HK TWO Point* of Ttow. W i, ■W tf * ort,im C n toilinit with axe and iri>dn ■ BMwen the fir-tree mwa ; B ' Tm wrf " danelng, dancing, dancing, V Until the crowing'* cloer. ■ tho knit that led the waltrora there, __ MX* t those foolish men! They work white we take rar pleasure, t s go on dancing, then." Hp i 1 I The JMChif over, the dance went round, ■ . The "title blew clear and the fiddle liegan ; J Quoth the ant to her train of workmen email. ■£.*" Industry, oee, ia unknown to man." HF ] ■ " VTetl hoard our pile of hard-earned com, I ■. * hllJl wc lw rich when the* are poor: ■ <"nmcr'a the time for them to "waste, ■ Summer's the time for us to store." k Rrifliug. H Echoes of cstliedral music ■ Heard— tt may ha— long ago, n i H Haunt ns still ami Bee and grow ; H They are driftiue, softly dnftmg HB Throngi, the wild unreal of tiro, ■ Golden organ-acts®, uplifting H Weary souls shore the strife. H Though th clamor of the citr ■ Konnit enu Mls M Still tboae sacred n it Mjinn ' ■ AH the chambers tf •mg *!?, , ( hc stilicsai Acre ana "aim. Of that in. w hoh. the cadence of t pasha. ■ When the summer stmjktagtn H adowu the crimson Wast, ■ THEN the ether pitssl they: fKfmBS We hnt obey caiieih us iar away. thac. i ealleth vear by year, HMA NOW Ut< re, BOW here;' Utakeldi the way appear." ealleth mo ?mmk ye igktas vrasting be! BBHHpf" .Wwr'i Monthly. DONATION PARTY. things- when did you get aaiic ' aid the merry Mis. Belles, m she tea o'clock m c a^ ,, *b|riving night, and found ber hu- H &0 1 uioodilv alone, baring just trip to Sew V<'k,id she j H baurt.lv by the hand, and le^ WjTr o ' true wifely affeetkm twa bis his seat and hooking as off the track or bad his sunk to the . been here F she j his silence. ■■B two." on the clipper 7" nodded. V she continued, drawing HHforcs. unpinning her shawl, ana r hit. j * sh'> exclaimed shaking back her . I wish you had got heme be- 1 that you 'might have with j dotation party : we had the j i would have given anything 1 been there; I have not seen a tK many a day. Ob, I wish ■HK you had better save your re- very sure I should not have j at borne, and peeadventure < staid at home with me:so , been so highly delighted with make the bast of it. Aou. friend to such doings " sf Edward, you oould not have | ] Mp plea-wd to-night. Why my i HH.. % is fluttering with ioy jst to -1 It. Retiming thanks V tafjl leather, by giving of ou* good < HK Spoor and" needy." 1 % and medy," he repeated witi mm, *jt Parson Allen you <*ll poari < Rflßi be wife wears a better boa- i HHKs. dinners than nine out i jSflfkn Allen —psbaw, Edward, ■ IHHII iHltald talk about Parana < ■A with ten I niM for i ■k ;w ** ; guriy tuna j <■" j true and I Mik Jr' ibcepf home four i ■■■■ d'"r> r:: 1 <- smite t fl;:>J bless her; ilesr grnjalmoOier Brown. >'ll do sll I can,' mud the fashionable Mn Grey; "she was with im\ Utile Nettie, and lab! her dear little form into the coffin " help her ? vee~by hokot; iil the nnvsb butrher, Hopkins. |'She ought to l>e supported by the public, ' and never know want, for poor widow as she ha* been *w MH** > eats, she has never let anybody want thai she could help, aud I've know n her many a time, vhen -he was earn iug bread with IHT needle, at a quarter a dar and board henolf—drop all and go and nunse two or three days at a thus, with thoM that were too notr to help her a mRe, and now site has them children to care tor. Br bokey, I'll give in my dona tion with a free hand •* And so it went; every body willing to help the widow iu her need, and we got up the donation party for the widow for our Thanksgiving tight, and oh! how glad our hearts have been made, in making the widow's cup to overflow with joy iu re turning thanks toour Ileaveuly Father by giving of our alandauee to relieve the wants of the widew, grandmother and or phaned liula one*. Yes, Kdward, my heart tows Buttered with joy t joy that there was so much of tie angelic in human heart; joy that in this food land there is enough for *ll. tad that so tnaan great and good minds are plewdiig for the right of all to live and love; h>v that every day the work of charity and benevolence goes on. and that woman is beaming to think and (eel f.r woman and for the opm-ened. and to tall upon her neighbors to lay their offer lags of sympathy upon the altars of suffer- heart*. Edward, dear as you are to m. dearer than lifc, even your frown and tplder words at this ttiomeut of our meei qf conk! not banish that heavenly guest an my heart, that the aged widow's *|od bless you," and her tear of gratitude hp usheced in there. Would that evsrr Tillage and every town would use t bet Thanksgiving a* we have done to-dav; the*, indeed, would it become a time of thanksgiving and prayer, acceptable alike to maa and God." Kdward Belle* bent his head low upon the feaad of hia lovely and kmog wife, and a tear fell upon that wedding ring, and wahjf rdyaemembraaos of she troubled sow b*i ened it to fwirl upon that gecde finger, aid a deep earnest "God bless yea, my Mary," made them again as one. GRAfIN RESOLVE. " Please ma'am, a little girl to see yon. ma'am," exclaimed the coarse voice of a | servant, breaking in so abruptly upon pretty little Grate Lovering* meditations that ft caused br to start. "Somebody after charity. I suppose,'" she replied, rather pettishly, 'give her sotne -11 liiog and send ker off. Don't trouble me | any more shout her," and as the servant 1 disappeared, she, though never very hard hearted or unkind, but sometimes neglect ful banished ail thoughts of the little girt from her mind. It was pretty near the holidays, and she was trying to plan how fiie eon d make it the most pleasant New Year cf ker life, for, besides being New Year,it was also the firat anniversary of her samel life. And what should she give tSeorge 5 She asked herself over and over again, when suddenly the door opened. '• The little begger won't '.cavg, ma'am," was shrieked in her ear. u What t nuisance!" she returned, • I ; presume fi thinks it is so near Christmas and New Tour's that 1 must give her money, five her that.'' and ahe passed her a :wn< -'and mind, don't on any ac count whatever come to me again, I wish j to be alone.' And the rai* no thought to what the child's troulle might be, for to her, trouble i as yet was bat a myth. Having lost her mother in tarty childhood she had never known bee esse, and when her father, a cold, ni *an died yearn afterward, she did not sore* for him. Then her guardian put her to school vhere she was surrounded by all the ctrnforis wealth could procure, and when sheretumed 6om there sbe met with George Lor*ring, her guardian's \ nephew. As the match was considered equal she, in t few months, changed from t iracie to Grace Levering. Since then she bad Hit even caught a glimpse of woe, and knesano other phase of it thaii what ahe had sfen through a novel. That nght tspeorge Covering was has tening heme fro* his office dowti town, he met writl a litth girl crying bitterly as if her heart would break • his kind heart was touched and he inquired kindly what troubled her, out she gave him no reply, seeming literally dumb with grief. It wore upon his mad. but he tried to forget it, and did not mint ion the circumstance to Grace for fear of orryihg her. Christmas went past ana New Year's came atlas t. Grace L •verine's home was a scene of festivity. She had decided upon giving party—to be the most elegant affair of the season—and every nook and Koraer of her spacious home was crowded Brith gaesta, among whom were numbered fte wealthiest and most renowned of the Briiete was music, finding and dancing; writ costly Christmas and New spread out for inspection; there exoctics scattered around in lavish Hiv easy the heart comes around to the when we o#ae resolve to do SyHhnd to drive away the mist of ill that hangs over the spirit, by a love and kindness. Mary replied seeming to rememhu- that she had repulsed. HK until one almost believed they suddenly transferee into some There was all %t taste and supply, and gaiety wy the ruling Hgßof the hour. Hither yd thither, of the gay, the youtliu) hostess BHlaHround among the reveley. MHted with her own success. IS never was a heart so chofilaMly hers that night Lowering slipped out fry, the for a moment, and he was harsh voice at the street r . jronc, you little beggar ! beg*,e!" Heard the servant exclaim. " Why d 0 fou think the madame wants to be traiAled with you or your note for to-night f or I'll set a f from him: a DEAR GRAC®—Y° do not remmber U me; but come, I pray, to a 1 Madeline Howard I Ttatath er flashed through George We ; ®rs *m. e- He had heard the story of Mr. H#d s r- eldest daughter marrying a poor Il§c tw artist, and being turned way froaitfr y) father's home when Grace but afd iv |of three years- It wastht blow wfj to i sent poor Mr ß - Howaraßp %i untnlg tan grave, and ltti Grace W her sister's nam* mentioned utttil her me mory had alnmit faded from her miuil And Madeline Vincent waadying! Surelv, Grace must go to her. "Come in into, and warm yourself, dear, xaid George, leading the poor wait' into a warm, comfortable room. " What's your name I" " Madeline Vincent, sir " '' *lll call tirade -I am her husband, and go to -tv your mother, ** 1 cry quiet If lie .ailed Graric from miiitl her guests, and told her where she was wished for. " 1-el me go to her now/" she cried- M Mv poor sister, dying 1 dung! '>h. George! dying!" A fw moments more, andobrhad spolo iai'd to such of her guests as would miss her, and, together with George and the child, started out to meet that sistar of whom she had but the dimmest raooUae tlou. They left the brilliant'v lighteil streets behind them, and turneo nto om of those lone, dark, dreary, ar.d almost God-forsaken streets of New York. Grace gaztd around her iu awe, and kept closer to his side, as her eyes, for the first time, foil upon real woe and degraiiation. Here and there shouts of drunken laughter, loud swearing, angry voices, and children's weeping, fell upou their ears. "And thin is New Year's eve," she mur murvd. "Oh! George! And the contrast of this scene to the one she had left behind her, almost pat-al ined her. Could such misery exist / "My sister! surely she dors not live here ?" she a->ked of the child, pitifully, as she entered an old, tumble-down tene ment-house, and led them upward and up ward long flights of creaking stairs, that bent beneath their weight. " Here." aud the child opened a door that led into a mean little attic, where the dim glimmerings of a candle scarcely re vealed the lipure of a woman lying up a pile of straw. "Here! Oh, minim-i she has come with mef Grace hurried to the bedside. " YUddie, .Maddie! is it you V* she crieil, showering kiss upon kiss ou her poor face. " It—is! Oli! Grace kwhv did you not come sooner 1 1 have sent for you every day, this long while; and I have watched so eagerly for you. But, thank God! you have come before I died. My child- " u Maddie, Maddie, you must not die," she cried, agonizingly, as she realized the bitter truth, that sue had so heartlessly turned her own sister's child away from her door. "We wiH take you home—you shall be taken care of—vou shall live!" " I cannot, Grace ; I am dying—famished to death for want of food. Only care for my child—oh, Grace V During this conversation, George had slipped out for a physician ; hut before he returned Grace Covering had stood or knelt, for the first time by the couch of death. The last words had been: " My child, Grace ! my child !" And Grace had folded the little orphan to her bosom, and mingled her tears with hers. But little more remains to be told. Madeline was given a costly burial and the little orphan was taken home and well cared for. And then and there, amid the bitterest tears of her life, as she stood by the corpse of her starved-to-death sister, and began to dimly realise how great was the suffering that could and did exist so near her, she almost loathed the brilliant ly-gleaming lights and the gay laughter that was then resounding through her own home; and resolved tnat never again should a child be turned from her door, of the friendless not be Itefriended. Good Advice. Surgeon sententioualy expresses a number of thoughts " wortli remember ing " in the following appropriate sen tences, wbich he published as "advice gratis": Nobody is more like an honest man than a thorough rogue. When you see a man with a great deal of religion displayed in his shop window, you may depend upon it he keeps aveiy small stock of it within. Do not choose your friend bv his looks ; handsome shoes often pinch the feet. Eta not lie fond of compliments; remember "Thank von, pussy, and thank you, pnasy," kill the tat Don't believe'the man who talks the most for mewing cats are very seldom good moaners. By no means put yonrself in another person's power. If yon put yonr thumb between two grindeni they are very opt to bite. Drink nothing -without seeing it aign nothing without reading it and make sure that it means no more than it says. Don't go to law unless you have noth ing to lose ; lawyer's houses are built on fool's hemla. Put no dependance on the btbie of a bag, and oonnt money after your own kind. In any business never wade into water where yon cannot sec the Iwttom. See the sack open before you buy what is in it; for he who trades in the dark asks to be cheated. Keep clear of a man who does not value his own character. The Winter Fashions. All velvet cloaks are either made very long or very short. The style most in vogue for young ladies is a shorff half fitting basque, that requires two yards and three-quarters of yard-wide goods. The seams to these are left open to the waist, the trimming extending up the slashes. If the lace is very wide, it only extends across the bottom, while the heading, which is usually gimp, goes up the seams. Sometimes, however, a nar row edge of lace is put on to hedge the gimp. No particular style prevails for trimming across the shoulders. Every lady should adopt in this respect what ever becomes her figure. Slender once bear a good deal of Trimming, while the stout require lea, if any. The garni ture passes straight around the waist. No sashes or bows are attached this sea son. The handsomest garments are made high in the neck, with sometimes a frill of black lace standing np around the throat The front is held together gen erally with an ornamental frog-button, looped across with cord. Sleeves are of the flowing shape, describing from ten j inches to a half a yard in depth. All kinds of cloaks but velvet ones ( h*ve collars cut either m revere, or the vjxare French shape, which is the new est and low enough to show the collar an<\ iccktie. The sleeves to cloth cloaks are mvie an easy-fitting coat to below the elbw, when they suddenly diverge into a svt of bowing one, six or seven inches dep, and left open as many more on the bui, of the arm. CBVEUTT.—Four Chinamen, Ah Cba, Lee, Jng, Wtpg Rung, and Ah Toke, have been sentenced at flan Bernardino, CaL, to two yurs confinement in the State Prison and to pay fines of 8500 each, for whippingnnd burning a woman of their own nationjlity. They tied the poor creature to a tree, stripped, and whipped her, then letter go, and repeat ed the process, adding to it the torture of fire by kindling brush about her, laughing and joking all Vhe time. So i California paper says. Fotra of the irew of Trov- have been picWjL 4 off Cap< , Spartiinento. They tt , fl JL sel capsized, and hi. wife and child, and ' were drowned. CENTRE HAI.L. CENTRE CO., PA„ FRIDAY. VANUARY (>. 1871. A College Explosion. A Cambridge, (Si!ana.,) letter says j One of the moat daeUudly out.-ago* ver ; committed by student* took place in tlio louteineut of Ktoughton Hail, one of the ' duum tortus of lltmanl College. It oon- I Mstod in exploding a small keg of gun • owdur in the cellar immediately under . (lie rooius occupied ly the mutubora of Uie Freahumu Class. Thtf result I was the destruction of alnioat everything in two of the room#; the shook having rained the floor of the room more than u fiK>t, tearing up a plank in each of the rooms, .scattering and destroying their contents, and sending their occupant* forcibly up against the ceiling. In two of the adjacent rooms, one of which was occupied by two Spring hold high-school boys, not so much damage wan done to furniture, but the floor was divided, and one part ruissl nearly a foot. <)f course, the rooms were immediately tilled with smoke, which, pouring through the floor, incteased the terror of the al reaily terrified <>ccupr.nt*. (i lass was shuttered, and door-sills wrenched, so that the door could not tie opened, and for some time there was a great state of ootiftwion. An alarm of fire was started and the Are department were quickly on hand, but fortunately, (and strangely, tix>,) tliere was no need of their services. Some idea of the power of the concus sion may be derived from the fact that persons in the second story above were knocked off their feet, and pictures hanging in rooms in the third story above vroro'sliakeu from their nails to the floor. The Strang* -.-u thing about the explosion is that nobody was hurt. Prob ably there is not half an hour, except in the night, when some person docs not go j to the cellar for coal, :md if any of the j students hail been there at the time, they ] must have been lulled or very severely ! injured. Indeed, one of the students hud a narrow escape, having been in the j cellar but a few minutes bsfore. A per- j son jiassing by, outside, Wa kuockeil j down by the rush of air front Uie cellar j and almost stunned. Of coin*e, under tiro circumstances, the whole affair is charged upon the Sophomores, Int noth ing definite is known. A quantity of fuse was found in the cellar, which 'may aid in detecting the criminals. Presi dent Elliot, at the chapel spoke of the outrage, and desired the co-operation tf the students in bringing the perpetrator* to justice. His speech was heartily ap plauded by Uie students. A Chapter on Birds. The enumeration of figure* in the im portation of foreign birds into the Unit ed .States is nn intending study. First on the list comes the canaries, of which there are over 40,000 brought in every year, and probably 10,000 on many more are raised in this country fori the Surpose of sale. The nunrtw of bull ucnea, goldfinches, thrashes, robins and larks annually imported rise as high us 500 or 600 for each variety. There are fully 3,000 Java sparrows brought to the United .States by vessel* from that regioii, and fnlly as many parrots are yearly sold in this City alone. Was bills and other minute -varieties are scarce, and seldom arrive in quantities of more than 100 or 200 each year. Paroquets and love birds, from Australia, follow parrots in their relative importance. In native birds, there is no reliable data to go upon. It is roughly estimated that about 10,000 mocking birds find their way from the wild nest to the cage each succeeding Summer. 'The average life of these magnificent songsters while in confinement is six years, when blindness nuts an end to their T*,'' jyou are arvujMKl (almost, as it sown*, W fore von are well asleep) from a rough couch in one of the little log-hut* of some outlying village, by a violent (bake of the shoulder, and a hoarse voice ad monishing you to "get up, and look sharp about it for there's no tunc to !•. ' You make a hasty toilet, nnd rel iving forth, see in front of the hut, in tlm dim light of the coining morning, a I huge dark, shapeless mass (which, as ! your eye* get used to the darkness, uvuiiue* the form of a broad, heavy, J throe-horse sledge, with very high sides, not unlike an enormous washing-tub}, around which are tlittiug three or four spectral figures with lanterns, the tlitful {rlii re making their grim bearded faces ook grimmer and less human than ever. Onus ammunition, haversacks, are stow ed away in the bottom of the conveyance ami last, but uot least) a young pig; your query reflecting which elicits from the leader of the party only the oracular answer that " it'll conp in hand hy-and byand all being now ready, the hunters squeeze themselves into their places, the driver shakes his reins with a " W'o-o-oi J" and away we go into the darkness. Mile after mile of the frozen wueto goes by like a dream, till at length spectral aliodows of the forest slowly gather round us, and tin- squeals of our unlucky pig rwhose oars one of our party is now pincWg lustily) begin to be answered by another sound, which no one who has once heard it will easily forget not the long melancholy howl wherewith a mtppeiion wolf may be heard bemoaning himself on tlie out skirts of Moscow, Almost any night in the week, but a quick Matting cry, as of oue who sew* his dinner coming, and wishes to hasten the bring** id it And there they come at last, the gauut wiry, slouching fellows, with their bushy tails, and flat narrow heads, and yellow, thie vish. murderous eyes. There is perhaps nothing on earth more thoroughly mean and hateful-looking, at first sight, then the genuine Kami an wolf; but the rascal has a certain pictarcsqueneas of [his own, notwithstanding, though of a I •Saagreenble kind. There is something I grind in the dogged and sinister tenacity of its pursuit; coming on, with brad I throtn forward, and sharp white fangs j uuahmthad, untiringly and unrolent- j iugly, Idte a hunting Fate, •• Wi% hw loo* 0C)op. Which CM tin Tb liuuve a white silkNj'cttiwQat, and a scarlet satin pannier and sodioc. Mrs. Ander mul wore a aatin, trinuued with cherry autiy, ail a |mint-lace shawl fell graocfullj v r bf shouldur*. One of the most Imautifur drcsses was that worn by a very pretty blonde, Miss Williams, from Baltimore. Thia wm a ill*.- saUn, with whiUi uufcbn ovcrdroaa, tastefully made and triuuiged. The dia monds worn by thia ladv were magnificent. Necklace, earnings, urooch, and an ornament for the htur were all composed of cluHters of thefcP precious fftoiue. Mian Minnie Sin rmu wore a blue silk dresa, and liwr sister dreaa of tlie same color and ii*berial,Nwith an qvcrdreas of white muslin, inaple witli puffs ami rows of maertiou. Mi#" Edoa, of (le.irgetown, a brunette, wipre a white silk, with deep, black flounoes, and scarlet flowers were placed ins her dark hair and looped in the sl.-eveaor her draws. Miss Benjamin, of Cold Hpriflg, won* a white taristane, made short, ad looped above it was a delicate shade df gmvu turlyUne, very Ucgauing to her rosy complex ion. Nlrs Gaines attracted, as she always does, jgrunt attention, and looked as you#£ as if she bad uot urged hur great claim for a hundred year* or so. She wore a pearl-colored aatin, trained skirt, mid a white satin head dreea trimmed with feathers and flowers, imd KH-ured by white ribbons beneath her chin. Senator and Mrs- Williams were caUwln very handsonderous thunder-machine with a deaf ening roar behind. Half the distance had been traversed, and the horae was within a few feet, of the stone-work. Every pound of steam was forced into the cylinder, and the engine gave oue mighty lunge, striking the animal upon the right hip, throwing him high into the air, char from the stones below, where he fsß, with his bead turned partly under him. never once stirring alter he was struck. A* to Lou Bremen. Mut fashion* owe their origin to an attempt to give promineuoe to the strong point or hide the weak point of a king or queen. Thus powder came in to vogue to conceal a queen's gray hair, and Urge perukes because a kiug was 1 bald. We learn, however from a Belgian paper, that the custom of Lubes exhibit ing their Imsts in all the beauty of na ture has a far more romantic origin. ; In a battle ia which tlie French were engaged ' all dates, we may mention, are j reserved,) their ranks were broken, and they were routed. When they re treated their woman loured their breasts and entreated them to pierce them rather than permit them to fall into the hands of th enemy. This was too much for the gallant Gauls. Nerved witii courage they turned, renewed the combat and were victorious. From that hour French have at festal occas ions always lawn twcustonied ,o wear their dren.se* low. In fact, when you see one who appear* to have forgotten the upper part of her ilress, it is no proof of iuuelicacy. but simply an in dication of the j>ower of national senti ment Tliis satisfactorily explains what many ignorant peojde have taken for impropriety. We live and learn. TUB Sraox or HTnasßria.--Tlio mini ber of guns of all kinds employed was '241 : 44 of tbeOewere used ny the Ba densere against the citadel ; the remain der by the Prnaaians against the forti fications al>out the city. As regards calibre, 58 were rifled it-pounders ; 80 rifled 12-ixiiinders ; 83 mortars, 2 rilled, 8 smooth 80-pounders ; 19 50-pounder ; the remainder 25 anor day was 6,249 shots; per hour, 209 ; tier minute, 4-5. The operations extended over six weeks ; but the formal bombard ment liegan ou tiie 20th of August, end ing on the 27 of Septemlicr. It WAS Taot'oar a wonderful event when Eugene Aram was tried and exe cuted for a murder committed fourteen vears lief ore, but a man has been brought before a Loudon magistrate on a charge of felony and embezzlement which dates hack more than double that time. The felony *us represented by 7a 6d. the embezzlement by £lO, and the defendant had endeavored to make some amends by sending the prosecutor, lus former employer, Ids. worth of mist age stamps. The magistrate put it to the latter whether, after the lapse of so many years, he intended to proceed against the mnn, and the prosecutor replied that he was determined to put (he law in foroe. Fending further inquiry, the defendant was released on his own recognizance. ON THE CAITTCLATION of Thionville, 5,000 French troops were paroled. A majority of the besieged were mneh en raged at the surrender, and some of the troops threatened to explode the mag azines, but they were dissuaded from tUcwU purpose upon the appearance of the women and children, who, on their knees besought! submission. During the action 50,000 shells were thrown in to the city, involving damages to the ex tent of over $5,000,000 THE San Francisco Jews have Voted— -88 to 24—to abolish the old custom of forbidding men and women sitting to gether in the synagogue. The Fighting Outside Paris. The dreadful osjiect of the battle-field outside Paris, after the great sortie, ia thus described by a correspondent of Uie 1 mudou Times : " There is a park inst at the extreme end of the village \ libera, on the Paris tide. before and all around it raged the buttle. The chateau is office?*' quar ters. How it suffered ! There is scarce ly * window-sash left in oue side of it, and to approach it there is no necessity to make use 'of the entrance gate. The wall is snuudied from top to bottom in a dozen places. I entered near the gate and the first sight I saw was 10 dead Saxons in a row. Their faces were cover*yl, and three of their comrades watching over them. Passing through the park in the direction of Paris, I walked out through an embrasure in the wall and came upon raising ground. It was one of the hottest parts of the battle field, and almost the center of the aoeue ' nghting. Heavens, what a sight ! To see the men advancing under fire of the forts, and (ailing at every step; to see the French and the Saxons, amid that horrid din of artllierv shooting one another dowu with L'luumepot wad needle gun ; to hear the •hurrahs' followed bv a volley, and as the .smoke cleared awav to And the Hum thinned and living men advancing over the prostrate bodies of dead and dying was horrible, but noth ing like so horrible as the sight of this battle-field, with hundreds of dead lying there in the cold air, the sun shining on their gliastlj features and stiff forms, while the cannon on Avron and Nogent were ,thundering with sound* which shook the earth for miles around. " One of the great grdtifb I came up on was composed of 60 French soldiers. A few Saxons and \\£Lewbergera lay arouud them ; but thptermans had al ready removed and laid in their last sleeping-olaee most of their dead. The center of the group was formed of a cio*e hue of 46. Von could not have placed a body between any two. They tell shoulder to shoulder, just re they had stood to fire By far the greater number of them were on their backs, with their faet t# Paris and their heads to ViUiera. Alas, it vas painfully evi dent tli at many of thei, and of others whom I saw subsequently, had not died instantaneously, bat had* lived probably many hours without a hand to lend them succor, and in piercing MQOW and frost One poor fellow lay > a his faoe. He had two rifle-wounds in his back. He had partly stripped hirna*|{, and' he died with a hand on each bdiet-hole. Several had taken off their loapsacks and placed them under their hoida, and so pillowed hod breathed thjir last breath. Others clenched tbeii water bottle* in one hand, but had been mable to remove the cork, and died without being able to wet their lips in then ag ony. Sone, in their sufferings, had burrowed their faces in the thick day on which they lay, and turned thur blood and earth-stained faces upwaifl liefore they expired. Two 1 saw wh> liad their* arms fixed and their fist* clinched, as if, while dving, they wets engaged in a pugilistic encounter. Only very few were on their sides. These hoq their knapsacks under their heads. There were men on whose faces beamed the smile of an infant, and whoae coun tenances were like handsome wax-work. The expression of others was that of terrible agony. Everv feature was con torted ; their legs had been convulsively jerked up until their knees stock into their stomachs, and their finger and thumb nails 'had been squeezed until they became riveted into tne palms of their hands. Behind, before, and at the corucm of this line of 46 dead men were others, Saxon, and French. One had a frightful wouud in tlie faoe. He had pulled his hands up into his sleeve* to warm them, but his cap had fallen off, and the blood clotted on his hair till it was all in bloody mats. Near him was another who hail taken a biscuit from his knapsack and the bottle from his side, and had partaken of a little of both. More than one of the slain had died with the hands clasped in prayer; and near one I found a little plaster medallion of the Blessed Virgin- A portion of the edge had been shot off it. The Chasse |>ols and needle-guns were still in many a dead man's hand, and lying between his arm and his body. Similar were the sights all over the plateau between Villiera and Brie, and Villiers and Chainpigny : and among the corpses were knapsacks, helraents, shakoe.s, bayonets, and many a letter sealed and directed to relatives and friends in Germanr and France. Near a cemetery situated on the battle-field itself. I oaw between '2OO and 300 dead French soldiers collected closely togctb her ; thev had been removed from where they had fallen and collected in that spot for burial, .ill were regulars, and a considerable proportion of them were men at least '25 to 30 years of age. There were dead nearer to Paris than any spot I visited, though the fortifi (■ations were much too close to lie at all ogrseable, and Neuflly-sur-Marne and Fontenay-soua-Bois seemed to be within a few minutes' distance on my right and left. I hoj>e there were no wounded. No anuistiw for the removal of the dead and wounded had been agreed to ; but | both sides Lid l>een removing them by j night So late as last night some of the German wounded were found among the dead, and are now in hospital. What must have liven their sufferings in snow and frost since the 2d inst, for they had been lying out day and night j since then, if not since tlie 30th !" Attempted Robbery of the tutted State* Treasury. The Washington Patriot says a lx)ld attempt to rob the United State* Treaa- j ury was made the other night The! captain of the night-watch, in mating i his round*, heard a suspicion* noise near the Currency apartment, and, upon opening a door, "a burly uegro r made n savage tlmrst at liim with a club. Bo- j hind the negro was a white man, who j also had a club, which he was in the act of nniug on Cutler, when the latter blew u whistle and closed the door. The burglars then retreated, and Cutler quickly reopened the door, drew a seven -shooter, and called on them to halt. They did not heed his order, however, and he gave chase, attempting to fire his pistol, nveof the chambers of which did not explode, owing to the defective cartridges. Finding his wea pon useless and having no other means of attack, Cutler rapidly ran'to the door, at the same time blowing his whistle to arouse his force. The watchman on the inside, hearing the alum, mistook the direction, and ran to the northeast in stead of the northwest corner of the base ! ment, and before they could traverse the space between the door and the west frout of the building, in the darkness! the robbers escaped. J THE CACTTS FENCE is an liistitutia peculiar to Mexico. The variety of th plant used for this purpose is called tt organo. It is eight sided and shoots n straight as an arrow, from ten to twent; ftve feet in height an d ftve to eight inch In thickness. The fence builders c the cactus in sections of the right lengl stick the cut end into a French, cover f earth around it to the v depth of a foj and the fence is made. Tne pieces i setas closely together as possible, and they take root and grow fo" oentun the fence improves with age, instead going to decay like other fence*,- TERMB : Two Dollars a Year, in Ativan©' The (Jueition of Privateering. I la the New York Chamber of Com- merer the question of privutoering wax f discussed. The committee made the following report: i Hmoliml. That the perfect immunity i from capture of ail private property upon the ocean in time of war is demand by an enlightened sentiment of justice and the improved spirit of civilization, not leae than by a due consideration of the bent interred* of commerce. Rrwlwl. That the Government of tin United States bo resperfully solicited I to Uko Mich measures as it may deem fit, to have tiie principle expressed in th> preceding resolution incorporated in the code of Maritime law. Discussing the question Mr. A. A. Low thought that the views in the re port were identified with those given in times past In IH&) the Chamber acted upon the matter. He could not recall whether at that time he voted for or against that action of the Chamber. But since then we had a war. War is a dreadful calamity, and we have learned s leason we never knew before. Nations are governed by their interest, not by a mere sentiment The United States wished to keep the Paris compact of international regulation, but England dissented, and furnished the Confeder ates with shijis of war, which raptured and burned our vessels. The nations looked on with condemnation of the act; at all the colonial porta of threat Britain J the rebel pirates were furnished with supplies liberally, treated with great , hospitality and allowed to depart upon their way* of destruction and revenge, and British captains were ready to com mand their ships, while our vessels were refused supplies sad ordered sway. England was governed solely by her sentiment, and not try the compact of Paris; a war between us and any foreign nation must naturally be a maritime war Hit comes (I hope* it never may) we would fight it portly out in Canada. Our ports would be lioznbarded. Such a com-j pact would not be maintained. In such . a war all the material injury iufficfth anxious for candy and not bashful in making it known. One day his moth er forhade his asking il again ; he solved the difficulty in this wise: The next time he went to the store he hung around for j I :• long while with entire obedience to the I command, but finally an idea struck him 1 and walking up boldly to his grandfath er. he says. " Grandpa, I wish you would I give me "some candy without my taking for it." Of course grandpa took the hint, and the boy got his candy. But such an evasion of her order hardly sat isfied the mother, and so she explained to the little shaver that what he said was really asking for the candy, and told him he must not do so any more. He promised obedience, and obeyed m this manner : Soon afterward, going to the store, some one asked him how he got along this hot weather. He quickly and ingenuously replied : " Pretty wall; but I'm wtful sw*dty—for candy" Who doubts that this " perspiration " was relieved, if candy would do it ? It is certain that no further candy commands were hud upon I him. PEACE PNOPOSANA —A special despatch to the Manchester Guardian, from Bei lin, says: "A conference of the representatives of the neutral powers has been held at the Foreign Office here, at which the following basis for peace was agreed to : il. Acquiescence in the annexation of i Luxemburg to Prussia. 2. The recogni i tion of the German Empire. 8. The ,of an indemnity to It.oOO francs, the the German '. of to lie One Sore ** ru> pom*** *At.i.*tv This month of 'May, one pleasant eventide, | a foune girt *iiunsr on the er.so; I cams upon bar where the ways divide. ,# ! Auu wud, " God keep you, maiden, from of two. j " Maiden, the CM of love von keep and aava, 1 And five you ali your haul desires," I cried. Then sue : "Pray Sell me gentle sir and Have, Wither yon wsnd this pisasant etentiile?" I" To you I oome, • lover leaf and true. To tell yon all my bops and all my care; Your love is what I seek . Than jmu No woman ever seemed to me more fair. Wil and Wisdom. The greatest truths are the simplest* so are the greatest men. Old maids are dwrtl*d as embene from which the sparks have fled. ! i The worst of an imaginary danger is, that if often leads ns to overlook a real j one. It is always difficult for a doctor to NO. 1. . keep hi* tempv >• ion he loses hi* pa _ J tiencc. gl The real value of friendship <<.nsi*ti i more in what we feel than in what wa | inspire. Many people drop a tear a! the sight of | r .listrew, wh< wmhi do Utter to drop a - I sixjs-nee. ' | Hhow a good roan hi* error, tuid ba ■ tnnis it into a virtue ; u had man doubles ' | his fault*. There never exi -ted a man that did I not say, in the course of his life, ds in the life of a voman : one, when she wonder* who ahe will have ; the other, when alia wond>-r who will have her. I m-ver knew a man who deserved t be well 1 benight of himself for hi* morals uid who had a slight opinion of the vir tue of the other sex in general A country girl coming from the field wm told by her cousin that ahe looked as fresh a* daisy kweed by the dow. j "No, indeed," was the reply, "that waa not hi* naiae." Since it lies become the fashion for men to confess their pant errors very frequently in book*, it is Ixildly ansertea that there is no difference b.'tween m autobiography and a naughty biography. John Ilandolph waa once, on a race course, solicited to bet by a strungr, Vj| who said : "Smith, her", will hold the stakes." " Just no, " replied the deeeend nt of Pocahontas, "but who*ll hold Smith?" A week or so ago a surprise at Pitta field, Mm*., broke a stove, three chain, a sofa and a lot of crockery during their stay at the house of the party surprised. '|| The family ha* no further wish to ba surprised. A short time since a Mr. Knott waa tried in an ulterior county of Georgia fori violation of law. The verdict of the jury mm; " find the defendant Knott guidv." The judge was at a loss whether to sentence or not. TOT Labrador fishery is as id to have been a lamentable season. The catch was not within a third of what it was in the previous year, and the result is that several hundred fomilieaof fishermen are rendered deatitnte for the Winter. Whew the petition of Victoria C. Wuodhnll asking that she may be allow ed to vote, waa presented to the C. K. House, several members shouted. "Oh, vea, let her vote !** "By all means, let "Vic vote r The petition was tabled. Mr. HAI, of (Mmo, was impolite enough to get into his wagon ana start for the cirrus without inviting Mr. Townsend to go along, ao the latter shot him with tod shot If the offense is repeated, Mr. Townsend will use sings. A fcredeamar who had failed In the city of Bangor, wrote on his front door: " Payment suspended for thirty dm. A neighbor reeding this said.: "You have not dated the notice." "No, said i he, "I Jo not intend to do eo; it would run out if I did." The Grown Prince of Prussia, after a combat before Paris, reviewed hia victo rious Bavarians, one of whom eyed him with a broad smile. "What is up, eon rade ? " asked the Prince. " Why. is it not jolly," waa the good-humored reply, "to ace vour Royal Highntwe just as be spattered with dirtjaaftbe rest of na." A "personal "* in a'New York daily a week ago stated that. "if John Smith, formerlv of Philadelphia, will call it No. -Blank street, he will hear something to his advantage." John called. There stw about 250 of him—and he baa been calling at the rate of fortr-aeven per day ever sinee the " penmnal" appeared. A boy was sent by hia motlwrto saw (dove-wood out of railroad tiea.WGoing out doors shortly after. she found the routb sitting on the saw-honse, with head •down. The mother asked hm hopeful : son wire be wm oast down. and why he didn't keep at his work. The bw re tried : " My dear mother. I ted it hard, very hard to severe old ties. Portland. Me., teethe champion mean man. The fellow, known to be in cosa j fortable cireuinatsmoes, made .an agree ■ meet with an aeqaintanee to take a daily paper on uteres, and received four dollar* a half of the subscription. His method was to lounge in a certain store, read the paper that others bought, carry it off and givcf it to his unsuspecting partner. A candidate trawling through on* of the rural precincts of a certain county, a few <3*T wmv. rode up to a farm-house, and thus accosted a tow-headed urchin who was seated on the top of a gate post: Bub, where*# your pa f * The young ster replied : " Pap's just gone down be yond the cow-ehedtodig a grave to burr the old dog Towser. The old fool tolled himself a barton* at candidates for Sher iff. Be* you one?" The candidate rode On. mmg~ mm—m—Sß Ponosous SEKPKHTS ArwrmaMA.— Although the number of poisonous ser pents in North America is sufficiently great to render it a matter of consider able uncertainty to the unlearned wheth er any given individual is likely to prove dangerous or not, we may eon crratnkt* ourtclv©® ni being better off than the Anstndiiuis. In the recently published catalogue of the serpents of that country bv l)r. Krefft, of Sydney, we find enumerated about eighty-three species, of which onlv twenty-three are non-venomous. Of the sixty poisonous kinds fifteen are sea snakes, which are frequently encountered when bathing. The total number of serpents catalogued I as occurring in America, north of Mexi co, is about one hundred and fifty, of which only twenty-three are in any way gi poisonous. WAHTED TO TBI HIS LCCK.—A man having married a woman who had already had four husbands, was asked why ha became the fifth. He said lamof an adventurous disposition, and having heard that her first husband ran away, that the second hung himself, the third , shot himself, and toe fourth drowned himself, I wanted to try my luck, and see what would become of me ; and I'm afraid," he added, with a sigh, " that I shan't have the pluck to do what any of my predecessors did." Ax intelligent boy in the national school of a large and populous town in Lancashire, on being examined, among others, by the commissioner, was asked, j" i "Do you .know any of heaij j and cold ?' " Yes, Sir. Heat ex pands, ? , \ and cold contracts." 4t Good, my hoj~f ' you have answered well; now an exatf '' i pie:" " Why, Sir, the days at Midsuin | mer are and in tht Y k|mDm-NXCT &rer in Ciudaoftti was Bfjy brought to his senses, mid a'- Bmds through a window,} after a Branch. Two of the §•*** tAL i 11 and death would !*? *- timely d 9