tiDhe gautitottr guttittginrct, PURL; tiED EVERY WEDIQESDAY BY H. G. SMITH & CO. • \,l A. J. STEINMAN TE1....113—rw0 'Dollars per annum, payable all oases In advanoe. UFFICE--SOIITHWEST CORNER Or CENTRE SQuARE. az-11) letters on business should be ad dressed to H. G. snail & co. l'iterart. What the Papers Revealed " Sir, the gentlemen are coming clown." "Indeed ! I suppose then it's all over. Poor old Nancy ! she will be a dreadful loss to me." And the speaker looked up with a sigh from a volume of Greek plays. which he had been read ing with evident relish. The room iu which ti is brief colloquy took place was a handsome and lofty, but not very spacious apartment, pan elled in oak and lined with book-cases; a massive oak table, quaintly carved, was drawn near the large old-fashioned grate, where a fire of mixed coal and wood burned brightly. Everything in the room bespoke comfort and luxury, but of the ornamental element there was not a single vestige. The original oak chair had been discarded to make way fur deep-cushioned lounges, and in one of these sat the master of the house, •-;ir Edward Ashly, his hook DOW closed, plunged in what, is commonly called "a brown study." The servant OW, with the uncertain ty that betrayed a novice to the ways of the house, moved 'and replaced a tray containing wine-glasses, decanters, and biscuits, that she, a minute before, de posited on the centre-table; she then busied herself in rearranging the folds of the window-curtains, glanced in quisitively from one side of the room to (tie other, from the huge lamp burning MI the Cell lre-table, to the smaller pair on the chimney-piece, and apparently gaining no inspiration by the inspec tion, inquired hesitatingly,— "Anything more, sir'," " No," said the master, shortly ; "you limy go." As he spoke, the heavy curtains that hung hefore the door were raised, and two gentlemen entered the room. The foremost of them looked very grave ; he was a tall inan with silvery hair, and his white cravat pronounced hint a clergyinan. " I tire glad yiiu sent for me," he said; " the poor woman, we Dr. Nichol tells me, grew calm clireetly she heard I was coming, :ml although greatly agitated at first, her end was peace," "She is deed, then "Dead, and no mistake," observed the goifileitiall ',NAM had not yetspoken, rubbing his hands cheerfully, and up proaehing the blaze. "I never allow the parson to be summoned till till hope is over; the sight of 0111! is too sugges tive to a nervous patient. But," he added niore seriously, "when I l'eel my ellorts to he hopeless, I make way for the disciple au baler Physician." "Poor old Nancy !" said Sir Edward, regret f u ll y. 11W HI , skill could have saved her , I till : , I.llle yours would. And now draw nearer the lire ; you will re quire a glas.; of wine before venturing into the frosty air." " You see I did not wait for an invi tation," rentarked the clergyman, who was already seittsml; " I consider myself one of the privileged few who may veil• tore with impunity into the lion's den." " It would be strange if you could not, Nugent," answered Sir Edward ; " for, of coltree , by the lion you [neat! me. A chat over old college days sometimes does good even to a hermit." "And \vhat a her,mit you have be come!" was Mr. Nugent's reply; "it seems impossible to understand why a man, who has lived ill his life in conti nental courts, should return home merely to shut himself up." " For that "try reason you ought to understand it," linswered his friend. " \\Then I first left England many years ago, I required . the whirl of action and and continual change of scene; but I was ambassador to Spain long enough to wish heartily I had never accepted the post, independent of my earlier di plomatic experiences in Turkey and Russia. Such responsibilities give a surfeit of society, I assure you, aud ren der repose inexpressibly desirable and grateflll." here interposed the doctor, confess that your perfect seeltision is a mystery to me: no dervish could worship solitude with more perti nacity:. of course, personally, it makes the exception in my favor more flatter ing; but caul you wonder at the indig nation or the county when a man in your position, Sir Edward Ashly, of Ashly _Hall, indulges ill such unortho dox tastes." " Thal indignation has long ago died out," answered Sir Edward, good-hu moredly; "the world is, fortunately, very willing to forget those who forget it; my return and retirement were the conventional Min-days' wonder, npth ing more. Besides, I ant not without companions," he added, pointing - to the book cases round the room. "Anti these have been your only companions ever since you came back to England'?" the doctor said, interro• gatively, his eyes following the direc tion indicated; "why, that must be nearly four years." ".lust four years." " And during all that time you have had no other servant to wait upon you but, the poor old woman lying above'?" "No other" 'More of your eccentricity, cried Mr. Nugent,. " Not only you restrict your household to one sole attendant, but you choose for the post the ugliest and most repulsive sample of womanhood I ever beheld. lam now merely speak ing or itppeitranvo+, for I remember how well and faithfully she served you, and have of ten remarked with astonishment her wonderful quietness and rapidity while waiting On us at table; but how could you have ever brought yourself to look at her'.'' "llnl, 1, 1 suppose. There were two other servants In the !louse besides old Nancy, but you never saw them, for she const tutted herselnuy special attendant, gilding about noiselessly, and keeping the others, with their creaking shoes, always in tile lower regions. It was such ~tolort. The house might have been onootged hy Invisible fairies, so punetuaily , and silently everything was done." "How much you will miss her!" said :Mr. Nugent. "More than I can tell you. When I first returned from abroad, my present head groom, who was then my valet, chose her for me from among the few who presented themselves; for there were not many willing to take service in a great, lonely country house, de serted except In rho Wing, without any prospect of company or variety. He 'chose her for the qualities which would have deterred you, anti which made her so inestimable to 'tie, her excessive ugliness, her Insurmountable taciturn ity, and lier activity, remarkable for so old a woman; and he certainly chose well. The poor creature fell into niy ways silently and at once; her seamed and scarred lace was an ever-preseut assurance of the impossibility of lovers and interlopers; her grim determina tion and surliness, a guarantee of her empire below stairs; and, to give you an idea of the really 'unprecedented value of old Nancy, I do not remember Laving once exchanged as many as six words with her during the four years that she was my exclusive and constant attendant." Sir Edward :N. shly concluded his sen tence in the slow and impressive tone always adopted when the culminating point of a eulogy Is reached. Dr. Nichol smiled. "Words are as Sliver, but silence is gold," he quoted. "1 always thought, for nay part, that your old servant was a mute, until called in to attend her, and I am ashamed to say, although not a timid man, that her ghastly, fossilized face used to frighten me. It is painful to think how much we are influenced by looks," the doctor said; "and in eases like present, how unjustly so. My dear Ashly, you will find it difficult to replace this poor woman. Such quail- Ries us those you esteem most are rare." " don't expect I shall everreplace her. Already that girl who emerged from the back premises when poor Nancy gave up work (which she did not till the last Moment) has driven me to the verge of Insanity; rushing about, bustling, fuss ing, and actually tormenting me for orders. Orders! Why, Nancy never '* . gitit?eota littettiwitt&t VOLUME 68 asked me for an order in her life. She did everything by intuition, and never left anything undone. Poor faithful old monster, I shall miss her steady, unobtrusive services, as I would the presence of an old friend." " How long was she ill ?" asked the rector. " Two days," the doctor said, reply ing for his host. "When I was first sent for, I saw there was no hope ; the frame completely shattered and worn out ; and I asked the poor woman if she would like to go home. She said she had no home." - - - " Poor thing!" observed Sir Edward; " I did not know that ; but in any case, I think it a cruelty to send a ser vant away for getting sick, as if it were a crime. Yet this is often done. For my part, I gave orders that poor Nancy should receive as much care as myself, in proof of which she was attended by my favorite doctor." "You could not do less, even in a human point of view," answered Mr. Nugent; " besides, this old woman always struck me as a perfect Cerberus of trustworthiness and vigilance; and, from what you say, she must have ex • ceeded all I gave her credit for." "Four years of untiring service are a great test," Sir Edward said, with a groan. " I expect I shall soon learn, to my cost, how invaluable she has been to me." "By the by, what was her name ?" asked the doctor; " we shall want it for the burial certificate." " I don't know," moodily replied the host, 'whose thoughts were occupied with his difficulty in the mutter of household reorganization ; " I never heard,—l always called her Nancy." " We can easily settle that question," said the rector, producing a roll of papers from his pocket; " the poor crea ture's mind was solely ill at ease, and one ()flier last efforts was expended in drawing this packet from under her pillow, saying it would tell all about her." With these words Mr. Nugent handed the papers to t•Air Edward, who began listlessly to unroll them ; but no sooner had his eyes fallen on the first word, than, with a smothered sound, as if lie had received a heavy blow, lie clutched nervously at the table, and his face, from pale, became perfectly livid, With wild eagerness, he perused the docu ments, and when the last had becnread, lie raised his head, revealing to his astonished companions, a lace so changed as lobe almost unrecognizable, —gliastly„expressionless, and awful in Its vacancy. Then, before either of his friends, paralyzed by the suddenness of the attack, could utter a word, his grasp relaxed, the papers fluttered to the ground, and he fell back rigid and in sensible. Both gentlemen Ilew to his assistance, and endeavc'red to restore him, but un successfully. The servant•girl nearly took leave of her senses, when summon ed by Dr. Nichol, at the sight of her master, motionless and apparently dead, and threatened to faint herself, when the doctor resorted to his lancet, all simple restoratives having failed. As the blood started, in obedience to the summons, the baronet moaned, and opened his eyes. "All right!" exclaimed the doctor, twisting a handkerchief round the in cision ; in a very few moments 'Rich ard will be himself again.' " "Doctor, can you account for this whispered Mr. Nugent, whose curiosity rose as his fears lessened. " Was it caused by those rapers.." " Undoubtedly. Perhaps a date, or even a stray word, may have brought too vividly before him sonic forgotten circumstance. Certain it is, that the mind first, and then the body, gave way under a mental shock." "The body—yes; but the mind ?" said the rector, in a horror-struck voice. "You don't mean to say—" "O! only for the moment, of course," answered the doctor. "Look at him now! in five minutes he will be as well as if nothing had happened." "Thank God!" ejaculated Mr. Nu gent, greatly relieved. By degrees Sir Edward's color re turned. "Those papers?" were his first words. "0, never mind the papers, Ashly," said the rector ; "leave them to me, and I will see about everything. The fire was too hot for you, and you fainted." "No, Nugent. You know, as well as Dr. Nichol, that it was not the lire. I saw in those papers a name that I never expected to see again, and learned from them a strange and wonderful fact,—so wonderful that it is impossible to real ize it. The unexpected resurrection of that name prostrated me; but now the shock is over, I feel I shall derive com fort from what I have discovered." " Good!" said the doctor, as if dis missing the subject. " 'All's well that ends well.' " " But," Sir Edward continued, "you ask me no questions, and I appreciate your delicacy, for you must have been startled and mystified; but there is now no reason why I should not enlighten you. The one great episode of my life has been revived to-night; the episode which made mea wanderer from youth to age from my native laud. The long buried memories have been Suddenly recalled to life; you shall hear them, if you like." The faces of both gentlemen betrayed eager curiosity, but Mr. Nu,geuthesitat ed. "If the mere recollection has been too much fur you, a long recital will surely do you harm," he said. "No," answered Sir Edward,—"it was ie surprise that upset me; and, moreover, brooding upon such a past would be worse than relating lt." "'Prate," said the doctor, nodding assent'" "brooding would be worse. And his sanction settled the question. "I really owe you an explanation of my strange emotion," their host then said, heaping additional logs on the lire from a handsome carved wood-case that stood beside his 'chair, a relic of conti nental habits. "Draw near ; and while we share the house between us and the dead up stairs, I will tell you what those papers recalled, }cud what they revealed." When I bade farewell to a college life —leaving you, Nugent, winning the praises of all and, the envy of some—l started at once for Wales, on a visit to Sir Andrew Heath. This visit had been a long-planned project of my parents, and originated, strangely enough, in a romantic attachment of Sir Andrew's for my mother. My father, who had been the confidant of the lover, ulti• mutely became the husband ; but, con trary to the usual rule in such cases, no quarrel ensued. Sir Andrew, shortly afterwards, married an heiress, who, fortunately for him, shared his love for the country, and they lived quite out of the world, ou . their estates in Wales. My father, Sir Edward Ashly, had only one child, a son; Sir Andrew Heath had only one child, a daughter. The result is obvious ; to cement the two friendships, to join the two fortunes, to connect the two families—such was the dream of our respective parents from our earliest 'years. As a child, I had been accustomed to speak of my little wife, but I had never seen her; my father had a theory ou the subject, and did not believe in years of childish familiarity being favorable to the development of the tender pas sion ; so it was arranged that not until I had come to 11101.08 estate, and had left college, was I to see the young lady and judge for myself whether the wishes so long entertained by the houses of Ashly and Heath were likely to be realized. I\ ry father's system was certainly a good one ; no constraint was laid upon me ; I was merely made ac quainted with the facts of the case, and left to decide for myself. In conse quence of the young lady being person ally unknown to me, the charms of expectation and conjecture were added to the greater interests involved, and I started on my journey to Wales in a state of excitement and suspense that would have delighted my father and Sir Andrew, could they but have known it. I am telling you a story of many years ago, before railways were everywhere, and isolation an impossibility. such is truly the case now, but in those days many parts of the country were almost unattainable; and my journey to Glen twyr, a thinly populated district in the most distant section of Wales, was an affair of no inconsiderable magnitude. llany days, in various coaches, brought me to within some fifty miles of my destination, where I found Sir Andrew Heath's carriage in waiting, with post horses, to carry me the rest of the way. The approach to Glentwyr was a scene of barren picturesqueness almost savage in its desolation, but very beautiful, nevertheless. I did notremember hav ing seen a single human habitation from the time I entered the carriage till I drove through the little village of Glentwyr. All the stdries of fairy pal aces I had loved to read as a boy rushed to my memory when I first laid eyes on Sir Andrew Heath's grand old house, lying in a wide-spreading, sheltered valley, and encompassed round by the finest and boldest mountains in the country. I have often been reminded of its situation by one of our most sym pathetic modern poets, in a reference be makes to a similar scene, which he describes happily as " A lovely land•leelied vale." Sir Andrew received me at the door of his house,—an honest, open-hearted, country gentleman, somewhat boister ous, I thought,—probably an active sportsman and farmer. Such was my first impression, and I had some preten sions to unusual powers of observation. He led me at once to Lady Heath, and left us to make acquaintance. She struck me as a delicate woman, rather preoccupied with her health, but in a graceful, feminine way, not devoid of a certain charm ; and before we bad been many minutes together, I was wholly fascinated by that indescribable gentle ness which, for want of a better word, we call womanliness, and which she possessed to a remarkable extept. It was during that interview that I first looked on my long-dreatued•ol be trothed. Where was she? Had she heard of my arrival? How soon should I see her? Such were the questions 1 was asking myself,—a feeling of rest less impatience stealing over me. When she entered the room, on perceiving me, she started, as if unprepared for my presence, but went through the cere mony of introduction with haughty stateliness. To say she was handsome would be to use au expression con temptibly weal:,—there was something startling in her faultless lovliness ; highly-colored and ideal as all my pre conceived portraits had heed, I had never pictured in my imagination a beauty so dazzling as hers. She held a book in her hand, and I heard from her mother that she was a greati,r r eader ; from her I could not obtain a word. This reticence continued throughout the whole of that first dap, and tor long all er wards. I must not weary you with minute details, though every hour spent under that roof is as vivid to me as if it trad only occurred yesterday. Let it suffice to say, that as day after day passed by, uneventful and monotonous, .I. could not thaw the icy reserve Miss Heath had shown me froth the first. Alone, comparatively speaking, in a country house, it seemed almost impos sible, dial c.msbint companionship should not inevitably render an increase of familiarity; yet, far from this, her manner, with time, only grew more distant and undemonstrative; and, if occasionally I sought to join her solitary rambles in the park, she would either acquiesce silently, laying down with ostentatious resignation some favorite book, or darkly hint a vague taunt about forced companionship. I was honestly mystified. I could not decide whether to attribute her varying, but always disdainful mood, to a naturally morbid charact /r, self-cultured in soli tilde, or to a studied motive for which' was imposible to conjecture a cause. That I was personally distasteful to her, as my fears sometimes suggest• ed, seemed contradicted by the fact that in the very first hour we met, before she could have formed any opinion adverse or favorable to rue, her manner had been equally repelling. Besides, if such a feeling existed, why not express it? Her marriage was not compulsory, and I felt sure that what ever might be my sufferings, and their disappointment, Her parents would never force a sacrifice to their wishes, from an only child. With Sir Andrew and Lady Heath, 1 was soon on tLe friendliest terms, and their open-hearted kindness formed a strong contrast to their daughter's un fathomable nature. To them, therefore, I confided all my doubts, and certainly found consolation. Sir Andrew attribu ted his daughter's reserve-to the natural shyness of a young girl, brought up in an almost uninhabited part of the country, isolated from all society, having never let a young man before; and, more over, aware of the object of my visit to Glentwyr,—an additional reason for conscious bashfulness. He argued that the reserve which alarmed me ought, rather to be a source of satisfaction, as showing the delicate and sensitive na ture of the girl I hoped to make my wife. Lady Heath, with truer instinct, de- dared her daughter's manner, but it appeared to occasion her no surprise. Miss Heath, she told me, was reticent and undemonstrative, even with her parents; she had lived on books ever since she had been able to read, and had resisted every ellort of her mother's to stop her constant supplies of indis criminate literature. "1 feared," con cluded Lady Heath, "that so much reading, in a life of inaction, might tend to a morbid state of mind; but fabriella is of a strong nature, and I am of a weak one; and though she never openly disobeyed me, I foresaw great difficulties In depriving her of her only pleasure ; especially as I could not hope to make Sir Andrew understand my view of the ease." There was something so reassuring and so plausible in all this reasoning that 1 gladly allowed myself to be con vinced by it; resolved that, If patience only was required, 1 would emleavor to emulate that of Jacob for his beloved Rachel ; for the beauty of this strange girl had enslaved me. I could not call the feeling love,—however strong the passionate element in love, there still must be a large ilhare of personal iden tity, a real or supposed sympathy with individual character; something be yond the mere outward impression on the senses, to compass the full meaning log of the word; whereas Gabriella Heath's mind was a sealed book to Inc, her character• as inscrutable, her feel ings, If she had any, as impenetra• ble as those of the sphinx. But an ad miration stronger than reason, and overwhelming iu intensity, grew upon me In spite of myself. It may be that the mystery of her unalterable reserve gave additional fascination to her al ready irresistible loveliness; for her cold, proud face was full of power, and the character of her beauty the complete reverse of what would be generally at tributed to a passionless nature. But, whatever the cause, the result was that my whole life and thoughts became concentrated Into a desire to lead he, to a betrayal of her real nature ; and many were the traps I laid to find the bent of her mind, and oirthat clew to shape my course. There were times when a gleam of animation rewarded my perseverance. I remember especially one occasion that, seeing her with a history of the first French revolution in her hand, I made sciine trivial remark on the pathetic incidents of the time, the sufferings of the weak, well-meaning king, the de gradation of the beautiful, proud queen, and the unhappy, heart-renderingstory of the poor child, Louis XVII. She turned on me with unexampled scorn ; "Of course," she sneered, "what is it if people groan for generations under the pressure of tyranny and wrong? What if they toil, and faint, and per. ish to supply a proper succession of pleasures to their superiors? What if ,they die by thousands of starva• Mon and.penury ? It is their business the purpose for which they are created; but if, by some mistake, a latent spark of manhood struggles to the surface and they rise upon their oppressors, or the representatives of their oppressors, to proclaim a glorious equality, theta the LANCASTER PA WEDNESDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 11 1867 necessary sacrifice of two or three lives is a blot upon the page of history, hith erto quite unsullied by the myriads of deaths among the people, caused by ini quitous and heartless misgovernment. if such narrow-minded egotism is edu cation, you had better not have gone to college." Her extraordinary warmth on so com pletely abstract a subject, quite bewil dered me; her philosophy, too, though perhaps well founded, sounded strange from the lips of a girl scarcely twenty years of age; and it seemed to me, as days wore on, that I knew her less and . less. Beyond this one outbreak, however, and an occasional sarcasm when any question of social distinction was start ed, I never got any further clew to Miss Heath's real character, her unvarying placidity remained as unimpressionable as ever. At length, when days and weeks brought me apparently no near er the object of my mission than in the first hour of my arrival, I resolved, in a fit of despair, to brave all consequences, and propose to Gabriella. Her whole conduct was such an enigma, that I thought it might possibly conceal an inclination favorable to myself; and at all hazards a declaration would lead me to a partial solution of the puzzle. When I apprized Sir Andrew of my intention, he implored me to delay un til we knew more of each other. To this I replied that I had given up all hope of ever knowing more of Gabriella, and that I had certainly been at Glentwyr long enough for her to know me fully. I did not tell him how much I was be ginning to suffer from this protracted suspense; how, with every succeeding day, my passionate admiration made le barrier betweeu us au ever-increas- lug torture; yet, with the cowardly consciousness that a refusal might re sult in banishment from her presence, I listened to Sir Andrew's warnings against precipitancy. " \Vait, at least," he said, " tlil after the fair—a most important era in the lives of all Glentwyr people. Once a year this little village awakes to life; buyers and sellers, ma rionttles and menageries flock in, for the day, from all parts of the country ; and every one, from the highest to the lowest, is expected to be in a state of excitement and exultation at the great event_ Even Ch‘hrlellu forgets her books, and seems as interested as the busiest when the falrthne comes round. " You will have an opportuhity of seeing her as you have not seen her yet, and may then find the secret spring to her favor, which you do not seem sure of having yet discovered. She is, perhaps, a little cold, and, like all women, ca pricious; too much precipitation may rouse her opposition, and I think you now concur enough in the family wishes to dread this. Therefore I say, wait a little. In my day young men were not in Such a terrible hurry to give way to despair." And accordingly I waited. There certainly was a change iu Miss Heath; her placid tranquility was re placed by an unmistakable restlessness. She now often joined our general con versation, always in iroducing the sub ject of the fair, either proposing to her father to throw open the park gates and give a banquet to all comers, or declaring her intention of passing the whole day in the village iu the midst of the festi val. My heart beg an to beat with a sensa tion almost lik hope as I noticed this change ; there was something so natural and girlish in her interest for the coming gala, and anxiety for the people's en joyment of their holiday, that I argued well from the contrast to the indiffer ence she had hitherto shown for every thing. Sir Andrew readily entered into ail sympathy for the villagers, and promised that the presence of the party from the castle should not be wanted to crown the occasion as a complete success. To me the projected fair was a species of revela thou* ; it seemed to explain away my principal doubts, and account for Ga briella's outward apathy by her life of unnatural stagnation. Lady Heath had said, that her daughter was a girl of strong mind ; she had been brought up in an atmosphere so dull and eventless as to be absolute petrifaction, and had probably ended in creating a fictitious existence feu• herself, though her books, in which, as far as thought and feeling went, she absolutely lived. From this imaginary region, pleasure, excitement, variety alone could wean her, perma nently, perhaps; temporarily, certainly, as her activity for the coming festival abundantly testified. There was still one drawback to my growing confidence. \Vining, as Gabriella was, to converse on the subject of the corning festivity with we, especially when alone, she was as silent and reserved as ever; not even on the all-absorbing topic could I get her to utter an opinion ; she froze at once, whenever I. attempted to address her. \\ hen, at last, the long-expected morning dawned, and I threw open my window to let in the glorious sunshine, distant noises from the village, princi• pally the discordant noies of primitive musical instruments, came wafted in on the air. I fancied, as I listened, that Gabriella must have been disturbed by these sounds many hours before, for here were the only rooms that looked out towards the village, and were much better situated for seeing and hearing than any others in the castle. Indeed, with a goodglass, she could probably distinguish the movements of the busy multitude, and count the number of booths and tents erected during the night. She certainly never looked more beautiful than when we met that morn- lug at the breakfast table: her grand eyes sparkling somewhat restlessly, and her cheeks flushed with a color almost feverLsh in its intensity. Sir Andrew also seemed impressed with the importance of the occasion. An annual Idc, that his mere presence sanctioned, was an Institution far more to his taste than the gayeties of society, that he had tired of at a very early age. Lady 11 eat ii looked at father and daugh ter with au amused smile. She had lived in the fashionable world for many years, an acknowledged belle and a courted heiress. Fortunately for the 'blunt country gentleman she chose, a belief in her own extreme delicacy and failing health led her to prefer a life of perfect retirement to any other; but the importance allowed to this little rustic festivity by Sir Andrew and Gabriella, recalled, no doubt, lu startling contrast, I some memories of the busy life beyond the little world of Glentwyr. Never theless, in her quiet way, she shared her husband's and child's wishes for the successful issue of the holiday, and con sented for once to forget her ailments, and accompany us to the scene of action. The great event of the day was to be a wrestling-match between the chosen champions of the surrounding villages; so, after wandering a short . time among the temporary booths, lavishing small coins on every side, and patronizing for a few moments each separate show, we were led to the seat of honor reserved for us on the field, where the modern tournament was to take place. I say "tournament" ad visedly, for, however unromantic and degenerate this display of brute force might be, compared with the knightly feats of tilting, au old fiavorof chivalry was cast upon the scene, in the custom, revived by Miss Heath, of crowning the victor. Had the exhibition been twice as interesting as it possibly waslshould not have noticed a single detail. My whole attention was riveted on my be! trothed. She follawed the varying scene with breathless interest, and seemed transfigured suddenly from an insensate statue into a passionate, pal pitating woman. Even Sir Andrew remarked the change, for he looked at me triumphantly, and at his daughter, as 14 struck with an unusual sense of het exceeding loveliness. You will think I am infringing on my privileges as A. narrator, in dwelling so often on the, wondrous attractions of this young girl. Forgive me; I cannot help it, and I shall not tax your pa- tience much longer, In a few minutes I shall have ceased forever to trespass in this respect. Till then, and. while I am endeavoring to recall the scene on the village green, the most prominent point in the picture must be the almost superhuman beauty of Gabriella in her transformation, for such it was. As I have before mentioned, I did not follow the details of the struggle, but every phase of it was reproduced in my betrothed's changing face. At one moment it lighted up with enthu siasm, her cheeks burned,. her lips parted, and her whole frame seemed thrilling with excitement, and uncon sciously she half rose from her seat; at another moment I saw her turn so deadly pale, I thought she would have fainted, and, seriously alarmed, I whis pered to Lady Heath, who, looking around, was frightened at her daugh ter's pallor. Come away at once, dearest," she said, holding out her arm to support the trembling girl ; " this has been too much for you." But with a strong effort, that showed how com plete was her mastery over herself, Ga briella, on being remarked, recovered her composure. "No, mamma," she said, " I am not ill—l cannot go—we must stay to the end. And without giving her mother time to answer, she appealed to Sir Andrew, who, intent on the wrestling, had observed nothing. and of course consented. Following the direction of his eyes, I sought the cause of Gabriella's emotion, and saw one of the hitherto most successful wrestlers rrostrate and wounded on the ground. t was evident that such a display was not fit for a girl unused to the slightest excitement; while at the same time it showed how rich in human sympathies was her apparently cold nature, how delicate her sensibilities, how much too trying the present tension on her nerves. With the simplicity of a child she suf fered with the fallen, and trampled with the victorious; and when at last the conqueror was brought to her feet to be crowned, she performed the ceremony with a pride and solemnity too full of grace to be ridiculous. I scarcely re marked the recipient of this honor, who appeared to be a strongly built, hand some young fellow, with a rather sheep ish expression of face. On our return to the castle, Gabriel la's vivacity deserted her; exhausted probably by the fatiguing events of the day, she sank Into her usual listless silence, and retired early to her own apartment. Gentlemen, I have reached a point in my story that It is agony even to recall ; every hour of that fatal evening lives again as I rake up the long-buried memory ; nearly forty 'ears—a lifetime—lie between me and t, yet even now, I dare not dwell upon it. Briefly, then, our usual evening's amusement, chess-4between Lady Heath and me, while Sir Andrew invariably dozed in an easy-chair—was ou this oc casion interrupted more than once by noisy cries from the village, which in creased steadily, and, to judge by the sound, seemed coming nearer. Present ly all doubt ou this score was confirmed, the shouts grew louder and louder, and we could almost distinguish voices. "Strange that this noise has not dis turbed Gabriella," muttered Sir Au drew,—"hers is the only room from which anything could be seen ; go, my dear, and find out what it is." Lady Heath was pale, and evidently alarmed. ' Come with me," she said. And Sir Andrew siezed one of the branch candlesticks from the table, and followed her out of the room. I waited anxiously—not long, how ever. A minute had barely elapsed, before a wild shriek rang through the house—a shriek so piercing, so full of terror, that, reckless of consequences, I rushed to the spot, following in the wake of Sir Andrew, who was just then entering his daughter's inner chamber. What this chamber was like I never knew. I felt that the window was open, for the night air blew upon my face; but my eyes were fastened upon the scene within. Lady Heath lay on the ground in a fainting fit, mercifully unconscious for some moments of what ensued. Sir Andrew, totally oblivious of his corpse-like wife, whose most fan ciful complaint had always filled him with concern—was looking steadily, and with grins determination into the room, at the other actors in this horri ble drama. For there were two—Cia briella, her long hair falling loose upon her shoulders, stood boldly forward, with her arms spread out, as if to form a barrier, and behind her—a man. In tuis man I recognized the hero of the wrestling-match, the successful champ ion of the morning's sports. His courage was certainly not of the moral order, for he shuffled uneasily, and at sight of Sir Andrew's set facesheltered himself more completely behind the dauntless girl, who stood before him like some hunted animal at bay. It was she who first broke the awful silence : " He is my husban 1," she said, tearing some papers from her bosom, and offering them to us ; "he is my husband, and I love him." No one responded to the gesture; but Sir Andrew in a voice so changed, that I started at hearing it, merely asked the man,—" Is this true"." The creature muttered au affirmative, and some words in extenuation about her having made him marry her. But Sir Andrew interrupted. Stern, col lected, and therefore merciless, I re, og mzed what these easy-going, indolent natures can sometimes hide of intense ower and self-control. His voice alone etrayed the effort: " That will do," he said. " I want no explanation. I have seen. That is enough. You are free to go. Take that woman with you ; she is no child of mine, and she has killed her mother." He pointed to the inani mate form of Lady Heath, and turned, with pitiless calmness, to speak to his daughter. "You have chosen dishonor deliberately ; abide by it ; you are no longer anything to me that I should seek to rescue you, From this hour re move your accursed presence, your tainted person, from the roof to which your shame has brought undying dis honor and disgrace. Go!" he added, more bitterly, 'join the witnesses you have summoned to your triumph." "Then, for the first time, I looked round, and perceived through the win dow, at some little distance, the group of peasants whose clamor had originally disturbed us. They had missed the hero of the day from their revels, and suspecting him of having abandoned them for the company of the castle ser vants, had followed him in a state of noisy intoxication. Blit now, awe struck into silence, they stood huddled together, gazing up through the dim night into the brilliantly-lighted room where so strange a scene was being en acted. For one moment Gabriella quailed under father's words; then raising her head defiant as before,— " You will regret this harshness when you know all," she said • and, without even a glance at her mother, she seized the crestfallen champion by the hand, and almost dragged him from the room.. Then followed a scene that I cannot attempt to describe. The unhappy girl gone, Sir Andrew was himself again, hanging over his still unconscious wife in an agony of tenderness; while the scared servants bustled about the house, getting restoratives for their mistress. But from the shock of that night Lady Heath never fully recovered. Although the very next day she left Glentwyr forever with Sir Andrew, time brought her but little consolation. She died shortly afterwards at Pau, in the Pyre nees, having never seen or heard of her daughter since that fatal night. Poor Sir Andrew did not long survive his wife. After her death, I persuaded him to join me in Italy. Glentwyr Castle had been sold ; and not only had he forbid den Gabriella's name to be mentioned before him, but he refused to be made acquainted with her whereabouts, her prospects, or her position. From this resolution he never swerved. In small things tolerant beyond most people, once his sense of honor was touched, his whole nature became metamorphosed. In the same degree that he had been a credulous and adoring father, so was he afterwards a relentless and unforgiving judge; and on the few occasions on which I ventured to sound him on the subject, he invariably replied, with per fect calmness, that he bore no ill-will to the peasantry of Wales, with the excep tion of one woman who had deliberately dishonOred a name stainless for genera tions, and had moreover, murdered his wife. Did I require him to Belie this special woman as a recipient .of his gratitude? With. these feelings un changed, he died about.a year after the catastrophe that had broken up his home, his hopes, and happiness; and in his will Gabriella was formally dis inherited. My friends, in all this I have not spoken to you of myself. How could any words give an idea of the bitterness of a trial such as mine? I can relate naked facts, the desolation of a hearth, the degradation of a name, the deaths of a stricken woman and broken-hearted man, my own voluntary exile for long and weary years, the ruin of my hopes, the blasting of the youngest and what should have been the brightest portion of my life; but to describe or detail the sufferings that such things bring with them is not in the power of mere language. • When I left England as attache to a foreigh ernta.ssy, it was partly to shun the land of such cruel experiences, and partly because my father feared that, if at home, a morbid desire to find out what had become of Gabriella Heath might prompt me to seek her out. Cer tain it is that I listenell eagerly to all news from England, in a stupid, un reasoning way, as though it were possi ble that any despatches could contain intelligence of au obscure cottage in some remote part of Wales. The feel ing may have been presentiment,—a foreshadowing of the future that some people possess, for there wasyetauother link to be added to that hapless chain of events. One morning, w hi le scanning as usual the English newspapers, my heart gave a sudden bound as the familiar name, Gabriella Heath, caught my eye. Once more that fatal name was destined to be associated with calamity, and this time with guilt. The paper stated briefly that a young woman known as Gabby Wynn, daughter of the late Sir Andrew and Lady Gabriella Heath, of Glentwyr Castle and Rocklands, &c., was ar raigned for the wilful murder of her husband, James Wynn. My first in stinct was a wild desire to start for England, which I should certainly have yielded to but I was most unex pectedly chained. I could not get leave of absence. I did not then lenow that my father had sent word to detain me; but if I could have thrown up my ap pointment with honor, 1 should cer tainly have done so. I lived in a kind of dream during the progress of that terrible trial. With feverish anxiety I watched for the arrival of the malls ; and then, with a copy of the public pa pers, hurried offto battle alone with the horror of the awful details. The ac counts were pitiless and precise. The case for the prosecution was short, and to this effect : That Gabriella Heath had fallen violently In love with and married the man Wynn,—and here some painful references to the disparity of their social positions, and her broken hearted parents, were given,—that he had brought her home to his father's farm, and had been a good husband to her, in spite of the objections of his family to seeing a fine lady among them; that she was proud and violent, unwilling to conciliate her new rela tions, and accustomed to exasperate her husband by incessant scenes of scornful reproach and vituperation; that on one of these occasions, returniughome, tired out from a day's labor, she met him with such a volley of unprovoked and bitter taunts, that, iu a lit of indignation, he raised his hand and struck her. That night lie was found murdered in his bed. Such was the substance of the accusation, without the comments and remarks with which it was interspersed. The prisoner—my soul revolted at the expressiou—pleaded guilty, and sullen ly refused to say a word in extenuation of her crime. But the unhappy woman was not wholly forsaken. Some dis tant connections of the Heath family, anxious, if possible, to lessen the addi tional disgrace which threatened their doomed house had engaged for the defence one of the ablest lawyers of the day ; and he certainly made as much out of his miserable ma terials as- was possible. Ingeniously avoiding any attempt at refutation of the crime, or any direct reference to the crushing facts of the accusation, he slid, with apparent unconsciousness, into the strain, always so powerful with English juries, of an appeal to their sympathies. The woman before them was still young and very beautiful ; and, in words of glowing eloquence, he wove, from the stores of his imagination, a pathetic tale of her life and sufferings. First representing the young girl in her aristocratic home, surrounded by all conceivable luxuries; then painting her romantic devotion, her sacrifice of all for love ; and crowning the elaborate imaginary picture by a vivid descrip tion of what the gradual disenchant ment, the daily and hourly loss of cherished illusions, the terrible waking from the ideal to the real, the discovery, too late, that the idol of gold was an idol of clay,—what these must have been to a highly-wrought awl sensitive nature. " God forbid ! gentlemen of the jury," he said, " that I should attempt to palli ate this crime ; but in shrinking from lie act, I cannot forget the provocation. 'rampled on and insulted by the man through whom she had lost all,—naive and fame, home and friends,—reviled and disowned lop him, deceived and degraded by him, this woman expiated in years of bitterness—who can estimate their bitterness t'—the crime of having loved too faithfully. But even the veriest worm will turn at length. There came aslay when the one drop that tilled it to overflowing was poured into this woman's cup. Encouraged by the applauding jeers of every member of his family, the brutal coward struck her us she stood alone among them In her 'fatal defenceless superiority. Was it the blood of a thousand ancestors that rushed with tumultuous rebell ion to her brain? Was It the la,t agonized throe of a yet unhrokenspirit? 1 dut not conjecture. I only know that, goaded to madness, in a frenzy of wild unconsciousness, the unhappy woman rushed to avenge her wrongs ; to cancel her misery in the crime for which she now stands charged before you.'' . . t was a well-imagined defence, aud, I always thought, prompted the recom- mendation to mercy which accompan ied the verdict of guilty. In considera tion of that recommendation, the sentence of death was commuted into one of transportation for life ; and the subject dropped from the record of human events. These occurrences took place lour years after the death of Sir Andrew Lleath. In all the lacerating pain they brought, it was yet a comfort to remember that he had not lived to know them. From that timemy native laud became more than ever distasteful to me. My father died, and I sue. ceeded to the title and estates, an alien and a foreigner. Love, marriage, and all the dear domestic ties realized in the one word " home " were not for me ; a blight was upon thy life ; a ghastly memory was attached to all such associations; and not until thirty five years of exile had blanched my hair, and warned me of coming old age, did I venture back to the cold hearth I had left a buoyant joyous youth Here, comparatively happy in the ge nial society of my books I have lived for five solitary years, with the ashes of nearly forty winters to cover the story of my early life—a story so old as al most to belong to the records of a for mer generation ; yet this very night, my friends, I have learned that until within a few years ago it had a sequel. As Sir Edward Ashly pronounced the last words, he placed before the doctor and clergyman the papers confided to the latter by the dying servant. They were three in number. The first was a baptismal registry of Gabriella Heath, daughter of Sir An drew and Lady Gabriella Heath, with date and names of witnesses. The second, a certificate of marriage between James Wynn and Gabriella Heath, with date and names of wit noses The third, a ticket•of--leave discharge NUMBER 36 from prison for good conduct, granted to the convict, Gabby Wynn, and dated some six years back. "My God!" exclaimed Dr. Nichol, "it cannot be possible! That strange, wizened creature,—that mass of scarred ugliness and deformity—" " Was once thy peerless Gabriella Heath !" said Sir Edward, concluding the doctor's sentence in the absent tones of a man whose thoughts are far away from the subject on which he is speaking. " Truly she was, as she herself said, a deeply guilty sinner," mused Mr. Nu gent, as he renewed in thought the death-bed scene he now so fully com prehended ; " but the mercy of God is infinite!" And then silence fell ou the little party. But that night, for the first time since its reoccupation, Ashly Hall har bored guests, for the clergyman and doctor refused to leave their friend alone with that strange revelation, while the dead was yet in the house. A few days later, when a mourning train issued from the gates of the Hall, the lord of the manor attended as chief mourner, and truly— "the little port Had seldom seen a costlier tuueral." But in this extraordinary deference to the memory of an old servant, the people of Ashley only saw a confirma tion of their opinions respecting tile "eccentric Sir Edward," who, being the greatest aristocrat and landed proprietor in the neighborhood, had given too deep offence to the county by his unex pected seclusion and unaccountable inhospitality to be worthy a renewal of surprise. Others, whose greater curiosity took them to the churchyard to inspect the last testimonial to the object of this homage, found only a simple marble slab, erected near the family vault of the Ashlys, and Inscribed with the simple letter G. pgal gotiero. EX EC UTO N DTI CE.-•-A LI, VERSO NS knowing themselves Lobe indebted to the estate 01 Cat harlue Clark, late of the township of Bart, In the county of Lancaster, Pa.. will make immediate payment to the undersigned Executor, and all having any 01111111 H against the Buld estate wilt present them duly nulben• heated to W. CLARK, Executor, Columbia, pa. aug ctl titwo 31 ENTATE OF DAVID MIA Y, LATE OF Manhelml.lorough,deeeased,--Lettern tes tamentary on said eiitate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted there to are requested to make Immediate settle ment, and those having claims or demands against the same, will present them without delay )or settlement to the undersigned, re siding in said borough. FANNY MAY, CATHARINE MAY, aug 7 Stw 31 Executrices. T'MTATE OF AHM. RA UFFMAN, LATE of Manor twp., tlec'tl.—Lett ors of Admin- istri4tion ou the estate of said deceased haying been granted to the undersigned, all persons Indebted to said estate will please make pay ment forthwith, and all persona having claims against the SUMO will present them to the un dersigned, residing in Manor township, for settlement 11. C. KAUFFMAN, C. M. KAUFFMAN, aug 7 atw• 31 Administrators. FITATE OF ELIZABETH CURRY, LATE of ,ittistiory township, tlecouicti. ',otters 11..statnentary on said estate h tying been granted to the undersigned, nil persons in dotted thereto, are requested to make imme diate settlement, aud those having claims or demands against the same, will present them wit limit delay for settlemet it to the under signed, residing in said township. 11.ACHAEL LINTON, nog 21 61.w"33 Executrix. LSTATE OF HUGH 101 A LEY, LATE OF Eden t,wnship, deceased.—The under signed Auditor, appointed to distribute the balance remaining In the hands of Samuel Slokom, Esq., Executor, to and among those legally entitled to tho same, will sit tor that purpose on MON DAY, SE PTENI BER 30, 1567, at 2 o'clock P. M., in the Library ROOM of the Court House, In the City of Lancaster, where all persons interested In said dist, ibth ion may attend. ELWOOD Auditor. se p d .It.w 32 Mary E Conyngham by her 1 next friend, Philip I November Term, f 1660, No. lad. John It. Conyngham. J mo THE DEFENDANT ABOVE NAMED. 1 —You are hereby notified that. Depositions un behalf of Petitioner will be taken at my ollice, No. hi North Dua e street, In the City of Lancaster, on FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, Mil', at 10 o'clock, A. M. WM. 8., WILE Y, Lancaster, Sep. 3, 14117, Com Missioner. sep LiSTATE OF ANN KLINE (WIDOW) E/ Late of the borough of Washington, Ma nor twp., Lancaster County, decid.—rhe under signed Auditor, appointed to audit, atiJ Wit the account and distribute the balance remaining In the hands of Baruherd Mann, (Farmer,) Ad mhaistrator, to and among those legally enti tled to the some, will attend for that purpose on TUESDAY, the 24t0 day of SEPTEMBER, 1007, at 10 o'clock, A. M., in the Library Room of tile Court House, in the City of Lancaster, where all persons Interested In said distribu tion may attend. A. J. SANDERSON, sep 4 31w Auditor. I)EIOSTER'S NOTICE.-THE ACCOUNTS of tile following persons are Bled in the Register's Office iif Lancaster county for con firmation and allowance. at an Orphans' Court to be held in the Court House, In the city of Lancaster, on the THIRD MONDAY IN SEP TEMBER (lath), 1867, at 10 o'clock A. M.: Sarah It. Davis, Executrix of Maria S. Kuhn. William Diem, Administrator or Luckey Mur- ray. Samuel 11. Scott and Elizabeth Mcllalnes, Ex ecunirs of Alexander Scott., Joseph Kirk, (inarillan 01 Alvin Brown. Hannah Robinson, Achninistratrix of George Robinson. David Hartman, Administrator of Tobias 11. Miller, dee'd, who was Guardian of Anna Dangler, Sarah Dangler, Barbara Dangler, Tablas Deugler and Georglanua Dangler. John S. Franck and Henry S. Franck, Exec.i irs of Christian Franck. Thomas Smedley, Administrator of Jonathan Smedley. George $. Snyder, Administrator of Mary 15 . 1111arn Della, Administrator of John L. Cur venter. 1111un Kline , Cluardlan or William hack ITMU. Bander.. McCullough, (Juardlan of Sauderti Mc lenry Housman, Executor or Susan K 111 heffer \ udrew Zereher, Executor or Trustee or Ben Peter Oberholtzer, Guardian of Elizabeth Pe tern (now Hoffman). Jacob Oberhollxer, Civardlan or all the minor children of Chi'lotion Oberholtzer, Mary Ann Deutsch ' AdininistraLrlx with the will annexed of Sarah I)rolsbach. 'el er bleConowy, lie/Innen of Joiaph Lu Bre toe, tilintuel Hems, J r., and Fredereic Hess, Excen Lure of Marred I less, sr. John M. Cialeu and Huuh Ad ml o Istra tors with the will annexed of David (lock ley Ilarnherd Mann, (fanner) Duardlan of Clutha, rine liaullThan. David Weidman. Cluardian of Harriet S. ()rove. Jacob Musaelnian, Uuardian of Mary S. M iIN- Helmnan and Fanny At ueaelmau. Martin K. Greiner and Peter Brubacher, Ex ecutorm of Mary Elizabeth Orel ner. Christian M. dlartiu, Executor of Catharine Long. P. Picket and Leonard Picket, Adrninlatratora of Philip Ritz, Benjamin W. Hurnlxh , Ailminlatrator of Jacob Barthel. Daniel Martin, (Juardlan of minor children of Jacob Stauffer. Marks U. Adrninlarator of Adam Arline. Carpenter M'Cleery, Guardlan of George Dan ner. Abraham D. Ebersole, Guardian of minor children of Christian B. Ebersole, deceased. Amon Bruce, Executor of John Roads. Wm, ii. Paul,Adminirtrator el George Mohler. Wm. 11. Hershey, Administrator of John Hershey. David Barns,Administrator of Jos. Ebersole. John Runner, Guardian of Win. it. Runner, Geo. W. Runner, Rebecca E. Runner, Rachel A. Runner, Z. Taylor Runner, John Runner and Sarah A. Runner. John G. Mohler and Solomon Mohler, Admln Intratore of George Mohler. George It. liandrietraort, Atlatinlatrator of Mug thalena Carter. Samuel Eby, Ciuurdlan of Marla E. Heft. and John Heft. George Duchman, Trustee of George W. Engle, —Trustee under the Will or George Weidler. George Duchman, Adeninlstrator 01 Elizabeth DueJamul. _ _ C. L. Hoffman and E. G. Groff, Executors o Michael Burd. Jesse Sellers, Administrator of David C. Kellam; Jacob I3uch, Levi Shirk and Peter Martin, Ad minlatrators of Emanuel liuch. Michael Keller, Guardian of Hara . h E. Musser P. G. Ebermau, Executor of Elizabeth Eber man Mary Welt and Evan• Flory, Administrators of ~I'ete H _rWeit. E. F. oover, Administrator of George Rettew. Jacob Kemper, Administrator of Martin d. Heiser. George S. Mann, Guardian of James R. Wertz Samuel Hate, H. D. Mimelman and W. U Bender, Executors of John Hate. Janice A. Patterson and I). W. Patterson, Ex eoutors of James Patterson. James A. Patterson, Guardian of Mary A Stauffer. Grabill Bear, Guardian of Madison Johns. A. s. Witmer, Executor of Jacob ntreblg. John M. Ensminger, Samuel A. Er smluger, C. J. Snavely and E. F. Hostetter, Executors of Samuel Ensmlnger, who was trustee of Elizabeth Witmayer, under the will of Jacob Hummer, deceased. J. G. Hess, Guardian of Ella Felix. J. G. Hess, Guardian of Theopnilus Felix. John P. Stamen, Guardian of Mira G. Shuman. John P. Stamen, Guardian of Mary S. Shuman, Peter Wonge___,r DA Administrator do uonla non of Emanuel Wenger. VID MILES, Register. aug 21 4tw 33 R A. 8 Itt I T cRACUCER, BISCUIT AND CABE BAICER WIT ZINO BTBSJLT, Three doors below Lane's Store, Lancaster, Pa air All the artielesUbr Bale at this oetablishl meat are baked troth every day, RATES OF ADVERTIMONO. Bit Simms Anvitwrisimarni, Ea a ,year M _ .. square of ten lines; $0 per year Or eac h di - Lionel Square. REAL IIIerATz , PNESONALPEOPIIMTS,and .smar. ADVERTISING, 10 cents a line for the first, and 5 cents for each subsequent inser tion. firactrAz Van= inserted in Local Column, 15 cents per line. SPECIAL Namara preceding marriages axld deaths, 10 cents per line for first insertion, and 5 cents for every subsequent insertion.; Busritsza CARDS, of ten lines or less, one 10 Business Cards, nye littericTiTerui, one LEG y A ar N D OTH a E ionose— Executors' ..otices .. ........ Administrators' not ices : 460 Assignees' notices, 2.50 Auditors' notices 2.00 Other "Notices,' ten lines, or less, three times gate golttertionuentig. SIGNIFICANT 't ho new system of Advertising adopted by Geo. P. Rowell S: Co., Advertising Agents, No. 40 Park Row, New York, Is attracting a good deal of attention The following extract from a speech deliv ered before the N. Y. titate Editorial Conven tion, (lately hold( a at Penn Tan,) by a promi nent Advertising Agent of N. Y. City, goes to show that he at least acknowledges its advan tages. From Janmcstou•n, V, Y. Journal of Aug. ?.ml, Edited by C. E. 13isuor, Chair/nano./ CtMllniCtee ou ADVICILTISISO AGKSCIII.S. "Mr. Pettlugill spoke in opposition to that plan front the publisher's stand point alone. He showed the publishers that by this system of contracting they were giving lower rates than they gave their owu home customers or others equally as prompt and good customers; that they were selling one portion of their paper to be used to compote with and under• hid the other columns; that the owner of the space thus sold could coins right in and beat the publisher's prices and take his business away from him; that 11 the publishers, fully understanding this, still wished to continuo so irregular and uu business-like a system, ho (Pettingill S Co.) should of course cease try ing to get advertising for the papers at their regular rates, and go into the other system of contracting—which ho could stand, if tho printers could." The anxiety on the account of nownpapars is uncalled for. :flier° Is not ono In twenty which would not prefer to receive all their for eign patronage on this plan, when it is fully understood. 1: is too generally recognized as thi rou4h ly beneficial to all parties concerned to be Injured In the least by ally thing which way be said against it by Interested parties. Advertisers should send for a circular giving ull explanattuus Do LLocu I NsTrriuTE, A FIRST CLASS 1. Boardlog School for Hopi, ut Ylttnllell, Marcr. 'rem of 'A/ weeks bogltur Oct. i, 1867. For particulars lohlrerim REV. W. C. RICHARDS, Prlnclpul. llneu you 4eoll lite "PENN LETTER !WOK,' for copy lug let term tint bout the use of either press U, critter? It BILVCS time, labor, told the tcrittace of n copying press. For sale by all first clams statitinerm, amt la the talkie of tho ••I'enn Manufacturing \Yorks," 7a.: Chestnut Phliatlelphia. Pa. A few more good Agents Wanted fur General L. C. Baker's 11 , THE SECRET ?SERVICE." Increased commlsslon and greater Inducemenfs offered. Address, P. UARREI'T CU., Box 1:I7, Ph Iladelphla,Pa. ted Nix Now LL -6000 :Tragirl I 1. ? k o l;; I o l all nay great. profits. Send Lie. and gel SO pages 11l Hl sample gratis.l.4ents lilleo Mad° .5.100,. linlrrnlin Brown. Lowell. 'Muss A Tre?thie on 1)(to11'oemn, l'on -811111141o) and Cancer. caux,,n nud 1111,1111 S Immediate relief and speedy cure, mow fre(l, Send particularm to STILWELL, 10(4uut II lit I, churl, \Vlllluutxbu rg, L.. 1. MAIDAM FOY'S cORsET si:llcr SUPPORTER Combln In one garment a emwratr FITTING CORSET, 11.1,1 the most desirable Skirt Sup porter ever offered thu public. It places the Weight of the skirts alum the /Moulders in stead or the hips; IL Improves the form with out tight tatting; gives ease and elegance; Is approved und recommended by physicians.— Muutinu:Lured by I.), 11. SAUNDERS .51 CU., MI=MMEI;T! nAI NTS FOR FA ItAI ERN AND OTHERS. —THE URA' , l'oN MINERAL PAINT CO., are 1101 V manulacturlm: the Best, Cheapest and anus! Durable Paint lu use; two Coats, well put on, mixed with pure Linseed Oil, will last 10 or 1i years; It Is or a Bunt brown or beautiful chocolate color, and call be changed to green, lead, stone, olive, drab or cream, to Sllt, the lust e of the consumer. It Is valuable for 'louses, Barns, Fences, Agricultural Imple ments, Carriage and .Car-anakers, Palls and W ouden-ware,t:an cuss, Metal At Shingle Roofs, (It being Fire and Witt erProol). Bridges, Burial Cases, Canal Boats, Ships and Ships' Bottoms, Floor Oil Cloths, (one Manufacturer having used 5,000 bbls. the past year,) and as a paint for any purpose Is unsurpassed for body, durabili ty, elast ionl adhesiveness. Price 11l per bbl., of :tee lbs., which will supply a farmer tor years to corny. Warranted 111 all cases 80 above. Sena{ for a circulsr, which gives full particulars. None gee lithe Unless branded In a trade mark (Iritflon Paint. Address DANIEL BI DWELL, Proprietor, I{si Pearl sL. New York YOU'RE IVANTED: LOOK HERE! Agents, both male and female, wanted every where to sell the PATENT IMPROVED INK Mag i:tavola, (by which Iron! one to two pages can be written without replenishing with 111 k), and our Fancy and Dry Gouda, etc. Ca❑ clear from 13 to flu a day. No capital required. Price le amts, with an advertisement descri bing an article for sale In our Dollar Fur. chasing; Agency. CIRCULARS SENT FREE. EASTHAN 4, KENDALL, 65 Hanover St., Boston, Maas. DEAFNESS CURED. The Organic Vibra tor fits Into the ear, Is not perceptible, and enables dear persons to hear distinctly at, church and at public assembllem. Send partio ulars to Dr. HTI LWELL, N 0.45 South Uth at., Williamsburg, N. Y. WE ARE COMING, And will present to any person sending us a club In our Great One Brice Sale, of Dry and Fancy Goods, &c., a Silk Dress Pattern, Pleco of sheeting, Watch, Sc., free of cost. Catalogue of goods, and saint - do, sent to any address free. Address .1. H. HAWEM a CO., H Hanover St., Boston, Mass. P. 0, Box 51H. Thirteen Yenrii Ago Dr. Louis of Providence, R. 1. discovered Rem edies, with which he has cured hundreds of cases of Paralysis, Fits, and all forms of Ner vous Diseases. send two stamps for pamphlet, and certllicate. A FFLICTED RESTORED! IGNORANCE /I EXPOSED! FALLACIES UNMASKED! Highly important to both sexes, married or L mingle, In health or disease. Dr. ARMONT'S Paris, Loudon and New York Medical Advisor and Marriage Guide, Slth edition, 400 pages, nearly tigi Anal otnlcal Illustrations, upon Mental and Nervous Debility, Urinary Depos its and Impotency, affections of the Bladder, Kidneys,Genllo-Urinary Organs, and their consequences, and anatomy of both sexes I European hospital practice—the. Author's mo ral, legitimate and effectual method of pre venting too rapid lucre so of famlly,—hls une qualed Pads and London treatment, dtc. Mailed true for 51.50, closely sealed. All who would avoid the barborons treat ment with Met cury, Copabla, Injections, Caut erizations, Quack mpeclllcs, Antidotes and In struments, should own this valuable work or consult Lhu Doctor oersonally, or by letter, No. Broadway, N. Y., front 10 A. M. to 5 P. M. Post Wilco Box All, N. Y., Is all the address re• qui red. Consullalion, Adtrfc, , tV Medicine Si. ILI all cases In advance. Wu concur wILh other papeDi In recom mending Dr. LAMONT and his work."— Courier des Eta., Unis, ()crown die Reform, D - patch, &was Z,eilunii, Alias , Medical Review, &c. AwATCII FRE:IL—A Sliver P. Watch Giv en Gratis to the purclnuier of Every 100 of Kennedy's Mammoth Prize titationery Packa ges, the Largest In the world. (Ae an Induce ment to have them Introduced,) agents sell the packages as fast as they can reach them out. 10 Dollars per day can be made sure. Wo havo agents that cell ou an average 1000 per week. Price per hundred, 15 Dollars. Retail at 'Li eta. And a watch In the bargain that will retail for sls more. For fall particulars of Prize Package and other saleable goods address lt. MUNROE KENNEDY, Cor. sth and Wood tit., Plthiburg, Penn. SCHOOLS Principals of Amnion'lex, demluaries, &c., should consult no in regard to nava:Using. No charge for Into 'nation. OF.O. P. ROWELL & CO., Advertising Agents, N. Y. E=! It you wl4ll to Advertise you Nhould commit GEO. P. NOWELL et CO., 40 Park ltow, N. Y. uourance Ormpautti). C OLUMBIA INAUKAII cr. ,COMPANY CAPITAL 41W A &SfETS, 8632,210 49 This Company continues to Insrire lugs, Merchandise, and other property, against loss and damage by ,fire, on the 11:1UtUlli plan, either for SIXTH a cash A premium o NNUAL RE r p remium note. Whole amount 1n5ured,...88X1,293.51 Loan INCOME. A.Nli ain't expiI TAL, red in '56... 212,330. 9,091,U59.61 CAPOO Am't of premium notes, Jau. let, 1863 8126,000.60 Lees premium notes ex pired iu 1868 Ain't ol premium notes received Inl 86J Balance of premiums, Jan. let, 186, Cash recelpte, less coin missions - in 1845, EMEB73 Loans and expennOe paid in 18a5 , e 37,967,88 Balance or Capital and Assets, Jan, 1, UM 1682,210.49 e570,19/4,3 A. S. GREEN, President, UE013.210 YOUNG, Jr., Secretary. Mme= S. 8111JMA RC N,Treastlier. DINORS: Robert Crane, ,William Patton, kt. T. }Von, John W. Steuart John Penticton, Geo. Tow_ g, Jr. H. G. ' Nicholas Mollonald, Sarn , l F. Eborlein, Michael B. Shuman, Amos S. Green, mend S B.ar 'S in laymaker, Edg. THEO. W. HERR, Agent, North ko stroat, CHASTER urt House, mar WIWI L.WFIANNA. 18,073.53 410,017.21 $570,198.81