At Snnset, There oomw a night, oh, dear and tm I Along the path that we pnnrae— Ita abadow drink* th# morning dew ; Weaee !♦ creep Aoroaa the living hloom vre tread. A thing too fugitive to drea 1, And vat •• weep I.'ght tear* for rainbow war* meet ; Hvlf-fcar*, t a' quicken failing heat. And prick osir l.y bli** to *weet Self-o "tiacionanee*. Thai ele might sometimes in a trance. Too prodigal of time and chance. Forget to blea*! If in mid-heaven hnng o* T tan, If all onr path* ware overrun With (lower* that raieaad the grace* won From ahadow* grav, Beloved, thon mightat fail to keep My feat from falling on the elcep And dusty way, Nor always gnarvl trnna eye# from tear* in the wide margin of thoae \ ear* Where all tlie r.ioin for peec!i appear* That love doth crave. The ailent apeech of hand to haud Alight be le* dear, in that atranga land That had no grava. .4•intr H. .taw*. Jane Reed. a rwnrsTLVOtn uuar. "If I could forget," ha aaid, " for gat, and begin again! Wa aea ao dull at tha time, and, looking back, art plain ; There a quiet that'* worse. 1 think, than many a epoketi strife, And i.'a wrong that on* rnklake *hould change the whole of a Ufa. " There* John, forever the same, ao eteady. sober, and mild. Ha never *u>rm* a* a man who t*vo cried as a child: Perhapa my way* are harsh, but if ha would seem to care. There'.! be fewer swallowed words and a tighter load to bear. " Here, Cherry ' —atie"a found me ont, the oalf I raised in the spring, And a likely heifer she's grown, the fooliali. soft-eyed thing ! Just the even color 1 like, silhont a dapple or speck— Oh. Cherry, bend down your head, and let me cry on your neck ! ••The poor Jamb beast she la, *he never can know nor tell. And it seems to do me good, the very shame of the spell: So old a woman and hard, and Joel ao obi a ■an But the thoughts of the old go on as the thoughts of the young begat, 1 "If* guessing that wasice tha heart, far worse than the rurvet fate: If 1 knew he lad thought of me, I could quiet'y work and wait; And then when rither, at last, cn a bed of death should he. Why, one might speak the truth, and the other hear and die !" She leaned on the hetfet's neck; the' dry leaves fell from the boughs. And over the t hue grass of the meadow strayed the oow*; The golden d. dd r meebed the cardinal flower by the nil; There ems suluma hue in the air, and sun light low on the hilh "I've eenehow &WD try MUX," ehe Mud to hereelf, and sighed: " Wl.at girie are free to hope, a steady wonai: reus: hide. Bat the need outstays the chance: it makce tue cry and laugh To lluuk that the only thing 1 can talk to now is a calf." A step rams down .'rem the bill; she did not turn or rise; There wae something in D near, tnat eaw without the eye*. Bhe heard the foot delay, ae doubting to etay or go; -1* the heifer for eale 7" he taid. She stern ly answered: "SoT She lifted her head aa ehe spoke; their eyca a moment met. And her heail repeated the words: "If I could only forget!" He turned a little away, bat her lowered eyes could see His hand, a* he picked the bark from the trunk of * hickory tree. " VThr can't, we be friendly. Jane ?" his word* came strange and slow; " 100 seem to bear me a grudge, so long, and so long ago! You were gay and free with the rest, but al ways so eby of me. That, before my freedom came, 1 saw it couldn't be." "Joel!" tu all eh cried, m their glaccee mt •gain, And * sadden rose effaced her pallor of sg and pain. He picked s.t'e hickory bark : "It's a curi ous thin. t<> esy ; Bat I'm lorn riiioe l'heke died and the girlt axe man.l-J away. " That's why these thoughts come back: I'm a little too oliTfor pride. And I never could understand how love should be all one side; Twould acewer iteelf, I thought, and time would -how me bow. But it didn't come o then, and it doeen't reen eo now !'' "Joel, it cams eo then !" and her voice was thick with tears; " A hope for a single day, and a bitter shame for yean-!" lis snapped the ribboo of bark; he turned from the hickory tree : " Jane, look me oooe in the face, and eay that you thought of me !" She looked, and feebly laughed : " It's a com fort to know the truth, Though the cbanoe was thrown away in the blind mistake of youth." "And a greater comfort. Jane,' be said, with a tender smile, "To find the chance you Late lost, and keep it a hide while." She rose u be spoke the words : the petted heifer thrust Her muzzie between the twain, with an ani mal's strange mistrust: Bat ovc-r the creature's nerk be drew her to his breast: " A horse is never so old bat it palls with an other beast!" " It's eticugb to know," ehs said, " to remem ber, not forget!" "Nt, nay : for the reet of life well pay each other's debt!" She bad no will to resist so kindly was she drawn, And she sadiy said, at last ; " But what will become of Juhn 7" —Bayard Taylor. Leather at the Centennial. The applications for space in the shoo and leather building have reached the number of 547, and then- are more in anticipation. The spaces are divided as follows: Seventy-five to boots and shoos, 118 to sole and rough leather, sixty to harness, thirty-six to morocoo and sheep skins, sixteen to rubber goods, twenty three to saddlery hardware, fifty-one to machinery. Afvor* F*st Boots and shoes 3.887 Hole leather 3,900 lioagh leather 7S Harness, kip and calf 1,200 Morocco and sheep 1,168 Harness and saddlery 1,508 liubber goods 630 Trunks 814 Blacking 142 Haddlery hardware 668 Machinery 1,726 Foreign 5,000 Total '. 30,698 Prescriptions. Professor Wilder, of Cornell Uni versity, gives these short rules for action in case of accident: For dust in the eyes, avoid robbing ; dmh cold water in them ; remove cin ders, etc., with the round point of a lead pencil. If an artery i "it, compress it above the wound ; if a vein is cut, compress it below. If choked, go upon all fours, and cough. For alight burns, dip the part in cold water ; if the akin is destroyed, cover with varnish. For apoplexy, raise the head and body ; for fainting, lay the person flat. FRED, KXTUTZ, Kditor uiitl Proprietor. VOLUME IX. A PAIR OF APRIL FOOLS. Mr. Softheart had always been a ro mantic young man, frvim the earliest year, at which it waa possible for him to claim the title man ; and he wua ro mantic still, now that tlie title young waa only accorded to him because of lua bachelorhood. Mr. Soft heart lxad never dceired to be a bachelor. He admired the other sex too much ; but, although he had i>eeu in lore with four blonde*, three bru nette, and five young ladies who were neither oue nor the other, he had never been able to pop the question point blank, but deboatuly intimated it in auch a war tliat hi* meaning would have been a riddle to the Sphinx, and waa naturally enough never aucceawful. Now, "at forty, and growing extremely stout, he waa aa romantic aa ever ; and, moreover, he was desperately in love with a new idol—a young lady who smiled when he appeared, gave hvm soft glances, called his bouquets "love ly," and preeervevl them in water. The fact is, Mr. Softheart was very well off, and not ill looking, and that MM Belinda had made up her mind to accept hia hand whenever it was offered, despite the | ftheart to pro teose, and every day more certain that he positively intended to place his man sion and bank account at her disposal. But, though Mrs. Bellows was kind euough to allow the oook to summon her to consultations when Mr. Softheart called, and so leave the pair alone to gether; and although Belinda's sister. Miss Angelina, was equally ounaiderate, and invariably remembered that some thing she wanted very jutrtieolarly was np stairs, when her" mother went to speak to the cook, poor Mr. Softheart never could bring himself to the point of saying : " WiU you have me I ' It would, he argued, confuse the young lady and himself ; and if she should mv no, where—as the floor never opened on such awful occasions to receive rejected lovers—where should be hide himself I " I'll do it by letter," he said to him self, after long consideration. " Women, so far, have misunderstood me. I'll do it in black and white now—say, ' Will von marry me I' in so many words, and decide my fate." And so, on the last day of March, Mr. Softheart wrote, on pink tinted paper, perfumed with Rimmel's scent and edged with gold, an offer of his hand and heart, as plainly to be understood as a bill from one's baker; and, feeling that he had done a safe, though coarse thing, he enveloped, sealed it, and put it in his pocket, before he made his evening call on his beloved Belinda. Now it so happened that that very evening Belinda herself hail come to a resolution. Her twenty-fifth birthday was approaching, and she could not afford to " waste time." When Mr. Softheart reached the house of the Bellows', he fonnd the field quite clear. Miss Belinda had artfully lon trived that it should be so. Th.it per fidious young ]H sure to see it;" ami thatlie had presented her with the billet containing his proposal, crowned by a five-ahilliug niece I How should she guess that even at that moment the offer Mr. Softheart oonld not make in words was in her work lsiske called an April fool ?" she subbed. " You might have more eon—aid—era tion—for—my—feelings, when he "a tri fled so." And went offinto hysterica. Mamma rushed in. Biddy screamed " murtlier." Sal volatile was applied, and, in the ooufuaion, no explanation was made. Biddy a wept the room ami put the letter in the dustpan. And Mr. Softheart watched >• 11 day for the post man, and watched in vain. Tliat afternoou Mr. Spooney called to inquire after Miss Belinda's health, and found her well enough to walk out with him ; and Angelina and her mamma be gan to compare notes. Then, anil not until then, the letter began to be a mystery, and Biddy being stmt for ex plained that, to the best of her belief, Mr. Softheart gave it to her to pnt in Miss Belinda's room the night before. Then, in dismay, the ladies rummagisl the dustbin, and", after an hour's seaich, reappeared iu the parlor with dusty trittw s and soiled hands and nine little pieces of pajx?r. These, deftly pieced together, made a whole note, w'hioh, be iug ierusd, revealed a proposition. Belinda returned rather late with a very conscious look upon her face, an J stared in ast-u ishment at the dusty ob jiit.-, *ho met her ith excitement on their counter anoes. It was a good while before the truth could l>e extract iil from the iuterjectiuus and ejacnla turns with which she was greeted ; bqf when, at ia.it, it was male manifest, Be linda listened like one in a trance. She had indeed bvu made an April fool of. Mr. Softheart bad really proposed. The mansion had b>s'u offered to her, the bank stink and all that made the bachelor a 1 eligible match ; and ahe that very ev ning had accepted Spooney, for whom she cared yerv little, and who had only £l5O a year to 1 ve upon. It WHS not complimentary to her be trothed, but tdie went into hei second fit of hysterics t one*'. As for Mr. Softheart, ho never pro posed to any one again. Fie received the Dews of Belinda's b'tn thai with comparative calmness, bnt made hi* will next day in view of auicide, and left all his fortune to a hospital. Changing his mind, however, he live* still, and ao I does Bidinda, on a second floor, where die quarrels a good deal with her hn*- Otuid, who has ceaaeil to b> at all atten tive and wonder* vaguely what he could iiave mi a: t by it—meaning his court -hip and marriage. And Mr. Softheart never sees Belin 1 da, who would be handsome *till in a decent l>onuct; and 1 linda never see* the old bachelor, whom uln .Really liked, and who i* tine looking as well a* rich, rithout a bitter ren embrance of the tirat of April which made them and ha* left them a pair of April fools. How to Hang Picture*. No picture ought to be Lnng higher than the height of the average human eye when the owner of the eye is stand ing. If the picture is a portiait, or if it has hnman fares in it, its eyes should look lis nearly into <>nrs as j>o*sible ; and if there be no snoh simple guide, tier hafis a good rule will tie to hare the line tliat divides the picture horizontally into equal parts level with the eye. If one sta< ts in hanging pictnr< a with the determination to place them so that they eau tie easily seen and enjoyed without stretching the neck the least, or stoop ing the body, ho will be pretty sun* In do well. In remote farmhouses ar.' 1 country taverns we often see pictures, particularly portraits, skyed as high as if their owners had been academy hang ers, and the painters young rivals of a school. I suppose the reason is that the simple h artd owners think a pic ture sneh a precious thing it can't lie hnng too m ctirely out of reach of mod dling hands. They aro often not clear in their minds as to what a picture is meant for, and, not finding in it any practical relations in human life and society, they treat it with reverence and put it where it will disturb them as little as possible. Bat as the people come to enjoy pi -tares and get some intellectual, spiritual nourishment out of them, they want them, as they want their books, where they van see them and use them. Worship In the Wilderness. The early at ttlers of America, among other trials, experienced great difficulty in attending divine worship. On ac count of the raids of the Indiana it wns necessary that at all times the men of the household should go armed. A picture shows the strange scene of the master of the household, with hia gun on his shoulder, about entering the little log church built in the woods. It is the first Sunday that they have had service in * long time, and the whole family have come np to bear the words of trutn from one who had periled his lifn and sacrificed hia earthly prospects for the good of hie fellow creatures. A True Community. The family should be a community. To make it truly so there must le com mon interest. Alas for that household where the father's business, the mother's social caros, and the children's s]orts and pleasures are not shared by each other ! Then it will not be strange if the expenditure is out of proportion to the income, and if the companions and resorts of the children are evil. Happy that home where the oar*a and joys are so divided that the former are not op pressive and the latter are multiplied— where the hearts grow closer as the years roll by, so that the separations which must oome to every family aro only bodily and therefore temporary! CENTRE HALL, CENTRE CO., PA., THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1870. Ceutrnulat Notes. It is officially estimated that the whole amount of gootl* placed on exhi bitiou will exceed forty thousand tons in weight. The opening ceremonial on the tenth of May will take place iu tlie space be tween memorial hall and the main building. Governor Connor, of Maine, lias ap pointed I "reside ut Chamberlain, of liowdoiu College, orator of that State at the cxlubitiou. The people of Kllenvilla, N. Y., pro poee to til up ami anchor t.Aar tlie Ceil teunial a canal boat, to be used as a lioardiug and lodging Kstt. The lioating men of Pittsburgh ap JHVVT determined to be well represented among the four-oar crews at tlie Cen tenuis! rcgutta. Four clulm of that city have already selected crews. Norfolk, Virginia, has organised a Centennial walking club, which pro poees to start oil the first of May and walk to the exhibition, passing over, in its route, the principal civil war battle field* of Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania. The scene inside the main building has much the ap|*-aranoe of a town of respectable site, with street* laid off at rigut angles, ami with dwelling houses, summer pavilions, cathedral*, gloomy prisons, Norman castles, round towers, alhambros and wigwams iu the greatest variety, and forming a most extraordi nary contrast. It hsiks exactly as though a host of architects had origi nally liegun some Babel-like construc tion, hut were suddenly drawn under some mysterious influence that caused them to erect, wilh divers tastes, those plain, picturesque, ontione, gay, aom tier, massive and foirylike- Ktnictures that already place the visitor desiring to view the interior of this building in just the same difficulty as would be expe rienced by a man posting himself on the threshold of the Continental Hotel iu order to obtain a birxlseyo view of Philadelphia. (lifts to those in Office. The Galajry, in speaking of late af fairs at Washington, says: Not very loug ago it was uot only jM-rmitted, but exjiected, that i-v. ry man in office should profit not only by the salary of hia office, but by presents given to him iu consideration of the use of this influ ence in favor of the giver. No suitor went to tlio bureau of an official person without a present in liaud, and the firomisc of more if the influence asked or aud exerted was effectual. These preaenta were of money, jewels, and other articles of luxury. Game was given in small matters: and the poor gave (nmltry and egg*. Old Go bo, in the Merchant of Venice," says to Basaauio: "I have here a dish of doves that I would bestow upon you worship; and my suit is," etc. We read, too, in a grand old story, how the head of an Eastern family, hardly yet a tribe, wishing to propitiate the prime minister of one of the king* of Egypt, said to his sons who were going ln-fore him : "Carry down the man a present, a little balm, and a little honey, spices and myrrh, not* and almonds.'" The name of the prime minister was Joseph. This custom was prevalent until witiun a little more than a century, in govern ments of the highest class, and among gentlemen and noblemen of the highest character. Huch giii* were not regarded as bribes, as they wonl.l have been if given to a judge. Until recently, all of- Ueial | HIS Is were regarded as places of profit; snscril>ed to the loan, but, in view of the ulterior measures on the part of Oen. Lei arra, they have applied to the United States consul for protection. A Smart Child. " Jack," screamed a bright eyed, golden hairod, fair faced iittlo girl of not more than six summers, to her younger , brother, who had damped himself under the wall, where ho wan digging Band with a atrip of ahingle, " Jack, yon good-for-nothing little scamp,you arethe torment of my life? Coron right into the honae, thia minute, or I'll take the very hide off"m von ! Come in, I nay !" " Why, Totty," exclaimed her father, who chanced to oome op at that moment, " what in the world are yoa aaying ? la that the way yon talk to yonr little brother?" "Ob, no, papa,' answered the child, promptly, and with an inno cent amile. "We were playing keep boase, and I am Jack's mamma, and I was talking to him just an mamma talked to me this morning. I never really spank him, as mamma does mo some times." _______ Life In (Ire at Cities, The relative healtlifnlneaa of some of the great cities is shown in the following table, which exhibits the annual mor tality for 1,000 inhabitants: Madrid ...65 0 Vienna 32.7 Berlin 80.6 Rome 211 3 New York 27 9 Turin 24 8 Brussels t .H Paris 23.2 Ijondou 22.2 Philadelphia 20.3 The above estimate for Madrid is from a recent compilation given in a journal [in that city. The capital of Spain is thus made to rank as one of the most ' unhealthy places in the world. HAItKAHNIMI A GOVERNMENT. Ilw lk Orlll.h K>o lo* lit arm •( Nsissa* aad ibeu tbaard lllaa. Readers are already aware that a Brit inll man-of war recently seiaed and sold the Samoau navy, including its huwitaer, it* (Hiker decii, it* bottles of whisky, and oilier government ntures, under the pretext that a cannibal navy had no right to fir the American flag. The sou are of the Hamoau navy wo* made in accord ance with the advice of the foreign con sul* resident at Apia. The Hamoan gov ernment, a* every *ue knows, consists exclusively of Mr. Hteinberger. On hearing the news, the government in stantly ran down to the seashore, and }>erociving that the dock of the uavy was crowded with sii ltritinh marines, reoog- Uixed the hopelessness of attempting to rt (Hisaees himself uf the public property by forts*. Being an experienced amWar sighted government, he immediately foresaw Uat an attach might at any mo ment lie made npou the national arsenal at Muhinu l'oint, and lie therefore crammed the anus and ordnance stores of the Hamoan army into his waistclolh and conveyed them to a fort in the in terior of the island. The next day the British commander, who had sent an overwhelming force of two powder monkeys to sack the arsenal, found that he was too late, and he therefore set out, with two or three of liis officers, to storm the Hamoan fort to which the artns and stores had been conveyed. He reached the fort, but wus refused admit tauce. There can lie bnt little doubt that this refusal was thoroughly justified by military law. When a hostik naval force inarches to a fort, knocks loudly at the front door, announces-that it ha* come in order to rapture the place, and demands to know, with much nnneocs aary profanity, why some one dot* not come down and u|ieu the door, it is plainly the duty of the garrison to men tion politely, and out of the secoud storv front window, that they must really decline to receive any visitor*. The Knglisli captain, however, did not take this view of the matter. He de cided that he had been personally in sulted, and on his return to his ship he sant the Hamoau government a note for mally requesting that due notice should be taken of the fact that he was iu a tremendous rage. The next scene in this eTentful drama was the examination of the Hamoau gov ernment before the British captain and the assembled consuls. There is ao doubt that the gallant captain hail iu former years s* rved uu the coast of Africa, and that the experience thus ob tallied directed hli method of treating the Hamoau govi rument. Having been accustomed, on boarding a suspected slaver, to demand a right of her psjiera, he naturally felt that the first thing to do, after boarding the Hamoau lalamla, was to ask somebody to instantly exhibit some sort of iiapers. The Hamoan gov ernment firmly refused to accede to this demand, and as there is not the le a*l reason to suppoae that be poaaesaed any papers whatever, except an odd uumtier of an American illustrated pa(M>r con taining a (Hirtrait and biographical sketch of Mr. Hteinbergcr, such refusal was uuduubtcdly wise and dignified. Failing to moke the government pro duce its imaginary register, manifest, and custom bourn* clearance, the British captain and hia consular advisers re lieved their minds by vaguely threaten ing dreadful things. The unhappy Ha moan government was told that " he had bettor lie corefuL" The American c.-n sul darkly promised that '*hc would let him know," and the British tartain, harassed by the conviction that all the precedents of the slave trade required him to put a prise crew on board the Harmon lalomls, with order* to execute the physically imposoible feat of takiug the islands into the nearest British port, there to be tried and condemned by a court of admiralty, glared solemnly at the government, and from time to tune recited to him brief and uneompli incntary acrans of biographiaal informs tion concerning the government's al leged ancestor*, and certain obscure ilia roses of the eyes and heart which be was destined to contract at no distant day. Finally, the examination come to an'end, and the government returned to hia palace, while his enemies remained in consultation to devise uew plans for his annoyance. The end of the whole matter was tliat the cousula published a proclamation forbidding all foreiguer* to recognize or oliey the Hamoan government; the Brit ish captain sent for another frignU-, with the vague impression that by trie help of strong reinforcement* ho might yet suc ceed in making sonn lsxly show their : pajieni; tne resident mioionsriea under took to indnee the Hnnioana to ask for Mr. Hteinberger'* resignation, and that harass® 1 government opened a now box of stroug cigar*, and nmler tlieir calm ing influence asked hiuiscif whether Christ in ity and trow*eis aud a quiet life were i *t really more to be desired than the gi.>rv and vexation of playing at royalty with missionaries who do uot understand the game, and with British captains aud miscellaneous consuls who refnse to play fairly, and who openly mock at a make believe monarchArte j York Time*. A Fire In Tamos. Tarsus, the nstive city of the apostle Paul, was, on the night of the twentieth of January, the soene of a great fire, which reduced the bazaar to rnina, and effected damage to the <aat thirty year* of age, who haa the aim ufa mil liouaire. lie awore that he waa one of the firm of H. 8. Huntley A Co., mail contractors, and also of Barlow, Header aon A Go. He had gone to Montana in 1867 a poor boy. After being there a abort time they bought a amall route of the agent with whom they became ac quaint* d, on credit and by aorne mean* succeeded in paying for the stock on the entire route iu four year*. From that time they had gone upward and onward and were now o|x*ratiug in their own name* several hundred thouaaud dollars' worth of contracts, and in hia settle ment last year with Barlow, Haudaraon A Go. hia share waa $425,0U0. lie told the committee bow the contract for the route from Reding, Gal., to llooeburg, Oregon, waa let tc oucGoddred for $24,- 000 in 1874, and Goddral aarried the mail with hia stock and then failed. By agreement, and by buying off intermedi ate bidders, be got and still holds the contract at $75,000. He denied ever having bribed or given presents to any official uf the (Mist-office departuietit, al though he was intimately acquainted with nearly all of them, and troubled them very frequently on business. He knew nothing whatever of any attempts by hia firm to do anything but a legiti mate business. In fact, he knew very little, if his story vw accepted, abont the immense business that he wus con ducting. Truth Stranger than Fiction. The Ashville (N. C.) Pioneer asys. A number of men met at a house on North Tow river, Mitchell county, for the purpose of a general spree. As usual in such cases, a quarrel ensued, and in a fight between a young man named Davis and a drunken eom;>anion named Tooley, the former was slabbed in the abdomen, and portions of his en trails protruded from the wound. In this condition he was placed iu a blanket, a pole run through a loop in the same, and the ends shouldered by two men, who attempted to carry him where he oould get surgical aid. The path led along the aide of a rugged mountain, s-id they had borne him some distance * lieu tin' knot through which the (Mile ran loosened, and the wounded man was thrown down the mountain, his intes tines catching on bushes and winding around him as he rolled down its precipitous side. He was alive when picked up, and his friends carried him to a house in the neighborhood. We are informed thai an old midwife was culled in to attend him. She pushed hock the entrails and sewed up the < tifleo with (isckthrxaiL Later in the d.y a Dr. Dagger arrived, who gave it as hia opinion tliat the ojiorati<>n had uot b-en properly done—that Davis' •' jianneh" was not in the proper posi t.'in, and tliat some of the minor entrails w.-re miwung. This he ascertained by giving the patient several hearty shakes; lie said "the sound was too hollow." At this order the man was again ripped o(ien, while parties were sent in starch Of the missing entrails. Tin y found sen rnl of thtae indispensable* to the progress of digestion, and burryiiir Iwck to tne house, banded them to tin* M. D. As they were very dirty, he rinsed them in cold water, sprinkled a little silt over them as a preservative, and then put them in the patient. The wound was rem wed, and when our informant left it was thought that Davis would recover. If he doc*, a life insurance policy would be the greatest extravagance he oonld indulge in. A Novel (Jun Carriage. A laughable adventure is said to have befallen a certain committee, just before the e mmeneement of the Abyssinian expedition, who, in the exercise of their dnties, viuted Woolwich to ins]ect a new kind of mountain howitzer. It wms proposed to Arc the gnus off the liacks of tue mules that carried them, by which plan it waM thought a great saving of time might be effected. A donkey was accordingly procured for the experi ment, and a light gun strapped firmly to a cradle resting on the pack saddle, so that the ranzzle of the weapon pointed ovrr the donkey's tail. The gun was loaded, the donkey turned with his tail to an embankment, and the usual prepa ration made for firing by means of a lan yard and friction tulie. At this juncture one of the oommittee suggested that this mode of firing might derange the aim, by the jerk of polling the lanyard, and it was arranged to fire the guu by 'a piece of slowmatch tied to the vent This was done, and the match duly ig nited, Hitherto the doukev had taken rather a sleepy interest in the proceed ings, bnt the fizzing of the match on his back caused him to first prick up his ears, and finally to turn round, in a con tinued effort to see what was going on behind him. The members of the com mittee were utterly dismayed by this un expected conduct. In vain they at tempted to dodge the impending dsn Sor; which ever way thejr ran, the oukey was sure to head off in a new di rection. The noble chairman, who was too oorpnlent to run, flung himself on the ground, and calmly awaited his fate. It was an agonizing moment; then— bang!—the shot went harmlessly rioo chetting away in one direction, while the unhappy donkey turned n complete somersault in the other. The subse quent report of the oommittee was not favorable to the new method of firing mountaiu howitzers. About Cabbage Seed. The case of Richard Van Wyek against Richard H. Allen and others was argued before the general term of the ooiurt of common pleas. The appeal was by the defendants from a judgment for t2,000 had against them in the court below. The plaintiff, who is a market gardener, purchased from the defendants one and ono-half jniunds of what were represent ed to lie seeds of the Van Sielen early flat Dntcli cablmge. After planting he found that tho plants never noaded and were of no use. The main question in the case is as to whether, without any express warranty and ou a more repre sentation which they supposed to bo true, the defendants can be held liable for the damages arising directly from the use of the seed. The jury in the trial term of the court answered the question in the affirmative by giving judgment for the plaintiff. Decision was reserved by tho general term.— Nno York Time*. TERMS: a Yoar, in A.dvane. ** The BOJI." Are wa " tlia boys " that uaad to mat a Tba tables ring witli tnM*> folllea 7 Whose .U.p lui.g d laughter oft would abaka Tba oelln.g witb its thunder volleys t Are wa tba youth# sub lips unshorn. At beauty's feat uuwnnkied atutora, Wbuee memories reach tradition* morn— The (lays of prehistoric tutors 7 " Th* boya "wa know—bat who are tbsaa Wbuee beada might aerre for I'lutarab'a aagoa, Or Foi e martyr*, if yoa please. Or harmite of the dismal ages f '• Tba boya " wa knew—out tbaa* be Uioaa 7 Their cheeks with aaaming * hi ash were painted, Where are the Harrys, Jims and Joes With whom • oboa were wall acquainted "t If wa are they, we're not the urn* ; If (hey are we, why than they're masking, Do tall us, neighbor What e-yoor-name, Who are yoa t What s the use of asking 7 Yoa once were Oeurge. or Bill, or Ben ; There s yoa. yourself - (here's yoa, that others I know you now—l knew yoa then— Yoa a*ed to bo your younger brother I (Mmr WmdeU Uokm**. THE TWIN PORTRAITS. A rifling irlui ! Ho Gilbert Lsiwaon u called, but only bj a small circle of his especial friend. Otherwise be wan entirely unknown to fame. But be wan bopefnl. Onoe be saw an eagle leave it* unit, and aoar up bigb toward* tlie auu, while ita unfeatbered young fluttered, but remained I whind unable to follow, lie felt that it waa much the name with bimaelf—that straggle* would strength en bia piuiona, and lie would in time be able to aaoeud the great ladder of fame. And so be toiled unceasingly. For aome montbabe bad been engaged upon a portrait, lie bad found bia model in a young girl, perhapa twelve years of age. He bad flint aeeu her in • the street#, and she waa a beggar, or the next thiug to it—abewaa a street singer. When her voioe first fell upon bia ears it thrilled him, for it waa wildly beauti fill. He knew that voioe trembled. He saw her hand aa it was extended to re ceive the pitiful coin dropped into it, and be observed that Uiia trembled also, and that it waa very tiny and dch uate. Then lie looked npon her face. Her eye* were of heavenly blue, but wore a sad expression and were down rtutt. Her gulden bair fell in tangled masses over her shoulders —indeed, abe was lieautiful, although no one but the voung and enthusiastic painter had as Vet especially noticed that Lenity. When he explained to bar bia wish, her face became radiant with pleasure, which lent it an additional charm. The picture waa completed and the artist sat gwung on it- He oould soar-e iy decide in bia own mind which be loved the beet—the original or the aem hlanor. But, dropping a curtain before the work, be aroar, and walked to the window, rising into the street. A sigh escaped him, and an atiaorbed were bia tbougbU that he did not obarrve the en trance of a second party until a baud waa places) on his shoulder, :.n.l a voioe •wad : "Gilbert, 1 have called to see you. work, as 1 promised you." The artist blushed and even trembled, and aa be lifted the covering, r. marked : " Mr. Byrd, my fate dmeada upon a few word* which you will speak now. I have thrown my whole soul into this | picture, and I am everything or noth ing. You are an old painter—speak candidly—tell me jast wlint you think." It vii some momenta More the young man raised hi* eyca, and then only when attracted by the long continued silence of bia friend. When he did so he saw that Mr. Byrd waa pale as death, had sunk into a chair and that he trembled violently. He sprung to hia side with a cup of water, ana when the old man had partially reoorerrsl, he asked : " What, in the name of Heaven, is the matter with yon, my friend t" ••When- is your model I—who ifl your model t" gasped Byrd. All waa explained, and theu the old man continued : "Take your painting; come with me to my house. Gilbert followed hia old friend, and he entered s superb mansion in due time, and wan theu taken direct to the studio. 11 is own picture was placed be side another, and it waa the young man's ! turn to start in surprise, for here waa two portrait* exactly alike with the ex ception of the dress. Mr. Byrd now said: "Be seated, Gilbert, and I will tell yon a secret which has never been breathed to mortal man before. Twenty years ago I jaunted the likeness of my only daughter, and the picture that you see before you. She was then tan yearn of age ; she is now thirty, aad still with m." "May not this be her child—this model of mine ?" " Listen. At the age of nineteen my daughter did as many a good girl has done before her—ahc married, without my knowledge, one who was to me an entire stranger, and nearly ao to her. That husband proved to lie a villain, for, in two years after, he forsook her. More ihmn this—he took with him a .laughter by the name of Gracie. The blow nearly killed the mother and even time baa never healed the wound. I have made every effort to trace out the man, and recover onr darling, but in vain. I f lined sneh information, however, that was satisfied he bad died miserable in a distant town, and we have given little j Gracie op as lost forever. Now yon can acoonnt for or agitation when 1 first saw vonr jaunting, can you not?" "I can divine yonr thoughts." "What is the name of your model!" " I only know her as Katie, the street •linger." " You know where she can be found ? "Yes." " Ijet us go for her at onee." In two hours after, the little beggar entered ibe splendid saloon of the Byrd mansion. She was bewildered, for she had never gaxed uj>on so much elegance l>e fore, except as she had seen it from the streets tlirough the closely curtained windows. Her confidence was soon re stored, however, by the kind treatment she received, aud tnen she was conduct ed to the study. Aa ner eye* fell upon the pictures, she stood motionless for s time, and theu said: "Why, you have painted two pictures of me, instead of one, Mr. Gilbert." •• Yes—would you not like a copy ?" "Oh, so muchl" she answered, her eyes becoming brilliant in anticipation. " You shall nave one of them. Which do you prefer ?" " This, I feel as if I oould love it I" and the young creature knelt before the mother, while tears fillet! her eyes. This was too much for the grand father. He sunk into a seat, and cov ered his faoe with his fingers. " What is your name I" asked Gil bert. "Katie Courtney. I thought you knew that before." "Courtney was his name," groaned the old man. "Do yon remember your parents?" again asked Gilbert. " Only my father. Ho was not very kind t-o me, and died in Plymouth sev eral years ago." " Aud you have been singing for your bread ever since ?" NUMBER 16. "I hare." " Well, if yon are to hare the picture, I want yon to sing tne a song now. You will do so, will you not t" "Oh, yes, willingly." Bbe I'gn one of her wild strains, and the dwelling waa filled with melody. Thia had not long continued before the door of the study was opened, and a lady entered the room, one was pale, una ntaggered as if suffering fn ia great weakness. Hbe clutched tli* leek of a ■■hair for support and then asked, in a faint voice: " Who is this ringer f" To here answered in words would bare been useless, however, for tier eves had fallen upon the face of the child : and, with a doll shriek, the mother fell fainting upon the floor. In an instant, Katie, or Grade, as waa her real name, waa by her side. As she gaaed upon the marble face, aha ex claimed : " Ob, this is the other pic ture !" "Can yon imagine who it ist" " Not my mother i Oh, tell me, ie it my mother t" "liia." . I Joy never kills. The orphan child at thia moment gave rent to her feelings in aoba, carcases, and words of endearment; and it was not long before the mother wae fully oooactous of her great happi ness. Those twin portraits had been the means of nutting those loved ones, who had been eo long and cruelly separated. A Domestic Sorrow. Hare is a eharaetariatie conversation which oocurred some time sine* !*•( ween acu rtain Mrs. Bmith mod a Mm. Jonea. The Li unban da of both belong to the Blank dab, and upon a certain occasion the two wivw met and talked over their grievances. Said Mr*. Jane* : ** My dear, do yon know that I am unhappy' •• No, "dear, I had not the remuteat idea of anything of that kind. Yon are living in ueh luxury and ease that I supposed you to be the happiest of mortals." " Ob, no, I never think of that far I am too, too unhappy." " What makaa yon ao unhappy f" •• Oh, never mind, dear; it ikx* not oonoern any one in the world bat my self ; bat lam dreadfully unhappy. I suppose 1 am the moat unhappy person who lives." " Do tell me what it ia t" " Well, my dear, if you will know, it is this: My husband goes oat and stay* all night long at the dab, and playa cards. Ain't that dreadful t" Mr*. Smith gasad at Mm. Jones very calmly and placidly and pityingly, and then remarked: '* My dear Mrs. Janes, I was absolutely frightened—l was alarmed. I shuddered for fear yoa were about to relate some terrible myatery. You are not half as unhappy as 1 am. I am the most unhappy, miserable woman that ever lived." •' What : M said Mm Jonm, "yoa un happy, and ao mnch admired and caress ed bv society I" " Vee ; the mast heart-broken woman yoa ever knew." •' What can be the caose of this I" •' Well, I'll tell yoa, my dear. lon see my husttand goes oat and stay* all night, and—well, he stays all night and tries to play cards but can't. Those other fellows beat him every night." George Fraud* Trail's Assets. George Francis Train was examined in the New York marine oourt under what were called supplementary pro seeding*, as to the prep.-rty his credi tors ouuld n-Hch. In his examination he said : "I reside at No. 61 Lexing ton avenue; I have a wife and three children ; I am in no business at present; I have realised large piofita on or lec tures throughout the country u Frem dintial candidate, and expend in chari ties and promoting my welfare as a can didate large amounts; I have not lec tured for the last five year* ; have no personal property, exoept my clothes ami watch, which is worth #IOO ; I have no jewelry ; I jy #lO per week for my board ; have no income ; my wife has an income in her own right ; fifteen Tears ago 1 settled on my wife #IOO,OOO, being eominisaions made by me far negotiating the original bonds and pur chasing the iron for the Atlantic and Great Western railroad company; my wife now nays my board ; I have assets; they consist of claims cjrinst corpora tions." His assets, be stated, consisted ,of royalty on 2,000 miles of railway at #2,500 per mile, build in Birkerbead, Darlington, and elsewhere, England, etc., in 1860, #5.000,000 ; a claimagainat the British government, #1,000,000 ; a claim against John Mctlenry for nego tiating the bonds of the Atlantic and Gnwt Western railroad, and other claims, amounting t0#20,000,000. His real estate besets down in Omaha, Chicago, Council Bluffs, and Columbua, at about #13,- 000.000, but be has no faith in real estate. Impeachments by the raited States There have been ouly six impeach ment trials before the United States Senate, and but two persons were ever convicted. The flret case was that of Senator Blount, charged with treason in 1718, bat there was no trial, the juris diction of the Senate being denied on the ground that a senator was not an officer of the United States. Judge Pickering, of New Hampshire, wae found gmlty of drunkenness in 1808, and removed. Judge Humphreys, of Tennessee, was impeached for treason early in the war and convicted. The most celebrated trial, down to President Johnson's, was that of Judge Samuel Chase, of Maryland, who was impeached in 1804, for political partisanship in the trials of Fries and Oallender for libel, five years before. Chase was a Federalist and these men were virulent Democrats st a time when the press was vastly more bitter than it is now. The trial was the great event of the day, but re sulted in acquittal. Chase was one of the signers of the Declaration and a great spirit. Having onoe ordered a sheriff to summon a yoac and take eome rioters to jail, he was timidly answered that no one would respond. " Summon me, then, and I'll take 'cm," thundered the judge. Aaron Burr's trial, one of the few famous American State trials, was after the expiration of his term of Vioe President, and before a jury on an indictment for high treason, of which he was acquitted. . A Fatal Mistake. A man mar drink moderately bnt steadily all his life, with no apparent harm to himself, bnt his daughters be come nervous wrecks, his sons epileptics, libertines or drunkards, the hereditary tendency to crime having its pathology and unvaried laws, precisely as scrofula, consumption, or any other purely physi cal disease. These are stale truths to medical men, but the majority of parents, even those of average intelligence, are either ignorant or wickedly regardless of them. There will be a ehanoe of rid ding our jails and almshouses of half their tenants when our people are brought to treat drunkenness as a dis ease of the stomach and the blood as well as of the soul, to meet it with com mon sense and a physician, as well as with threats of eternal damnation, and to remove gin shops and gin sellers lor the same reason that they would stag nant ponds or unclean sewers. Item* of Interest. A person who has seen tremble ought iokjsrLtt,bo.moota. A iodiekm* nuraa to worth a mnoh in the nick chamber M aakillfal 'phycian. dream ootaed ohip hate, trimmed with strawberries, are in the faahiouabte MM The author of the saying, " Tern mat always take a man * you And him, was a constable. A New Jeiaey woman l*ps feet oat of bed, eo that the cold air may awaken her if a burglar opens the window. tttatistics how that the average hoc in the United Htatea laet year 321 pounds. Thia year he weigh* 208 pounds. There ia a Scotchman in Hartford who nan apeak fourteen languages. and he gets hia tiring by performing on mnaioal glasses. Query for naturalists : If a ofrd in the hand ia worth two in the bush, ia a mole in the face worth two in the ground I It ia not to any man's credit, particu larly, to be the eon of an honored father. The credit ilea in pro ring worthy of the distinction. The along the ooaat of Maine are to be aold at pnblie anction. Par chasers will not be required to take them away immediately. A sign of spring—A woman with her drees turned up, a brush in her hand, .wiewhief in her ere, and splotches, of whitewaab*onihar(faoe. The Kentucky Legislature baa passed a bill taxing all dogs orer three years of age f2 each. Dogs refusing to giro their ages will be dealt with sommanly. Never nunc a child or a town after a until lie has been dead a century or no. The people of Belknap, lowa, are wanting to change the cognomen of their riUage. A witty prelate was askedif be did not think that soch a one followed hia oooacieoca. " Yes," mid hie grace, " I think be follows it>a a man does a bone rnja gig—he drive* it fieri." A convicted murderer in Nebrmaka ia likely to get a new trial, because, after the cam had gone to triaL ana of the juroca offered to bet two doilara that the pneooer would be oonvieted. Laet year the following nations sent the United States contribution* of ti noi ia the order of aumerieal import ance: Germany, England, Ireland, Canada, China, rrmaoe, Boast*. Before tearing a akeptngsparttueul in the morning, aaya i>Tw. W. llall, throw each article of bed oorenng orer the back ot a chair, or the foot board, and hoist the window, if the weather ia not rainy; An exchange prints specimens of Walt Whitman's forthcoming book on poetry. It is like all hia other poetry —don't rhyme worth a oent—unless you would aall " purple" and "amokertack " a good rhyme. California wheat in the straw six feet in length, com ten or twelve feet, and several species of oactns thirty feet in height, will be sent to the Centennial. Mustard stalks eighteen feet high will not be exhibited. " Minnie has been to see me to dar," said a little fire-year-old, " and she be haved like a little lady." " I hope you did. too," said her mother. " Yea, in deed. I did: I turned aomeraaults for her on my bed.** Emerson advisee unknown poets to publish their verses, if they most fc-e their work in print, in the poet's corner of the county newspaper. The county newspaper will hare something to say about that, Mr. E. A foot of water astUed in a cellar, ai d in the evening when the man of the hotwe went down in the dark after a pen of apples, without his books on, be said thing" which we would not prist for seventeen dollar*. A horse balked and resisted all efforts to more him until an insurance agent came along and began to talk tc htm, when be started and went off with the anthuriasni at a man est his way to the funeral of a rich aunt An old Hootch lady gave ft painted re ply to minuter wLo Imcv he had of fended her, end expressed surprise thai the should oome to regularly to hear him preach. She said: "My quarrels wi' you, man. It's not wi" U* gospeL " At the eighteenth annual meeting oi the grand lodge of Good Templars of M u held it Worcester. ft membership of 13,139 in 139 lodge* waft reported, being • k* during the year i of 1,838 members and eleven lodges. Wishing to pay his friend s compli ment, a gentlemen remarked : " 1 hear you have a very industrious wi'e." " Yea,"* replied the friend, with a melan choly smile, " she's never idle. She's always finding something for me to do." Of the two hundred and nineteen mil lions of dollars of gold and silver annu ally produced, nine-tenths are exported to the East to pay for tea, coffee, sugar, apioes, silk, fan, dywstaffs and other Oriental products; consumed by Europe and America. Hugo Arnot, one day, while panting with asthma, was almost deafened by the noise of a brawling fellow who was nailing oysters below his window. "Tho extravagant raeoal," said Hugo,;"he>w wasted as much breath as would have served me for a month ?" Some of our merchants are reported as yiatieg a specialty of a line of oaii ooce which are remarkably cheap. That's where they make a mistake. If they were only a little higher priced than anything else evenr lady in the land would want some of them. A loaferish young Californian married a servant girl, andafter a day or two de nerted he*. Three months of diasipa tion in Franoisoo killed him; but before his death his mother died, leaving to him, as bar only heir, about #150,000. Thus the girl gets a fortune. Brealhsa there a man wtth soul so dead. Who never to himself hath aaid, I will a family paper take. Belli for my own and children's cake 7 If eoofa there be let him repent And have this paper to him sent. " Elixa," —'d a clergyman to one of his parishioner*, whom he saw with her heir in curling papers, *' if God had de signed your hair to curl He would have curled it for you." "He did, sir, when I was a childl" was the reply; "but He thinks now I am old enough to do it myself." An Englishman has analysed the causes of railroad accidents, and comes to the conclusion that human machinery is responsible for forty-one per cent, of them ; defective signals for twenty eight per cent ; defective roadway for eighteen per cent ; and defective roll ing stock for thirteen per oent A fellow was doubting whether or not he should volunteer to fight. Ono of the flags waving before his eyes, bearing the inscription: "Victory or death," somewhat troubled and diaooursged him. "Victory is a good thing," said he, " but why put it victory or death I Just St it victory or crippled, and I'll go for it!" He groaned in his sleep, and his wife aroee to light the lamp. He beheld a display of striped stockings, and then murmured to himself: "I've got "em sure this time." "Got what!" she in- ? aired. "Got the delirium tremens, 'm seeing animals of all kinds. I've jnst seen a zebra." She turned down the light, and the menagerie was closed. Emily Faithful says: We like unlady like girls. We dislike to hear a chit of ten or eleven praised for being " such a ladylike little girL" We would far rather hear the complaint, " Mary is bo boisterous; she never comes down the stairs, but always down the banisters; she tears about like a mad thing anil is never so happy as when she is after some lark, as she calls it!" The statement is made by the presi dent of a life insurance oom pany that it is a fact that women live loDger in the United States than in any other country. They are less robust and muscular than the women of other nations, but their tenacity of life is strong, and their con stitutions are sufficiently enduring to keep them alive considerably longer than their appearances, as a genera! thing, would warrant.