• - r - _ .4:V; SAMUEL WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXVIII, - NUMBER 9.) ,PUBLISIIED EVERY SITURDIY MORNING. Office in Northern Central Railroad Com zpany's Building, north-aced corner Front and ircztaut streets. Terms of Subscription. itiOae Copy per annum ' if paid in advance, " if not paid within three .months from commencement of the year, 200 Coss - tog za. "No subscription received for is Ices tiler than six -months; and no paper will be discontinued unid all urrrarages are paid, unless at the option of the pub s other. 11:7 - 1 1 1oney may be remitted by mail at the publish er's risk. Bates of Advertising. I square (0 lines] one week, • three weeks, each subsequent insertion, to 1 '. (Wines) one week. three weeks, 1 00 each subsequent insertion, :tr.. Larger advertisements in proportion. A liberal discount will he made to quarterly, half yearly or yearly.lvertisers,who are striettyconfined to their business. THOMAS WEL.SII, TIISTECE OF VIE PEKE, Columbia, Pa, 0 oirtley„ in Wliippent New Building, below Black's hotel, Front street. t intention given to all business entrusted to l Eic c PmmP Nove !kilter 28, 1E:17. DR. G. W. MIFFLIN, DENTIST, Locust street, a few doors above the Odd Followo Hall, Columbia, Pa. Columbia. May 3, ISM. 11. M. NORTII, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Columbia, Col lections, romptly made, in Laneabter and York Counties. Columbia. Mny 4,1850. J. W. FISHER, Attorney and Counsellor at Lam, Columbian X. Columbia, September li, 1556-tf GEORGE J. SMITH, WROLESILE und Retail Bread and Cake Baker.—Constantly on hand a varlets , of Cakes, TOO numerous to mention: Crackers, Soda. Wine. Scroll, and Sugar Biscuit; Confectionery, of every description, &c., fix. LOCUST :STREET, Feb. 2,i56. Between the Bank and Franklin House. CORN Starch, Farina, Rice Flour, Tapioca, Sago, Out Meal. Arrow Root. Ike. ' at the FAMILY MEDICINF: STORE, Odd Fellow.' MIL Sept 26,'57. JUST received, three dozen Dr. Brunon's Vegetable Miters, a certain cure for Dyspepsia; also, at fresh lot of Sap Sago and Fine Apple. (Theirs; Farina and Carat Starch, ut D. linarrs Sept 5, 1b57. Grocery and Liquor Store. BAIR DYE'S. Jones' Batchelor's, Peter's and Egyptian hair dyes. w arranted to color the lion any desired shade, without injury to the skin. For sole by. R. WILLIAMS. May 10, Front at., Columbia, Pa, JUST received, a fresh supply of Kennedy's 31eriteul Ihscovery. illlll for snb•. by R, WILLI MS, Front street. ColllMbill. June 27.11,57. BROWN'S Essence of Jamaica Ginger, Gen• uinc Article. For .t le let Alcetlitli .1.; & Family Medicine 8 tote. Udd Fellow.' Hull. July 2.5. o,,,OLUTION OF CITRITE OF MAGNESIA,or Fur- Li votive Al Otero! Wuier.—Thi , piece-old medicine which is highly reroinmeoded as a i•iihsldute for Epsomnsnhs. Seidliit Powders, he.. I . II it lie obtained fresh every day at Do. E. 13. HERR'S Drug Store. Front at. Ij2 JUST received, a fresh supply of Corn Stureh, Furl an, and Flier F . lour. at MeCORICLE DELLErrs Family Medicine Store. Odd Fellows' flail, Columbia. Columbia. Mac :30, 1537. LAMPS, LAMPS, LAMPS. Just received at flerr'a Drug store, a new and beautiful lot of Laman of nll dexeliptante.. May A LOT of Fresh Vanilla Beans, at Dr. E B. Herrla Golden Mortar Drug More. Columbia. Mar 2.t..67. ASUPERIOR article of burning Fluid just received nod for by H. SUN' M Az. MIN. ALARGE lot of City cured Dried Beef, just received nt it suYt.A.NI & Columbia. December :20, 1956. TIOUFLAND'S Gzglitlts.lvlc at r .uKi..zi:l P I": Family Medicine Store, Odd F(.111014 ,' July 25. I K 57. COUNTRY Produce constantly on hand an d for -olic by 11. SLIVI) M & SON. HOMINY, Cranberries, Raisins, Figs, Alin oik, WuMail, Cream Nut-, ke ,Just received u. EXYDA3I & Colombia, Dee. 20. IPSG. A SUPERIOR lot of Black and Green Tcas, Cotree and Chocolate, just meowed at u. ,UYDA M k sox`a Dee. 20,1856. Corner of Front und Union w. JUST RECEIVED, a beautiful assortment of DMus luk *Lauda, at the Headquarters and IS:CWR Depot. Columbia, April IS. 1857. TIVFItA Family and Superfine Fiore of the heft brand. for .4kle by 11. SUYIM M & SON. JEST received 1000 lbs. extra double bolted Buckwheat Meal, at Dec.:2o. l 356. 11. SUYDAM & SON'S._ WEIKEL'S Instantaneous Yeast or Baking Powder. for cote by 11, SUYDAM & SON. - PARR Is THOMPSON'S justly celebrated Com ': !Herein! and other Hold PCll.—the hem in the market—just receiVCll. P. SHREINER. Columbia,April 26.1E55. WHITE GOODS.-••A fall line of White Dress Goods of every description. Just received. at July 11, 1e.57. FONDERSSIITH'S. WHY should auypersou do without a Clock, when they can Le hat, forlll,:illand w ar NEs. SHREI? .C+olumhia. APO] 28.1855 SAf . ONEFIER, or Concentrated Lye, for ma : /pug Soap. I lb. is sufficient for oue barrel of ..1011 Soap, or Ilb.for 9 lbs. Hard Soap. Full Ilirer pon. will be given at the Counter for making Soft, Hard and Fancy Soaps. For sale by IL WILLIAMS. Columbia. March 31.1635 MADLE and Rock Salt. by the sack or bushel, for .L sale tow. by Oct. 10. 1857. TIE GRATH'S ELECTRIC OIL.. lust received. 4../ freak supply of this popular remedy, and for sale R. WI L.LIAMS. Front Street, Columbia, Pa. 'May 10,18506 A LARGE atiortnien tof Ropes. all glee. and Irngthe, .11 on hand and (oriole ac THOS. WELSH'S, March 12.1952. No. 1. High •trees. A. Nit:VP lot of WIIA LE AND CAR GREASING OILS, received at, the store of Or ttaln.ertber. 111.INVI L.1.1A MS. Front Street, Columbia. Pa. 11,lay 10,1956 A . SUPERIOR article of PAINT OIL. far 1.11 i• by It WII.LIAM:4. Front Street, Columbia, Pa. May 10, lE5a. TUAT RECEIVED, a large and well selected vralety of Brushes, consisting in part of Shoe. Hair, Cloth. Crumb, Nail, Hat and Teeth Urudtes, and for sale by R. WILLIAMS. March 22,'55. Front street Colombia. Ps. ASUPERIOR article ofTONIC SPICE HITTERS. suitable for Hotel Keepers, far saie by It. WILLIAMS. May 10, 1850. Front street. Columbia. "'DRUM' ET OCIt 'CAI. OIL, al way. on hand. and of J! pale by K. WILLI/I%IS. May 10.1854. Front Street. Columbia, Pa. JUST received, FRESH CA NIPHEiat. and for *ale by IL WILLLIDIS, .Nay 10, ISMS. Front Street, Columbia, Lost and Found. Solemnly, silently, sullenly slow.— It is the mourners— See how they go On through the rains, and the dabbled slush, lit the grey of the day, and the lonely hush Of the wailing winds, weary and weeping SE 50 Stretching above in the comfortless air, For it is winter, And they are bare, Chesnut mid sycamore, gaunt and gray, Overhead, o'er the dead motionless clay Bend down silently, thinking her sleeping *0 39 Through the long avenue echoes the trend Of the crowd, thronging , After the dead, Living, they knew not as I did know, Yet, alas! as they puss, I may not go To mit& my woe with their sadness. Loveliest. and proudest, and gayest of all Those haughty rich ones That swarmed in the hall. Yet for me, lowly, unheeded, unknown, She apart bent her heart down from its throne, To fill me with joy—nud with madness. Like some grand meteor that startles the night With its great glory Transcendently bright, So on my soul-night a moment she shone, Sudden light, darker night, for she wns gone, Gone! Be still, heart, and case this wild beating Yet, I shall follow where they dare not go, Hul those sumo mounters Solemn and slow. For it is creeping up, up to my heart, Rampant pain, through each vein, leaps like n dart Aid nett' pain adds new Joy to our meeting. Now is that wintry sky shut from my sight, All, all is darkness Deeper than sight. Here I no longer nay, mourning alone: Earth, farewell. Hush that bell: make no sad monan Two souls are united in Paradise. The Path through the Snow Bare and sunshiny, bright and bleak, Rounded cold us a dead maid's check, Folded white as a sinner's shroud Or wandering angel's robe of clona— -1 know, I know, Over the tuner the petit through the snow. Narrow and rough it ties between ‘Va,tes ,there the wind sweeps, biting keen, Aud not a step of the slippery road Out marks where some weary foot has trod; 'Who'll go, who'll go, After the rest iu the putt through the snow? They who would tread it must walk alone, Silent and steadfast. one by one; Dearest to dearest can only say: '•\iy heart: I follow thee all the way, As we go, as we go, Each utter each in the path through the suow.n It irtny be under the glittering, hate Lurks the prontine of golden rltiy4, That each !sentinel tree is quivering Deep at its core with the blood of ~pring„ Green binder ore piercing the frozen snow It army be the unknown path %pill tend Never to any earthly end, Die with the dying day obscure, And never lend to a human door, That none know who did go Patiently once on this path through the snow No matter—no mutter! The path shines plain, The pure snow crystals will deaden pain; A hove. like stars in the deep blue dark, Guiding spirits will stand and mark; Let us go, let us go, Whither lieut en leads in the path through the snow! A gaunt man in a gaberdine sleeps du ring the winter months on a mattress placed for him in a cupboard near the entrance hall of The Charles in the Oak Inn; which, by right of him, inscribes upon one of its door-posts this charm, indicative of constant business: 'A Night Porter—Always in At tendance.' When I first saw .this inscrip tion it appeared to me as odd a confusion between town and country as 'Bill Stickers Beware' on a banyan-tree. John Pearmaine is the night porter's name. By day he is half-witted; perhaps he is on that account, shrewder than most people at night. His only relation, a broth er, is an idiot in the county lunatic asylum; But the half of his wits left to John, enables him to live at large. He digs and goes on errands for a market-gardener close by, re ceiving fool for his labor; and at rare inter vals, a shilling. The poor creature is home less; and, in summer time, uses his master's greenhouses as sleeping rooms; or, in fine weather, lies among the cucumbers, it being his charge to watch them and the fruit.— He is an exceedingly light sleeper, and de serves more pay than he receives for this part of his service. Should these lines by any chance come under his master's eye, let him say, Dowsie (they call John 'Dow sie,' which means, in these parts; half-wit ted—daft, as the Scotch say,) Dowsie shall certainly be better paid next summer, if he lives to see it. BIUNEU Co_ Some years ago the life of this afflicted outcast must have been very distressful in the winter season. There was no fruit to be watched, and little work provided by the market-garden. The gardener, indeed was not unkind, and the people of the neighbor hood did not shut up their hearts. Ile never felt the want of ,food except when times were hard, and then the hand of common charity among poor people being closed perforce, Pearmaine took refuge in the workhouse. But when free during cold weather, the unhappy creature wandered always in no little uncertainty as to the whereabout of the good Christian who would next open to him a barn or an out house for the night, or generously welcome him to a warm horse cloth and the right of lying down before the ashes of the house place fire. Igriris. And as sve go, ns we go gritttions. From Household Words The Night Porter. "NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 23, 18.58. The railway station claiming to belong to the next town, lands pas,engers at the dis tance of about a mile from it; and on the roadside between town and station, stands The Charles in the Oak. Passengers to and from the trains go by the door of this mod estlinn in omnibusses, which unite the railway to the Biffin's Arms Hotel. All the night work that the railway brought us, in the the first year after its establishment—and a pretty pice of work the landlady considered that—was caused by one passenger from the mail-train passing at four in the morning, who, having missed or scorned the omnibus, knocked up the house for a glass of hot gin and-water; and even this customer appears to have regarded the demand as a mere pas sing joke. But, in the second year of the railway, night-work was brought by it to The Charles in the Oak, in the shape of a gang—mine host considers that it must have been a gang comprising the select of Lon don burglars—who broke into it; and, with out disturbing a mouse, stole from the bar six tea-spoons, a summer (vulgarly known as a tumbler;) a crown punch-bowl, several hare-skins, a dish of mutton-chops and a pepper-castor. The rest of the glass was fortunately locked up in a chimney cup- I board, and the bulk of the plate was under the host's bed; where it is always kept of nights. I take for granted that no London burglars are among the readers of the jour nals which contains this revelation. After the burglary, _both landlady and chambermaid expressed, after dark in win ter time, unusual alarm. A house dog was, for their satisfaction, turned loose in the passages at night: but he kept the whole establishment awake for a month, chamber maid informs me, by continual howling.— Then, every one who tells the history claims for himself or herself the merit—which be longs truly, I think, to the hostler—of hav ing brought into discussion the superiority of such a watch-dog as poor Dowsie John.— It would be Christian charity, said that somebody, to gtve him settled lodging in the winter, and he was so light a sleeper that the footfall of a cat would wake him up as surely as the bigest gun. The only fault to be found with him as a watcher was that, if some tales were true, ho had been known once or twice to say that he had heard and seen such things as were not to be heard and seen by any of his neighbors: that he had, in fact, like other dowsie peo ple, his delusions. 'We all have our delu sions,' quoth the landlord, looking toward his wife, and, straightway pluming himself on his own infalliable acuteness, he engaged Pearmaine to sleep on his ground•fioor du ring the winter season. Then it was that by a happy stroke of wit, and as a potent charm to allure the traveler or scare the midnight thief, mine host of The Charles in the Oak Hotel, and—no, not Posting House (the railway had scratched that off the sign)—caused to be written in small black capitals upon its door-post, 'A Night Porter Always in Attendance.' I regarded this unhappy night porter, whenever I passed him in his cupboard, with a certain awe; and, when I had him , up into my room—ke had no awe of any body—and sat looking blue, and cold, and , hungry, with his feet upon my fender, :Lila his knees scorched by the fire, a glass of, punch in one of his long bony hands, and a great rump steak in his stomach, he scarce ly seemed to be a man of common flesh and blood. A shimmer of something more or less than reason played over his face; and, as I won upon his confidence, he sometimes made my flesh creep with the things he said. He thinks there is plenty of good life in him for a Night Porter's business, though (turning up his elbows) his bones are so sharp. He sleeps in his clothes, and knows when a step is coming; so that he can spring up at once, and have the door open as soon as the bell is touched; or sooner, for the matter of that. Sometimes people look stir prised; and once a man, who had not rung, took to his heels and ran. It was supposed that that man was a London burglar.— Knowing that they can got in easily in win ter nights, and have a light struck, or a kettle made to boil, at any hour, by the quick hands of Dorsi() John. belated neigh bors often come at strange hours to the Charles in the Oak; and so the good fellow conducted a little branch of business that earned at least his right to a good supper all the winter through. The house and all within it was, indeed, of nights wholly at his disposal; the entire district being assured of John's trustworthiness. He is a man to lie down and die starved upon the floor of a full larder, if the owner of the larder does not say to him, 'Fall to and eatl' Yes, he had seen seen some curious things, he says, as a Night Porter. There did come a thief once—only once; be came un der pretense of being a traveler, hut John soon throttled him. ➢faster came down and dragged him off, but only in time to prevent the vagabond from being throttled before his time. But that was nothing. He would tell me, as a secret, an adventure that he often dreamed over again after it happened, and still dreamed about, and feared he al ways should dream about to the end of his days. One December night, several years ago, it was bitterly, bitterly cold. It had been snowing for two days, but it was not snow ing then. The earth was white, and the air was black, and it was bitterly, bitterly, bitterly cold. Dowel° John lay in his cup board, and was kept awake by the stirring of a cruel wind among the snow. By-and by the wind fell. There was a dead calm, and John slept till a sound of voices at a distance—beyond anybody else's ear shot; but his ears were so very ready--woke bum up again. 'God avenge this!' said a man. 'This way to the Charles in the Oak, I think,' said another. And then one of the two shouted out, 'John Perri - mine, put a light in the window: We can't see the house!' John's light was on the window-sill, and the shutter was thrown back in an instant. They were the voices of two neighbirs— stout young farmers, brothers, who lived with their father, and had been, as he knew, to a distant mnrket•town with cattle. They came slowly, with heavy steps. The candle sent a ray of light across the road; and. through the ray, passed at last the arms of one young man; then, suddeoly, the gleam flashed over the pale. still face of a woman whom the two were carrying, tenderly, rev erently, dead as she was. They brought her in with blessings upon Duwsie John's quick ears. 'Lost in a snow drift; cold and stiff as ice. There may be life in her yet. Quick is the word, Johnny, quick!' The Night 'Porter dragged his mattress. from its cupboard to the feet of the two brothers, and they laid the body down upon it, just within the threshhold of the inn.— One brother darted out again, to bring the nearest doctor to the rescue; and the other, when he saw that Dowsie John had rushed, as a matter of course, to the tap in search of brandy, hastened up stairs to alarm the house. So when John brought his brandy to the corpse, he and it were alone. In stooping down to it, he moved aside the shawl, the folds of with enclosed lung strips of snow: and, under it, saw that there lay fixed in the woman's rigid arms a cold, white baby. The half-witted man knelt down—he never could tell why—and picked away a lump of snow that lay unmelted nn its little bosom. 'Pretty hire he said. and put his gaunt face down, and kissed it on the mouth. Then he turned to the mother with his brandy, and spilt it; because, sud denly, she opened her large eyes, and looked at him. The eyelids crept down over the eyes again, and covered them. John turned away to fill the empty glass. At the same moment landlady and landlord, chamber maid and cook, were hurrying down stairs, the cook with an arm-load of blankets. The bmiy was moved, fires were lighted, bricks were made hot, the set teeth of the dead were parted. To no purpose. The doctor came and declared that life had been fur many hours extinct, putting aside John's evidence to the contrary as a delusion of the senses. The woman might have died of hunger and exhaustion before she was buried in the snow. He could not tell. There was a wedding ring upon her finger. and the child, which, as it seemed to him, had ex Aired several hours later than its mother, was of about seven months old. The rags that covered them had been good clothing ME In the hope that somebody would recog nize this woman, she lay with her chill du ring a whole week at the inn; and the Charles in the Oak itself, by the desire of its landla dy, who would hear nothing about parishes, gave her a decent burial. A week afterward a young man came to the neighborhood, obtained leave to have the grave opened, and was distracted when he looked inside the coffin. He said she was his dearest sister—his bright Phoebe; that she had gone away with a bad husband, who had ill-used and deserted her: that he lost trace of them till he heard that she had set out from a distant place to seek him in some town in this direction; and upon this followed news of the bodies of a woman and an infant having been found here, and then he earner at once. This mini, though he looked poor enough, (and was, indeed, a yciman of small means, named Thomas Halton,) paid all the ex penses incurred by the host of the Charles in the Oak on account of his dead sister, and gave Dowsie John ten shillings—as insane an act in poor John's eyes as the free gift of a million would seem tort' or to me, if sud denly made to us by some chance capital ist. 'I shell face the villain yeti' said Ilaisten, as he galloped out of the inn•yard. 'I would not be in his shoes if you du,' muttered the hostler. 'I would not be in his shoes if you don't,' said Dowsie John. 'I wouldn't go out of the world like him, with such a score chalk ed up behind my door, and never have met with a man willing to rub it off fur me be fore I went.' Two months afterward, at about ten o'clock on one of the last nights of February —it was a dull night, with a mizzling rain that had accompanied a rapid thaw, and the Charles in the Oak was gone to bed for very dreariness—John Pearmaine, before retiring to his cupboard, was at work over his last purchase of a halfpenny worth of new bal lads by the kitchen fire. Intent upon •The Soldier Tired.' he did not notice any sound outside until ho hoard a shot, It mime from the road, but was not very near. lie was on his feet instantly, and made all haste to the front door; but after the first bound into the entrance hall, ho stopped. Across the threshhold, just as it had been on that night in December, Jay—or seemed to lie—his mattress, with dead Phcebe and her infant stretched upon it. The white snow gleamed among the folds of the dress. All was as it had been once before, except that the dead face. rigid and white, with the eyes closed, was turned toward John, and one hand was lifted from the baby, and fixed in a gesture that appeared to bid him stand and listen. He did stand and listen. After the shot he heard words uttered by persons in the distance so rapidly that he could not catch their purport; then a sudden, sharp cry. fol lowed by a voice that moaned, 'Heaven avenge!' The spectre's hand flickered slowly —moved—and pointed to the door. Its opened eyes shone full into the face of Dow sic John. After some minutes a step was heard in the wet road. It approached the door of the Charles in the Oak, but John, fixed by the woman's gesture, stood immovable, candle in hand, his face aghast. The do tr had not been bolted for the night. The stranger pulled the latch, and opening it, briskly en tered. The spectre vanished; but the last part of it that vanished was the pointing hand. The person who suddenly had come in damp out of the mist stood where its form had lain, and shivered suddenly as though a cold blast from the ground had whistled through his bones. 'ldiot!' he said, fiercely-, stare" It wag evident to him, at a glance, that no one eh.° wmi stirring in the Charing in in the Oak; and Julia way for the time an idiot indeed. 'lf you have any sense,' said the stranger, 'remember what I tell you. A man will he found dead in the road to-morrow. It wa• I that killed him; but his blood is not upon my head. He waylaid me in my road from the town to the station, shot at r.•e, and was slain by me in self-defence. That is my name,' he added, throwing down a card; 'I am known to many people in the town.— To-morrow I must be in London. If an in quest be held, give evidence before it, as well as your wits will allow, and say that if they will adjourn over another day, I shall appear to answer for myself before the jury. Take this to keep your memory alive.' The stranger, who was a good looking, brawny man, advanced toward Dowsie John, and tossing a half sovereign into the dish of the chamber candlestick, turned on his heel, and went into the road again, closing the door tranquilly after him. The man had brought much dirt into the hall with him; but where he had been standing longest was a stain over which John bent till he assured himself that it was blood. He tried it with a corner of the card; and sickening at the bright red c o l o r, slunk, trembling and cowed, into his lair. Wonderment followed wonderment next morning at The Charles in the Oak. The night porter had gone to bed, leaving the outer door unbolted; his candles•stick was on the floor of the entrance hall, with the candle burned out in the socket. There was blood on the floor; the name of Mr. Robert Earlby on a visiting curd, marked with a blood stain on the corner; a piece of money was found afterward embedded in the tallow that had guttered down over the candle stick; and John Pearmine, who could have explained all this. lay on his mattress with the sound half of his wits astray. Furthermore, on the came morning, body pierced through the breast, was brought to the Charles in the Oak—the nearest inn— and identified by the people there as that of a man, Thomas Mrlstou, who had come into those parts two months before. A dis- charged gun was found in the hedge near him. and there were obvious signs of a strug. gle in the muddy road. An inquest was held in the inn parlor, at which everything was told arid shown that could be told and shown. The card was declared by a jury man named Philips to be that of a gentle man of good character and most amiable disposition, living near London on a free. hold farm that yielded him a comfortable income: 'He had been at his house,' said this juryman, 'nn the preceding night, and bed left at about a quarter before ton, in the best of tempers, to walk to the train that passes at ten thirty.' 'How long had Mr. Philips known this gentleman?' •Only six months; hut he had, before that time. made the acquaintance of his eldest daughter Mary, when she was in town last spring upon a visit. As her accepted suitor, he had been lately a frequent visitor at his house, and in his character he had reason to place the utmost confidence. He would not fail to write to him at once upon this business.' 'ls you friend bachelor or widower" 'A bachelor.' The jury went to John Pearmaine as he lay tossing in his cupboard; but no kind of information could be had from him. His mind rambled over a great number of wild subjects; but he said not a syllable, insane or sane, of anything that could be supposed to have happened on the previous night. While they were thus engaged, news cam e that Mr. Earlby had descended from the omnibus at the inn door, and was in the parlor waiting for the jury. He was pale and faint, he said, from loss of blood.— Pressing business as well as the desire to submit his wound at once to the attention of his own surgeon, had caused him to per severe in his purpose of returning home on the night in question; but ho was so anxious to avoid every appearance of a desire for secrecy or mystery upon the subject of the unfortunate affair, that he had COMIC back, weak as he was, without eren a day's delay. He had been the more anxious to do this, because he had doubt whether the message left by him at the Charles in the Oak would be delivered by the person whom lie saw there. He explained s.ati,factorily all that had been seen that morning in the inn: the blood was his own, set flowing by a shot which only grazed his ribs, though it bad been aimed at his heart by the man whose body he had on his arrival gone up stairs to see. The person was a perfect stranger. Ile must have been a man well known to the police; fur so desperate an assault ns that which had, in the case, led to the death of the assailant, must have been committed by a footpad of no ordinary sort. After firing at him from the hedge, the fellow had leapt down into the road upon him, and would, as the deponent firmly believed, have killed him, had he not been provided with the sword-stick, which he used in self-de fence. Every circumstance helped to support the statement of the witness; who, after the re i turn of a verdict of justifiable homicide, was complimented by the coroner for the high minded way in which he had come forward, despite all risk to himself, and for the valor which he had shown in the defence of his life against a desperate assassin. Mr. Earlby went to the house of the Phil ipses, and was sought after as a lion by the townspeople. The ball, he said, had re bounded from a rib; his surgeon had found nothing to extract. He was confined, in deed. to bed for a few days at Philips's house with sharp pain on the wounded side; but this was fir a few days only, and then all went well again. Halston was duly buried in unconsecrated ground; and, in a place where nobody had known him, there was nobody to take his shame to heart; except, perhaps. our hostler. This worthy, who cut out a large cross on a piece of an old manger, scrawled under it, with irregular incisions, 'Thomas I (Liston, His Mark,' and set it up by the neglected grave. His only assigned reason was that he must pity a man who had no luck in shooting vermin. Ti) the cook alone the hostler would confide all that he thought about the matter; but site, too, was myste rious, and all that she could say was that she must pity poor Miss Philips. Other migivings were soon set at rest; and, for a time, I fear, the hostess was to be caught now and then regretting the new linen of her own that she had gilen to 'the burglar's Isister' for her grave clothes. iThe poor night porter said nothing, and knew little more upon this sullicet. His illness continued till the spring; and I must say of our hostess, that if she regretted kindness after it was spent, she never grudged in the hour of need. The Charles in the Oak promoted John to a commodious bedroom on the upper floor, and, by good nursing, helped him to regain his former health with to fur portion of his former wit. I Nobody spoke of the affair which had pro duced the painful effect upon his mind. lAlthough incessantly, as I believe, tor muted by phantom shapes and such delu sions as are common to disordered minds, a strange instinct kept ail speech about them • from our poor night p.rter's tongue. He lived alone with his ghost world; and it is only by chance, or upon the strength of a rare confidence, that any one or two of his experiences were revealed. I may bete state that there was one especial reason for preserving silence with Daft John upon the present matter. For the market garden, in which he fund summer employment, lay between the inn and the town. Fifty paces down the road—measured from the gate of the garden, going town-ward—is the spot where Phcebo and her child were found; and against the very bank near which he had been told that she lay covered by the snow drift, Thomas Ralston, when he had tracked her destroyer, stood to shoot him down. Happily ignorant of this, Pearmaine work at his summer duties among nectarines and roses, gaunt as ever. He planted, pruned, and gathered, with the same unearthly shimmer on his face. February long since gone, July was come, and John was caper ing in his uncouth way down a gravel-walk pursued by little Tabby Full, his master's youngest girl, and a few other olive branches. The children wore all dancing to the tune of wedding bells that rung through the pure morning air from more than one of the town steeples. They were arrayed in muslin, very clean, except Tabby, who bad twice been on her knees, embroidering herself with gravel.— All in good time came more little girls in white; and ono or two girls of a middling size appeared by ones and twos and threes to swell the group. Finally, in the very nick, Mr. James Foll, the mnster-gardeuer, in a white waistcoat, establiblied himself as a telegraph station at his gate, and began working in a lively manner. Obedient to signal, all the fairies disap• peered within the great conservatory, each quickly to reappear with a boquet. Mr. Full, in his character of Generalissimo, then formed his troop, and animated them with this harangue: 'why do you 'Now, girls, the happy pair are coming I Show yourselves worthy of your fathers and mothers. Honor the brave and fair, your dear companion. Mary Philips—Mrs. Rob ert Earlby, now—wife to our noble and courageous friend—shall—tho wheels, la dies; they are coming. Now's your time— form /Me across the road, band in hand, and adranee. Peermaine, take this hotpot—my $1,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; $2,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE [WHOLE NITAIBER. 1.434. token of affection to the bride—tell ber so when you give it through the carriage win- d OW The damsels, bent upon their — wedding freak, formed a white chain, like a living wreath of snow across the road:then-march ed forward some fifty paces before meeting the bridegroom and his bride. Of course the postillions stopped, end straightway there appeared at either window a group of smiling eyes and lips speaking confusedly a babel of sweet language, while dimpled hands were raining bouquets down upon the laps of the much honored pair. The bride groom leaned forward, laughed, then looked for half a minute stern; and in the mind of Dowsie John, who stood aside under the hedge will: the great nosegay of the morn ing in his hand, a wild memory was start led into life. Unconsciously, his lips utter ed the cry that had been wafted to him on the night of his great terror. He moaned it faintly, just as it had floated to him through the February night, but struck its every note upon the bridegroom's ear: 'Heaven avenge' Earl by sank hack in the carriage. It was not the voice of a gardener's man in a gaber dine; it was the voice of a dead man, as he believed, or of his blood, crying aloud from the place where he had fallen. The girls and the bride in their glee had not noticed this. Their happy riot was nearly done, and it was now time for John to do his mas ter's bidding. lie stepped, therefore, to the carriage window, and, leaning with his weird face before Mr. Earlby to prevent the flowers to the bride, who sat upon the other side, said, true to his text: nm hidden to present these to you, as a token.' Bratitifulr the Lride. '012! do tell me whq ,:e n t As a token from—' between the bride and bridegroom suddenly appeared to his sick fancy a spectral face—lrom Phoebe llab , ton!' he screamed, and recoiled as a man who had been stung. A blow from the bridegroom, who had risen in wild fury, overtook him as he shrunk away: and the poor creature, staggering back fell under the hedge. lie rose almost directly. Earlby woe coughing violently, with a wedding hand kerhief before his mouth. It was drenched with blond. The horses' heads were turned, and the bridegroom was conveyed without lose of time to the sick chamber. The boll that had not been extracted had indeed glanced against one rib, but it had been only so di verted as to lodge behind another rib. The wound, healed externally, had made only the more certain way within. Sudden emo tion, and the strong exertion of the chest necessary to strike DowsieJohn, bad caused the ball to make a fatal plunge into the lung, and to set the red blood flowing. Hopeless illness, which endured for months, intervened, ns you might suppose, between this accident and death. Those months were not ill-spent by Robert Earthy. So fully did he take upon himself the shame due to his crimes, that while unable to re store, even by his fervent prayers and er d.•nt repentance, the brother and sister and the innocent tendril whose lives were either directly or indirectly on his head, be didthe beat he could, tts I learned afterward, to keep Dowsie John out of the poor•heuso for the remainder of his life. THE BASQUE Satter ea the ma ny heroes whose renown is built upon the mortification of excisemen, is a French Basque named Ganis, to whose fidelity was at one time confided a freight more illus trious than silks,or furs, or the best Mocha. He hod the distinguibbecl honor of smug gling the Princess of Beira, the consort of Don Carlos, over from France to Spain, when she went to be united to her liege lord. On this occasion, finding himself briskly pur sued, he coolly took the Princess on his shoulders, and bore her bodily through the swollen Bidassoa, leaving the French troops to seize a barailesq Italian, whose accent caused Lim to be taken fur the Count do Montemolin. We are not informed whether, the Princess in safety, her guide fell on his knees, and, like a true knight of thu olden time, bogged her to accept his head as some small atonement for his presumption; but it is satisfactory to learn that she did not for get him, for, as the bells rang next morning for her marriage with Don Carlos, she set tled upon him that annuity of 1,800 francs, which to this day makes him a solitary me morial of the gratitude of Spanish Bour bons. Ganis is a megnanimons fellow, as the fol lowing anecdote records: "A boat laden with smuggled goods is sailing towards Bidoche. The revenue officers present themselves to ef fect a seizure. Ganis, surprised, advances towards their chief, who, doubtless mistak ing his intentions, discharges a pistol, load ed with ball, the muzzle against the smug gler's breast. One sign from the latter, all tho officers aro seized, gagged, embarked and conducted to a lonely shore, where they are tied to trees and made ready to be shot. Tl•c leader calms the fury of his companions and forbids them to fire without his orders. He then withdraws, probes the wound with a knife, ascertains that it is not mortal. and having extracted the hall, returns and pre sents it to the officer who had fired the pis tol. 'Learn from a smuggler,' he says. 'to respect the life of thy fellow creatures. I pardon thee: but, do not return.' All were released without injury."