The Robin. BT JOB> o. **rmn. PubHL from Cn th* lock* of RCH- , And listened to bear the robin *in. Iter grandson. plating t marbles. stopped. And cruel in sport, a* boy* ill bo, ••N*y I" said the cmndmothor ; "h*v<- you n>t hoard, My poor bad boy 1 of tho dorr pit, brfdffa cool dew in hit Attic till, And lets it fall on the aonla of mis; Yon can tea the mark on hi* cist hroat still Of fire* that acorch a* he drop* it in. PiltfWKJiLHSK'itor 4 " uJ Very dear to the heart of our Lord Li ha wW pities the lest like Hint I" "kaita • I said ta •****ntfu) "Stag, bird of Ood. in my heart a* well; E*eh (food thonjtht i a drop wherewith To 4001 and loaaon the ire* of hik !11 I*ay< ie of kwe.ifke r*h*ibi.* Jll! ** Tear* of uitT are routing dew, Ani dear to'the tern of vLr< *" WlUaulß uHlnm in ISie piM they do!" Hon tMc t4nb (\i4*hf the lm Fash ioned llufsik*. (Thin* iikh iikei Elii f t 'lf there is it's doepinh don, And .tout crop out at outv>nmrm titiue. As it •hs s in a atllii or blown, Or a Iwttehnian. ftr a YiiiVce, •Vi T v lawI aw m'Y t Nt. twr! tnew rM-okinm.l vLtei Mean Wssst, and a good drat more ; And when von are kwst ospecting the same Jtp jie iial .i!aid, n'lsrief, Wfwal>n-h. *t atoi4. MtbawaiTuw, Aim it irocopef itbiOemia.- mtrth . And **- they rtde by the siannc light Of yowrteroely Uhnrfnj; hearth! 1 burnt maeb Iwv Aw an Iwjwn ; And when Uw'• •Mm worth while I*l*yd £ on iUp amokim; varnuiu, I P*n"t ktvp h*Pk wmlr - No nure than I ran * hniM, When | f*e Hunt twt'Whu' tUal With • tre*fhrua Wk, like a hungry w.if Thai** vratchin' along th<> route. T* ft* down in'tbr'" Chrenut ttuK U N heen kan tin* for bur a wvek ; Ami of all thr lurk I over ha.l. That wa* ofteut Ihv ik*hvi streak. I vrae fry-Hii' Nno ami Urvtl A* 1 lay thar on tin- groun I, But muftoy •)Uiok r o, Fur 1 knew there'd U' a tune. With the ingine's shriek, ami the Injun'* whoop. lake a thttuder storm in June. On. n, like the wind it earn. ! Firm Ml that rtuwil *ll d:" ' " Sold! o!d!" cried I. while the Injun And the <*re went oat of ftighl; But never shall T. till my dying day, Kit-get Itia look of fright, I haint much Sure for an Injun, hat 1 almost pitied him Fur fc' ieiW totf* ftocrH Land a bAhie griw. ? ' 1 r f.M: r WHAT C AM or if. Vl.orsY. It WAA a misty, yet sweet September night. 1 nn see tii ky as it is hung .. over Sttftum JSest, our sea-side home, tai ry VJue, with here ami there a patch of white float my and tho harvest trnwui ruining up awl flooding all the world with gfrWeu splendor. I remember how the crimson roses bung about the door heavy with t hair own sweetnes*; and what sugp'sriwuojorft floated up from the flow er he* in the dim M garden. I can ever i ruifiwVr the dress I wore—pure white, heraine that was the dre.vs in which mv - htmhand-kwed me best. Did he Tore me at all? th- yht V J yellow gold that won him ? 1 mtucdiatelw aftf! our marriage we went on theCootinJit, f here we rambled about for a year or tpa.Jrinteriig in Rome, and sjwiMling surf fMtivfr amid the Alps. Toen ijrt tntand bomC .But the rum&n --• W waal# if upon and we took what Our coupflK anordo l'tyi the way of life. Bi tl' midst of tjfhi wawlcr \ *•;, in a country town amid the Safe.-*, my ■" • h t byyeconuday Jf our sojourn at Ok hotel "in this place, to which we had cotne tn accordance with my husband's wish, I missed Imp. He was frhirig for trout; una of our party suggcto ed, andaakhfrJtkni'Kw *vc strolled down ia§ made, me gUmcc that way. Hwrc thev •'•P* V fide, ®y hubatid *u l a J** 1 ™? *** db glossy mowt 1 paired on ia aScnar; but 'hat sis-;t. tnjr husband returned mt# mugfil' y, f wrr rwrrytjUnd cold. I refused to Uncc, and *w*d j waa sog lor him. J nre from phce to place, hit pf Apliyitud© Use instant we were in our own room he taught mv T ! to&itm Hh*t tro ,i les ■ V 1BH" •wifjUK' *• *a o- 't wft > ' ronHRS c.udi nat tei) Mm. 1 was afraid to let him know that I doubted his iiitegfftr. u lJorace. H I qacptkmed timidly, "do you ore tne,i p < His fine eye* opened with astonishment. But he answered pas-iy.atcly. "Ixjtd you ? Aye, better than yon will erer .J know, ViHet. r ( ■•Did you—have you erer loved any one else ?* ! faltered." "Never. Viofct, on my honor." I was happy, yet not entirely satisfied. I was a wntpaa. K*o ate the forbidden fhiit with Pariulise all aroand ber. 11 "Tben wbo was it. 1 (altered, that wo man—l saw with you—this afternoon V He started, Arjd flushed rerr red for a moment, thefl hrfktuflted. "Oh," he said, u jea!ous, are you 1 Then I am sure yon love iw. But, seriously, dear, I ought fr> apologize for my long b --att;. That woman was a friend, i old friend of mine—she * in distress, and! liad ***} reiisjied 7* ™ ■mxMbd my head in assent; yot my heart was not quite at rest. After that we went ci vil to the Swan's Nest, our sea side liotne, and settled into aober married life i and for some uiontlis our bliss was perfect 5 and tben that dfe*dful , night ttAhJ # ~ f Hcrace has licen gone all day. He hail not home to dinner as was hi* cifo torn ; M after luring ordered tea,! dress ' Od'yeetftfnd mt down iri tlic roae-hat Come. l>ina<-r and *p|p i baalfotll got .spoiled ; the llouci* in my hair were fkefing, and I was sick and weary with waiting and suspense. Horace had never remained away no Jong since our marnage. What could detain hii* so? Vety slowly the erening went by. TVclve o'clock came, the moon dropped out of fight, leaving me in darkness. An owl hooted from the top e here to dinner. Don't wait for me ; it is imjxissi ble—" "Make no excuse*, 4r, I replied haugh tily ; none are needed." Oh those sad reptuaehful eve*! But his lips uttered 110 retort. He only said, 1 *Oood bye, dear," and went out. ; * I watched him from the window, hidden behind a curtain, as he rode away through the driving rain. The memory of that day comes !>ack to me like a terrible dream! Towards even i ing my agony Iweame unendurable ; and ia* the rain rea*el, I determined to drive over to my father's bouse, in the neigh boring village. About half way we met a close carriage, containing a lady and gen ' tleman. "Why, that'* Mr. Reado!" exclaimed my coachman, a* the vehicle dashes! past our plueton. Unc glance contuiue all these wrong* will be righted." I For two years T lived alom al Swan's ! Neat—two year* of inexpressible agony : 1 then the new* came. A ship, homeward Iwund from Calcutta, was lout and Horace, lleade wa* one-of the passengers. That I wa* the death of hope ! Another year dragged by. One sweet May evening I strolled down to the sea ilioro.j The sun-was setting in wave* of indd a*d purple, and a full moon came up, flooding the great sea and the long sf retch of glittering san 1 with misty splendor. The tide rolled in with a low, musical mur mur. I sat down on a rock. Far out upon the bar a stately vessel swung at anchor, and a little boat from it was coming in. I watched the tiny craft with a kind of fascination. Presently it grated on the sand, and a man sprang ashore. A wild, nameless hope took shafie in lay heart. I arose and tottered forward, blind and half unconscious. The instant after a strong arm clasped me. I looked up in the face above me. It was wan and worn, and changed by suffer ing, but I knew it in an instant. "Ob, Horace! my husband!" I cried, "forgive me." Then I le't his tears upon my cheek, hi* kines on my lips, and I sank into his arms insensible. It is all over—the remorse the loneliness and the aching heart! We live at .Swan's Nest —my dear, forgiving husband and my e|f. "I had engaged my passage," he said "ip the steamer that was lost. But I fell ill and could not come then; and that sickness has restored me to you, thank God!" 1 thank Him also, daily and hourly, for this undeserved, this perfect bliss. An Ojj> Man's Affection.—A Pitts burg lady recently culled upon an old man who had just lost his wife, with whom he had lived for forty years. She found him sitting, with folded hands, in ; his lonely room, and while engaged in conversation her eyes rested upon some thing bright and soft which lay upon his pillow. With a tremor in his voice said: " Ah, madam, it is only my dear wife's old wrappers. You may think me childish, but at night I pat the sleeves round my neck, and it comforts me." Could human love find a more affecting expression ? Chableston, S. C., has had but three postmasters since the foundation of this Government, CENTRE HALL REPORTER? A Pirate's Treasure. A few wis*ks ago, any* tin New York Sim, a quiet, gentlemanly printer, euuie to this eity from tie South, ami worked lor a time on various morning |uqer* as a "sub," He was a man of more than | ordinary intelligenee, ami 111 addition to iJIUe practical knowledge gill tied in the Cum JM islug- rm >ru, he had a good elassieal eilueatiou. Mr. Newell bml held si-ve nd iKviitions of trust, but his appetite • for stimulauts lasnming stronger than his will to desist, he lost them through neg lecting his duties. After a short stay in New York, he shook hands with his friends and bade tliem adieu, say ing that he was going to shut for New Orleans. His last words, delivered m a very con fident toue, w ere: " Boys, wheu I return, I shall be in a position to entertain you at Dolmoui j eo's," The following remarkable story from the New Orleans fiiiiyusc, of the 9th, throws light ou what was] sussing through Newell's mind w hen he bade his good ! bye to his fellow-printer* : Andrew J. Newell, recently a ooinposi tor in this office, met his death by vio lence somew here in Lake l'ontehurtraiu about the fir t of the present mouth. His hotly was found lietween Salt Bay and Higolets. In his right breast were two holes, resembling gun-shot wound*. Hi* jHvkcts contained iMqa-ra that leave uo room to ilonbt his identity. He was in search of the treasure of the pirute ' Lafiltc. It is generally lielievt-d that an idiuont iueuleulable amount of wealth lies couocnled on one of the islands. Sjai-iric information of the wlieretdlouts of this treasure reached Mr. Newell in a sort of family trailition. Many years ago, when n crusade was beiug made by tins Southern States against Lnfitte's crew, it is said that five of the gang were ruptured near ltigolets —three men and two boys. The men were executed at once, but ow ing to the extreme youth of the boy*, and the state ment that they were forced to join La fitte's Runl, they were suffen d to go iu jiettce. Years afterward, when he had grown to man's estate, one of these bora obtained a shelter under the roof Nfr. Newell's father, in St. Tammany parish, where his mother still resides. lie was sick and toil-worn, and the family did all iu their power to alleviate his suffer ing. But he gradually grew worse, from day to ilav, and finally died, lu one of the islands of the Gulf they had secreted their treasure. He knew the place, iuwl he w ould give her such specific directions that it certainly could la- found.* These ilircetious were written down and pre served with scrupulous can- by the fam ily. Evidently they put implicit faith iu the statements of the dying rnnn—so much so. indeed, that upon three oc casion* the father of Mr. New ell started yu search of the place. But there appears to IK- U fatality almut it. In the first expcilition the K-at we wrecked, and he ami his eomjnuiion barely with their live*. The 1 aecoail time ho was only two day* out when the man he huil with him *m sun stricken, and returning home with him, he dual the next day. The third time he himself was taken violently ill, and had to return. The old man at this be came superstitions. He L lirxed that some fatal impediment prevented the discovery and guarded tho treasure. But ho transmitted the secret to his sou, and for years young Newell has la-en per ; sis tent in his desire to go iu * enroll of the wealth that lies hid iu tho Gulf. • His first attempt resulted in failure. He afterward communicated his secret to a friend now connected with this office, first putting him under the obligation of an oath not to revial it, nuil never to attempt the discovery unless by his di | reetion ami consent 80 probable did the tradition ajqa-ar to this friend, tluit accompanied by Mr. Newell, he went in search of the pirate's wealth. But a storm came on. Their lx>at was dis masted and the rigging torn and lock After Is ntiug at-out the lake anil gnlf for ten days they returned disheartened They did not reach the island they w ere in search of. Since then Mr. Newell has been jw-r --sistent in his deU-nnination to go again. He trieil to persuade his friend to aceom i pany him. Vnt the sail experience of his first expedition had disabused it of it* novelty, and induced him to abstaiu from prosecuting his search again. Mr. Newell wen' away iu his own lioat, ; reeently purchased and litteil up for the purpose. How he met his fa'e no one can till ; but his sudden and untimely ; death gives room for sjieeulation on the ' remarkable fatality that has attended any search for the treasures of Lafitto. A Ilrutal Fellow. The have returned a vonliot of man slaughter against Oliver Whittle, a pupil at the Mottnun Grammer Srlns-l, Che shire, England, for causing the death of John Goodall, another pupil, by forcing him into a Imtli of m alaiug water. The circumstances as deserilied at tire inquest were most painful. The boys Kiaribsl with Mr. lleury Briggs, the master of the school, and early one evening larth wore in the bath room ; Whittle, who is in his seventeenth year, apparently having tho su|oriutcndeiiee —Mr. Briggs him self was s)K-iiding the evening in Man chester. The servmit-maiil supplied Whittle with a bucketful of lioilitig water, which he carried upstairs to the bath room. There was cold water in this I room, lmt UOIKKIJ seems to have noticed whether any was put into the small hip Imth which the deceased was made to enter. Whittle was seen hi hold the little fellow in the water, who screamed loudly, as if in great puin, and, though he was allowed to get out of the bath for a short time, Whittle forced him in again, ' first making him hold out his hand, ami thou striking tire palm with a stick two or three times. lie also sent for a strap to tic the deceased's hands. The little fellow's skin begun to peel off in the bath, aud in fact, he was fearfully scald ed. He was put to lied shortly after wards, bat nobody mentioned the cir cumstances to Mr. Briggs—who returned about half-past ten the same night—until ! Sunday morning. A surgeon was then summoned, and he fonnd the hoy sink ing, death ensuing nlxiut three o'clock on Monday inoruing. MARIUAOK EXTKAOIIOIN ART. —The Re publican and SUmrlartl, of Montgomery, announces the consolidation of tire Wal k-ill Valley Time* with that paper under the head of marriage notices, m the fol lowing terms: " REPUBLICAN TIMrIH.-In Mont gomery, on April 24th,by Editor* Win field aud Hehultz, The Republican ami Sl'imlaril, to Miss Walk ill Valley Time*, second daughter of Stephen If. Haver, Esq. Tbehappy groom is now in his seventh year aud the bride in her third. No skimmington." We hope this cross will improve the breed.— Warwick A>h. GOOD RULES.— The following rules for the government of children, wliicii were first presented in one of Jacob Abbott's 1 looks, are said to have been of grce service to many successful teachers : When you consent, consent cordially. When you refuse, refuse finally. When 'yem punish, punish good na turedly. Commend ofteD. Never scold. TEE German Parliament hae agreed to the additional elauses to the postal treaties of 1867 and 1870 between Ger many and the United States, CENTRE HALL, CENTRE CO., PA., FRIDAY, JUNE !>, 1871. Note* on the Fuddim*. VVaU-r-proof suits are now made of gray, blue, stone colored imported Eug lish cloth. Tliey are cut in the form of a long, loose oaeque, closely tnittonisl iu front, with a diW'p cape In the- tnu-W, which is fastened deftlv on each side, forming the sleeves. Hide pleating* of the materinl or wide galloon i* used as a trimming, but many of them are plainly hemmed, with no other attempt at gar niture. Elegant Leghorns for more elderly ladies are trimim-d with blockgroa grain piped with palest ecru, and ostrich tijis of the two colors. A novelty from Vlrol's is of black grenadine, with square meshes huil plainly ou the frame imd piped with black gros grain. Moaa-roordmda, form tin- face trimming, aud a deep mantilla veil completes tlie bonnet. The lovliest round hat is a round crown aud narrow rolUd brim covered with two shades of China eraja- iu the violet tints ; price SSO. Golored Guipure larce, so extensively j uv'il this season for trimming linen suite, varies iu price from SI to 83 for the hand-made, and 50c. to SI for that made bv machine. Collarettes of silk, trimmed with one or more raws of Valenciennes, and fas tened in front by a silk eorxl nnd two buttous of the material, sio quite tlie rage, link, blue, grain, lavender, rial, all colors are shown for these collarettes, which can be made at home very easily ty any one possessing a particle of iu genuity. The juice ready made is 83.50. French Breakfast seta, consisting of collarette and cuffs, of muslin odged with a crimped rttflle and narrow lace, are very fashionable and cheap at $2.50 jK-r set Brct<,-lli- are to IK- extensively worn with muslin and silk dresses this *eason. I'lain ones are of Hwit-i muslin, triimni-d with one row of fluting. More elegaut on-s are of Valenciennes insertion ami inualiu embroidery, edged with Valen ciennes lac*. Them-, when of real lace, cost about 810. The imitation can be bad for $3. Lu-e cajx-s will also IK- held iu high vogue. These are made of al ternate rows of muslin, puffing, and Va lenciennes insertion, finished with Y'a lenciennes lace. Bbok silks at |l.|s a yard nr* miu mended by merchant* as good enough for wearing under grenadine. These light silks answer Tory well for under skirts beneath grenadine ; hut experience teaches that they are not snliskintial | enough for waist linings. A thick gnw gram for 92 or |is(l is really better economy. t'ra|x- veil* for widows have np|>eares of trains, the jxiinted vari ety hare nearly disappeared, and the square shape, sharply set on, is altogeth er the favorite. l'lie remedy is easily suggested to those who liave pointed traius to dre®soa, if so !*> they are will iug to l>e " curtailed of Uieir fair pro portion*. " A wide latitude is permitted to sleeves ; the pagtxla, the simple semi-flowing, the slashed alcove, aud Uie still prettier one, ' showing a very little of a fine linen un dersleeve at the back, are all permissible. Points and lxxhliees, of tlie old-fuali ioued sharp kind, are appearing with frequency. Uie rage far Ixiws as a part of dress trimming, is returning. In addition to flounces, frills, and luce, a dressy suit iias a uumlx-r of Ixiwa add**!, a* garni niture to the already well-adorned cos tume. Lyons poplin*are almost as expensive this'season as handsome Irish poplins. The con! is not a* large and as even a* in Pym's he*t, but the fabric is the sams, aud the light quality more pleasant for summer wear, while Uie coat is only $1 or SI. 25 a sard. The color* are rv* per fect us in rich silks, tlie tea and I ron Frou shades U-mg especially d®*irahle for suits. Tliree dollar* a yard is naked for the beat summer silks—white grounds with pencilled stripes of hlark or a color. Tlie qualities sold for 92 ore warranted not to spot, and very pretty silk* alike on both sides, are shown for 91.25. The silks of at ill lower price so largely dis played in the early part of last season are not to lie had now. Small-uirahrd grenadines are used this year in preference to tho largo square meshes so long in vogue. Iron grenadine, well-twisted, strong, and three-fourths of a yard wide -the most convenient width—is sold for 75 cents s • yard. . This makes a pretty show, and retains its color almost as well as finer goods. Glossy silk grenadines in auiure figures cost from 91 to $2. What Came of a Joke. John Hillen, a hog and cattle-drover, was in a i*rter-liouse in New York, read ing a newspaper, to which some one act ! Are a* a practical joke, lie was, natur ally, angry when the flame reached his hand, and left the place somewhat cxcit | ed. Tlie next evening he returned, aud meeting one Robert Simpson there, charged him with having set fin- to the paper, which the latter denied, and angry words ensued between Uie two, finally ending in Simpson striking Hilh-non the head with a bung-starter, inflicting what at the time was considered u trivial wound, as Hillen went unaided to the Fifth Precinct Station-house to have it dressed, aud, having refused to give either his own name or that of his assail* ant, went away. The next day Hillen wa* found lying in an insensible condi tion in tlie street, and lwiug taken to the hospital shortly after died. Simpson wu* arrested and locked up on the charge ; of murder. IN BZI.R DKFKM K. —At tlie Jersey 'En gland) Assizes, Alfred Bridges surrender ed to take his trial on the charge of shooting, with intent to kill, Lieuten ant Charles Frederick Campbell, of the Hixty-ninth regiment, on February 15th last. Lieutenant Campbell, in eomjmnv with Ensign Le Breton, of the Euniskif lens, was iu pursuit of Bridge* for the purpose of chastising him for having written insulting letters to some of the female members of Lieutenant Camp boll's family. Mr. La Breton wan armed with a riding-whip and Mr. Campbell with a small walking-cane. When Mr. Campbell waa within three pari-* of the prisoner, the latter drew a revolver and fired two shots, the first of which missed, the second taking effect in Mr, Camp bell's left wrist, passing through the bone and out of the other side. Mr. Campbell apjxsared in court with his arm in a sling. Tlie jury acquitted the prisoner on the ground that he fired the shot in self-defense. The decision was received with applause. AN OPINION.—A Western paper evi dently does not believe in prize-nghting. Of the late affair it says: "The mis take made by the Hheiiff in Canada was in not firing first and reading the Riot act afterward. In that way lie might have saved his own watch aud money, and at the same time performed an act of international courtesy, which would have been deeply appreciated on thia ■id®." IMPORTS. —The imports of foreign foods at tho port of Beaton, since the st of January, have been about four millions of dollars larger than for a corresponding period last year. The in crease is more tnau 20 per tent, over the imports of last year. A New York Millionaire. Heiirv Hart a noted New Yorker i suiil to In- worth He eame to New York froui Germany alwut forty vonrs ago. Having some money, he l-eeauto a pawnbroker at 81 Chatham strr-et, and there, oarly and lab-, le„ lin* exercised hi* remarkable acutem-i* until he has amaased a eohaoorl fortuue. He is U-lieved to own two thirds of all the *tH*k in tho Third Avenue lUdroa.l. Ho owns real estate iu West Twenty seventh street, five houses iu Thirty uiutli stres-t. property in Perry trwt and itl Nineteenth street, the block of buildings in Chatham street where he lives, and much propertr elsewhere. Mr. H irt lives aud transacts his bui iieas without oanistaiice. Even his jrawu broker shop is always chared, an I not ouly th door but the window bluid* or fastenings are bolted summer slid wiutor. The aspect of the whole build ing is that of a desolation. The same dreary fact is true of all his property. When property jioaso* into his hsuds tho work of ileoay la-gins. He was never known to rout to any one any |mrtioii of iiis immense estate. His uiagmttreut lirown-stono mansiou—it was a palace wheu le bought it years ago—is rapidlv going to ruin. The woodwork all through the building is uffected writh the drv rot Not a single soul hsa oc copied it since it fell into his jvs*'vnon. But in order, it would probably rent for 83,U*> a year. But Mr. Hart will uot rent hi* pr qierty to any one. Home year* ago excitement was creat ed ly a ghost iu this very place of prop erty. Tlie story of toe "Twenty seventh street ghost" was published throughout the country. Tlie house which his ghostship haunted Ixiougtsl to Henry llsrt. It turned out that the ghost was a white billy goat la-longing t< a neighbor which hod by aom- means effected an entrance into the budding. Mr. Hart ha* amassed his fortune by |H-nuriou*lv hustemding the enormous profits of }mwuhrokiug. How he con trive* to |lay tlie taxes on his vast un tenanted estates is best known by those who retain tho secrete of the finances of the city.—.Sua. Tli* ** Wrb*tler" SUrj. There is one tradition in tlie tier man army which lias doubtless survived to this tiny, and has been often gaily rw 1s tiled around the camp tires below \tris. It ass told to l>r. Liebor by Ocneral l'fuhl, of the allied army of oc cupation iu 1815. After entering Paris, tieiiend Pfuld was Military Governor of oue of the divisions of Uie eity, and a Prussiau soldier, native of Pomerauia. wns oue day brought before htm for having beaten his host, a French citizen, lss-uus' he did not inspuiUv produce the wlute !*vr—weissbier of llerlin -when the soldier demanded it. The demand a so extraordinary that the curious General sent for the offending soldier, and investigated the case. Tlte soldier confessed everything. He had asked for weissbier in Paris, aud, against the most |KMtitive orders, had lwaten his French host who did not produce it. " Hut, mv boy," said Uie general, " 1 cannot understand you, \\nat do yon mean by asking for weisabier iu Paris. " I will tell you. General, what I mean. When Uie Frenah were in Pom erauia, in IH(M, I returned one day from school and found that the French sol diers were saragelv leating my old fath er because they insisted ti]>on liaving claret aine, and there was none, per haps, in all Pomerania. It was a terri ble sight; aud I took a solemn oath. General, boy as 1 was, thnl should I ever get to Paris as a soldier, I would de mand weissbier, and if the Frenchman did not instantly bring it I'd (log him well. I'm only keeping my oath. Gen eral." General Pftihl said to him. " You will have your punishment of course ; but my boy," he added, kindly, "when you come out I wnnt to see you." A BAP AT C'OHNKB LoAjraa.—An ex change goea for corner loafers as follows: " That young squirt on the corner, wiUi his hat a little on one side, Uie stump of a cheap cigar in his mouth, and nature for every young lady that p—iaa— ia a loafer. I)o you know whore he gets his money ? His mother earn* it for him taking in waahing. Poor soul! Kin* thinks her lx>y will get work soon. Ho rouhl And work enough to keep him bnsv fifteen hours a day, if he wanted it. Ibit he i a lazy loafer, and don't want to work. If he gets a place he shirks or tUxw his work so poorly Uiat lie ia soon dis charged. He never works for the same man twice. Or prrluqi* ha is particular what kind of work he docs. He is will ing Uiat his mother or sister should sew or wash to earn money for him to spend, bat he is n little particular, he is. what work lie does with his luiud*. lie hxiks down on that sweaty earjK-iiter who hurries by him and uoosed of partisans of Lcrdo. Juarez, it is aliened, is using the public funds, while Leruo is also spending money liberally, to pro mote their resjiective interests in the Presidential campaign. Whoever may bo elected, it is expected that his oppo nent will inaugurate a revolution, and attempt to assume the office of Presi dent. by force of arms. The friends of Porflrio Diaz are powerless. Za masons is their leader, and he is directing the party bo as to favor Lerdo. A rupture of the Lerdo and Porflrio parties is im minent. There arc 90,000 shoemakers in Penn sylvania. Hie Years' Growth of a Mate. The complete eeusus of the Htato of New York snggt-sU some curious 00m 1-arin.uis aud eonelusiona, eapeeiolly in re-gard to the conditions of growth that have prevailed for the past five year*. One fact is evident from the moat cur sory examination of the figure*—namely, that the tendency to the oeutrwlixatioo of population in our ritieaia rapidly iu nroaaing. while the purely rural distriots •how 1-1 titer an actual decraaae or a very alow aud almost inappreciable growth. Following this point, through emjiar isons of the Htato census of 1A65 with the Federal census of IH7O, we find that the total population of the Htato amount ed to 4,402,7H8 in IK7O, and that in 1865 it was 3,831,777- allowing an aggre-gate increase of 571,011 in five years. But of this whole uiereaae, tho growth of two eitiea- New York and Brooklyn -ac counted for mote than one-half, or 315,- 678. New York gained 215,051 in five years, and Brooklyn gained 90.727. If to this we add the increase of West chester County (28,792) for the same perioil, which is re-allv r |ait of the growth of this City, the increase con sisting chiefly of lire overflow of our own |M>pulation, the total to be deduct-d frotu the State aggregate is !5W,470. This leave* only 231,541 as the total in crease of the State ouUide the cities of New York and Brooklyn and the County of Watohcster—or an annual average of aliout 46.U0U. Taking this ltabtnoe of 231,541 as a new jKiint of dejiarture, we find Hurt no leas sa amount than 73,764 must be de ducted from the total to account for the increase in the population of ten otlier •itn-a— h-aviug only the small remainder of 157,777 to repreaent the increase of all the rural districts in the H ate for half a decade. This result may Ire re garded a* due to three causes—the de parture of young farmer* from the old liotnostoads to seek thair fortuues in tire eitire aud large towns, the gradusl in crease in the quantity of laud hchl by •ingle owner*, and the tendency to emi grate to new homes in the West The cities are growing rapidly at tlie exjiense of the country, aud in these centres of Copulation, trade-, and industries of all iuils are flourishing more and more. .V. Y. I'nper. American* In BrailL It is kno* u that a few years sine quite a number of Americans went to Brazil to live, aud it is also known that most of thoac aho could not get away have suf fered terribly. The following story is told by a cormqxiudeut : The writer of this sketch was walking down tlte Itun Dericta, the great boule vard of llio Janeiro, one evening last January, when he was accosted bv a mis erable, ragged at d squalid-looking ob ject, who implored him, " for God's sake, give me only a rinlr " (less than a quar ter of a cent) "to get something to eat." The wretched man said be had been in Brazil four years. He had left a voung wife and child in Baltimore, and had emigrated with many other*, whom he said were then as destitute as he, hoping to rc)iair his fortunes, but instead, he had been going rapid]v down hill ever since he first landed in Brazil The gen tleman—-fo% despite his haggard look and ragged ®p|tearaicc, the man bore tlie semblance of respectability—said he was a graduate of the Jefferson College Medical School, in Philadelphia, and had at one time a large and lucrative practice in Richmond, Va. When reach ing Brazil he at first endeavored to prac tice medicine among tlie American col- ( onists of the tain Paulo province, hut the colonists were a* poor aa he, and he was finally eom]M>lled to return to Rio Janeiro sick at heart aud much more sick in laxly. Wandering a'*out the dingy streets of the vast city for days ujon days without * place to lav hi* head or scarcely a morsel to eat, he at last applied to the city authorities for employment, and though greatly debili tated by long suffering and exposure, he accepted employment on the public highways. Under the scorching rajs of a torrid sun this gentleman trundled his barrow through Uie streets of Rio Janeiro, filled with sand or stone for the pavers st work on the boulevards. Fi nally Ui'* doctor waa taken ill, and was eonseauenUy obliged to relinquish even that laborious means of subsistence, and a few days after the rencontre on the Rua Dereita. spoken of almve, he was found dead in a filthy hovel in an ob scure section of the eity. Being a Pro testant, he was denied a Christian bu rial by tho ecelesinatical authorities, when fortunately a few geucrous-hcsrted American sea-captains and the officers of the United States Flag-ship " lain custer '* had Uie jxior fellow decently interred. Simralar Story from Mew Orleans* The New Orleans f'iraynnr publishes the following atory in a department of the pajier where, a one of its 1000 l con teiupornries say*, reliable statements are usually found : " We heard this n.oruiug in the May or's nftiee of a deplorable circumstance connected with the exeeuUon of lhe twro Hpsniard* on last Saturday. The rope with which Uie miscreants were hung had been purrhaeed from a merchant doing business down town, who, it ap appesr*, had, at the time the purchase was made, been iudneod to witness the executiou. He was present whin the murderer* were made to jmy Uie jiennlty of their crime, ami the scene, revolting as it was, msde a deep impression upon hia mind. An hour or so after he re turned to his house, the evening jiapcra appeared. While reclining in his arm chair, hia wife read to him the detailed account from one of the paper*. Sud denly he interrupted her rv exclaiming in a frightened tone, " O, I see the.ra 1 I see them ! " and scarcely had these word* escaped lum when he dropped dead. We may menUon that the deceased gen tleman had for some time been afflicted with heart disease, and Uie impression which the accuc at the scaffold tuade up m him had evidently hastened his death. FOOLED HM. —Most Ixiy* of ten years anil Upward have, in their circus experi ence. iNVomc tolerably familiar with Pe ter Jenkins, who generally oomm tum bling into the ring in a state of bcaally intoxication, to the ucver-ending aston ishment and delight of th<> sjxther, and had been Uwu, bred and spent uiuat of her life in France ;) the cUhwt sou, who has all kia father'* bourijihueaa and his mother's waywardncks, and who, betwecu the two IwrenU, finds Iris home, as he call* it, " A hell U|KIJ earth." lardy Tirhborne, completi-ly under the influence of tire pneto, handed the IKIJ over to them for education. He began life under the Jiauiteat St. Onu-r, jassscx! next to tire military college at Handhuret, got a corn mission in a dragoon regiment, the Carabineers, served with his corps t Dultliu and elsewhere, but soon took a disgust lsth at the profession and tlie company among which le wan thrown. He ukol to iKtoae and awoke with his inferiors. His brother officer* laugh's! at the young fellow's half-French, half- Knglioii jargon, for French was then his more familiar tongue, and reprobated Iris low tastes aud Uxme lotnjawionfc. He sold his rontmimiou and started to see life and seek adventures in Honth America. From Havre he sailed in March, 1653, to Yal|suwio, pushed in land toHantiago, where Iris body w-rvant, a. man named Moon-, waa taken ill; then set off ah m a on a purposeless ramble hither and thitlier, turned up at Bio, smi in April, 1854, end>urked ttorn uppermost, lmt no jiaaacuger or sailor who was on Iroarel except it be Sir Boger, the prment .claimant,) has ever reaiipcared on earth. It was assumed that the vrusrl han tin* other hand, however, the claim ant evidently know* a good deal (how ever learned) about the Tichlmrne family and rotate*, i* sworn to a* the real Roger by several relative* and old friends of tile house. There ia one test he offers to submit himself to, which keeps up the romantic nature of the narrative. Roger before he quitted the country parked up a number of documents in a *11 |*or cel which he left with Mr. Roaford, the steward of the Tieliborne catnte*, with instrnctions to open it only in the event of his death, aud the claimant offers to state the content* of that parcel in order to prove his identity, 8I;CB A .SwnnMJt—ln New York re-J cently. James 8k John, an ernuid boy, j lfi year* of age, waa arraigned on a charge of swindling by means of bogus telegrams. He pretwuted no lees than aixteeu bogus dispatches to business men in one day, receiving 93 ' product uothing hat droaet; and it ia : generally concede.! that impregnation i does uot ufinet to. dreiwi . ooa- \ laeqaentiy the. tiwlopnnpnfi of a pure ; Italian <|ueen k pare without regard to the drone she ha* tuatod with. >, ( The queen and worker arc provided, with stinga ; bat while the latter will doc it upon any provocation, the for ' mer will only use it at her own rank, j The d m raw have no atiaga One queen, aa a rula, ntaU that is tel j crated in a hive; tot previous to throw -' tng off 'aftor-awarma," torn r WW queens are permittid in the wane hive tor a short tone, but the extra ones are | soon disposed of. In case of rttperwd-' log a queen, the old One fa pre*aerrcd intO the new one is fitted to take her' [dace. Queens have a deadly hatred for cwrh other, and sill deatroy, if pcruut-; i ted. ail queen tori* Mvw, f ind will fight each uthor until tianw ia * , but one left alive. Wax, like fat, is an animal nradnct, | nd ia secreted hy the h* in tirtn scale* !on the under ride of the body. White, loing this they eouaantelarge qaanbtiaa ( 1 of honey—from fifteen to twenty pound* ' tor every [tound of wax aaeretod. i A fritfbterud baa, or una tilted with ! honey, i* not dispowri to sting. : ... t A "good **mrm cuutoiw about twenty j thousand toe*. .. j A stmug or mcdinm hive, with a laying queen, is never a.-riotislytlvnbkd with the moth worm : but * hive with out a queen or the means of raising mm | Ml wire to betebwk hi them. i Bees reoognise each other by tistar j scent j The first one of two weeks of the young bee's life is spent inside the hive, as nurse or wax worker. | The range of a hceft flight tor food ir generally within two or three mfkw ; i much greater range ta of but little bene- * i fit to Item. The b'rsjw Cull are. The crape culture ia tiecoming a moat, ' :m[>ortaut branch of industry in Mtoon- f j ri, and it is estimated that in a lew yeare. the wine crop aiU be* worth more than j i anv other agricultural prudmrtion of thai State, corn and wheat alone Wierpted. ! The town of Itevmnnn in Oaaomiode | eountv, which was ocitted in ItMO by a 1 | German settlement noddy from Piute dclphia, and now has a papulation of j jioSTte the moat of : the gtapc-gruwiag and wine-making in tcrest. The vintage of Hermann was' > about 450,0tW gallows teat year. In that* ivgion, when a vineyard i in good bcar j ing condition it yields, with a favorable Mwooo. a profit of about s9tKr pcraitiw. i i The entire coat of vineyards, preparing tle soil and sotting and training the' vinos till tbev came into hearing, varies ; | from firJOO to ffiOO per sere, white the annual coat of cultivation afterward ranges from SSO to SfiO ptw acre*. An acre of <\>iMX*rd vine* for market jmr poare will yksld from 10,000 to IS.OM |M>nnda. which will *11 at an iwrw price of ten cents a pound. Tin* whole uumfier of acres planted In and around ■ Hermann is l*etw-n thm* and J/pui; j i hundred, and all the way to the Gascon ade river, a dutanoe of about seven crib*.' jin a continuous vineyard. From the •meres* attending it in Haacooade county. 1 grape-growing ia rapkfiy sprewditig into different portions of the amttii half of Missouri. Eight or ten million* of seres Iving idong the UiUaidcn or in the warm \ voileva of this pewtiuo of timtitato lauds,, too, tbafi have hoen Liatilisril wttrtftlcss when compared wlih the Jtohcr alteVte*. of the river and the prairie—have, lawn ' found to bo the DOR productive of aIL t Three hunts are still cheap, anfl thon- I rentte are annuahy making tiu-ir tews upon them It is claimed that a groat portion of Miawmri posareoc* the requi rito aoil and climate for fairing VtWty , variety of grapes, and th vitire are te-iag abnuiLuitly [oante*l in *U |.wrtti of, tin. State. In many locahtie* the vinwh iri* ixwmr no largi* and nuacfwu* to to form a oin-pteuows feature of arety co)Me and thicket f ** t , A _ What (aa IN* Bate. \V' b\r nearly arrived at the nliJTen ium in diy goods as n*gate diecpafaai qnalitv, and styK and it teqnite [xnaible for a is*ly to attire herself well tor ojnun that five years *g*i woshf law been I tardy sufßcicnt for hct glore* sad hatiA kerchiefs. W"ith twenty five th'ltere a tedv can now purclwse the mntmaLs for a linen, a white, and liaen aasgv anit, with money enough left lor a pair of khl ! gloves, n jwrasol, and pretty scarf for the ncek. If the lady has plenty of ingenuity and leisure she can contrive three riylirii costumes of these materials, in whiyh she will always be presentable, and look as well, if not better, than some who sjwnd many times that amount, but ao injadio* iousfy that their toikttrs are never etfep tivo, idways lacking that indeacnlwble " DubbuM>.t " which chiunw.k*risaa tlw? effort of owe endowed hy nature and ob servation witli skill and taste sufficient to evolve wonderful combinations from tha dimplcst material*. At teari to a New Tor* paper given to fashion gossip tells *. _j . •• WHIUK YHK UABHKST BBirwKmss nf England produce each from seventy to ninety mtilious of quarts of base annual ly, the largest breweir ,- J t **> '!'•;> -•> jp! variety of Infer is called ■ "Audit lumoriirtM Brattnwbwoiger J" \* -"•- •I ' "'f* •' " .. *l.'? ? G< nttemen t dlaw>Mrtv should wear white esttlirie n*ek-tim instead of black aflh, to be Jo thy burilion. ■ There is * tluima; .jane. ir 000. , A Wisconsin poßtUMustt r baa writ** to Washington tor "*om denial rweau y aqlng eob to Detroit boa a bwehdora' elab, tin memltera of which haw ntn to warn iMfttowf lemlha* fiWMW •<* * brick ty'li hda MyUftA tfffibg-uddp for lattice' am baa a fan iaacrtri m tb handle, which can be alao wad MI a screen from WW A baatoroo* npntberaiTr ia Boatoa ex poses a cake of map ta hi* chop window, with toll imrMaiWl tasnir*iafcMßpory to be "sitting ia Wadtora latere; WJWmra and waiting for business." :i, ;, • ~,, A jU^riiveS*oisv **f date I*.* J. iitiiii'ii f r*m ' the old Cambridge hnryfag-gtound, waa ! totrnd ia a Hsi-vsstt stadoat's mow the 1 ndarht. A' Aetefinr ggristdfiuMPufi says . ** N ever'platet pour potatoes curly. It ia the rerfv potato that am ton Hw worm It , _, i *I I , r ( -| r Marfrd-l-ii -flarWtte wflaa flasa# *' IS Rp mil wnfl Willi l#f*"flf Wn I4A*- A Ftoridaaoe iwfieenuwi who toned a candle iKirning in a cellar, amid papers, straw, and rubbish. and pert it ot, waa , mvrrelv rtnnJ bj tlw* owner next day, Jiistaow pooplaare inquiring how to make hot -d*. About a qoartor of a ponpd of cayenne pemw* rpr.nkl- d ia mat before nctirinK wffl ptobaMy make it warm etwejrtt 1 TbeKaaawt pawed an net ' tiurt Winter wbirh proddwttwl reporters who attend Vfil report priic-Wth in fhst Slate sill be' siibjertwl to hawy Itscß and inii>i Isodtotoi in the |H*uiten iiary. ' A 'state Senator of faaaMiw, has nob tidied a eardln which he nays that his 44 dtmmt at suicide" waa aotofap; mows than toe manh of the carelaw faaodiinß I 4 firearms, aU Watr—mta to toe eootrary An iwhaaa orwutor dark has fonnd ia his oidee a certtfkwUs which r, li: " This w to cortufy that I, Wiftaw Hands, ia agreed that Jim Brown shall bee mi , Daughter Patocy to wifc thin I7lh day | geaewerry. 181 L" An Alexandria comsspoadeat aamrta ! that northern risitors hswiwt off all the lwtton.i on Htc rnsbion* in Washington's • i>cw in fbriW ehnrch. and aw* 'now carry mg off piece* of the staff. Both hattowi ; and cßWitona are modern 1 One of the new now to whirti sponge lis bring pnt is that of pads to he placed ' tmdor nWiioanstta as well as under neath those in potion, hedwwma. etc. ■ H'wvtofore, cotton waste or wadding i a as awd lor this porpow . A tkaciaanli paper aaya that in that i cits rliiwwkcTi and aeaanstassar*. who —* -a lomprise the greater a amber of work woman. do not average more than $6 a work for forty wecka in the year. The remainder of toe time they am oat of I work. ' . . i Tha nctors el the Bariin Boywl Theatm their aslariaa. *lm php waa atopfwd, bat toe manager paying them, Uw actom want m the stage toowttano the play and m rotui% hisacd tiy the aadieaee. ■-'..1 I. H- 1 ..I' 1 "!" igaa vuiv t - - ~.-j ,11 . twpKlMHDrplMßts. It ia aatonhhiag how tame okphanU Income after. King wane time domesti os|r mahout and hia family, and the elephant all ooupt the tsame liettae. The ricplamt has h .hnnwof eakeaof i snlmntmcd bread, jmpamd tor him at thesatpo tone as his isk ttoy aB . it hgetoer. I hare seen their child, an infant not able to walk, in charge of the elephant, 'tl waa heSHj meat amnaing NtottataMtoki to see toe aohiritmk do- Jtared hytoia gijgantic nurn, . As hia little chArgr wontd Mm ocariy ont of Nlii'lWihtNiai tl*e place whf ho was iwetatod. he wemidatoetoh mi W trunk, and gently lifting the infant up, place luSwTomMR feet.' After playing .wheat awe tton\ the ehild got tired ami ■ went to sleep, the cleihant meanwhile tircaking on a gm*n branch ftwun a nrijtoborlnp ttori waved it gently hack wards sad forward* own #> flto of the ikMISWr.u f '■ ' 1 ! t'le flier, should ditt jn Vi< shailbor The creature i might Itavo haesi tofightta do Uua, lait it tiK DTovot ut what sxtraonianiry sagm ritT these stomal* are pasaWaea. I waa onoe otrtotf k tiger party, in which there waaofemah- efspltaot noMMtoddy tame and sggacioua. She used to come to oar tout everytoorning * nfle we were break farting tuid tog breml. or anv;isifig etoe llattwaa to to had On she would waft oirfr> fne bmsitar, and (oirclmaewweelaaoata, and woe betide the •totoer if. h to toeat Imr. More than oncc.the maneut informed na, she bad polled the stole atop over the haafis of the kaavinh dealers who had B#gipmhcr fair exchange for her monev. Blie would draw the cork from abotde with her trunk, no matter how tightly it was.: hammered down, and drink* its contents. It appeared, indeed, that she wts given' to strong hqoore ; and the nwdtoat tokkoa son had been rcpeat odly dead ilruntakm jpmUemen had piven her a mifficwnt quantity of spirits. t Tw bnokete fulh he informed a% waa . 4mnli the ncocasary quuntity to make her groggy. We did nbt. however, toy tho exp