Lie No. 2432. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. O\E DOLLAR PER AffXl JI, IN ADVANCE. for six months, 75 cents. L\j| NEW subscriptions must be paid in L e . If the paper is continued, and net Ljthin the first month, $1,25 will be charg fnot paid in three months, $1,50; if not jr. six months, $1,75; and if not paid in Lnths, $2,00. [Papers addressed to persons out of the , ViU be discontinued at the expiration ol L paid for, unless special request is made [contrary or payment guaranteed by some Ljble person here. [ ADVERTISING. .lines of minion, or theirequivalent, con , a square. Three insertions sl, and 25 for each subsequent insertion. ffest Brand! Ipnrance Co. OF LOCK HIFEJ,' M.| [IRES Detached Buildings Stores Mer ndise, farm Property, and other Build ind tbeir contents, at moderate rates. DIRECTORS. John J- Pearce, Hon. G. C. Harvey, Hall, T T - Abrams . , \ Vaver, O. K. Jackn.an, Prist w White, ovtmson Thos. Kitchen. D,Ck ' Hon- G. C. HARVEY, Pres. T. T. ABRAMS, Vice Pres. S Kitchen, .^ec'y. REFERENCES. | IH llovd Thos. Bowman, D. D. *£prir, W- V~D.RB.It, Macker. Win. Fearon, l)r. J. S. Crawford, iQuilgle, A. L'pdegrafr, IV Maynard, James Armstrong, Simon Cameron. Hon Wm Bigler \ent for Mifflin county, G. W. bTLAV- M- ap23 ; iaity from Less and Damage by Fire, ,i lt Perili of Murine ami Inland Transportation CONTINENTAL NSURANCE COMPANY. grated by the Leyulature of Penusytra- j ' hiVj, icifh a Perpetual Charter. j Authorized Capital, 51,000,000. i !ii0.61 Walnut St. above Seeond, Phila. t Insurance on Buildings, Furniture, Mer iise, &c., generally. Marine Insurance ! ar,'Us and Freights to all parts of the I "Inland Insurance on Goods. &c., by ~ Rivers, Canals, and Land Carriages, to u'lla of the Union, on the most favorable I,consistent with security. DIRECTORS. j. W. Culladay, William Bowers, >l. Coleman, Joseph Oat, nV. Macheite, Howard Hinchman. lEORGF. W. COLLADAY, President. LIS WILSON, Secretary. f*\jcnt for Mid/in county, Wm. P. EL- T, Esq. febl9-ly INDEMNITY AGAINST LOSS BV FIBE. nkliii Fire Insurance Coinpa- j nv of' Philadelphia. kite iCi.li Chestnut street, near Fifth, '■cut of Assets, $1,827,185 SO 1 January Ist, 1*57. shed agreeably to an act of Assembly, be- : ing, Hi>rts:iges, amply secured, $1,519,932 73 : K-tate, [present value. $109,- Li cost, " 89,114 18 Is, (present value. 883,881 12,) i " 71,232 97 ie, 64,121 56 $1,827,185 80 j fetaalr, r Limited Invranees made on every j ij'tnii -f property, in Town arid Country, j iss low as are consistent with security, ce their incorporation, a period of twenty years, they have paid over Three Millions illars' losses by fire, thereby affording ev tof the advantages of Insurance, as well t ability and disposition to meet with (•mess a|| liabilities. Losses Fire. S paid during the year 1556, $301,638 84 DIRECTORS. N' Bancker, j Mordecai I). Lewis, I " Wagner, j David S. Brown, brant, Isaac Lea, R Smith, | Edward C. Dale, fiiehards, J Oeoree Fales. JIARLEB N. BANCKER, President. , '• 0. BAKCKER, Sec'y. *Agent for Mifflin county, H. J. WAL- j hsq., Lewistown. mar! 9 ■ 2C,3ii®S©a Jr. Book, Stationery, and VARIETY STORE. r'ibcriber, at bis old stand on East Mar -1 street, has added to his former stock of j M Wttiually large , 1 8sortment of ickel and Family Bibles, ud Prayer Book, of various kinds and I ~ odiog; Blank, Classical, Common and Juvenile /looks, era ' the te>t books now in us'C in the wd Common Schools. Vrr istin S of Letter and Cap L-ii"*•*, quality, either by the ream 'uii.r < i uan J t ' t ' e *; fancy and plain Envel kder,'?s,| P rint 'og Cards; Steel Pens *' ate ' ' ea< * atl4 * Car< * P en " tJliorll™ ' and Inkstands, together i cf nt7 oferer y description, and a great ' " J " er ar ticle usually kept in book io n .°/ weed, he would call their '"' lar S e and extensive assortment JBACCO AND CIGARS, and plain Cavendish, Rose coarse and fine the . aw ' n B and Smoking Tobacco, kimm r- 1 kinds ; Imported Havana dom.s, '^, 8 the mos t celebrated * -Wan r aVana ' S ? anish ' Ha,f S P an " f ell Cigars, and also a large quan- I 4!, alt f,r 4Bo t. C( ! ® hea P domestic and Ger -00 the w '" a®" wholesale or tenders reasona b' e terms. strict* ,„ ks for P ast patronage, rir 'S to ni ttention to business, and eo llaa'i Dr< f aße * l ' S - cus tomers, and selling fore given'hi' ' Dcrea,e the patronage GEO. W. THOMAS. ffSiJiHSiiS) Ass® wsMsaraiß' aw ®S@IE®23 irawssiiswHM&a MBWEBiKiDwsj 9 aiEffißMisj ©ffiurercrsra IPALO ANUS MUGSTTIRII^ WITTIE, WE HAVE MISLED YOU. Oh Willie, Is II you, dear—safe, safe at home. They did not tell me true, dear, they said you would not come. I heard you at the Rate, and It made my heart rejoice, For I knew that welcome footstep, and that dear familiar voice, Making, making tnuslc on my ear, In the lonely midnight gloom, Oh. Willie, we have missed you—welcome, welcome home. We've longed to see yon nightly, but this night of all. The lire was blazing brightly, and lights were in the hall; The little ones were up till 'twas ten o'clock and past. Then their eyes began to twinkle, and they have gone to sleep at last; But they listened lor your voice till they thought you'd never come. Oh, Willie, we have missed you—welcome, welcome home. The days were sad without you, the nights long and drear. My dreams have been about you, welcome Willie dear; Last night I wept and watched, by moonlight's cheerless ray. Till I thought I heard your footsteps, then I wiped my tears away. But my heart grew sad again when I found you had not come Oh, Willie, we have missed you—welcome, welcome home. INRATAUIIBAIDIA"." THE LADY TEACHER. A BEAUTIFUL STORY. 4 You were not here yesterday,' said the gentle teacher of the village school, as she laid her hand kindly on the curly head of one of her pupils. It was recess time, but the little girl had not gone to frolic*away the ten minutes, not even left hei L out. but sat absorbed in what seemed a fruitless at tempt to make herself mistress of a sum in long division. Her face and neck crimsoned at the re mark of her teacher, hut looking up, she seemed somewhat reassured by the kind glance that met her, and answered, 'No ma'am, I was not, but my sister Nell was.' ' I remember there was a little girl, who called herself Nelly Gray, caiuc in yester day, but I did not know she was your sis ter. But why did you not come ? You seem to love study very much.' 4 lt was not because i did not want to come,' was the earnest answer, and then she paused, and the deep flush again ting ed that lair brow— 4 but,' she continued, after a moment of painful embarrassment, ' mother cannot, spare both of os conveni ently, and so we are going to take turns; I'm going to school one day, sister next; and to-night I'm to teach Nelly all 1 have learned to-day, and to-morrow night she will teach me all she learns while here.— It's the only way we can think of getting along, and we want to study very much, so us to sometime keep school ourselves and take care of mother, because she lias to work very hard to take care of us.' With genuine delicacy. Miss M. forbore to question the child further, but sat down beside her, and 111 a moment explained the rule over which she was puzzling her young brain, so that the difficult sum was easily finished. 4 You had better go out: and take the air a moment; you have studied very hard to day said the teacher, as the little girl put up her slate.' 4 1 had rather not; / m iyhf tear my drcis; I will stand by the window and watch the rest. There was such a peculiar tone in the voice of her pupil as she said * I might tear my dress,' that Miss M. was led in stinctively to notice it. It was nothing but a nine penny print of deep bine, but it was neatly made, and had never yet been washed. And while looking at it she re membered that, during the whole previous fortnight Mary Gray had attended school regularly, that she had never seen her wear but that one dress. 4 She is a thoughtful little girl,' said she to herself, 4 and does not want to make her mother any trouble. I wish I had more such scholars.' The next morning Mary was absent, but her sister occupied her seat. There was something so interesting in the two little sisters, the one 11 years old and the other 18 months younger, agreeing to attend school by turns, that Miss M. could not forbear observing them very closely. They were pretty iiiceo children, of delicate forms and fairy like hands and feet; the elder with dark, lustrous eyes, and the younger with orbs like the June sky, her white neck veiled by a wreath of golden ringlets. She observed in both the same close attention to their studies, and as Mary had tarried during play time, so did Nelly, and upon speaking to her as she had to her sister, she received the same answer, 4 1 might tear ray dre**.' Again the reply caused Miss M. to no- THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1857. tice the garb of the sister. She saw at uiiee it was the same piece as Mary's, and upon scrutinizing it closely, she became certain that it was the same dress* It did not fit so closely on Nelly, it was tdo long for her, and she was evidently not at case when she noticed her teacher looking at the bright flowers that were so thickly set on the dark ground. The discovery was one that could not but interest a heart so trdly benevolent as that which pulsated in the bosom of that ' village teacher. She ascertained the resi dence of their mother, and though sorely straightened herself by a narrow purse, that same night, having found at the only store in the place a few yards of the same material, purchased a dress tor little Nellv, ; and sent it to her in such away that the donor could not be detected. Very bright and happy looked Mary j tjray on Friday morning, as she entered ! the school at an early hour, waited , only to place her book neatly in her desk, , ere she approached Miss M. and wliispcr ; ing in a voice that laughed in spite of her J efforts to make it low and deferential — ' After this week, Nelly is coming to school every day and oh, 1 am so glad !' | 'That is good news,' replied tin- teacher kindly. 'Nelly is fond of her books, 1 see, and I am happy to know that she can have 1 an opportunity to study her books every I dav,' Then she continued, a little good-humor ed mischief encircling her eyes. ' But how call your mother spare both conveni ently.' 4 (>, yes ma'am —yes ma'am, she can now. Something has happened which she didn't expect, and sjie is glad to have us come regularly,' o She hesitated a moment, .but her young heart was filled to the brim with joy, and when a child is happy it is as natural for it to tell the cause as it is for a bird to war ble when the sun shines. So out of the fullness of her heart she spoke, and told the teacher this little story. She and her little sister were the only children of a poor widow, whose health was so delicate that if was almost impossi ble to support herself and daughters. She was obliged to keep thcin out of school all winter, because they had no clothes to wear, but she told them if they could earn enough by doing odd chores for the neighbors to buy each of them a new dress, they might go in the spring. Aery earnestly had the little girls improved their stray chances, and very carefully laid by the copper coins which usually repaid them. They had each saved nearly enough to buy a calico dress, when Nelly was taken sick, and its the mother had no money before hand, her own treasure had to be expended for med icine. 4 ( ) ; 1 did feel so bad when school open ed, and Nolly could not go because she had no dress,' said Mary. 4 I told her I wouldn't go either; but she said I had bet ter, for I could then teach her some, and it would be better than no schooling. I stood it for a fortnight, but Nelly's little face seemed all the time looking at me 011 the way to school, and I couldn't be happy a bit; so I finally thought of away by which we could both go, and I told mother I would conic one day and the next I would lend Nelly my dress and she might come, and that's the way we have done this week. But last night somebody sent sister a dress just like mine, and uow she can cont'd 'too. 'O, if I only knew who it was, I would get down on my knees and thank them, and so would Nelly. But we doii't know, and we have done all we could for them— we've prayed, far them! and oh, Miss M. we are all so glad now. Ain't you too'!' 4 Indeed I am,' was the emphatic answer. And on the following Monday, when lit tle Nelly in the new dress entered the schoolroom, her face radiant as a rose in the sunshine, and approaching the teacner's table, exclaimed in tones as musical as those of a freed fountain— 4 I'm coming to school every day now, and I am so glad!' Miss M. felt as she had never before felt— that it was more blessed to give than re ceive. No millionaire, when he saw his namd in public prints, lauded for his thou sand dollar charities, was ever half so hap py as that poor school teaeher, who wore old gloves half a summer longer than she ought, and thereby saved enough to buy that little fatherless girl a calico dress. jr Howdoesaliuelookwithoutspacing ? THE OVERFLOWING CUP, 4- company of southern ladies were one day assembled in a friend's parlor, when the conversation chanced to turn 011 earthly af fliction. Each had her story of peculiar trial and bereavements to riffate, except one pale, sad looking woman, whose lustreless eye and dejected air showed that sbe was the prey to the deepest melancholy". Sud denly arousing herself, she said 111 a hollow voice : ' Not one of you know what trouble is.' ' Will you please, Mrs. Gray,' said the kind voice of a lady v/jro welj knew her story, 'tell the ladies what you call trouble.' 1 1 will if you desire,' sbe replied, 'for 1 have seen it. My parents possessed a com petence, and my girlhood was surrounded by all the comforts of life. I seldom knew an uugratified wish, and was always gay and light-hearted. 1 married at nineteen one I loved more than all the world beside. Our home was retired, but the sunlight never fell on a lovelier one, or on a happi er household. Years rolled on peacefully. Five children sat around our table, and a little curly head still nestled in my bosom. One night about sundown one of those fierce, black storms came on, which are so common in our southern climate. For many hours the rain poured down inces santly. Morning dawned, still the elements raved. The whole savannah seemed afloat. The little stream near our dwelling became a raging torrent. Before we were aware of it our house was surrounded by water; I managed with nr. babe to reach a little spot on which a few wide spreading trees were standing, whose dense foliage afforded some protection, while my husband and sons strove to save what they could of our property. At last a fearful surge swept away my husband, and he never rose again. Ladies, 110 one loved a husband more —but that irag not trout tie. ' Presently my sons saw their danger, and the struggles for life became the only consideration. They were brave, loving boys as ever blessed a mother's heart, and I watched their efforts to escape with such agony as only mothers can feel. They were so far off I could not speak to them, but I seen them closing nearer and nearer to each other as their little island grew smaller and smaller. 'The sullen river raged around the huge trees; dead branches, upturned trunks, . wrecks of houses, drowning cattle, masses jof rubbish, all went floating past us. My boys waved their bands to me, then jioiiited upward. 1 knew it was a farewell signal, and you, mothers, cannot imagine my an guish. I saw them all perish, and yet— -1 that 'u as ,ujt trouhfe. * 1 hugged my baby to my heart, and when the water rose to my feet I climbed into the low branches of the tree, and kept retiring before it, till an All-powerful Hand stayed the waves, that they should come no further. 1 was saved. All my worldly possessions were swept away, all my earthly hopes blighted—yet that wax not trouble. ' My baby was all I had left on earth.— [ labored night and day to support'him'and myself, and sought to train him in the right way; but :us he grew older, evil com panions won him' away from me. 11c ceased to Carft' fhr his mother's counsels; he would sneer at her entreaties and ago nizing prayers. He left my humble roof that lie might be unrestrained in the pur suit of evil;'and'al last, when heated with wine one night, he took the life of a fellow being, and ended his own upon the scaffold. My Heavenly Father had tilled my eup of sorrow before, but now it ran over. That wax trouble, ladies, such as I hope His mercy will spare you from ever experienc ing-' There was not a dry eye among her lis teners, and the warmest sympathy was ex pressed for the bereaved ih'Other, whose sad history has taught them a useful lesson. fl®"A son of jCol. J. J. Winter, of Clarks burg, Va., returned home the other day after an absence of three years. His father had some difficulty in recognizing him, and after he had made himself known, the father step ped to the door of an adjoining room, and calling to two of his daughters, informed them that a gentleman desired to see them. Upon entering the room, the young ladies did not at first recognize their brother, but almost instantly the eldest recognized hiin and sank instantly to the floor, dead. Being somewhat delicate, the joyous surprise of thus unex pectedly meeting her long-absent brother, to whom she was dearly attached, was too much and thus caused her instant death. MAN MUKDERKD UY 1118 ty'IKE. The Oleau Advertiser gives the follow ing particulars of a horrid murder perpe trated at Eldred township, McKean county, Pennsylvania, 011 Sunday morning, 11th ult;—" Betsy M'Lanc killed her husband, Haniel M'Lane, by striking him repeated ly on the head and neck with ur. axe, nearly severing his head from hik'oddy. M'Lane was evidently lying upon the bed when the deed was committed, as the wounds upon the body indicated, and the bed was so fully saturated with blood that it dripped through upon the floor beneath. " M'Lane uud his wife, we are informed, were both upwards of fifty years of age. She was a widow, with some property, when he married her, and both indulging pretty freely in whiskey, they have never lived together very harmoniously. On Saturday last M'Lane was in this village, and bought five gallons of whiskey, which he took home with him. That night himself and wife were both drunk, and on Sunday morning the neighbors heard them quarreling and fighting in the house. Between ten and eleven o'clock, all was still there, and sev eral men belonging in the neighborhood went into the house. M'Lane was nowhere in sight, but a large quantity of blood was upon the bed and floor, utld one of the men remarked to Mrs. M'Lane, 'it looks us though you had been butchering here— where is M'Lane?' 'He's gone to Smith's Settlement,' she replied. "At this moment the man discovered a hand protruding from under the bed, and stooped down and seized it, and drew out the ghastly corpse of the murdered man. The woman immediately exclaimed, 'I don't know who killed Hun—l don't" know who killed him The corpse was fright ful to behold, the skull broken by a blow on the right temple, the head nearly sever ed from the body by a deep cut oli the left side of the neck, and a part of the right hand chopped off. An eye witness says: ' The bed looked as though more than forty gallons of bloodLJiad been poured uj>on it.' When the party entered the house the wo man was endeavoring to Wash the blood out of some of the bed clothes. "This couple had no children—and ac cording to the best of our knowledge, no other person had been in the house the morning previous to the murder, and there can be no doubt but that M'Lane was kil led bv his wife. She is now in the jail at Smithport." WIFE KILLED BY HER HUSBAND. We condense the following from the Pittston (Luzerne county, Pa.,) Gazette of Oct. 28th: < >ne of the most appalling tragedies which has fallen to our lot to record, occur red in this place last week. Early on Fri day morning it was rumored that a woman living in White Oajr llollo>v, about two ttliles from tins borough, had been brutally murdered by her husband, a man named Francis Burns, in the employ of the Penn sylvania Coal Co. The constables were immediately on the alert, and having ascer tained that the report was well founded, a search was made for the supposed murder er. He was soon discovered concealed in a coal bed or cave, near the town. Hi's face, hands and clothes were besmeared with blood, aud his behavior at once satis fied the bystanders of his guilt. The crowd which met the prisoner on his way to the Justice's office, took possession of him, and demanded he should be lynched; and it was with the utmost difficulty the constable managed to rescue him from their grasp. During the hearing before Esquire lleddcn, the scene was one of great excite ment ; nothing would satisfy the indignant populace but the immediate application of lynch law. The prisoner, however, was eventually taken to the lock-up, and a Cor oner's jury summoned to hold ah inquest on tfye body. On arriving at the prisoner's residence, which is situated in one of the wildest spots of this section of country, the body of the murdered woman was found lying on a miserable apology for a bed, in a wretched hovel, which, with husband and two children, she had inhabited for some months. Drs. Nugent and Durkin made the necessary examination of the body, and testified that the cause of death was con nmion of the brain, produced by violence, Oue or two flesh wounds and several severe bruises were discovered on the body, but there was n() fracture. A man named New Series—Vol. 11, No. 52. Cooper, being duly sworn, said—Last night I heard some one hallooing, aqd blows be ing struck ; have frequently known liurns to ill-use his wife. Other witnesses were examined, who tes tified to the brutality of Burns, after which a verdict was rendered to the effect that she was murdered by him. Bums was then Committed to Wilkesbarre jail. The same day reports reached Pitts ton that the remains of a human being had been discovered on Everhart's Island, near the Lackawanna, so far decomposed that identification was impossible, but supposed to be the body of Adam Michael, a Ger man, who worked in the " Upper Mines." The Berks County Murder. —The Com missioners of Berks county have offered a reward of S">00 for the apprehension of the perpetrators of the murder of Adaline Ba ver, neaT Mohrsvillc, in that county. It is to be hoped that they may be brought to justice. In reference to this murder the Reading Gazette relates the following sin gular coincidence: Some eighteen years ago a beautiful young girl, named Esther Fisher, left Man ayunk on a Canal boat for Reading, but was murdered before reaching the latter place. The public excitement was very great, and a large reward was offered for the detection of the murderer, but without success.— This girl was a sister of the mother of Ad aline Bayer, who so recently has met a similar fate. Is it possible that the mur derers of these poor girls are never to be discovered until the revelations of the great day? an evidence of the hard times which are prevailing everywhere, the New ark (N. J.) Advertiser relates the follow ing incident: "A young mechanic on Sat urday evening was arrested for stealing a piece of riiofit from a butcher's stall. He said he Hkd been without work several weeks, and being without money or credit, and too proud to beg, he preferred to steal to save from starvation a wife and two children, who had been without food since Friday morning. Ah investigation Into the ease proVcd the truth of his statement, and he was released, given the meat, and told to come for' more, and was also pre sented with a purse of which was made up for him." WOKLDL V' PREACHEIIS. The tjeriniui Reformed Synod'of Penn sylvania, lately in session at Allentown, had before it certain charges against two Min isters of that persuasion, the One the Rev. Mr. Lescher, and the other the Rev. E. Ilelfrick, both of Northampton county. A committee of Ministers was appointed some weeks ago to investigate the matter. It was alleged against the former that he was deeply interested in some coal transac tions in Luzerne county, in some way con nected with the Northampton Coal Compa ny, which was organized several years ago. It is not shited in what manner these trans actions affected the standing of Mr. L., but the Ministerial Court voted to suspend him. Against the latter it was alleged that he was also engaged in the Coal business —that he endeavored to defraud the Coal Company —that lie waS eiitirely too world ly in his movements, trading horses, specu lating in coal, slate, &c., and lastly, that at a picnic given some time ago he had joined in some sort of kissittg play, such as the young folks sometimes introduce for the sake of amusement, and that he had kissed the giris ! The charges against Helfriek were not sustained, but the case is to be revived before the 'Synod and finally dispo sed of. A FifflU. —Patrick White, last night got exceedingly tight, and engaged in a fight, by punching the head of a friend who said that Patrick White was not quite right- As might he supposed, his friend's anger arose, and he hit Pat on the nose three very severe blows, which as every one knows, is quite apt to disclose the passions which dwell in a man's heart who is " unwell" from drinking too much of whiskey and " such." The persons around were dis turbed by the sound, and couldn't think of sleeping a wink, till the outcry wa3 hushed aad the crowd dispersed Mr. White was put right on the road for his home, and told in all time ito come to leave off drinking rum, and conduct himself good as all per sons should. He acknowledged the corn of taking a horn, and he solemnly swore he'd do so no more.— Buffalo Republic.