I,n rirt t-itfil,fr...i.-.. war ceminnlXlMP 13DCIROCIRMIXOtPotkICOS - 7s. Neatly and Exiz.allayAit apirptuage MICE, LEBANON, PENN'A Irish!' eiliatililhniant is neve. supplied with en extensile. imilPriAsesd of, JOH TY Inc, which will be Inereeeed as the' paifoleefps danisuils. It an now turn out Pairrimi,of.• slug, description, in a neat and expedition* manlier nudism „rery reasonable terms. Stich as Taiaphiste, Cheeki; - . . Bueiness. , Vszar, Os:akin+, . i ,CircOirs, Weis* . . Billllsidings Blanks, ' . . - • 'Prratiiilics., Bills of tarsi. • I ~ • -: ..; 4 . ca vitation., Tickets* 1k0., , Atc,; 1 ilibrPssps of, ail, kinds. Common and .7sidgatcnt Bound., itirJustieee; Constables' and other ElleslMS, Prihtedi ilfsed nicer pram best Pnperi ,cOnittillf if,At., , fez mile at, this 'office, at•prices "to suit the times. ***,ldubjeription' price Of the LEBAPIOIC Arfallfelflitß. OneiDollar and a Halt s Toni., ~,` i ..,i_ , t , . Addreos. Mx, ld. Bsouil, Lebiikbri; ra. " 4 , 4 ' i ''' 11 , i : • - ~. , Accused. Falsely A Crintiftthi—iiit tpraTurnberg, .1790 '',Naiktfar.efitTlorgat Nurnberg 'whit eyed' for al few hiirt;;aama bled thilOtiglkite 'medieval' streeta:- ifatthuniniiit living type of alle.van past: Not' au modern building , le to be"alara ; for even thoee 'houses lett'W'4o - dratted r yoaterday have; IfeKfillehforted: 'after ' the sixteenth eentirry itioldel; or earlier. Hence. , tilblaila tttion of,llBatizhor; dinf,Pregud'UlVesthem a 'certain pi;;. tin* tie ' Superiority over all other hies;: ere iterrotermAsk,Biajj retift so perfect an his toricaPicture, as.thie harnburg, ev eryiroinse of which has a physiouno. futdfiltl Own, every street of which felt panorama. The varied gables, tlie'quitint windows, the high roofs, the fantastic galleries, towers, and doorsifitys, with ihit endless -effects of colour, make the streets a perpetual delight to the traveler. Here one feels thoroughly at Ituit). in the past: The lives of our forefathers become intelligi One only needs.a change of cestifirie 'la : the busy crowds to *aka tile thettilat Complete. , ”rii6 change • whatever has `co i lli# over` the' spirit, of the architec there 'ilea, happily, a ;profound 'change nem° Over the spirit of erimi• nal law in hatilburg • and if the lov er of medieval institutions. wants en illustration of those times which will Make biro join with the lover of pro : , males „in blesein,g .the results of the wiser latvs which' in our day yogi:- lat.:a society, finperfeet, and in many roiltects barbarottsi as these are, let I'm attend to the narrative of the following Trial, 'which occurred in Natinhurg at thy very close of the:last century. Among criminal trials it has an exceptional interest, which is, baavevets' more psychological than atid the mystery is even yet not, ,cleared - 0 a•the,3oth Stirtol79o, at five in the MOrfring, LW' Merchant Sithann Mae eas-StTerhank %Vas awakened 11,,y his -'1.v..11, , 11 'with the vinplonsam Aft: ,rirr; OF ' ve; 11 , q1 r.r e 1? *,! I .)4}.1 q. that 106' •.: 1 1 4= I:tilee'll=A ln (.':i. , rlox ( wi h.l,4f.x (~ o nt;iine'd two thoug.,ticlirtli•i„.=',3 41) slr-• = oning.hy our sstandimrblit really a lIMCII iar:t,Cl' slllfl in lltosty days, the ' rigittitiod of Sterhe=nii may be 'coTti- -eived, lie toisfl•-'n=ql4.c= the ”onntiiig • house , with his titbits trod' servrints, fonoil that a pancyol_ glass had he tql removed from the window, which looked from the countisigamase on the staircase, 'end that tht= door was \Vide open., The Maid that she , lisul boltelt the'll,otistralotia etrefeight. The read'et-enust remerribet that' an Continental heilies the housedoor,Lar porte &Aar, is the entrance to all the ii*elliegs contained in ono pile of b u ilding ; nnlike our Englieb !lenses, merely admits to the vesii bule.i.' 'The separate doors have to be utiltickollefter entrance hue been ai feetEkribiehgb 'the' house door: In this ease the house-door htid nci lock; nothing but bolt, which the maid, , &cattail elie hadptiehed into its sta ple: heated rid what: , ever*during eight,,such as; tail , timing of this door would °colleted ; tleticending in ,the' take fa the milk saltedtl imilk.aid man r_Lang; was this Milkwgrnaniniiide the the donrlialtitig yielded' totter" titbi dot4til Alitimedilstlelltitit ed to ilia counting-Itque6, door, slid found thilt also Open.' Shelefrkeirt Ihr and` found the iron cash .I.iiix„naftisiag. It `was 'A once tlitiV the robbery Must have' :have been ccftn' Mitted bona S One pisri eetly acquain ted with the' localities. • This very pane of glass which had been remov ed wws thesame ifint, ten days before Sterberik had ordered to be taken' out ~when one of the clerks had lost the key of the counlingl?nuse, and itwas nacassary to Npen thedoor from with *, whiel) could be effected by it , 111# , Ti ' S tbrataig hie arm through thfe opin ing an thus reaching to theltielte--• A ra ' eskenger, ' awned , Schonieben, re markt:4lf. hat this was very suspicious. But whose to suspect,? At present there, teas not, a' clue. The whole town rang with t , het, ewe ; and gos sips on the door-steps and in beer. shops freely vented their ,byptheti , . / eat: , saspieione, as is, 1,100 in Illl l P ll rebooo, A. shopkeeper swore that en . Atte night in question about tw0,,0 iCieSic be• quitted the tavern tallitora4ei ,whore no had beenim, jovial .deititpanyv and saw two suspicious. looking fellows in. the neighborhood of thStSternbenk house, who crossed thettse.mltrl;et ; a • barber also .he Saw' two. , men that utglit 'near the house, arid , had asked thetniithittktiele ; a maidservant de eraied tilaiti3he bad seen' a Young man tki"dalliefore standing: oppesitepthe boast,. cotteldering . ,a.ttentivly. as theileavitnesses could neither identify-the personsb4.hey had scien, , l noire any other: clue,. their attes ttltiAfs'hedHillis light , over the qttes- Oen.,. • Suddenly on Schen ,1 W ien ' the messenger, who .had found the hiStory of the pane , of glass so stiSpicidos. It are* and' greet,' till it heeitme very like conviction.* He i happerred le say nne of the shop...i i hope' tliitt.',f 'maid only °era , tale she' litd 'been 'citified aeroes l "ittpaqrfefottiatket, as .wort said, he W4%16 1 640 - trate ,atite,thil 4 , ; _ , . =I ME VOL. 16---NO; 31: NM . . •. , *smark, eerily : r_l!)t. vary e.onnironi,aing, seems f.o hav excited tir((eu .w as ' rani CVa be AO hat' tilif-"ltin 'find not been) hfainhiess ; and • thiaitiky imaginations or men Instant, buittleptii:ithousaed r.prehebilitics to-, c i te n Thee,y,ssty, day. , a fte r the itebtierx . .„ h h ret!? er , 1 :4) itipa ( living in a,- neighboring' calittd :eiVo'n' T him at the `Bl. hb011e; -bed. ; spoken with ' 40 an ,Ipisii*toniyanidi then had:quitted- , the' to.Wn:,ivith , 44,4llngtectri. - i7.ltlnf coarse r carrying ; aw;i3y. the caSh-box jin . : th is: cart,' as quick; imaginations read i divined. It was further 'rernighhered that..some before the robbery, mad pEttraellee the cOtinting-hOtie r•ani hear' ifitdkilthan fonloh; 7ho cop Id „pr„ iy give .verynneatisinotory oTcBopm and th.p„ dayr t n,ftei the ro!). kiany,heztnerattected fq*Celllo6l2lii- I &c:: &o '',7on - such indication's was , this marl arrests I ittwas clear that Schoilleben could no alone have .aegomplishe,d.. ithe erime. His accomplice was soon fix. ed on. It w tali mei., a poor span gle-maker, The iiidiestinns'agai . nst him were these he Wad. poor , . he had assisted Schonleben to . carry a load . of wood into ; the Sternbenk house, and in doing so ~p assed up the Stairs leading to the &ranting-Y:6lSe; arrived at the top Yitair, he was said to have passed there some minntes, looking—intently : drat) the etranting house, fa?cinated byjhe sound of the money he heard chinking there.— This was assorted by more than 'ono witness, Although resaliitely denied by him. It could Only - be - horn a de• sire to make himself: fbmiliar with thelocality previous to'his criminal attempt. He also , wiwarrested.' The idea of arresting, imprisoning, and examining two men,on such evi T dence.as this will asteund the reader; but ba will be still more astounded on learning that .th 4 possibility of their being' innocent'was' never , en. tertained.' They were assumed to be criminal? ; and all .that remained was to extort, or entrap,,,a confession of their guilt: While the cumbrous 'procedure : of those days Was being carried 'Out a= gainst these men, a new , clue seemed to, have been discovered,offargreater irnp.e:.!tance than any yet detected..—; A barter, nAmeA Kirlwittir,, upon, :rn in the reader's tittention he pa ,, eci on Sterbenk, and - Under # I IP senl of seeresy ftS ' tearnrded him- F ,w, do,iared that, unless he, was nt 1 "1,t 1 +0 0 P. ,Ivarr3 tve,..-.1 tr' r, • 01,,SAY lii that WWI iOC . el tit%j.(lsrt lt i n . papelvs: as the non stolv'n, in the room of the gilder kat , •rti.rt; who hveti tlice. , same house\ with Seltelnleben. gieehmeir taligd s day or tw , Y aft'(ir -the 401-h on Mau riert, and the cash-box was no longer visible., This litrchrneir was *icit yen of Number., the father of a torgu, family, well to-do in the world, bearing the .character of an upright, religions, mitn. Ilia testimony was considdred unitntieheliable ; u tatal credulity was the result. On "the unsupported testimony of this Man, Human beings 'wereliat.onii.:inipriS oned, but tortured and . destroyed: Maunert, the accused, was marrl. : ed, tie father of-two-sons aged ten an&fiftsen, rfrylionr, buff bitilert i m of blameless repatiition.. He was arrest .ed and'A;alpinetlr -I,lle denied 014 iitiltvd 4 ore if wad - 4:11 . 3" such °Ash-I;6Y, gliidird.l:ol his puasession. ,g+ 2 l kripy ktpaw th'itt, be - Was Sterlo4,ll*MpsiOrger,` but knew nothing of ''ye,t i. Titkteaffitire Vi.n ipertk's :wire OA sons, pis° denied ey . tanll tt lokx had r?e,en in ti-leil•hottige,:. •Akttin-e'Plr;;F:lq01060 with -thc`fil 'eaftell.l 4 1 0$ aPPll.krUd that.olo)),6 3601 at eight in the mort Ing, ' :!,,ntered : Matinert's reom, to shpve t fitm, ite saw under thn near the', 0ve0,... an iron box with green stripes, the top paincedl i with floWers, the Ornamento,,pcth four painte4pati)eaves,Vellietlye,Rew perfectly, well re:nwinbered,and conld describe. - never saw thata:al - Cat , terWards. , Kirchmelf , ,Was zip, honored a : 'cal.. „„ zen, and his state nest *as so elpllc it, nod so firtnir Impaled on by him, that inasmuch as he seemed ifree frOm all pOssible motive in thi matter, not bearing any malice towardathe Map. neetsi hilt, ein the contrary, testify ing to their being, asaros e knew, honcit, trathhil people, the idea of dOUbting his"declaration,oever, enter ed the heads of the Nurebergeri, itS ,suredly not of , the executive, which at once twat .Maunert into ,a i dark so).- iary cell, and his wiffSinto a cell With condemned women. kannert's lodgings were searched. kfqither , °sail-box, noi.,t,i4Ce °law; burf,',4fM9fifi -ifult,M4oott could, be. round, . but— an d this Wilti thought important--in lamberrroom-one of the planks showed trsees%of having been Iltely raised, and,,,with unexpe.. rienpsd ;bands restored to its ; place. After this; ' nothing was: needs& but the full confession of the Schonieben ; firmly ,denied any knowledge of the crime or thenefritiii- i naffs au* couliilte,name any on whom his•sttspioionStfell).althoug# he, would• say ,thettß.eatner;l'on ;the Co eaaion oUhelping bitn n witb, ;the qload of wood, did ask Whi4teitbe pottnting honse.was, and whether theppeo ple in ~t he,: house slept abotte.;!::Re knew nothing of Beutner's baring' stood looking into the enuntiag house,iastad been asserted, :,kle,ile nied everything that was, ;snaked a gainst him, or explainedAt atvap-4-ii There is' one pOint , , i4This , 'rerichitice )afthiihf ncltiOesbadnWaeiritteh ; tiotieecka.naraelyi ,i t . hat refesuribed the cashlbow .11ritsieelyi)thlif slime 'terms es !Ousel 'inspioyeelyi 11111 u C. meier in reference te. the, box seen in Ittaunert - 's addi-- tional,weight,„to! harkeen testi mony ;for, it. Was Argifeir, how could ire ti Meier, o t4Ver' been in Ste` henk'sli d' 'eon se quer) tip trot: seen the cashibox;; there,-. aeon-, re,tely, describe , /t1 unless ho l llifttantPi 1 413!• , 5eeP, i 4t.4 4 3. eiselY ,the 'Messenger who. ;saw it, ditify ;"and 'what "Keit :titt } ll l „ l till averred, under .thetablh'in nert's room: • Now 4daunert ,:and•hfs. wife, distinctly -- 4,enleil -- ever having had' - any caslitlibx% - - Whateverkl t geir . 6;6 m i . !"; 1 Ifetitrer, the spangle-itialeer;:citi . be` respecting' his dia-' Se.hogteben, admitted:its truth, but. said he was ill lighd'c°at the time, kne.w not, Itruch wit:a t e bad t4ko PiAkogiricru3r 4 a;‘, the eilininals, -Ile knew absolutely, nothing; and as .proof that he was not cone:tertied : in the robberY either' principal or assistant, he offered' to .prove , lin alibi. Unhappily for , him, this proof was far , from . satisfae 7 tory, and the- suspicion..-deepened' a gAinst him. The witnesses-he call ed 'ad not„Admit that he was wick theist drinking till two in fhe Mern ing.; but on the contrar,f,' declu're& they had iteeoinpanied hirn , home Olevem ..Now if he reached, home by eleven,. there was abundance of .time: for him to have conimitted the rote Kerr. The.ex4tuipacipn of the igaunerts now, ocenpied . the court,. it iCa5 de terinfeed to put in 'force the rigoi; of the kV to eitort confessiOn:Kireh: meier 'reiterated, andl-egen added to. hie.former. statements, and deelared himself ready, ifneedssnr , y, to affirm_ them on, oath. In tholie days - the' eriinlital fills did not absolutely' re quire witnesses:to be sworn ;'..only in extreme eases was the-oath, adyninis= tereek,and the punish rnenVof perju ry was very : severe. The oath was a last step, when the evidence was Otherwise imperfect. Now as the b 034, on being inter rogated, and solemitly. , 7warneci, speak the truth, persisted in unwav ering denial of having ever seen a b:ix; and :suggested that what the barber Saw must host: been a' paint: ed.-box fiit(4(l - : "wit h..planter enst,•firte tiallint.si which I , :idettO•was under the table. abut ,nit- inthind or near the door; ,this steady denigi forced the court. tn atiministel; the oath. '. Kirelitnnie:r again deeiared his read ini 83 * (.0 hi ke . t he '"oath t.... „44. it IHI4 &I a ~..wa----em,no-nrn-rry, ~..3 - - 1,V114t, he seid,,tohe. quite _clear with iiiinself es to. Whellii..r the box 'seen by hini teas really r suCl) a finx as the one stolen.; the severe Punisli'ment; of perjary was rebiiarsed to,:him4 , and the Utah WaS slowly read aloil'cl to hint He remained unshaken. The despairing . 31aunerts on their .. knees implored hi m. to hii'Ve pity ; adjUrnq li,im by all Olathe held sacred not to il hi them ; pointed to their elvildreriln hopes of moving him. Kirchmeler was •irbinovable. .In calm,and' solemn tones; Ihe -took the oath. ~ Nothing thqt, was, said made him swerve, in his statetneat that he had _seen the bOX:'`"That 'WI - lie/1,1 itaW,l ea* : the greea'pairited' cash box with green wo6defillegs, I saw in , .." the' rooms of the man' who is now,kneelingimplor legly !before , tne. I cannot help It.-- I am (pito convinced that in thiS I am tilt mistaken. His blood ba on My bend l" ' ''. ; '' r.. i 's It:watt - -dOne.. The sbad been taken. God hail,heardjt, , atid would exec ge it if false.,,_ The; excitement was not confir.ed, to '4"Ntirnbeig MO Traneabia ; 'all 11-4rcianY'sliVretl in' i?.' tanitibletß;pietures, 2and.dis'ensaiona 'Made it, the talk of ,the . day., ~ , ,Che court, alter Kirch meier's solemn tes timony, saw.in. the-accused nothine but-hardened and obstinate, sinners ; the pupliashared this aonVction.— 8 . 6 high fan the feeling l'igitintit till L6e r ebelised 06' account , 61 their , ob atirtney; ih at the mobatnasbed:§nhon. lebenYtt:iitindows, , and !higt,,yuttpgest child was,killed in its mother'l .ar,ms by a stone. Kirehmeier, the demon' Of-thiststo fy, after his'dare natory oath ; Om 'mini anted fresh indications of Marfriert'a ilibitiality, whichi , of eqars j e,,ilielpeil to, confirm the prejudice against the unhappy man. Ile stated that some days after he had seen' the box in 'ldaunert'S reiores; be had called 'on bib) and narrated how he bad just seen Sebonleben t s wife carried through _the crowd by the pc lice, accused of, having with l her hue ' band staler: Sterbenk's easif4for `WfAreupciii Maunert said, ".knt what , compensation with these poor people 'get ifthey are' innocent ?" Surely: a '" - *itii natural and humane. question ; to 6 humane apparently for -general ~appreel'a,tio,n, then, sinee,,it.,,:fas in -1 terprated as a. sign of guilt :by a iiigi cal process not unexampled in public !reasonings. A week later, , the bar. her 'again called on liaunert, 4nd showed him the newspaper irk, which a reward was oftuTed for the detoation lof the *cnini`nals. Uttutiert, remirk i ed- 7 --."11.0w eaild stiirbenk imagine that'' robbe;rlWOUld be .trisoovered litetely if Pcibefieople werai`obsbried to havoiot spead,anaro .aloapyl,t,ll#49 masa? ~Eta,:.ltaueert, hartpmed t to ,4sys• lately paid so me 4eltts r ati'd was in Paseession of More money than u sual; but he did 'not suppose-that sus : , 'pinion could tall"on him: on '.that 'AC COUDO, : .. ,-„it„ cannot escape the, reader as aottethingpesraliarly,temoved fro .ino,dEpplar,4sll4,oo,a, Wax, not only `Should. sae ti Impli i ett rtilianeer,Aav ile& PlaCtid.'obAtie "bittbeios'-'astitiY "tions;:titiPuppl3rtud'asthay wergioistit, thitinclissisphion VlCllMitorkihflrftibip awakened at his retarkstilpfmtr 1 NMI LEBANON, OMB= iddyll , , 7, refused:, be it ", ged.. Tir 6•o:afrrig extorted nothing,. but groans iiirtl, denials; Ile - waa flogged , ,ligain ; but as ,the judicial' rePP..I . I lleiv:1 1 remarks, "although" he h . : t s h h:V ip ft es: nektreleeeasceplibilit r t h 6 t ,Waa not to . be , hroeght to eoefess .:,.4.n - tlie • ceetrary, I stoutly maintained bie ; inn licence, but begged that a fall "Investigation of his whole life, might- be made, 'which would show he had ,always lived hon. estly,.and akinve suspicion." - nithing of, the kind was undertaken. In: those clays—the close Of, ill e'v'en ligh t - - ersed" eighteenth ; 'eentury—it. did, not occur to men to: ask, What com pensation will;the limoccrit • receive if their innocence is proved? After this a Second Seareli was made in•Maunert's,dwelling ;, but no-' thing ivas found which` in , Any via y bore on, the robbery. S - ehonleben's dwelling'. ties 51.40 searched with e qually fruitless result. What was to be •done? It was clear thai. these men were guilty ; 2 1:M0heir obstine, cy, set justice at defiance. How ex tort a confeSsion ? Appeals to their, terrors had been tried, and failed.—* Examination and cross-examination had been tried, and failed. ring zings had, ~.3ccrt - tried and faileil.:---, 'There remained only two resoureeei . first, the Priest, and nexti—the Rack., g c l ii F ; y nt i : I : 4 , 8:r. :t d ,: efi lg : 3 1 : (1 1 ) :t il :: : , L PeY : : ti ed : , iy , C d s: l vs e c e eie r h : ° p l e i _ : ;: m t e, i '° , t i le ct fe e n ; mv d At i mlei employed; ns,;if had r fi rre s i r o s id i t eri 1 6 1e rli t i r e n o nt g i d e i fin i t) : ee.°e t rt nr l x o, i dn e t: si o l l i :u n i r i gs o . c 3 t d -t- - 2 :' their powers.. "The ; public expecta tion was raised b' the news of this. ilf . tac 7l . - ar4 - ..ta1e4.:4 -*----rn. ' nor and.Fuehts •;, , "dpicl be itresistelite, and justice woeld.at lengl..b, be Della. tied./ ~ • - • : : J ._ A Ales!, aeon thisfailed. , , Thepriests reported that the ; two sons, no less than ALaunert and his wife, repeated that they knew nothing whatever of the, cash-beic, that Kirch rneier bad perjured , himself; tind that,•,G,ed would even yet make their innocence mani fest. "And," said Scboner, .when I warned;Kauriert's wife,of that judg nient:wileb awaited her .:in_; another Ay, lich• none could escape how ever tb'ey-might escape the judgment in, this world ; when I painted ,in. glowing terms the' terrors of ,eternal damnation, theimmovable justice of the Lord, and the awful power of his decrees, she interrupted mewith,the exclamation; "To', Him ' I appeal!" 1 When I ittglied with her on the gad minse'qqencesi whichiWoold. enaue, un less she confessed,.not only Unit ~h,er imprisonment: . would continue, : but -that eifen,harder rricasuree.:.wonld,‘, , he adOpted• towards herself and • ;family, sheireplie4:,..;t 4 And ,if l they;_fiog me,Mi death; -whittle it?,.l wanl,:tiothing more from %his world, and. care. .not VS triter it again l". -' .., , In this :manner she encountered every exhdrtation,, eveli afgtithent, -eVety-feferenUe,to teniporal or liter, naljustice. = She Was innocent'; her husband and childrep were innocent; she could •saylnothiug e1...00: ! . the stater of ttiniOn waR so inc.° n cei stably .fixedtagaieSt , Ahern ~,t kat ,we doubt,whether; any bresamptiv.ii evi dence would at; thalt element :have had much weight, !otherwise it is probable—but only ; probable- , ;-•-that this steadfast reiteration of in nocence on the partof the cib ~e lei family, un ded such , severe tilde of • l•heir , 'fi.vm [ l, .. i n n es t s b , e ,W ir o o ti fa l v ti nn ,hi c ive . suggested ,a: . deubt It was true that : the •••bartier's: evidence was explicit. But there %VAS ,no other evidence.; and a gainst it -might fairly , he set that of the, whole family, two of them young boys,,w)ho - never swerved in their statements,`: Vlore was one awkward '61'01114401)CP ) it is trtw; the barber i swore -ho sim A cash-box; Whereas - the whole family steadily denied that. any! cash-box had been in•their,room. It was impassible to doubt ,the bar her's statement: The prisoners' Ale .niat ldoked :like sheer obstinaty.-- Neverilitilesti this ,denial,, , and,theitn piesSion 6PaineeritY NviliPh innocence 'must haveithade on the priesta, at least,>accustomed to. hear. confessions )and• to interrogate criminals. would have had its weight, had/ ,not Malin tirtra.:wife 'committed& very, common triletake-:-.toinisitlike to which' we-are all liable, and ~which daily , experinee seems incapable fr of leradieting..---- .ritttitel3r, that , of aftrikating motives to the acts'ofothers. .?..Winiteveris daub, • espeeially*hon it ie in anyway inju rious to us,' welnsist en assigning to lte 'true , motive. Now. the motive tivhichi really actuates , a... human , be ing, is alinost Inevitably hidden 'froth nay we never altogetber,lnow,iti•dve "itrelnet often thoroughly aware,of our t iril this state : - of ittein . tnettireit;:cret' ',Able I gnuteanee,.- ve e 1 geeke rat - what the motive may probably „Afel;tno sooner jitl i bM irs_lo§o Been AO have a AtillMiltWig#PMfaiftPdtTaltr7m' ), "0 4111 Cr, . . .0 Y JANUARY 25 1865. erg tili~ Vi n =- I lia' b 45 BAw 0cin)03:46,. ''''''' reiapppaeek' oaf, Th , K, every: in e t9 p," ? ,, - : beri, I; 01093',Pu! itisTd'Ory; stances k nawn' to us, than WC"ati once` give it' entire faith krid r 'tisat itinte (LH' estahlidhed 4, A so," tfAY vte proceed io 'oat' as if' it Were 'eci. ' the the' 1 11 0 Pve r . whibh aay , 'actuated' .froti'labler are ntiMerattd,' ISut could` . not, known atiBther: '}fad Ort's wlfe contented 'hitSelfwith' saying: ' "ttretline t iii 7 .hits *• 'sworn' ralBely? WhyT r idd i nat: knOiij how should I 'know whYl w `hie assertion' wou , Id! have been forcible:; . buta n hap- Oily she'ebilld not rest satisfied With out guessing et his motives, `and sta ted' that Witai..She, said w ad' the fact] Xii'eh meter, she said, had worn a gailjarthent, beeatfse"Maiinert,' owed. iiini;;Eletne money for shaving,. an Li bed not made him a Weir:yeait s l'A";Par'il.ritated and feehle 'fe- OVA e - irlthlit,iiCilYisetkftsT 'sect-Att . an tideifnate rEotivd; at ' any rate it Was the motive she guessed, and, hav ing guessed it, she believed it. On the public ~mind this accusation pro. tineca'no 'effeet, save that:of strength ening the pri-judiee saninst 'her fain ' • In' a clear 'form the coifeluding words of the priest's report, that a tnisgiving had entered his mind re specting the guilt.,of this family.-- "My heart beats sorely,"' he says, "at the Obstinacy of these pedple otherivise seem to have lived honestly though in poor eircemstan ees), if they are guilty ; but still Mere at their' fate if they''are intn eint;---':lPltirchmeier hes been mis taken, or if, like other men, he has been - capable of having been led astatliy." 'lip to this time a plausible explan ation had been propounded, and of course unhesitatingly accepted, as to the mode in ,w Web the cash-hox had been taken frdm Sulionleben's dwel ling to that of Mennen's. As we . do not sufficiently understand the local Hies to form a 'correct. idea of this explanation, we shall not trouble the reader with it. Enough that at this jencture it was proved by professional witnesses that, the cash box could not have been so transferred. More over, the plank which had been found recently taken up_ and laid down 'again iiiSchen leben's and which was one of the indications against him,..nowfurned out to have been .removed by h's prede:Oessor in that dwelling who testified thereto The eourtfelt that its ease crag Coming weake r. evertl nloqqi - I .Pa tattoo,ct. wee-octerm ire ltrAo--cry toe - effect of Atiggi g. She nittst &rirk t'es She oinst, learn that denials are' use lese,and that' those who se,t thorn; selvei In olip'esition to the law would taste ita,fultseverities. It was . thus decreed that she ihould he flagged— . and in ease her bodily health did not , permit her suffering sueb chastit.c mint, She cv'cia to be imprisoned a ' lone on bread a t nd'water in the dark est dungeon of the prison: Should this fail the court. redid' proceed to the last . extre. - niti , --'-tHe Rack. That equiclinOt fail. A bii udanp eiper ieneo e on ciiininals,ef all pibvedthat, however, they might persist in denying their.giiilt,;' however rni t . less might impriaorirMini? fleagikg and exhortation . - the test Of torture was almost infallible. flow .many migerahle victims.' - had confessed erimeii:Of. which they-wei. , l3itinegeirl,i, arider f t4,eolicitatiebot j thQ,`chumb - Aer r erati'd''hoot, no', i knew that'seine men had dene so. .Thritek kind eon iiquentlY"neen falling into disusef bat it`etas from the code cif eavati.ed nations; and, the V'aenherg court of, justice re solvedio-aPply it to the kiturierts. At this period SChbilleben• still a 1 . prisoner, requested toTbe heard. lle stated to the , court that it new occur; ed to. hint, and be iris ready to swear PL) it, if ''neessary , Jthat the spangle-miiker; Beutrieri had on the nekasiaii,bt aasiking hitiVrith the ^,l , . , `_toad o f wooci,, j stoou some time at the dOorAoeicourtirig7hcittge,; and, on biaving .tbkhouse together;,bad said, old, one has a heap of i money , there; couldn't we bra little ?''—a prepogition "which - li6, SehOnleben, rejected:, with indigna j To this be adder, - that three days ago',he had dredini that_ the _ca§b box had been found„ j and that he himself had seen it tinder a heap ef wood in Beutriers. house, where- uppn ;fie' naively remarked, "he had felt great joy, and requested' the Mitgistrates to release him from.pris on to the sound of music. The effect ,of this depciaitkin - *lts once dirt loquiry towards Boutner. ''Theillcoinerts stoutly de nied their guilt ; Sebonleheii flenied his • and it Wils.tlievioht that perhaps Buettner could bo brought:to copfess. ,That nofie,of them were guilty never seems to Have been suspected; AU ,the , indications agitimit,Beuttier we r e ,o aro foily, collected together. The `very. dream o f Se49(nleben, insipid of being, tre,a,te . ,d its ti diream, natural enough in Ale eircurastanced, and of so„,loi;C`, an imprisehinent damP:dismal cell, Was aeeepted as a B,entner',SAmise%vas thorough ly seareliedJ;stit then, where no cash hox could be found, none of course was-foand.,. In vain was; every' plank torn Up:and ,every eofner ransacked; rats; dust r and'rubbis hi abundance were theife; but po cash fibx no , trace o f .money , Bouttier :was thene.Aarnined, but denied ever 'HaVing , said anythfng abouttheir eastlog of somesoe of his nainief. , .an 'being confronted cut Lf Y6l#l.6ol4omr!mto,fie persisted 113, : tnP3 n ini.,do4trelf ? , 'Ake the re st, hat His ,3109 - #lO • , 31.1`1#4 ktlrnfirt E ctil i gn v;'eAk? °n >rig • ff.: P :.~.•.~; WHOLE NO. 813 dint"-Conviction horelied with eonfi ' dence.' 4 - I AB if to strengthen this state- Meta, iin#;if no sooner was One clue caught of than the next . moment it. *as-to`iletrOken, thevervdef after -Beutner's ekamination, h" smith, in Wlttise,'serviee livedlono of the wit :nesses:'Catieltt to prove Tient n er's akin infOrmed:the court t tj:'t, l his% . werlti' man had ennfessedtriliinr, the smith, that he:had eoncesded :the trutit his examination ; that in -reality liontnerr": did , not go hoMe on the night'- of the 29th B.oth at eloveil o'clock; but; at two in' the morning.; at. which tient the workinenaccom panied hini;:. Why had' hoconeettled , this; and stated wliatite . knew to lie; false Beet - tan. he :was. afraid of the iiritten - would have:fallen on him for 'having: been drinking in police! IJetenpon Betttner's witnesses. 'Who had been previously examined on tho-nlibi. f were onee More ictarnined, and they one 'and all emit - eased that it Was-two o'clock, not eletion,: when - Bentner and they left the' beer" Shop ; they all confeaSed that it was 'only far of the police regulations' : enfo r ced against them, which IMlmade them conceal the facten their first- ezarni . natinit, There was not unnatural suSpiefon exei ted that these -witness es bad told the truth at first, .and that Reutner-had found some means of corrupting them, so as to induce this -retraction ; but' they persisted i'n • thiaisecond statement, and were not only unanimous,- but spoke out with the` greatest precision and cenfidezine:' as„ - . to the fact.- Nobody believed them, and the strictest inquiry was'l made-into every . conceivable circum stance-that could posSibly throwlight on their testimony ; but the upshot was that the stirOngest point against Benttier—namely.-his :supposed pro senee near the spot at lite assumed period when the robbery was cam - mitted•-=was, reluetnntly, tint inevi• tahly, &limed to sink into utter ob . seurtty. The locksmith, who for:' years had been 'employed by, Ster henk, was now interrogated. nolzel had three years before repaired - the cash-box in question,ltnd he deposed that, according to.Atis recollection ; it weighed ono hundred and -twenty pounds, was striped with green, painted. with White flowers, and had the lock ornamented as the barber, afterwards becnnie. of °, s Teat, rimpor tanee, He stated that on the 30th of Tune--=the day the robbery was. dis bovered—Kirchmeier had infOmed hint oftheirobbery aeSterbenk's 'add ing that he bad seen a cash-box - , somewhere. On being asked where, #.ntiHin whose house he had seen it, Kitt hmeirer could give no satisfacto ry Answer. . Nevertheless, ten days afterwards, Kirehmeirer privately- in formed him that he had'seen - the Cash box iirMatinettrahouse on- the:- 80th Stme;:but *loco ‘then had :not - set eyes on it.:..Hotzel liege& him -to ideate - this to Sterbenkytellich - foil!tbe first time he then did. - :!! This AV 1113 Al :,:con fiemed. ;Kii.elt rneirer. "..lio:distinetly -remembered every circumstance, - :and ,Teinetriber , ed Morons , * that Matinert i •:-Mr!hiS entrance; seemed somewhat confused-, had moveOltpidly away- frent the ta ble; while. his Wife managed to'!iceep the barberat the door - till - - the 'cash bbX washidden, 'He alsd .distinctly remembered ,that the. xe - teh,bctx was such its ,the ohAl eeseribed - ;i!lidk With plaster. vast Medallions lid titiee•not remember to have eeete" , the „re, sPeeting Ake capability Frau Mathmrt toestipport a flogging :was registered. AV was stated .!that !Ate was quite capable of . bearing some etripes , e and there' can be no! doubt that-this - cruelty, tend; indignity would havmheen - suffered by ,es it had-been al 'ready. by ber:husband had-not tntture. given Mt - einpbatie denieh to: the Medical evidence; by currying her off., _On the 28th Sep tember,. -After intprisonment of Mom thitrethememidiiths.,,Aeath.:bene- ' fluently put an end to ~her :sufferings. She died:in mat, agony ; bodily and mental..:-The priest 7w O *lobe iti4od beside her daring thelast:: , hours Glared .that in the. whole ()fills:fifteen years' „experience he had never known -a. sadder mac._• The cellln -which!slaeln,a,S imprisoned was under -ground; thittoofr front Alto light of the ' ,sun and'the breath of.heiti!en:; as-she herself was:shut off from-the ernbrite es of her children, -and auxieus ! love of , her. •husband.) .alsO .:'sat alone in darkness. with the know-. ledge of his intemenete.aed the knew ledge that ttll:nten belieeed hint to he The priest stn -gentle persua -Bko aceente, urged tlie.,:dying woman to-free her sBtfl *OM it.S. lead : by con fession ; herconstatit= reply was that she had notkMe: to confess ; she and het. fumile , ,wQ.-,it.:itsinie,ont.---.=G,od wilt bring:our inn o cence, light .; yen see that. one Ky." so the final -preparations for her !end- were bel t !!/ made; J4he said, ef : ;:od has beert;.witri me; and,ealled:tO met ; Fear ~; ant--hesite! thee ; go joyfelly i th Him; fora go at once; to heaven; Tho.priest;took his leave, and Shortly •afterwarMe all w*. Over for her in. this „ As a criminal. she bad' died; as.a trimly) a 1 e ;Iv as,;bpriecl , ' ,, ' lA, eileeee ind:darknosaehe Was htid eerth 'Without rites of ,isepultitrey e , any .rato:ebe::was free, Ivey: All ;taro: ittf,oo. 4,41 Or; /o,dy,:w , • Three isii4intis) still reriiainodt , 'thin* Mittlatilairixecirriprononritiii as 0 tidstri The:y*4d:: ev,eittilii•g 110111 no ,Jaci,: in .... 41 ' Cljt PiTtrtiorr --= A 142 M UV PAYER FOIL TOWN VITHY, ISPRINTED AND PUBLISHED - Ern 1; 13`y WK. ffi. zßEsuate stc,ri New Binding, CumpSitrilitl .- . . . -h. A t - 031-3 Dollar and Fifty Coats a Year. _—_,..- 44- AuVewils !Actors inserted at she usual rati o , 'WI ifas-lI.A.NDBILLS Printed at an hours notice. Let *Ann Mints. postage free In Pennsylvania. out of Leanition county 6 cents 'pei quarter, or. 20 cants a year. Out of thia Statt, 8 cta. per roaster, or 28 eta. a year yy the poatage is, not paid in advansa, rates are ileitite to fear_;, notlking to . hope. By one of .those coingidenees.whieh net pow erfully et - l i the:public mind, ever prone as the to: build .conjectural ret»anees:put pf insignificant and un related facts, on ! The very day of Frau -31 - a ith Clilqtt4'l t-pettte Faulwetter announced that his house had' been burgalariously entered. was : a smallgarden house, outside the;tewnovbereon .account of. quiet he wits in the habit of working over, his briefs. 'Tbis,had violently' entered-early in the morning, but nothing was,stolep. On, his bureatt nn inksts,nd had - been tipset,..nirfthe . flooded. the, papers lying there, some .of which: tFere. torn, a_nd,seversfrpood, from their posit tons. was , o ct . Now for the intt-rpretatfou ? p . anl wetter W'is ob:b of the. .coupBOl employed p the,Ater- F.)enk case, and, as be had.:several, times had the papers of ,the proves' verbal with him to look over,-a, fact . notorious in Nurnberg—it was tea,r that some. yet undetected partief3a; tor in the robbery had brokeit into the:honso, hoping:to carry off papers, and. so destroy evidence whie4 might be brought :against. him :or :at ally rate:throw fre:t difficulties in .the way of justice. No sooner wati this hypothesis started than it gained, of course, ,instant credit.; and it set men ,speculating 11!3 to who the yet . : unde tected accomplice, or aceonipliCes, : might .The power of gereSSing was illimitable ; and we have seen that the,:worthy,-Nurnbergere were not backward i» suspicion : but W - 10 all their efforts they could get at no eine. Even when the mistery ly cleared- up,,the burglary at -Paul wetter's remained inexpl,icable ; and not ,until some time afterleads, when Faukvetter was murdered by one of his exasperated clients, waS even tolerable - guess AM to the motive of the burglary arrived 411- Thus,, day after day, suspicion rose end fell ; .fresh lights glimmered through the obscurity, but after lead ing : men:a strange dance through the morass, they were all recognized as ; and real steady day : , light' eon Id nowhere • penetrate.-- Weeks rolled on: Ererythig had been done, to extort a confession, but the hardened obstinacy of the prison ers baffled every effort, Had not one. of them died impenitent, carrying hh g. Z. - CL )i ' lL n 2t. 4.4, ....- ..11' . :7710 j -- "IiVrJ , yield to the persuasion of the raelr.--, '.Chia, as we have seen, bad bacii al ready threatened, and - even reeolved on ; but with a natural rellietttneili„t had hitherto been left untried:: AI: though the age,had gradually learned a little more humanity—learned that torture was a terrible means of invest, tigation, only to be employed in ex treme cases, and therefore the court was slow in proceeding to sitCll. ex tremities—yet the age had not orriv-. ed at the conviction that torture . was an inftinA-• and a folly. For ilnately for all concerned, this iast iniquity was avoided..,:On the 30th October, exactly four weeks 4:: ter the litirlid of Fra. Keith erf:, anew':. turn was--giVen to tile ,inquir,y. fa; deed, before that there hadboill,itt.; mours which gfew more 41 3. 0 ro - ore :se rious,,and which diretited.-gilip,icioxf to quite, ether persons than the a 4 -7 eused. - But the court would not be led away from its present - course, by following new and uncertain tracts. It was felt that the •wholb eitl, *aa implicated—that justice herselritlis in peril;; unless the 'truth could top made evident., At length runiour.pe, came so load, that one . of the' futikil . sent ffor thh, locksmith's apprefitlce; Warner, and in his . private lo liouse tools down the, following tleposi tion : On Sunday titb. 17th October, a friend of his told him at the biter-shop that il little while before be, Wagner, arrived iltero,..kne of Meister Borger's work then,. nitnied the Berliner, heti spoken very abusively of.eistof "111 Gorier, the locksmith, and bt litoiiii, his man ; boldly telling, the. -liittOk that people suspe,etelf bird Of ~being concerned in the St erbenk rebbet7. Blosel bad 9uictly,aecepted all the reproaches, insidts,..aild vituprratiOn Of the Berliner, and sat, a l e: if - diiin6:, in the presence of his antagonist.— The suspicion to Arhi44. - tfie Berliner alluded was foonded on the fact that Illeseland Gosser bail bought them.. selves silver Ay aticiibs, tvere, dressed* in new suits from top• SA the; aNI seelt ed to be altogether in meeli - more . prosperous circumstances tha for. erty. WS gn er further deposed thAt, on the Monday after that scone, Acts. ter Gasser had come to the beer-shop and codeavoured to clear hisnaNt from imputations which .hid ecxe east on him, dec.:Jeri:. g, - that be bad 're= eeived money from his rel,atib6s - in Saxony, -which 11. - puld I:Cecil:of, for his prosperous condition. . „ - • On further queStiOnifig, Waiter deposed that abottt, -a: week ago a-fel.- ° lo W- NV Ork 111 all ld , :his had remarked : "Blosel is cutting a Ogitre ' * Hekiit 8 hail: -t. new coat trade. He stood treat .to -, MC. in ptinc-ely style ~.two., bottici* - of, wine at ono Pia.9. B -:.444 ; whenever we have. been together he has insisted nn paying for 10.11 . ;.7 , .. ~,: . ' Had anythingelse been.obsbrvecll. Yes, this: Since the ,: scenv eV i ihe benr-Shop, Blosel had notOice,rt - don with hie;*wateh; Whio:--Pret r ibutx! had always carried....4ll:orcoVisrkr 81, p , :--;• sa l . h a d. ni W &It Le:o4*kt :7017; ; irolc*-. bare b to ti ' i t w lia4) . ;e z er4l ll ad e - iint3r ai t t a e'l w ileeiviiild : Z -,,l arcd a:lll7-Ibitit.,, -i'pageitidd i so 3 torr, that ibßloitil*ciim -1401iiike',witi -nislici . -tie - veonidliit hive fl.l " s 8f t':' 7 - V.: I } :,..' lAN.' i:. -.:: .... , .. •;:;,) It I;ATES. O . F . POSTAOR ER