A. • ,•". It , ,••i. , . ~.. • •: ,I. • : . • j,.. '' - . 74 •., . , . . . _ 1 ..i.l.- ••.• . . ... : i- ~ :,...:.: .... :'• -.3 / 4 '•• :?',;,",•_, , • . • : . '.- .. .. . . , ... M. . . ~. .. ... . ~ ... .1.) r . • ~. ; , : ;:. - .='-E.;-'' •': 1 .1; -• 7... ,:-. . • r i - -, -,.-w--- . -_ .. . SAMUEL WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXIX, NUMBER 2.1 PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING Office in Northern Central Railroad Com pany's Building, north-west corner Front and Walnut streets. Terms of Subscription. ov Copy per ttn.u.urnerf not paid months from commeheemeniof the year, 200 No sub4criplion received for n Ic>a time than six months; and no paper will be di-continued omit all s..rrearnes are paid, unless at the option of the pub miter. Money may be remitted by moil attitoPilbash er,s risk. Rates of Advertising. square ( . 2 lines) one week, three weeks, del ear +ulmweuent inSertiOn, 10 " [l2:inesj one week. 50 three week 4, 1 00 elicit eul..equeilt insertion, 25 Largerndvertisententin proportion. A Inherit! tit.count will be .nude to quarterly, ball yearly or yearly.tdverusers,who ure trictl) confined 10 t h eir buttitte.t.• liottii. Dnst and. Ashes Betwixt your home and mint, 0 love, there is a graveyard lying; And every time you came, Your steps were o'er the dead, and from the dying! Vow faze was dark mid sad.— Your eyeri hurl shadows in their very laughter Vet their glance made me glad. And shut my own to what was coming alter. Tour face had deeper eborals Than the ..-EoHan harp when night winds blow; The melancholy music of your words None but myself may know. And oh. you won my lienrt By vows unbreathed.—by words of love unspoken; So that, as now we part, You have no blame to bear, and yet—'tis broken! How shall I bear this blow. how best resent it! Ah, love, you have not left me even my pride! Nor strength to put wide, nor to repent it, Twere better I had died! You came beneath my tent with friendly greeting; Of all my joys you hail the better part; Then, when our eyes auil hands were of tenest meeting You struck me to the heart'. No less a murderer, that your victim, living, Can face the passing world, and Jest and smile! No less a traitor, for your show of giving Your friendship all the whi!c! 'Well, let it pass! The city churchyard, lying, Betwixt our homes, is but a type and sign Of the wasto in your heart, and of the eternal dying Of all sweet hopes in mine! gtirttiDn. Front Household IVords Green-Beard and Slyboots In the popular tales of Lithuania, the most important personages are robbers, who sometimes perfo#t the functions assigned by the inventors of our ordinary fairy tale , to ogres, sometimes are characterized by cunning rather than ferocity. "The mere fact that a person is a robber, does not af fect his moral position in the least, he may conduct himself well or ill in the predatory profession as in any other. A virtuous rob her will facetiously display his shrewdness, a wicked robber can snuff "fresh meat," and delights in' bloodshed even when unac companied by profit. On the authority of Herr August Schlei cher, who has made a collection of Lithua nian tales, or rather judging from the tales themselves, Nye should say, that virtuous as Lithania may be at the present day, it was once inhabited by a people whose notions of property were of the loosest. Nor does the talent displayed by the clever and less san guinary marauders greatly exciti our admi ration; inasmuch as it shines 'less by its own brightness than by contrast with the vast expanse of dullness by which it is sur rounded. Ages ago a little cunning clearly went a great way in Lithuania. That the Lithuanian Tom Thumb was as disreputable as he was minute, might easily be supposed; for the legendary hero of short dimensions has not been remarkable for moral punctiliousness in any quarter of the globe. Like his western counterparti,"the Slavonic manikin sits in the ear of the ox that draws his father's plow, and by shout ing aloud urges the animal to proceed.— Having attracted the notice of a wealthy stranger, who purchases him at an enor mous price, he persuades his new master to put him into the cow house, that lie may guard the. cattle and prevent them from being stolen. At night, while he is seated ;in the ear of one of the oxen, three thieves Arrive, and though they see nothing, they .plainly hear a voice directing them to the ;beasts, and offering a partnership in future ,enterprise. The oxen are taker: away by .the thieves and slaughtered in the nearest field, and the Thumbling still unseen— ,thongh, odd to say, the night is not so dark .as to impede the slaughter of the animals— proposes to carry the entrails to a neghbor mg stream, and to wash them out. When ho is at some distance, he is heard crying piteously: "I'm not the only one; there are three men out there, roasting the meat by the fire." The thieves thinking that their comrade bas boon caught, and is betraying them to his captor, hetalce to their beets, whereupon the acute dwarf hastens, not to his master, but to his father, who immediately proceeds to the field in a cart„ and fetches home the oxen left by thethieves. "Thus," says the historian, with great complacency, "did be have his son again, together with the pur chase money, and a load of butcher's meat in the bargain!" Enough of this dissertion on the ethical views of ancient Lithuania. We will not classify the robbers of this favored land ac cording to their goodness or facetiousness, scowling cut-throats or merry purloiners. And from each of the two classes will we take one specimen. Let Il Penrcroso precede L'Allegro, all the world over—even in Lithuania. We begin with the thrilling tale of "Green-Beard:" A certain merchant. who lived indefinitely in a city, was considerably annoyed when his daughter—a very charming young per son—swore, or rather vowed, that she would never marry a man who was not blessed with a green beard. In - vain did he tell her the story of Bluebeard, in order to counter act her absurd predilection. She simply replied that "blue was not green," and he did not feel himself justified in contradicting the truth of the assertion. 22 50 -: However, not only the younglady's father. but likewise the captain of a band of rob bers—four and twenty strong—who, as their friends said, enlivened—as their enemies said, infested, a neighboring forest—became acquainted with her views on the subject of of beards. Possessed of this information— whether through the medium of the milk man or the baker, we cannot say—the cap tain at once called his band together, and asked the collected assemblage whether they happened to know any dye that would ren der beards green. A unanimous shout of "Yes!" followed the query; and was fol lowed in its turn by a recipe universally commended for the manufacture of the de sired cosmetics. 'Why the captain was less accomplished in practical chemistry than any of his four and twenty men, we do not pretend to inquire. Having given his beard the required color, the gallant captain proceeds at once to the city, and as he was altogether a fine, well looking gentleman, he was much admired by the passengers in spite of his green beard. His conduct, when he reached the merchant's house was marked by the most rigid observ ance of the laws of etiquette. First he asked leave of the father to woo the daughter; whereupon the father, recollecting that he had a great strapping expensive girl on his hands, and could not find a suitor with a green beard every day, readily gave his con sent; then he addressed the lady herself, who, finding her own ideas of human beauty actually retlized before her eyes, could not do otherwise than accept the offer of his hand. [Household Words Glowing with all the delight of a fortu nate suitor, the captain took his departure, having told the young lady which road she must pursue in order to reach his farmhouse on the other side of the forest. From this fact we conclude that weddings were by no means costly in ancient Lithuania, and that he who went to see a nuptial procession must have been grievously disappointed.— The gentleman proposed, and if found suit able, was accepted by the lady and friends. He then went home, and the lady went after him alone, at her own convenience. Here was a saving in bridesmaids and white favors. The merchant's daughter, now a bride, packed up her trousseau—that is to soy, caused a large cake to be baked—and thus handsomely provided, set off for the resi dence of her future lord. There was a bridge to be crossed, and then there was a road on the left hand to be taken, which would would lead to the abode of domestic bliss; at least so she had been told by the green-bearded Andonis, whose instructions, as far as the bridge was concerned, proved to be thoroughly correct. But, as for the road to the left, the only thing that could be called a road at all was a pathway, that led straight forward into the midst of a thick forest, and grew more and more nar row at every yard—nay, become so incon veniently narrow, that the bride was obliged to get off the horse on which she rode, and to proceed, with her cake under her arm, on foot. Unpromising as it looked, the pathway at any rate, brought the lonely fair ono to a cottage, which was not a whit more attract , 'lye in her eyes, from the fact that a lion was chained on each`side of the door. However, u.s the beasts offered no opposition, the crossed the threshold with as much boldness as she could command, and entered a room fitted up like an armory, with a large stock of muskets. Expending bnt a short time in the contemplation of these interesting ob jects, she entered another room, from a rafter in which a cage containing a small I bird was suspended. I No sooner did tbo bird behold the lovely stranger than it scorned bursting with in formation. "Know most ill-fated of mortals," it twit tered forth, "that you are in a robber's den, and what is worse, escape at the present moment is impossible, for the lions, though they did not object to your entrance, would tear you to pieces if you tried to get out." "Then," said the poor girl, overpowered by the weight of this unpleasant intelli gence, "what am I to do? How, oh feathered orator, am I to apply all the useful know ledge which you so liberally diffuse?" "Knowledge," said the bird gravely, using a phrase since immortalized by Lord Bacon, "knowledge is power." "That proposition may be generally cor rect," answered the young lady, with cor responding dignity, "hut my case seems to be exceptional." "Listen," said the bird, in a patronising tone. "Yonder bed must be your hiding place. When the robbers return they will get drunk---" "Inebriated," suggested the young lady. "NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CIIEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY 'MORNING, JULY 17, 1858. . "Aod will then go to sleep," continued the bird,-not noticing the interruption. "If you are wise, you will seize your opportu nity, and issuing from the door, will throw a piece of your cake to each of the lions." "And what am I to do then?" asked the intelligent maiden. "Take to your heels as fast as you can of course," answered the bird, with something of contempt in its tone. "r think your own senses might have told you that." Piqued by the slur thus indirectly cast upon her understanding, the young lady sharply asked: "Why may I not give the cake to the lions at once, and run away now, instead of waiting for the return of the abominable robbers?" "Because," replied the bird. drily, "you will be sure to meet them on the pathway. Your own experience must have already in formed you whether that is exactly the sort of road on which an unprotected female would like to meet four-and-twenty robbers." The convinced damsel crept, shuddering, under the bed indicated by the sagacious bird, and had not been long in her hiding place when the robbers returned, bringing with them a female captive. Their first act was to sit down and consume a very sub stantial supper; their next act - Rime our Lithuanian tale grows so very horrible that we advise readers of delicate nerves to skip all that follows, and be satis fied with the brief statement, that the lady did effect her escape from the robber's den. For the sake of the strong-nerved students alone, we proceed circumstantially:] Their next act was to mince the female captive into ridiculously small pieces, the first operation being a detachment of her little finger. "Ohl" gasped the merchant's daughter, paralized with horror. "What's that?" said the Captain. "Nothing," said the bird, winking at his protegee; and the robbers continued their hideous work. No less thick in head than savages in heart, these atrocious ruffians, instead of removing a valuable ring from the doomed little finger, allowed finger and ring to roll together under the bed, where they were instantly pocketed by the concealed lady.-- The mincing process being completed, and seine unpleasant observations having been made respecting a pie that was to be pre pared on the following morning. the robbers lulled their consciences—if they had any— with such deep potations, that they were I soon senseless. "Now then!" cried the bird. To start from under the bed, to rush from the door, to toss a lump of cake to each of the lions, was but the work of an instant on the part of the merchant's daughter who, scampering along the pathway as fast as she could, fortunately found her horse where site had left him, and galloped home looking as white as a sheet. Nor way her haste at all superfluous; for the cake did not last very long in the lions' months, and the roar that immediately followed its con sumption brought all the robbers out into the wood. What they had lost they did not precisely know, but felt convinced they had lost something or somebody. Some chance wind or other had, perliap4••, conveyed to the mind of the robber captain the story of the Forty Thieves. At all events he shaved off the beard which he had taken such pains to dye; he loaded a great wagon with barrels, in each of which lie stowed four of his men, (which proves that Lithuanians pack close) and, assuming the character of a traveling dealer, he set off for the merchant's residence, actually guessing that his bride had paid him a visit, and had made discoveries so far from pleasant, that unless he would forgo her society altogether, he must contrive some new device for her recovery. The removal of the green beard preyed sufficient to prevent his recognition by the merchant, and he was allowed to put his barrels in the yard, while he himself re• eeived an invitation to dinner. But the robbers in the barrels would not hold their tongues; a servant in the establishment, who overheard them, informed his master of their loquactity, and the merchant ac cordingly engaged four sturdy fellows to manage matters in the yard, and two still more sturdy to set at the table by the dis guised Captain. The production of the amputated finger in the course of the meal, proved to the Captain that be was disco-- ered, and this incident was soon followed by a triumph of the sturdy fellows over him and his men. They were all put to death of course; but the reader will be far more anxious to know what became of the animals, who aro such important personage in the tale. The bird became the domestic pet of the young lady, and the lions were kept as curiosities by the merchant. The rest of the property in the robbers' house was sold for the benefit of the poor, the house itself was burnt to ashes; and—there is one thing more—the young lady entirely abandoned her predilection for green beards, With pleasure we quit this grim, green. bearded villain, this plagiarist, conscious or unconscious, of the captain of the Forty Thieves—this uncouth ruffian, who had probably stored his mind with the Littman• ian fable of the Cat and the Sparrow, which is expressly directed against good manners, and which we may as well recount here,-- A sparrow was once caught by a eat, who was about to devour him on the instant, but was checked by the bird's remark that no gentleman ever ate his breakfast without haring previously washed his mouth, and who, setting his pr:isoner down, began to rub his lips with his paw. Thereupon the sparrow flew away, and the enraged cat rowed that he would never again be gentleman fur the rest of his days. All this by way of parenthesis. With pleasure we quit the grins greenhearded to seek the society of the pleasant, kindly, murder-hating little thief, who is immortal ized in Lithuanian folklureby time name of Sly Youth, and whose history shows what an inestimable figure may be made by robber. There was once a rich merchant, an in hald t tl.e town, who had a wretchedly poor 'or , 2 t in the country.— Stran t ;t; t tile man of wealth, far from foigetti%,; his taiseralde kinsman, had the horses put to his sledge one fine winter's day, and paid him a fraternal visit. Edu cation was evidently more esteemed than bravery of apparel among the Lithuanian peasantry, fur while on the one hand, the poor man's wife would not show herself on account of the scantiness of her wardrobe, his sons were likewise invisible because they were at school. flowerer they soon came home, and highly delighted they were when their kind uncle gave them each a suit of new clothes that had been =dein the town; and still more delighted, when he took them out For a ride in his sledge. They were all smart intelligent youths, and took a world of interest in the different objects that presented themselves on the road. "There's a big ash-tree," shouted the first. "What a nice table it would make!—capital oaks for cart-whels!" cried the second. "A splendid thicket that, for thieves to hide in!" bellowed the third.— "What," said the uncle, with a pleased smile„ "would you like to be a joiner my little man?—and you a whelwright, my sec ond little man?—and you a thief, my third little man?" "Very much!" "Amazingly!" and "wouldn't I rather?" were the three answers to the questions. Of all three answers the good uncle took note. New the merchant was not merely a man of words, but he really meant to do his duty to his humble relation. Bidding an adieu to his brother, he took the three boys with him to town, where he in the first place sent them to school, and when their education was complete, placed them in the professions of their choice. The young connoisseurs of ash and and oak were re spectively bound 'prentices to a joiner and wheelwright; and as the merchant was on kindly terms with a robber, who lived with his band in a cave near the city, there was no difficulty in providing for the third nephew according to his wish. As a friendship founded on reason is of all frind ships the most estimable, it is worth men tioning that the respect entertained by the robber for the merchant was based on the good caves of the latter towards the former. When other merchants left the town with their gonils, the robber was apprised of the circumstances by his commercial friend, and took measures accordingly. Thus, while the Damon of the heath filled his vaults with plunder, the Pythias of the town got rid of dangerous competitors. Though the youth found much to admire in the robber band of which he had become a member, there were certain peculiarities repugnant to his better nature. The rob bers had the bad habit of murdering people after they bad plundered them, and this practice struck him as not only barbarous but absurd. Tie therefore wished to work a a moral reform. "If you kill people forthe sake of what they have," he urged, "you act as wise robbers ought to act, and no sensible man could object to the proceeding; but surely when a poor devil is stripped of everything, it is as well to let him go." The robber.:: :1:0, )1; their headq and answered ac cording to the:r s: , -,;0-al temperaments, The more :-ent;n.unt:,l ;: 1 they would never abandon tto prit—i!les bequeathed by their fathers; the sagLei , ,u3 alluded to the practi cal inability of dud men to tell tales; the sarcastic talked about milksops. "Well," said the young man, "to prove that craft is better than violence. I will undertake to steal a goat three times over, and sell it twice." "Humph!" said the robers in chorus. The intelligent youth, who for brevity's sake we call Slyboots, proceeding to a town where a fair was held, took his station at the gate, and waited for the arrival of the countryfolk with their goats. Presently an old man appeared with a fine white animal, which he offered to sell for three dollars.— Slyboots agreed to the price, proposed to seal the bargain with a social glass at a neighboring public house, and while the old man was absorbed in the contemplation of his liquor, skipped out of the back door into a neighboring cornfield, where be in geniously spotted the goat's liidowith black. This operation effected, be boldly returned to the town, and the first person he met was the old man, who of course, failed to re cogizne him. For Lithuanian cunning to have a fair play, it must have Lithuanian dullness to work upon. "is that goat for sale, worthy youth?" "Of a truth it is, good father, and any one will give ten florins for the same." "Marry, I will buy it; for 10, when I came to town this morning I had with me a white goat, of which a scurvy knave bath robbed me. I may say 'robbed' with a good grace; for though I gave him the poor beast with my own hands, he never paid me the price f demanded, but, Vanished like a thing of nought." The bargain was again concluded over a glass, and again didSlyboots escape without paying, into the corn-field, where he painted the goat black all over. Returning once more to the town the first person he met we , again the old man, who failing to recognize him, again purchased the gnat for ten florins. Little docile as he had hitherto been to the instructions of experience, the old man on this occasion, refrained from crowning the bargain with a social glass, and walked straight home. First be put the blackened goat into the stable, the door of which he neglected to lock; then he proceeded to the house and told his wife that he had preformed a series of intricate commercial operations, the ulti mate result of which was the exchange of the white goat for a black one. The old lady listened with small admiration, and when on visiting the stable with her thick headed spouse, she found no goat whatever, her rage knew no bounds. Nay she vocifer ously stated her conviction, that the money obtained by the sale of the white goat bad been expended on tap-room luxuries, and that the commercial operations so circum stantially narrated were but the creations of a brandy-heated brain. The old gentleman answered the accusation by setting off im mediately in search of the missing animal, and as he soon heard a bleating in his vicinity, he proceeded in the direction of the sound. A. veritable ing.,mis fatuus was that unfortunate bleat. It led the pursuer to a marsh; and it induced him to step into the marsh, and it caused him to east off a con siderable portion of his habiliments that he might go deeper into the marsh. But the goat was never found; the clothes disappear ed from the spot in which they had been laid; and the old gentleman went home a sadder, and colder, and we trust a wiser EOM When the robbers heard from Slyboots the narration of thesefacts;WhOU they heard hint describe how, without changeof attire, he had passed for three several persons in the eyes of one individual, and robbed that individual three times over; how he had fol lowed the dupe to the stable, and observing the unlocked door, had abstractc the goat; how lastly, he had led the old gentleman into the marsh, by pinching the goat's tail as he carried it in his arms, and had thus become the possessor of a wardrobe in ad dition to the previous booty; the stern ruf fians murmured applause, and stating their opinion that the time of apprenticeship should be regulated by &grass of proficiency, not by length of service, declared that Slyboots had now fully served his time. He there fore bade them farewell and proceeded to his kind uncle, who rejoicing to find that he had fully realized the promise of his youth, at once placed in his hand a large sum of money, that he might start in business with capital as well as talent. Haw is life reg,ulated by accident! Scarce ly had Slyboots left his uncle's home, than an event occurred which caused him to aban don the profession in which he had hoped to make so brilliant a figure. St,,pping at a public house to take a glass of beer, his ha 7 of gold attracted the eyes of the re,pectalde wido w by whom the business of the estab lishment was conducted. She at once ex plained to him that a male superintendent would give an improved turn to her affairs, and that if he would marry her daughter, and take the management of the public house into his own hands, he world confer a real obligation. Slyboots jumped at the' Offer, and abandoning all thoughts of the heath and the forest, espoused the blushing maiden, and employed his capital "in the public line." His old friend's the robbers soon heard of his whereabouts, and two of them determined to pay him a visit. Like many other per sons who are not robbers, they contrived to make their call at a time when they were sure not to find their friend at home, and entering the house with an easy air, coolly told the ladies that they were the brothers of mine host, respectively belonging to the gentle crafts of joiner and wheel•wright.— They wore very sorry their brother was out. but really they could not stop, and so they departed, followed by the courtesies of the ladies, but not until they had observed a huge fatted hog hanging up in the earthouse. This they removed at the earliest opportun ity, and when Slyboots, returning hoard of these brothers and missing the hog, he at once bethought him of his comrades on the heath. Immediate pursuit was resolved upon, and Slyboots plunging into the neighboring forest, soon overtook the robbers. One had set down to rest while the other, with the hog on his back, was groping his way through the darkness. "Let me have a turn now comrade," said Slyboots to the foremost robber, "thou hast carried that load long enough." "Thou west ever a kind comrade," was the answer of the robber, echo of course thought that he was addressing his compan ion, and without hesitation, he placed the hog on the shoulders of Slyboots, who nt once set off in a homeward direction.' When the hindmost robber had overtaken the foremost one, a little conversation reveal ed the true state of affairs; and they both cried out with wrath not unqualified by ad miration: "Slyboots is still Slyboots after all!" However no time was to be lost, so at once there and then, the two robbers dis guised themselves as women, and putting $1,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; .0,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE their best feet foremost, were enabled to meet Slyboots nt the entrance to his own premises. The source of the female attire thus rapidly put on, is not recorded in Lithuanian history; but the disguise must have been most efficient, as it caused even the shrewdest Slyboots 'to take one of the rubbers for his mother-in-law, and the other for his wife. "Well bast thou got the hog?" said the more strapping of the two. ‘'Marry Lave I, mother-in-law," responded Slyboots. "Then give it us and well take it in doors, while thou lockest up everything outside," was the artful suggestion, which was answer ed by another transfer of the hog. When Slyboots had locked up every gate and door he walked into the house, and not perceiving the hog, °shed his wife where she bad put it. "The hog," said she, "did'st thou get it then!" "Of coarse I did," said he. "I," said she, "have never clapped eyes on it," "Come, come, no nonsense," said he, "I gave it into thine ONVa hands at the gate yard." "Why, by my halidom, I have never cros sed the threshold of the door." The acute mind of Slyboots was not long in divining the truth; and as he had been rather caustic in his remarks, when the ladies had allowed the prize to be carried off by the robbers in the first instance, he set out in pursuit of the marauders with even more than his wonted rapidity in order to avoid infliction of the led talionis. When he reached the forest Ile found that the luxurious rascals had lighted a fire to broil a ham which they had cut already from the hog. As the fire had got low, they were searching for wood, each in a different direction, and his mode of operation was at once decided. Taking a stick in his hand he administered a hearty thrashing to the stump of a tree, shouting all the time in piteous tones, "I won't do it again!" Each robber hearing the sounds and the cries, concluded that his comrade was overpower ed, on this hypothesis both ran away. But Slyboots took up the hog and went home. Chance brought the rubbers once more to gether. "In good troth thy hue must be of the blackest and the bluest!" said the first, with a derisive kind of pity. "Nay, rather look to thine own skin; for a short while ago thou didst howl an it were a whipped cur." "Whipped cur thyself, when thou didst frighten all the birds in the wood with thine unmanly %railings." This interchange of sharp remarks led to a mutual explanation and the result of the mutual explanutin was the united shout of both the robbers: "Slyboots after all!" Resolved not to be outdone, they return ed to the residence of their crafty acquain tance. To their agreeable surprise, though the outhouses were lucked up, the window of the one room was open, and close to the sill, by the dim light of a rushlight might be seen the lifeless form of the hog, with the bodied ham laid upon it. "Marry," (tooth the first rubber, "this is nat. like Slyboots, and to light a candle that one may find the way to it." "Too much good fortune bath blunted his wits at last," said the second robber. And he laid his band upon the ham. At that very instant Slyboots, whose wits were as keen as ever, and who was standing beside the window with a sword in his hand, struck off the most prominent finger at a blow. "Phew!" said the second rubber, "the ham is still hot." "Out upon the dullard," growled the first robber. "How could the ham keep hot, af ter being carried all the way from the forest. It won't burn me, I'll warrant thee." So saying he thrust in his hand, when down came the sword, and off went a finger. "By the mass, I am a finger the poorer," shouted the robber. "Serve thee right, for a hard-hersted churl," said the second; "that is my case too, only thou would'st give me no pity." "Humph," retorted the first, and they both looked at each other for some minutes, at the end of which they both exclaimed, with one voice, "Slyboots is still Slyboots after all!" So they went their way, and were nerer heard of more. Who was the Thief. About ten years ago, I was a jolly sub in a regiment of Bengal native infantry. We were ordered to a remote station, and on arriving there, in the beginning of the hot I weather, I found bungalows scarce and dear, land was only too glad to meet an old friend, who offered to sell. me half his, which offer I gladly accepted. We were of course cut I off from all the amusements and amenities I ? of civilized life, and therefore my chum, whose name was Caldwell, and 1, took to studying the black classics, Persian and reliering our literary labors with various intellectual amusements, such as slaying squirrels and lizards with the pellet-bow, our educatingdogs and monkeys, destroying wasps' nests by squibs attached to the end of a bamboo, and hunting man gooses. Our zeal for *May lasted all through the hot weather and rains, but with the cola weather, a change came over the spirit of our amusements. Our time was now divided between shooting and fishing excursions, rifle matches and pigeon-shoot- [WHOLE NUMBER, 1,459. ing, besides which we taught the sepoys cricket, and played officers and men of right wing against those of left wing. This af forded capital sport, and, unlike most other amusements, cost little—a small subscrip tion from each defrayed the expetmes of hats , . balls, levelling the ground, d:c. I was re quested to receive and collect this, which I did on pay day, the only time when cash transactions take place. Being late in the evening when I received it, I placed the amount, about sixty rupees, in my writing desk, which always remained open on my table; and as I believed my servants to be honest, and thought no oae saw me put it there, I considered it safe enough for the present. .On locking for it next moving, the cash was gone, and alot with it a few trinkets and all the papers in the desk, some of which were of great con sequence to me. It was quite e - ,-ident that a servant or some one well acquainted with the house had taken it, as an ordinary thief would hare taken desk and all without wait ing to abstract its contents; besides which, he would doubtless have left other trace , of his visit, as a pair of valuable pistols and a silver match-box lying uu tic same taM.• would have excited his cupidity. iNly pieions lit upon a cock-eyed beorcr of Cal well's, to whom I had a strong objection.— lie certainly was a must sinister looking in dividual, and, if not a rogue, his countenance lay open to an action for defamation of character. Caldwell, on the other hand, felt quite sure that my clhobie was the thief, as all the servants declared ho was the only person who had entered the room that evening, when he brought in the clean clothes. I don't like speaking in an unknown tongue, but that word dltobie is an indubitable and unmitigated staggerer; it means a "male washerwoman," and I know of no word in the English language which expresses that. We were both so positive that, for the first time in our life, we had an angry discussion about it. At length we decided on calling our servants together—about twenty in all —and telling them we were certain the thief was one of themselves, and that we would accordingly deduct the entire amount stolen proportionably from their wages.— , They were at once assembled in the veran dah, and I made them a short speech, an nouncing our determination. This was touching them on the tenderest point, and all were in the midst of loud protestations of their innocence, when in walked Ajudiab. lie was a small spare man, but being a high-caste Brahmin, and having held the office of regimental pundit fur a quarter of a century, he was greatly respected by the men. Ile had the reputation of being very learned, and had scraped together a large sum of money, as, in addition to his regi mental salary, be levied large contributions from the sepoys in his priestly capacity, and gave instructions in 'Undo° and Sanscrit. Caldwell and I had been pupils of his, and he now came ostensibly to make salam, but really to remind us that we owed him a small balance. Only learning the state of allitirs, he said: "Defender of the poor! pro tector of the oppressed! it is easy to pro nounce judgment, but between judgment and justice a wide difference exists. It cannot be concealed from the light of your penetrating mind, that if you act as you propose, all your servants will suffer evally with the guilty one: I have no doubt, if such be your pleasure, that, with the aid of my own skill and your good fortune, I can discover the individual who has been faith less to his salt!' I have always had a roost profound contempt for the Brahmins and their transparent humbug; but thirsting that fear of detection might induce the cul prit to confess, I gravely assented, and said I should feel much obliged by his coming nest morning soon after sunrise, to make his investigation. I had not the slightest expectations that it would be successful, but 1 thought it might be sonic amusement, and at mess that evening I 1/tenth - sued it to my brother offi cers, and invited them to come and see the fun. We were hardly seated at coffee the near morning when Ajudialt made his :tripe-tr ance, and asked permission to commence h:4 experiments. This being graciously ace-,rd el, lie began by seating all the servant. , (ri a raised platform of masonry. in front of bungalow. lie then seated himself in middle, with a brass dish containing un dressed rice at one side, and a pair of small I scales and weights at the other. After mur muring a few prayers and stretching out Ibis hands several times over the rice with the palms open and the kuckles uppermost, I like a person warming his hands at a fire. he commenced operations by doling out to each servant a rupee's weight of the dry rice. As each man's portion was weighed out, it was placed on a piece of plantain leaf, about siz inches square, and deposited in his lap by a young Brahmin, who was Ajudiah's disciple. When all lied received their quantum, he stood up, and stretching out his hands to the four quarters of heaven, as if invoking the judgement of the Deity. desired them to commence, whereupon all hands took their portion of rice in their months, and be,gau chewing away rigorous ly. While this was going on, the Brahman took up his rosary, made of the beautiful brown berries of the ..Vdia and appeared, quite absorbed in prayer and meditation, though I have no doubt the cun ning old rogue kept a sharp look out all the time.