t • WRIGHT, Editor aid Proprietor. VOLUME XXXIII, NUMBER 6.1 :PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDIY MORNING. Office in Carpet Hal, Yorth-wesicorner of fFrcint and Locust streets. Terms of Subscription Igge Copy perm] numj f paiditi ugh-mice, .. .. . if not paid withitt three -Inonthorrom commeneententof the year, 200 -4. Coatts Lib clop-yr. VG; un.criplion recelved lora time than cix J r.contlia; and no paper will he. it k continued unit: all a.rrearagebdrepuld.unleshAt the uptionor the pub -other. ip-'.AIOIIC rn a YU e • e Hutted b'S Irrailauhcpublibb •er a rilik.• • • Rates of Advertising. qua r ,[6. i ties.] one week. •• dues wee Ls. each suhe.•qucn linlertion. 10 [lt i nes]nne week .50 three weeks. IL 00 each 40 loselluenil nisertion . 1.0 rgc rides rtke men tern propornon Al ineralilleolllll wt ! ihe mode to quarierly,lis early or ••n trI)! I ve rtisc rs,c.ll o are strict I)confined o their bu-dne.s. DR. HOFFER, DENTIST. --OFFICE, Front Street 4th door train Locust. over sstylor &McDonald's Honk store Ded.rudn... Pa Erndrunce, saute it. Joll.l'. Phu ograph Gallery. [August 21, 1859 TIMM AS WELSH. JUSTICE OF THE PEKE, Columbia, Pa. • 01 , 1 , 1t:E. w %Vhipper's New Budding,lovt itllttek'c Ilotel.Frotit street. [1:7 - Prompt attenuon given to all business entrusted o tll9 care. November 1b57. H. 11. NORTH, VTTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW Columbia - Collection! promptly mode.i n La ncastei and York !!!!! ICS. Columbia,May 4,1950. J. W. FISTIER, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, Cca:42.233lbiza, ..1E`41.. columtua,-,eptcluber 0, 1 . ,,ti II S, lee B ckius, D. D. S. PR de:flegia the Operative. Su rg and Meehan 1. teal Llepurtnienis of Desitivti y; Omett Li:team street, IiCIWCta be Franklin nonce and Pcvn Office, Columbia, Pa >lay 7, 1e59. Harrison's Coumbian Ink. is a superior article, permanently black. Tr and not corroding the IMn, rift lee had in ant ,antity, at the Vault!). Medicine Store, and blacker yet ts that Eitglil.l. Boot 1 . 0115/1. Columbia. Jew.: 9.1:459 We Have Just Rece!ved D R. CUTTER'S Improved Cliest Expanding utpl t.itoulder lime, for 4eit , l,moo. mud Potent skirt Supporter mad Bruce for I.allte•, tu-t the unfelt, Ilutt a- wanted at tilt.. COMP .1111 d .oe throe tat Faint iy Aledseitte Store. clad Fe:loaa,' (Apra 9. 1.511 Prof. Gardner's Soap Wthe Nell, Eimi:itid Soap ilowe who die 1' V too oto.tio ti (tom the cusp attic, II t. plea-am .to the mid will bake gre.i4e Non , Crain %Voo.en Good-, no lieire.ug. for you get the Jvonb of your money ut the Family Medicine Store. Coluinlou, June II , 1n59. alllllll, or, Bond's Boston Crackers, for I,q liild Arrow ROW valid,. nut) elitittlett—new articles Its Columbia, at the. Fatally Medium.: 6iate, April Id, I),ILDING'S PREPARED CLUE.—The want of 11114r:11 . 1y 1, 1011 111 wiry' Comity, Ulll.l now 11. 0.111 he P.upplied; fur tnendi fig fuinilure, china iwiuti.oinainiqual work, ioy, ke.„ there II nothing fuperinr, We have found it Literal in repairing ninny aritele- which halve been useless for inontitii. You u.:2ein it at the na.ounA:. E1111.1*.‘.11:DICINE: STORE. IRON AND STELL ! 'l'lTSille.erilivr• have received a New and Large etock of el! 10n.1% dud siie. of BAR IRON AND STEEL limy are cumitautly supplied with 'met ut this branch of Ins business. and can famish it to customers la large or smull quantities, at the lossest rums J. SON. Locust street below Sec RUMPLE ood, Colum & bia, Pa. IoGO. Compound , Syrup of 'pi' and he Golden Marl' trrugZie".: cold•, &c. Kr axle ATER'S Compound Concentrated Extract San tpartlla for tbe cure of Surofula t gunge aud all gentfoloutt :ace:loll+, a fre3b at. :re Jut: receiveu and for le hy It. WILLIAMS, Front at, Columbia, Rept. 24, 1E159, FOR SALE. 200 CROSS Friction Matches, very low for cash. lane 23.'30. R. WILLI A NIS Dutch Herring! ANY one fond of u good Herr rig on supplied at S. F EHERI.EIN'S - Store, No. it Locust. at. Nov. I. 1859. ECTS T TON'S PURE 0116 CATAWBA BRANDY no PORE WINE:, e , peeially for AledlCllle3 uJ Sl l Cllll2ltsltlllpurpo-e+, at le /1211.29 1.1.1 IL] MEDICINE, STORE. NICE RAISINS for 8 cts. per pound, arc to be had only at ELIERLINN'S Grocery Store, March 10,1E60. tio . 71 Locust street GARDEN SEEDS.—Fresh Garden Seeds, war ranted pure, of all laude, pl.' received at ELIERLEIN'S Grocery Store, March 10.19C0. No 71. Losu-t street. POCKET BOOKS AND PURSES. A LARGE lot of Fine mid Common PoeLel Books and Purses, at from 15 emits to two dollar.. each. He Idquarters and ;Sews Depot. Columbia, April 14.1 VV. A HEW more of those beautiful Prints lett, Which will be aold cheap, at SAYLOR iv. AieDON ALB'S Columbia. Pa. 13712/111 Just Received and For Sale. 1500 SACKS Ground Alum Salt, in largo or *mull quainu tire, ut APPOIAYS Warehowo. Cana! Bush'. Mays,llo COLD CREAM OF GLYCERINE.---For the cure and prevention fa chapped band.. er.c. For rule at the UOLDEN MORTAR DRUB STORE; Dec.. 2,11359. Front street. Columbia. Turkish Prunes! you r first rate article of Pruries you munt Fo to F. ELIERLLIN'S Nov. ID, IMO. Grocery Store, No 71 Locust st GOLD PENS, GOLD PENS UST received a large and Elle mtsortment of Gold a/ Pen,. of Newton and tinawold'• manufacture, at SA VLOR & Book Store. Agril 14 Front vireet. above lAttemr. FRESH GROCF,R I ES. WE continue lo sell the be.t "ii vy" Syrup. White and Brown Sugars.good Coffees and choice Teas. to be Sad in Colombia at the New Corner Store. op posite Od t Fellow s ' Hull, and at the old stand tbe H. C. roN toms:mil I. Segars, Tobacco, &c. A LOT of first•rate Segars. Tobacco and Snuff will be found at the store of the rube nber. He keeps only a first:rate article. calf O. S. F. EBERI.EIVS Grocery Store. 0et11,13 LOLUF.I st., Columbia, Pa. CRANBERRIES, N"Crop Proms, Now Cltrorhat Oct. 20.119G0. A. At. RAMBO'S SARD4IVES, Wereemerebire Stowe. Refitted Coeur. /LC, just re velvet and for sale by S. F. REWRI.EIRT. Oet. • lee° No. 71 I.oetr.t St. CRANBERRIES. • menses! a (nob lot of Cranberries and New arrnents. at No. 71 LOCUS/ Street. rt. Oat*, IMO. St F. EBEICIA3N griEttious. The Blaming of St. Rosalie ED In the penitential days of Louis XIV., when Madam do Maintenon bad succeeded in putting the belles of his court in high Idresses, and making the princes of the blood walk beside her sedan to mass, the dullness and devotion of Versailles, debarred from all the sweets of scandal, was somewhat en livened by a tale which began to circulate regarding one of madame's most distinguish ed.protegres. The young lady was in her nineteenth year, and would have been a court-beauty, had beauties been then ac knowledged; but the mighty marchioness did not permit such things, Mademoiselle de Bethune had been placed, nobody knew how, under her special protection. The blood ut Sully and of Ruhan mingled in the fair girls vein's. She was heiress tobroad lands in Provence and Languedoc. Her birth, her beauty, and her fortune, might too a commanded one of the best matches on earth, ur at least in France; but Madame de Main tenon and her friends the Jesuits, were determined on making her a bride of Heaven . Ro , alie de Bethune's m .ther had early lost her husband in a duel fought in defence uf her ref utatiun. Subsequently, the bereav ed widow was know as one of the gayest at the court presided over by Madame de Montespan; but having survived youthful charms, and come to the days of De Main tenon and devotion, she was converted to the most ascetic piety, and died, bequeathing her daughter with her whole fortune to the Convent of St. Rosalie. h. had been foun ded by one of the young lady's ancestors, ages before the name of Huguenot was known to the Bethunos. Their patron age had been withdrawn from all convents since the Reformation, when they as well as the %Mans, became Calvin's men; but the nunnery had held its ancient place on one of the dry sandy plains of Provence, leagues away from town or village, and also kept up the strict discipline of the holy St. Benedict. Though of Cal vanistio descent, the heiress had been reconciled to the Church in her early childhood, Madame de Bethune being too much of a court-lady to hold a faith frowned on by Louis le Grand. Even the piety of her patroness had never suspected the young heiress of the slightest leaning to heresy. Nevertheless, a life spent in the Convent of St Rosalie was a prospect which no eloquence could recommend to her taste. In vain the spiritual fathers, old and young, of madam's chosen society, set before her the sinfulness and vanity of the world; the risks her youth ran in the midst of its many temptations; and the special judgements she j might expect for despising her mother's dying wish and oolemn dedication of her to thu saint whose name she had received in baptism. One assured her that no honor able man would marry a woman with such terrors hanging over her; another found out that there had been leprosy as well as heresy in her family, and both would certainly break out with renewed violence in the de. generate branch which dared to refuse the saintly veil; a third reminded her that, with her fortune and talents she had every pros peat of becoming an abbess, reigning over community of obedient sisters, extending the fame and influence of the convent, and probably attaining to the honor of canon ization. MA Neither the wrath to be expected from Heaven, nor the distinctions the church had to bestow, could move the obdurate heiress of the Bethunes. She respected her mother's dying wishes, she venerated the sanctity of the cloister, half her fortune was at St. Rosalie's service; but she had no vocation fur monastic life, and into the convent she would not go. Unfortunately, Pere Duro que, madame's ally and the kings confessor, was first cousin to the abbess of St. Rosalie; moreover, it was a triumph for the faith that the last decendant of two such heretical families should retire with all her wealth to the solitary convent erected by her pious ancestor; yet, to give the sacrifice alai, it must appear to be voluntary; and his ghostly counsellors were suficiently acquainted with the world they despised and censured, to know that ladies rarely hold out against advice and persuasion so fiercely except there be a lover in the case. The usual machinery of espionage and inquiry was therefore set to work. Between her confes sor, her maid, and some inferior instruments, it was discovered that a secret correspon dence had existed for some time between the heiress and the Count d'Ambois. The count was a gentleman of ancient family and very reduced ebtato. The king had made biro an officer of the bedchamber; and his mother had contrived to get him intro duced to Mademoiselle de Bethune, with whom the count said he had fallen in love; the youngheiress believed him; and his moth er connived, encouraged and assisted the ro mance, which was carried on with great pri vacy, for fear of the mighty marchioness.— This being n.ado out the necessary steps were taken. Tho count and his mother were ad monished to break off the affair, with a prom ise of place and pension if theyobeyed, and refire: de cachet if they refused. In conse quence, letters arid looks of hair were return ed with all speed. The count found out-that his heart had never been affected. Ho set Forth on the same day on a tour of Italy and Spain; and hie mother . employed her credit to redeem out of the betide of a money-lend. "NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 7, 1861. ing goldsmith a richly wrought crucifix, eet with precious stones, and believed to contain a chip of the true cross, which she forthwith presented to the convent of St. Rosalie. The crucifix was an heirloom in the Imbuis fain. ily, and according to the tradition of that noble house, had been presented to its fir , ' marquis by the famous Doge - Dandolo, flow the spoils of Constantinople. Their tar...- and quarterings were engraven on its re verse; it had descended feora marquis 0' marquis with the chateau and estate: long after these were gone, it served tlo family necessities with the said gold,mit,, an d his congeners. On this oec.isi, n, it served their fortune also. The nuos of Sr. It 'SA lie sent baci theiy thanks, and partly promised the offices of their patrone:s we. Madam) d'Ambois was taken into court favor, and gut a pension; her son was made keeper »! the king's wardrobe; yet the point was MO gained. In spite of the f (et that she W.I forbidden the court, (hot people had order not to visit her, that her confessor placed her under an interdict at once from the mas and the theatre—the heiress of the Bethune, held out, till her spiritual advisers agreed that the Huguenot blood was in her, and some pretext was sought fur sending her to the Bastile. On the very day in which she had been admonished of this design, by guard being privately placed over tier in her family hotel, which she had continued to oc cupy with the old maitre:fee and servants, the heiress was sitting in one of the great so loons, musing over her unlucky wealth. which left her no choice between the Bastile and the convent. Of course, her entire household had been long in the service of her enemies, and acted as so many spies.— They were all apprised of the steps about to be taken, and rather satisfied that thing' were coming to a climax, when the three musketeers took their station at the foot of the grand staircase. But even the porter was sure ised when, in the fall of the win ter twilight, a monk presented himself, and demanded leave to speak with mademoiselle's confessor. The reverend 1.)))) r had been installed within doors in the deceased lady's time, and knew better than to give up his vantage-ground. The monk was introduced to his study without delay, and the confessor was somewhat startled when he presented n letter from the vicar-general, commanding that Brother Cyprian of the Society of Jesus should be permitted to speak privately with Mademoiselle de Bethune. The reverend father had seen letters from the vicar-general before; the present was his hand and seal, and Brother Cyprian looked grave and trusty enough to be employed on such a mission. He was a man about mid dle height; no one could have guessed his age, but there was nothing of decay about him. His frame looked thin and wiry; his face had a fixed expression, like that given by death; and his eyes, which were at once sunken ar.d fiery, had a keen searching pow er in them which the confessor did not care to meet. According to the rules of the so ciety, Brother Cyprian was his superior fur the time. The monk evidently knew it, and would give no information touching his mode of procedure with the refractory heiress.— The confessor had hoped fur the glory of her reclamation; but the vicar-generd's • com mand must be obeyed, and Brother Cyprian was conducted to her saloon. The maid, who got absolution for peeping through the keyhole, saw them together, but could catch neither word nor mean leg, except that her mistress looked first frightened, then thoughtful, and at last resolved; while the monk's face never altered; and the pious femme declared in her confession that his eyes seemed to look through the door into her very heart. The conference did nut last long, but it proved effectual. Within half an hour after Brother Cyprian's departure, which was accomplished so silently the mus keteora only saw him pass, mademoiselle announced her determination to fulfill tier mother's dying wishes, and take the veil of St. Rosalie. The confessor ground his teeth over the honor and triumph ho had lost, but at the same time made a vow of extensive tapers to the shrine of St. Cyprian, to whose special interference he attributed the re markable success of the monk who bore his name. Madame do ALtintenon and her pious coadjutors were more sincerely de lighted, though no inquiry could discover who the envoy was, or whence he came. It was oven reported that the vicar•general, in his first surprise, had positively affirmed he never wrote the letter, and knew nothing of Brother Cyprian, which it was not thought politic to persevere in, though the king him self suggested that a miracle might have taken place. What matter?—the spiritual victory was gained; and the lands in Pro vence and Languedoc secured, for the last descendant of the Rohans and tho Bethunes took the veil, and became a nun in the Con vent of St. Rosalie. The circumstances which induced her to take the vows, and to which a strong tinge of the miraculous was imparted in the pro vinces, gave the event immense interest.— 1 It was not permitted to subside. The ab bess and nuns who welcomed with open arms this valuable accession to their com munity, soon began to publish such tales of the devotion and austerities of Sister Rosa lie—the nun had chosen and been permitted to retain her saintly name—as made their convent famous throughout the south as the dwelling-place of a probable addition to the calendar. It was asserted that, for weeks together, •tsbe never slept at all; that ber prayers ascended night and day from their chapel altar; that the only bed she would consent to occupy was a flat tombstone; and her use cf the scourge and haircluth, her prolonged fasts, and exhortations to du like wise, created a pious ferment of emulation• an,lng the sisterhood. Then came tales of .t still more marvelous character; lights were seen in Sister Rosalie's cell which no e wilily hand hail kindled; voices were heard cmiiersing with her when she prayed alone in the chapel; a plant in the convent gar den, believed to be .lying, revived and put iiirtt new buds at her touch; and a nun en;,.•, bed-ridden, benefitted so much by her prayers that she rose and walked to matins. These miracles increased in number and magnitude as they went abroad. The pow• ers 1/1 Sister Rosaile brought visitors flout village and cameau to the convent. To se cure an interest in her prayers for family hopes and troubles, the rich offered gifts to the altar; the peasantry to the cellar or lar• •ter; and hundreds who labored under such vhable difficulties es a withered limb or an unmanageable sure supplicated healing from ihe touch of her holy hand. The list of mir acles consequently extended every day, though numbers were disap• Mated fur want of faith. The convent bade fair to be the richest in Provence. Its fame reached ailleq; and as a weight of sanctity w:l4 just then Wanted to cast into the scale against P,rt Royal and the .Tansenists, the whole court turned out in pilgrimages to the she is of St. Rosalie and her chosen nun. Mad ame de Maintenon did not take the journey, neither did the king, fur it was winter, and very bad weather; but they sent a great Abundance of needlework from St. Cyr, and 14 the popular preachers came out that Lent on Sister Rosalie and her miraculous con versions, they gut their full share of the g'rrry. Tho convent was still in the full blaze of its fame--the pilgrims were talking as much ;ibout the riches of its chapel as of the mir acles wrought there—when another blaze startled the scattered dwellers on the barren plain around it; for one dry, breezy night, three hours before the ringing of the matin bell, the .sy was flushed with a glare red der than that of the coining day, and the Convent of St. Rosalie was a flaming pile before the honest peasants could understand the cause. Substantial as it looked, the greater part of the old fabric had been tim ber, dry as time and that southern air could make it. Tire fire, therefore, made such ' rapid progress, and the hamlets were so fir from the nunnery, that when tho nearest neighbors reached the spot, the burning roof and part of the walls had fallen in, and out of the whole establishment no living creature escaped but the portress, the wood cutter, and the convent dog. Their habita tions being in the outskirts, they could give no account of the fire but that the convent was in flames when the glare and the noise roused theta from their sleep. It was too late to make their way into the inner pas sages; they thought they hoard cries ming ling with the roar of the flames; but none of the sisterhood ever appeared, and the mini ele-working nun must have pecished i.:O mg the rest, for she was praying that night in the chapel, and it was first consumed. The wonders of the terrible calamity did not and here. Though guarded by the proviucial poliee, and diligently sought over, no re p liant of the c ,stly plate or jewels with which the altar had been enriched could be found in the charred ruins. Gem., gold and sil ver were known to be iocombustible; but they had disappeared, though the ashes of the poor nuns were partially gathered. Nu inquiry, no investigation could throw light on the mysterious fire. The portress and the w..od-cutter, though examined by bish ops and priests, had no other story to tell; nor was any addition to their testimony ever obtained, except that of a solitary shepherd, who stated that on the night St Rosalie was burned a pair of mounted travelers, with black horses of unusual size, rind huge sad dle-bags, had passed him on the heath and inquired the nearest way to the sea. All along the southern coast those travelers were watched and searched for in vain. The shepherd could give no account of their faces; he said the moon was under a cloud when they passed. The peasantry began to find out that Sister 11)s:die's miracles had not been genuine; a question arose among them regarding the agency by which they had been performed. Tho unaccountable fire did not seem to them an event of saintly origin. Nothing could be made of it, and it might encourage heresy; so the authorities temporal and spiritual, did their host to get tho convent forgotten, nn 1 the peasants of the plain took care to avoid, its ruins after nightfall. Years passed away. The Crunt d'Am bois and his mother kept the place and pen sions they had gained by giving up the heir ess of the Bethunes; but though devout and obsequious as the reigning,marchioness could desire, they never advanced a step further in court favor. There was no mote use for them. The strange and terrible conclusion of the business in which they had served cast an ominous shadow on them: thn peo ple in power did not care for the instruments in such a work. and what was worse no eligible woman would hold parley with the count on matrimonial subjects. Little profit had been made by what Madame d'Ambois was in the habit of calling their great sacri fice; however, elm was not the lady to be forgotten: and while just keeping clear of being troublesome enough to get banished the court, her claims were so often turd so I variously presented to royal notice, that ' length by way of ponstuning them off, her son was appointed one of the attaches to the 1 special embassy sent to Berlin, where the Elector of Brandenhurg was about to he crowned first King of Prussia, and madame. wens permitted to accompany him. It is said that Berlin was never so full of odd and unaccountable people tient the splen did coronation of the first Frederick. Ad venturers from all corners of Europe crowd ed to the err pital of the new kingdom. 'fru ditions toil; exist of the high play and fatal duels which came off in the interludes of the royal festivities. The latter were on a scale so magnificent and prolonged as to tire the eyes and exhaust the patient-a of everybody concerned, except the new-made king, whose love of romp pageant was insattable.— They wound up with a masked ball ant the palace, to which all comers were welcenn.• • I and where, consequently. the police would be in attendance to - The company was immense, and the great salons a sight to he remembered, filled as they were with all vie rich ies of costume. Madame d'Anthois rind her son were there. The old Parisian dame though verging oti sixty. did not think Ito:- „sir p a st a mask; an I it wag with many complaints of the niggardly allowance as sig wed them, that they tl•911111,! , 1 the charee :ere of a nit tied a 11.1 , 1.114 the lea-t. they went in a hire I earrinee. in•ce I. unnoticed, with the miney throne Nob •ty knew them, and they ;thew nob ,h ad T,trt genttlem en and lashes of the emba.ey were all present; but the count and his mother had come from court tiller a cloud, and they did not consider it nee :try to acknowledge their existence anywhere. much less at a masked ball. The count was an agreeable man, nod Iris toothier could talk vies erly: but that night the damp of their fortunes fell on them. In spire of masks and the best in tentions, they failed to interest anybody in the gay crowd, were pronuncing it a very dull evening. end talking of going home a little after midnight. when a voile! Sultana whose magnificent Eastern costume end matchless eyes. flashing through two slits in her teil, had been the admiration of the whole assembly, 1 . 111110 up to the corner where they stood, entered at once into conversa tion after the manner of masks. and. ne might be expected, addressed her-elf especially to the count. It was a latly'e voice, and a fine toned one. A small awl beautiful hand. ev idently displayed for the purpase. gavel further assurance of a true &liana. Per haps her son had made an impression On some German princes.; at all events he could take care oft imeelf; and Madame d'Ambnis discreetly retired into a quiet Hint with an old miner, who, she had reason to think, was a [kneel-inn nobleman. very tired of the masquerade. and waiting for 111$ car riage; but she kept her eye and ear also, on the pair; heard the sultana offer to confess to the monk, and Inn. him foliate her throngh the suite of Rebls, till she lost sight of them nt a small side-door, covered with rich dm perv. and leading to a private cabinet, where Fred rick hail given nudience to his favorite npholsterers, and debate] questions of dress and deeeration for thew,. crowning Madame watched and waited long, but they did net reappear. The miner loft her, and' went his way. She got into other chats., and did some small flirtation with the help of her court-training and some talent for the work. in spite of years and adverse fortune. But; hours passel, the company began to grow thinner, and still there was no return of her son. She explored the rooms in search of t him and the sultana; no trace of either could she find. There might be modes of ogress., from that cabinet with which else was not acquainted. Oat of the side door they had not come. There might be snares laid for 1 the count, though he was poor and prudent. It was six in the morning, and madame would wait no longer. She made her way boldly to the cabinet; the rich drapery coy- 1 ered the doorway; it was but it step from the great saloon, yet nobody had thought of turning in there. A single lamp lighted the small but elegant apartment; it was hung with green damask, and festooned with flowers, and there was her son, alone, reclining on a sofa, with his monk's frock drawn closely around him. He seemed asleep; but as madame stepped up to wake him, her feet splashed in something on the floor; it was blood! The mother's shrieks brought company, servants, and police into the private cabinet, and the count was found reclining in tin easy attitude, but stiff and cold, with n dagger driven deep into his left side. Its hilt was a crucifix richly wrought in gold, set with precious stones, and bear ing on its reverse tho arms and quartering', of D'Ambois. It was the very gift with which madame had propitiated tho powers of the court and the nuns of St. Rosalie,— The unfortunate woman knew it at first sight, and the circumstance was believed to have upset her brain, for she lost her rea son from that hour, and would never talk of anything but the burned convent and Sister Rosalie. No research or inquiry after the veiled sultana was spared, but trace or tid ings of her were never gained by the police in Prussia or elsewhere. One curious fact, however, came to light, which only involred the affair in deeper mystery—it was discov ered that sundry jewelers and goldsmiths in the large German towns had purchased front passing travelers, supposed to be foreign noblemen, valuable plate and other costly articles known to have been presented to the convent in Provence. which, though no body cu.uld tell how, must have escaped the burning of St. Rosalie. 81,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; 82 00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE The CH -, final Witness A LAWYERS STORY. In the spring of 1.6.18 I was calle•1 to Jackson, Alabama. to attend omit. Levitt; been engaged to defend a young man wht had been accused of rubbing the mat]. ; arrived early in the moral, g, and immedi ately hal a long conference with my client. Tue stolen mail bag bad been recovered, a• well as the letters from which the moat? had been rifled. These letters were given inc for examination, and I returned them to the prosecuting attorney. Having got through my private prehmistaries at, . n ton, and RS the e.n.e votald not 'come • f bet . ..re the next day, I went court the afternoon to see what was going 0n...- The first case that came up was ono of theft. arid ine prtwa•er w.l.- it ywin% all I not 01.111• than seventeen years of age• named Eliza beth Madworth. She was very pretty, ant , bore wnieh we st d,,ta i“ a au'!" Sue it been %A 0. 1 Mg profusely, but as she found man, eyes upon het, she bee tme too ft ightened t. eep m Die e.iiip .zi tt her set forth that she 4..billitrs from . M. N -eby. an 1 111.! CII•t! ,CIII on I faun 1 that thi. Mrs. N.t+ehy, a wealth 3 wi AL! t •t% .a. wee the girl's .lee I si.• into). reace in the trible.t terna..i. lii eireuni AtaIICCS %Vert: I,,ri against her. A hundred .toitais I. hu k notes had been stolen Iron• her inistresi' r ohm, an I the w..is the unit one that h.t.l access there. At this juncture, when the mistress VI /16 up•ni the #4.1114i. :1 v uiig man can e and caught me by the arm. Ile was a Ett I.•ukutg man, told tpg tear, ~COul in lie eyes. "They tell me sou are a good lawyer," he whispered. "I am a I.lwyer," I answered. "Then do s.tve her! You certainly c do it, for she is innocent.' "Is she your sister?" "No, sir," he added, "but, bu—" !acre he hesitated. •'llas she no counsel?" I asked. "Nme that's good for anything—nobody that'll do anything for her. 0, save her, and I'll give you all I've got. I can't give you much, but I can raise something." I reflected a moment. I cast my eyes to wards the prison. , r, and she was at that mo ment looking at me. She caught my eye. and the volume of bumble entreaty I read in her glance resolved me in a .Thunent. artote and went to the girl, and asked if elms wished me to defend her. She said yes. I then informed the cuurt that I was ready to enter into the ease and was admitted at once. The loud murmur of satisfaction that ran quickly through the room told me whore the ~ympathies of the people were. I asked for a moment's cessation that I might speak with my client. I wont and sat down by her side, and asked her to state candidly the whole case. She told me she had lived with Mrs. Naseby nearly two years, and had never any trouble before. About two weeks ago, she said, her mistress lost a hun- dred dollars. "She it f •om her drawer," the girl said to me, "and asked me about it. I said I knew nothing about it. That evening I know Nancy Luther told Mrs. Naseby that she saw me take the money from the drawer —that she watched me through the key. hole. Then they went to my trunk and found twenty-five dollars of the missing money there. But, sir, I never •u It, and somebody must have put it there." I then asked her if she suspected any one. "I don't know," she •aI.I. "who could have done it but Nancy. She has never liked me because she thought I was better treated than she She is the cook. I was the chambermaid." She pointed N nay Lather out to me.— She way a stout. buld•ftccd girl, somewhere about five and twenty years old, with n low forehead, small grey eye-i. a pug nose and thick lips. I caught her glanco at once, as it rested on the fair young prisoner, and the moment I detected the look of hatred which I read there I was convinced that she was the rogue. "Nancy Luther did you say that girl's name was?" I asked, for a new light had broken in upon use. "Yes, sir." "Then rest easy; I'll try bard to save yon.'s I left the court, room and went, t.. the pros- ecuting attorney and asked him for the let ters I bad handed him—the ones that had been stolen from the mail bag. Ile gave them to me, and having !elected one, I re turned the rest and told him I would see be had the one I kept before night. I then re turned to the court room, and the ease went Dirs. Naseby resumed her testimony.— She said she entrusted the room to the pris oner's care, and that no one else had access there save herself. Then she described about missing the money, and closed by telling how she found twenty-fire dollars of it in the prisoner's trunk. She could swear it was the identical money she bad last, in two tens and one five dallar bank notes. "Mrs. Naseby," said I, "when you first missed the money, had you any reason to believe 'hat the prisoner had taken it?" "No. sir," she answered. "lied you ever before detected her in and dishonesty?" 'No, sir." [WHOLE N UMBER 1,6R0. "Should yuu bare thought of ecarchuig her trunk land not Nancy Luther utivieel and informed your' "No, air." Mrs. N.iheby left the stand and Nan, y Luther took her place. She came up with a bold look, and upon me she cast a defiant gla• cl . , a• if to toy, ..crap we it 30u She gave her evidence lie followk.: She said that on the night the money was taken, she saw the prisoner going up stairs, and horn the sly manner in which she went up she suspected all was not right. So she followed tier up. ••Elizabeth went to Mrs. Nasehy's room and Mint the door after her. 1 stooped d •wn and looked through the key hole, and saw her take out the money and ~ut it to tter 1 . 1101 ntie stooped !own .111.1 pielted ttp the 11111111. awl at. 1 elli4 I at she wa4 e ,, ,Foz.nit 1 harried away." Then alio went on, told how ahe had in formed her mistress of this, and how AO ,u•0p,..al to :-edtrett 111.1)411r:4 frnlik. I called M. Naseby ai the stand /I. ' •/.4 nal./la/ 1..2 tom.% naVe y. un.elf aLd he pri. h nl :11 . /.1 , 14 f., ymir raorn." "N,mc coup Nancy Llther Lava the room if she wislie.l?" "Certainly, sir; I meant that no OrIC elso ;my tight thero." I :aw that N lsrhy, tllnngh fla t ;any t har' woman. vrlv. snntatrhat tomv6; by p z, hpt 11.4 ..ory "Could your cook hire knrrtro, by any means in your kuurrledw, Where your money was?" '•:,•, , 1:: I r ,he hapi often rt , one n my r iota while I was there, and I have oft( n :tiven her mnney to buy pr•n•isiona of iii men whn happened to come along; with their wagons." "0.4t1 un,rc rpie4iion. "11 .; a y'•tt known of Orr, prisoner'.- hating iled any money ...ince this will stirlen':" —No. sir." I nuvr called Nancy Luther back. and she began to tremble a little, though her look r... bold and defiant at 4 over. "Miss Luther," I said, "why did you not inf“rm your mi.treqs ut unue of what you had seen, with )ut waiting fur her to ask about the lust money?" -Because I could not at once make up /iiy iiiilid to expose the pour girl," the an ...wered promptly. “You ony you looked through the keyhole .ind Raw her take the roJney?” "Yea, ai r." • "Where did she place the lamp when did an?" "On the bureau." "In your testimony you said she stooped down when she picked it up. What du you moan by that?" The girl hesitated, and finally she said she did not mean anything, only ih.tt she picked up the lamp. "Very well," rail I, "how lung have you been with Nlr4. Nagoboo • "Not quite a year, sir." "How much - doei 4iP pay you a week?" "A dollar and three quarters." "Have you taken up any of your pay since you have been there?" "Yes, sir." "flow much?" "I don't know, sir." "Why dor.'t you know?" "How should I? I hare taken it at differ. cot times, just se I wanted it, and kept no account." '• Tow if you had wished to harm the pris oner could you hare raised twenty-fire dol lars to put in her trunk?" "No, sir, oho replied with virtnons indigna tion. "Then you have not laid up any money since you have been there?" ' "No, sir, only what Mr— Nitemby may own . me." '•Then you did not have any twenty-fire dollars when you came there" "No, air, and what's ot.•re ; the money found in the girl's trunk was the money Mrs. Naseby lost. You might have. kh"wn that if you'd remembered what you asked her." This was said very sarcastically, and was intended as a crusher upon the idea that she should have put the money in the prisoner's trunk. II .werer, I was nut overcome en tirely. "Will you tell me if you belong to this State?" do, sir." "In what town?" She hesitated, end for an instant the bold look forsook her. But she finally answered, "I belong to Somers. Montgomery.oounty." I neat turned to Mrs. Naseby. • „ "Du you ever take a receipt from your girls when you pay them?" "Always." - "Can you send and get one of tbectlfor me?" "She has told you the truth, sir about the payments." said Mrs. Newby. "0, I don't doubt it," I replied, "but par ticular proof is the thing for the court room. So, if yon can, I wish you would - procure the receipt." She said she would willingly go if the court said so. The court did . no, an she went. Her dwelling was not fer*Off, and she soon returned and handed me four re ceipts, which I took and examined. They were signed in a strange staggering band by the witness. "Now, Naney Luther," I said turnin g to the witness. and speaking in a ciniielc. start. tons, at the stunetinutiodkinglierliteritly o me eye. ••piease tell the aotiristitud And tell roe. where you got Ida letienftidise dollars, rot sent in you intetzlostinthisiee in Ilotnetir