ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: Qatnrimn fttoroinn, fttnrci) 3, 1855, glutei) Ipoctnt. BEAUTIFUL STANZAS. '• 1 will lead them in lite paths they have not biotcn." ISAIAH xi.ni, ll>- How few wlio, from their youthful day, I.ook'or. to what their life may be; Fainting the visions of the way In colors soft, and bright and free. How few who to such paths have brought The hopes and dreams of early thought! For God, through ways they have not known, Will lead His own. The eager hearts, the souls of fire. Who pant to toil for God and man; And view with eyes of keen desire The. upland way of toil and pain; Almost with scorn they think of rest. Of holy calm, of tranquil breast, But God, through ways they have not known, Will lead His own. A lowlier task on them is laid,— With love to make the labor light; And there their beauty they must shed Gn quiet homes and lost to sight. Changed aie their visions high and fuir, Yet, calm and still, they labor there; For God. through ways they have not kuown, Will lead His own. The gentle heart that thinks with pain, It scarce can lowliest tasks fulfil; And. if it dared its life to scan, Would a-k but pathway low and still. Often such lowly heart is brought To act with power beyond its thought; For God. through ways tlicy have nt known, Will lead His own. What matter what ttie path shal. • That end is clear and bright to view; We know that we a strength shall see. Whate'er the day may bring to do, We sec the end. the house of God, But not the path to that abode; For God, through ways they hare not known, Will lead His own. jfoltffffc Calf* HKLI.-TI I E-WOLF: OR. How Ben Holick Won his Eride. TK VNSLATETi FROM THE GERM AS. In the sequestered valleys of that noble chain of mountains known as the Wushitah range •he genuine American backwoodsman is still te iie found. Homely but upright, rough but hardy, he is as remarkable for the self-sacrific ing generosity of his friendships as for the dead liiiess of his hatred." The toils of the chase, the cultivation of the land, and, above all, the rearing of cattle, furnished him with the means of subsistence. For these last named ojtera 'ions the region is "especially adapted, by the mildness of the climate and by its undulating surface, here rising into grassy slopes and ante sinking into depressed hollows of marshlam covered with acres of reed and rush. The rear ing of vast herds of cattle is thus a matter o very little trouble. One enemy, however, the backwoodsman ha to contend with, one that, in spite of rifle am trap, in spite of wearisome pursuits and eudles stratagems, he has never yet been a match for The cunning, merciless and bloodthirsty enemy was the wolf. In vain the backwoodsinau brought all his skill and experience to bea: ngaiust the crafty thief. Seldom could the wary beast he tempted within gun shot. In spite o constant watchings, the wolves increased and multiplied year bv rear, and the herds dimin idled in proportion, till the cattle-fanners fell that decisive measures must he adopted, unless they were prepared to own themselves vanquish ed. and to quit the field and give up their em jilovincnt altogether. A backwoodsman van quished. by the wolves —rattlesnakes and buf faloc*! it was not to be thought of; life-long disgrace and shame were involved. That under such circumstances the best shot i he regarded as the best man was but natural; ami -n it was that Benjamin Holick, in the half year since he had come out of Missouri to settle at Washitah, had killed no lev than seventeen of these formidable lieasts bitii his rifle—received the honorable sobriquet <>t Wolfs lien, with the reputation of being tin R!fi the most good temjered. patient. '" • -'ing friend that a settler could make. A •"fi wi.ni would win anything from him; he w 'fill gh.- away his powder to the last charge, Gie very ia.-t crust out of his wallet. . "vfi ufln tions were fixed upou the only '-''iter of Kobert Sutton, a charming girl, arin <- of all her father's wealth. Ay.tin n uieruli; that he, a poor adventurer in tuc " ' r:; Utt his knife and his riHe,aiid his strong >;.euld be accepted of as the son-in-law of --aau w! ;o had the largest poss<-.--:o: - ••• •ohitaLi and Red River, ami who c'y v 'a' riiHnutaius once a year for hi- health, f the sake of pasturage for the tiork<, . Uu! a very likely thing to happen. And •ii In rciueiultered too that button was com ••■} rtpuk-d a covetous man, of what weight " 'ha one would be Beqjaujiu's personal . bai -liar to dollar seemed too tedi t yiq something must be done, for he ! :;u ! . 1<; *°ald not be the first wooer fot um button had placed the bench outsidi bit where, in the quiet course ol V". woodland lib-, was he likely tomcet THE BRADFORD REPORTER. : / - T „ . , . S wt !' Z " ? ,£ ' 6 .RHKIJCJR $■?:&* •"V Jfittf ;*J with the golden opportunity and to seize it ? A thoughtful sadness fastened on him. lie avoided the houses of his companions—passed whole days and nights in the woods, having nothing to show for his walks bntthe scalps of the wolves he destroyed—the three dollars a head with which the State rewarded his good service, and which still amounted to a mere tri fle, being carefully put by, as the foundation of his claim for the hand of pretty Mabel. It was about this time that, in a short ex cursion in Texas, old Sutton was told, by some of the outlaying cattle-farmers there, of a plan for utterly banishing the wolves from any dis trict in which they had established themselves. The plan was this: A wolf to be caught, and taken alive; and tlieli, after having a bell fastened around his neck, he was to be set at liberty. The creature, would naturally turn to his comrades; but no sooner did these hear the unwonted sound than they took to their heels, and in wild confusion fled before their former associate, lint wherever they fled the bell still followed; for the strange ornament around his throatj and the dinning noise in his ears, made the solitude doubly distasteful to him. lie shakes himself, lie rolls, he leaps, he spins round and round, he essays every possible means of ridding himself of the torment: and exasper ated to the highest pitch to iiud that he can no longer steal unobserved and noiselessly upon his prey, but is ever betraying his approach by the sound of the hated bell, lie seeks the socie ty of his brother wolves; and there too he on ly succeeds in driving herd after herd from the mountains which he had formerly selected as his dwelling place; auu, urged to extremity, tiiids himself at last to seek another hunting ground. There again the sound of the bell be trays him. and frequently drives the flocks, in well compact* d phalanx, to the shelter of the settlement. Tie. txpei'iic-ut must assuredly be tried in Wushitah. Sutton returns on a sudden, takes counsel with the neighboring farmers, ami in concert with them announces it reward of twen ty dollars to whosoever shall bring a live wolf to the "village. It was all very well to affix the reward, but the wolves were more crafty than the hunters. And even after Ben had brought in scalp after scalp, it seemed to him iuiposs>ible to catch one of the cunning beasts alive and bring him unhurt to the farmer; for the pits that he dug for them were all empty, or trapped only the neighbors' sheep or swine. When Benjamin lloliekwas unsuccessful the other lads of the settlement soon began to de spair; and the farmers, red hot upon the mat ter, and determined on any terms to make trb al of the experiment, raised the sum to be giv en for a real live wolf to the unheard of price, in these woodland regions, of two hundred dol lars. This was truly a stimulus to Benjamin. With two hundred dollars could ho not stock a little farm, purchase a few cattle, make a beginning; and then Mabel! —ay. who knows if slu: would not be able to persuade her father, if once he saw Ben with the black thief in chains at his heels? But there was no time to be lost; for the the reward had of course brought all the hunters of the neighboring country into th field: and the Woods resounded with the stroke of the axe upon the sapling trees that the men cut down to prepare the only kind of traps known in the district. Steel traps for instance were useless, as there was rbk of wounding, if not of destroying the prey—and the premium was offered exclusively for a ' live and unharm ed wolf.' It was at this season that a visitor came to the mountains, who occasioned the greatest un easiness to our friend Ben, and even became dangeross to him. This was a so-called cousin of Sutton's, a citizen in a blue coat with silver buttons, and trousers with straps to them.— How the children laughed when he went into a house and set down! How they put their dirty faces together and whispered; and then, casting a shy, sidelong glance at the "straps." and bursting l into tits of uncontrollable laugh ter. tumbled in wiid confusion out ssible occasion gave him to undesrtand that all the sweet things he said w ere ]K>sitivelj distasteful to her —was he, a man brought up in New Orleans, to be driven from his purposes by a little eonn terfied prude? Like a prudent man he strove bv everv means to ingratiate himself with the father, flattering the old man in all his weak ness, ami in a very short time persuaded him that he was the best hunter, the boldest rider the finest fellow that had over worn the liun ti r's coat, Ac., Ac., till by his cunning and pro- display of learning, especially in things winch he hud uever heard before, he so beguil ed his host that Sutton was hoard to say that Mr. M' t'-alf w-a® ; " smartest and best man in the 1 :ut : his daughter refused to to- i:: i' nana, sue would have to reckon Without tmu, her lather. on that score. Poor Mabel! in a private meeting with Ben she declared that it would be impossible to live without him, and pronounced herself the most miserable creature on the lace ol the earth!— B n perfectly agreed with her as he held her hand in his, and looked with a, sad and -y thiziug gaze into her blue eyes. " Dear Ma bel'"said he, "be not cast down—all will be well. 1 have been at Work uilnight, and kuve set four new trajis with u dainty bait in each; the wolf once caught, I secure a small capital, and say to your father, " Friend Sutton, I wish to marry vuur daughter. I have a comforta ble home to take her to, and 1 want nothing but herself. I ask for no portion or dowry," and when I add that you are favorable to iny suit'— PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA„ BY E. O'MEARA UOODRICU. " RE6AR.DLESS OP DEJiCNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER.'*' "Oh!" cried Mabel, interrupting him, and sobbing as she spoke, " but, you w ill not be Lhe first to catch the wolf. The dany stranger has beeu talking of nothing the whole evening but the newly invented snare; and he t h fls my fa ther that he is going to set it in the woods.— Ah! he knows all the tricks aud suares that they invent iu the cities, and he will bullie you, and turn you out of the path yet." " Let not that trouble you, Mabel," replied Ben, soothingly, while a smile of self-confidence stole over his face. " Don't be downcast for that. Men may invent snares and traps in the cities, but they must learn to use them in the forest; aud if the city-born prove too much for us there, it's our own fault, and we deserve it. And as to what you tell me of his pretending to know something of the hunter's eruft, why. there I meet him ou uiv own ground and yieid to no man living; and now, since I've beeu talking witli you, I don't know how it is, but I feel as if new life and confidence had been in fused into me. Only be true to me Mabel!— \onr father cannot force you into marriage; aud when he finds that 1 want neither his goods nor his gold, but only yourself for my wife, lie will see at once that such a son-in-law will bring him far more honor than won Id the smart citizen.aud I shall yet will a consent from him." So taking a cheerful leave of the mai den, he shouldered his rifle, and walking with a firm step and a brave heart toward the forest. The favorite resort of the wolves was an en closure adjoining the homesteads and at the outskirts of the wood, where the cattle were littered down at night; and here it was that Benjamin Holick had set his silares. One of these—that to which he especially looked to crown his hopes with success—was placed near a track the wolves had made betweon twb ele vated ridges, so narrow that it was impossible for them to pass without observing the tempt ing bait with which it was garnished—the head of a fresh killed horse. The locality had one great advantage. It was commanded by the summit of a craggy rock, from whence Benja min's eagle glance could at once ascertain how matters stood below. The necessity of close inspection was thus obviated, and there were 110 treacherous footprints to arouse the aus picious of the wary foe. lie could not in deed see to the bottom of the pit, but he eonld see whether the trap was set or whether it had been sprung. There was nothing to be done at night, and after his parting with Mabel. Ben made at once for his bivouac ou the lull side, where he had determined to remain until ho had achieved the eutcrprize. He soon succeeded in kindling'a fire, and after eating his simple supper, rolled himself up iu his blanket and quietly fell asleep. There was no need of eock-crowintr to arouse him iu the morning, for at the first -plaintive note of the whip-poor-will he had started to his feet, and prepared his coffee, of which every sportsman in the backwoods carries with him a supply roasted and ground, in a linen or lea thern bag—and then sat impatiently watching for the first streaks of daylight in the eastern sky. Slowly, but at last—nt lat the longed for light began to dawn, the signal for the return of the wolves to their accustomed and general ly inaccessible dens; and now, creeping rather than walking, aud carefully avoiding such with ered branches and cracking brushwood as might have told to some lingering beast the tale of his approach. Ben made the best of his way to the look out ou the rock. The top of the snare was no longer to be seen—had it indeed fallen! His heart beat with feverish anxiety, and it was with a strong effort that he restrained his impatience, and waited for a full morning light erejhe desceud ed to the hunting ground. The suspense at length became intolerable, and as he looked with fixed and straining gaze against the grow ing light, ho became convinced of the fact—it was no longer a hope—a doubt—it was a cer tainty. The snare had fallen, and a wolf must be ut the bottom. With rapid puce he descend ed the height, and made for the spot where, amid a thicket of sassafras and spicebushos, in a heap of driftwood brought down by the mountain torrent, aud sprinkled by its clear rushing waters, the suair had been laid. 4 Hurrah!" shouted Ben, giving vent to his ecstasy in one lond ringing note of triumph.— He had reason —for there, at the bottom of the pit, looking shy, and as if ashamed to be seen in the dvalight, was a line, black coaled he wolf. The creature's eyes glared fiercely when through the opening of his prison, they fell on the form of the young hunter—the most peril ous of all the enemies by whom lie was beset, into whose hands he could have fallen. " Hark ye, beostie," said Benjamin, Looking dowu between the interstices of the fallen beauts, which were about a handbreath apart. " I have put a stop to your handiwork at last, von hoary old glutton! And there you are. af ter having snarled away al! your fellows from the newly discovered dainty, seated in the place of honor behind the grating! Only wait a while, and I have still more glorious sport in prospect 'for thee." The wolf showed his teeth and grinned sav age Iv at the young huuter as he bent over the trap, but uo attempt to stir, seemiug like an enraged dog to await his opportunity for a spring. It was not Ben's purpose to irritate the animal further ; he cast one more look dowu and thcu laughing cried— " I am not altogether unkindly disposed to ward thee, old fellow, for though you are not altogether the most likely looking of suitors, you shall yet help me to wiu a bride; and so we will part friends;" and then nodding pleas antlv to his captive and shouldering his rifle. Ben sprang, leaping down the somew hat deep declivity that led by the nearest path to the homesteads, in order to get assistance without delav, and so at ouce to bell the wolf: 44 and thcu hurrah! how he will jump! He shall go free enough then; a clear course aud liberty at will." The inhabitants of Woodviile had not per ceived the yonug hunter s approach, and he took all by surprise as be rushed, singing and shouting into Sutton's domc white hairs adhering to ont of the rough beams, that could have come on ly from the belly of a wolf. But what hac become of him? That he could have worket his way onr. tinder the heavy frame work, rn, iiupot-siblo. Milton stepped down and put hi shoulder to lift it; lie could scarcely raise it : foot. While he was thus employed Benjamin joinc* him, and without speaking a word placed hi rifle against a tree, threw the bell ami collarT*c side it and "tepping into the middle of the ruin ed heap, began carefully, but without disturb ing anything, to examine the state of matter within. " And you really had a live wolf there tui, morning?" repeated Sutton, after a panse, du ring which, in spite of the evidence of the hail and the scent, he had become confirmed in hi; belief. '• 1 give you niv word of honor on it," saU Ben, in a brikeu voice. "A stout hc-wol was sitting under the trap when 1 left thi spot scarce an hour since; but the strength o three wolves would not have sufficed to mov* these beams and to make an opeuing througl them; and even if they had, they must certain ly have left at least half their skin on the toug! bark." " I think so too" said button. " And yot are fully persuaded that it was a wolf?"' " Mow, hung it, man!" exclaimed the ban ter, stuug beyond endurance by disappointment aud now by the oft repeated suspicion of hii truth, "do you think 1 don't know a wolffroir a lamp of horse-flesh? but there! l<*ok in and convince yourself at last." As he spoke h* suddenly jumpped into the mid*ile of the heap and with one vigorous effort throw back tin spring that covered the trap, as though it ha* been but a sapling lath, and swung himsch with one leap to the bottom. "There! look!' lie exclaimed, as he {Kiinced to the humid sur face. ' Here! here! litre! again, are tfl* marks or the claws, since you will not take rro word: here is the pku-e where he drove in tin spring as he was taking the bait: and hero, ii .scents, is the spot whenr it fell. Would yea liave more proof that jt is a fact and not a Ik that I'm telling you? Plague and poison! i is a vile trick that one of those skulking villain; of the hamlet who can never look me straigb in the face, has piaved me. The wad lieast hn, lieen set tree of wanton malice, end, by m; right band! the nun who has thus shameful!; laid Lis fiugur on J>n ifotick's property, ha' better never -ec* banks o f Wavhitahf thai -iR-onii([r my gaze, it* unec 1 trace the deed homy to him." MlmiiphTuiurmorodflm chimin; "it's a won derful story, certainly. Who slibn!B*ivo Hinta-If the trouble fjV&t a wolf loose just for tbcs:&e of spiting you? Aad innt }iur foot-Tens and been at your heels the whole night -or how should he ftavi* Idiow'n the exqrt moment when he might set about his work with impunity?" Ben made no reply., but climbed up the pit arid began to search the wood for any indica tions that might put him on the right track: but the withered brodiwood gave no signs; and he found nothing but a few hairs, and the prints of his daws where the animal had made hi> first spring on emerging from the snare, whence he uppeared to have made at once for his covert In itio shortest cnt across the hollow. There was no trace of human footsteps: the only tiling that met the young man's eye was a couple of stones sunk to an unusual depth in the wet soil —-notwith-binding \rhich they were perfectly iug the wood; and when lie return ed at evening weary and dispirited to the ham let, he had to endure the condolence of the neighbors, and to minister to the curiosity which, under the guise of sympathy, eagerly craved the minutest dt ttyh of the event. Metealf es pecially was ino ■ k and voice, from which Ifou Hblick recoiled with in stinctive aversion. Was it party bias & jealousy | tfoit inspired su li groundles- hatred of the man? ; wn- it not r dh'T— " Hod for-iVc me!" he exclaimed, "that I I should think ihn* unkindly of a man. who. a far as I know, has never done me wreng: I nt this Mctentf cmr comes amoss me as mv evil spirit, and if tin re lives the man at whose door I would lay thi- devil's villainy, it i-' HK. But beware J if it be then, mv master, thou hn-t a pair of as sharp eves upon thee a< any that are to be fouud in the hamlet: and who knows wlie rher we may not yet have something to say 1" each other?" Ben was a kindly, forge-hearted follow, and. lik mr>--t men of his gigantie inonld, to<> well proportioned mentally, if we may be allowed the expression. to le easily pnt oft' the balance: but i:> vortheh--, race t'lanehed b's cheek T<> deadly paleness, as he now stood once more on the spot which had been the goal of all his hopes — MI ! otg struggling for—attained but to be i dashed ;ro:n hi" hand by the knavish malice ot ! some masked villain. Bat what availed this impotent animr? }Jr found t ' trecc whatever; and the wolfs mark? wore so i raft if; obliterated that Ben'- suspicion began to vav r. lie eould hardly give credit . tu the fopjiish citizen for so moeh adroitness* it i wou'd ratlrvr have been one or other of tin voung woodsmen who. as he well knew envied 1 ids favor with Mabel, and had thusend'-avor-d to deprive him of her hand. But all was nier I surmise, at d he saw no means of arriving ai i certainty. What grieved him especially, too. was. that his lest snare was for a while rendered useless: for until a heavy shower had obliterated even trace of the former captive, it was vain to think that any wolf would approach ir. and there wa -1 no site so favorable as this. Wolf s Ben was net a man to be daunted by diftieiilties. lie was still master < f three traps, and here in 'he hollow, a little higher up. one of these might be set. This was accordingly done; for Bed set to work with all dilligenec. lay day and night in the woods, and kept so vigilant a watch that not a rabbit, much I. -sm mortal man, could have stirred in the whole of Ills huuting c'renit without attracting his at tention. Full of fresh hopes, he awoke every morning with the expectation of lindmg a sec ond wolf in his toils; hut he was doomed to disappointment: his traps were set in vain: and at last Ben got so utterly dispirited that he avoided the hamlet entirly, shunning the pres ence of all nam. and living alone in the deep seclusion of the forest. Still, one thought, one pnrjoso. possessed him absolutely, and to tlm Ins energies were all bent—the capture of a live wolf. If he had occasion to visit Woodville. it was i.y night, so is to avoid the possibility of en countering Mabel, for he lmd now come tn r~ gnrd himself as a dishonest hunter, and to be lieve that he was the object of general con tempt ThreO weeks had been passed in thif manner, and if Tfon Holoek's heart was un changed, tlfing* had assumed a very diflforeni aspect in the hamlet. The 'eitv 'gentleman,' as the young hunter: ( of Woodville osnitily called him. received let ters from Alabama refjuivhighi; immediate re turn. His ' unde had died suddenly, leaving sole heir of a propert v wbirh, as it* consistc< chiefly of slaves, called for L 4* personal snicr itifondfßce without- delay Tim© passed, am. though hi* wooing had Mthefo*f ro"gr*.a(jl-o VOL. XV. NO. 38. slowly enough, he now brought it to a crisis at our-, ami boldly proposed himself us the suitor ol Mabel SuttoV.. Ou the very day of his re-' , firing the letter. Mr. Metculf made his offer, and although unconditionally rejected by Ma in:!. her father, to whom the irnsj>ect of so wealthy a son-in-law was particularly agreeable did not scruple to give his positi.-eassent, as suring the youug man tliat ' his daughter's re fusal was but the nmuku bashful ness; that he most make up to her, and theu all would be right. Metraff would fain have had a more favora ble on over from the daughter, or at leust one less expresive of aversion; but as things were he seemed at once to accommodate himself to tl.iem, and expressed a hope that he might bo able, by kindness, to secure first her good will, and ultimately her affections—at least so bo told her father; and fixed that very evening lor a kind of fefe, to which all the neighbors were invited, ami which he desired might be regarded in the light of a betrothing. Evening eaine. and the court-huu.se was pre pared for the occasion. It was a rough log erection, so called from its having been first ued as a sessions-house. Jt had bceu promis ed to the villagers for a school, hut was at present used a- a storehouse for inaizc. The large room was lighted with a profusion of candles, made from the liees'-wax found by the hunters iu the fallen trees; the floor had been carefully cleared of the ruaize-staw, bench es were placed all around for the ladies; and in one corner was a table with a seat t>ehind it, for the solitary musician, an old fiddler. Ma bel was almost sad; she thought of her discon solate lover, wandering alone in the neighbor ing woods, and fir-It r.o inclination to join the dance and the festivity. Jt was with difticnlty that she was persuaded even to enter the danc ing room, and no entreaties could prevail on her to mingle in the jovoas circle. But Benjamin ilolick was not wondering in the wood, as Mabel supposed. Old Sutton as he hunseif avowed, had. when lie found that none were to he excluded, given him u special invcation to the gathering. Ben, however, had declined to be present, though he resolved to be near at hand. Busy friends had brought him word that it was to be a betrothing feast, anil he immediately determined to sec with his own oves, whether it could be true that Mabel had lotsok np his position behind a fallen tree: " only present yourself in tne open space, and you shaii rejoice in Ben lloliek's rifle bail." He lifted his piece on to the tree—jxtiuted it in what ho supposed to be the direction of the beast's approach—-giving no heed to the pack behind him. it being the weil-kuown habit > of wolves to keep the ground they have taken till joined by their stray comrades. He had not long to wait. As Ben stood listening with breathless attention for "the slightest movement, ho soon heard a quick but - cautious tread resound among the withered I haves beneath a einmp of t:e oeur wfeere he • s Trip trip trip. trip, and tta wolf-made.