:oveliness of that morning to suggest t houghts in the hearts of the vi even. Yet there was a deed of developing in their hearts. I;:ealsi,i,...t came and vent. The I ' s trangers bad left the breakfast Socn, like housebreakers, they stealthily back. For what ?--= teas nobody of more importance : Lue than a serving man, whose skin, was a shade darker than their „—whose soul, as the event proved, isf)itelt whiter•, and larger, and • r than each or all of them possess- Whom they had received the I .:,taiiiies of the board but a moment What could they want of He was busily arranging the :,--Jered table, and too honorable to the villainy of men whom ho fed withhis own hands. They. ,-:;rol the room, cat like, coward- , e . The back oftheir unsuspecting was turned toward them. They 3 + upon him and pinioned his to his side. Bit their triumph WLS transient—he burst his bonds as if had been stubble, and beat back .; i s„ilants with the very energy of despair , One against three, he , z h t for the dear boon of liberty ts:ev fought, tvhorn we revere as martvrs. lie dealt some heavy blows ...71lutnanity that day, but against fearful odds what could he do? Tr n ev struck him down with billies, ri stamped upon him as he lay help :!s' and bleeding. But with miracu ::s strength he again shook them off tr.LI escaped into the glad . sunlight. Fa:nt, and bleeding, he totteted down the river-side, pursued by the cow :73 strangers, with knives and pistols. He gained the river and plunged_in, r .-,sing death rather than Slavery. pur.uers; with a barbarity that -.-at have moved even a savage to ed bullet after bullet at the head :i!Le unresisting man, until his death sewed inevitable, when they retired. I;.eding from pistol shot and bruseS, ,Ira7geti himself ashore and fainted. Tail the crowd that had gathered round. one, more bold than the rest, .r.ciertook to befriend the fainting fu ;::11c. He lifted him up and put ...:nes on his naked and bleeding iv. For this noble act the three Nwarcily ruffians threatened to have life, and forced him to desist at the =lnk of the revolver. But all faint bleeding as the fugitive was, they cared not attack him; stag;ering like ir I,kaa min, be fled acr.,ss the fields t:i was safe from his pursuers. Gut r."rit great crime had this nrin r. , ..ittedl Crime? Ay, surely none r , .:2i;ives from justice may be sh , t IISI like dogs, in thii free land—this :1 , 1 of the free and home of the I:7zre! if,: crime was that for which Ki : rg ,rge Outlawed the men of '76—oct ley loved life less, but because ev . 0.-;:t1 LIBERTY more than life. How much more sublime was the t:Aea choice of the patriot HENRY, the part: of this fugitive from boi's -;.:d in a free land and by free , nen's 1.7.:..k as he held his bloodthirsty per t!: tors at bay—every action elo ta: with that most subline resola :: :--''LIBERTY, OR DEATH!" !:',d this wrong was done at your - e:y door, good sir; its shadow tell a prophet's warning upon your rai:le. Our blood boiled t=en, as it does now, and we called ?:•iir attention to the unparalleled out :7e that had been perpetrated in the trr,a and under the unreproving eye a free Government. But not a 7,rd is denunciation of that Lynch I.la proceeding, not at the hands of ':evleFs fanatics," but sanctioned and by the National Administra- did you vouchsafe the pub ir. tat, THE HERO OF WILKESBARRE! " - ±Till:,iting the loftiest and sublimest _srn that the men of this age have' ; 'Ked upon—BlLL, whose only c:imes *ere a dark skin and a love !Jr Libor surpassing that for Life—was •elled at your door, and you, and !:Ir brethren of the Democraticpress, rz: dumb, silently assenting! Thete was no vision of outraged •=sate to provoke the wrath of "sum -ter patriots" then. But it was re lerTed for the day when a high Court 1::uld dismiss without punishment, the who denounce the law under which :t, outrage was perpetrated! The American people will sit in ::dzraent upon the deeds of their ser taztt one day.— WellAboro Azitator. " IT was runt that did it!" shrieked rte Wretched murderer, Daily, as he "rilheil in the wild agony of fear. poor wretch was afraid to die. o , li tpproacning doom unmanned him. /it' clung to life with all the strength fearful delirium of the most abject ett• Shaking, as with the palsy, and Pmuily calling upon his God, the zrierer was launched out upon the L ' 44 eo ocean whose gloomy waves t ttas nub , to the grave. In the bnef ''tt(is at the commencement of this P,trtgraph, the whole history of this t . t t!xcteristi c tragedy of the rum traf c I S told. The murdered wife_ and ` t elmsband who slew her, are both at t'l.otiler tribunal. The patient people *lll Pay the expenses of the trial and t xecutio n , and like a bubble on the It 'eato, this one of the constantly oc e'.'llog scenes of a kindred character, be forgotten. And yet, while the :$ 1 :orld stanus,_i_ that voice from the serer will will wail out its startling scull- cation against the great cause of mur der. And will the people, so ready to hang the principal of the crime, arrest, try, aud condemn the accessery From nearly every gallows which casts its shadow by the very doors of our school-rooms, churches, and homes, that same voice comes in judgment against the rum traffic and the people who sustain it. It comes from the alms-house ; from the jail ; from the house of Refuge ; from the prison dungeon; from the dingy hut where hearts beat in unutterable Ivo. Within the borders of our own city and county, how often that brief sen tence could be written. Whole fami lies have been ruined, and are now in their graves. •Rum did it ! In our homes, and in our jails, our citizens have died in madness, drenched in their own hot blood. Rum did it ! Poor Graves is in his grave. He would have died a sober man, but could nut. The licensed butchers of this Christian city robbed him by night and by day, and killed him by inches. Wool weaver went from a very respec table grog shop in the city, and lost his life upon the It. R. track: Tupper died the same bloody death. Miller went from Williams' drunkery,- laid down on the frozen ground, and died. Robinson froze within sight of his own home. " Charley Young," an excel lent mechanic and naturally a good hearted man, died a vagabond. The Watsons, with wealth and position, fell before -the same scourge. A poor working woman gets. rum at Brown's tavern in Conquest, and dies,out under the cold sky of night'. A citizen went from Morgan's drunkery in Fleming, and died from exposure to storm and cold. 'Wilber, young, talented, gen .tlemanly, and esteemed, was slaugh tered on a wager. On—but it were useless to enumerate the list. Every town has been robbed in our county. Blood—blood!—utoon! is every Where. It cries out from the beam, from the open field, from the slaughter-houses, and from the highway. Rum did it ! Were some sober, strong-handed vil lain to commit the crimes in our midst, which so-called 'respectable men have committed by authority and in open day, thy would have been tortured at the "stake. l‘len were raving mad to wreak summary vengeance upon Bill Freeman. -Many of the same men talk, and vote to sustain a class of butchers, by the side of which the red-handed negro assassin would be an angel of mercy. Freeman did not first clutch the substance of his vic tim=—did not rob women and chil dren of bread, and give desolation and hopeless sorrow therefor—did notlook coolly on fur years and see his victim waste away under his blasting haed.. The rtimsellers of this city and county, past and present, have killed their handle& to Bill Freeman's one. T 1 e hand, smoking as it- was in the hot heart's blood which jetted from the bosom of infancy, znaniiwid and old age, will not appear redder in the sight of God, than the hands of many now in our mid 3t. God have mercy upon the rum seller 1 The- Maine Law will be a blessing to him, as well as his victim. —Cayuga Chirf. All the world seems to have caught the We. , tetn fever. We took it once, and it lasted us some years. There is, however, a remedy for it. Go West. We did so. We went iu the spring and staid until summer. It curedus.—Laurencc Courier. OBITUABT Thou hast all seasons-fur thine own, 0 death.' DIED—On Tuesd ty, rth ult.; in Biughatn, Poster Co., Pa., Miss Peens:see E. kooks, aged years " Sister, thou oast mild and lovely, • Gentle as :he summer breeze; Pleasant as the air of evening, - When it floats among the trees. " Yet again we hope to meet thee, When 'he day of life is lied ; Then in Heaven wish joy to greet thee, Where no tarewell tear is shed." Tee, when a few more .ehort years have rolled away, then shall we be freed from the frail pr.sou-house that now rivets us to earth, and soar away to meet thee in that far-off. happy land, where parting never comes, and fade.ess flowers forever boom. AUGUSTA, Very Important Information. Dr. JONes, one , ot the most celebrated phy sicians in New-York, writes as follows: Dr. Cc isrts—Dear :—Having witnessed the excellent effects of your lirocss• OR Is- H•LING HYGEAN VAPOR AND CHERRY SYRUP. in a case of chronic Brenchities, and being much in favor of counter-irritation in affec tions oldie throat, bronchial tubes, and lungs, I can therefore cheerfully recommend your Medicated Apparatus as being the most con venient and effectual mode of applying any thing of the kind I have ever seen. No doubt thousands of persons may be relieved. and many cured, by using your reMedies. Yon are at liberty to use this in any way, you may think proper. Respectfully, yours, &c., C. JOHNS, M. D., No. 609 Houston atreet, New-York. Prof. S. CENTER. writes as follows: GENTLEMEN,-1 have recently had occasion to test your Cherry Syrup and Hygean Vapor in the case of chronic sore throat, that bad re• fused to yield to utber forms of treatment. and the result has satisfied me, that, whatever may be the composition of your Neva-scion, it is no imposition, but an excellent remedy. I wish, for the sake of the afflicted, that it might be bruuk, , ht within the reach of all. Rev. Doctor CHEEIMEL writes; Naw-YOBS, Nov. 15,1854: Dear Sir think highly of Dr. Curia's Ilygeana, as a remedy to diseases of the throat and longs. Having had some oppor tunity to teat its efficacy, d am convinced that it is a Moat excellent medicine, both the Syrup and the inhaling application to the chest. The Hygeana is for sale by. D. W. Sessom, Coudersport. - • 7-37 6m Putnain's Monthly. I, es-turning the ptiblication of rtifflll'S MONTHLY, it is only accessary for tut to refer to the special notice issuol, with our hearty approval, upon the first of April. by the late publishers. The Magazine will aim at greater excellence in the direction hitherto pursainit and, without being a partisan, will hold cidrd opinions, and will treat all public ques tions from a humane and truly notional point of view. In all the other varied departments of a Monthly Mtst - -.titine, it will hope to amuse, instruct. and 'benefit; to criticise generously Ittlt justly ; and to attract to its passes. as it has already done, the contributions of ab;n men in every walk of Literatur,•. Science, and Art: The past volumes ale the Iffst assurance that nothing ofiensive to the purest morality, and no wanton attack upon honest corn will ever find a place in the Magazine. All communications 'should be addressed to Di & EDWARII3, Publishers of Putnam's Monthly, 10 Park Place, Ntw York. MAY. CONTENTS. - The Last Word of geology. Oliver Besselin. The Compensation Office. The Alps. The Dames of Virginia. The Turks Two Hundred Years Ago The Night Chase. _ Only a Pebble. The Count De Cagliostro. • . The Challenge. The National Academy of Design. The Birth-place of Mozart. A cruise in the Flying Dutchman. The Beasts of the Prairies. America for the Americans. Twice Married (Continued.) Editorial Notes. I. Literature—l. American. 2. Reprints. H. Fine Arts. 111. Music. IV. Drama. TERMS Twenty-five cents per plumber, or $3 per annum. Clubs, of five or more, supplied at $2. Specimen numbers furnished, and libe ral terms given to agents and canvassers . . DIX S.I..EDWARDS, 10 Park Place. "For. Truth—our Country, and the Stare." OUR WORLD, 603 Pages, 12m0., 10 Illustrations, Price $l - 45 11" T this exciting story should arotr=e the LIVELIEST INTEREST AND DEEPEST FEELINII, is natural and obvious—it relates to THE GREAT QUESTION which so deeply engrosses the minds and hearts of all our people. Its character, inci dents, and scenes, are all OUR OWN, AND OF OUR TIME. It is vividly and - effectively written; and the Truth of Mi.:tory and the Charms of Romance render its pages at once CAPTIVATING AND CONVINCING. It shows the wrongs and cruelties inflicted upon THREE MILLION SLAVES! and the bondap in which the Slave-power attempts to hold TWENTY MILLION FREEMEN! "Aq a literary work, it iq superior to Uncle Toms Cabin. It will excite, fir,t,- attention, and then-admiration throughout the country, and take it: place at the head of ail recently pubdshed books." - [Buffalo Express. "We lr.ve never read a fictitious story which socomp.e-ely engrossed one's atten tion from commencement to c:ose." LBosLon Evening Gazette. f For sale by ail Booksellers. *** Copies sent by Mail, Postage Prepaid, on receipt or price. • • MILLER, ORTON, & MULLIGAN, PllbliSheTS, 25 Park Row. New York, 50 2t and Ikr: Genesee•st., Auburn. TO THE PDBLIC. TAKE NOTICE, that I intend to apply to 11:s Excetlency, Got. Pollock, fur the pardon of tny sonlytn. Alonzo Crosby, who was conric:ed of Forgery in this county at the last September session. WM. CROSBY. Couderspor-, Pa., April 2;.;, A NEW supply, of Scuoot Boons, A Pei.s, etc.,of every kiwi ehquired ut this part ut the couutryjust received awl for sale at the JOURNAL BOOK—STORE. Bounty Land; THE undersigned will give partieu lar attention to the procuring of Bounty Lund for all those entitled thereto under the late or any previous Act of Congress. A. G. OLMSTED. Coudersport, ra., March 1.5, 1855. 7-43 Eta Auditor's Notice. IXTOTICE is hereby given that the Auditor 1 appointed by the Court to make distribu tion of the proceeds of the moneys arising from the sale of real estate in the case of Aaron Rico vs. John l'ye and Martin Ryan, No. 47 Feb. Term, 1853, will attend to the duties of his appointment at the Prothonotary's Office, in Coudersport, un the I Ith day of April next, at one o'clock P. M., when all persons inter interested may attend if- they think proper. T. B.' TYLER, Auditor. March 22, 1855. 44-3 t Macarthus's Liniment. The beat Liniment in the iTrorld ! Prepared by A. Macawriren, M.D. This article may be relied upon as being a sure cure for Sprains., Bruises, Cramps, Swellings, Rheumatism, Frozen Limbs, Lon. traction of the fifuscisi, Croup, Ctuinsy, Chi,blains, Affections of the Spine, Nervous Diseases, Weakness, and for Burns if applied immediately, Eruptions of rho Skin, Chapped Hands, Cuss or Sores, and eilectually coun teracts any Inflamma.ion. - And an ettictual remedy for Horses and Cattle, in the cure of the tollowhr , diseases, viz: Sprains, Bruises, . Swellings, Spavins, Ringbones, Fresh Wounds, Sweeney, Wind galis, Lameness, Cricked Heels, Scratches; or Grease, and Galls of all kinds occasioned by the hasuess. For sate by D. W. SPENCER. N EW arrival of Ayres'. Pee,oral at - SPENCER'S CLOVER SEED, and all kinds of Garden ,Seed, for saie - at SPENCER'S. THE beet three stilling tea and 6d sugar is at OLMSTED's. HONEY:—A good quality of honey for sale at • • C. 6.IIILTH's T EAS, frith end cheap. al TO PRINTERS, BRUCE'S NEW YORK TYPE FOUN DRY, cstablis.hed in 1E43, • has now on hand, ready for immediate de/irery, in fonts to suit purchasers, 1e , C,000 lb. Roman Type of new cut, - 511,000 " Fancy Type, 10,000 " Scripts of various styles. 5,000 " Germans, 5,000 " Ornaments in great variety, 5,000 " Borders, 30,000 feet Brais and Type Metal Rules, and all the novelties in the business. All the above Types "are cast by steam power, of the new metal peculiar to this foun dry, and which is certainly- superior to any ever used before in any m.rt of the world. The unequalled rapidity in the process of casting, enables me to sell these more dur.ible types at the' prices of ordinary types, either on credit or for cash. Presses, Wood Type, and all other-Printing Materials, ex‘ ept paper and Cards, (which j have no fixed quality or price,) furnished at manufacturers' prices. The latest Specimen Book of the Foundry is freely given to all printing otiices,:on the re ceipt of fifty cents to prepay postage. Printers of newspapers who choose to pub;ish this advertisement, including this note, three times before the first day of July, 1855, and forward mo one of the papers, will be I allowed their bills at the time of purchasing five times / the amount of my manufactures. New-YMI, Feb.l2 ' 1855. Address, GEO. BRUCE, 13 Chant bery.-st., New-York- BE Coudersport fleademy, THE Spring Term of this institution will commence on Monday, March 5, 1e53. ,and continue eleven weeks. Terms.. • Elementary branches—Orthography, Geography, Arithmetic, PhyStotogy, Higher Anthruitic, First Lessons in Algebra, and English Grammar, 350 Higher English branches, Philosophy, Astronomy, Algebra, & c., 5 00 Higher Mathematics and the Languages; 6.00 Drawing, extra, 1.50 Ins:rucuou on the Piano Forte, extra,...10.00 Use of instrument, 3 00 Vocal musicfree of charge. .Pre-payment of ail bil is strictly required. r - tr Either higher class 'of studies'will in clude any or all the-lower classes. The subscriber takes this occasion to ex press his thanks to the people of Potter and of other-sections for their liberal support (hiring the past year, and to assure them that no pants will be spared in the future that may be required to m:,ke this school an institution worthy of the entire confidence and support of all who desire a sound rudaueutal -as well as a thorough mathematkal and classical edu cation. J. BLOOMINGDALE, Principal. The undersigned. Officers and Trustees of the Coudersport Academy are moved by a sense of official and personal duty; to call the atiethion of the pub:ic, and of the people of our county in par.icutar, to the rising and useful character of this institution of learning. When we invited the present worthy Princa. pal to the post he occup:es, We found the Acad emy depressed and declining. We submitted. its organization and mber most onerous atiairs to his discretion and management; and our experience entitles us with increased confi deuce :o assure pareMs and guardians that be has proved faithful, efficient, and practical— just such - au" instructor as this community needs• H. 11. DENT, President, H. J. OLMSTED, Treas., ! Trustees. T. D. TYLLR, See'y, ) Court Proclamation. WHEREAS, the Hon. Robert G. White, President Judge, and the Hon. 0. A. Lewis and Joseph Mann, Esqs" AssoCiate Judges of the Courts of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail De?iverv, Quarter Sessions. of the Peace, Orphan's' Court and Court of COuunon Peas for the County of Potter, have issued their - precept, bearing date the '3d day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fitly four; and to me directed, for holding a Court of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail De livery, Quarter ssicids of the Peace, Orphans' Court, and Court of Common Pleas, in the Borough of Coudersport, on MONDAY, the ltith day of June next, andAo continue one week. Notice is therefore hereby given to the Cor-. oners, Justices of the Peace, and Cons:ab.es with.n the county, that they be then and there in their proper persons, at IO o'clock, A. M., of said day, with their rolls, records, inquisi tions, examinations, and other remembrances, to do those things which to their offices ap pertain to be done. And those who are bound by their recognizances to prosecute against the, pr,soners that are or shall be in the jail of the said county of Potter, are to be then and there to prosecute against them as will be just. Dated at Coudersport, FehAnth, 1855, and the 79th year orthe Independence of the United States of America. P. A. STEBBINS„SherifiI List of Causes For Trial in the Court of Common Pleas of Potter County at June Term, 1855. Curtis vs. Dickinson. Admin'ser of Adams, " Butts. Harrison use ofGerrett Hall. Ayres " Bell. .Perry " Hill and Hill. Carson " Johnson. Brown& Co. use of 1 „ Rooks. Simpson, Abby " - Bronson and Steele Jones " Jones. " _ Ross - " Jordan. Williams " Reant. Benson " Carrier, et. al. ForAdmin'st'r of For, "- Dwight. Cady . " Dickinson. THOS. B. TYLER, Proth'y. . • PROTHONOTARY'S OFFICE, Coudersport, April 26, 1653. IMPORTANT TO . LUMBER MEN. SKINNER'S • PATENT SHINGLE—MACHINE. riIHE undersigned, agent for the Patentee 11- in Potter and the adjoining counties of Pennsylvania and New-York, wouid respect fully call the attention of Lumbermen and others to this labor-saving machine, patented Nov., 1851, and now in successful operation in various parts of the United States. This machine will rive and shave from one to two thousand shing.es per hour, and will work hemlock equally as well as pine, the practical working of which can be seen at Genesee Fork, where one is now in operation. Any information respec:ing the same will be given by addressing the subscriber, 0. CHAMBERLAIN. Ellisbnrg, Pa., March ft.!, 1855. SLATES, Pencils, Writing gooks, Drawing Books, Account caul Memorandum Books, Tracts, buticlay School Question and Class Books. Ink, Paper-sand; Chalk, Cray. out, Sealing Wax, Tissue„ Tracing, Brewing, and Glazed raper; Blotting Boards, Parfo. rated Boards, Pert-Folios, and Porte-Slonnaies. Call and examine at the JOURNAL, BOOK-STORE Good Books by Mail. PUBLISHED BY FOWLERS AND WELLS, 3613 Broadway, New-York. I t eider to . acconnnodate " The People" residing in all parts of the 'United States, the Publishers will forward by return of the rirtsv sun. any book named in the following list. The postage will be prepaid by „them at the New York office. By this arrangement of pre-paying postage in advance, fifty per cent. Is saved to the purchaser. All letters con taining orders should be postpaid, and di rected as followt.: FOWLERS ♦NL WELLS, 3119 Broadway, New-York. .Constitutica, of Man. By Geo. Combe. The only authorized .American Edition. With twenty Engravings, and a 'portrait of the Author. Price, mu.tin, 57 cents. Defense of Phrenology. Containing an Essay on the Nature and Value of Phre nological Evidence; also, an able Vindica. tion of Phrenology. By-Boardman. Price 87 cents. Domestic Life. 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