach the light ami cry out "What uewsf" to tlie k—q-er, who had juat sue ceoded ill recovering the tiattered kite. •* Come and sec with your young eyes." Wild and Johnny found the words: We had lutd nothing to eat for two days. Sow we'll weather the ice, thxl willing, and git in all right. We've supplied the Mary from our stores." And there, right at the door, the first oomera, who had followed the kite, wen- Mrs. ltiwe and the friemla of the men of the Mary. "Whom- idea was the kite?" asked an old fisherman. " Wild's," shouted Johnny. " Johnuy made it though. I couldn't make a kite," said Wild ; but not a oul save Johuny heard her, for the wild air about the light was ringing with tlie shout of "Long live Wild Rose of Gajurjx*- 1 shall use Dr. Kirkbride'a rejx-rt for the Peunsyl van ia hospital for tlie insane. The an aly*i* is l-es- d upon the supjxme-l causes of insanity iu fi.ftyy oa*--o. Domestic dfficultive ar< the probable causes of mental -lis-'as-- in forty wnn meu an-1 eightv-eix women. Nearly two to one expresses the difference iu intensity in the action of this <*aus-. Fright result ed in insanity in sixteen men atnl thirty six women ; grief affected seveuty seven men and two hundred ami fifty six women, a difference of more than three to one ; religious excitement act* as the -•ause in seventy-nine mctr and one uun dml and twenty-seven women, a differ ence of sixty-two per cent. ; nostalgia, seven women and no men ; from mental anxiety there are one hundred and aixty four meu and two buudr--d aud sixty one women insane. These oausen, winch present such dissimilarity, have one band of uniou ; they affect the emotion al part of the physical nature. From till* I would uot conclude that women are less able to I-ear the operation of these exciting caii*->s than men; but tliat the emotional nature of women i more largely develoj>ed, and thus more exposed to the action of such -•an*--* as directly affect it If lam right in this, w> would expect to s--e in w.-nieu the emotioi:al form* of insanity develop—l in ex--*** of the same in meu ; and this is just wb it we fin-L Continuing to an alyze the tables of Dr. Kirkbrnle relat iug to the same eases a* atxive, we find the nnmlier of women to l>e 3,220, the number of men exci**ling them by 459 ; and yet there are 1,032 cases of tnalnn cholia among the women to 832 in men. Prof. Mauduey defintw this form of in sanity as " gr at opj-ressi-m of tlieir -.■lf feeling, with oorreeponding gloomy, morbid ideas." The Heroine of Newport. Ida Is'wis' latest exploit in pulling out from Lime Hock lighthouse >u the lower Newport harbor and rescuing a man from drowning recalls the earlier achievements which have given her the title of " the Greco Darling of Ameri •a." She first came into prominence in 1806, when, ou one of the coldest and most blustering days ever known in tin* latitude, she HSV— I the life of a soldier *ho bad started for a sail on the hnrtx>r in a light skiff. One day, in the autumn of 1867, while a terrible gale was raging, two men set out to cross tlie harbor with several sheep, r.nd in trying to rescue one tliat had fallen overboard, came near swamping tlieir boat; seeing their twriJ from the window of her father's I lighthouse. Miss Is-wis went to their aid, and. after lauding them safely, went back and rescued the sin ep. lint her greatest exploit wa* perform—l oil the 29th of March. 1869, when n 1-oiit con taining two yonng soldiers arid a boy wo* struck by a sqiia'l on the harbor HI J overturned. Though ill at the time. lia rush—l out of the house, ; launched her life-bout, sprang in, with J neither hat on her head nor shoes on her f—*t, reach—l the wreck just in time to save the two sailors us they were al-out losing their hold from exhaustion, the boy having meanwhile perished, atnl rowed them to the lighthonse. Miss Lewis should l*> among the first to re ceive the new ctrino of " a revival of righteousness " is one wliich we heartily tielieve in and have tri—l to support. They have lieen having just such R revival in an Ohio town, if w- can judge from the following letter lately re ceived at this office; A/y I>rnr Sir : Home y—irs ago I took the New York fnftrprvrtrnt, and there is now an old ac— mnt on ynnr books against me. I have given myself to Ood unconditionally. Make np my account, and the usual interest that yon have to pay for money up to thia tunc. I think I can send von the money in a little while. Very truly yonre, We wish that a similar religious ext>e rience might ?>e had by some fsw of the reader* of this paper. This is what we call bringing forth fruits meet for re pentance. A Chlrken Case. A chicken case of some interest has recently occurred at police court at Greenock. A little bov was charged with stealing the chicken. One of the witnesses examined was evidently fresh from the Highlands. He said : " I saw'd ta woe lioy wi' the wee chicken in Eelow his jacket, an' I kenned the wee ird, for I kenned its mother. (Great laughter). . And the poy he telt me thnt he had got her soomin at the side of the born." (Great laughter). The chicken was placed in a banket on the table, and the lid was lifted and the chicken shown to the witness, who said: "I ken its wee cheep. (A laugh). Ay, and that's the bird, for it's so like its mother. (Laughter). The case was found not proven. CENTRE II ALL, CENTRE CO., PA., THURSDAY, SLIT KM HER 23, 1875. A DEFAI'LTIN'fI OFFICIAL. Tie Trroitrrr si N#w Jrrse* IHn>i>nri with Hill Th.-M.nuil Dollars-- V Fsrluse There was great excitement iu Troll ton, N. J., over the announcement that Joaephtis Hx>y, the treasurer of the State, was u defaulter to the amount >f sixty thousand dollar*. He had IWH-II elected for four consecutive terms, aud List winter helil over another term on account of the difference of is-litiiwl opinion lictwccn the House and Henate of the State. Some mouths ttgo the iuiuptroll--r warticil SOOV'H Isuidaiusn that lie uei-ded looking after, and some of thetu sitokt 1 to him. Some weeks ago it was known tliat he hail several thon sand d-illars, wlucli he sai-t were revivtxl from the lVuusylvaiiia rnili--a-l company. As tin-it* was no record of such money on the Isioks the comptroller viMtcl the coiujiaiiy's oftit-e iu Fhiladelpbia and as i-ertaiuisl that the comjtanv claimed to have paid the treasurer eiglity Uiousand dollar* more than* they were credited with on the ktook* in Trenton, but they were uot able at the time to find vouch ers tor the same. The comptroller, re turning, anktsl the treasurer whether he had received the money jmid by tla com pany, and the treasurer a-liuitte-t that lie liad, but lliul denoaitevl it iu the I'uiou (tank at Mt. Holly and the Gamdeii sav ing* tuuik, but that amoiuit had uot lu-eu crediUsl, and he ha I sent his Is-ok to have it done. The comptroller told him to attend to it immediately, atnl tlie treasurer went away with the avowed in tention of doing *•>, since which time he lias uot t>eeii itaeil. The boinlsmeii are Gen. John S lrick, Vinoentown ; James T. Durwud, New ark ; W. A. Ripley, Newark ; Samuel H. Dobbins, Mount Holly; John Hrown l'arker, M-iunt Holly ; William S er, Green Hank ; Nicholas Kooy, Hurling ton ; Edward T. Tbomjiaon, Klnuuony. The amouut of the bond l* The sixth and seventh l-ond-mien are brother* of the defaulter. The enlnp troller entered eompbiui twfore Justice F. S. Mills, of Trenton, agam*t Trca* iir-r S--T for 'ial>ezzlenieul of fllll-l* of the Slate, and a warrant was gmnt-\l for his arrest and au officer ili-qaitchrd U- Mount Holly. A report of the defal cation wras ale-- sent t<> ti--v. lt-*-lle at Ijoiig Hrancli, who arrivcl iu Trenton, as -lid Attorney-Gcucral Yauatta from Morristowu, ami they were in conference until a lab* hour with Comptri-ller Run vou and Assistant (Vimptfoller E. J. An -lemon. The Stat-- *e*urities and school funds were examined ami found intact, the money ct-'leu ln-ing confined t> money nxvivisl from the l'< unsylvania railr-m-l Oimjwuiy, either as tax--* U|MIU property of th-* united compaiuea, --r in dividend* njwtll *t-H-k of the UUlted Com j-auies owrn groggery. He was paitwHy intoxi-at-d ami almost destitute of fund*. The t-ntiri' amount atoleu ha* Iswn muamlcr-xl. The l-clief is iiretraleut that he is derangtvl ami the opinion i* liorueoiit by hi* moat singular conduct.' Mr. E. J. Anderson, of the comptroller's i-ffi-v, am! J. A. Hall, the governor's secretary, s<-arched Uie re -v-r-U to ascertain t> what extext the j>e culutioni had run. They were tra-val tiack to January la-t, and aggregate fifty-nine th--uaand d-illar*. .*u addition to tin* unlawful eljicoditure he ha wquaud- re-t al*-ut '--venty-fivc thousand dollar* of prqicrty sine* going into office. The brothels id Philadelphia were frequently vi*ited by liirn anil have often lent money on hi* notea. lie is sixty-seven yi-ars old, and has an entim •able family, one --n a M--tli-xlist minis ter, l- iiig 10-'ab-l at Princtou, ami an oth- r employed iu the tieasurer's oflioe at Trenton. Ib-troit Free Ere** Currency. The mosquitoes haven't put in a very profitable season thus far. These deluges around the country art very annoying to old drunkards. "I'll talk it over with Susan," is the last -lang express! m coined in Xo> York. Keep it in mind tliat it isn't jscitire lv neeoaaary to strike each sepanite stair in falling down stairs. It is believed that a good many more jieople eotild inert ase tho enuacienee fund if they only would. Army regulations are to le alten-d so as to allow men to enlist as cooks. The question is, can a cook Is* a jmtriot? "How much is a meter?" asks n Ch \ eland pais-r. Wait till the gas man comes around—he'll give hlieral figures. A New York tailor says that if all men would pay cash down for clothes the tailors could knock thirty cents o(T of prices. There is no such word as " liar " in the Chinese language, and the Chinese get along al>out as well as any other na tion. A Wyoming husband has given hia full consent for his wife to run for office, but he didn't give it until after a conflict which broke every dish in the house. The I'all Mall tiaxrltr defends the practice of men kissing each other's wives. It may do lor England, but the practice has fallen into decay on this side of tin- ocean. Would yon think that Gideon Welles, when you stand and look at him, ever carried candy mottoes in his pocket or ever sat on the stile with his girl at twi light and chewed gum ? A Boston man spent SI 3,000 in lot tery tickets and drew about sau—l, and looking up, aald, " 1 am delighted to see by these dispo sitions of your property that you are so rich. I had no idea that you |-o>K-m-d such n fortune." " Fortunet" said the old gentleman ; " God bless you. 1 have no fortune. lam a poor man." "I'isiri" said my father ; " why, you have already disposed to strangers of g3U0,000, and as 1 supjHise you mean to leave your family at b-ast an < qual amount, I should scarce ly call you a poor man." " Hleaa your sottl." said the old gentleman, "my whole {Htasesfuoua would not amount to one tenth of the sums I have named, but 1 nut them down in my will to show what 1 would do if 1 had a fortune. 1 wish to aliow my good will to all those frit ml*." Helton ; That is precisely my etna-. Excellent old man ! I wish I hail known him. lhi you know it reminds me of the will of one of the greatest men of Am-row, who died not manv years ngo I He had, ss he said, lived like a gentleman all his life—meaning, of course, that he had sjwut all he could get, and considerably more, and was head over ear* in del it ; but. like tills old gentleman of whom you *J>oke, he made a will di*)>o*ing of large sums just as if he had them, and leaving hi* real estate, which was mortgaged to the full value, to his heir*, remarking ixaillv tliat "m—uis would 1*- found to carry fiis in tentions into effect," Mail- tl : Av, I remember the fact very well, and I re tuemls r also tliat means wure found, and that a large sum was raised by public subscription to jay off his debts and onrrv Ins intentions into effect. I won der if the public would do that for tin? Helton : Inunediatelv after hu death a statute was projHawvi to lie erected to him, and, in view of the debt* he owe 1, Dull* suggest* nag- had jaid the debt of nature : " Thank G-xl ! It in the only debt I ever knew him to jay." Loud Manner* toward Ladles. Recent events, says a vrntr. have called public attention to the intimate relation of moral* and manner*. It may le mi l tliat there- ui uo greater peril to morality than much that is call—l merely fre*• and —w-y manner*. Young men, and even yonug women, |-rmit themselves a freedom and license of manuer which, having all the as|— t of impropriety, may Tery readily a-jyuire- it* ul>st-in—'. Edward a-ldr——* I.milv with a loud and j.-sting intimacy of tone and conduct, • Inch might l>e expected m the sailor sal-Mina, but which is re-pul-ive and odi ous in the drawing-room or among re fin—l or gentle pereous. E-lwwr>l and Emiltr would be atuax—l U* )*< told that they have not tlie maun- re of a gentle man or of a lady. They think that they above all othera know wliat ia the rule of high society. Hut they are merely | vulgar, and have the manners of those who are- worse than merely vulgar. Goaesnoesa cannot b- gild—l into refine lui'lit The young woman who habitual ly call* her jouug friends of the other *ex by their Christian names, or who suffer* anything that can 1*- call—l fa miliarity, although it fall short of actual indecorum, should refl—-t care fully. ' "Sir," sai l a lady to a policeman who took h*r ellxiw to pons Imr over th-- Htrex't, "if I wish yon to touch me I will ask yon." No woman of a high sense of personal dignity wi*he* any man to lay his liatxl upon her thought lessly or unncccssarilv. Nor will such a woman permit any kind of mdeues* in the tone or manner of men. An Extraordinary How of Stow*, Etc. While boring for water on the farm of a man named Hoar, three miles wont of Marine City, an explosion of pa* took place, the result of which is simply won ilerful. lusts-m 1 of having a well over flowing with cleor anil sparkliug water Mr. Hoar ha* a miniature Vesuvius at his door, aneen put tlown one hundred ami twenty-aevt u feet, ami at that distance hail struck a vein of water, muni ami gravel. Up to thm time there hail not been a drop of water in the well. One morning the gas began to escape from the well, and an hour after the force was ao great that atone", one of whieh weighed eleven pounds, were thrown hundred" of feet in the air, awveral oomit.g down with Btich force na to penetrate !h roof of the houae ami liarn, two at es going through both roof and ceiling of the houae on to the second floor. Water soon began to follow and in anch quan tity aa to floe 1 the wholepremiaea. Thia maaa of stone, sand and water was forced out in an unceasing stream for more than six hours. Then, instead of a well seven inches in diameter (as the tubing of the well was that size?, there was a hole of more than three foot in diameter, every particle of the tubing having ilianpiwareifj everything having given away to the power beneath. There was a heavy rumbling sound, which at the well vn* deafening, and roil Id be distinctly heard in the village. The Vineland Case. Mr. Carrnth, the editor who was shot, and his family have returned to Vine land, N. J. Carrnth, says a correspon dent, has become very corpulent and looks remarkably well. His sight is very much imjiaireil. and he IIAS to move his heed to cover the width of a newspaper column. He thinks the hall is lodged behind his right eyr, and if it should trouble him seriously in that region he intends to have tho eye taken out, so that the ball may lie sought through the socket. He can walk or ride without much inconvenience, but exertion is in variably followed by loss of strength, in addition to the thirteen acres of laud which hn owns in Vineland, and which is free from incumbrance, he owns property in Wisconsin. H i deter mined to spend the remainder of his life in his Vineland home. If IIIH in come Ve exhausted before liia death, he says he will go to the poorhouse of Cumberland county. He has not made n complaint against lses the |>eop]e w ill do what is right, about it. His recollection of the inci dents attending tho shootiug are very much confused. Tho report that nego tiations were progressing between him and Liandis on the question of damages is unfounded. Neither party has as yet made any advances to the other on |li* subject. INDIAN JUUUURU, MlsAsss. The fort of Calcutta, says a traveler, commonly known as Fort William, is one of the most splendid and convenient military establishuieuU to la found in auy jart of the globe. It ia very sja ciolis, alld H- -tlie what resembles tlie Tower of London, in tliat it DOMUB ->f various streets and squares, adapted for J different military purpose*. Ou all sides it is guarded by a high and strongly built nun|wrt, which is surrounded in its turn by a broad and deep foaae, over which are placed drawbridges, leading to the priucijial gateways. Tlie fort is often Uie scene of animated festivity, from tile presence of native jugglers, re Downed lot their surprising skill and dexterity. The performance* of these strange people have been no often de scribed, that I shall only make mention of one which struck me as being curious from its liaviug a strong resemblance to the feat* recorded in sacred history, as liaviug Is-eii performed by tlie magicians of Egypt, and in the time of Moses, in the presence of I'hamuli. Indeed, as it is well known tliat the Hindu tricksluve I teen handed down from tlie most dis tant ags, from father to son, there is little wonder that such a similarity can exist. The particular trick alluded to is the apparent e-mversioti of a brass coin into a Hiiake. The juggler gave me the coin to hold, aud then seated himself, alnmt five yards from me, un a small rug, from which he never attempted to tuove dur ing the whole performance. 1 showred the coin to several persona who were close l>eide me, on a form in front of the juggler. At a sign from hun, I not only grasped the coin I held firmly in my haud, but crossing that baud with equal tightness with my left, 1 enclosed them t*>th s firmly as I could .between my knees. Of course 1 was positively certain that the small coin was within my double fists. The juggler then be g*n a sort of incantation, aooomjiauie-d by a monotonous and discordant kind of recitative, and rejieating the words " Ram, Hum ma," during some minutes. He then suddenly shipped, and, still keeping his seat, made a quick motion with his hand, n* it throwing something st me, giving at the same time a pufl with his mouth. At tliat instant I felt my hands suddenly distend, and become j-artlv open, while I experienced a sen sation as if a cold I-all of dough, or some thing equally soft, nasty and disagree able wan now between my palms. 1 Mart- -I to my feet in ash-uisbment, also to the astonishment of others, and open ing my hand found there no coin ; but h> my horror and alarm I saw a young snake, all alive ; and of all snakes in the world, a cobra dl-oapello, folded, or rather coiled, roundly up. I threw it instantly to the ground, trembling with rage and fear, as it already bit by the deadly reptile, which l>egan immediately hi crawl along the ground, to the alarm and amazement of everv otic present The juggler now got np for the nrnttime since he had sat down, and catching hold of the snake displayed il length, which was nearly two feet -two feet all bnt all meh and a half. He then to--k it can tiouslv by tin tail, and opening his own mouth to its widest extent, let the head of the snake drop into it, and dehlwrate ly commenced t swzll-jw the animal, tdl tlie end of the tail was only visible ; then making a Midden gulp, the whole of the suake was apparently swallowed. Aft- t till* he came up to the *js*cti*.t--r>, and oi-euing hi* mouth wide, |H-rnntted us to look into his tlir-iat, but no suake <>r -sake'* tail was visible-—it was seem iugiy down hi* throat alt-g--Uier. Dur ing the remainder of the p-rformaaccs we never saw this suake agatti, nor did the man profess his ability to make it re ap|M*ar ; but he performed another suake trnk, which surprised us very mtidi. He took from hia bag another cobra di cwjx-110, aud walking into the center of the room, eucloaiwl it in his hand* in a folded state. He waved, or shook them for some time io thin condition, and then op*ncd his fiats, when, presto! the snake was gone, anu intrei ducod. Iu Italy no forests remain. Hpniu and Or—-ce are almost woodles*. The southern oust of the Mediterranean is almost foresth ss. " An Empty Butter Firkin." Weddings should be scenes of " hal lowed mirth," but now and then they exhibit to the clergyman a very humor ous phase. Rev. I'r. Trafton tells this incident : I have in mind nt this time the case of n well to-do grocer, who was united to his Jiaiwrr by a dear old friend of mint*, who will no doubt risid these liues. To his great surprise he received 110 fee nt all. Some time after, beiug iu the store of the happy grooin one day, the gentleman said: "I have intended to make yon a present for the little job you dil for us, and I will do it now ; and stepping iuto the back store, he brought out an empty butter tlrkin, say jug : •• Tt will he useful in your family. " Terrain: 52.00 a Yenr,in Advance. THE OLD FOLKN. Hhi SUM.I* T*# Be 1-aW aa lk Wfccli la Ikr *rrawaaa4*ilaa a( l* •' psaala—As ArilrU thai C'aalaia* .Warfc •f I mrrraf. In mi ariicl* on lh " OKI Polka,*' the lYihunr says : The " old man "on the farm watchsa Hob come down in his Sunday finery aud aet off across the fiehls in the late suuaet to the frolic, or to take Dolly f to Hinging acbis>l, and is l*y waltz- s 011 the rattling new piano until "tlie twwux" come, their father and mother hurry out of the parlor, and stifle in the stuffy little -lining room uutil l>odlime. It never occurs to them or to their daughter* that the liest room and the eheerfuhieaa and light and gay ety should not l>elong to the voting peo ple as a matter of course. "They " liave bad their turn," is the argument which settles the whole matter. What was it they had their turn of f Love, pleasure, some daily brightening of the -lull mechanical round of duty I In the old man dead now to all these t Diil his heart harden and grow callous as his hair whitened and his eyesight failed f 1* not his feeling mors tender, the sense of lourliuea* more profound, the yearning for comtsuiiuuship etrongcr with every year that passes I Try him with a little symjiathy ; the experiment is a curious one, and rarer than you think. Take him into your confidence some day, instead of the daalung young fellow whom yon met last week and recognized as a congenial soul. Bharc the fun with him some time, the joke, the little scheme which you think so itnjiortaut. Test the question whether this queer work-# day old gentleman whom yon arc ashamed to remember you know best by his odditiel and differ ence* from yourself, although he gave you life and all that has sustained life aud mad- you the Admirable Crichtou tliat yon are, has really any human nature akin to your own in the finer and sweeter sense. It really seems as if there might be aome vein of sympathy between the young man and the old, even on such matter* as amusement aud 1OT making, provided one knew what witch hazel rod to use to find tL Old Storr*. who comes liack to the shop every Monday and leaves Phil to danae and flirt with the girls, or who sends the young fellow to Europe for a year, ia regarded by that gallant youth aimplv as a hauker. In deed, he talks of him sometimes as "my exchequer." When Phil was a baby Hu-rrs Ixgan that system of strict personal eoonomv and ngid devotion to buiuc*a, for which the younger man n<>w brand* him a* of lower nature than his own. It was all dune for Phil. He had the money laid by for that journey to France and Rome which lie and hi* wife had planned an long ; it went into a life insurance for l*liil's benefit ; the old people will die without seeing the coun tries of which tbe boy talks MI glibly— talks in fact to <-there, for he ha* tlie no tp-u tliat it would be throwing pearl* be fore a very inferior aort of animal to sjxak of art to them. So the old man stands in tlie doorway and look* in at Uiis man-child he baa given to the world, aud feels that be has no part in him, ex cept one akin to that of his caterer or tailor. Old KUirre' story is repeated a million times, in all clsaae* and ranks. When Rob at the farm goes courting he knows well enough tliat the King littl sum on which he can marry was saved by tliat old couple drowsing over the flic bv hard labor and ceaseless self de nials for long year*. But does be for tliat try to make the evening of their life less dreary ? There are a few cases where father and mother and children maintain that best of all relation*, kon camarmttnc to tbe last, but only a few. In the majority of American home* the old folk*, however tenderly nourished, are held aloof as oomjwtuious, lour—l from all the dailv interests, the j-*t*. the pleasures* which give to life its actual test. Hence they turn incessantly to the scenes of their couth and drearily recount them, simply iwcause it was then they were recognized as oouq-anion*, rather than burdens; or, Sost pathetic of all, the old man finds his grandchild the nearest friend in tlie lonesome latter -lav*. l**-an*e the lby lias not yet learn—l to snub him In every house where the old folks yet linger it would be worth while for the gay girls and young fellow* to spare a little time from their work or idlene**, and. remembering all that they owe to these qneer old men and unfashionable old women, try to discover what hopes mid love aud fancies they liare earned with them to the edge of the grave. They have but a little way to go before they reach the great darkness; a young, cheery voice and loving hand would do much to make those few step* leas soli tary. A Voracious Idol. A coiT-wpondent of the New York Tri hunr thus describes one of the idols in a joss-house in San Francisco : The "G-HI of the Tiger*" is worshiped more in China than here. In early days a blood thirsty tiger came from the jungles and ate all the children, an-1 frequently men and women. The "Tiger Mar, now canonized, volunteer—l to go to the jnn gle- and slay the tiger. He was last seen on a tiger's l>aok, and the belief is that he slew all the tiger*. To the right of this ifiol, and beside him in the same oonopv, stands a mangy-looking effigy of a tiger, al-out a foot high, with a big head and an open mouth. It is the most miserable and counterfeit nreoentment I ever Iw-bold, and the foolish superstition of the Chinese nowhere appears so ridic ulons a* here. In front of thia figure of a tiger, and all around it, were strips of pork, lx-il-1 egg*, mutton chops, nut*, etc., which nr.- plac-1 there- to appeose the hunger of the In-ast and pn-Tent his i>ating the women and children. It is the lw-lief of thoee who pUoe tlieee things there tliat when the tiger gets hungry he eats the provisions instead of the children. Hut being somewhat iu i-redukms, 1 think the rats are more fero cious tliar the tiger and that they run off with the offering*. In Sierra L—inc. Sierra Leone is a terrestrial paradise for the colored man, and one where they have almost everything their own way. In Sierra Leone a negro might assault and half kill a European, and only be fined a small aunt, but if a finger is laid upon a negro, the flue ia twenty pounds. It ia no uncommon thing for a negro to follow a white man all over town shout ing after him: " White nigger," which they consider a moat opprobioua epi thet, and dancing around with menacing gestures. All this ia done in order to make the " white nigger" lose his tem per and strike the other, iu which case the latter immediately takes ont a sum mons against his assailant, who is mulcted of twenty pounda. As a large pro portion of the tine goes into the pocket of lie person assaulted, many of these colored men find that it is more prod table to provoke white men to strike them than to work for a living. In this I negro "Utopia," instead of the negro !>eing the miserable downtrodden wretch he is generally depicted, he is ths great i man to whom the whites must defer. NO. 38. THE LOOT ror*D. A Tm> Wmm MeM.r.e la Mar Kawltr Aflvr mm A ba.ar.af O.ar Tweair Veare —Ta Start ml Mar AStralarra. A romantic incident, each ae we some times rtwd about bat eeUiom have an opportunity to wituem, occurred at Dn mud, Wu. On the 17th of July, IBM, Mr. Timothy Htokin, now of Dnraud, hail a little girl eighteen months old stolen from him. He was then living at Merton, Waukeaha county. Mr. Htokin wee in the garden at the time picking cucumbers, leaving the child in the house villi older children. Her liuehand waa some eighteen mi ha away from borne. When Mr*. Htokin returned to the bourn- she asked where little Emma waa, and the children auawerod " oat on the flower bed." Mhc called it, bat re ceived no answer, and never aaw the child again until night Wore last., when Mr. Htokin returned with a young lady from lted Cedar Falls, l>unn county. Thia proved to be the child who was stolen twenty year*, one mouth, and two daya before. Tbe girl bail been teach tug achool during the summer at Bed Cedar Falls. The history of the loot of the child and her snbsequrnt move menu ia interesting. After the child disappeared the father aroused the iieignborbood and a lung aeerch waa made. He firmly believed that tbe child bed been abducted, and left no atone unturned to find her. lie tracked two men to Ripon under the belief that they had the child, bnt there he lost track of them. The father and bis son entered the army ; the eon was killed, the father returned alone, and the family removed to l>urand, where he has lived for ten years. Of the adventureaof the child nothing ia known up to her eixth year. She re member* that at that age she waa living in St. Louie with e woman whom aba re garded aa her mother. Tbe women w*e taken ill, and under the impression that she would die, abe confeeaed to the girl that ohe waa not her mother ; ' hat ohe had been stolen and that she (the woman) had been paid to keep her. The woman did not die, and the girl remain ed with her in 8l Louie until abe waa eleven years old. At that time Capt. L. D. Bartlett, of Hudson, Wia., captain of the steamer Viola, was in St. Louis with his wife. Mr*. Bartlett met the girl, liked her, and made arrange menta with tbe woman by whidb the girl fvisaed into the hands of the Bartletta and went to Wisconsin to live. About a year ago Captain Bartlett removed to Indiana, and Fannie Johnson, aa ibe girl wrn. known, took charge of the achool in Dunn county, as mentioned above. A few weeks ago Mi* Nasby, of Du rand, viuted Cedar Falls and became acquainted with Emma. She wsa imme dlately struck with the resemblance of the girl to the Htokin family, and know ing tbe story of the lost child concluded that this might lie her. She acquainted the Htokin family with ber belief, an