LirtT Utterance. On# day a low aonght to gain An ttiivw to hia lova ; The tntid was eoy, ami ha in vain To win her anawar atrove. Hevday, how sad' Tie* maid waa shy. And Eluhed but male him no reply. Tie ■ ni • he aleo felt lova'e flam*, TV. o. n!d not tall him ao; Bha oaied not answer " Tea " for aharn*. Nor dramt of ana waring "No So, growing more and mora eonfnaed, Bhe sighed her lipe Us a,n the landing; indeed this, with occasional expeditions to Proaser's for commissariat purposes, formed the staple of his pro fessional occupations. When he first undertook his duties we had started him with a pint bottle of ink, a ream of draft paper, and a gross of ]>ens, and wo had enjoined him to employ all h ; s leisure time in copying precedents. He begun with great via or, and copied abut a page and a half in a large schoolboy har.il the first morning, but he never got any farther. The ream of pap r dwin dled somehow, and the ink disappeared to an extent which even the numerous little black devils, with which Blobbs had embellished his domain, failed to account for, until one morning I detect e.l him in the act of blacking his toots with it, and polishing them with the penwiper. Still, as buys go, Biobba war not a very tad specimen; and as we really had no work for him to do, we were Dot disposed to be extremely angry with him for not doing it. Fortunately, Armitage and myself were both to a considerable extent indie pendent of our profession, for, to all ap pearance, our profession was quite iude pendent of us. We hail been called, &,* I have mentioned, very nearly a year, and i.either of us hail ytt lieen favored with a brief; nor did there appear to be any particular likelihood that we ever should. We hail a friend, Charley Larcoiabe, who hail recently been arti eled to a solicitor, and who had prom sed that when he was out of his arti eiea (which would be in about four years) and had passed his examination (which might be forty) he would "give us a lift" This rath-r vague prospfnrt really appeared t> be ouroulychai.ee; but with the natyrai sauguiueness of youth we still looked for briefs, though we had not the faintest notion where they were to come from. In truth, in the very early days of our professional career (when we hid only b en banisters for]a week or two) we used to watch with anxious solicitude any person of legal aspect who was seen to cross the court in the direction of our utairivuv ; but we found that the person of legal aspect invar'b!v stopped short at tie chambers of Cocksure, Q. C., which were immediately below ours, and the approach of a tr itiger had now ceased to excite more than a casual luterest. Our personal habits, too, hail degener ated. At the outset of our career we had unanimously agreed that ev< ry thing of an unprof< seioual character in our belongings should lie rigidly talioo ed. In particular we had decided that our breakfast should always lie over snd its remains cleared away before nine A. M , and that smoking should not on any account be permitted in the room des tined for the reception of clients. In accordance with these virtuous resolves, we were (or I should rather say we hail been) always to be found by half-past nine, each seated in the rigidest of arm chairs, wearing the blackest of frock coats and the stillest of shirt collars, at tentively perusing ponderous law Fjooks, and making copious notes with the as sistance of a gigantic pewter instaud, jiolished to a positively dazzling bright ness. But this halcyon state of affairs was too good to last. We had screwed up our virtuous resolves to too extreme a tension, and they had gradually sunk down again. Who was the first to give way is a mooted jioint. My own idea is that all would have gone well bad not Armitage insidincdy suggested our al- Ey ourselves just, one cigarette after f ist; while he will have it that the lid of the wedge was iutroduoed r surreptitiously reading an occa- F/vuch novel under cover of kon Littleton." However this oe, we bad speedily fallen away rar original high standard, having been troubled with that KHED. KURTZ, Kditor and 1 V* M tki.t. VOLUME IX. frantic rush of eUi>ot which wo nad origtnally Miwlud, wo had become muoh loss part icular in our habits. Tho larg. law Ihki k wort" loft unopened, th* hour of bmtkfost hail become gradu all* lator, ami abort aud twer." I must say that Arm:tape's behavior did him ortVht. My landing the tirst prize must naturally have l>eeu a disap poiutment to him ; but in the most mag nantmous way he exclaimed : "Good for you, old man ! Go in and win. I'll hook it into the next room and leave the coast clear for you." And he bolted accordingly into his bedroom. 1 would have given much to have been able to assume a more digui tied attire, ami to straighten things gen orally, before the entrance of my client, but it was out of the question. 1 had only jus! time to pitch the end of my cigar in the tire, open one of the big law books (upside down, as I afterward dis covered), and to compose my features into the most professional expression compatible with a flannel jacket and carpet slippers, when the visitor en tered. He was a snort, puffy little man, middle aged, and of a good uaturedly uuintellectual cast of couuteuance. He wore a shabby white hat and greasy black gloves, and his trousers were shorter and his umbrella fatter than is genera ly considered desirable in those articles; but, notwithstanding, there was an air of snug respectability aliout him, and the bundle of {rds the stale of the case. The party I rep resent is a Mrs. Podgers, and I think you'll agree with me that she has been very badly used. The fact is, she was j the daughter of an old fellow named Glubb, in the oil and color trade, a man reputed to be worth a mint of money. When she married Podgers, j who was a pork butcher iu a small way of business, Podgers naturally wanted to kuow what the old man would do for them. A little ready money wonld have l>een very acceptable, and as they knew that Hunan (that's Mrs. Podger's) was the only daughter, and would come in for all the old mau's money a' bis death, they didn't see why he shouldn't give 'em a little at once, on account like. But old Glubb wasn't to be had in that way. • No,' be says, 'if you marry Susan, when I die you'll have all I've got, which may be ten thousand or it may lie twenty; but I'm not agoing to undress before I go to bed, as the say ing is !' So npon that, and quite relying that the old man would keep his word, Podgers goes ami marries. They all kn<*w the old man couldn't last very long, no on the strength of bis expecta tions Podgers puts iu a new shop win dow and starts a pony trap. Trade was balaad Podgers found himself outrun ning the constable a bit; but he didn't iniud, feeling sure it would le all right when the old man went off the liookH." \ I le-gari to see my wa . Podgers ha I married on the strength of the old g n tleman's promise, and the old gentle man hal subsequently charged his mind. Here was an opportunity of im preasing Mr. Ward with my legal acu men. " Exen°e my interrupting yon one moment, Mr. Ward," and 1 rung the bell. Bloblw entered. " Blobbs, give me Cbitty on Contracts,' and theu go and ask Mr. Cocksure's clerk to oblige me with the loan of the sixth volume of ' Meeeon and Welsh*.' I think 1 can give you a case just in point, Mr. Ward." Blobbs handed me " Olutly on Contracts," which in point of fact was on the mantelpiece immediately la-hind me, and departed to execute the re maiuder of my order. I referred to the ind x, murmuring audibly: "Con sideration—good—valuable—marriage— page 18. Then turned to the passage and silent]* perused it with mnch atteu- I tion. " An, yes, I thought sol" Blobbs here returned with the lwr rowed volume, in which, with an air of deep reflection, I turned to an iroag ; inary anthority. " No, that won't do. I had forgotten for the moment that that case was overruled by Jones vs. Robinson. Pray proceed, Mr. Ward." Mr. Ward had more than once at tempted to qoutinue his story, but, with a gentle wave of the hand. I had ~our t? ously yet firmly dcprecat* d interrup tion. He resunit <1 apologetically ; "I'm afraid I'm giving you a deal of trouble, Mr. Browne." " Not at all, Mr. Ward, I aaaore you. I always like to maks sure, from the THE CENTRE REPORTER. out** t, as to tho briad principles appli table." " Quite st>, ir; very true. Hut lam afraid there is a little misunderstand ing." " I think not. 1 have followed you with great attention. A married IPs daughter C on tho faith of u under taking by H that he will, on his death, leave C the whole of his property; B (that's tilubb. you know) dies, ami he doce not leave tho properly to 0 (that's Mrs. P odger-), but to aomotiody else. Isn't that your easel" And 1 loaned bunk iu my chair and eyed him witua deny that if you "Mil sort of expression. "Just exactly so, sir. If you'd been one of tho family yourself you couldn't have got it more pat. They all went oil as comfortable as possible till one Sun day the old gentleman dined with the Hodgerses, ami he found a caterpillar m the vegetables, lie would have it they did it on purpose, lie went home at once, tore up his will and made anoth er, leaving every penny of his money to the asylum for incurable clearstarchers. The excitement brought on an apopleo tio fit, and he died the very same night. Personalty sworn under £25.000; and Podgers all but iu the 1 iwgun to fear that the case would prove to be a Chancery matter, and that my share in it would be limited to giv ing Mr. Ward an elab>rate opinion to that effect. But it clearly would uot do to make any suggestion of the kiud at the present stage of the proceedings. "Ah, just as I thought, vou see." ± tried to look as if I had anticipated every detail of the case, even to the cat erpillar. " Well, now the quetion is, what evident"*" have we, first of a dis tinct agreement on the part of It (other wise tilnbb) to leave all his property to his daughter, and, secondly, that A (otherwise Podgers) marri d on the laith of that promise. You hear what C'hitty says: ' A valuable consideration is such as money, marriage, or the like, which the law esteem* an equivalent given for the grant, and is therefore founded on motives of justice.' T hat's the law; but how about the facts. Mere assertion won't do, you know; we must have evidence. " Well, as to the evidence I'm afraid there isn't much in a legal sense. Mr. Cocksure has advised upon the case, and he says that we haven't any evidence; in fact, that we haven't a leg to stand upon." It was flittering and at the same time a little alarming to he consulted iu a case in which Mr. Cocksure had already expressed ail adverse opinion. If Mr. Cocksure was timid I had better be at least cautious. " You will have np-hiil work before you, I'mafraul,an 11 should recommend you, Mr. Ward, as a man of buniuees (that is, of course, l**tween ourselves) to see your way very clear as to your costs out of jxieket. The incurable clearstarebers will tight hard, sir, you may depend on it." "Oh, dear, yes, sir; no donbt they would. But we've quite made up our munis not to go to 'aw ab >ut the mut ter. It would only be throwing good tuouey after bad; lea-tway* it would if we had any to throw; but wo haven't. Podgers ran iway to America last Mr wife and five young children are this moment living in a two pair tack m Camden Town, sustaining i miserable existence on the scanty r< mains of the stock in trade." A horrible migi*iug crowed my mind, ul I shut up t'hitty. '' 1 thought 1 meantosay I supposed 1 re-iily don't quite see, then, IU what - 1 . M'J :• • s.-rvic •ii th • e.l-*-, Mr. Ward." " Well, you *ss, Mr. W.ggins told rae as you was *n uucoium u kind hearted gt-utl- b J 1 made bold to call and sk if yon woul lu'tput ilown your name for a trtle for the widow ami orphans— not that Mrs. P. is precisely a widow, nor yet the children exactly orphans, but rather worse if anything, in my • •pinion, and another CXIMKUHI almost immediately, Kir." I wi< fairly caught. Not f"r world* would I have let Mr. Ward know that I had been tailoring under a tuimtpprr henmon, and had leeu meutali v wel coming hirn at mv first client. On the other band, after the extreme interest 1 Usui exhibited in the case, I could not do less than give him a handsome dona tion. Hmiiicg amiably, but inwardly breathing the most awful imprecations against Wiggins (and very nearly vow ing. on the spur of the moment, never t > have my hair ent again as loug as I lived), 1 ixnrt sed my extreme gratifies ;ion at having the opportunity of con tributing a sovert igti to the ii>oeeities of the Podgers family. Mr. Ward •itemed with delight, and pressed on my acceptance his card, assuring mo that, if I should at auy time require anything in 1 is line, it wonli l*e his most earm-st endeavor—these words, l y the way, be apparently spelt with ou h—to give me satisfaction. He insisted on shaking bauds at parting, and appeared to find considerable difficulty in tearing him self away. At last, however, he de parted, leaving me still holding his card. My one absorbing thought as soon as F could think at all was how on earth to conceal the facts from Arruitngo—what possible fiction to invent which should save my dignity from the exposure of the horrible truth. What dreadful false hood I might ultimately havo given birth to I cannot say, for I was saved from the ordeal by hearing a burst, or rnther a succession of burnt*, of frantic Uu.-Liter from the room to which Armi t.igc ha1 -pinion. Oh, dear, my poor rides ! Win n shall we have the dinner, eh, old man'' "Come, Frank,'" I Raid, addressing him more in sorrow than in soger, "don't add insnlt to injury. You're had the door ajar, you scoundrel ; HO J needn't tell you any particulars. lint at any rate promise to ki-ep my secret." "That I'll !• hanged if 1 do, old boy; the joke is a great deal too good to keep to myself. How about ' Chittv on Con tracts' and *6 Meesou and Wolby I' Oh, yoti old impostor ! I'll bo hanged if I don't tell the Rtory to every fellow I meet." Ho, for fear that fho facts phonld l>e misrepresented—l hate misrepresenta tion—l determined to tell it myself. Tout: It on the Hal her. A sea captain of jocose humor, in a seacoast town, met an acquaintance the other day who was rather noted for not very cleanly habits in person. "Well," said the latter," "I have just been in bathing." " You don't say so ! Iluthii.g, do you say?" asked the other. " And where did yon go t" " Ob, down to tbo beach." "I am afraid, then, some of onr ves sels or boats will run fonl of a new bank formed there of which they never heard before." In 1852 the English Parliament voted for education, art and science an p- Kopristion of 82 853,810. This >< ar c amount was 818,890,198. * * CENTRE IIA EE, CENTRE CO., PA.. THURSDAY, ISKITKMBKK fifT I^(s. Fearful Iccldcnl—The Uejeetrd UH patch. AKutt this timo the circus agr-ut bursts into the county newspaper office timl says, breathlessly; " You tho rxtitor f" " I am, sir." " Oorre*poudeut for some of tho mo trupolituu pr> ? ' " Y"s, sir," " I've got the biggest itcuoation you •v*r saw, and 1 want you to send it off by special to all the big pajx>rs." The editor get* out hi* pencil ami u quire of priutiug pajx*r, and ay: "Pile in." The circu* agent saya: " Put down that H tow hard s (iigantio Mammoth tlolden Megalothasallurian Circus it's a big tiling, I tell you, and i am agent; Burmim's is a sideshow to it, and Lout would have to burst up and go home on fixit only our old man lent him inouoy— have you got that down f" " 1 have." " Well, add that we have lxx*u tenting up in the Northwest and tx*eu coining j money everywhere, while all the little one-horse concerns that g fremi its living tomb were frantic, and the look of dumb, almost human, agony in it* large, lustrous black eye*, moved the sternest advance agent to tears.' l " l>ear me!" "Then th* royal Bengal tiger, the Humatrau lion, and the big horned rhi mxx-roa got into a three cornered fight, and the way in which the air was full of howls, and dust, and blood, big chunks of meat like sirloin steaks a whizzing round—it mak< s me shudder to think of it." " It mud have Ixxm terrible." " Terrible ain't no word for it. Theti the Chiaspian gigantic orang outaug and the blue foctxi gorill* came up with clubs formed of saplings sixteen feet loug, and a* big r<>uud as your log, and sailed in like policemen into u primary mtx'tmg, ami iu - 14 y they hud flattened out them tigers, ami lloua, aud rhiuoc t-nees, till there wrosn't one of them dared say his soul WHS hi* own." " Wonderful! wonderful! ' "You're just talking. Then the phnut, Mereutio, turne! wild with fear ami rage, ami trumpeting like u thunder storm, rati into a fold where farmer had a flock of lOO.tHK) merino sheep, and such mtitt a jiggling I never -uw in nn life. Ha'd just yank up a sheep with ! hi* trunk, and give him a j-rk, aml z-.p! that sliep would go shooting through th> air, and come down fiat as a pancake *ix huudrcd or s> veu hundred yard* off. It wis jn*t old chain light nit g, and it would have made y ur eye* out to sax- it. Why, once h<- had seventeen sin* p in the air at once." *• How many lives tost I" " None, thank Heaven. We !way* have ast-am fire engiue filled with chloroform on the train with us, and a - x>n a* we could get it out ami g-1 steam up we begun pi.tying ou then), ttud. of course, wtn n tiny wirestu) - fled, it was the cm-ieet tli-ng in the worn to catch them ami put them bu k in th. ** "I understand; but how atant that jxror giraffe I" "Oh, wc gave the anaconda a barrel of emetic*, and the giraff came up kit ing, hut the a -tiou of the anaconda's ga-t-ic jiii(X ha* taken all the color of of hi* hindquarters and balf-melted ofl lii* h'Xf." " How wonderful are the works of nature !" " You tat. Now sock it to them red hot and lively, and I'll ante up ail the ticket* to the show you want." Th cxlitor doe* ao, ami goes to bed to dream that be ia an anaconda trying to swallow a long necked circus, marked " special complimentary," w hen he is wakened by the telegraph lxy, who brings biro the followiug: * " Your special about circus accident refused, l'lease pay bearer (£3 14." The I'rcddcnt* of the United States. The following table may prove useful for reference as showing the political sentiment* and th* club" of inauguration of each President, the lengtli of tune he lived aflor that event, arid his age at the time of his death : 1. George Washington, Federalist, inaugurated 1789, lived ten years, age sixty-eight. 2. John Adam*, Federalist, inaugu rated 1797, lived twenty nine yearr, age ninety. 3. Thoma* Jefferson, Democrat, inau gurated 1801, lived tweuty five years, age eighty-three. 4. J * roes Madison, Democrat, inau gurated 1809, lived twenty-seven years, aged fifty-eight. 5. James Monroe, Democrat, inau gurated 1817, lived fourteen years, age seventy three. 6. John Q. Adams, Whig, inaugurated 1826, lived twenty-three years, ago eighty-one. 7. Andrew Jackson, Democrat, inau gurated 1829, lived sixteen years, age seventy-eight. 8. Martin Van Huron, Democrat, in augurated 1837, lived twenty five years, age eighty. 9. W. H. Harrison. Whig, inaugu rated 1811, lived one mouth, age sixty eight. 10. John Tyler, Vioe-Pro*id nt. In dependent, inaugurated 1841, lived twenty-one years, age seventy two. 11. James K. Polk, Democrat, in augurated 1815, lived four years, age tilt v-tonr. 12. Zacliary Taylor, Whig, inaugu rated 1849, lived sixteen months, ago sixty six. IH. Millard Fillmore. Vice-President, Whig, inaugurated 18.0, lived twenty four years, age seventy-four. 14. Fraukltu Pierce, Democrat, in augurated 1853, lived sixteen yraus, age sixty-five. 15. James Buchanan, Democrat, iu iiugurated 1857, lived eleven years, age seventy-PCTCn. lfi. Abraham Lincoln, Republican, in nugurab'd 1861, lived four years and one and a lmlf months, age fifty six. 17. Andrew Johnson, Vice-President, Independent, inaugurated 1865, lived ten years, age sixty seven. U. H. (hant, Republican, inaugurated 1869. Tyler was elected Vice President as a Whig, ami Johnson as a Republican. Their "Independence" followed their inauguration as Presidents. HITTING BOIX.—In our fight on the Rosebud, says a soldier writing home, we oouid see Hitting Bull stauihng on a high poiut, ont of gun-shot, directing the movement* of his warriors with a small looking glass. It was noticed that wherever he throw a reflection with the glass, there the ImlUai would iuatoutly oUnrgA iu for##. St'HPENDEH ANIMATION. A r. 18.U.81. M IH'MKMI ULE • b ( k.t1.1 lb. NUIW. A journal called the lx>* Augeloa .VStar rer.lt*J the following mordent *i the tuue it occurred : A gentlemau iu the city had a very Urge Mini Uwutiful torn oat, which he had reared iroiu U kitten. It WAX now five year* old, and the two auiwaU were mutually attached. Every morning, when tiie Mirvitut brought tu the water lor hia master's tub. puna used to couie in and bit at the aide of the tied, aud guse with admiration at his employer, and sometime* iaew him out; hut re tired iuto a corner during the tubbing, which he thought irrational, and came out agutu when the biped wan clothed ami tu hia right miud. Oue day the cat was seen in the gar den tumbling over and over in strong j convulsions, which ended in it crawling ; feebly into the house. The master j heai d. and was very sorry, and searched for the invalid, but ouuld uot tlud him. However, wheu ho went up to bed at , night, there was the poor creature ; stretched upon the floor at the side of i the btxl. the very place where he used i to sit and gaze at his master, and mew him out of btxl. The gentleman was affected to tears by the affectionate creature's death, aud his coining there to die. He threw a handkerchief over jxair torn, and passed a downright unhappy night, lie de terurim-d, li iwever, to bury his humble friend ; and no tuue was to be lost, the weather tx-iug hot. Ho, when the servant came IU to till his tub, lie ordered a lit tie grave dug directly, and a box to ta { .... i of u suitable MXo to receive the 1 remains. Then he got up; and, instead of tub 1 lung, as usual, he thought he would ; wash poor loin's Ixxty for interment, for it was all stained and dirty with the inold of the garden. He took the body up, aud dropped it into the waU r witL a souse. That sous.* was soon followed by a fu rious splashing, that sent the water fly lug in his face aud all about the room, and away tlew the cat through the open window, us though |>ossos.se.i by a devil. .Sordid the poor body forgive tl.s by dropathic treatment. although sueoees ful. He took a perverse view, an ! hod never returned to the house "up to the time of our going to press," says the le* Augelos Star. The cat is not the only animal subject to suspension of vital |xiwcr. Many men and women have Ix-eu buried alive in this condition, es|*cially on tlie con tiheut, when* the law enforces sjxxxiy int-rtneiil. Even in Itritam—where they do not shovel one into the earth quite as fast—live persona have been boned, and others have had a narrow cecal*. 1 could give a volume of instances at home and abroad. One of them an arch bishop, who was actually being curried iu funeral procession on an open bier, w hen he came to, and objected —in what terms I k* ow uot; but the Scqfcb have an excellent formula in similar It runs thus ; " ltnle ye yet, inon; i hue a deal uiair mischief to do tirrrst!" Two nxvt.t English case 1 could cer tify to lx* true-one, n little girl at Nun* utou, who lay several days without -igi.s of life; another, a young lady, not known t-> the public, but tome. She was dead, in mediciin ; but ber mother refused to let her lx buried, b.waiuso there was no sign of deoumposition, and she di I not g< t so d adly cold as others tia 1 whom that uiotlur hn.i hst by death. This girl rcnia; 'd uuburied mmi* 1 ays, till is . t ii r is eixrt. At the npeniug of the century the public facilities for anatomy were less than now. Ho then robbing the church yards was quite a trade; and an egotist or two tiid worse; they kilhxl people for the small sum a dead body brought. Well, a male lxxly was brought to a certain surgeon by a man he had often employed, and the pair lumped it down on the di sii*ti?;g tilde, and then the vender received his money and went. The anatomist set to work to oper the body; but, in handling it, he fancii d the limbs were not so rigid as usual, and he took another look. Yes, the man was dead; no pulsation, either, Aud yet somehow he was not quite cold about the region of the heart. The surgeon doubted. He was ahu nnuie man; and so, instead of making a line transverse cut, like that at which the unfortunate author of " Manon I*w eaut" started out of his trance with a shriek, to die in right earnest, he gave the poor body a chance; applied harts horn, vinegar aud friction, all without success. Still he had his doubts; though, to Is* frauk, I am not clear why he still doubted. lie that a it may, he called in hia as sistatit, and they took the laxly into the yard, turned a high trip on, aud dis charged a small but linrd hitting column of water on the patient. N effect was produced but this— which an unscientific eye might have parsed over—the skiu turned slightly pink in one or two places, under the fall of water. The surgeon thought this a strong proof life was not extiuct; bnt, uot to overdue it, he wrapped the man in blankets for a time, aud then drenched hint ngain, lotting the water strike him bard on the head and heart in particular. He followed this treatment up, till at last the man's eyes winked, and then he gasped, and presently he gulped, aud by and bve he groaned, and eventually uttered loud aud fearful eric, as oue battling with d> ath. In a word, lie came to, and the sur gixm put liiiu intixa warm bed, and, sn medicine has it< rfcliion*, and bleeding was the panaccn of that day, lie actually took bloo 1 from the poor body. Tliia ought to have sent him back to the place from whence he imiue—the grave, to wit; but somehow it did uot; and next day the revivor allowed him with pride to sewnd visitors; and prepared an article. llivmrrectna was well fed, and, being u pauper, was agreeable to lie iu that bed forever, and eat the bread of science. Hut, as years rolled on, bis preserver got tired of that. However, ho had to give him a suit of hia own ! clothes to get riil of him. Did I say years ? I must have meant days. He never did get rid of him; the fel ! low ns d to call at intervals, and demand ; charity, urging that the surgeon had taken him out of n condition in which he felt neither hunger, thirst nor misery, aud so was now bound to supply his natural needs. However, I will not dwell on thinpain fnl part of the picture, leaf learned and foreseeing men should, from the date of reading this article, confine reanscita tion to quadrupeds. To conclude with the medical view. To riwuseitato animals who teem dead, but are secretly alive, drop them iuto water from —or else drop water on thom from—a sufQciuut height. I'etcr Cooper'* Early Hay*. A gentleman who has ku *wu the vu* erabl Peter Cooper, a candidate for the presidency of the United State* tver niuoo he came V. .1 k oily IU .1 i" ■!/ IJlZaut of Ills busiues* reverses tlgd S U* censes, said a few days ago in cn tirely to the roult of this inquiry. The fact.*- printed, the Herald say S, come as s revelation not ao much of the official and jf reoual corruption which underlies public life at Washington as of the ao ciol auilntion* and jaalouiea which form ao strong an element in Washington ao riety. In reviewing these revelations, we would not n*k unkindly of or deal har.dxly with the vc man to whoa hand them anonyms were traced. At the hot t< m there was truth, probably, in most of tfie cliargcs, and a vast outlook of ootijo litre is opened up by the mere -uggestiou of a cause for a course so re markahle in a woman ao distinguished. There is till a mystery behind it all, the nnrav. ling of which would prob biy IH gin with cirtun newx]fl|x r c me |x indent. These oorresjxn.i*ut* (female*) have Ixx-n trying to teach tin "official lmlie*" at Washington that tin y ought to bo something more than gtxxl wives and mother*. In a citv of Ix.ardiug lMMdtreaa ; ury ch rk* they have been trying U. set ' up law* of mx-ial preotxieucx*, atul witliiu a few y. :ir* there have lx*en " first lailuvi " and "second ladies," "diplo matic la.lns" aud "cabinet ladies" tn Washington wK*iety. The puffery has I Ixx'u dutguating, and many events of late have shown the results of the puf f.*ry and rivalry to have been disastrous. Mr*. Belknap and Mr*. Williams might Lave lxx*n rival* in the I vail room and at receptions without much liarm, but both aspired to lead and each tried to crash the other. In these rivalries Mr*. Wil liam* vw detected, or *n*|>ected in cer tain acts, and in consequeuoe the at torney general loxf hi* place in Uie cabi net. In her efforts to Rhine in a place where moilestv wo* her tx**t rcommen dation, Mrr. Hclkuap hxl ber husband into a jx>r*ib nt arid ayatemntic accept ance of bnlxv*, and hi* downfall i* her *hame al*o. In all thi* social rivalry and tomfixilery—these effort* to l>e first ladies in society aud to get cuff* in the newspajx r* there can bo only shame at last, aud how terrible is the disgrace I which is sure to follow ! Truthful and Obedient. " Charley ! Charley 1" Char and sweet the voice rang out over the common. • Tint's mother," cried one of the j boys, instantly throwing down hi* bat and ;y ought to belied; and in 1 : r. hard knot, too." 1 I •' Bnt I wouldn't be such a baby us to run the minute she called," said 1 one. 'I "I don't call it babyish to keep one'* ' word," said the obedient boy, n lx*anti ful light glowing itt hi* blue eye*. " I call it niiiuiy for a fellow to keep his • word to hia mother; and if he dg>sn't keep hia word to her, yon see if he keeps > j it to any one else." Hon't Ho. A correspondent of the I'ittsfield (III.) i | Old Flat], writing from Dead wood, it - the Black Hilln, says: Wages for com mon lalxir are from four to five dollars per day, bnt a great many are complain I | ing that they can't get work. I would 1 uot advise any man to come to the Ililla i this fall, as there will not lie any great , amount of work going on this winter ; i bnt I would advise them that are doing well to stay whero they are, for a man - will have to travel further than I have 1 to find a better plaon than old Pike, tak [ ing everything into consideration ; but ■ still, this is a great deal tatter conn try to make money in than I expected to find it. To them that have money and , leisure I would *ay, thi* is the place to > spend the summer and breathe the pure i air, and driik the clear, cold watr, and ehaaa the rad daar over th* hills. : a Year, in Advance. A PI K1 LOI N FOMITIOR. r*Mtaa lk I'm Klver ea a W ire T llaad.vd wad KWHlldll feet tram iSr U Kter. Tho maii ilariug enough to tie the first to cross tho East river on the Wire Stretched from New York to Brooklyn, says the .Sun, Eiiwiu F. Farriugtou. Ho in a waiter tnechauic, and, it is said, has no peer iu Uio putting together of tho wiro work of *upcu*iou bridges He gained a reputation at Niagara aud Cincinnati in thoooustruction of hridgon. Ho is about fifty ytmra of age, and i* as brave m a lion. The working rope is endleaa, reaching from pier to pier, and is 6, WW feet in length. It is the longest Mingle belt oon noctiug machinery in the world. A " boatswain's chair," not unlike an ordi nary liUlo awing usetl by children, was attached to the wire. The board seat is about two feet long and eight inches wide, and the ropes were lees than four feet long and joined close together around the wire at the top. Mr. Parnngton wore tight fitting buckakui gloves, aud wheu lie took hia seat his grin on the cable was firm. Then he folded Ins arms around the ropes, and the red flags on the Brooklyn and New York towers were waved, and the wire U-gan again to re solve. A gun was flr.-d on the New York side and Mr. Fornugton waa on his perilous ride to the Brooklyn tower from the anchorage. The people in the streets and ou the housetop*, near the Pulton ferry, luathy cheered, and Mr. Farriugtou swung Lis hat aud waved kisses to the lad lea. He took his watch and noted the time. Five minutes after ward he approached the tower. T hen he waa standing in his seat. This, Mr. Martin, who was superintending the en gine, explained, was the only point at tended with peril, and he felt some anx iety about the working of the engine, for, in case it went too rapid, the chair might be dragged over the pulleys aud ita uocupant thrown out. He watched the signal ' anxiously, and when he learned that the chair was within ten feet of the tower he stopped the engine. Then he ordered it to work very alowly, and to atop again as the chair touched the tower. Hia caution led to a moat perfect result. Mr. Farriugton was touching the granite pier when the engine *top|ed. Ho was pale, and ui* hps quivered. He held tight to the cable, baring work meu reached for him, and he was drawn upon the pier. He trembled somewhat, but said that he was not nervous. He shook hands and spoke to the bystand ers, one of whom encouragingly said : " Well, old boy, you carry your life in your Laia i iu crumiiiig thjtf nm. I wouldn't make that trip for a million dollars." The little wmg or boatswain's chair wa* made fast to the cable on the river side of the pier. Mr. Partington said that he was ready to start. He stroked hi* short gray beard, and looked curiously at those about him, and then with rciU hravorv and much nimbi an—* he swung over the side of the tower and clutched the ropes of the cluur. He waved hi* hauiL The spectators cheered, the rod flag* were held aloft, and the journey across the river was tagun. All the ferryboats, tugboat*, and stoam< rs iu the river set up a screech ing. Every pilot seemed nimultaiieous lv to have seen Mr. Farrington cm the wire. Home of the ferryboats were stopjxvl in the middle of the river, and the ladies on the boats, on the piers, and on the housetops frantically shook their handkerchiefs. Men aud boys shouted and swung their hat*, and Mr. Farrington, seemingly enjoying hia ride, held hi* handkerchief to the bioeze. When near the center of the crossing be clapped hi* hands, and e-m*d immense ly j leased. While roaring the New \ <>rk pier the wire aa* tan', so that the trip wa* almost [•er;x*ndicular, and Mr. Farrington itood in his seat, .and was U it safely carried to the top, and "the fl. t man wlio crossed fie great bridge w.i* greeted with terrific cheer*. The trip from pier to pier wa* made in *ix minute* aud forty-flv* seconds. The ride from the New York pier to the anchorage was aoompUahed in four min ure*. Mr. Farrington said be had a de lightful ride. Many per*uns applied at the bridge company's office for permis sion to cross in the same chair used by Mr. Farrington. His trip was merely to wtisfy the public that the win* is se cure. Ho was the first to cross the Cin cinnati bridge and also the Niagara one. This is the only unbusiuess venture in the work of the bridge, and the other Irij * are to ta ma do for useful purposes. A new working rope is to ta lashed to the npjx>r cable and pulled across, as wa* the boatswain'* cbait. After it is stretched from anchorage to anchorage, two buggies, one from New Y'ork, the other from the Bnxklyn tower, are to ta started down the rope to the anchor ages Each will descend by its own w. ight, and as it goes tho workmen in side of it will cut the lashings, thus free ing the workiug wire. This done, the bugoie* arc to ta returned to the two towers, and adjusted to the cables in the same way. Tbcy will descend to the middle of the stream, from opposite di rections, by their own weight, and the la*hings will ta cut a* they go. They will meet in the center of the nrer—it is hoped without a violent collision, as there will ta nothing to re strain them in their course. The men iu the buggies arc to lash them together, and then tie them firmly to the endless cable. They are then to swing the new wire free, and are to ta pulled to the Brooklyn tower by working the endless rope. Who he Found. The Chicago Tribune ha* intercepted s letter sent by Stanley in Africa to the Herald . describing a great battle ta twoeu himself and 25,000 natives. He ssya: " I have previously mentioned in my letters that reports were currant among the Wsgandn that Gammonbauia gara was occupied by race of white negroes. Having this in mind, I watched intently during the battle for some of these strange people. Discern ing a tall, fleshy, white faced man, who seemed leader of hi* fellows, miugling iu the thick of tho fray, I captured him. After the battle, remembering the cap tive, 1 hastened to hi.*u, wishing to learu something of the strange pheuomenon— n whito black. Upon coming into hia presellco, 1 looked intently at him, when suddenly a thought flashed through my brniu, my feelings overcame me. I thought: Ha* fortune reserved forme this crowning feather in the cap of dis CO very f I advanced, a thousand emo tions swelling iu my bosom, lhe cap tive arose. 1 said: ' This is . * I am,' said the s.vmiug apparition. It was Boss Tweed." A Solid Dinner. Home of the hotels have bills of fare with the fly-leaf covered with cards of various business houses. An Oregon man recently took a scat behind one of them, when a waiter appeared with "What will you have, sir?" To the utter confusion of the waiter, he leisure ly remarked: " Yon may fetch me a new wt of tooth, in gotta peroha; an im orovod sewing machine, with patent I, **k ftitch, a tax of Brandreth s pills, a „ d a pair of number seven French ealf „k, n taote." fn a moment the waiter replied; "Wc haven't got any of the "Then what have you got them on the bill f fare forf" retorted the etut ymav NUMBER 38. LIFE OX THE PLUM. .Vtaalaea el a Traveler la tbe WeMara Or*rl—A TraiHe lertdeet. AM for me, MAYA a correspondent of the World, crossing the plain*, I hk to get out on tbe platform, late at night, when the mooti i* ehedding her radi auo over the awful, desolate, yet beau Uful ms 'lie, and think the thought* aud recall the legend* which are appropriate to it. Onoe in a while tbe tract* of an old trail appear. llow many a white mat), how many a white woman croaeed tbi* dreary country long year* ago, never to return to or even to hear from home and frirnda again I How many night* were panned by plonecra here I How many tragedian, aa gloomy aa that do acrihed by Cooper in "The Prairie," have been enacted in these aotitudea, unknown to Eastern men and Eastern law ! What epiaodra of teuderneaa and honor, of grief and plea* ore, have aUrrod the heart* of thoaewbo perished, or who have ainoe triumphed in the great struggle upon the Pari Ac ouaat f Looking out toward the pale bluff* that aerrale the aootharn boriaoo, the apae tera of wagon train* ariae, and voice* from midnight ramus. Distant Area flicker. The coyote a cry—the " wotf muaic " whose only grace was that while it lusted it aaaurod the abaenoeof hostile Indians-—offends tbe listening car. Tb coyutm were the natural watch dug* of the white man's oivouac. Sfam ago, before the railroad or tbe overland stage route, or even tbe over land pony express M thought of, a soli tary lamiiy of seven persons, aooom panied by three men, started from Il linois to erase this waste, They bad wagons, mules, provisions and house hold furniture in abundanoe. The family *•* of good origin. Jt consisted of the grandfather, father, mother, three daughters (the eldest, sgod nineteen, being very attractive) and two little muscular sous. Of the three men outside the family two were past their prime. The youugest, the lover of the eldest girl of the party, and by her beloved, war befriended by lur grandfather, her sisters and botii her brothers, enooursged by his elderly male companion*, and oordiaily hated, on account of an hereditary feud, by the girl's father (the chief of the expedition) an l his wife. One night the young man was missed in camp. Bo arbitrary wa* the rale the chief pioneer had established that no allusion WH> made to the circa maUnoe during his silence at the evening meal. Next morning the girl was gone. Btill the father said nothing; nor did the mother make one sign. The rest of tbe i rain were admit and subdued. Toward noon it was noticed that the grandfather, whose affection for tbe absent girl was well known to amount to devotion, had likewise quitted the camp, carrying bis weapons. This discovery was tbe sig nal for tbe pioneer's action. Shoulder ing his rifle he commanded his two sons to stay in camp, and then started off in an eastward direction at a pace that in dicated his perfect knowledge of the whereabouts of the alwenteea. The rest of the story I give as cloeely as I can recollect it in the language of one of the two elderly men who soon left the camp OQ the trail of the departing pioneer; • We didn't like the looks of old Ham 1," said tbe narrator, *'acd so we followed him. It was abont a seven or eight mile stretch, and just afore we come to the place we Itegun to" sort of snspicion where it was. It was a 14uff like. We walked fast, and got around where we could see what was goin" on, afore old Bam'i come np. It seemed that old Sam 1, the second night previ ous, had 'tioed young offn tbe trail around by tins here bluff and shot him ihiougo the ckbt and left Lorn for a goner. The girl had watched which wy they \r at, and when the boy didn't cot tie back next day she skedaddled the next night. So when we got there she'd got him down by tbe brink of a little water hole; and there they both was, eho S'hoMuT hi* bead on her arm and keepin' the sun off his face with her apron. Pretty soon old Sam'l eome along the other side o' tbe btnff. He looked around s second or so, and get his eve on the gal. 1 seen him raise his rifle and p'int it at her, and I raised mine and p'mted it at him. We both fired at the same time, for just as he keeled over I looked, and the girl was a-lying face down, tht across ——'a body. The old granddaddy—he just then ris np 'longside o* ♦he water hole. But I didn't stop to see an* more. Me and my partner both lit oat, and only stopped long enough in camp to git awy with onr blankets and a little grub. I never iiearu of any one o* that fam'ly sence." A China Boy's " COMIBS." A "Chin* boy" hu no end of •' cousins" (sounding the i fts it ftounds in pin). From one to half ft dosen Chinamen will loiter round ft kitchen if tbey dare, ftnd one my feel certain that every Chineee of them is hungry. To be hungry see me, indeed, their normal condition. for they live by scores in their washhouses and other haunts, sab- Mating on the smallest modicum of food, in ordr to save money. When they drop into our kitchens to cftll on ft com rftde, therefore, one may be certain that those bright little sloping eyes are on the alert for forage. We have happened suddenly down stairs and found anoh a visitor in the cJoaet. his hand in the sngar bowl. A neigh hot met another emerging from her pantry, eating pie. When thus confronted, they langh and leave immediately. Not a word is said in aelf-defeuse, and the housekeeper's coueolation ia, that they do not dare to uke any bnt small quantities But it makes housekeeping with them not a state of entire confidence. It is quite a a question whether or not to put tilings under lock and key. If trusted, they aeom to put themselves somewhat upon honor, not to allow, at all events, auy largo amounts to be abstracted. This, aud the fact that no drudgery of locking can really prevent theft, determines most housekeepers, we think, iu l'avor of open closets. Whether this ingrained habit of pilfering is at once eradicated in those who accept Christianity, wo do not kuow; but we have been told by re turned missionaries that they have to settle the same question, with about the same solution. —Scribncr for Septem ber. A Flu In His Bark. The Albany Timet says : On© of the dodges of the innumerable multitude I which is always .-driving to live without j work is thus described by a resident: A j strong, healthy looking man raug the door bell and asked for a few pennies to buy him some bread. They were re- j fused on geueral principles, aaS then the sturdy beggar begun writhing Ml if in misery, and explained that he had pin sticking in his back, which hurt him severely. He would like to go into the house a minute, in order to remove the tioubleaome thing. In the case re ferred to, suspicion was aroused, and the man with a pin in his back was ordered to move on. In others, how ever, the impostor has been allowed to go into a room alone, when he has helped himself to whatever he conld lay his hands on. The trick was qnite common a few years ago, and in one instance the lady of the house, who was alone, was rudely insulted. Our readers will do well to beware of the man with ■ pin in bia back. I> Lm. Lann 0. Redden. or " Bmnrf Olyn dou"—the lady wboae marriage was coupled in the newspaper* with an ao count of her learning to talk after being a deaf mat# nnttl sixteen yearn of age— pnbUahea I Hi* poem. Doubtless it wan written during the honeymoon, for it oontaiua thia renie ; Thar*'* a beautiful country that gleams from ths duteoos, < Kiorading the ecrantry thai MOM looked <*e When bla aad, dying (yss, with palbetnrper aiatenra. From Piogah'a high top eoeght the f* hovicuti. Ti* the land the I <• loved of the iow-leanlag lover ; Tie lb* lend that la loved of the laea he leeiis over; For the eueke never hldM In the eweet aeentad clover And cloud* never darken the bine of the sky In the aweet by and bye I A Woman'* Wit, A g ottoman connected with the press wss in Hi. Louis recently, and con tided to a friend the detail* of an adventure m a lloaton hotel. The story ia brief, but with an immense moral as showing how, in some things, lovely woman will ul way* ooine to the relief of s sister in tiiotrea* to outwit the tyrant man. The journaliat above referred to, stopping at the hotel, a private one where the guests were accustomed to tbe entire freedom of the bouse, felt, one night, the im ; permtive necessity of esting nome frmt [ (a-fore tetiring. It was too late to send out to buy any; be did not want to arouse the servants of the house at ao late an hour, and yet fruit or preserve* or something toothsome of the kind aeenied to him s personal necessity. He knew where the storeroom was, knew thai the door was toft open, and finally resolved to go down quietly and prig -nongh sweetmeats to aatiafy his need. No sooner was the thought ewnoeivea than acted upon, sad, within five min utes, he mas in the storeroom hooking preserves out of a jar aud enjoying him self immensely in satisfying the craving which had come upon him. For a few minutes the enjoyment of the man at the praaervre was complete. Then be was startled by a light, swift atep in tbe hall, there was a whiab and rustle of garments, the door opened sud denly and some one bounded in moth such suddenness as, coming aqqaiely against tbe form of tbe midnight raider, to knock him half way across tbe room and fairly off his feet. Leaping op at once be dosed with his uneonaaoua as* aaitont, to be startled by s subdued shriek and to find that be had raptured a woman! Farther, he discovered that the ladv, who had wanted something to cat as well a* be. was only dad in a night dies*. Still, though trying, the occasion was not one of unmixed hor ror by any means, and in a moment the gentleman's nerve returned and his curi osity roue to fever heat. "Who is this?" he demanded. No answer. " Who is it I" he repeated. " ton 11 not get out of thia until you tell." Still no answer, but a struggle in the dark ness, the lady trying to get away. Again tbe query wa* repeated, with equal lack of response, but this time a rebounding slap in the lace from a hand (hut was doubtless pretty bat which hit With decided force, was the reward of the questioner. He wa* put mi his mettle at onoe. "Ton think you'll get off unknown! We'll see about that!" he exclaimed. "I've a device that'll work, I think." And then, after a titont but determined struggle, he caught a little bit of the lady 's right cheek between bia teeth and bit it—not ao badly as to break the vel vety skin, but sufficiently hard to leave a mark which be knew could nut diaap i war for a day or two. Then he retea*d his unknown* prisoner, and she flew like the wind along the passage, disappear tug in some room impossible to hade in the darkness. Tbe next morning the gentleman with a mvsterv to solve *me down to hruai / ant "early. No ladies had yet appeared, but at his table were one or two inti mate mal- friends, and to them be con fided the story of his adventure in the might, relating also the means he L*d taken to secure the identification of the unknown lady. The most intense curi osity at onoe prevailed at the table, and tbe advent tf tha todies was awaited with an impatience (scarcely to be con trolled. Five miuutee later the door opened aud the belie of the hotel euter * i demurely, glided across the room I and seated here If lor breakfast. Eager crew, followed her, and aa her face was fairly exposed, there was a sensation among the gentlemen. Upon her right cheek was a strip of eoartptoster an inch long! The men exchanged glance* and whispered and smiled. The mystery wis Derived early. But just then another tody entered, this time a dignified matron. As she seated herself there was disclosed upon her right cheek s piece of cocrtplaster identical in apqwaranee with that upon I tbe face of the bsllet Another and an other ladv entered. Upon the right cheek of "every one of them appeared a piece of oourtptoeter. The tab>es filled up and not a tody at ono of them but wore eoartptoster on the right cheek ! And then the gentlemen look ing confidently for a revelation wilted. They comprehended the situation. The tody who had been raptured in the night had confided ber extremity to her friends, and they had come to the res cue, to outwit male humanity. They had succeeded, too. The discomfited men at that particular table knew that Iwnrath one of the many pieces ot oourt plaster in the room were hidden the marks of teeth, but which was the iden tical bit of oourtptoeter they oould not tell And they never learned. Commodore Taoderbiit's Children. Commodoro Vanderbilt has ten living children, two sons and eight daughters, some thirtv odd grandchildren, and half a donen greot-grmidchildron—tine, a son of William H , being ft man grown. The probable shape of the will ia being discussed. It is understood that Wil liam H. Vanderbilt, the elder son, will be well provided for and endowed with a large part of the railroad interests, which his father has managed with such con summate skill. New York is full of gossip concerning the probable provision thmt will be made for the other son, Cornelius J. Vander bilt Those who believe the oemmodore to be a man of stern justice think the second son will be endowed with some important railroad interest while others accept the current rumor that he will lie Classified with the daughters, at*l, like them, receive only a small portion the vast estate. Cornelius is a man of per haps forty. For thirty years of his life, beginning in infancy, he was the victim of an affliction which entirely in i capacitated him for any exertion. Home eight years ago he began to throw it off ! and his constitution lias now acquired uearlv its normal tone. He is tall, about : six feet, ana a slight stoop of the shoul tiers betrays a mark of the disease which ihe has conquered. He lias a thin, high i head, clear blue eyes, facile speech, an j earnest rnanuer, and quick, expressive ! gestures. He dresses with neat plaiu : ness, and looks like a Methodist minister i without ft pariah. A Malay Female, : Li. Maria Child says, in ft letter to the j Woman' Journal : Poity years sgo I : met in a stage mi elderly man, the j thumb of whose right hand hung down as if suspended by a piece of thread, and some of the passengers inquired the ! cause. H -replied : "A Malay woman j cut the tendon villi her saber." "A Malay woman I" they exclaimed. " How came you to lie fighting with a woman f" , " I didn't khow she was a woman, for they all dress alike there," said he. "I i was on board the Potomac when it was [ sent out to chastise tfee Malays lr i murdering the crew of a Salem vessel, i We attacked Quailabattoo, one of their i fortified towns, and killed some two , hundred or more. Many of them were i women, and I ean tell you the Malay women were as good fighters as the fIMKb 99 *