IL a a I ;yy ;ty,U Published by J. H. & 6. 6. Myrover, Corner Anderson and Old Streets, Fayetteville, N. C. VOL. 3 NO. 4 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1875: WHOLE NO. 107. nil i North Carolina Gazette. ,Iw II. & G. G..3IYUOVER, ! riitll8liora. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: line year (in advance), Six mouths " Three - " ... .8 2 M . 1 --J3 CLUB HATES: 10 copies (Kent to oueallres.s) with an extra copy f 42 50 20 . - ' 40 (M) 4) " ' 75 oo :,o " - " " " " - unit a nroinimn of a fine chromo, value $25 90-00 100 coiile. (seut to oik: alilr- vith an extra copy and a premium i a him: cihuiuu, vhuc Civ 150 00 RATES OF ADFERTISIXG : Uno souare (9 lines solid nonpareil) one insertion 5 1 00 .. " . " two " 1 50 ono month' a so 5 00 9 00 three MX twelve 15 00 Longrr advertisements chareed in proportion to the abi.re rates. Sperial nonces per cent, more man i ei'tilur ailverti.Hemftnta. Home Gircle. ifjine is the Sacred Refuse of Our Life." Driden. l: : -CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE ' The following is one of the most extra ordinary cases of circumstantial evidence on record. It is, however, literally true, forming part of the criminal history of the talo of Vermont. It id to- this remarkable- case that the English novelist, Wilkie Collins, is indebted for the plot and main features of his rather sensational story, 'The Dead Alive." Eds. Gazette. On the morning of the 2Gth of -November, 1819, there appeared in the Rutland (Vt.) Herald the following, notice: "Ml'KI'Ki:! Printers of newspapers throughout thr linked States are desired to mbiii4i that Nt jilicn Hoorti, of M-iiicliester, Vermont, is sentenced ;.i lie exec.Uod tor the murder- ot Russelh Colvin. .who lias Ix'f.i alisentj atiniit seven vears. Any per son who Piinive any information of said C'olviu may save tln lite ofUhejiiiioct'iit by making iu:iue diute conimuwinUitf. olviii is about ft. his. hili, l'udit -hair, litflit elmiplexioii, lilac yes, and n about forty I-cars old. Aluncicstt); ft., Xoi: '2Gtfi, This comjmunication was copied very generally I'M newspapers, a created much interest. Betjore describing events thatfol-. lowed, let n4go back to the year 1812, to the little ton of Manchester, Vermont. Harney J5oorn, an old manf had two sons, Stephen ami Jesse, and a daughter! Sarah, wife of KusseU (Jolvhn, a- half-witted day laborer. They were a bad lot poor, ig norant, and in doubtful repute for honesty. Two miserable hovels served them for shel ter, and i few acres of pine barrens consti tuted all their possessions. They raised a few potatoes and garden vegetables, and eked. out a scanty living by day work for their neighbors. In Mav, 1S12, Colvin was at home. In June lie was missing. At first this occa sioned no remark; lie" was always a tramp, absent from home sometimes for weeks Jo getner. uut tins t as w eelassgrew in get her. Rut this time he -did not come back; s'firrew into months, inquiries be- gati to be mode in the neighborhood about the missing man. There are no tongues lor. gossip like those that wag in a village.. One spoke to another; excitement grew; won dcr, like a contagious disease, infected ev "tv. t was kno.wn that there had long ex- isted between the old man and boys a ( grudge against Colvin; it was in proof that the last time the missing man was seen lie : -&asat work wilh the Rooms, clearing stones . ijtni a field, and that a dispute was goinfj . on; and Louis Colvin, a son of Russell, staT ted that his father had struck bis uncle Stephen, and that he, (the, boy) beinir fright pned, run off. Again, a Mr. Bald win had heard Stephen Boom say, in. ans wer to the intjuiry as tt) where Iinssell Col vin was: 1 ''lie's gone to li 11, I hope!" "Is ho dead,- Stephen?" pursued Mr. Bal dwin. " I tell vou again that Golvin is gone vi litre potatoes won't freeze." For seven vears the wonder grew; Col vin s ghost haunted every house in Ben nington county. There was no proof that the Boorns were guilty, and yet everyone believed it. A button and jack-knife were found which his wife believed to have once been Colvin's; dreams, thriee'repeated, were had by the old women and kitchen girls and ten thousand stories Were in circula tion. Five years after Colvin w as missed, Ste phen Boom removed to Denmark, N. Y., yvLilc Jesse remained at home. After the Tonncr had left, some bones weie accident ally found in the decayed trunk of a tree near his house; and," though all surgeons said to the contrary, it was universally be lieved that they were part of a human skeleton. Of course, then, they must be the 'bones of Colvin. Jesse was arrested, Ste phen was straightway brought back from Denmark, and both were held for examin ation. Although all the testimony, when sifted, was found to bo worthless, yet .the two brothers were remanded to jail, and Jesse was worked upon to make him turn State's evidence. The jailor tormented him with suggestions, which Lis wife followed up ( with womanly adroitness, and neighbors i Wiped. Be set with directions rtold that there was no doubt in anyone's mind that ephen. committed the, murder urged to inake a clean breast of it, and thus save his "i and soul what wonder that The man confessed, or was alleged to have confess cd, that his brother Stephen did murder tolvin! .. ,. - pu-September 3, 1819, the grand jury lourid a hill of indictment against Stephen and Jesse Boom for the murder of Russell oivm. ilhain Farnsworth testified that " w thftt he did ir7 ftrfcf iht i Jesse helped him; that they hid the body in the bushes, then buried it, then dug it up and burned it, then scraped together: the re mains, and hid them in a stump. On this urn supported evidence the jury returned a ver dict of guilty against both prisoners, and thev weresentenced to be hung January 28, 1820. ' And now the men came to their senses. They asserted their innocence; they said that they had confessed as their last hope. Some compassion began to be felt for them; they might, after all, be innocent. A pe tition for their pardon was presented to the Legislature. It availed only to get com mutation of Jesse's sentence to imprison ment for life no more. Stephen was to be hanged. Let the reader now turn to another chap ter of this strange historv. In April, 1813, there lived at Dover, Monmouth county, N. J., a Mr. James l'olhamus. Some time in that month a way-farer, begging for food, stopped at 'his door. Being' a handy, good-natured man, quiet and obedient, homeless and a man of weak intellect, tooy lie was allowed to stay. He said that his namo was Russell Colvin, and that he came from Manchester, Ver mont. Not far from Dover is the little town of Shrewsbury, then a quiet hamlet, now in vaded by the cottages and villas of Long Branch pleasure-seekers. Here lived Ta ber Chad wick, brother-in-law- to Mr. l'ol hamus, and intimate with the family. Ac cidentally reading the New York Evening Post, he met, not with the notice of the Rutland Herald, .but w ith an account of the trial. Convinced that the Russell Colvin, who was alleged to have been murdered, was the -very man then living with Mr. 1'olhamus, he wrote a letter to the Even iny Vast, w hich was published December 9,' 1819. I'pon the arrival of this paper at Man chester it excited little attention, as the let ter was believed to be a forgery or a fraud. Had not the lu st people in the town long belie ved the Boorns to be guilty? Had not one or both of them made full confession? The bones of the murdered man, a button of hi,s coat, his jack-knife had not all these things been found? ' Had not sin Upright judge made a solemn charge that the evi dence was eonclusi ve, anil an intelligent jury found them guilty, and the Legisla ture sanctioned the findings? There was no doubt of their guilt none whatever; and therefore no benefit of a doubt had been given by jury, judge or court of ap peal, x Mr. Chadwick's letter was, nevertheless, taken to Stephen's cell, and read aloud. It was so overwhelming that nature could scarcely survive the shock. The poor fel low dropped to the lloor in a fainting-fit, and Lad to be recovered by' dashes of cold waler. Intelligence came the next day from a Mr. Whelpley, formerly a resident of Man chester, that he himself had been to New Jersey, and had seen Russell Colvin. The members of the jury which had convicted the Boorns, however, hesitated to accept anything short of the man Colvin's pres ence, alnOudge Chase, who' had senten ced them, pointed to Stephen Boom's con fession. On the third day came another letter. 'I have Colvin with me,' wrote Mr. Whelp lev; 'I personally know Colvin,' swore Jno. f'Rempton; 'lie now stands before me; it is tue same liussell Colvin who married An na Boom at Manchester, Vt.," said Mrs. Jones, of Brooklyn, in her affidavit. But it won hi not answer. I'ride of opinion is very stubborn. Doubt of opinion dies very hard. However, Colvin, or Colvin's double, was on his way. As he passed through l'oughkcepsie, the streets were thronged to see him. The news preceded him eve rywhere. His strange story was printed in all the newspapers, and told at every fireside. At Hudson cannon were fired; in Albany he was shown to the crowd on a platform; and all along the route to Troy bands of music played, and banners were flaunting, and cheers were given as Colvin passed along. Some men become famous from having been murdered: Rus sell Colvin was famous because he was a live. Toward evening of Friday, December 22, 1S19, a double sleigh was driven furi ously down the main street of Manchester to the tavern-door. It contained Remp ton, Whelpley, Chad wick and the bewild ered Russell Colvin. Immediately a crowd of men, women and children gathered a round, and as the sleigh unloaded its occu pants, and they took their places on the piazza, cries came from the lips of scores of gazers: "That's Russell Colvin, sure e nough! There is not the slightest doubt of it!" He affectionately embraced his chil dren, asked after the Boorns, and started for the jail. The prison-doors w ere unbolted, and the news was told to Stephen Boom. "Colvin has come, Stephen." - "Has he? Where is he!" "Here I am, Stephen," exclaimed his brother-in-law. "What are those on your legs?" "Shackles!" ''What for?'' 'Thcv said I murdered vou." ''You never hurt mo in your life," re plied Colvin. The seqnel is soon told. Stephen and J esse Boom were released from prison, and Russell Colvin returned to New Jersey. But tho judge who suffered an innocent man to be convicted of murder by the ad mission of extra-jndicial confessions the jury who deliberated but one hour before agreeing upon a verdict of guilty, upon proof which should not hang" a dog the deacon and church members w ho urged confession the uinety-seven members of the Legislature who refused a re-hearing pf th evidence wdiat of them? . The Little World, of London. Here are some curions statistics about Lon don, from one of the papers issued by the London City Mission: It covers within the fifteen miles' radius of Charing Cross nearly 700 square miles. It numbers within those boundaries 4,000,000 inhabi tants. It comprises 1,000,000 foreigners from every quarter ol the globe. It con tains more Roman Catholics than Home itself, more Jews than the whole of Pales tine, more Irishmen than Dublin, more Scotchmen than Edinburgh, more Welch men than Cardiff, and more country-born persons than the counties of Devon, War wickshire, and Durham combined. It has a birth in it every five minutes, a death in it every eight minutes, and seven accidents everyrday in its 7,000 miles of streets. It has on an average twenty-eight miles of new streets opened and 9,000 new bouses built in it every year. It has 1,000 ships and 9,000 sailors in its port every day. It has 117,000 habitual criminals onitsp'olice register, increasing at an average of 30,000 per annum. It has as many beer-shops and gin palaces as would, if placed side by side, stretch from Charing Cross to Portsmouth, a distance of seventy-three miles. It has as many paupers as would more than occupy every house in Brighton. It has an influence with all parts of the world, represented by the yearly delivery in its postal districts of 238,000,000 letters. The man who undertakes to live two lives will find that he 'is living but one, and that one is a life of deception. Causes will be true to their 'effects. That w hich you sow you will reap. If you live to the llesh, to the 'passions, to the corrupt incli nations, you may depend upon it that the fruit, which is in store for you, will be that w hich belongs to these things. There can Ie no doubt as to what your harvest will be. If you think that, after your day's business is done, you can shut the blind and carry on your orgies in secret with your evil companions ; if you think you cn serve the devil by night, and then go forth and look like a sweet and vir uous young man that goes in the best so ciety, and does not drink, nor gamble, nor eommit any vices, then the devil has his halter about your neck, and he leads you, the stupidest fool of all the crowd. You deceive noiiody but yourself. There is an expression in the eye that tells stories. Passions stain clear through. A man might as well expect to take nitrate of silver whose nature is to turn him to a lead color and not have the doctor know it, as to expect that he can form evil hab its and pursue mischievous courses, and not have it known. It does not need a sheriff to search out and reveal the kind of life that you are living. Every law of God in nature is an officer, after you. It does not require a court, judge or jury to try and condemn vou. All nature is a court room, and every principle thereof is a part of that court, which tries and con demns you. Do not think that there can be such a monstrous mis-adjustment of af fairs as that you can do the work of the devil and have the remuneration of an an Female Society. All men w ho avoid female society have dull perceptions, and are stupid, and have gross tastes, and re volt against what is patre. Your club swaggerers, who are sucking the buts of billiard-cues all night, call female society insipid. Poetry is uninspiring to a yokel; beauty has no charms for a blind man ; music does not please a poor beast, who does not know one tune from another; but, as a true epicure is hardly ever tired of water, sauce and brown bread and but ter, I protest I can sit for a whole night talking to a well regulated, kindly woman about her daughter Fannv or her son Frank, and like the evening's entertain ment. One of the greatest benefits a man can derive from woman's society is that he is bound to be respectful to her. The habit is of great good to your morals, meu, de pend upon it. Our education makes us the most eminently selfish men in the world, and the greatest benefit that one has is to think of somebody to whom he is bound to be constantly attentive and respectful. The Lazy Daughter. -Among the w orst features of a badly-minded daughter, we would first single out indolence, or to use the rough and more expressive English word, laziness. A lazy, sofa-lolling, lie a-bed late in the morning young Woman is an affront to hei sex, and in her own family more a curse than a blessing. To her mother she is a burden, and to her father an object of contempt. She is al so a great promoter of doipestic strife, and a shocking example to her younger sisters Such a being crawls, instead of walking with tripping alacrity, through life. She dwadles instead of works, her speech is vulgar, and altogether lier ways are very bad indeed ; and, to add, to her misdeeds, her health suffers through her folly, and thus she wantonly impiises a grievous tax on the purse and patience of her parents. For a girl to be idle in the flush of her youth is to invite any and all kinds of calamities to befall her with blistering anguish; and, depend upon it, tho down ward career of most afflicted women may be primarily traced to this early and wick ed habit, for it is nothing else, it being as easy for a young woman to be industrious as the reverse. . Judge Myrick of California has decid ed that a man undergoing an imprison ment for life is civilly deadand his wife a widow. A woman sixty years old was recently convicted of murder in the midland circuit in England for killing her hnsband, aged ninerT-nine. PLAIN TALK FROM A JUDGE. At Rome, Ga., recently, four young lawyers,- who had just passed an examination, were addressed as follows by Judge Un derwood : "Young gentlemen, I want to say a word or two to you. You have passed as good an examination as usual, perhaps better ; but you don't know anything. Like those young fellows just back -to their homes from their graduating college, you think vou know a great deal. That is a great mistake. If you ever get to be of any ac count, you will be surprised at your pres ent ignorance. Don't be too big for your breeches. . Go round to the justices' court. Try to learn somethiug. Don't be afraid. Set off upon a high key. You will, no doubt, speak a great deal of nonsense, but you will have one consolation nobody will know it. The great mass of mankind take sound for sense. Never mind about your case pitch in. You are about as apt to win as lose. Don't be ashamed of the wise-looking justice. Ho don't know a thing. He is a dead-beat on knowledge. Stand to your rack, fodder or no fodder, ana you will see daylight after awhile. The community generally supposes that you will be rascals. There is no absolute necessity that vou should. You mav be smart without being tricky. Lawyers ought to be "gentlemen. Some of them don't come up to the standard, and are a disgrace to the fraternity. They know more than any other race generally, and not much in particular. They don't know anything about sand-stones, carboniferous periods, and ancient land animals known as fossils. Men that make out they know a great deal on these subjects don't know much. -They are humbugs superb hum bugs. Thev are ancient land animal themselves, and will ultimately be fossils. You are dismissed with the sincere hope of the court that you will not make asses of yourselves." Health and Talent. It is no exag geration to say .that- health is a large in gredient in what the world calls talent. A man without it may be a giant in intel lect, but his deeds w ill be the deeds of a dwarf. On the contrary, let him have a quick circulation, agood digestion, the bulk, thews and sinews of a man, and tlie alac rity ami unthinking confidence inspired by these; and, though haviug but & thimble ful of brains, he will either blunder'upon success or set failure at defiance. It is true, ''especially in this country, that tho number of eentanrs in every community of men in whom heroic intellects are allied with bodily constitutions as tough as those of horses is small; that, iu general, man has reason to think himself well off in tho lottery of life if he draws the prize of a healthy stomach without a mind, or the prize of a fine intellect w ith a crazy stom ach. But of the two, a weak mind in a Herculean frame is better than a giant mind iu a crazy constitution. A pound of energy with an ounce of tal ent will achieve a greater result than a pound of talent with an ounce of energy. Tho first requisite to success in life is to be a good animal. In aii3' of tho learned pro fessions a vigorous constitution is equal to at least fifty per cent, more brain. Writ, judgment, imagination, all the qualities "of the mind attain thereby a force and splen dor to which they1- could never approach without it.' But intellect in a weak body is "like . gold in a spent swimmer's pocket." A mechanic may have tools of the sharp est edge and highest polish; but what are these without a vigorous arm and hand? Of w hat use is it chat -onr mind has bo come a vast granary of knowledge if you have not strength to turn the key! Spares That May Klndle. Over every grave, even though tenanted by guilt and shame, the human heart, when circum stantially made acquainted with its silent records of suffering or temptation, yearns in love or in forgiveness to breathe a sol emn liequiescat. Luxurious ease is the surest harbinger of pain, and the dead lulls of tropical seas are the immediate fore-runners of tornadoes. It is a truth of the largest value that the dominion ot woman is potent, exactly in that degree that tho nature of woman is exalted. Such as woman is will man for ever be; the one sex being essentially tho antipode and adequate antagonist of the other, w oman cannot be other than depress ed where mau is not exalted. Never yet was woman in one stage of elevation, and man (of the same community) iu another. Therefore, daughter of God and man, all potent woman! reverence thy own ideal; and in the wildest of the homage that is paid thee, as well as iu the most real as pects of thy wide dominiou, see no trophy of idle vanity, but a silent indication, whether designed or not, of the possible grandeur enshrined in thy nature. Re alize it to the extent of thy power, "Aud show us how divine a thing A woman may become." "Tote." The Mobile Register resents an imputation cast upon a legitimate South ern word, saying: "The other day a Geor gia paper said that Mr. A. II. Stephens could not have mauVa certain remark, be cause he understood the English language too well to make use of such a slang word as 'tote.' We cling to 'tote as the Anglo Saxon nation clings to Magna Charta. It reminds us of our descent from a liberty-loving people, and preserves the memory of justice. The writ by which a peasant ag grieved in the Baron's Court was enabled to carry (toUere) his case np to the County Court was known as the writ of 'tolt,' pro nounced commonly tote.' This privilege which the hnmble farmer had of toting his case from his own landlord to a less preju diced court was'dear to every Englishman. The people of the South will not surrender that word. It is as dear to onr yeomen as the common law' Itself, distinguished painter, to the effect that, walking down Broadway one day, he saw before him a dark-lookiug foreigner bear ing under his arm a small red cetl,ar cigar box. He stepped immediately into his "wake," and whenever ho. met a friend (which was once in two or three minutes, for the popular artist knew everybody), he would beckon to him with a wink to "fall in line" behind. By and by the man turn ed down one of the cross streets, followed close by Jarvis and his "tail." Attracted by the measured tread of so many feet, he turned round abruptly, and, seeing the pro cession that followed in his footsteps, he exclaimed: "What for de debbil is dis! What for you take me, eh? What for you so much come after me, eh?" "Sir," ex claimed Jarvis, with an air of profound respect, "we saw you going to the grave alone with the body of your dead infant, and we took the opportunity to offer you our sympathy, and to follow your babe to the tomb." The man explained, in his broken manner, that the box contained only cigars, and he evinced his gratitude for the interest which had been manifested in his behalf, by breaking it open and dis pensing them very liberally to the mourners. A Dance Without a Smile. They have a singular kind of a dance conducted on the greens of country villages in Russia. The dancers stand apajrt, a knot of young men here, a knot of niaidens there, each sex by itself, and silent as a crowd of mutes. A piper breaks into a tune, a youth pulls of his cap, and challenges his girl with a wave and a bow. If the girl is w illing she waves her handkerchief in token of assent, the youth advauces, takes a corner of the handkerchief in his hand, and leads his lassie round and round. No word is spoken and no laugh is heard. Stiff with cords aud rich with braids, the girl moves heavily by herself going round and rouiid, and never allowing her partner to touch her band. The pipe goes droning on for hours in the same sad key and mea sure; and the prize of merit in this "circling," as the dance is called, is given by .the spectators to the lassie 'who, in all that summer revelry has never spoken and never smiled! Toilets of the Notabilities in the Bois de Boulogne. Lucy Hooper, in her last Paris letter, describes the no tabilities in the Bois do Boulogue of an afternoon, when all the fashionables are out for a drive. The display of toilets is always magnificent. Mile. Croisette, the actress, always attracts all eyes as she drives past in her dashing low victoria. One lady, who always dresses very ele? gantly, and whose equipage is as elegant as her attire, always sits with her eyes shut while she drives ; whether she is a sleep or shamming to attract attention it is hard to decide. In a superb low carriage, driven by a coachman iu the picturesque costume of a Russian Istrostchik, the black horses tossing their heads proudly under the weight of a harness glittering with gold, sits the heroine of the Russian dia mond .scandal, the beautiful Mrs. Black ford, or Mrs. Feenix, or whatever other name she mav call herself. Beanti-' ful both in form "and face, exquisitely dressed and thoroughly distinguished looking, it is no wonder that every eye follows her as she passes down the drive. Next comes a superb open barouche, lined with brown satin, the coachman and foot man in elegant liveries, the horses worthy of drawing the carnage of a prince, and with one solitary occupant, a woman no longer young, but tall and stylish in figure, with a hard, haggard face, dyed yellow hair pulled iow on her forehead, and round, parrot-like eyes a woman who never in her best days could have been a" beauty. Yet, sinco she first seized upon the sha dowy seeptro of the demi-monde, kings have been dethroned, empires have passed away, the face of Europe itself has chang ed, and here she 6its, 6ecure in her evil royalty. It is Cora Pearl, and, look a ronnd the Bois de Boulogne as you will, you will find no equipage more faultlessly appointed, no toilet more elegant and tasteful than hers. Mr. James O- -, of Cincinnati, who had just arrived at the Grand Hotel in Paris, called the other day on one of the principal Parisian embalmers, to whom" he said: "1 have just come direct from Cin cinnati, attracted by yonr reputation, in order to be"embalmed by yon." "But sir," replied the man, "to be embalmed ono must " "You are going to say," interrupt ed Mr. O , "it is necessary to be dead. I have provided for that. In this envelope you w ill find your fees, some other money, and directions about sending my body home." Thus saying, Mr. O ' took a bottle of laudanum from his pocket, and was only prevented from swallowing tho poison by the quickness of the embalmer. The American was taken into custody and the authorities have written to his friends. The Duchess' Watch. When Queen Victoria was about thirty years younger than she is now, she was inclined to be very exact in the" way of business, and more especially in the way of promptness to appointed times and places. Seven years a queen; four years a wife; and three years a mother, she felt probably a more weighty dignity resting upon her than she has felt since. And yet, no crust of dig nity or royal station could ever entirely shut out her innate goodness of hearts At tho time of which we speak, the Duchess of Sutherland held the office of mistress of the robes of the British queen, and "on public occasions her position was very near her roval person, and deemed of great im portance. A day and an hour had been appointed for a certain public ceremony in which the queen was to take parte The hour had arrived, and of all the court the duchess alone was absent, and her absence retarded the departure. The queen gave vent more than once to her ; impatience, and at length, just as she was about to en ter the carriage without her first lady of honor, the duchess, in breathless hasle, made her appearance, stammering some faint words' of excuse. "My dear duch-. ess" said the queen, smiling, "I think you must have a bad watch." And as she thus spoke she unloosed from her neck the chain of a magnificent watch she her self w ore, and passed it around the neck of Lady Sutherland. Though given' as a present, the lesson conveyed with it made, a deep impression. The proud duchess changed color, and a tear which sho could not repress, fell upon her cheek. On the next day she tendered her resignation, butj it was not accepted. It is said that ever afterwards she was, if anything, more punctual than the queen herself. Watchixo One's Ski.f. "When I was a boy," said an old man, "we had a schoolmaster who had an odd way of catch ing the idle boys. One day ho called out to us : 'Boys, I must have closer atten tion to 3'our books. The first one that sees another idle I want him to inform me, and I will attend to the case.' a 'Ah !' thought I to mvself, "there is Joe Simmons, that I don't like. I'll w atch him, and if I sec him look off his books. I'll tell. "It was not long before I saw Joe look off his book, and immediately I in formed the master. "'Indeed?' said he, 'how did yon know ho was idle V "'I saw him said I. " 'You did ? And were your eyes on your book when you saw him?' "I was caught, and I never watched for idle boys again." If we are sufficiently watchful over onr own conduct we shall have no time to find fault with the conduct of others. "Phculiau Peoile." People who, at this period of our commercial prosperity, when writing paper costs next to nothing, cross their letters. People who have no poor relations. .People who always know7 where the wind is. People-who send conscience money to the Secretary of the Treasury. People who take long walks before breakfast. People who spend an income on flowers for the buttonhole People who like paying income tax. People who go to hot, uucomfortable theatres. People who buy early and costly aspar agus ; nine inches of white stalk to one of green head. People who give large parties. People who lavish their money on the heathen abroad, and leave the heathen at home to take care cf themselves. People who have the ice broken to en able them to take a cold bath in w inter. People with no prejudices, weaknesses, antipathies, hobbies, crotchets or favorite theories. People who hold their tongues. Cast a Line for Yourself. A young man stood listlessly watching some anglers on a bridge, lie was poor and dejected. At last, approaching a basket filled With wholesome looking fish, he sighed : "If, now, I had these, I would be happy. I could sell them at a fair price, aud buy me food and lodging." "I will give you just as many and just as good fish' said the owner wm chanced to overhear his words, "if you will do me a trifling favor." "And what is that?" asked the other, eagerly. "Only to tend this line till I come back. I wish to go on a short erraud." The proposal was gladly accepted. The old man was gone so long that the young man began to be impatient. Mean time the hungry fish snapped at tho bait ed hook, and the young man lost all his depression in the excitement of pulling them iu ; and when the owner returned, he had caught a large number. , Counting out from them as many as were in the basket, and presenting them to the young man, the old fisherman said": "I fulfill my promise from the fish you have caught, to teach you, whenever you see others earning what you need, to waste no time in fruitless wishing, but to cast a line for yourself." Correspondence. FOB THE GAZETTE. Reminiscences of a Sojourn of Many Years in the Principal Empires and Kingdoms of Europe. NUMBER LKXVr. Ekhata. In last week's issue two prrorc ocenrred in "YoyageurV communication : We said that the streets of "Pisa" were superior to any we had seen in Europe, except those of Tuscany ami small portions of some in Trieste, Austria; but sliould have said that the streets of "Florence" wore superior to any we bad seen ia Europe, except those of "Piia,". Tuaeany, tc Again wo said that tbo mosaic "factories" are to be found in the shops on Veechlo bridge and in the jewel ry shops near by; we should Krre said the "work" of these mosaic factories was to be found in these shops, and not the fketories, aa they are very extensive es tablishments. 1 i; '- ' , ' ". .. Messrs. Editors: Ono of the most interesting places in Florence to visit is what is called the Museum of Natural His tory. The botanjeal department is exten sive, and that of mineralogy is veryiine, but the zoological department is not so fall as I have seen elsewhere. ; The anatomi cal department (in w-ax) was gotten up by Clement Sosini, an Italian Catholic priest. It is the largest and most varied collection I have ever seen, consisting' of all kind of fruit and flowers, birds, fish, frogs, snakes, and, in fact, everything and all as natural arid life-like as it is possible to conceive. There ar&two fowls male and female; two ducks male, and female; two rabbits, two cats, and a vast number of other things in wax. . Thtf fowls, ducks, cats and rabbits were all opened, and look ed as fresh as if they had just been killed, and, as there were splotches of red w ax here and there, in imitation of blood, many w ere under the impression that they were reallv natural. All the internal portions of these objects were visible,' so that the curious might examine and learn their construct ion. I was particularly -interested in tho ' contents of two glass coffins : one consist ed in one-half (the left half) of a very handsome young man, who w as split down through" the spine, dividing him exactly into halves; the other was the right side of a most beautiful young, girl, or at least that is what one-half of the face indicated. There are brass rails around these coffins, so as to prevent any one from touching them. Men and women (but no children are admitted to these departments, consist ing of forty great halls; but there is one room to which no ladies arc admitted, and but few gentlemen. There were six of us, and we made tho usher up a sum and at last prevailed on him to admit us. Tie took out his key, unlocked the door, and we all slipped in as cautiously as possible. After you leave this room, you enter a de partment that is filled with various things that have been turned to stone by some petrifying process. The name of the man w ho discovered this wonderful art was Ser garto, and he was the only man who has ev er been able to turn flesh to stone. But, poor fellow, ho was doomed to persecution, be cause the Bible says we return to dust, arid, if w e should be turned' to stone we could net become dust. He w as hounded by the church, imprisoned and maltreated, until the poor fellow died from the effects, and was so provoked that he allowed his se cret to die with him. And now, when it is too late, everything has been done to discover the secret. Several attempts have been made since by others, and the results of their labors are there to show that they are a miserable failure. All the samples of flesh on exhibition by those who made these miserable failures are to this day of a elammv -feeling, and wherf struck with a key havie a dead sound, not unlike the sound that a madder of snuff has when, thumped. The appearance is worse than dead, look ing somewhat like badly tanned leather. The w ork of Sergarto is perfect: there are frogs, lizards, snakes, pieces of human flesh and hundreds of human specimens that I cannot now call to mind. I remem ber seeing the head and neck of a man, with the hair still upon it. To say that it looks natural would not be true it is stone, perfect stone. There are also the head and neck of a vonng woman, whose hair hansrs down in a mass behind her ears, to her shoulders. When any of Sergarto's work is struck w ith a key or any other piece of metal, it gives forth a ringiug sound. A correspondent of the Newark Scnfigcl, writ- ingfrom Florence, speaks of this petrifact ion with great admiration. I will quote ,1'tom him, as I am not prepared to appre ciate Sergarto so highly. He says: "There was at the exhibition one specimen ol mbd ern invention a petrified human hand! A Florentine physician and naturalist, na med Sergarto,' who accompanied Choinpol- liou on tho,Egyptian expedition, soon af ter his return produced specimens of petri fied flesh, and thus preserved the bust of a young woman who was killed iu an iri- i-nrrection here, so beautifully and so per fectly that it seems like the bust of ono just dead. At tho anatomical museum attach ed to the hospital Sergarto was counected with, are to be seen tables made of petri fied human viscera'. 1 1 seems mosaic work , tho tables aro so beautiful.. A great. vari-ety-of things made of different parts of hu man bodies are also exhibited. Sergarto is supposed to have discovered the sepret in Kgypt, and he promised to leave it be hind; but being piqued W'ith the indiffer ence which had been shown him by the government he never communicated it. He died a few years after his return, f Grea(t pains have since been taken to dis cover the process by which he produced such wonderful effects, and so far have these succeeded that the hand exhibited at the fair was the result; but it covne far short, in perfect! i ess, of the human petri factions made by Sergarto, and is so 'differ ent in appearanco as to prove that his sct cret died with him. The loss of such a sure method of preserving specimens of natural history for loss indeed it is to the scien tific world may thus be attributed to the neglect of the Grand Duke to patronize art and science." . " ' It is very well for one to be pleased with what he sees; but to say that the bust of that girl is so beautiful and m perfect that, it looks like one who has just died, is a great piece of affectation. ' t?ergarto's dis covery was truly wonderful, aud 'he "did what he proposed to do, turn flesh into stone, and so did the Egyptians succeed in turning their dead into mummies; but Who has ever seen a beantiful mummy ?' "The fact is, the more the dead are worked with the worse they look. The process he used whatever that may have been had the effect to kill anything like colory or any thing that could remind one of a human, being. The substance looked dead dead like wood more than stone, thongh it m stone. . And 'tin for the la'dy's work-table,-work boxes arid snuff s boxes inTaid with flesh and viscera, everyone knows that nei ther viscera nor the flesh contain an5' beau tiful colors, and, therefore, cannot resembl mosaic, for mosaics require bright, tittan ara AnM. Ap.IlA VCS fact they are negatives. Ini2r?om ITSaw one thing, B f ' . rGEUK. i It til f liVAlr