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Six lines or less,— : ..... ......$1 50 $3 00 $1 00 One square, 3 00 5 00 7 00 Two squares, 5 00 8 00 10 00 Three squares, 7 00 10 00 15 00 Pour squares, • 000 13 00 '2O OD Half a col ainn, 12 00 16 00 • 't 03 Ono column, 0 0 00 30 00 50 00 Professional and Ltiyiness Cards not exceeding four lines,' ono year. ‘z:3 00 Al inidistrators' and Executors' Notices, $1 75 - - - Advertisements not narked with the number of inser tions desired, will'he continued till 'forbid and charged itc ,coraing to these terms. THE NEW 1300 K STATIONERY STORE Te subscriber respectfully informs all concerned, that Ito Iris fitted up a moth in the "Globe" building, and that he has received and is tow opening, a good assortment of DOORS :Ind STATIONERY, which he is detornt ucd to SOU at fair price,, and he invites the public generally, to give him a call. Ilavin;- made the nece , sary arrangements with publish ers, any 'Book waded and not upon his shelves, will be ordered and furnished at City prices. 1w desires to do a lively busluess with small profits,• liberal share of patromege is solicited Huntingdon, Dec. 15, le5S NEW WATCH & JEWELRY STORE J. W. DUTCHER, WATCH,ITAKER & JEWELLER, Respectfully informs the citizens of Huntingdon, vicini ty, and surrounding country, that hor.? Las commenced bu-dness in the room adjoining, Strous 7 Store. iftrNTINGDON, and Lopes to ceive a share of public In.fronage. WATCHES and CLOOkai repaired in the best workman like manner. Iris stock of.ITIVELIZY is of the Leg. Also—Portmon naics, Fancy Artie:OP, 4e., ; all of rhich he will dispose of at:reason:lLL: prices. The public gimendly. are requested to give him a call and examine his stock. [January 5, IK9.] THE PILESBYTERIAN A collection of tenoss a•lapted to the Psalms and llymns of the rre.,bytcrian Church in the 'United States of America, Per sale at • LEWIS' ROOK STORE. QTRAY TUCK. Li Came to the relbleuce of the subscriber in Union township, Iluntirtu:don county, some time last - December, Buck. supposed to be half soutli-du‘vn, with both cars croppe.l. The owner is reone , ted to come forward. prove property. pay charges, antetake him away,-otherwise, he iIL be disposed of according to law. A..131ZA11101 WRIGHT. January 2tt, 18.10.1 JUST RECED.rEP AND FOR SALI , 3 : A 'new Gj# : Oct. sliding desk iron, finme Hanel & Davi PIANO AT LE'VVIS' s Boos, STATIONIIIII .N 1) MUSIC STor.r: FREsll .11,01INFTIA ASTE THE JUNIATA FLOUR AND PLASTER MILLS' —one mile east of Alexandria, lluntingilon comity, Pe., pare ou hand• at all titn.is, the Lest ipaility of lluoutsu PfASTIIR. for which (;rain of all kiwis n ill be taken in ex change.at market prices. SAMUEL 11211:1 , 1.E.L.D. January 12. TNFORMATION WANTED, of the whereabouts of JAMES itO3VER, who loft lianitingdon on the night of, the St 6 January, 18Z9. Groover hails from liarristiurg, has been Ili email on loco motives, is between '25 and 30 years of ago, small blaell'hair, and goesAvellid.ressed at the expen s e hechits'swinctled... • • • , 'Any information of the Whereaboute of mid. Gioover, will too thankfully received by tlie unilarshuird. CALDWELL, LEWIS CO., Iluntio! , :, , lon. Pa. January 1.2, 1850-tf. .-70 9, 00 K WNDING. s • Old Books. Magazines, or publications of any kind, bound to order, if left at LI:WM" BOOK cf. STA TIO.YERY STORE. D BOOKS p Of any size or pattern not upon our shelves, will be, furnished to order at City prices. Call at rmaK d: STA TIONER STOKE. THE MAG AZINES. • Fon SALE AT LEWIS' 1100 , E. STORE .Harpers' New,Monthly Magazine. _Peterson's Ladies' National Magazine. Godey's Lady's 800 . The Great Republic. All the above 31a:mzines can he bad regularly every month, at Lem be book and L , ;,thonor Store. u stioi:;s, cheaper at 1). P. G win's :I„.__A than can he had in town. Call aml see them. - _ BLA K Flannels, at all at t lie matain,tl. ~taro c 1 FJI I 1 1:1:. & 3k:A C1ZT1,11,7, TrUGLASS W 811.MtOO.LY8 Pat cut Extendon Skirts, for FA. , only by PIS McM pAPE ! ! ! Note, Post. Colunasrcial, Fo - Isc;ip and Ilatc•tp—a good asorttnctat for sale by the reatu,.half rceui, quire or bisect, at LEW - IFNEW DOOR St . STATIONERY STORE. ACKEiI EL ()fall herrina7, can be had of the best qthaity. by calling ', - ;n MeMtiirflll.E. )L I!,'ASE YOUR CHILDREN ! Call at LEWIS ?SEAN - 130 . 0 x STME. where you will find a choice selection of Now and interesting books for children. 1.)00KS EOlt, EVERYBODY A large asgortment of the, most popular and intor estiug Louts .4f the dcv. ,In-Tror•eived met for Bale at LI,AVIS'2:IIIW tiTATIONEILY STGItE. O.lN • b Improved Sausage Cutters awl F- - ; ixf; - "t 5. far ,31c by JAM ES A. 13 itcYW X. U MEN TAKE NOTICE J . ) If yon want your card. neatly printed upon envel - 1300 K AXD SVATIONTILY STORE. I)lAlt r ErS ti FOIL 1859, STA T/O-YE/?Y STORE TrILANK - BOOKS,ur 'v.kr..zaus srzr:s;, for at Zl'll IS' 1300K4XJl SI:A TEO-VERY STORE ALMANACS FOE, 1859, For sale at LEWIS' NEW BOOK & STATIONERY STORE INKS. • A superior article. of writing 'nits for F:Ile at E{V IS' 1300 K -41CP 8.7'..4 T. 01 - . - . E STORE. QCHOOL BOOKS, Generally in nRe in the Schools of the County, not on liana, be furnitin‘d to onion: on uppliention at - .LETIUS' BOOK ANDSTATIOXERY ,STORI.7. (11 1...::::5 Y • Mau who recrives or pays out money, is ul have Pr', r::, :i's Corotterfrit Detector—for sale at - T io LEWIS' LOOK .A.ND STATIO.LVER.r r..7:1701,,E. TRACING DIIAFTING AND DRANTING PAPER, White and adored Card Paper, For E‘alo at LEIVIS" BOOK ca STATIOX.ERY 5T0.7474 ranTer- L - - • A snperior artide Note Paper and Envelopes, suitable for ceOtteptial correspondence, for side nt LEWIS' BOOKcE 5r.,17"10NE121" STORE. LIitIIrELOPES -11 `4 By the hex, pack, or loss quantity, for sale at - LEWIS' BO AND 52'.(1.7701VER I - STORE. yONTHLY TIME BOOKS, • For sale at - .L:EWILS' BOOK AND STATIONERY STORE. MACKIIEL—No.'s I and 2, tit reduced prices, at LOVE $1 50 ME AND NOW OPEN! WM. LE\VIS WILLIAM. LEWIS, VOL. XIV. eZ~xtVa,efal. THOUGHT. BY BODOLPB. All searching, secret, magic spell, In dark recesses hid, What human vision e'er did dwell Upon thy mystic bed? Or what quick eye could ever trace, 'Mid worlds thy pathless way? Or marl: with wondrous ken the place Where thy deep wanderings stray What chains can bind? 'What prisons doors Impede thy rapid flight? The tempest's force that round us roars— The fleeter wings of light— • E'en time's swift pinions cannot vie Whit thy unequalled speed, Through realms remote, o'er'regions high, Through realms of darkened deed. But thou immeasurable power, Unfettered in thy sphere, When struggling pangs bespeak the hour Of dissolution near: When life gives o'er the parting gasp, And dust to dust is brought— When nature yields to death's cold grasp, " Where art thou then? 0 Thought! v cT cct tor. TEEE TORN NEWSPAPER ; CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE BY OLIVAIt SINCLAIR CLIAPTER I " I will never consent to your marriage with William Appleton, Ida," said Charles Reclington, .with flushed look and angry eves. "If I love William more than I love you, Charles, why should you he angry? This is not the way to make me love you bettor than William. If I cannot lie your wife, I can be your friend ! You have paid me a compli ment I shall always be grateful for, in offer ing one your hand. I feel deeply your pref erence of me over other fair maidens of your acquaintance, and who I know would be made happy by such an offer. Nay, do not look displeased ! Because I refuse to be your wife, is no reason that I cannot esteem you as a friend !" .'Thus calmly and gently and sensibly r spoke Ida Boyd; a sweet, beautiful girl of eighteen, the daughter of a poor widow, to a rich young man of uncontrollable passions, who had loved her long, and would have made her his wife ; .for though poor she was socially his equal ; her father having,' been a gentle man of fortune, who became bankrupt be fore his death through the failure. of a bank, in which ho had invested all be was worth. They were standing at the garden gate, to which he had asked her to accompany him, after having called to see her, saying that lie wished to say a few words to her alone.— These few words were the offer of his hand and fortune. Ifer reply was that she had been a month engaged to William Appleton. Ills angry exclamations of disappointment, called from her the words of remonstrance and kindness which she addressed him at the beginning of our tale. " Love or hatred 1" he replied, almost fiercely. "I must either love .or hate you, Ida Boyd ! There is no medium with me!— As for William Appleton, may the der—" " Charles—Charles ! Stop where you are ! This conduct is unworthy of you, -and painful to me!" she cried, laying her hand upon his arm, which he pettishly withdrew from her touch. "If I cannot love you, why will Sou hate me? Does not this show your love for Me was not such as would stand the test of life ?" " Ida, talk not thus I My love for you would have made me die for you! Yester day, if you had bidden me do any deed, in voiving, the risk of my life, I would have marched with a smile upon my lips to death, so that I felt that you approved l" She looked in his face. The moonlight, sifted through a lattice ofleaves over their heads, fell in soft splendor upon his fore head; for his forehead was uncovered as he spoke to Alio fair object of his NNor ship.— There was a momentary silence. She broke it by saying: " Charles, I am very very sorry for you! I ----" " Pity me not! Your pity adds poison to the barb you have so completely fastened in my heart! A heart that so loved you that, if, like chamomile, you had trodden it under your feet, it would have given out from its bruised leaves sweet fragrance to regale you. Hate me, Ida ! hate me ! This will be the most grateful return you can make me;f‘for robbing, me of yourself! " Charles," said the lovely girl, as she took his reluctant hand in hers ; dear Charles, my friend, how can you blame me! How can you feel so ! Love is a mystery Ido not know why I chose William, rather than you." "He has known you but ten months, while I have known you from a child I" " I know it Charles I • I have always liked you I Do you not remember how I have so often gave you flowers ; and how we have blackberried to e ,"3tler ; and how you used to loye to carry my heavy satchel of books home for me, and how you gave 'Me birds and rab bits for pets, and I named them after you, and how you used to do all my hard sums for me, and what good friends we used to be." " Yes, I remember it all, Ida ; and we were very happy, and when I grew up, and you grew up and became so beautiful, I re solved you should be my wife ; but then came this stranger, and—and —" • - Here the emotion, if not a gush of tears of the young man choked his utterance, and he turned away without finishing the sentence. "As 1 said, Charles love is a mystery. I loved him as soon as I saw him. I don't know how it was, - but our eyes no sooner met than our hearts seemed to fly together and embrace like long-absent friends." The disappointed lover made no immediate reply. He walked for a few moments to and fro before the garden gate. There was a cloud visible upon his brow and a stern fixed ness of the lips which alarmed her. She ap proached him gently, and said,-;;' , " Charles!" " Well, Miss ,Boyd I" " Do not speak to me so unkindly." " What matters it? Are you anything to me? Am I anything to you ? Are you not Ids, body, soul and spirit? Are you not his in all that made you dear--oh, how dear to me ? Ido well to speak unkindly ! But, forgive me, Ida! I see no moonlight reflect ed, as . from diamonds, in tears upon your cheeks. lam not angry with you. Poets say love cannot be helped. But as for him, who knowing how I loved you, and has come between me and happiness—" " Say no word in anger, Charles! Fur anN sake, do not-be angry with 'William !" " Per thy sake ?" - "Yes, may I not ask this?" " Ida, what do I owo you—that for thy sake I should not hate him ?" "Nothing—but—oh—forgive me! I knew not you loved me so dearly. You never told' me till to-night!" "Because I did not deem it necessary to tell thee," he observed, bitterly. "Do not the birds tell one another they love, before they mate? Does the night-blooming ceres tell the moon itloves before it opens its bosom to her embrace ? Does the river tell the ,sea that it loves before it flings itself murmuring into his arms ? Does the glow worm tell its mate that it loves ere he lights the lamps which is to guide him to her, bower in the grass ? True love is 'instinct, and is voiceless ! I did not believe,, Ida, I had need to tell you how dearly, how fondly, how passionately I loved you: I thought you understood the look of my eyes, the touch of my hand, and the tone of my voice. To tell you that I love you would have seemed to me like painting the rainbow, or leading torches to the light of the stars ! But, alas, I see I have been mistaken ! The love of this world to secure itself must gabble and speak itself out, or the loudest goose will be the victor !" " You are very bitter, Charles !" "Pardon me, but I feel bitterly. Good. night, Ida." " Let us part friends !" " Friends ? Eh Friends ! What does that mean ?" . , Kot enemies I" • " .21 7- o t enemies 1" answered the young man as he .coldly received in his own, her. soft hand, with which she warmly clasped his. " I can never hate thee! When I die, Ida, your image will be found engraven on my in most heart! Good night. If I never more speak to thee, do not imagine I hate thee ! But I can never look again upon the form which is possessed by my rival !" He left the gate and walked rapidly on ward. She impulsively followed him half a dozen steps, but seeing he paid no attention to her pursuing feet, though he must have heard them upon the pavement, "she stopped and clasped her hands together upon her bosom and sighed heavily, and said : "Oh, that I had known how Charles loved me I Yet he never told his love ! He was so diffident and distant, while William pres sed his suit with such fervor. Poor Charles ! I wish he could understand that I love him (as a friend) though William is to be my husband I" wi-po-will !" cried in plain tive tones a whippoorwill, in the top of a neighboring, tree. "What a doleful cry ! This bird's note sounds ominously and makes me feel. fear !" she said, as she turned slowly to the gate.— "They say it sings thus only when some: evil is to happen to the hearer. Shall Igoin or wait for William," she soliloquized ns she lingered by the gate, held half-open in her hand. "He was to be here at nine o'clock and the bell for nine will soon ring." The young girl, with a torn heart—for she loved both lovers, (but William most and tenderest, having also pledged him her hand, heart, and troth,) lingered long after the nine o'clock bell rung, for William had promised her he would come at nine. With every note of the bell she expected to hear blended the sound of his footstep. Half-past nine came, and her mother came out to her and said— "Ida, you ought to be in dear. Where is William ? " - "Not come yet, mother. I wonder what has detained him." " Perhaps some engagement. You know he is but a book-keeper, and hasn't his time to himself, poor young man, as Mr. Reding ton has, who is rich. I must, confess, Ida, I am, surprised you should have selected the poor one." `•IIe selected me, mother." "But you know that on the least encour agement the richer would have asked you." "I did not encourage him because he was rich. I could not trust myself. I feared I might be thinking:of his fortune, so I let one who offered first have my hand." "Well, William is a good young man, and will make you happy. But you know my opinion. I would rather you would have married Mr. Bedington. That fine house his mother lives in would have been yours at her death, with a ; carriage and. all that." "Don't talk of such things mother. They .do not come into my thoughts. I shall be perfectly, happy with William. And since I have seen the exhibition of anger and feeling shown by Chailes this evening, I see he has a fearful temper, which might have.made me wretched as his wife." "Well, come in, dear child. It is full a quarter to ten. Honest people ought 'to be in bed half an hour after bell ringing." "I will ebrne in soon, dear ma. I think William will be hero by ten. I will just meet him at the gate here and say good night to him, He was to bring me . a wedding ring." "Well at ten you must come in. Tie your handkerchief over your head, Ida, for I feel there is a dew." Ten o'clock wls struck by the old clock in the house, but Ida's lover had not come. She waited till ten minutes past, when slowly and ..-." ~, lair . .. ..f - .4 .... . : 0‘...: .. , 4; . . . -. r ‘'''''. 41 4 - .....-.1 *tr.:, "t 4. , !:„. ~,,,: ,-!-,, ( . . HUNTINGDON, PA., FEBRUARY 9, 1859. .---PERSEVER.E.- sadly she returned to the house. "He has never failed me before," she said, "but perhaps something has detained him.— It cannot be that now that I am engeged to him, he loves me less, and thinks be need not be so punctual to his engagements as he was when he was not sure of me, and was trying to win my consent." h ow sensitive, how jealous, how exacting is true- love ? Ida re,-entered the house, and by-and-by retired, but not until all hope of seeing Wil lian that night had expired. . - In the morning she dreamed a dream.— She believed that she was walking arm in arm with William by the side of the river when a mermaid rose out of the water before them, and said in a harsh voice— "Come—l have waited for you ! You must go with me ! My home in the depth of the.river is ready !" She thought that the mermaid so fascinated William that he left her side, and went as by a resistless spell, to the syren, who was about to entwine her arms about him, when some one cried, as if from the air- "Fire - and slay her or she will destroy him !" She heard at the moment a report as if from behind her, and she saw William with a wound in his forehead, fall into the arms of the syren, who plunged with him into the river and disappeared. There was a mock ing laugh behind her, and she thought the voice sounded like that of Charles Redington. She turned to see if her fears were true, when the loud voice of her mother awoke her : "Awake child. 1 Up Ida 1 There is fearful newt.?" "What is it mother ?" she cried, starting from her vivid dream. "William is dead ! she shrieked, catching the words from the pallid lips of her mother. "I saw him shot ! Is it not so ! Oh, do not be silent !" "News has just come that he was found in-', "In the ricer, with a bullet wound in his forehead !" she cried. "Row wonderful and true I" cried two or three neighbors, who were - at her room door, while a third said— "flow could she know this ?" "I-saw it in a dream. Oh, tell me, is Wil liam dead."' "Yes answered the minister, who lived near, and having heard the news had hasten ed to the house of mourning, as became his office. He was found dead' an hour a - go by the slibre, half in the "water:: .He had been shot in the forehead. His body, is taken to his mother's where an inquest *ill be held." "Oh ! William; William—who could have done it! Dead ! William dead !" she shriek ed, and fell insensible into the arms of her mother. The death of William Appleton by vio lence, in so mysterious a manner, created the most profound excitement throughout the peaceful village. .11e was beloved and popu lar, and was not known to have an enemy.— lie had been found by the shore, his body half in the water ' • but as his clothing and hair were thoroughly wetted, it was believed he had been thrown in, and floated ashore.— The place where he was found, was about half way between the village and the resi dence of Ida Boyd, by the road, that led along the winding and shady banks. "He must have been going to see her, or else coming from there," said a woman, who was present as they were holding the inquest. "He was 'gaged to her, and went to see her every night." . This opinion prevailed. „ The question now clinic up, who could hate done this? and what could have been the motive ? ' There was no suspicion of person - or motive, and the jury gave in their verdict—" Shot dead with a pistol or gun, by some person or persons unknown, and then thrown into the river." What more could a coroner's jury, not om niscient nor omnipresent, decide. The fu neral took place on the third day and was at tended by a vast concourse of people ; for a murder invests death with a fearful mystery, which arouses the deepest sympathies of the human heart, as well as awakens the liveliest curiosity of our nature. But there were agencies of Providence at work for the discotery of the murderer.— The surgeon who had been called to examine and pronounce upon the nature of the wound, bad drawn from the orifice made by the bullet, a mass of paper saturated with blood and with river water. He saw that it was newspaper wadding which had been driv en into the wound behind the ball. He stated to the coroner, from this circumstance, that the assassin must have stood close to his vic tim for the wadding to have also entered the wound. This assertion threw no light upon the author of the crime, and had little weight with the coroner and his rustic jury. The surgeon who was a shrewdlnan of the world, and who let nothing escape him, took the wad ding home, and having removed the stains of blood and dried it, closely examined it. lie discovered that it was a part of a newspaper called the "Evening Star." Dr. Thomas, upon looking carefully at this fragment, compressed his lips and was for a few moments silently fixing his keen gray eyes upon his office floor. "'The Evening Star ho at length ex claimed, or rather muttered. " I wonder who takes that paper iu this village ! This I must quietly ascertain. I saw bfore the coroner that this piece of paper might probably . be a clue to the murderer, and I did not wish to make any noise 'about it, lest the murderer himself might be present at the inquest'and take the alarm. I . think I have shown my usual sagacity. Now, with the aid of Prov idence, I may find out who murdered William Appleton. Poor Ida Boyd ! They say it has broken her heart, as they were soon to be married ! The 'Evening Star !' Stay there, bit of paper," he added, " until I look fur ther 1" As he spoke he locked the wadding in his money drawer, and putting the key in his pocket walked out. He took the direction of , 144, 1 1 0... 1 f i l I,ict„ . • %• V7•.7 CtIAPTER 11. Editor and Proprietor. the post office, which he entered with a loit ering step, as if he • had no purpose. The postmaster was seated in his great armed chair, (being a bent up rheumatic man, with iron spectaeles,) actually reading a copy of the " Evening Star." Doctor Thomas was a friend and his phys ician. After a question or two as to the pres ent state of his rheumatism, the doctor said : " A New York paper, eh ?" " Yes, the Star ; Noah's paper. They say he-is a Jew ; but he is a great wit, and a cap ital, fine writer." "So I've heard. Do you take it?" " No. He is on the other side of my poli tics. It comes here toMrs.Redington, whose husband, you know, was a great politician. You see her name on it ?" "Yes, I see. It is such an interesting pa per, I suppose, many copies of it ase taken at this Tillage ?" " No. This is the only one taken at this office. It is usually taken out by her son Charles, but he has not been here for several days : so I thought I'd peep into it." "A privilege," replied the smiling doctor, " which you postmasters take not only with papers but with letters, ch ?" " Ah, doctor, that is a serious joke," re sponded the man of privileges, as he fulded up the paper, for that moment Chas. Reding ton entered and asked for his papers and letters. " So you keep up the old " Star" subscrip tion, sir, like your father ?" said the doctor. The young man answered, with a curl of the lip— " I suppose one can subscribe to what pa per he pleases ;" and thus saying, he pock eted his newspaper and went out of the of fice, which was kept in an open room, com mon to all corners; indeed, the people gener ally helped themselves to their own letters, (and their neighbors' too, if they choose,) to save the bent and rheumatic postmaster get ting up from his chair. Doctor Thomas wended his way to his own office slowly and thoughtfully. Charles Red ington was above suspicion, wealthy, Son of a member of Congress, born in' the village, and of good name and fame. Yet he was the only ,one who took the " Star," and it was a torn portion of the ".Star" which ° formed the wad of the bullet'. " It is''posiible another man may have found or torn the ,paper. Perhaps he does not file, them . away. If so, any one might pick diem up'. I must be cautious. I will call on his mother, and ask her for the loan of a volume of the folio Encyclopedia, which belonged to her husband. This will enable me to look about, and perhaps learn some thing. Yet, do I suspect her son for the deed ! Heaven forbid ! But this wadding must be traced." Thus be mused as he walked along. That day he called on the widow, and was shown into the library for the book by Charles him self, who looked pale and ill at ease, so much so that the doctor said-- " Mr. Redington, you do not look well.— Yon must look after yourself." The young man laughed and turned away his head. Upon a chart the doctor saw piled in a heap a great number of the " Star." He took one up and then said— " This is a singularly American journal, Mr. Redington, to be edited by a Jew." "I seldom read it. lam not a politician. I keep it as waste paper." " .21. h, indeed. Permit me to look over some of them." "Yes ; but you will exCuse me, as I have an engagement. You can borrow any other books you please, sir, besides the Encyclope dia." After the young man bad gone ouf, the doc tor proceeded to examine the newspapers upon the chair, but found them all whole ; seeing one wrapped around a parcel on the table, he approached it, and saw that it con tained melion seed•. A portion of this paper was torn off. A glance showed him that he had the missing part at his office ! Instantly and adroitly he poured out the seeds and secured the paper. He was over whelmed with surprise and pain. As he was leaving, Mrs. Redington met him in the hall and said, after a few remarks about books— " Have they discovered the murderer, doc tor?" "Not yet, I believe." " Poor Ida I Charles thought worlds of her, and has not been himself since he heard how she is, almost beside herself. I think be loved her ; but I always told him she was too poor a match for him. I am sorry for her, and for the poor young man. How pitiful !" The doctor left and proceeded to his office, took out the wad, and went to the residence of the justice of the peace. The two gentle men remained together for two hours. That night Charles Redington was arrested while at the tea-table, by two officers of the law, and conveyed to prison. Ile denied all knowledge of the murder, and assumed the front and bearing of injured innocence. He was in due time, brought into court for trial. The only ground of evidence against him was the fragment of newspaper. But the defense ably argued that the assassin, whoever he was, might have stolen the paper, as no such paper was to be found on the pris oner's premises, or brought it from another town. " The Star mails four thousand copies weekly," he added, "and there are four thous and chances that my client is innocent." When everybody in Court looked for an acquittal, the torn newspaper, which the doc tor had taken from the library, with " Mrs, Eleanor Redington's " name upon it, was produced, and the fragment fated to it before all eyei. When Charles Redington saw this paper propuced, he uttered a cry of despair, and sprang from the prisoner's box so unexpec tedly, that he had reached and leaped from an open window before he could be arrested. Mounted men followed his wild flight, and he was overtaken and caught, at the very spot where- the body of William Appleton had been discovered, The result was, that he con fessed in prison the deed of murder so clearly established by circumstantial evidence. Ile said ho had gone home after leaving Ida Boyd, loaded his pistol, tearing off a portion of the " Star" for the wadding, resolved to meet Appleton on his visit to Ida Boyd, and compel him to relinquish her to himself.-'-- That he met him on his way, and upon his refusal to comply with his command, he shot him in a moment of uncontrollable jealousy. Three months afterwards Charles Reding ton empiated his crime on the gallows, and the evening of the same fatal day, the body of the fair Ida Boyd was laid by weeping mourners in her last home. Oh, lore I oh, war I which has slain tho most victims ? The following touching and felicitous illus tration of the power of ideas, was given by Wendell Philips, the other day, in a public speech at New York : " I was told to-day, a story so touching in reference to this, that you must let me tell it. It is a temperance case, but it will illustrate this just as well. It is the story of a mother on the hills of Vermont, holding by the right hand a son, sixteen years old, mad with love of the sea. And as she stood by the garden gate, one sunny morning, she said : " Edward they tell me that the great temp tation of a seamen's life is drink. Promise me, before you quit your mother's hand, that you will never drink." "And," said he, for he gave me the story, "I gave her the promise, and I wont the broad globe over—Calcutta, the Mediterranean, San Francisco, the Cape of Good Hope, the North and the South poles—l saw them all in forty years, and I never saw a glass filled with sparkling liquor, that my mother's form, by the garden gate, on the green bill side of Vermont, did not rise before me ; and to-day, at sixty, my lips are innocent of the taste of liquor." Was not that sweet .evidence of the power of a single word ? "Yesterday," said he, there came into my counting room, a young man of forty, and asked, Do you know me ?" No Well,' said he, " I was once brought drunk into your presence, on shipboard ; you were a passenger; the captain kicked me aside; you took me to your berth, and kept me there until I had slept the sleep of intoxication ; you then asked me if I had a mother; I said I never knew a word from her lips; you told inc of yours at the garden gate, and to-day, I am the master of one of the finest packets in New York, and I came to ask you to call and see me.' NO, 33, How far that little candle throws its beams, that mother's word on the green hills of Ver mont I 0 God, be thanked for the almighty power of a single word I" WILAT I WOULD Do.—lf I were possessed of the most valuable things in the world, and was about to will them away, the following would be my plan of distribution : I would will to the world, truth and true friendship, which are very scarce. I would give an additional portion of truth to lawyers,traders and merchants. I would give to physicians skill and learn ing.' I would give to Printers their pay. To gossiping women short tongues. - To young women, good sense, modesty, large waists, and natural teeth. Toyoungsprouts or dandies, common sense, little cash, and hard labor. To old maids, good temper, smooth faces, little and good husbands. To old bachelors, love for virtue, children and wives. _ . GIANTs.—The bed of Og was 27 feet long and 7 feet broad. The height of Goliah was 11 feet, his coat weighed 150 and his spear 19 pounds. The body of Orestes, son of Aga memnon, leader of the Grecian expedition against Troy, was 11? - feet, and a woman 10 feet. Maximus, a native of Spain, the Bo man Emperor, was Si feet high. His wife's bracelets served him for finger-rings. His strength was such that he could draw a load ed wagon, break a horse's jaw with his fist, crush the hardest stones with his fingers and cleave trees with his hands. His veracity was equal to his strength, eating 42 pounds of flesh and drinkinn• '' 10 bottles of wine daily. Bryne and O'Brien, Irish giants, were eight feet high. A Tennessee giant lately died, 74 feet high, weighing more thanone thousand pounds. The Kentucky giant was 7 feet 10 inches high. par Our,correspondent at Lawrence, Kan sas, writes to us that the barber at that cap ital is ailaak man, a slave of Judge Elmore, and that his Excellency, Gov. Medary, recent ly went• to his shop to be shaved, Just be fore Tom (that is the barber's name,) got the ofhcial by the nose, that functionary, who adds economy to his many other virtues, said: " Look here, I want you to shave me by the month." "Well, massa, I don't know massa," stammered Tom, hesitatingly. "Well, why ? 204 not, Tom ?" " Well, massa Gubenor, I don't mean no Hz dispeck, but, but den, all de Gubernors ob dis territory, don't stay here but so short, and cloy run away so fas', and Ps.not sure dat you be here a monf ; and SO you see, I don't know, massa."—Ex. THE VALUE OF A SMILE,—Who can tell the value of a smile? It costs the giver nothing, but is beyond price to the erring and relent ing, the sad and cheerless, the lost and forsa ken. It disarms malice, subdues temper, turns hatred to love, revenge to kindness, and paves the darkest paths with gems of sunlight. A smile on the brow betrays a kind heart, a pleasant friend, an affectionate brother, a da tiful son, a happy husband. It adds a charm to beauty, it decorates the face of the deform ed, and makes a lovely woman resemble att angel of paradise. CLEAR. AS MUD.—An editor had a bottle of London Dock Gin presented to him, and after drinking the whole of it, he wrote a "notice" of the article. Here is a specimen of the style : " Here's to the ladies and other branches of business (hic) in and around town—and especially the Messident's Pressage, Moning ton Washument, etc., 'all of which may he had cheapat the Buck—Drook—Brook and Duk Store of Bininger's old London Doke Gin, for $2 a year, if payment is delayed un til the end of the Atlantic Cable." • Zar A member of the Legislature now. in session at Indianapolis, who had been coughed down on several occasions, offered a resolu tion instructing the door keeper to buy twen ty dollars worth of cough medicine for the, use of the members. rrar If you cannot avoid a quarrel with a. blackguard, let your lawyer_ manage it rather than yourself. No man sweeps his own chim ney, but employs a chimney sweep, who has no objections to dirty work, because itis his trade. "Pray sir, what makes you walk so crookedly ?" "My nose is crooked and I have to follow it." JC.' Good wheat sown never changes to cheat or tares ; but "wild oats" sown inyoutl always does E-0. A. Mother's Magic.