r. c; TBB LANCISTiIIiffiLiMENCEIL ", . -91.1 111- a: SMITH , erznaliar. H. G. SMITH. TERMS—Two Dollars per annum payable In all cases In advance. • • • TIM LANCASTER DAILY • INTELVOENC= published every evening, Sunday excepted, at 3.5 per annum In advance. f 001LIUM Or • OFFIOE—So WYTIAP.6. 113 nett) LEGEND. twilight on Jutlea's A BEAIITIF, 83111 y ell the touel oßent 11111 s• Slowly crept Judea's r ot rt - pence of moonlight o'er ‘.lbllng ,___ a cwrt, conversing, Coven elder,' elpart -aud and hoary sages, wise of bead and ore of heart.. OR SlmCe best?" Fluid Rabbi Judah, he astern . and eteadfaid. gaati; Anwer, ye whose tolls have burdened through the march of many days." To have gained," said Rabbi Ezra, "decent wealth and goodly store, Without xlo by honeat labor—nothing and not more." 'Po have found." nald Rabid Joseph—meek nem In Ills gentle eyem— A foretaste of Heaven's nweelness In honle'n blerusal Paradise." '^l'u have wealth and power and glory, crowned ' and brightened by t lie pride Of uprleing ellidrmen children," Rabbi Benja min replied. "To havo Won the praise of nations, to have won the crown of none," Rabbi liolomon rempooded, fall 1,1111 lo hle kingly name. "To alt throned, the lord of wllllous, 11,4 and noblest in the land." Answered haughty Rabid Asher, yontiaost of the reverend band." "All in valn," said Itabbi .1101 . 11 N, .•11111c. fail It ittid hope Ilityl• I rayed In the snni Alornie nrem.nlr, uneineed. Then uprose wire Itubbi .1 shun, Inliest, gri, est of theta all— • Prom the Iteighls of filun• ullll 1101.101 . I'Ven valiant SOUNIIIIIy r:111. Lore may fall us; vlrllle'N S:111110:4 grOW a dry Intl thOrllY en If we In•ar Ina In one 11000111 the uovr.lll`ll lid, of tiod." In Ilse outer road sat !any] ag a sad-featured. fair-halred vial!!! Ills young eyes seemed wells of sorrow- l hey were God-Ilke when he sin lvd' tine by one lh• dropped I he II hus, soft ly pinek .1 with chll,llnli band: • Ono by one he viewed tile Slll4l, (II:0 gm, trial hoary Hiep by slop he neared them closer, !111 en alreled by till! SVV1•II, Then he malt!, Itt 11/111,4 mil rein 1)1 i rig, alit. a motile that, breathed of lhaven, "Nay, nay, fatlyern4 only tic Within the mlt- Hurt, of whose breast I , welln the human love with God-love, ean have found Ilfe's truest rent; For where titre In not, the other lutist grow stagnant at Its spring, Changing good devils to platillorns—an un sotilltlss 1111116, " Whom) Ileitis llds precept truly, owns n Jowel brighter lux Than the Joys Of home and t•lliltlreu—thou wealth, Bone anti glory ere; I'alrer than (dcl agellita, 1101101,41, tar iii traditions law. faro as any radiant v (Vii an.a.lll prophets saw. Only he within the mean:ore—faith 11.ppor dolled—of whose breast . Throlot the brother loot. IIoWS .the depth or perfr rt rr>L•' Wondering gazed tiny at earl, other, once broke slienvelllei to II16re: has spoken words of wisdom no man ever snake before I- l'atmly pa:Aging from their pre,ette.3 1 , . the fountaln'ti rlypttt3l4l.lllV, StOOlted he to uplllt the litlett slrest ell the settltereti mprltyti ulotatg. Faintly Mole the Kinetics of evening through the massive oaken door ; Whitely hey the pent, of moonlight on the temple's fluor. Where the YlderN 1111gereti, hilt:Ill 110 mpuke, the l•ntleilled, \Viler,. the W I,tiotn of the :Igoe enl 11011t1 the thlwers—a idisffilanrotts. Mr. Smallpleces Legacy When people wanted to get to the of flee of Mr. Kotaliplece, they were obliged to go up a dirty street ana then under a dark and gloomy archway Into a little, open court, where a th„ r„,.t t pant of the office, on whose door it was nailed, wee Mr. Simon Sululiplece, Solicitor. The office I Itself was quite pleasant and cheerful when you once got inside of it, for its back windows opened upon a sunny lit tle bit of common, green with soft grass and waving trees In Summer, and spot less pure with an expanse or vir g in snow In Winter. On many an afternoon had N r. Small piece sitting at his worm-eaten old desk In the antique window-space, look ed up from his work, and, catching sight of a bird hopping about among the rustling leaves outside the open win dow, become lost Id dreamy reverie, which led him to waste whole hours in following the unrestrained vagaries tir bile thought. In fact, dreaming was the only recreation Mr. finulllplece ever hail now. Ile could remember, and that ettally enough, a time when he was not the childless old man which life had left him years ago. There bud been a day when a cheerful home, graced with the luxuries of life and rendered sacred by its love of wife anti daughter, was not the least of his worldly possessions; and now 1118 wife was sleeping in the churchyard yonder, while his daughter - " Worse even than. dead :" ex claimed Simon Smallplece, clenching Ills hand as he thought of her. " even than dead. May my curse go with her, and with the man who rubbed me of her." And then he sat back In his leather covered chair, biting the end of his quill-pen savagely, and thought, with bitterness in his heart, of the day, so long ago, when she had come to him holdim Will Allen by the baud, and when )Vill, standing proudly before him in the full nobility of stalwart manhood, had asked him for Nellie as his wife. Mr. Smallpiece remembered, too, with a chuckle of exultation, how he had shown Will Allen to the door at once, and forbade him ever to enter his house again ; how he sent Nellie to her room in a flood of tears, and how he himself returned to Will Allen all the foolish letters and keepsakes which he . over had the audacity to send to Simon Srnallpiece's daughter. The old lawyer could not but acknowledge to himself, as he sat thinking of these things, that he made somewhat of a donkey of him self, after all ; for Nellie had obstinately refused to marry the wealthy suitor whom he had selected for her, and had persisted in this silly attachment for this farmer's son, whom she ultimately ran away with aud married. Rut Si mon Stnallpiece had sent his loudest curses after them, and 'had never seen the face of his only child froM that day to this. He never would forgive her, and there was comfort in assuring hint ' self of that at all events. And old Simon had lived alone ever since, his temper soured against all mankind, and his heart, if he ever had one, which is doubtful, chilled Loathing of stone. He was reputed rich, but few ever saw the culbr of his money. His apartments, in the .upper part of the same old building with his Wilco, were mean in the extreme. His clothes were threadbare, and his face was pinched with the hard lines of avarice and sel fishness. ' With no charity for the suf fering, with no feeling of kindness for the unfortunate, with his heart closed to every appeal from womanly tender ness or childish innocence, Simon Smallpiece avowed himself the enemy of the world, and passed his life in picking quarrels with it. One lazy afternoon Mr. Smallpiece, chancing to look up from the misty deeps of a long chancery bill in which he was Just then submerged, caught sight through the open window of a little child standing upon the steps of a house on the opposite side of the com mon. There was nothing Interesting to Mr. Smallpiece hi children. As a gen eral rule he bated them; but as he hap pened to glance at this wee little lady standing, so plump and rosy, upon the door-step, she suddenly clapped her hands together and gave such a Joyous little scream of delight that Simon ac tually smiled: Yes, he did; and it was something he had not done for a very long time. Looking In the direction In which the child was gazing, he saw a man, clad in the dress of a workman, coming across the common. And this person, when he came to where the child was stand ing, caught her high above his head with a laugh, and bringing her down Into his arms. again, kissed her. Whether llir..Smallpiece's. heart was a trifle more tender than usualj wit then, .F.cannot say; but it seemed to him I there was something in the movement of-the workman very pleasing and pre ',._ ty: "1:10 , remembered the tithe when he Was w wont to do' the same thing to his wn child hiniaelf. ~ , . he ohtld, 'eatehliat . a glinipse_or Mr. plleet4bahl, Weed elij. 0/44,44:40.' ehtheoppniselnueri; - saidi k aoree og,to, 44ninuntrwheaheld , her ;lend (Abe tterit : . putting her doivn on.. the groundited hen AdOwly across the lawri.toward the atter ' ' noels office, - . '... a ~ ...7 ., ..._ ..-.' - . ... -,.i...- ..:.....V.. , - •.; ...FG'..“.. , n r , 10 ,2,, :-L . r ,- 7 .• -'--- I. ~.,,:: '..;., ;.,!.:/: .1:.;:::,..!:,.:. k, 11:..2 , - - ,:: ' - -.hi .:iloalirmilr 117 tr.l:trirt7 , :"; • . - iTz,T l'i)ri7.ll:.l 91IT j !;.11 ! , :ir, iirl:c.Titto..) 51r.1R i . . 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'‘• .' 4r . .' . , • ~. . . .•.1... -' '•C•i1.C.:.,',.`:••1 '1 .10.10540". ,f...!! , 11:110 100 ~. ` t‘r;.l . .. ... .. . . .. ~ --, '- .- - ..,- -- .“ : •-"''': .--- .1.. .;,:. . . : .. ~- --..::,.: - - - ..1 ~.: &i 4411 /... ~.) ......t L .1...1!.-10• ~, r... . !.. ~ : ..!• '1 ..,i.. - ,' -_. - ~iiisi - ' ~. . . „. . _ . . . . _ - VOLUME 72 "'Whose brat is that?" 'said Simon, when they had approached near enough for conversation. • • " She is not a brat," replied the man, quickly. " Doesn't she look pretty enough to be called something better than that?" "Hum!" grunted Mr. Saidllpiece. "Well, child, then. "Whose is it? You're?" .. " She's mine' now," replied the man;, "but I'm not her father. She is my brother's child, sir." " She seems very fond of you," said Simon, "seeing that you're not her natural parent." " She is fond of me,ain't you, Daisy ?" rejoined the workman, stooping down to pull her yellow curls through his fingers. For an answer, the little girl put her little round arms about his knee, and Laid her dimpled cheek close against it. " Why don't your brother take care of her ?" asked Mr. Smallplece, looking at the little girl a trifle less sourly than he usually looked at people. " My brother is dead, sir," sail the man. "The child has no father but me." "Where's her mother?" "Iler mother was left very poor," he replied. " She had one little boy be sides tills little child, and was hardly able to support them with her unaided hands. She lives many miles off, sir; and once in a while Daisy and 1 go down there to see her—on holidays and such like. " What does she do for a living?" "She does plain needlework, wilco can get it." A hard way of earning a living," aid Mr. Stuallpiece; " very hard. But dare Ray She don't work any harder Ilan 1 do--not a bit, not a bit." " Perhaps not," said the man ; " but she is a woman. lam a bachelor, like yourself, sir, and I ollered to take this little one and care for her while I lived. I not very glad I did it, for site has made all the world bright to me—a great deal brighter than It ever was before." "Hall !" said the lawyer, with a gee- lure of disgust. "All humbug! I don't want young ones about me, I can tell you. Those that want them can have heal. I don't. The man laughed and caught the child up in his arms again. "She's a pretty child enough," said Simon, looking at her through his glasses. "I've got an apple in my desk here. Do you think sfie would like it?'' The little child held out her fat hands eagerly. • er prayers. "Did your uncle always want you to say your prayers ?" asked the lawyer, going to the bedside. " Yes, always." " Then say them to me, little one," said Simon ; and kneeling down by her side, the old man rested his scattered gray hair upon the counterpane while the tiny voice repeated a simple prayer, and the chubby hands Were fast clasped together. And in the prayer, following every word, Simon Smallpiece's heart was touched, as it had never been touched before ; and from his lips there went up, with the supplication of the child, an earnest prayer to be made bet ter and more worthy of the charge which had been placed within his keep le should feel soft-hearted towards this ing. "Here," said Mr. Smaliplece, taking a red apple out of his drawer and tossing it to the man, who gave it to a little lady in his arms. "Now go away quick. lam very busy." The man laughed again, and taking his hat, withdrew, holding one of the chubby lists in his great brown hand, and making believe to bite it, while the child munched the apple which she held in the other. When they had gone, Mr. Small . dece leaned back in his chair and re fleeted on his unparalleled weakness. What interest had he in children, that little one Was he getting childish in his old age? He did not know. Pos sibly so. At all events, a new feeling, ur rather an old feeling revived, had sprung up in his breast, and caused him to look upon his own cynical nature in something of a new light. The next afternoon the child appeared again upon the step, and again did the man toss her high above his head when he met her. Looking across the little comtnon, the workman recognized the lawyer with a nod and a smile, and then began an uproarious romp upon the soft grass with the child. Ile lay down and allowed her to roll over him. He made believe to chase her, and then, when she turned upon liiinjan away, feign- LtIL44 Liso laughter rung out in the still afternoon air like u peal of little silvery bells. He went down upon his hands and knees, and, putting the little one on his back, trot led about the lawn, pretending to be a horse, and otherwise conducting himself in a manner so extravagant and ridiculous, and sending hie companion into such convulsions of merriment,t hat Shnon Smallplece, quite before he was aware of it, found himself leaning back in his chair and laughing almost as as they. " i should like to do that myself," thought Simon. And although you may not believe it, it Is actually true that the old lawyer left his work, and. putting on his hat, left his office by the back door, and walked across the common to join them. To be sure, he took no part in their sport, and only Stood under the tree to watch the proceedings; but before he went back to his writing, the child had another great red apple, bigger this time than both her chubby fists togeth , And so between these people n sort of half-familiar acquaintance sprung up, which gradually became to Simon Sinnllpicee so pleasant and agreeable, that at last, whenever the workman and his niece failed to appear on the pleas ant afternoons, the lawyer would exper ience ii shade of disappointment. Un consciously to himself, the attrition with the innocent nature of the child was rubbing off some of the hard protuber ances of selfishness and uncharity upon his own character. Somehow he could not think of this little one and his own daughter,. who was once a child, too, at the same time, (and when one was pres ent in his mind, so also was . the other), with opposed and different feelings. When he laughed at the gambols of the workman's niece or pinched her rosy cheeks playfully, he could not find it in his heart to utter his accustomed curse upon the memory of his own child, whom he had driven from him years ago. And as one thought led to another, he began to reflect at times 'When he sat alone In his chamber at night, that it would be a pleasant thing to have a woman's or even a child's presence there, to brighten his declining years and to make him feel more kindly towaid the world. But who was there to do for him what the workman's little charge had unconsciously accomplished for her uncle? He had no brother to bequeath him children. His daughter luau found a better shelter than he could lye her, although he knew not where it was, happy, doubtless, and in her daily thoughts and prayers he never found a place. Yet he could almost have wished to see a little child or two whisking about his room, and perhaps calling him grandfather. It would have been pleasant. after nit to hayo rosy elf, all smiles and dimples, climb ing into his lap after supper, and bury ing a pun of pink checks in his waist coat. But that, alas i although it might have been, was nut to be thoughtof now. The Summer waned and Autumn came in her rustling robes of brown and gold, strewing the grassy space be hind the oillee with a loose carpet of crisp and withered leaves. The intima cy between the child and Simon,extend ing now even to taking her into his arms and kissing her, had clandestinely smuggled au clement of kindliness into the lawyer's nature, which had kindled iu his heart a warmth which it had not known for years. On every Sunday af ternoon he walked across the common to meet the workman and his niece, and sometimes stooped himself to gather a handful of the rustling leaves with which to playfully cover the child's flaxen curls. One afternooD ho saw moan approach ing with a singular, halting gait, us though it were painful for him to walk. The hour was a little earlier than that of his usual return from work ; but the child was waiting for hint under the trees. As she.. saw him coining, she clapped her hand with her characteris tic little shout, and ran toward him. But he did not catch her in his arms as usual, and as he took her hand, put his own great brown ono up quickly to his heart, and staggered a little unsteadily. Then, without a word, ho fell forward suddenly upon the grass. " My goodness l" said Simon, leaping at once out of the low, open window, and running across the common toward them: " Something has happened to the man." When we reached the spot the work mail lay . upon his face,. and the child 14 , 11.1 clinging to him with soreams of ter ror. Several persons who had seen him fall, cable quickly - up and tried to raise him to his feet; but when they recog nized the truth, they laid him back again, and tried to unclasp the arms of the little girl. ' • • • • "It Was heart disease;" said one Softly.: '"lslhe,dead,?" said bending. e** prOOtride.,fortitin •44 4 iiikte:Aaa4, replied,thebtlier;"*W qias etteighboring phyaleien,,;,,',',TS' the. child his ?" 7 ,, "The el:Mille mine, now," said Mr. Smallpiece, 'thinly, raising her - in-his arms. "Will you seine with me little one?" - - "Is ,the world coming to an end-?" asked one of the , bystanders, grimly. OfWliat, I have been to the world has already come to an end," re-. Plied 'Simon, pressing his lips to' the tear-stained cheek of the little one •in his arms. •-" Take the poor fellow to his' house. The child shalt go with me." And he took her home, and 'locking the office, eat down in his big chair and tried to comfort her. As he held her in his arms, all the feelings of paternity, so long dead within his breast, came suddenly uppermost ; and greatly to his own astonishment he found himself do ing, without the least awkwardness or embarrassment, the needful things which seemed hest to draw her mind away from what had happened. When he had quieted her sobs with cheery stories, he summoned his house keeper, and bade her attend to all the child's wants. The woman was for tunately kind-hearted,' and she did so. Meanwhile, Mr. Small piece sat down to ponder what he should do with her. It was evident that he could not keep • -. her with him, as her uncle had done. Why not? Because—well he was a stranger to her mother, and she would never consent to it. And that led him to think that if her mother were only here, he could perhaps provide a home for her and her children, too. He cer tainly was able to do it, and the loss of the money would never be felt by him as the loss of the child would be. And then, perhaps, the world would remem ber, alter he was gone, that he had done at least one kindly act during his life time, and recollecting that, would for give hint many of his more selfish ones. Yes, he would keep the child, and he would help the mother, too. But how was he to get word of her ? The workman had told him of the town where she resided, but had never spoken of her by name. He might have asked the child, but although Simon Smallpieee was an experienced lawyer who usually thought of everything, singularly enough he never thought of this. So he went to the child's bed-room to inquire. At that moment a tiny voice came up from out of the bed-clothes, reminding him that something had been forgotten by his housekeeper. "And what is that ?" asked Simon. Dear little heart! She had not amid • He returned to his office, and, writing the letter, directed it to the postmaster of the town in which the object of his search resided, informing him of the fa tal event of the afternoon, and request ing him, if possible, to forward the in formation to Daisy's mother. A few days passed ; the preparations for the poor man's funeral were simple and few, for lie had no friends in the neighbtirhood where he lived, and little seemed to be known about him. Simon offered to bear the expenses, whatever they might be, and one afternoon when the man had been laid in his collln, took Daisy with him fora farewell look at his peaceful face. But Daisy shrank from [he cold and awful form in terror, WIL Nyll . B glad, , for it friend would all be given to him In life and that there was still room for a little affection for himself, after the workman had been forgotten. But on the firth day, which was the day of the funeral, there CURIO a knock at the door of the lawyer's &lice, and there stood upon the threshold a woman, closely veiled, and holding a little boy by the hand. "My husband's brother is burled to day," she said, a little sadly. "I am told that you have kindly cared for my little girl." Great Heaven ! That voice! It seem ed to Simon Smalipiece like the peal of sweet, sweet bell, ringing back to him the sad changes over a half-forgotten world which had fallen from the -firma ment many long years ago. He rose rl-om the seat, trembling with a strange emotion. "Your little girl is quite safe," he said, "I shall have a proposition to make to you in regard to her, after to-day's sad ceremony Is over. May I ask your namo ',' "I think you know she said, raising her veil. "0, Nellie! my (laughter Nellie !" cried the old man, fulling suddenly down upon his knees before her. "May God forgive me for the wrong I have done you and yours ! 0, my child, be merci ful to me, for I ask your forgiveness at your feet." " I have nothing to forgive, father," she said, assisting him to his feet.— " Whatever there was between us has been forgotten long ago." "And you will stay with me always?" asked Simon, half-ineredulously. " Always, if you wish It; father." " The hand of the Lord is in it," cried he, catching up Daisy iu his arms. "It is this little one who has prepared the way, and she has mado my path straight " And who can say that Simon Small piece's legacy was not better than gold or silver, slime it brought him a new heart? A Remarkable Boy Farmer Bogies was a veracious old codger. If there was anything he de lighted In, it was to secure the attention of some oue while he spun a yarn about the wonderful 'cuteness of his son Tom. Tom was his idol—his hero on every occasion—and never would the old fel low let his hero suffer in want of a ro mancer. Ah !" said Bogies, one day, as ho had fairly liked his auditor, "Tom is the most remarkable bo you ever set eyes on ; he's like his of dad—you can't no more sarcumvent rim than you can a woodchuck. You recollect that apple tree that stood down under the hill. be side the stump fence? Well, I was mighty savin' o' them apples, .1 can tell you. I forbid 'Tom touchin"em, as they brought a high price in the mar ket, and every one.told, but he would get 'em In spite o' me. It was his way, you know, and all possessed couldn't stop him. One day I caught the young scapegrace up in the tree, stuthln' his sack with the fruit, and I determined this time to punish him fur it. Thomas, my son," says I, "your father's callin'ye—come down." I thought I'd be sort o' persuasive, so it would fetch him; but he smelt the rat, and didn't budge an inch. " I can't dad," said he ; " these pesky apples are in the way." " Toni;" I continued, sternly, for my dander begun to rise, "come down this minit, or I'll nit down the tree, and let yer fall." You see my poor old limbs wouldn't permit my shinuin' alter the boy, BO had to take other means. "0, no you won't, dud," says Tom ; "only think how you'd mourn if ye couldn' sell the apples to stuff the ol i st i toad-akin," That was too much—to have my own boy'accuse me uv !tech parsitnunny. do. what does I do but git the axe and cut away at the bottom of the tree. "'loin—Thomas," I cried, as the tree was about cut off; "will ye come down now, and save yourself." "Never mind, dad," says he, "I 11'114 spillln'." It was no use ; I couldn't bring' him that way ;'and so I chopped away at the' tree, till, at last, it began to sway and fell to the ground." "'What! and cruahed your own boylP. ejaculated his horrified listener. • "Not by a long °balk," replied old, Bogies, winking knowingly. -"You couldn't come it over. Torn In any Such way. What had he done bUt"craWled . out on allimb, and while I was Choppin , at the-botttom oi the tree, he had been cutting offthe limb.with his jack-knife, and when the treefell, there As was still. up.there on the . , . John Yoder . , laqut ,flfly yea.raptme,, •esident or z Wer4eravllle,,BeXs.nontl ty; eaniniitted;siilelde 'on 'II3IIOAY pooh by hanging' hiblealf to a tatter in his stable. Ma2M nM3 LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY , MOWN-0- MAY 24, 1871. Llttle-Bel..the Newsboy. • Some months ago, or a year ago,may be It was—l have forgotten just how long, for I don't remember time and seasons, very, well—two people were walking down street one - day. A big, burly newsboy, very rough-looking, very dirty and uncombed he was, walk ed slowly.•along, just. before the two people, crying, In a hoarse, brazen voice : Yer's yer evening pippers, 5 o'clock e—dish—ing !" Just'as hundreds of rough-lookingvn combed newsboys do, every day. But a few feet behind the big boy, another boy, a little one, was walking timidly. He was the merest mite of a little boy, not more than seven years old. I think, and small of his age, too. He was a fragile-looking little fellow, with a pale face and slender little hands. His hair was combed and curled carefully, in long yellow curls, almost like a girl's. None but a mother's hand can comb and curl a boy's hair just that way, I have noticed. , The small boy had a few papers un der his arm, trying to hold them as the big boy held his. And when the big boy sung out his cry, " evening pa pers-5 o'clock e—dish—ing!" in his loud, rough voice, lie would turn imme diately around to the little one, and nod eueourniugly, and tell him : " Now, you say it, Baby." Then the pale little fellow, with the long, yellow curls, would take up his cry, faintly and feebly, and try to say it in his weak, childish quaver. Some how it made one feel queer about the throat to hear that poor little voice. The large boy was teaching the small one how to be a newsboy. Next after noon the two boys had another rehear sal, and the next, and that time the lit tle boy ventured to cross the street, and go down the other side, faintly and timidly echoing the cry of his big, rough friend opposite. Hundreds of people must have noticed the two, I am sure. The small boy was little Bell. I have not much saving faith in the race of newsboys, as a general thing. I am afraid that, in spite of Sunday schools and night-schools, and savings banks, and even newsboys' homes, they remain a class of the most depraved little wretches underthe sun. I know I should be so myself in their place. It is not their fault. It is the fault of the barbarous civilization which turns chil dren out of their cradles to earn their living. Learned doctors say that the moral faculties, being the highest en dowment of human nature, are there fore the very last to be developed. And that is why children are mostly such unmerciful, cruel little heathens, and pinch and torture each other, and steal, and tell lies, and have to have ideas of right and wrong educated into them, so to speak. So that it is not until children approach manhood and wo manhood that they begin to be truth ful and honest and tender-hearted. In deed, I have known even full grown men and women who did not seem to have any very vivid ideas of right and wrong, not yet being fully developed mentally. So when cruel necessity lays the burden of bearded men on the shoul ders of weak children, we cannot expect anything else of them than they will be miniature sharpers and wicked little wretches. But I never meant to preach. I only meant to tell the simple and sor rowful story of little Ben. It is a true story, too. If I could have made it up myself, God knows I would have given it a different ending! He was a newsboy, as I told you. Not one of the angel-kind either. He sometimes said words, little as he was, which would have shocked you, I am afraid, if you had heard them. And I know the only reason in the world why he did not knock down the big boys who used to kick and cuff him when he went to take his turn in the row of 'MAMA , 2,PW RR °P!fT? was ehP7 Patsey Hagans did It for him, and Pat sey was the bully of the newsboys, the roughest, toughest, most reckless of them all, the hardest case la town, who always slept rolled up In an old blanks, on the floor and who knew how t( swear .when he was two years old Patsey trained Little lien to be a news boy, and called him his baby. Ho Pat sey had a soft spot lu his hard hear after all. Ben was the smallest newsboy yoi ever eaw. Such a little, little mite id a fellow he was, that you wondered how he could sell papers at all, and how any mother could trust him out of her sight. Fine ladies Bald sometimes that It was°. pity such a pretty child should be a newsboy, and that his mother surely did not care much for him, letting him run about the streets so in constant danger of being knocked down and killed. If ho were their boy he shouldn't do it for anything. For little Ben was a very pretty child, with his slender hands and long golden curls. How was it? Did not,his mother care for her child? Aye sho did ; for ho was the only comfor she had in the world. Her only coin fort and her only child. Little Then hiu a father, bht he might better have ha no father. This father was a poor, pit iful wreck of humanity, fallen so low thatl think scarcely the angels of Heav en could have reached him in the depth of degradation to which he had sunk ! I am sure nobody except an angel could have reached him, away down in the pool of slime and filth which was all over him. Porno beast is so beastly as human beast. Time was when this weak, bad man had been well to do in the world, and respectable, and had friends. But it must have been always in him to be weak and bad, or he would not have fulled so easily when temptation came. An old tradition which tells how the angels fell from'Paradise, says that the thread which drew them into evil "was at first as thin as a cobweb, but they did not resist, and it grow strong as a cable." So with little Ben's father. He did not resist the cobweb at first, and now the cable bound him hand and foot, and left him no power, nor even the wish, ever to rise again in this world. With the father of little Ben we have nothing more to do. Time had been when the gentle mother, with her slender hands and yellow curling hair, so like little Ben's own, lived In a large house and had a carriage to ride in. 'rime had been when she had such a happy home that she had nothing left on earth to wish for. But that time was so long gone by now that Ben's mother, in her great trouble and despair, looked forward. to no happinons and no beautiful home till she should pass over the river and enter the gate of the celestial city. Indeed, so heavy was her trouble, that she some times lost sight of even that one last hope. The days of plenty and happiness were so long gone by for little Ben and his mother that one night they had no supper. And the next night it was Just the same, and the next—and after that little Ben often went hungry to bed. One day, watching his mother with his large, wistful blue eyes, he saw that her work had fallen from her hands, and that she was crying. At first, Ben cried too, because he did not know what else to do •, laying his bright little bead on her shoulder, and [clasping his weak arms tight about her neck, as if, poor child, thatcould do any good. Present ly he said: "Mamma, what are you crying for?" Then his mother told him that she had no supper for him, and no break fast either, and did not know where to get any more breakfast or supper. Maybe. the angels will bring us some,' said poor little Ben. •' There are no angels any more, Ben ny,'! said his mother. After that little Ben stood by her side a long time, very silent, very quiet (he was alwaya a quiet boy,) trying to get it through his childish head that there was truly no more angels, with their white dresses and Shining such as he had seen . , in a' picture his mother used to have.' The angels all looked' like hie mother, somehow, it seemed to him and she would make, a beautiful abgef , herielf, if she only had broad white wings. But he wanted his supper awfully, and some supper for mamma, too, the child thought,. • By amity,' after thinking. aq while longer, Ben went' quietly outdoors and Into theatre , erter, stole so *Ally out the Seek Way_ tat 'his !lather did - not see h i in He,weut to the 'lady who lived next door said : you. lend ine ; .`C4 Cents?". ~ 4 . 1.. • The lady, hearing the timid, treibto, ling-voice beside herdooked down and small , faoe gazlng•ui) , into Item, With beatitY ;` , Sawittvo large blue,ey_e!, _with the tome ottilVerliatin them already, as if the sensitive expect ed a refusal. Something, a fleeting re- _LL - t ... collection mayini;tir'ii . :iiStidering'.ten derthOught, floating about like a thistle down, seeking some place to rest upon, touched Mrs. Gray's heart at the mo ment;;; she remembered the strangiteel lug loneatterward, and she pattectlittle Ben's bright hair; as she gave him= the money and said he was a good child.' ; Then little Ben went into the news paper office, to wait for the 5 o'clock edition. It would have fared badly with him then, though, only for Pat Hagans, for the young ruffians of news boys, seeing he was a new boy, and a green one, fell upon the :poor child and began to beat and cuff him savagely. But another wandering tenderthought, Boating about like a thistledown, must have touched and rested upon the heart of Pat Hagans at that moment. For just as a big bad boy had struck poor Ben and made him cry, burly Pat Ba gfuls roared out: "Dry that up, rot yer ! Yer dassent lick a boy of yet size, nohow?" From that time big Pat Hagans was the champion of little Ben. He educat ed him to be a newsboy, as I told you ; taught him how to make change, how to " jaw back" when the boys "sassed" him, and also how to "slide off on his ear," at proper times, too. That very first night Pat's " baby " sold every one of his papers: And that night little Ben and his mother had some supper; though Ben wondered what made his mother cry again, as they sat down to eat, and hold him so tight in her'arms, and kiss him again and again. He thought it was a little unreasonable in a woman to cry when she had plenty of bread and milk. Maybe the angels had brought little Ben and his mother theirsupper after all. But Patsey Hagans was the only an gel directly visible in the case, and I am doubtful he;was rather a dirty-looking angel, chewing tobacco, and smoking a stump-pipe as he did. And I'm postive ly certain nobbdy would have let him into a Sunday-School Tableau as an an gel. Nevertheless, for all his patched [rowers and toessticking out of ills boots, he was just as much of a protectingspirit to little Ben as if he had worn the ortho dox white cotton gown and goose wings. Under wing of this guardian angel, then, little Ben had almost no trouble. Only once after the first week was he tormented at all, and that was when an envious newsboy be gan to beat him, because Ben had sold out all his papers, while the other boy had not. But angel Pat was at hand in less than no time, and made the spiteful Journal boy see such stars that he didn't dare say boo to Ben after that. That was the last that ever the boys troubled him. He was little, so helpless and harmless, that by and by his spirit of pity and gentleness toward him, began to develop itself, even among the merciless, outcast newsboys. They came to be so kind and chivalrous toward him that not a boy of them all would go near little Ben's beat, not a boy of them would take a customer from hint. lam glad to write that of them. They were glad to remember it, too, after that happened which did happen. So for months that weak little boy earned supper for himself and his moth er. People were very kind to him mostly. Ladies and gentlemen bought papers of the pretty golden-haired child, even when they did not want them. Car-drivers often slacked up a little when they saw him coining, so he might climb on safely, and the big policemen used to watch Win carefully across the street. Little Ben learned more of the big world than he ever thought was to be known; more than WAS good for a child to know, perhaps. He used to look at the fine carriages and wonder whether he could ever sell papers enough to buy a carriage. He wondered what he could do when lie was a man. lie would not be a newspaper editor, lie thought, because editors were all so cross and in such a hurry, and didn't seem to have much money, he noticed. May iTe'ltlcelrtilill l a Ai' ar ffit - Ting ri iiB L ri; would even have to go and be a legis lator, and have to be hauled about in a hack and gaped at. He would not like that at all. On the whole, lie thought he would be a milkman, lie told his mother, because a milkmen could ride all day lu a wagon, and seemed to get more money than any hotly else. And little lien learned some bad words and rough ways from the other boys, too. But he never said the bad words before his mother, never. And he always gave her every penny of his earnings, not even keeping enough to buy a pocket k idle with two blades, though he wanted it more than anything else In the world. At last n terrible thing happened. I hardly know how to write it down, for when I go to write of that my hand shakes and the tears coins in spite of me, and somehow I seem to lie writing of one who was a very near kin to me. One afternoon little Ben went out merrily to sell his papers, his slender, delicate hands and pale face very clean, and his long, bright curls shining in the sun. His mother watched him out of Hight from her window, just as always. That was the last time she ever curled little Ben's long bright hair; the last time she was ever to watch her darling from the window. Poor little Ben 1 He had sold three papers, and the little fellow climbed into a street-car and sold another. He meant to step off at the crossing, but the child was very little, very weak, and missed his footing, and fell under the car. In an instant the heavy wheel rolled over him—and poor little Ben never sold any more papers. Never, never more! They stopped the car and picked up the little, crushed body in a moment. A little feeble, trembling life yet quivered within him, and he opened his blue eyes faintly and begged them piteously to send for his mother. They knew the child and went instantly. But the faint, tiny spark of life glimmered feebly and went quickly out before the mother came. And with the cold hand of death stiffening his white eyelids, and dim ming his great blue eyes, little hero Ben murmured with his last weak breath, the words mingling brokenly with the death gasps: " Tell my mother—l've sold four papers—and—the—money—is in—my pocket." A crowd of men and women, most of them with tears in their eyes, saw the long, bright curis,all draggled and dusty, two poor little slim hands, broken at the wrist, one of them hanging quite dead and lifeless—a heart-broken Woman moaning and crying, and clasping wild ly to her breast the crushed, shapeless thing which had been golden-haired little Ben :—Cincinnati C'cnnoncrcial. Beauty and Rata Water L lan naof Politic rs, Duchess of Valen tinois, was a celebrated beauty iu an ago of beauties, yet strange to say, no histo rian has ever given details of those won drous charms which captivated two kings, one of them fifteen years her junior in age. We do not even knoW whether her eyes were blue or black, whether her hair was light or dark ; we only know that she was the loveliest woman at court: of lovely women, and that at an age when most women are shrivelled specimens of ugliness. Peo ple said she possessed a secret that ren dered her thus impervious to the ravages of time, Some went so far as to say in that superstitious age that she had brought her secret from a very dark gentleman indeed ! What was this secret then ? Did she ever tell it ? Never. Did any one ever know it? Yes, her perfumer. Did he never tell it? Not during her life. It is known then? It is, for those who have the patience to wade through musty many scripts and books. May we not know it? You will only smile and disbelieve I Try Good then, I will translate Maitre Outiard'e own words to you : "I, Oud ard, apothecary, surgeon, and perfumer, do here declare on my faith and on' the Memory of my late honored and tiMeh beloved mistress, Madame Dana of Poll tiers, Duchess of Valentino's; •that the only secret she.possessed, with whlcli. *0 be and remain ti perfect health,-youth, and , beauty- to the 'ago• of seventy-two was—Rain Water if And; in truths I assert that there-is nothing in the world like this same Rain Water, a constant lids of whieh' Is imperative to render the side:SCA anditlownY, or to ,freshe i the solo;„ pr to cleanse, the peresbf the orto make heauty.lastas 4a_.„Se7Pl Thus, the. nly service Whiell Oudard rendered his.- illustrious ends; tress was to gather the rain-water:ter her ; bottle it and seal it up? to kw:• in readiness in case of scarcity of•rain. , So all these bottlearcif .Iphileres•whieltdally arrived the ,greatiii#4l;! tcf`the greater Itidy,:ol34 • waned thicpsktapsx i , t Qa p4',4 Eayslt - ,Iso" ,Ttanti.4 , 1 5 0 11 ...041* adding that Diaus-, alwaye,,* hour's outdoor exercise.before the morn, Ing:dew had left the ground 1 LIME [Written for the Taitorlana; . Se'Ojai:Mons from the Flints and Doings. "Through thy recreant gizzard thou Jana.. Fi they monster, you've “cabbaged" my life." It Might naturally be supposed that. substances of .such opposite characters as those which constitute the specific title of this paper, could not possibly, under any circumstances, produce a scintillation; but not so, We have seen the time and the place, whorl they. would have "struck tire," the moment they came in contact, unless preVented by that " discretion which is the better part of valor." Before we proceed any further, however, it might be necessary to say something in regard to the signif icance of the terms employed in our title, without offering the least apology for the terms themselves; because they belong to the technology of the craft, and to have employed others, would only have beclouded our subject, be sides being foreign to the general sen timent of the shop-board. When we have oecasion to mention the name of Satan, or the Derail, we shall do so with out any compunction, and not " beat about the bush," by using such terms as "Old-boy," or "Bad-man," or "Old nick," or the many other titles applied to his " Plutonian Majesty ;" and it Is even so in this case. We did not origi nate these terms ; we found them in the universally acknowledged vocabulary of the profession when we took our in itiatory in it ; and they are still in it, al though we must confess that the muta. tious of time and circumstances have, in many places, rendered them almost obsolete. ' FLINT, was a term applied to that class of journeymen-tailors who were "sticklers" for the best prices for their labor that could be obtained, and who, under no circumstances would work be low the " bill of prices" which had been established by the society in any town or city—not even if it involved the ne cessity of their " trampling" to another place in the midst of Winter, and with out a sixpence in their pockets. What ever:may have been his profligacy, or his short-comings in other respects, the flint was "as true as steel" in this. He was invulnerable, and " hard as aflint," was a common comparison, when speak ing of any of this class. The Flint avowed himself the sup porter of the honor, the glory, and the dignity of the trade, and so far as main taining the prices was concerned, his claims in this respect., were indisputa ble. In some instances, however, it may have seemed that he carried his point of honor to an extreme not ap preciable by the world, outside of the circle of his profession, for he would infinitely rather have " played " over a single job for a whole week, for which he obtained Jive dollars, than to have made three, within the same period, at four dollars and ninety-five cents each. Such is the force of early habits of thinking on this subject, that we could not, even now,condemn him for his pref erence ; because, he professed to act from principle, and not from expediency— from an unswerving faith to the com pact between him and his " brother chips," and not from self-interest alone ; and if, whilst thus honoring the trade, he had always carried the same inflexi ble principles into matters in which the interest of others, outside of the trade, were involved, we know of no charac ter more trustworthy, as a custodian of the interests of the working people than theflint. Hints however, notwithstand ing their consistency in "sticking to the bill," had many weaknesses In oth er respects. Of course there were many exceptions, but as a general thing, they were very convivial—had their rigid shop-rules—their "Free-and-Easy,"and some of them would have thought them afP Wittig . " t fie y "'gine u c ti f I n 'a stray shilling in their pockets, that had not peen expended on the Saturday evening previous. As a sequence to this peculiar characteristic—whether they were married or single—there must have been deprivation or suffer• lug entailed ; but that was the abuse; us the subject of use, every mechanic or workingman must commend the course of the Flint. Although this term with usually applied to journey men, yet, in n general sense, it also in eluded their employers, or "crooks;" and their shops—" back-shops" at least were styled flint-qhops. Nothing could have been more disastrous to ft shop In a town or city where an effective sOcie• ty of journeymen tailors existed—than for said society, by a vote of its mem bers, to have expunged that name, and declared ft one of the opposite charac ter. In such event, it would have been the bounden duty of every flint to have "struck" against the shop, as promptly and unequivocally, as if it had been in fected withcholera,small-pox,or leprosy. Dung, on the other hand, was a term applied to a certain class of journeymen tailors who were willing to work at and price, and without regard to the restric tions of a special " bill of prices." In some cases where they worked under a uniform bill, it was such as had been dictated by their employers, and not one of their own making. Sometimes the number between "Flints" and "Bungs" was so equally balanced in large cities, that the latter had also their organized societies, but even In these cases, their bills of wages were such as their crooks themselves volUDtarily suggested. With out calling into question their general respectability, and their moral standing they were looked upon with disfavor by mechanics in general, and Flint-tailors in particular. Some of them were mean and cringing—" creeps," according to the technology of the craft—and made it a point to work just sufficiently below the bill to obtain that employment which otherwise might have been given to others. This term, it must be con fessed, is not remarkable for its elegance, but we are treating lt, not as a fancy, but as a fact, as it exists in the vocabulary of tailoring, and as it has existed from " time out of mind," and may continue toexist for time to come; notwithstand ing, like the term flint, it is becoming, from the same causes, more obsolete, as time and change advances. This class of men also differed from the former In this, that they had generally more in their purses, and more frugally kept it there ; but as there was no special code of honor among them in respect to prices, they would, when occasion re quired, or an opportunity was offered, underuzine each other, so that there was no bond of faith among them. Another very distinguishing characteristic of these two classes of men was that the Flint would not receive from his em ployer more than the bill called for, lest it might he supposed by his confreres, that a collusion existed between him, and iris employer, or that the latter had some ulterior design In view, whilst the Dung, free - from any apprehensions of this kind, would take all he could under any circumstances obtain. We distinct ly:remember on one such occasion in a Western city, where a journeyman availed himself of these special favors from the " Crook," and on the af fair being reported to the society it unanimously declared him a" creep," and hJs employer's shop "tainted," and forthwith every journeyman in it "struck," and deserted it as pre cipitately as rats are supposed to desert a "ainking,ship." By a satisfactory ex planation, however, and the payment of a line, at a special meeting of the socie ty, the next evening, bothwere restored to their former status. , This, of course, was arbitrary, and was'only one of the ptecutsors'of that disruption of the so ciety; ,and the Mel/king down of prices, Which too tilabe In that city.Withlit'five years.thereafter. We ate also cagnizant of a case,fin another Western city, where , the Society of Denys absolutely received twenty-five cents, more on a coat, from theiremployers,than the Flints did tkom Mils was an °enigma,. the only soll4t t ion ofwhich was thejaet that the former Wes a free NV of their employ etvintitle in order to throWdiscredit of odium on the Flints,Whorri . they hated Iwitilst the latter, was the result of a demand.KlP, as the Things were not Metturaental ,i making their price's, neitlitfr had het the power to retain them 'one day beyond:thei'vvill of their employers :continue 'them. There ' ,wse always a gate of hostility, existing between ,these two classes of 'journey en, Which — on the' least' proyOcatida, woultibreithehthito open war,unletii pre 'vented. tik somscounter inliuence~ this, at least,was the casein largeolties, where: they,ppth had their ; organized seeietlus. Xt qui* certain that theterillld tint meet *tithe on tfirdes'br soidarEhis inonscandthirefore theyllacithehf reite•plseed of meeting; and usual resort; and although it may be nothing to the ShoD-board c It of el er, yet the time idas, ea they wOultrinutually have delighted in nothing so m uch; as knowing thateither had .had their "thumbs smashed," party received some other injury, by which ;they. would have n bee unable to work at tailoring: This state of hostil ltjr;rof course; was suicidal to their own ultimate interests,..for it prevented that through which alone any class of. mechanics can expect to. maintain their rights, and not become the cring ,- ing subjects of domineering' and exact ing employers. It is very certain that the Flintsif, they could have had their way—would have prevented any man from usurping the husiness of a Tailor, who had not been bred : to it, by the ser vice of a regular apprenthieship. . It is just as certain too, that when and where they had the power In their hands, they did not always exercise It judiciously, and this perhaps, more than any combi nation against them, was the means by which they ultimately lost their pristine influence. The "bad feeling" between Flints and Dungs, is represented by the quotation at the head of this article ; and these exelanuttious are theatrically put Into the mouths of a pair of these worthies, by some caricaturist, who Illustrates a dualistic combat between them, the one armed with a "yard-stick" and the other with a " lap board," wherein the Dung is " run through" by the Flint. Neither of these classes of men seemed to recognize the necessity of a harmon ious union for the sake of a common end; nor did they acknowledge the mutal re lation which ought to exist between em ployer and employee. That relation is even now, looked upon—and often acted upon—as antagonistic, than whian, there could not possibly he a greater er ror. The employer is just as dependent on the employee as the employee is on the employer—not any kris so, not any more so—and so long as this relation is not understood—not carried out in all its principles, so long will there be a con flict between the interests of the two. There are relations between the employ er and the public from whom he receives his patronage, and there are relations between the employee and his family, to whom he is under obligations, all of which should be duly considered in their intercourse with each other. Where the employee makes demands upon the em ployer, or executes his work in such a manner as to conflict with the interests of the public, he inflicts an injury upon his employer which must ultimately re act upon himself; and on the other hand, where the employer makes de mands upon the employee which con flict with the interest of his family, he Is standing in his own light, for he pro vokes those combinations, which the weak are always compelled to resort to, to protect themselves against the en croachments of the strong. There is therefore no state of independence; but on the contrary, they are mutually de pendent upon each other, and the sooner they discover and act on this relation, the sooner a state of harmony between them will exist. Then, there will be no occasion for such artificial classes as Flints and Dungs, which are only the antagonistic adjuncts of a barbarous age in tailoring. The rapid revolutions of time and trade are fast obliterating these ancient distinctions, although it is not clear that a much better state of things has yet succeeded ; but, these are prob lems, which .we must look to the future to successfully solve. (ittANTELIA'S Rugby School. How ft wag Rmilned. In a London letter to the Cincinnati Cum/nut:id/ Moncure D. Conway writes as follows: - - - - As an Instance of how utterly depen dent a school, and particularly an Eng lish school, generally is on the force of a single man, one has only to look at the downfall of Rugby. I need not In form people so familiar as Americans irt ' t . (: . lCr 9 . ' W:l:l l lola"dretb i l l 1 Fi l lZjy " . w 1 111 YA% personal character, his eloquence, his tact, the old school blossomed like Aaron's rod among the other schools of 'England. Many of the old and barbar ous usages, as hazing, fell into happy desuetude among the boys, and Rug beians were everywhere in repute. When. Arnold died the school began to fall a little, but it was reinforced by Dr. Temple, who had not the exquisite art of Arnold in dealing with the young, but being liberal, earnest, and an ardent follower of Ar nold, under whom he had been trained, managed to keep the school at least pre eminent over all others in England for scholarship and morality. When Glad stone appointed Dr. Temple to be Bishop of Exeter, the Pusey I tes began to hanker after the control of the Rugby. It was complained by them that the Rational ists of the Broad Church had come to look upon Rugby as their private pre serve, and they insisted on getting pos session of the school. It turned out that on the Board of Trustees,with whom rest ed the election of a Head Master, a consid erable number were High Churchmen, others Evangelical, and a decided majori ty simpletons; so theyelected one Hay man ,a man utterly unknown; a man who was found afterward to have laid before the Trustees recommendations given to him many years before, by some eminent personages, for some small position in a little school, as if they had been given for Rugby. By so using certificates for a purpose never contemplated by those who gave them, Hayman was elected. When the deception was discovered there:was a cry of indignation, but Hay man clung to his post. When he ar' rived at Rugby he was found to be such a booby that the under-masters and stu dents held him in utter contempt.— Things went on Jrom bad to worse. Hayman turned out the two teachers who alone preserve anything of the old character of the school. The Stu dents were angry : there was a re bellion—a rebellion-that amounted one day to a regular battle with fists. 'The Trustees met, and found that, of the two under-teachers whom Hayman had dis missed,they had only the legal power to restore one. Him they restored. Thus, baying elected a Head-Master onia sectarian basis, they were compelled, within a few months, to repudiate his principal action. Rugby was tints given over to chronic' antagonism between Head-Masters and teachers. It is now universally, understood that Hayman is pig-headed, and the best boys are being withdrawn daily from the school, ' which Is ruined. The force with which Arnold and Temple ruled baying been withdrawn, we now learn that corporal punishment is being used upon the boys ; and, as. one barbarism begets another, the boys are beginning to be ruffians too. Oue of them has just written to a London paper in .de fence of the practice which now pre vails there under the name of " Sixth lickings.'.' When 'a boy does anything which the'other boys disapprove, but which can not be revealed to the ITIIIB - they take him Into, a room where he is " licked" bythe.Sixth form. "This the ingenious Rugbisfati defends. But a collection of boys sometimes has such curious moral 'demi and the offence they dare not tell the maaterisso often what older people would Call a virtue, that one cannot think . of "the " Sixth-lick trigs " with satlaftletion. But some such barbarisms as these linger in ,all schools where the infamous praCtice of flogging is preserVed to eke out the Ifi -1 competence of teachers.•Theexperience of ruined Rugby is one peculiar .as showing how utterly and easily au En glish school collapses when its doWn ward tendency is hot counteracted by some extraordinary man. And as Az nolds are.not to be got every day, it is Important that at least. nono,of the he reditary evils of the English colleges and schools Shall be Opted, to weigh upoh theenergielt that may be commanded In Amertm : c ••i , o A 1 Ight•Tlngered Teuton. '"' ' It is sad when German' theologians take to stealing, for, besides being fk bad example to the rest of themorld, ip furnish, a ban die to thOile.wtio have little' faith In fife edicasy2'Clertnafitheblogy. NOt lohgaincelhan toOktr svire'mlased from the Imperiai bray at 131 f Peters burg and one Aloys plchler, orklermun, theologian,„was suspected' of filching: frOm the s tores ellterature mbirdated' 'Atiiatten dant of thetibrary :very' : politely Mated •,the vquerable eiMohg on with hie, overcoat one flay, and took occpailon to prof ialithand oVer, his baek, tvheie a doncealedVoluirtiiidai distinctly felt'.' , An ofticialidsitivaliafter ward 'paid•to: theatudlouare treat 9f Rea ,1 3 1344eb.al there. seven tthOuativid umea wer e. iseoveied; aIA 'Which had tfee~isbtol This" etul-' dithlkit 14ht4hgered TettudfAseatid . to standeery high la themorid.oflennang, and his : selection of books indicated very sound taste and judgment. ;::.;',. ..._..,...,:-,'W.,,4!,,:;;,. 11272 ThkialdielktlPillitirtlelsl , I' l 'l2 1' Thelol l o.WiFig is theplatform adoptect,byi nahltiutleitts itt,istata Convention: ,• t. They demand, of the Legislatate. immediate peak*, of an ad 'calling a State Conventlott-to revise and':xtend the Com siltation • for „ the -..pdrlxielihi meet% : eitter• thinga, of Abolishing and Troldbitlng special legls- See ring the election of all State officers by thopeople; Ratabllshirig Sit Judicial system that will make Justice prompt and sure ; L . , And providing for the pasaage of general, laws that. shall so encourage industrial en-, terprlse, that Pennsylvania shall be ernabled , to take her just place in the front rank of all ,the States. They demand of Cougress that the credit of the nation 'shall be faithfully maintained ; home industry encouraged and protected; an adequate civil service system established for regulating appoint ments to office ; taxes reduced to the lowest possible limit consistent with the steady, but not too rapid extinction of the national debt; the honor of the Republic sustained at home and abroad ; the rights of every man protected iu all the S k ates, and every man, entitled thereto, secured In the poll ing of ono vote, and no more, at each elec tion. 3. They declare their unalterable attach ment to the principle or protection to home industry in the levying of tarif duties, in accordance with the wise policy which has existed from the foundation of the govern ment to this time. . . 4. They commend the policy of re trenchment and wholesome enforcement of laws, which has prevailed since the elec • tion of General Grant to the Presidency, and which has resulted in the first two years of his administration In reducing the national debt over two hundred millions, and in curtailing the taxes to the extent of eighty millions actually. They commend, elso, the similar policy which has prevail ed under Republican rule in Pennsylvania, resulting in paying off the war 'debt of three and a half millions; reducing the State debt from forty to thirty millions; and in abolishing the State tax on real es tate. It is to the fact that both the State and nation have been iu Republican hands, we owe the accomplishment of such grati tying results; and it is to the continuance of that party in power, the people must alone look for the continuance of this pol icy. The return of the Democrats to power In either Slate or nation, must inevitably be attended with a return to extravagance in expenditures to the 1111pairment of State or national credit, and to the abandonment of that protection to free labor under which onr industry has thriven and our people been made prosperous. 5. That in the judgment of this Conven tion, the time has come when the State tax on personal estate may be safely abolished, and the other taxes, imposed by State laws may also prudently be rednced without injury to the credit of the Commonwealth. 5. That au indication of what the people may fear from a return of the Democratic party to power, wo point to the criminal waste of the time and money of the people by the present Democratic majority of the State Senate. The Legislature has been now nearly live months in session, and is not yet nearly through with its legitimate business, owing to the obstructive policy of this majority. In all this time scarcely a single 'measure of public interest has been perfected; and the time has been wasted in their efforts to force on our State an unjust apportionment, and to break down the registry law against illegal voting, that they might thereby pave the way to their return to power through violence and fraud. 7. We commend to the support of the people of the State the candidates we have this day nominated for State ollicors. They are honest, capable, and faithful to the Con stitution, and In every way worthy of the public confidence. o ask , for their eleo- Lion, as an endorsement of the State and National administrations, as an approval of the time-honored principles of the Repub lican party, which we re•afilrui in their nomination, and as a fitting rebuke to the Democratic party for its destructive Nation al policy; for its adherence to the side of violence and wrong in the South ; and for the spirit it has betrayed in the Senate of this State this Winter—where It has made everything bend to the promotion of parti san interests, defeated the holding of a State Convention to amend our Constitution, wasted the public time hi childish trilling, and entailed upon the State a lingo bill of . 1. n milionged beyond. endurance, and which has prevented the accomplishment of any public good. 8. That our confidence hi the firmness, wisdom and integrity of our present worthy Governor, J no. W. Geary, remains unshaken, and that wo, believe Ills qualifi cations for the (Alice he now holds aro un questionable, as is eleary proved by the manner he has brought the State in safety through every storm. 9. That the administration of President Grant meets the full approval of the Re publican party of Penney wattle. His finan cial policy, by which the national debt is being steadily reduced; the reduction in the expenditures of the government; the honest collection of the'reventio ; his fideli ty to the principles of human rights, through which the liberty of all is to be secured in every part of the land ; his loy alty to the people In having no policy to enforce against their will; and the spotless integrity of his administration. After the reading of the resolutions had been concluded, a motion was made that the seine be unatilinowily adopted. The lion. P. C. Shannon advocated the same In a moat powerful speech, and on ocaioluding, offered to amend the ninth resolution by adding the following "and point to him as the honored leader of our pkrty now, and the proper standard-bearer of the Republican party in 1e72." Several gentlemen deprecated the amend ment as being premature, but It was finally adopted after a bitter debate. A Murderer 'lntuited by n Mob---Ex truer dlonry Cooluens of the Victim—Ms Couferelou. YANKTON, Dakota, May 15.—darnia Jamison, alias M. Mcheath, was hanged by a mob at Helena, Nebraska. He was ar rested near Omaha, last week, for the murder of Henry Locke, a German wood cutter, living in Cedar county, in October last, and was brought to Helena for triaL There was no doubt as to his identity nor of his guilt, and quite a - crowd gathered at Helena to meet him. Ho confessed tha murder, which was a cold-blooded one, and three other murders of which he was accdsed, behaving escaped from jail here on a similar charge a day or two before the murder in Nebraska was committed, He objected to being banged because ha was not prepared to die, but not because of his innocence... He was at once strung up,.but the rope broke, and it is stated be coolly smoked his pipe while they were getting the rope' ready again. The whole affair seems to have been conducted with cool ness and deliberation. The prisoner confessed to the murder of John Coifrey at Fort Buibrd, but claimed that s a comrade.natued Swisder shot him. Hp at first denied'the murder of Locke, but after a vote had been taken by the mob, and he had , been informed that he would be /U:Wed, he confessed the murder, and tvldressed the crowd as follows : ' Fr.uow Cyrrzsrm : I have come to make a free and open confession of the crimes I have committed. I know that I will have to be hanged, and I only ask to be hanged like a man. I have received a good deal of abuse for a murder Wm:Bitted at Fort Buford, the principal part of which was doite 'by the man himself who testified against me. I killed this man, Locke, down here. I had a quarrel with him Use day before, but that was no excuse. I had time to reflect; but I killed •him. We were going through the timber togeth er. I had some angry words, when I caught his ax and struck hind twice, killing him immediately. Tho murderer's real mime was John Mc- Beath. —Ho gas .30 yea* old, and was born in New York. He went to Kenttlcky, where he sertredln the Union army, anti came to Dakota in the 22t1 Infantry. He had a sister at Bowling Omen, Ky., and to her he bequeathed his - house and four acres of land. Se confessed to killing man in Kentucky before leaving, but said it was accidental. On Saturday night, after be ing taken across the river from here to Ok heavy, a dose of strychnine was given him by a prisoner at Sioux City. The dose was too heavy, and he recovered, though lie was still sick yesterday from the effects of the poillon. A.Fortink*n. Female. TeUN Her Bad Tato Through the Medium or on Advertise- • .We do not usually give gratultocul Meer don to advertisements, but the following, published in the last number of the Mo- Wongaheli Minn/Wenn; and its genahienees :vouched, for, We consider ,to 6 good to be lost„ is a novel contribution to Iltura biro, and should be preserved:" 'llOO Ritwartn—For the apprehension of. (Tattle, a tall man; about any: Pena ' haa,oonsiarable money anditlgh. forehead, long fae6 add hinteirnlawed' man , 'tf" bad like a giant, abd'hasoften beatine r andl went aim to end his dye ' penitentiary Where , he belne. cud he wears gray coat, with a very ge mouth, and one blue eye, and one blind eye, and'a' hideous looking lila& and now living with , the seventh woman, and me having one gcle Ws mad I. want him. Fought ap, up in the law ,With, bluirpants. 'tie ought - to be' arrested; and hale hundred dollars of saY money, anda let k l lead andish elli e lead All Yf i enl 9 ' f ini llatt4 , - anZh aP eitt 'add " papa" landile -called MA Una; Tilllapand A beyblludotonanywatid3 wbak APt niek. her, Mat Cato ' e liatdied afflklf *dui' iiitrand'eodiCalliy' geld =ad beitausiitt, and I will never nye with him.again,,no never, he Is a dtsgreee;and I Would like to BATE OF ADVERTISING 8 =7., tl=7. s l 3 l„7 l 7,o39:ALi ez rafi r .... uont15101p1;1111s . 7,..e.a.rx Asivicia a wap i mraf t o for fn- ElMitrrn.lL , Y 'r 31 11q1 A C V35-rr g u forll ß the =tebqUzOt " 1.F..1CW1 3. { 1... 1 1 t.1)11 1-.9)n0) 8111rWNintrav,twytt.1 •.sa, , Colvens r7.V1re.trct..,.,p.,11T .1 • . 1: - Sitselit.'cFrcrritice'proseallone.nyftirwreer.nna i c f ri r t: v t a w l = eg fo t r a lrti: ertw ere t , L iiii t liliA n ia yri a4l4t I J 1.1 VU:Bentote Vairiii,444.....“ 4 .4...••••Ki 1110 tegAVIrCOVIZATIFIA: O T I2I ;4 "2 15D, luorehimetwollitFul,4llPelled to main tAin mecendiNs ap: am his lawful weddeSctif luthahti cbrtfficateormar my acliut^r.Turrim. Pfripluty7,x.44s, Pa., ApT11.1.871. Pei!'!' ) MtPri FV9 I4 " Veu! l •4 , ?!P. , TnesdAY, evening, 'Mayi,d, via Ila milogutOtlttyl7, L lSlorning:=-There was a Tremendous scene at the Mil o; the Column Vendome, at half-past ; dye o'clock this afternoon.. The fall was announeiid for two o'elbeir',' and attain baledtiTeei in 'the Pace Vandoine were thronged'withladloa. Itues de,la Pais. and Castiglione were crowded. Three lands of music arrived while the werkmen - •were ehgaged' in chipping. the base:6l'7th° colunin.! AL./omile: next ar rived. and Warded the windlass. The ex elle'rnent was Mtense: M.lteehefort next apPedied and the people crowded around himi,glving him, loudsheors. Soon all ar rangements were completed, nod the cable stretched and tightened, the column stood firm' ' the windlass broke and the pulley fiewinto the air and Wen deseended,,strik - lug a sailor and wounding him. After this accident, M. Abadie declared that he needed two hours in which to repair the tackle. The odds rose that the column would not fall. At a quarter past 5 o'clock it was sivon out that the/column Would not fall before To'eletik. A general expression of disapprobation went through the crowd. At twenty minutes past five o'clock the cable was again stretched for the work of demolition. Suddenly to the surprise 01 the spectators, the vast column moved and swayed. It next swept magnificently down, bursting into fragments twit street: the earth. It tell lengthwise in the Rue de la Pads, exactly ou the manure cushion prepared for it, splintering with a dull, heavy, lumbering sound, while a thick cloud of dust and crushed and powdered masonry rose in the air. The crowd, as 140011 11-`4 the column fell, gave tremendous shouts of "Vivo la Com mune," and the bands played the Marsoil laise hymn. When the dust cleared away there lay the glorious column shattered to pieces, its bronze and rua.soury in two masses together in the middle, and the statue of the Emperor, several feet front one end of the column, with the head knocked off. The crowd rushed forward to collect fragments as relics, and the Guards were unable to resist the rush. Next the orators commenced their speeches, indulging in all sorts of extravagant language. The statue of the Emperor was treated as if it was the Emperor himself. The National Guards spat into its face and struck it with their rifles. After the ceremonies were concluded the crowd diverged and the soldiers moved off waving their red flag and giving ex pression to their joy by continual shouting. The excitement was tremendous, and is even now high. This is the story of the destruction of the Column Vendome--a monument which should have been pro tected and cherished by all parties, whether republican or monarchical, us not only commemorating the glorious deeds of Frenchmen, but as a great work of art, which cannot readily be replaced.—lterold WIFE MURDER IN NEW YORE A Mao Throws his Wife out of a Third Story Window. A terrible wife-murder way perpetrated in the tenement-house 133 Heade street, about 11 o'clock last night. For the past year, on the third floor of the house in the rear, have resided William Rudd and his wife Margaret. Rudd is a native of Nor folk. England, 39 years of age, and a sailor by profession, but has for six or seven years been emloyed as porter by the dry}- goods - goods fir of li. N. Taylor, 101 Franklin street. His wife separated from him Hewn months ago, and only rejoined him on Wednesday night. 'rho cause assigned for this Is that Marga ret Rudd, the wife, was a hard drinker, and refused to share the matrimonial couch with her husband. Last night they went to visit at No. 28 Watts street, and on the way back the quarrel way 'renewed. On reaching the house they wont to their room, and William McCarthy of No. 135 Reads street, next door, and Ueorgo Hume, who lives In a rear tenement, heard some quar reling, and several times hoard al re. Redd say "Stop this." In a row minute's, about 10:30 o'clock, or a little) after, all were horrified by seeing Rudd push Ilk wife out of the window. She fell on leer root In the rear yard with a dull thud, fuel man k it,,, grntutol Italia relic down stairs to the street, and was arrested by OillooJolly,!of the 3d Precinct. Thowlli , was taken to the Park Hospital, where, despite the attention of :or. Vaudowater, she died in a few moments. She was A nier ' lean, born of Irish parents, 35 years of age, and a rather handsome woman, She died from the shock to her nervous system. Rudd is locked up In the Third Ward Sla tion-flouse. The Author of the "Lou Coblu Songs Tho lion, John Gro[nor, ox•tlovernor of Now Mexico, and author of the once fn- Moon " Log Cabin " songs of the political campaign of 18.10 died in Toledo on Satur day morning, l ie was a resident of Col umbus, Ohio, and wan attending the Grand Lodge of Odd-Fellows at Toledo when ho 11 , 118 struck with paralysis. Mr. Greiner war born in 1810, and removed to the State of Chto when a boy. lie was nt one time editor of 'no Mato Journal, at Columbus, and afterward of The Gazette, at the Hattie platy, and of The Times. sin Look active part in the early Whig cam paigns of the State; in fruit, as the author of the "Log Cabin Songs" and other popular political ballads, he was ono of the leaders of the party. Among his songs still flunii lar, in their titles at lout, oven to the younger mon of the prosout day, aro "Tip pecauoo and Tyler too " , and "Old lip Coon." Ho composed the music to accom pany his songs, and the people seized upon both air and words with enthusiasm and eagarnesa. He frequently sang his own songs at immense gatherings during limo excitement of the' campaign; and other tongues than his echoed them at monster Whig meetings in all ports of the country, North and South. Mr. Greiner was rep • pointed Indian Agentby Prosidoxt Taylor, and President Flilmoro afterward appoint ed bird Governor of Now Mexico. Ile was absent in the far West about nine yearn. Ow his return he found political combina tions with which ho was uefamillar, and in which he took little interest. The relative positions of men whom bolted ridiculed or praised.were In many coxes changed, and he has boon board of but little during late years. At the time of his death, ho had re tired from editorial duties, and was engag edlia Wittiness at Columbus. , Palm-144f Halo The only place In the United States %Viler() palrn-leaf braid is manufactured is in Maesachusetts, the principal towns where the Credo is carried on being Am herst, Palmer, Barre, and Fitchburg. Till) raw material Is brought from Cuba to Now London, Conn., in bunches of twenty-five leaves from four to live fee't long. The bunches, placed on the stook end, arepack ed in the bleaching TOOMM and subjected for sixteen days to the fumes of brimstone. The leaf after being bleached, passes into tho'hands of the Splitters, and about ono third of the Material is rejected. This waste, until decently, was useless, but is now sold as .paper-maker's stock for fifty dollars a ton, when delivered at the mills. The splitleavee are now sent out into the country to be, braided into hate and woven Into webs for Shaker hoods. This work is done by the wivee mid children of tile Now Ragland farmers, and large teams aro con stantly passing over the steep hills and into the most remote recesses of the country, carrying the raw material to bo . bmided and bringing back the finished work. A large number of persons find employment Ih braiding, and nimble-lingered girls can earn as much as an adult woman. The pay is small, but oddmoments which otherwise would be disengaged tiro devoted to this labor. Country merchants', It is stated, fre quently take the leaf and.put it out in the neighborhood, being satisfied with the M erriam() of sales although they may make no profit from the braiding. A RUlAbie,ObJect We take the following from tho New. Jer soy Journal, published at Ellzabethport: most pitiable object in human shape in them parts is Charge Bortrob,• whom, parents live at N 0.203 Court atreet, In what used to be called the ' yellow tavern.' Ile was born blind and so deformed that he can neither sit, stand, -nor crawl; and at least ono-half of hls joints appear to be din. located: 1919'yeare old, and so near a skeleton. , that his bones almost protrude through, the sklsr. Pea a,cradie all the' time ' , on his, back, and abont all the motion that ho ferabln hi' make is to throw hlsbeachom one side and the othen,.whlch keep' the madleirocklug. The ,only, word "leis able to say is '111a;' - salboblels his in tellect can3ed by daily then His breast is concave Ituitead of conveg,andbis feet and legs are 010 drawls ,up" under that his whole frime ocenpleal but a 'amen space. His weight apparently is not 'over thirty pounds. Hiseareams; when these fits come °mare so.terrilb3 that he oort , he beard all over the nelghtsarbooil. Tho writer has;seeu nilierY in ail. its shapim, but hover before aslta& , sa , thilr. AmisantbrepistWobldbe ,o3rutod!by..a.v.isit au • iNneralß4arMn'•iNotrZP Gorernor WermontbootLotrielana, : bee been brew ht te g{I9LA a speech mado a Sew day, c e af,a receptlqu_slyen to, Gen: Blie•Knacui 14eVe Orleims,'"lde Govetnor - fteedollalyi QC:dad/mime feet othillibewing berm:fhb:Ay ,limokiblisieda n P4P:attack. CligaVlSFlee"gtigt=ls)lin•.°l - • ' • Sti VilipOlid•lly 12 You 'ought 101 , hive lbeen , elaietrely.f Abe; Gpvernor probably had hot mtieV pi/petite SO the rest of the banquet, ' " '