• I • .1 rr r JIM VOLUME LXXU. THE CARLISLE ERALD Published ovary Thursday morning by WEAKLEY & WALLACE, EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS. Office , in Eheent's Haft, in rear of Me (bur/ House Torms--$2 00 . per annum, in advance RATES 01? ADV.EatTIBING I 1 sql 2 sql 3 aBl 4 sql j.i cl N el 1-col I week. 1 00 2 00 3 00 .4 00 7 00 13 00 22 00 2 ." 1 50 300 4 bo 500 0 00 14 00 26 00 3 " 2 00 4'oo 5 00 il 00 10 00 16 00 30 00 4 .. • .260 475'6 75 076 12 50 18,00 32 60 1 5 " ' 320 4550.660'750 14 00 20 00 35 00 6 " 3'60 6 501 7M1860166022 50 37 60 2 mod. - 4 00 7 50 8 59 9 60 17 50 25 00 42 50 8 " 5 00 850 050 10 60,20 Oil 30 00 60 00 0 " 7 '6O 10 00 13 50110 00128 00 40 00 75 00 1 year. 10 00 15 00120 00125 00140 00175 00 100 00 12 lines constitute a sonar°. For Executors', and Administrate For Auditors . Notices, For •ssigneed' and similar Notice For yoarly Cards, not exceeding si For Announcements, .05 cents po • leseted for by the year. For Business and Special Notices, l cents per lino Double solnmn advertisements exhic.. Notioes of Matchless and Deaths published free. CARDS. 1. A. &?WOOD. ISAAC R. RANCE. ACTWOOD, RANCID kt" CO., COMMISSION TiIERCUANTS, Wholesale dealers In all kinds of PICKLED AND BALT Piet! No. 210 North Wharyes, Above Race Artist, PHILADELPHIA. .1" loc7o S. COYLE. Ti. SCOTT COYLE. 1872. SPRING. 1872. COYLE BROTHERS JOBBING AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ' NO. 24 BOITTIIIIANOVER ST., CARLISLE. They have constantly in. stock a large selection of Notions and Fancy Dry Goods; ladies' and gent's hosiery, gloves, suspenders, neck ties and bows, white trimming and ruffling, paper collars and culls. note, cap, business, letter, billet, wrapping paper, envelopes, paper bags, tie yarn, drugs, fancy soap, hair oil, perfume, and an endless variety of knick knacks. All orders will receive prompt atten tion. COYLE BROTHERS. • 7mh72tf DR. J. S. BENDER,. . . 1103REOPATI110 . Pit YSI , 'IAN. Ilan removed Mt Office to Foulk'n Corner. Corner nfSouth Hanover and-Pbforret etreotn, and opponite the Second Presbyterptp church. 19ve69 FE. BELTZEMOVER, JL' • ATTORNEY AT LAW. °Wei lel South Hanover etrevt, opp, ulte livu [ex dry goods Hum. 106e70 - R OLL, KTRKI'ATI&ICK & WUITEMAN =I MANUFACTURED TOBACCO, N. E. Mr. Third and Market streets - Philadelphia. H. P. LOLL. ■. ICIFPATILICX, HJsn7l C. P. RAIMRICII. WM. R. PARKER. inFURICH & TA A, ATTOILNEYS AT LAW. Oilcc on Moan alroot,ln Marlon 1741, Carlisle. 10.70 MUM'. J. R. 011.."101, JR J. H. GRAHAM ik SON, • ATTORNEYS AND COIINSF.,LORS-AT-LAW, No. 14 South Hanover street, 1=0! lion. J. 11. Graham, Info Priaident Juilgo of tho Moth Judlclat Pletrlet. has rename], the prostice of law, and immolated with him hie son, J. If. Oro. ham, Jr. Will practice In the °mint'. of (lumber- Porry and Juniata JAMES M. WEAKLEY, ITT° iLVNY•A T-L IF, OFFICE, NO. 2,2 0011T1I lIANOVEW STIINET CARLISLE, PA. • JOHN ATTORNEY AT LAB' Ofilco No. 7, Ithoam'a Hall, in rear of thoCourtillouse wow JOHN HANNON, WIIOLICSALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN THE BEST QUALITY OF WINES AND LIQ UOIIS, No. 41 South Hanover Street, 11ja721y CARLISLE, PA. JOSEPH HITHER., Jn., ATTORNEY AT 1,A15' ANL) SURVEYOR, hfechomiconott, Tu. thlico on Ihfll rrnul etreut, two doors forth of the Bonk Domino. Promptly attended JOSEPH G. VALE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Praotiees • in Dauphin and Cumberland Countioq. • • Orrice—ln Court Iloupo Avenue, No. 3 Kramer's. building, in tLo rear of the Jewelry eatablishruout. OAItLIBLE, PA • 12janTlly TOBErll V. CULVER. 611 AS. P. ctri.vnn LAW, LOAN AND COLLECTION °Malt OF ,iosuen F. CULVER & 8110. I'ONTIAO,II.frINOTS. We have the beet . of &ctn. ilea for placing capital on firal-claes improved forme. Tilley Inveettgated, and &Mamie hinibilied from our own °nice. 'Ten per cent interest and prompt payment guaranteed.. Wo Intro correnpondents In ev.-ry part of the Weet, which furnielion un every facility for gamely collection, ILEVERENCEB: lion. Jamen 11. Graham, Wm. 11. Penrome, eaq„ Win. J. Shearer, cei.. C. E. 0. 0 0/1.% Carllatin Hamilton Alrickn, eon., liarrirdiurg. Lin. C. P. Culver and Horatio King, 00 aaltin tom, D. C. George 11. Stuart, Phila delphia. Chambers & Pommy, New York city, Mon c. 11V,RMA,N; ♦ • ATTORNEY. AT LAW, • . Carlioda.„pa, N 0.9 niloolll . ll 11911. 10040 A. R., J. 11. 151,1LICEITAN ' : 1/1 4 ,OLURR ..LLJL , ATTORNEYS AT LAW, U 4 Soutlitlx6 strOot,Pidladelpllla Ale7lly. • • 1101 H. .SHAMBAHGEH, • 'JUSTIOS ON Tlls . , Westpohnoborb' tort Cumbori and County, all budnoos, ontrusted to him will recol ottoution. _T IT S A. LiNDSEY, TV ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, 1t11.111[102 BUILDING, IN WRAP, OF ,Tnxi (0121.1 Com nom. ~, I 1_• ~ . , ,', . -7 'W F. SADLER , NV '.; , ',. , ATTOIII2I2Y iT LAW, Offlcii22 south ynooyor Went next the flood Will Irooollouse. 4 . '... 'I , . lOseo2 WEB.' B. JURORS, ATTORNEY AND,COUNBELOR-AT UAW, °vele; AND nr.ktangriCa, 26 , 0 41Nrii attn,BTREET.. Bolow Walnut Street, /..; PRILADELYR/A. ltiscellaueous. AVID SMITH, formerly Justio4 of tho Peace, would announce to his numerZna rriri,nde•throughout tho county and rtclulty, that his *Mal Attention will bo won to tho collection and ao4loment of nil elation, book ACCOiptle, von duo notes, Ac„ and to *Wing of deeds, mortgagee, bonds: to., and Oleo to tho awl renting df Real Altate. Torme moderate. :Otneo in the Court . I,loue . . • - • I NFiy;• r ApypRTISEMENT. • 'luitiquolia,'WroAths,.Ordimob, Baskets, Out Plotter, und pc Parties, Weddings, & arranged in the biog.:style of ort to order. OrAera by =ail bri:noptty attended t ON 0... Iffir,E Addreis,V N IN, Pa.;' 3.0caa7261n -, 0"010 . can obh in. Dye Stuffs„ Perfa- AI weds Rue Fancy, Artlclan, at J. W. Iravor. wore,— Phystoland , presailitlous, targfully scow. ponndod at all elmon. - • • ;1 To IL lIATYIIBI4 / " , NO.6:flatith IlanoTat ritroot, Carib) " 4900570 ,it. • • . 1 '. ta r A. L. gPONSLER'S COLUMN. L. SPONSLER, Real Estate'A gent, Scrivener, C,lnveynnel,r, anco and Claim Agent. Chico Main Street hour Centro Square. AVALUABLE FARM AT PRIVATE S 4LE —Sit soled on tim Baltimore Turnpike, five milth ifonth of Carlisle, mar the village of Pitpertown, Cumberland County, contnining Ilk acres—lately known as the "IIthECIII , ON FAR,m,it The Improvements nro n 1111.081.0ne Mansion Moly°, with convenient out buililines—it large bank Barn, two Tenant lionses—well tewater and cisterns. As a frith farm it cannot lie excelled in the county, having a large apple anti peach orchard, together with poets, cheerier, grapes and strawberries in abundance, and a good market or the same. The tine McAllen or the buildings, delightful view and pleasant thrroundings, thnder it one of the most flesh - ado homes in the Netherland valley. The property will be disposed of upon favorable terms. Apply to dOnia72 ro'2lotiros, $4 00 2 00 3 00 7 00 COM MOWN PROPERTY AT PRIVATE 9OE nn:, Sout h Pitt littelit i Cat , I gottinining ?oat In i'ront mud 110 In depth to 011 . 1Plitit TWO-STORY 'BRICK HOUSE; with a h'rirk Intel balhlhni, containing parlor, hall. dining room and kitchen on the first floor, and four roman nn tho o ecnnd, with balcony and garret— wash honor. bake noon, smoke Inning and other con• venient flirt buildings and a good diatom, fruit tress and gmpe's i nos. Enunire of • A L. SPONSI.EIt, goonf72. ' , , Real Estate Agent. sq 11 lines, r,lino, nnieex EMI= rEO WN PROPERTY FOR BALE.- Situated on West Pondret street, above Vitt street. Carlisle f, The lot In 33 feet In (Font and 240 in depth, one of" the moot °legible building lots to Om town. ,The Improviononts are a .TWO-STOTtY FRAME DWELLING. Tho terms will be made easy. Enquire of A. L. BPONSLEII, 30ma72 Beal Estate Mont. HOUSE AND LOT OF GROUND AT ritIVATIN: PALE.—Sitnated on Woof South street. Lot to by 240 feet, a two story brick build lug set Di feet back front the street, lb by 4.1 foot conlidifiug 3 rooms oft rash floor and one oil the at. tie. Comenlent out buildings, hydrant In the yard, abundance of fruit, consisting of apples, pears, plums and cherrit, Tho property is In good order and %sill be II isposcd of npon reasonable terms. Jomlr2 ACOMMODIOUS TWO-- STORY BRICK /JIVEI.I,ING ON NORTH PITT STRBBr FOR SA I.E.—Containing .distrlslo parlors. hall, dining and kitrlzen, on the firs , floor, 3 nltittnlrers ssn Oro scums.' story 00.1 ti II INIIOtI I Ot,lllB in OR. &It's:, con, niers' oat buildings surd 'spirant In the yard. Apply to A • Is. SPON.9 LER, Itsnint - P2. Roll Estate Agent. BRICK RESIDENCE AT PRIVATE SALE —Situattid nn South Pitt ott,•rt, near Pont trot, a TWtt STORY BUICK 110lIsp, containing lot has, !Intl, Dining Room null on thoffirbt, flOor. nod fonr tilitoturtablo rooms on the Stwozwlj story. Ft tilt and Ilinver4 In the yard, and Crtilminient out Jiniltlingit. Tho property is in good rattan . , 211.1 Will tlispc.t.cl tlt upon the most reasonable terms. 41.1) to 3010472 rriNV() VXLUABLE FAIAIS, within live tinvionil lodises and lottlilinit loin in tinr Lm uugh, nuil h iid lot in l'anrtown. will litho bu dixpu nd of roinninitldd lin Ind, by FM ESTATE NOTlCE.—Letters testa - meutar) MI the ,tate or Sllllllll' I , Cow er, hew of Upper Allen tuwn.hip, dece,tnt , havitc, !wen granted l,y the 'theist, of Conilwrlaud county, to tbenublit mitre rending In New Clunlu•Hutel hot ough. All persons (Hiving chllllll3 uptlnet the 1.111 tilt 4 are `notifiede,e tu to prnt tht•t_And nt. hu inattbltut tL Ito -teune,t-.-inekt—illinteettmtwpw, •nt7 .10IIN It. COOV Elf, 4A3IES 'S. PROWELL, 27je7261. Executor, JOHN A. sNEAIITZ, R. W. HERITAGE, TN BANKRUPTCY. IN TOE DISTRICC CI)URT OF TVNITED STATES FOR THE I:ASTON DISTRICT ' • OF PENNSYLVWNIA. Thr unileriiigniiii hereby, givoii notion of Lin eln polo Dnepr RN Ann gone of John S Dougherty, of the lioninuli of Newrillo, in tbe county of Cuinturioult, tud (At yfl'otineyiriinirt, within saiii Distrid . wino hew horn adjodg ~, I in itintkrupt on hiw own by thn District Court of 831,1 Die4rlet. Dated nit Newville, the 11108 day of July, A. DA 1872. JOllBl OII I AtIA dl, Asidgmo, 4D17231. Nowvllle, Cumberland onto ty, Pa. MEM SCIIOOL TAX OF 1872. The School Tax fur the pr vent year, (1579,) han 11.1.11 levied and an+ed het ha School Directors of he borough of Cur e.tt lude.and a duplicate thereof sQued and dell vered to thn Treasurer for colic, tion The taxable Wrenn of 811111 Sl . llOOl District are hdrelore 1101311011 that the Tensor , r will attend at he Dainty Court Douse, (Codunitinionern' otliee,) ou Y and THURSDAY, the 1=331 AUGUST next; bete een the hours of knoll 5 o'clock of ertid days or 1110 purpose of receiving DOM taxes, and up to said dates taxes may be paid at the office of the Treasurer. No 28 't Marion Hall" Indicting, Went Main street, On all taxua paid 00 00 before 110'11116,, dates, it ded Orden Of VIVI: PER CENT ill L.•made for !mania payna trot, and for all tax. [thong atipaidi a warrant of dupla:at° will ho enfoicing thy collection thorrol according to CAI lid fl, 17, lii72 2111072111 THE undersigned having been tluali- Itod Jii+tice. 1.1 the Pratlr.ia now jircluireal to attend to all la...latt•Fa tatrualod to, Man 011ie, iaa me, lailr thy Farmer.' Bank, and•ii, rear of Elr,tProshyoi.th Church. Ithaidoueu till \Vert +tr....t. :,:saii.72t I • ...F. A, I{ ENN El/Y. LEM IMPIWVE YOUR SIGHT ! pyKE SOS Parabola Spectacles,! Tin, NEW YORK: M""' 9 6 II I . Y II A ZVIY.RBTICK, DEALER IN ' DRUGS, NIEDIGINES, TOILET AND j ANCY ARTICLE 3, CARLISLE, • PENN'A., I h appolatatl agent for the solo of tan above, spectacles PERSONS WEARINO GLASSES or Owe In nerd of them, will no well to call,foi In every cnsil ye (I UAItANTIM TO SUIT THE SIGHT PERFECTLY I 31.7ity MONEY_ CANNOT BUY IT ! FOR SRFLIT IS 'PRICELESS! But the DIAMOND SPECTACLES wlll Ilre.rYo it It you value your oyrolebt uso those - PERFECT LENSES. dioiind from minute Crystal pebbles. plotted to gether, and derivu.tbeirouine"Diatoond" on account or thel,ltardnette sail LrllDmwy. They.rolll lust many, years without rbunge, and ors warranted tolpurtUy to all others In use. El= .1. E. SPENCER A 1,90., OPTICIANS, NEW li!bnic. CAVT/ON.—Nero ienulue l .llelee ithuo pod with our trade eil Silver•xware . .• ' • .1. , • • .• '• • ' I. • '2 . 1 •:2 • , • . • ; ' • •••:: • • !, •• •1. • F TILE BRIDE'S SONG . Hear ma, 0 thrush, In the tree lap abovo, Stay your sweet strafos while I sing ant); love ; Coo to your mato when my prnan to o'er— Bird never heard ouch n soul,ong honoro. Lark whirring over to brown and so Ay, lIUxL youtllelt warbling, - that float down the ehy. Soring aloft la the Infinite blur., lfrlc ! to my secret, FO tender and true( Maya blitshin4beautioa tliat perfume the air, South wind earn sing the flowerets fair, Tossing leaves, towing loaves letting down light Crowning with glory dm dalloilila bright. - lirooklets that over your bloomy 1,10. st, 401, Dear little violets tit-op in 4 the dell, Shlro In my Joy in yt 1 howern, Whlnprr I{ low to the nuiiny tv:ngal beers. Idaten all tillage that are tender and .11Vt`e!, Bloanams tiller u no and dawn; e at my foot hero an I etarld mid lho'frugrance and due, Tire Perlala sd Peace ,men wide to my view. Over my way daWns a wonderful light, Doubts dreary shadows have all taken flight Livermore, evermore 10,1 than be wino, =I Ilark I he is coming tho lord of my iifo, • Coining to crown um with bliss no his win> ; Down iq the volloy Iha woddingholls pool, Echo's faint chimes througlithe glad woodlands stool Losrea and ladles with garlands no gay Strew our bright path to tho altar to-day, Welcome hind woleonio him so fair, ; • Brooklet and blossom and bird of tho air. GAMBLING SUPERSTITIONS. Iloudin, in his interesting book, "Les Trickeries des Grecs *seam," has given some amusing instances of the fruits of long gambling experience. " They are presented" said Steinmetz, from whoS6 work, " The Gaming Table," we ~quoto them, "as the axioms of a professional gambler and cheat." Thus we might expect that, however unsatisfactory to men of honest mind, they would at least savor of acertain sort of wisdom. Yet these axioms, the fruit of long study di rected by self-interest, are all . utterly untrustworthy. "Every game of change," says this authority, "presents two kinds of which are very distinct, namely, those relating to the, person interested, 'that is the player ; and those inherent in the com binations of the game." That is, we are to distinguish between . che chanctis prcper to the game, add th-lse depending on the luck of - the player. Proceeding tb consider the 'chances proper to are . game, itself, our friendly cheat sums thorn all up iii two rules. First : "Though chances can bring into the game all pos sible combinations, there are, neverthe less, certain limits at which it seems to stop ;° such for instance, as a certain number turning up ten times insucces sion at roulette ; this is possible, but it has never happened." Secondly, in a game of chance, the oftener the same combination has occurred in sudeession, .the nearer wo aro to the certainty-that- it will not recur at the next cast or turn. This is the most elementars.of the the , - ory or probabilities ; it IS' termed the maturity of the chances," (and he might have added that the belief in this ele mentary theory had ruined thousands.) "Hence," ho proceeds, "a player must not only come to the tattle ' in luck,' but ho must not risk his money e-;copt; at the instant prescribed by the rules of the ma turity of the chailees." Then follow the precepts for pe4onel conduct : "Foi• gambling profei:' roulette, because it pre sents several ways' of staking your money, which pc' wits the study of sev eral. A player should approach the gaming, table perfectly calo, awl cool ; just as a merchant or tradesman in treaty about`any affair ; if he gets into a passion it is-all over with prridenci3, all all over with good luck, for the demon I of bad luck invariably pursues a passion ate player. Every man who finds a pleasure in playing runs the risk of los ing. A prudent player before undertak ing anything, should put himself to the test to discover if he is ' in vein,' or in luck. In all doubt he should abstain. There are several persons who are con tinually pursued by bad luck ; to such I say, never play. Stubbornness at play is ruin. Remember that fortune does not like people to bo overjoyed at her favors, and that she prepares bitter de ceptions for the imprudent who aro in toxicated. by success. Lastly, before risking your money at play; study your vain,' and theudifferent Probabilities of the game—termedas aforesaid, the ma turity of the chances. Before proceeding to exhibit the fal lacy or the principles here enunciated— principles which have worked incalcula ble mischief—it may be well for us to sketch the history of the 'scamp who enunciated them ; so far, at least, as his, gambling successes are concerned. His first meeting with HOudin took place at' a subscription ball where ho managed to fleece Houdin "and other': to a consid 'erable amount, contriving a dukterous escape when detected. Houdin after- lihVids fell in with him at Spa, where he found the gambler in the greatemt, pov erty, and lent him a iimmllitsunr=to prac tice his grand theopeC" „This sum the surf' Houdin advised him dangerous occupy-. is occasion, it would imbler revealed to' lars recorded In his, Houilimun ith him 'again ; :hitt yr was transforined a thmmi malionaire v ~ a largo fortune on mr, who died intics- Houdin, the folloiv deelaratian at the " I have," said ho, led gaming ; Lam ce no longer 'for for- addqd proudly, " if thing, how'requld oanks in their pride, and what a glorious vengeance I could take of bad luok and its inflexible ageiit's 1 ..But my heart is' • too full of my happiness to allow-the smallest place for' the . desire of venkeance." Three yeaks later ho died,, and .11mIdin informs us that he loft the whole of flits fortuno to various charitable institutions, his ca reer antic his acquisition of wealth going far to dotnonstratO tito justice. of Becky Sharp's theory, that it is easy to be hon est on five thou Sand a year. • _ It is remarkable that the principles enunciated above are not only erroneous, but self-cOntradietor,..Yet„it is to be noticed, that though :they are presented . as the ohtcome of a life•of gambling mt. perienae, they me, in reality entertained by all gamblers, however limited their experience, as well as by many who aro only prevented by the lack cYf opportu nity from 'entering , the dangerous path which hasled do many to rain; Those eoraFadietorysOperstitions maibe called 'severally•—tito gambler's kellof in his 9 . 4itLIST 4 E,'PESN'A'-,: - tirtOtstrAY:'mpitifitili,....iiix.it 11,:::1:870:.:,!.!. own good luck, and his faith in: this , turn of luok. When he is 'Considering 'his own fortune; he'es not hesitate to be . novo • that, on-4h "whole, tho fates will favor, though his belief implies, in reali ty, tho persistence of thrombi° condi tions. On the, contrary; - when he 10:con sideriug tho fortune of others who 'aro successful in their play against him, he does not doubt that their good luck will presently deSert them; that is, he beliores in the non-persistence of favorable condi tions in their case. O,UR HEW YORK LETTER NEw Youn, July 8, 1872 SOlllO 0110 1110, pint 00 'word tho reinark that "Now York is not brainy manta an American city " 'fo certain degree, it is (roe. Llko Faris and Now. Or leans It Liss Its quariicrs. suitors you may find re. spectirely 0100500 tho Fronchman, Spaniard, Oormani and Chinaman. A rid yet all of thesa nd tional olemenis you 0111 lied coamopolizoll In 0110 locality—the Bowery. What Broadway is to the west shins of the town. Um itowoon in to tho onst. It Is thin shlllingpronneundo Tito poor livo then,: fund you 800 the peculiar char acteristics of poverty written lu blurred and nasty mbl ems nil floor thy neighborhood. Starting from Thty Hall, within two hundred yards of Broadway, you intrnko little old elotlicshops, BIM rmingled with cheap cornier groceries and enbtorrainlan Falcone. You aro on the old colonial stag° road to Itooton— Chatimm Himont. The promonsion thot 'passes you Is composed of the working rhos—during the day—but night„ look out Jur thieves. Thorn are dons notorious to tho ',online no receptaelos for stolen goods, • cribs" whorl, conngrogatin the robbers of tho town, and houses in which every window for six or seven stories upwards is a pieture of squalid Infifdressed worn°n and children. Tim street terminates in an Browder open space, on what was coon- a•steep hill side, and Is known nu Chatham square, butt mock ery, by tho way, on that shun°, for it' in unytl i ning but square. This Is the beginning of the Bowery proper—the vestibule, of the social mitriconilin, In which Ile burled all nronnd you every speclos of humanity that is obliged to plod for an existence. See it at night. In spito of the Avast letups Otero is nothing brilliant about it. ; rho shadows seem to flout out train the overcrowded tenement 11111111 VS that loom in the darkness nu either-nide. In the dingy beer tillops and "dirtier collars, torts nutno of the worst specimens of .T pnpulntinn, micanny florins of vat led evil staring sit yea from every corner, or diving llowu dimly lighted stairwayn to shrink from sight. Hero are to be found the little street Aral., the boys and girls preposimuunly old, who will mom till the Item the once Innocent coun try girl who halt dropped into the great maolntrom, and In resitog round /11/11 I'oll 1111 111 low itance to wer. Ile:11114—H red: bloated. fearful burlesque upon women.llrl l e ialW city' Tough" ,lilsok and o bite hiding perhaps Irons justi. or :11,11 1 Ilg 5051111 1113 W opimituoity Is go tomb V.ll 11 brain lumeklns, kink. or litirglar's —Jimmy." The Mee gardens nil. aloes thlx Step Into the " Atlantic," and sou may Ail most fancy yournett in the Failei land. The hall Is 1111111,1111 u, and thronged be hundred., who gathei around the little tables where, With pipes, lager, end Rhein wine, they while away this hours. A 11110 band linanshee the nimit end the, xenon Is belldering• Further n ix the Bowery Theatre—the grand play tome' of the gamtne, where the atullencg slay out peanuts and Moult (Lein criticism at the tore of their yob... The deities .if the true blood-anb thiiiitler drama preside hors, and minions litmus of info Aire Vl.lll/10 011 1111 ride, The worst—by in; tllo worst feature of thin neigh borhood Is its tenement 110119 M (Jr r•other they ought to be yelled Seven Story Cofll or, for probably ioshorn else hi America Is there snob a congrega• n of people littuully parked in deatbditlnted dens arid dying by inches. Windows broken; lodgers thirty; rlothes' lines extendingarress the tunnel like street, whereon ore flying In the wind the ghosts of ragged gartnents j i children playing around the Illth that 1100110011,.11 time; gutters reeking wleh pol lution; et tignor from the guitar dranu shop; rierr•suns. jr•ers, ortills—there are it pmt of the redo onrroundrogs of u New York tenement honer, with II; wild ittrtanterl population of hundreds. We l,n.ve this liegoeti op locality with a I,PIIOD of relief, turd room ter the 800 ury to continuo our joruntry up town mail it mei gem into the clearer and nieteAlghtly. neighborhood-of-the- Cooper-insti tute mild Union :ornate. All of the "breathing spots" of the Metropolis by the way, 111100 HOW slut on their summer dress, 1111,1 youlolll flnd no opectirefo more animated than that which is presented on n sittonier evening. Foal especially on Sundays by the thousands who flock thitherto enjoy fresh air. • .. • • In this connection I rimy remark that all of tho public squares have undergone marked improvments —the Iron ralllnge being removed, the indigo. dental mid the Idols eucopnngad tordrulld their nesto Union Square just at the bend of Broadway and Four tr•erith Street, .Is destined to bemoan n bearrkifal spot. Twenty . years ago the 110. es around it worn the residences of thy roost oristoriatic citizens, and there dial an air of digit fled seclusion about the place pdeullarly Weot Eland, 'Now, these old homes ono giving place to nutgattleent buclueee establisionenta, and in a i n title whtlE yon will ace tun array of architectural beauty unequalled In any city of tho United ...,totoq. Among the ancient Innd mart. thus yielding to the march of pregress is tiro Roosevelt mansion on the vomit of Fourteenth street and Broadway nod fronting Union Spode. The property has been pur chased by the lionieetto Sewing Machine Com puny, and they ore now erecting a sniierh edifice in the Reniatieence style which in Ile °kistnet. will over eloolow overy,lmlldieg In the neigheorhood. It Is tort u, 11l de while since the couipany-commenced operations In New York—being id western drigin— but their machine's have becomerisis suddenly pop°. Inc %Ott, the monsoon, become. of theireoporior convenience and economy. that WO dth and success have,roirniel the enterprise, and the proprletoreare enabled to Vit , with the older carporidtons whu have no long held the market. Wo Intro recently enloyvtl a Herniation In the elinno of a City tornado that uprooted tree!, unroofed homies t nod played all sort! of pranks with window Ow, abutters, awnings anti perambulating Dolly Yard., Our other sennitthin"l4 the "vitriku." Tho movement has become comproltenvive mutt syetontalle. Tkontv thousand, mechanics refuse .to eark more than eight hoot stay, 101(1 many of tho mployers - fro equally obstlnitto in declining, to se cede to their demands.. Sunni terribly murderii and onlebles committed, during the not week, and Jiistien xto to be among the illtign it, it were In one mute too when niilrate Freinihman Idiot his wile dead 111 the , itient,4he people came ery ever hanging hI nto a lump illar, and it biolts very much' an if linty wore getting up to that polo or Indlgoloion which 00010• tlllloo calk on... Judge 1.3111:11 t 0 111 . 0t1111, his rope The weltlier Tina becente r n e xirely warm runt there In on esinhi, to Ay/del - 10g.14mi,, Tll9 Aldine maker ttx initial artistic n Igo thy I.lltll. Nil 1101 . 101t1031 in Now Ind ed by the public with more intermit, or try, Ito 110.14101 d t lung. Its Illuoirvllons superb picture gallery. THE lIEATIIEN CIIINEE. MISS MALONEY'S virnvs ON VIE QUEBTiON, - No w titer. has succeeded in elucidating -the Chinese quektion more clearly and amaaingly than 'Miss- Mary Eli r tabeth Dodge, one of the editors of, Hearyt and Home, in the following charming article, which is now floating about the country ainl turning up in print ait every point : pelt I don't be talking. cls it howld 'on; yo say? Au' ; didn't I howld on till the heart of zoo Was clans broke entirely, and me media', that thin you could clutch me wid yer tWo hands ? To think o' me toilin' like' a ,nager 'for the six Years•V ye boon in Ameriky—bad 'luck to the dity I leer left the owld coanthry .1 —to be bate by the likes .o' them: (fair an' I'll sit siown when I'm ready, so I will, Ann,Ryan, an' yo'd better bcyliston- - in' than drawin' your remarks) I An' is it,mysel', 'with live good 'characters froni respectable places, would be hurdle' wid the haythins? The saints forgive • itte; but l'd be burned, aliVellooner'n . put*lln wid it a day longer. Stire nu' I was the granehorn not to be dyiu' at mint whoa themziesus kin/ into mo kitchen.wid her Perlavor about the now waiter tuanwhich. was brought out from Californy., `He'll be hero the night,' says she, ' and Nisty, it's, mosolf looks to you'to be kind and patient wid Lim, for he's a furriner,' saye 'she, a kind o' 'SgrO an' it's little hinder nor interfere wid him nor any other, mum,' says, a kind ,z)' stiff, for I minded me how time's FronCh: ors, wid their Vapor collars and. brass trnge theirfingers, isn't company for no Y S I +i' brought up dacint and. honest , . Oc ! 'eorra"abitl. know whet Watt demin' till the Mdeaus walked in to mo kitchen and says, kind o' sehared 'Here's Ting Wing, Kitty On', you Il have 'too much einso to mind his bein'a little strange.' Wid that she ehoots the :doOre ; and I, Misthrtistiug if I. was tidied up nuffiolont for ,'mo llno buy, wid his paper' collar, looks *up and—lowly fathors I May' I nivor bratho another , breathe, but then) Stud' a, - inlO Chineser.a;grimiln' like 'he's Just come. .off atai-boifi you'll' .belavo , mo,, tlio crayture wits that yotliir it 'ad : tat:ken roil to See him ; andrirre' a stlEoh. wan' ou hint but a black .nightgown. over his trousers, and the ,front of his head shaved island/. nor a coppOrhilor,:and black tail a hanging down from it, ehind, : lOW ills wo fooVutook into the : beatlflii-: estest shoes you ever set eyes on.. Ooh but I - vi , a ( s tip stairs ;troll:I-you could turn about, ,the, 4lissus warnin', an' only stont wid : . her, 'by her raisin' mo wages two dollars, and playdin' wid mo how it Was a ChristinoJs duty to bear - Avid haYttiddi and taich''em all ill our power—the saints save us I' Well, stho ways and trials I had wid that Chinosor, Ann Ryan, I couldn't be tellin'. Not a - Missed thing cud I do hilt he'd he look-. in' on wid hiS eyes cocked up'ard like two poomp handle's, an' ho widdout a speck or snitch of whiskers on him, an' his linger nails full a yard long. But it's dyi f n you'd be to see the missus a laruin' him, and he grinnin' and waggin' his pig %tail (which was pieced out lOngwid some black stuff, the haytin chat° I) and get tin' into her ways . wonderful - quick, I don't deny imitatin' that sharp you'd be I surprised, an' kotchin' an' copyin' things the best of us will do a hurried wid work yet don't won't comin' to the knowledge of the family—bad luck to him I Is st„ato wid him 2 Arrah, an' would I be sittin' wid a haythin an' he a (satin' wid drumsticks—:yes; an' atin' dogs an' cats' unknownst to me, 'I warrant you, which it is the custom oPthem Chinosers, till the' Aught made me that sick I could die. An' didn't .the crayture proffer to help me a week ago come Toos day', an' mo a foldin' down me clone clothes for the ironin', an' fill his haythin mouth wid water, an' afore I could hinder squirrit it through is teeth strut over the best linen table cloth, and fold it up 'tight, as innercont now as a baby, the dirrity baste 1' But the 'worrost of st all was the copyin' he'd be doin' till yo'd be dishtraotod. It's yersol' knows the tinder feet that's on me since ever I've bin in this couuthry. Well, owin' to that, I fell into a way o' slippin' me shoes off when I'd be seating down to pale the praties or the likes o' that ; an' do. ye mind ! that haythin, would do the same thing after we whiniVer the missus set him to parin' apples or tomaterses. Tlso saints in heavBn couldn't have made him behave he cud kapo' the shoes on him when he'd be naylin' anything. Did I lave for that? Faix an' I didn't. Didn't he get mo i ,i t ntothroublo wid 'me missile, the haythin? You're aware yersol' how the boondles comity'. in from the grocery often con,tlins — foe'n'll 6 into anything ,dapitffly. So, that malkter, I'd now and Oleo - takef or a cup o' sugar or sit, or tay; an' ap it in paper, an' put it in me bit of a box tucked ender the ironin'. blanket; and how it cuddont be bodderin' any ono. Well, what shod it be, but this blciSsed Sathur day-morn-thorniAsis was a spakiiir-preas ant and respectful vid me in me kitchen, when the grocer boy comes in an' stands fornonst her wid his boondles, an' she motions like to ring - Wing (which I never could call him by that name nor any other but just hilythin)—she motions to him, she does, for ; to take the boondles an' empty out the sugar an' what not' where they belongs.` If you'll polar° Ins Ann Ryan, ..what diey .th c it. plateoriut Chinese'. dobuiitake ;At a cup ,o' sugar; an' a handful o' tay, an' a bit of chaze, right afore the missus, wrap them into hits o' paper an' I spacheless wid sur prise, an' he the next minute up wid the iron'n blankit and ,pollin", out me 4box, wid a show o' bein' ely to put them in. Doh, the Lord forgive me, but I clutched it, and the missus sayin' 0 Kitty !' in a -way that 'ud cuddled your blood. ' He's a haythin 'lager,' says I. 'l've , found you out,' five she. ' I'll arriA him,' says I. 'lt's yoO who ought to be an: risted,' says she. ' You won't,' says I. 'I Will,! says she: And so it went till she gave ens such sass as I ouddon't take frompo lady ; an' I give her warnin' ao' left.that instant, an' she a-pointin' to the doors. • • LOGAN ON SUMNER Immediately after ISurnnoi's malignant personal assault upon the President, Gen. Logan replied, and a slteh of the first 'portion of the reply was published. Afterward the tali test 4-rthe ndblo Illinois , Senator's speech iwas printed, and wo now publish a few, paragraphs from the conclUding pl:iitioininf it. Gnu. Logan said : • Lot no' Ito what hen 'been ,nccompliebe'd by •thin educated, crammed donator from filenamelnmate, who him been In tub :mints chamber, I believe, for nearly twouty•four years. I bullet, I state 0 feet whoa I say that the records of Congress will net show a a 01111111,1 that man ever originated by biome i' which passed without amendment. I believe I state feet m hen I moy Clint tho a counts and the history of thin rouatry'show fewer acts of ()aigrette on the statute book to.dity originated by hint than'hy any other man Who ever claimed 'to lie a gilt... Moll, Ilk Otlttollllllllfllllp hnn CallBl.lollql for twonty-fonmyearn In Illgli.Kintaling'p bream In long drawn out mitten- COI, in paragraphs taken front imam nt an Mil:10M character. as Alt IntailllCO Of which welied in bin specch. pages on " nefintism,” saloon shan't bodily from a biographical dictionary of tho Popes and micro of Home. There In Wlll.lTill Ills greeting. cutn.istg. It catmints In igireuraphing, hu pleglar. 'into; In d• ell:mutton, njad egotism} lie fun , iiihmin• ouch 101110 oust estimation. lie le urina l .; or Hone One In hr him, of himself. I have lawn fleeting it latterly. I find It ha teeny of, bin speeches If. ho wore hors now I would, es , see who loin Moor his steadfast friend, beg. of hint tu, caluilh front that lifstury of thin last speech. 'lt Is n plelieunt Willowy to toad so far se it loin horn w sit ten., but I nay to bum its pages will he marred by ..1101nut. philliple against Prmident Ormet, 11l led OR tt , in with venom nod gall from MO sail to the other. • Let ye compare tho tanner Pros!dent with; tho magnifitently educated nonator from alaseticlasetts, who has accomplished to much trill too how be will etend tho comparison, Thu Sonotur Irobr Massachn aottn hoe lived his life without putting upon tlio „records of his country a solitary act of hill own allot; notion without ninotidaoint by other moo hitrlog macro understanding than himself In referuircu Lo men and thin,. (Joh Cir.int. the Proeitiont of the Uoited litotes, a tinnier front (Alcorn, lus clone what lie has written Into history , Indeed,' arhicb will Ilve ro long as pons ore dipped In ink, an long on loon real nod no long on history Is writton, tho hhtory of that man Is worth something It is • valuable; It In not 0 libitum of glittering gonerali the and iloolotantions in npeeclien, but is is n history, of gtuot minds and grunt titirign acuomplishod or Ills. country. ' In 1801, noon after Om brooking out of the war,. woleund thin President of tho Unitutl Staten the colnillianclor or a .1111111 fart. on tho ,1111,einnlypi river. Oil the bonito of the Potomac Wan a Jorge and troll organireil army, and thebounds War& hoard through. out the laud of battle from day to,day. the bottle wits - over thorn wins but ono thing that from. blod along the wiros, nod that one tho unify of the • United Motes had again boon duAitted. Dorm upon defeat followed; MI nover did you find yinir undue nilvc.drill nulfl .tho fame of thin iittlo won litrahlod from ouo end of the land to the other Ivory battle Ito engaged Jr Ito won, I wilt with blot Jo bin first battin On the bank& of tho Minds algid rlvorc the Menlo of Delmont, unit travuliol through with tho westorcP al-11110Y lu the western compaign, If you trill allow me-Land I ruler to 'ulysolf only to oliuw the foots within my knotriede —1 imitate, nbt to nay, that tho man who sue ho_ fa lingonurous dues not know Ulm. Tins man who says Iloilo not it man of ability does not know hint, Thu than who says ho over demented Ilia charnotor or reputation of another data ,not homelike. In all hie acts was gouorous do a fault with, hie come radon, and uo report did, he color make In which ha. did not giro full errant to every man In thu army wino had done hie, duly, can ,be tontine(' to by every mull melon lil)ried Under Illlll.' ' • hav,o rho time and ogaln in tholiotteat end thickost of battle, Wiling cotilly and calmly, without parting bin lips or (loping a word, watching tho mitt brunt maneltivarn of tho troops and tho monument on el thur side, to nob ben' ilto bugtini one ItOlfillt • nu ,maw DOA man of trinity worde,„:llo4,,iie, bin °wo r t, &luietly, and saw flint they Afore ortecutod.' flown& brought to the Army di the Potomaat • be made a suceese; ha gnu, tho,battlo; victory perched figon our baniforel „we succeeded; dreary and, alloilnliod, end our country saved After Tour yearn panned, the people of theclinited Stateilitundi him Prealdent: Us le now mailed bonus° of Ws Ignoraneu, boenune he woe aloldior, and charged with having doom ninth. leg during hie filo to Sao reinurobited. ..book at hint adminlatration and sop If ho Mimi no nbility. flow data It compare with others? rhatio not endorsed evorythlog he 'hen done; fior 1.19 I bollcre.• Mond le required to indorse everything that another duos ii t a fo o u r g d o o u r a t r. o . 1145 thr blend;m that which dliolos,nailututnlnottritty good to the oottatry„atol • I nay lt,haa been t 1 pant oaccoas. „ • ' '• ; ' • MI THE I.AB2'.,HILE-:S2'OHE WV PRAM RIVICRS , . . yourfr through shine and eltadow , .. Sixty years, iny gentle vcre, ' You and I have walked together Down the rugged road of lifo. " Front tho 'hills of Sprlug_wo etarted, ' And through all the Summer-Innd,,, • And Cho fruitful Auttlnnt country, , Wo hare journeyed hand id hand. k We have borne the heat and bunion, Tolling painfully and eloW; We have gathoired In our harvest, With rejoicing, long ago. Leave the uplands for our children— They nra strong to eow•nnd reap; Through the quiet Winter lowlands , Our loiel way we keep. 'Tie a dreary country, darling, , You and I ore passing through ; tint tho road lien straight Were us, And the lanes ore short nod low i s Nu more danger to encounter— No more hills to climb, true friend Nothing now but slinplo wedking, • Till we reach our jortri.jy's end. We have had our time of gladness ; 'Tweet proud and happy day— Ahl th4roudeet of our Journe— y lVe felt that we could my Of the children God had given, Looking fondly on the tell, " Lovely women are our d aughters— Our noon are noble meal" , Vo have had our time of aorrow— Our thlko of anxious fears, Whoa wo could not soo the tgllo stones Through tho blindu6ss of our Icon. In tho sunny Bummer country, hnikind n s halo May ' MO Willie, too grew . weary, • —Mid WC loft thank on tho way. • Are you looking backward, mother, That you stumble in the anew I am otill your guide and stgiT, dear; Levu your weight upon ojo, so Our told to growing narrow ; And—what la It, wife, yon say Yen!. I know our eyes are dim, dear, But we have not loot the way. Cheer thee! cheer thee! faithful hit ! Jost a little w;ny before Lies the great El6rnel City Ville King, flint we adorn. 1 can sitiOlto shining spires And the King, the Mug, my dear, We hove nerved hum long Toad hutoldy ; bless us e do not kmr. Ah! triTehtiw falls - fast - aid honey, Iltptr yen Oliver with the cold, I — c -- ekte wrap your mantle closer, And my arnh around/ you fob'. We'are week and feint and weary, And the nun lei./ In the went, We have reached the Ram ay darling Let um tarry here and rent. (From thckilorman of taiao Polka J , EN MINIATURE. The lovely Anna Smythei's, of, Ghent, found a joyous life awaiting her as a pupil in the studio of Gerhard Dow, the fanfous painter of the Netherlands... ......Mer.father had at last yielded to her repeated entreaties for instruction by a regular mastery and the hope of her!m riching both herself' and himi.rhy.the practice of the art, which ho flat-Veined but lightly, had decided him to send her to ,Leyden, to the -home of Dow, who Was a distant relative of her deceased mother. Thus, for the first time, Anna stopped from the gloom of a lonely youth into a warm, bright atmosphere of affee. tion. Free to devote herself openly to the art which. she Ledo° king secretly adored, she' noallossomed like to the joy of all who sitw her, and her rich talent developed itself with aston ishing rapidtt . Dow's studio Was a spacious room, with a northern exposure, full of soft . lights, and looking down upon the wa ters of a quiet stream. Wondrous order reigned. in the cool attractive retreat. The master never began his morning work until every particle of dust had subsided. Long after blOndo Anna stood painting zealously at her easel; Dow would wait patiently, watching the fine motes floating , in the sunshine, and when the' giddy whirl, liad c , ceased ho would slowly bring forth from a chest his palette, with its belongings, carefully select his, colors, and take the bruph in his baud. ` Then there Must be no going to and fro among the pupils—n rule of especial irksomeness to impetuous Franz Von Mimi.% who would gladly have run every five minutes from ono easel to an o'fber. Anna worn her brown frock 1 1 - 10 Sped up; lest in her 'quick motions it might sweep,the floor and whirl,a cloud of the dreaded dust into the air ; and, indeed, sho had no cause, to blush, for the little- feet which stood in their high-hoeleti shoes, a'S trim and delicate as a princess' own. Her close fitting -- jacket displayed the charming outlines of her feria, and her padded shteVes were pushed baCk froiii a pair of hands which Franz Von Miens declared tho fairest in the Netherlands. Unfoitunotely for the young scholar Anna's easel.' was placed Ott such an angle that pub' at .rare inter vals- Bathe turn of her head brought - to his view her delicate profile and rosy cheek. So he adintred'iill the more ar dently the golden, hair fastened in heavy - braid atitliwback of -her bend, and fall ing on each side in a shower of curls. Wo have a charming •pietitni by Frady. ' Mieris, in his latter 'years; in :whie has represented himself stairding!before his easel, dressed in black voliet,- his bold, Iraudsomo'face turned 'toward -the observer, and his, aristocratie hand rest ing between the folds of some rich drap ery hanging over the ;back - of a chair, Near him stands a girlish figure Ville precise attitude of the beautiful Amid, in the old' studio ; the slender waist, the lovely shoulders and neck encircled by a' golden chain, thti ; luxuriant .tall;' n glimpse of the cheek,,, and 'the white,' girlish handall,are delineated with the touch of a master. Upon the easel is a fdintfy outlined,Plaiire Of a lady, l l.dontle and beautiful, with gulping lips and, eyes - 2 -the4ortralt of .the young pupil her self. On„ one -side 'ft ''blisevlot 'foam k agaiust tike wall, arnminder of the Merry music) 'which sounded tiO',ofteri - tbrough the stadiO, 'mid in the Nat krOtind"tip:. pears Frau iratheritia bearingrofll)64 2 merits fur her husband and his 'scholars; Indeed, thorn had boon no dearthi of . musio in the Litydon studio. If 'Dan , wore woory'ol. the sky gray; and :over . cast, Anna must sing in bor swat voice, or the artist torbinv come ovormith hie violin and Franz, play the Poor Vrauz was sadly angry, r that Anua never seemed moved;,by tho 'idaintivo strains which ho drew from his instru.: pent, ,and andworocl only by roguish •sMiles all tho• languishing' glauSig;witli, which. ho .accompanied them. , ",The maiden oonld not bo made to ithdorstamt the — sontimonts of his susceptible , hand, Bho jested With merry,indifferenoo t doer ta Ills! half .utterod declarations of and at last told him plain* that the gay,. light.hoartod Fraim ploasod, hew a•thonsand times Moro . than his ryiliqt; inolancholi double,. . • • . • , NIIMM Mil - • ' . • _ . - . . r . . . ' • •-,,. - ~...,'....',.'. r. , i, - : -1 , ~- . '-':••• • , . 1 . '1 !, ;:':-,. , i . , .., '''i,'' , . i ~ . ~ ~, , , . • - 7: : -;: - , ..- • •' A -•!--- ~ . •.. . .. ~. •-•,,,., 11. , ./. •,-,:- ,i, , ....i ',.l' h ~ , 7 2 , ''• ' ' ' ', V . : . . :'• ' ir' - 7 '. : ' . 1111 MEE =I .„ . r IL:wonderful Instrument is a ,WOnan's ;heart. Tho. most pfuct f ice,d hand oft - d., ;fails to hormonions, accords from its do,licate,,strings, ,while,seinethmos neath• uuskillecl : fingers ; I:tomul. :forth : the sweetest melodies, So ,the heart of the fair Anna, impervious to the ardent oyes of Franz Mieris, tneltedf,befme-thazon tlo' glances of the,youngomuiptor Jacpb riders, who,. having just..returned from. Rome, wasralremient visitor'at Deihard Dow's atelier. The musical r entertain: monts now. received . a now impetus, for Doors could .strike the lute with a mas ter hand. Sometimes the returneclmnd • igal discoursed'with eloquent enthusiasm upon the wonder land of divine statues, Mul a sky, perennially blue. llow„thoy, all listened l Even impatient Franz, but most .05, all ,the . lovely Anna. ~Sher eyes rested with an expression of devout ad miration upon the dark, earnest face of the 'speaker, falling only when his soft glance mot tier own,' which , happened oftener and atelier.' Thew.rose glowed deeper on the maiden's cheek, lien breath grow quicker, bee smile -more: radiant, and thus. the ''blue',flower" of , a first happy love unfolded iu fierhard . . Dow's studio. Frau Katherina was soon the confidapdo of the girl'a over full heart, and, after the pauper . of women; she constituted, heraolf tllet guardian of the lovers. It 'was she , who arranged for Anna a sea, beside herself in the twilight, at that window of the parlor which looked out uport.the street where Jacob floors Was sure to pass, boW, a respectful greeting, and then step a little nearer. Then the housewife would suddenly. remember some important matters demanding her immediate presence. There seemed al ways-to he a kettle boiling over in the kitchen, and. there were no sucFjunket ing cats in all Leyden beside as in Ger hard Dow's howie,... Meanwhile the young people were left alone. Their conversation was very softly carried on, the little blonde head Peering so shyly from behind the yellow, violets and rosemary. Sometimes a man's hand, strong aud shapely, stole iu, and rested .onthe window sill, perhaps to sokthe flower pots right—no weari some labor, surely ; yet the rosy, girlish fingers hastened to aid that band, and so wore hold suddenly, in warm, sweetinf prisonment until Frau Katherina came back, and the dungeon opened of itself. Bitt the lovers were not seldom startled in a more nngentlo, fashion. A rain of coarser garden vegetables Would • fall among the flowers, accompanied, by a shrill whistle or , a sneering„ laugh. Whence came these insults? Gerhard Dow, whose eyes. : wore wont to observe so closely every liTrearnfut of the human..face, seemed strangely-. blind to the plain declaration. of the two happy faces, but Franz Von Mieris' dark blue oyes were all the keener, and his heart was torn with angry jealousy. Perhaps be bad made love to the charm ing Anna, more as a pleasant pastime than in sacred earnost,, yet none. the loss had his manly vauity received a :pailiftil stab. -- Such -wounds are always hard to heal. Was not Jacob floors a bead shorter than he? What Comparison be tween that slender form and his own per fect proportions? Did not' all the beau ties of Leyden declare his black oyes un surpassed -Had ever any one, except Anna Smythers, of Ghent, withstood his eloquent lips and .fearful glances? And yet she preferred that insignificant fol low I Had be possessed the arm of a giant 'IOW gladly would he „have Hung Jacob Veers 'back to that Rome whence he came 1 • Anna-ncrliiirger appeared with her accustomed regularity in the studio. A woman iu love seems in that blessed time to forgot for one thing all the most earnest pursuits of her life. DOW's pupil now,often neglected lid' easel to sit for limits in her own little room, watching the path of the clouds •and wondering ❑inch how her father.wOold ropoive the young sculptor when ho should one day go to Ghent: to say to him, ask your daughter for my wife.'. 'rho mastor, (matted by Franz Minds jesting questions, began to wonder aloud at the negligence of his once so diligent pupil. It was wall that Frau Katherina knew so well how to pacify her husband, and coax him to lot the child' alone. At evening they were always together as usual, and Anna's face was so radiantly happy, and her Voice sounded so, sweetly telthe accompaniment of JaCob Hears' flute that the mastei• ahi•ays forgot his littleiesentinient. . . SO days and 6016' passed :away. BLit suddenly enh a day Pore Smythors ap peared in studio, and in Curt, - decided . terms demanded the return of his daugh ter, for vidi`om he had .found'.' an accept able suitnr... Ire also,hinted at' swot in fortuatioulfEein,spine ono that , ,41.?n1 was yarning. ,nothing . of importance ? , and .ov zefd iu her . work: Qddly enough hp had - brought with him hinproiipoetive son-inrlaw, lanais Sway t, the richest tallier iu Ghent, NV . 131) whose well.kek person.; he hoped most ,favor ably to impress his daughter. .lint, s ales, limy, 'o ) .grew the,,,face the beautiful ; girl I She could rot oven give her , father a suitable greettpg ; Trembling and eoilf used she stood % before him,, and holavy),with violent displeasere tho tears bursting, from her eyes. jeers were a poor' iteeddipaniino'nejlndee#, to the obedience dueLfrorn a child to,a,pa- . Anna , ?the. , gaze. of Lucas Smart riv4e4 ou ?Aar faeo, explainosl thaP, elm ,was"Nyilliqg to r4tArri with ifor fathpr, and rgmaiß - his faithtul, obedhiat dau,ghte, rorormnp tO,ll,iji„fut,tiFf..) h,asbaM...sho hoggssl . that ths, 40'siols might be dblaygil,Far fsw years. Frau oimmtpgod yiar, y iio a old ,man gy received' . this roil:lest, in griniS"ankor:,and cursed at Oat Gerh'ard `D'e w 's etnelidniidki4.oWn'''folly lu oversent his (intighte'r'tikiro: , 'Now, ; she 1a,g06:1 nothing in the' world, ho cried, striking tho'fabiti and ii'eian;Ren great efond tO 7 tho '4lstrution of th'e int:Star ; what is a gifil good'' for' bid: ioio';narried 11 , 'the has ,learne'd Aro than ' a''thousdnd otherS; and , • nbailehail ho iidiSo all 'my life, and she Vitt?. Anna, dtzw lierself and dried, With' glowing,eheniiii and flashidg ' ' a little,'fatiif, LefOro 'pan don. 0441. ' lllO nVy ina l Sto'Cl . Lou MO place before gear ovpionoo of'what T'haye ldarued with hira.i gat kr,:o show you tlnit $ ini,errin'enough' by ,art,. so that :I need gamy on' my 'ehouldets, all mY life long, the; money, bagli of an unlovlid husband. And if I can• furnish' such 'proof, then give my heart 'free' ohoie'a. If fail I will go bome'with yon toklay,' and imone week_ I;will bo the wife of imeas Binart.' . Old SMythers could only answer " yes." Ilia B'll4 aeemod to hima 'very- princess, s`o proudly and - ConainaudinglY aim - stood before him, With her blonde- braids rest-. leg like a erOwn upon her forehead.: But the rich 'miller' .i)lncked hini by the sleeve, whispering': • "Let -us go home. YOur princess is too grand for my mill, and thve are O s theE girls in Ghent 1" The old without a word, pulled him dciwri into a, chair beside him, and' 'the tWo'sat close together eagerly Wait 111g. Anna seated herself - at the table and cut from a roll oPparchinent a bit of the size of a bean, mingled the colors, and lionding her head kiw began to paint. It was still as death in the room. The master worked :on, apparently indiffer 'Mit as tO the result. Franz Mieris stood with didturbe'd face before his easel and painted the portrait of a judge with a 'green neckerchief and blue nose. Near .tho half drawn curtain, in the back ground, stood Frau Katherina, deadly pale with folded hands, and over her left shoulder looked the sculptor's intel lectual face, a clear beam of love stream ing from his eyes upon the painting The wild roses outside. the window pressed mulorisly against the panes; and beetles and butterflies nearly beat out their brains upon the glass, while the sparrows loudly related to oath other, and:to every ono who choose to lis ton, that inside the studio there everything was not quite as it should be. Now and then Aiina:s glance hastily sought the face of the rich millers; and tho faintest intimation of a sportive smile flitted across the deep e:arnoStness of her-noble face. At last she arose,. and steilping toward Gerhard Eldw, she said : "Your eyes shall first behold my trial piece. Tell me if It is good work I" Gerhard Dow laid upon the palm of his broad, right hand the tiniest paint ing that over artist fingers had created, and gazed upon it in amazement. "Child, you have learned more than could ever have taught you! Such work as this neither I myself nor any other painter in the Netherlands could equal • I know not who has secretly in structed you. Thank him, not me, for your success. You have created the Most exquisite miniature genre picture that,my eyes over beheld I" So saying ho approached Herr Smyth ers and Lucas Smart and held out his hand. Franz Mieris came near and peered over their shoulder, and all three gazed in amazement utirin the wonderful miniature painting, whose every line was executed with the most enchanting clearness and -delicacy. There was a windmill; with its sails, a stout miller -who strikingly resembled Lucas Srhart, horses, with sacks, carts, and many peo• plo crowded together, but- each figure entirely distinct and perfect in its kind. The stern judge shoved his 1 . le cap from 'Tone ear to the -other, and said slowly : You are right ; nobody could equal that. We need no other fortuue.. Lucas Smart, put the princess out of your mind. As you said, there are other maidens in Ghent. go together and search for one. As for Anna, she may stay hero and paint !' "No, no I take mo with you l" cried the lovely Anna. " I can go on painting at-home if you will allow some one to go with me who has been _my chief in etructor.!'. Before the old man could reply Jacob "nears burst from his retreat, and in his joful confusion fell, by mistake; upon the neck of the rich miller, and embraced him so long and .ardently that Gerhard Dow himself laughingly rescued- the astonished man. Then followed a chaos of questions and answers, laughter and tears, until at last tto lovers e stood hand in hand before the amazed father. "But can he do anything in par icular ?" asked Burr 81113,010 n at last tointing to tlio young sculptor. "Certainly cried Frauz,Mieris, with a sneer, "he knows how to break stone, and—" "And to love your daughter faith fully!" interrupted the lovely Anna and hid her face upon her finher'. breast. Franz 31.1eri0 slipped ma atm in that o Lucas.9llmA and drew him away to show him Om windmills of Leyden. The little genre painting of the sub sequently famous artist, Anna Ileers, 1. still exhibited as ono of the marvels o Tho ,charming lady execute, many, beautiful pictures in the days oi her success; but she never again applies her pencil to miniature.. The wodderfq palntiik,,rethaintat, the enly one of lb kind—oilo of the marveled!, Meations o that Most lainotts of Masters, Love. .16•OUL lltrAlcline for July. NO OPPOSITION. The Democratic newspapers have pretty, much given up the idea of organ izing anything like a formidablo' oppo sitioir to the 'elootion of Don.' Dartrauff I and the other popular candidates ,asso elated with him on Ihe• Republican' ticket. Tho war, record of Mr., low, it' was hoped, would not 'ITS() to plague thorn . to any 'very great extent, but their expectation has not been re , Mixed. Ilia interference at tho time of' the draft, his Well-remembered advice as attorney to the "Fishing Creek Con loderacy," which occasioned the with drawal of , soldiers from th i 'd front, and `the sending of them, to tr.l Boolcalow's own county to ariost a . ohollion there oricouraged;•and uch more 'that will belorthcoming,' cannot fail to 'give the poopla.of Pennsylvania a Orkin irp-' preciation of, the Domocratia candidate' for. Governor. Tho extracts copied into the' Democratic papers from Forney's Press.are having an' oxcellent effect in favor of Gen. Bartranft' in Montgomery, opuritY and elsewhere. Dere, pooplo of ,both political parties know Ilartranft to be honest ; and therefore the more ho' rilandoied by a lifo Jong office-seeker, And 1 office-holder Fornoy, the More ho is; likely;tii Make votes from: honest' Demo: crate: This is'proved to'us almost every, day, ForinStance, a well-known Demo- , oret, from Re, of the centre townships of, the county wan eared whether lie) know fafa singlo'RePublican in' his neighbor- . hood'who was disinclined to voto for Gun. Dartf l anft. He replied that he ditt.'not know of such, but did know a nor/Ayer of Democrats who,declare they ; Will vote Per him, And this wo find to be , the case in' the ocnihty, generally. A correct esti , mato, of a candidate's 'character, can ;al-, ways be obtained: at 'his horn(); and no rrinnatends hip t .4 4 ,,m the 'estimation of tbe,people of cintgomery county than Oon. Ilartranft.-21Torrin'oteir.'Horatd.". =I Fil , fit„ t t c 32 rv; • : CHOLERA iNtEltAr2y4l-. With the first beats ori.Tago. buslYour biros cities conieß , cholera. Iniantum and tluf summer complaints, of,e,hildron, of which-it is the chief and, the,mostdiman agcole and fatal: Diaqheftana4Sentery havo each theirwictintil in the Flame class of subjects:: Of the ;medical treatment Mid means of cure:wean) not called upon to speak in these Coththneithe less so, • indpeil, fts theSexiciith . s . phiifibianir are not agreed: 'The • there important 'con sideration is to prevent the coming on Of. the disease and the'thiVOf t all hygcnic. agencies which' 'Pi•espthre • tin; health' of children. Chief among- all the causes of. cholera infautumiarthhigli and sustained . atmospheric limii•h.'ficl;reati;ieT ventila tion, so that.tholitfM,fit prersarehrthith ing not; onlylieated tint an impure air, which exerts a poisonous operation, on the organization, and most on thenervens and digthitive sYstems: The nthtethielling , cause of the diSeithe in question, IS 'MI' digestible food, which the stomach is linable to reduce' `to a hoinogeheons whole, out of which . chyle andblefidare . formed, but, InSteMl,disturbs the: stomach, causes sickness and ,vomiting into , • or, if it passes inthe bret.4, J'isO to diarrhea. Greatly predisposing, the little sufferer to be' afflicted in these,wltyn is the irritative fever from teething,, hence if au infant while teethlng,lie fat. . the same time itha hot and impure air; and use indigestible;. gross ToOd, no medicine or combination of Medicines will be of motel) it' any avail. . recess lid.precurin, relief for thiksipic infant will dePithd on the nhilitto're move or modify the nirbid'eauseB above stated. For this purpose the patient .should be taken from its close•and badly ventilated quarters .and. allowed to breathe a purer end fresher air in one or more of our public squares,, or especially in •the park. ; Gears should be thus spout . _ daily. Proper 'food can be taken by the mother or nurse kir the little one, which may thus be made to pass almost entire days in a vivifying atmosphere of miti gated temperature, and.-acquire-.now life to bear up under the debilitating, effects of the close and often crowded tooping rooms in 'courts and alleys, in which a renewal of air is scarcely obtainable. Mothers cannot bo too much impressed with the importancef'.of snatching a half thinr even for escape with thefrObildren into more open and cooler quarters. •Both as preventive and cure most valua ble is the inhalation of the pure air on ,board the' numerous steamboats, in crossing or sailing up and down the Dela ware river. Similarly advantageous, but with more pleasing scenery, is a passage up and, down the Schuylkill or into the romantic Wissahickon. Not a little may be done to dilninish and even prevent exhaustion froth the• extreme heat, by bathing the infantin Water of the river tempieraturo or that flowing from the hydrants, early in the morning, and in the evening by using the water for the bath milk-warm. The bathcshould be followed on both occasions by a thorough drying and friction Of the skin. • Continual errors in - infantile diet aro committed by parents giving their child ren strong, gross food, such as they use themselves. An :,attack of cholera in fantum, Or of diarrhea is often brought on in hot weather by a sudden change of food for the infant in subStituting for the mother's milk, as in the process of wean ing, the ordinary food of the table, and this in not always limited quantity. [lento Mothers should' not atkompt to wean their children during the summer months, except under very `peculiar circumstances, and counselled by the ph34ician. The food for a child during the whole of the saintlier months, and, indeed. at all' times, should be milk, .either pure or mixed with fairnaceous_ articles, such as flour, powdered biscuit,_ indian meal, preparations of Wheat, rico and arrow root, in the shape of pap, pu& dings, etc., sometimes flavored with cinnamon, nutmeg-, and the like. The drink will be cool, water, and Much in— creshment will be procured to the child suffering from' teething, by 'its taking into its mouth ground ice, which, oven if swallowed before it is entirely dis solved, will do no harm. Gum water, barely water, and infusion of different herbs—sage,. balms, etc,; may severally be given . to Viry the drinks. The ex treme "irritation of teething,,sonfietinaps causing; convulsion, can ho relieved by the physician; lancing, the, gthus. Tho clothing of -children in the: summer season ;should 'Po °flight texture; easy fitting and leoso4, tholuner garment bo ing very dhiu ~or ;gauze ilanne, which prevents tholmatofrom being.so 'sensibly felt as it, would ,10,Nvadli a thProin, kind • of garment next to the skin, aVid also has the advantage f..f , preventifjg a : dialing of the hoily after proftme, presPiratiom er a Sudden reduction,,,of temperature. A ,change ought to, he,,inaf,h4 if ;possible, both night, and morning. All parts of the body should, be proteeted, front the and hence theelethin,g should, come. o nZ the neck and cover the ;legs,. M y st Of the brealft 4l,nd shoulders Mpg V left naked to,inM'easn the_risk of a sudden 1 chill WI silliPtCPSo4.ffprespiration, the effect of, whioly 4tl4s:spason, will shoed digirdipg the stornaeh mid in, , the Paso of' a in';the',arins'ffanht,Ath passive,, is pfton,,yery,,.iervicoable takgn ins carriage, or, the, ,cars, and thr ,the timehping,,it,arrestS tho,flipOrderdff tho, bowels.; „A o stili,,mildor,, inny,pment,. but ono not withsait.beneflpiakrestits, : ls watimprilft'„ When warning. against the tisomfjudi dostiblo ;food, 'we; might be 'supposed,: of eour)oi•to 'include( the , prohibit!on. all unripe fruits, **Web not unfrequently act as a• sure. poisotr When taken.: i ntO -the stomiicif of a sick •or oven merely doll Onto , The r mum. is`ldtlFerdnt mitlf rripei fruits:and !that whiblybas beiSn Subjected to culinary process by'baking orLateating. Al popular remedy tbr infantile ;diarrhea' lafound , in a syrup 'of devbdrries• or of 'hlaokbUrrieS.: 'The , greateit riumbof )of •obildron suftbring Mud dyitig fidnucholora infargura sre foniiii , imder 'the dlsadirtin • ktficousjoircumstanceS of living' to 4whicli • theY”liave fadvertecy ibutvit , kvonld Ile a' groat lit istako S to, an pp °fie! that' therd. is Any! elaSs exoniPt i from' -Via 'Tint - fictions. children :of-tho . oPacjousonparimonts 'taint iktf"tbo 'enjoy went a. comparatively • pure gale fin gardotis and! , atherl rgtbdiuls,? , ofti3m,pay. tho , tax z : ' 8o far .tho' 4U-nulner I ifi.passing on witlib'ut many victims boing.sa'orificed,. to this disoaseAut still' there 'is in.. ." ,bOFCLIMED 011 ' irOURTII-11.4(igrd 1 iim IMI m MI ~~~', YJ . =MEM