2 l)c nits, ftctu BloomftdV Ja. PAID IX IIISOWX COIN. 1 GOOD STOllW IN the year 18 there lived at Bordeaux the last or one of tho lust of a long line of scoundrels who hud lnado that part of France infamous (to onr ideas) by a succession of cold-blooded murders, committed under tho sanction of what people wcro pleased to call the Code of Honor. This was a certain Comte de V , a. man of great physical strength, iinperturable sangfroid, and relentless cruelty. Not a bad sort of companion, as Home said, when the fit was not on him, but this came on once in about every six months, and then he must have blood, it matters little whose, lie had killed and maimed boys of sixteen, fathers of lamilies, military officers, journalists, ad vocates, peaceful eouutry gentlemen. The cause of a quarrel was of no impor tance; if one did not present itself read ily, he made one ; always contriving that according to the code aforesaid, he should be the insulted party, thus having the choice of weapons; and he was deadly with the small-sword. It is difficult for us to realize a state of society in which such a wild beast could bo permitted to go at large ; but we know it to be histori cally true that such creatures were en dured in France; just as we are assured that there were at one time wolves in Yorkshire, only tho less noisome vermin had a harder time of it as civilization progressed than was dealt out to the hu man brute. The latest exploit of the Comte de V previous to the story that I am about to tell, was to goad a poor young student into a challenge ; and when it was repre sented to him that the boy had never held a sword in his life, so that it would be fairer to use pistols, he replied that" fools sometimes made mistakes with pistols", and the next morning ran hiui through the lungs. The evil fit was on him; but the blood thus shed quieted him for an other half year and rather more, for pub lic opinion was unfavorable, aud the air of Bordeaux became too warm for hiui. Hut the scandal blew over after a time, and he came back to his old haunts, one of which was a cafe by the river side, where many used to spend their Sunday. Into the little garden of this establish ment our wolf swaggered one fiuc sum mer afternoon, with the heavy dark look liud nervous twitehingof tho hands which those who were acquainted with him knew well meant mischief. The evil fit was on him ; consequently ho found him self in tho center of a circle which expand ed as he went ou. This did not displease him. He liked to be feared, lie knew lie eould make a quarrel when ho chose, so he looked around for a victim. At a table almost in the middle of tho garden sat a mau of about thirty years of age, of middle height, and au expression of eountenance which at first struck one as mild and good humored, lie was en gaged reading a journal which seemed to interest him, and eating strawberries, an occupatiou whieh does uot call forth any latent strength of character. Above all, he was profoundly unconscious of the presence of 31. le Comte de V , and continued eating his strawberries and reading his paper as though no wolf were in that pleasant fold. As tho Count approached this table, it became sufficiently well kuowu whom he was about to honor with his insolence; and the circle again narrowed to sec tho play. It is not bad sport, with some of us, to see a fellow-crcaturo baited es pecially wheat we arc out of danger our selves. The strawberry eaters' costumo was not such as was ordinarily worn in Frauco at that time, and ho had a curious hat, which the weather being warm ho had placed on tho table by his side. " He is a foreigner," whispered some in the dress circle. " Perhaps ho does uot know Monsieur lo Couato." Monsieur le Comte seated himself at tho table opposite tho unconscious stran ger, and called loudly, " Garcon." " Garcon," he said, when tho function ary appeared, take away that nasty thing!" pointing to the hat aforesaid. Now the stranger's elbow, as he read liis journal, was on the brim of tho " nasty thing," whieh was a very good hat, but of Jiritish form and make. Tho garcou was embarrassed. " Do you hear me ?" thundered the Count. "Take mo that thing away ! No one has a right to place hit hat ou tho table." " I beg your pardon," said the strawberry-eater, palitely, placing tho offending article on his head, and drawing his chair a littlo aside ; " I will make room for Monsieur." Tho garcon was about to retire well satisfied, when the bully called after him " Have I not commanded you to take that thing which annoys me away ?" " But Monsieur lo Comte, the gentle man has covered himself." " What does that matter to mo ?" " But Monsieur le Comte, it is impos sible." " What is impossible ?" " That I should take the gentleman's hat" " By no means," observed the stran ger, uncovering again. " Be so good ns to carry my hat to tho lady at the coun ter, and ask her on my behalf to do mo the favor to accept charge of it for the present." " You speak French passably well for a foreigner," said the bully, stretching his arms over the table, and looking his neighbor full in the face a titter of con tempt going round the circle. " I am not a foreigner, Monsieur." " I am sorry for that." " So am I." " May one, without discretion, inquire why?" " Certainly. Because, if I were a for eigner, I should be spared the pain of see ing a compatriot behave himself very rudely." " Meaning me ?" 'Meaning precisely you." ''Do you know who I am?" asked the Count, half turning his back upon him and facing the lookers-on, as much as to say, ' Now observe how I will crush this poor creature." " Monsieur," replied the strawberry cater, with perfect politeness in his tone, " I have tho honor not to know you." " Death of my life ! I am the Comte do V ." Tho strawberry-cafer looked up, and thc easy, good-natured face was gone. In its place was one with two gray eyes which flashed like fire, and a mouth that set itself very firmly. " The Comte de V ," ho repeated iu a low voice. " Yes, Monsieur. And what have you to say against him '" "I? O, nothing." " That may bo well for you." " But there are those who say ho is a coward." " That is enough," said the bully, start ing to his feet. ' Monsieur will find me in two hours at this address," flinging him a card. v I shall not trouble myself to seek Monsieur le Compe," replied the strawberry-eater, calmly tearing the card in two. " Then I shall say of Monsieur what he, permitting himself to lie, said just now of me." " And that is?" " That he is a coward." " You may say what you please, Mon sieur le Conine. Thoso who know mo would not believe you, and thoso who do not my faith ! what care I what they think ?" ' And thou thou art a Frenchman !" No one but a Frenchman could have thrown so much disdain as ho did into the "thou." The strawberry-cater made no reply, but turned his head and called "Gar con !" The poor trembling creature came up again, wondering what new di lemma was prepared for him, and stood quaking some ten yards oft". " Garcou," said tho stranger, " is there a room vacant iu the hotel?" " Without doubt, Monsieur." " A largo one ?" " But certainly. They aro all large fine apartments." "Then engage the largest for mo for to-day, and another no matter what for Monsieur le Comte." " Monsieur, I give my own orders when necessary," said tho Count, loftily. " I thought to sparo you the trouble. Go, if you please, (this to tho waiter,) " and prepare my rooms." Then the strawberry-eater returned to his strawberries. Tho bully gnawod his lip. lie could not mako head nor tail of this phlegmatic opponont. Tho circle grew a littlo wider, for a horrid idea got abroad that tho Count had not found ono who was likely to suit hiui and that he would havo to seek elsewhere what ho wanted. Tho murmur that went round roused the bully. " Monsieur," ho hissed, has presumed to make use of a word whioh amoug men of honor" " I beg your pardon ?" " Which amoug men of honor " " But what can Monsieur le Comte poss ibly know what is felt among men of hon or ?" asked tho other, with a shrug of in credulity. " Will you fight yourself with me, or will you not?" roared tho Count, goaded to fury. " If Monsieur lo Comte will give him self the trouble to accompany me to the apartment which no doubt, is now pre pared for me," replied thestrangcr rising, " I will satisfy him." " Good," said the other, kicking down his chair ; " I am with you. I waive the usual preliminaries. I only beg to ob serve that I nui without arms : but if you" " O, don't trouble yourself on that score," said the stranger with a grim smile. "If you are uot afraid, follow me." This he said in a voice sufficiently loud for the nearest to hear, and tho circle parted right and left, like startled sheep as tho two walked toward the house. Was there no one to call " police." no one to try and prevent what to all seemed imminent ? Not a soul ! The dreaded duelist had his evil fit on, and every one breathed freely now that he knew the victim was selected. Moreover, no one supposed it would cud there. The count and his friend (?) were ush ered into the apartment prepared for tho latter, who, as soon as the garcon had left, took of his coat and waistcoat, and proceeded to move the furniture so as to leave tho room free for what was to fol low the count stauding with folded arms, glaring at him the while. The decks being cleared for the action, the stranger locked the door, placed tho key on tho mantel-piece behind him, and said : " I think you anight have helped a lit tle ; but never mind. Will you give me your attention for five minutes '(" " Perfectly." " Thank you. I am, as I havo told you, a Frenchman, but I was educated in England, at one of her famous public schools. Had I been sent to one of our own Lycees, I should, perhaps, have gained more book knowledge, but, as it is, 1 have learned somo things which wo do uot teach, and one of them is, not to take a mean advantage of any man, but to keep my own head with my own hands. Do you understand me, Monsieur le Comte?" " I cannot flatter myself that I do." " Ha ! Then I must bo more explicit. I learned, then, that one who takes ad vantage of mere brute strength against the weak, or when, practiced in any art, compels one unpractieed in it to contend with him, is a coward and a knave. Do you follow me now, Monsieur le Compe ?" " I camo here, Mousieur " " Never mind for what you camo, bo content with what you will get. For ex ample to follow what I was observing if a mau skilled with the small sword, for tho mere vicious love of quarreling, goads to madness a boy who has never fenced in his life, and kills hjm, that man is a murderer; and moro a cowardly mur derer, aud knavish." 14 1 think I catch your meaning ; but if you have pistols here " foamed tho bully. " I do uot come to eat strawberries with pistols in my pocket," replied the other, in tho same calm tone he used through out. " Allow me to continue. At that school of which I havo spoken, and in the society of men who havo grown out of it, and others where tho same habit of thought prevails, it would be considered that a man who had been guilty of such cowardice and knavery as I havo men tioned, would bo justly punished if, some day, ho should bo paid in his own coin by meeting some ono who would take him at tho same disadvantage as ho placed that poor boy at." " Our seconds shall fix your own weap ons, Mousieur," said tho Count ; " let this farce end." "Presently. Thoso gentlemen whoso opinions I now venturo to express, not having that craze for blood which dis tinguishes some who havo not had asim ilar enlightened education would proba bly think that such a coward and knave as wo have been considering would best meet his deserts by receiving a humiliat ing castigation befitting his knavery and his cowardioe." " Ah ! I see ; I havo a lawyer to deal with," sneered the Count. " Yes. I have studied a little law, but I regret to say I am about to break one of its provisions." " You will fight mo thou ?" ' Yes. At tho school wo have been speaking of, I learned among other things tho use of my hands: and if I mistake not, I am about to givo you as sound a thrash ing as any bully ever got." " You would tako advantago of your skill iu tho box?" said the Count, getting a littlo pale. " Exxi etly. J ust as you took advantago of your skill in the small-sword with poor young I' ." "But it is degrading brutal!" "My dear Monsieur, just consider. You aro four inches taller and some thirty to forty kilogrammes heavier than I am. . have seldom seen so fine an outside. If you were to hit me a good swingin g blow, it would go hard with me. In the sumo way, if pc or young B hud got over your guard, it would have gone hard with you. But' then, I shall only black Jwtth your eyes' mid perhaps deprive you M' a tooth or so, unhappily in front ; wheeas you killed Arm." "I will uot accept this baa-barous en counter." "You must; I have done talking. Would you like a little brandy before wc, begiu? No? Place yoursclfon guard, then if you please. When I hnvo done with you, and you are fit to appear, then you shall have your revenge ev en with the small sword, if y0u please. At pres ent, bully coward knave, take tl laA, and that, and that!" And the wiry little Anglo-Frank iva as good as his word. In less time thtm it takes to write it tho great braggart was rendered unpresentable for many a Ion g day. That number one caused him to se e fifty suns beaming in the firmament with his right eye; that number two produced a similar phenomenon with his left; the t number three obliged him to swallow a. front tooth, and to observe the ceiling more attentively than he had hitherto done. And when one or two other that had completely cowed him, and ho threw open the window and called for help, the strawberry-eater took him by tho neck and breeches and flung him out of it on to the flower-bed below. The strawberry-eater remained a month at Bordeaux to f ulfil his promise of giving the Count his revenge. But then, again, tho bully met with more than his match. Tho strawberry-eater had had Angelo for a master as well Owen Swift, and after a few passes the Count, who was too eager to kill his man, felt an unpleasant sensa tion in his right shoulder. The seconds interposed, and there was an end of tho af fair. It was his last duel. . Somo ono rouuecu a sketch ot him as he appeared cinsr thrown out of thn Vmtrl winrlmv and ridicule so awful to a Frenchman rid tho country of him. Tho strawberry cater was alive when tho Battle of tho Alma was fought, and is the only man to whom tho above facts aro known who never talks about them. Boston a Century Ago. ThoBostou Gazette and Counti Journal of a century ago, was a curiosity in its way. It was about 1-t inches by 10, and half of its twelve columns were filled with advertisements. From acopy, datd I2th June, 1769, wo clip tho following advertisements : A Few Silk Worm's Eggs to bo given away. Will bo sold by public vendue, at the Bunch of Grapes in King's street, two stout, able-bodied negro men. Also a negro boy and two negro women. Umbrellas, made in tho neatest man ner, to bo sold at G1.5 apiece, by Oliver Groenleaf, at his shop the corner of Win ter street, opposite Seven Star lane, South End, Boston. David Burnitt gives notice to all gen tlewomen that ho " makes in a new fash ion, which has never been done in Bos ton." " Major General Makay" advertises " a free pardon" to every deserter who shall surrender himself and join his regiment, ou or before the last day of June except some eighteen soldiers who are named, for whoso apprehension tho General offers three guineas each. The paper has no list of marriages and deaths, but simply the following announcement : " Buried iu tho Town of Boston since our last, nine Whites, two blacks, Baptis ed iu the severul churches, four." The news from England is to April 29, by " Capt. Hall arrived about six weeki from Loudon." Tho most important in telligence is tho rejection of John Wilkes by tho IIouso of Commons. The latest news from Philadelphia is to June 1 cloven days old. B$ Sec hero ! exclaimed a returned Irish soldier to a gaping crowd as ho ex hibited with some pride, his tall hat with a bullet holo in it. Look at that bullet hole, will you? If it had been a low crowned hat I should hayo been killed outright. SUNDAY HEADING. The Best Use of the Bible. " My mother srive me a Bible for mv gift last Christmas," said a little girl, complacently, and Louise gave Cousin Harry one, at tho same time. Now just look at them, and seo tho difTsrenco." Harry's was a littlo worn. Its gilt edges wcro tarnished, and the newness was gone from the cover, but it looked as if it had been read very often. Hero and there I saw pencil murks near favo ite verses, and in one or two places it seemed as if tears might havo fallen. Little Harry Gordon had become a Chris tian lately, and his Bible had evidently been very precious to him. Minnie said triumphantly, after I had finished my look at Hilary's, ' Now see mine!" She unfolded the tissue paper from it, and there it was just as fresh and fair and uninjured us when it camo out of the shop. " I've never had it out of the drawer but once," said Miss Minnie, " and that was to show to somebody." " Minnie," said I, " if your father was away from home, and should send you a letter, telling you just what he wanted you to do and be, would it be good treatment never to break tho seal, and to lay it away in a drawer unread ? Would it not rather bo better to tako it out every day and to read it over and over, trying all the more each time to obey his m j unctions ?" "Yes!" said Minnie, blushing and hanging her head, as she began to seo my meaning. " This is God's letter to you, my love ! Like the mau who folded away his talent in a napkin, you havo folded up your precious Bible. Hereafter, my child, use it as God wants you to. ' Search the Scriptures, for in them ye think ye have eternal life, aud they aro they which tes tify of me."' The Runaway Knock. " Teacher," said a bright, earnest faced boy, " why is it that so many pray ers aro unanswered ? I do not under stand. The Bible says, Ask and ye shaH receive, seek and ye shall find, kuock and it shall be opeued unto you,' but it seems to me a great many knock and are not admitted." " Did you ever sit by your cheerful parlor fire," said the teacher, " ou some dark evening, and hear a loud knocking at tho door? Going to answer tho sum mons, havo you not looked out into the darkness, seeing nothing, but hearing the pattering feet of some mischievous boy, who knocked, but did not wish to enter, and therefore ran away ! Thus it is of ten with us. Wo ask for blessings, but wo do not really expect them; we knock, but we do not wish to enter : wo fear that Jesus will not hear us, will not fulfil His promises, will not admit us aud so wo go away." " Ah, I see," said tho earnest-faced boy, his eyes shining with tho new light in his soul, " Jesus cannot bo expected to answer runaway knocks. Ho has never promised it. I mean to keep knocking, knocking, Until He cannot help openiwj the door." Is Your Soul Insured. "Pa," said a little boy, as ho climbed to his father's knee, and looked into his faco as earnestly as if ho understood tho importance of tho subject, " Pa, is your soul insured?" "What aro you thinking about my son '!" replied tho agitated father, " Why do you ask that question ?" " Why, pa, I heard Uncle Georgo say that you had your houses insured, and your life insured, but ho didn't beliovo you had thought of your soul, and ho was afraid you would loso it; won't you g3t it insured right away ?" Tho father leaned his head on his hand, and was silent, lie owned broad acres of land that were covered with a bountiful produce, his barns were oven now filled with plenty, his buildings were all well covered by insurance ; but, as if that would not suffice for tho maintenance of his wife and only child in case of his de cease, ho had, the day before, taken a life policy for a large amount; yet not ono thought had he given to liia own im mortal soul. AS?" God has not chosen to flatter our curiosity by any of ilisrovelations. What lie reveals to man is iu tho end assigned him, and the means of attaining that end. Dootrines and morals constitute an essen tial part of these moans. 6& Prayer without faith is lite a gun discharged without a bullet, which makes a noise, but docth no execution