know this is the third time you have spoken these very words to me ? and that between each of these times an interval of several years has elapsed ?" Ellen started in surprise : " This surely can not be," she said.—" Have we ever met be fore ?" " Ho you remember spending a fortnight at Mr. George Herbert's, when you were about ten years old " Yes, I remember that visit." " And do you remember a boy by the name of Arthur Punning, who visited therewith his sister at the same time ?" " Yes, 1 recollect liirn too." " Well, 1 am Arthur Dunuing." " Is it possible ?" " Yes, quite possible. I>o you remember one day, when that same Arthur Dunning was about to demolish a play-house just construct ed by Mary Herbert, how you laid your hand upon his arm and said pleadingly, ' i wouldn't do it ?'" " I think I do have some faint recollection of it now." " You recollect, I presume, a visit paid to your friend, Mrs. C., some five years ago." " Very well." " Do you recollect one evening, during that visit, falling into the company of two or three of the college students, who were discussing the plan of combining to refuse obedience to certain college regulations offensive to them ?" " I think I remember the circumstance." " And do you remember that one of them appealed to you for your opinion, asking you if you would advise those present to join in the scheme, and thai you replied modestly, but firmly and emphatically, ' I wouldn't do it V " "And was that student yourself?" asked Ellen, wonderinglv. "It was, and I didn't do it. If you recol lect the fate of those who did, you will believe that I never regretted it." " Strange that we should have met at three different times so far apart," said Ellen, mu singly. " I did not recognize in you the stu dent I ihet that evening." " This is not strange, as you only saw me that one evening. But the impression made on my mind was far deeper," said Arthur, in a tone which mantled the cheeks of Ellen with blushes. " And now, Miss Hastings, will yon not permit me to ask yon oe question ? Do you not think you were destiued to be my guardian angel ?" Ellen's brightened color was the only an swer to this question. Arthur took her hund respectfully, aud in low, earnest tones, said, " Will you not walk with me through life, dear Ellen, that you ever may whisper to me, ' I wouldn't do it,' when temptation invites me to dangerous paths ? Is not the ready obe dieuee I have yielded on such occasions when you have been my kind mentor, a pledge that I shall never turn a deaf ear to your gentlest admonitions, but that it shall ever be yours to mould me and guide me as you will ?" Ellen gave no definite answer to these ques tions that evening, but she did not refuse to take them into serious consideration ; and in the end, she did not refuse to become the wife of Arthur Dunning. We know not how often after their mar riage, she had occasion to whisper in his ear, " I wouldn't do it but, as her husband was ever respected aud honored iu all the high stations which he was called upon to fill, we may rationally suppose, that female influence had something to do with his prosperity after marriage as well as before.— Ladies' Wreath. Arrest of MoKim, the Alleged Murderer of Norcross. BI.OOMSBI RG, March 12.—McKim, the mur derer of Mr. Norcross, was arrested yesterday, by Aarou Wolff, at the Long Pond, North Mountain, Luzerne county. It appears that Aaron Wolff and E. A. B. Koous of Bloomsburg, Pa., had some busiucss which led them to cross the North Mountain, a spur of the Alleghenics, and after riding about ten miles they came to a road-side Inu, knowu as the Pond Hotel. Here thev alight ed, and when the hostler appeared to take charge of the horses, the travelers recognized iu the hostler the murderer of Norcross, the published description which they had on their persons suiting iu every particular the man before them. While McKim went to the stable irith the horse, Wolff aud Koons entered the tavern, nod after making a confidant of the landlord ljorrowed a rifle loaded with ball. With this they went into the yard, and as McKim came came from the stable Wolff presented the rifle at his breast, at the same time saying, " you are vcanted." McKim at once apprehended the cause of the action, and asked Wolff in a trembling manner if he was an officer, to which Wolff replied that he was, and intended to take him in charge McKim made no resis tance, but submitted quietly to the binding of his arms. In this condition he was taken to Bloomsburg, and from thence lie will be con veyed to Harrisburg to await his trial. McKim, when arrested, had one of the hand bills on his person, giving a description of him self, aud on his way to Bloomsburg acknow ledged that he had traveled with Norcross from Pittsburg, but positively denied having killed him. lie says that he loved Norcross as a brother, and would not have harmed him. After his arrival at Bloomsburg, the excite meat among the citizens of that place was most intense, even to a lynching degree, but by the precaution and firmness of the authori ties. alt manifestation of that kind were nip ped ia the bud. McKim ia affable and polite in his manner, and does not look much like a man who would commit murder or be guilty of the ma ny robberies imputed to him. But the truth of these stories will be made manifest on his trial, which will shortly take place. SERIOCS ACCIDENT ON THE PENNSYLVANIA RAlLßOAD.— Harrixburp, Marrh 12.—An acci dent of a very serious character occurred up on the Pennsylvania Railroad, westward of this place. In one of the tunnels an emigrant train was run iuto this morning by a freight train. Five persons were killed and six injur ed. Those wounded are not severely injured. There was a great deal of anxiety prevailing relative to this matter anterior to the receipt of the true account, for the first rumor was that the passenger train had been run into. AMERICAN CONVENTION. —The Harrisburgh Telegraph of the 6th instant states that the Americau State council, which met on the stb at Aitona, has ratified the call, issued by the opposition members of the Legislature, for a State convention to uominate candidates for Governor. Supreme Judge, and Canal Com missioner. e contrary, they were elec.ed to vote for a Democrat. One of these gentlemen went into the Democratic cau cus and voted for the nominee. As for the circumstance that at one time, when acting with the Democratic party, his colleague fa vored his (Mr. Biglers) nomination, he eonld hardly see what bearing that had ou this case. He did that when he was a member of the Democratic party. Mr. Foote submitted the following resolu tion : Resolved, That Simon Cameron is entitled to a seat upon this floor as a legally chosen Senator from the State of Pennsylvania. Mr. Benjamin offered a resolution that the Secretary of the Senate obtain for the use of the Senate, from the report of the decisions of the Supreme Court, 20,000 copies of the opinions of the Judges in the case of Dred Scott, and that the same be paid for at a rate not exceeding fifteen cents per 100 pages, pro vided (he same be stitched, with paper covers, in pamphlet form. After an Executive session, the Senate ad journed till to-morrow, at 11 o'clock. WASHINGTON, March 13. —1n the Senate to day, in reference to the contested seat from Pennsylvania, it was agreed on all sides that the informalities presented in the protest do not affect the right of Mr. Camerou to his seat ; and it was held, also, that the question of alleged fraud and corruption in the election properly belonged to the Legislature of Penn* sylvania, and not to the Senate. The resolu tion declaring Mr. Cameron entitled to his seat, as a legally chosen Senator, was withdrawn by Mr. Foote, who offered it. The Committee on the Judiciary having been discharged from the further consideration of the subject, the whole matter rests where it is. WHO WRITESTHE NEGRO SONGS ?—The prin cipal writer of our national music is said to be Stephen C. Foster, the author of "Uncle Ned," " O Susannah," Ac. Mr. Foster resides near Pittsburg, where he occupies a moderate clerk ship, upon which, and a percentage ou the sale of his songs, he depends for a living. He writes the poetry as well as the music of his songs. These are sung wherever the english language is spoken, while the music is heard wherever men sing. In the cotton fields of the South, among the mines of California and Australia, in the sea-coast cities of China, in Paris, in the London Prison—everywhere, in fact his melodies are heard. " Uncle Ned" was the first. This was publshed in 1845, and reached a sale unknown till then iu the music publishing busiuess. Of " The oVRRTISKMF.VTS— For a square of ten lines or less. One Dollar for three or less insertions, and twenty-five cents for each subsequent insertion. JOB-WORK— Executed with accuracy and despatch, and a reasonable prices—with every facility for doing Books, Blanks, Hand-bills, Bali tickets, 4"<". MONKY may be sent by mail, at our risk—enclosed in an envelope, and properly directed, we will be responsible for its safe delivery. REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION.—The Re publican State Convention, for the nomination of Candidate* for Governor and other State officers, will he held at Harrishurg on Wednesday, the 25th of|Marcb, 1867. Each District will elect Delegate* in the usual manner, equal in nnmlierto its representation in the two houses of the State Legislature ; and no person will 1* entitled, by substitution, to represent a district in which he does not reside. CHARLES GIBBONS, Chairman of State Executive Committee. In another column we publish the pro ceedings in the Senate, in reference to the right of Senator CAMERON to his seat in that body. It will be observed, that the Senate treated the protest of the members of the Legislature with deserved contempt, and properly rebuked the allegations of corruption, unsubstantiated as they were by a particle of evidence. I©~ The Legislature met in joint Conven tion, on Wednesday, 11th inst., and re-elected 11. S. MAGRAW, State Treasurer, he having 68 votes ; JACOB DOCK 58. RESIGNATION or Gov. GEARY.—A tele graphic despatch from Washington, dated on Monday, says that late on Sunday evening the President received a telegraphic despatch from Gov. Geary, dated St. Louis, informing him that he had resigned the governorship of Kan sas, to take effect the last of this month. He does not state the reasons which have induced him to pursue this course ; but the President is perfectly aware what they are. He has encountered difficulties and embar rassments ever since he had the row with Judge Lecompte, and he asked Geu. Pierce to remove him. He promised to do it, but never did ; at least Gov. Geary performs all the functions of his office in that Territory. Governor Geary will be at Washington in a few days, when the Administration will urge upon him to change his mind, and go back ; and if he desires it, Lecompte and every other office holder in the Territory, who has thrown any embarrassment in his way, will be removed. AMERICAN' EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING HOUSE. —lu coiisequeuee of the constantly enlarging demand for their own School Books, IVJSON A I'HINNEY, 321 Broadway,New-York,have been induced to decline their general and miscellane ous Book Trades, and henceforth to restrict their business mainly to the publication and sale of their American Educational Series, and other School Books, Stationary, Ac. This firm is now the most extensive publish er of School Books in the United States, issu ing most all the Educational Works iu general use, embracing School and College Text books, Ac. The house has the very highest reputa tion for probity and business habits. MORSE & GASTON'S DIAMOND ATLAS. —From the cursory examination we have been enabled to give this work, we are fully satisfied of its great value and convenience to every reader. The necessity for an Atlas to accompany gene ral reading must have impressed itself upon the mind of every one. The Agent for this County, Mr. J. O. BROWN, is now engaged in canvassing for subscribers, and will exhibit the work, the value of which caunot fail to strike every person in the least accustomed to read ing. TOWASIU, March 16,1857. From a partial examination of the Diamond Atlas, An cient and Modern, ljy Morse & Colby, we take pleasure in recommending it as a valuable compeud for family read ing and reference ; containing succinct historical notes, complete statistics, maps with township lines, and various items of practical importance and of general utility. SAM'L F. COLT, ULYSSES MF.RCUR, JAS. H. WEBB, WM. EI.WELL, M. C. MERCUR, C. R. COBURN, JOHN A. CODDING, D. WILMOT. ARREST OF ESCAPED JAIL BIRDS. —Ou Wednesday last, the two negroes who recently escaped from Bath Jail, passed through Wells boro, Pa, with two fine horses and buggy.— Their character was ascertained, and the Sher iff of Tioga County started in pursuit of them, and succeeded in apprehending the fugitives a short distance from Wellsboro'. The horses were stolen from Painted Post. One of the most terrible Railroad ac cidents we have ever been called on to chroni cle, is that lately occurring on the Canada Great Western, the particulars of which we give At the latest account, sixty dead bo dies had been recovered from the wreck, but it is feared all have not been found; NEW II AMRSNIRE ELECTION. —The election in this State, on Friday last, has resulted in a complete Republican triumph. HAILE, Re publican, is elected Governor by about 3000 majority, with a large majority of Senators and Councilors, the same way, and the entire delegation in Congress. Hon. D. T. DISNKY, formerly a mem ber of Congress from Ohio, died at Washing ton OD Saturday last, of pnucmonia. SUSQUEHANNA COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. —We had the pleasure of attending a portion of the closing exercises of the Winter Term on Thurs day last, which were in every way creditable to both teachers arid scholars. There will be a vacation of three weeks, the Spring Term opening on the Ist day of April, and closing on the 4th of July. The Institute has labored under many em barrassments and financial difficulties for the past, but it has already done a good work, and become an ornameut to our village, and of great public ntility. We trust that the exer tions of its friends will be rewarded by the suc cess which will make it a permanent and thriv ing institution. It has now in training many promising scho lars who will form next fall a Freshman and Sophomore Class. It has also already sent oot a large number of teachers from its Normal department, well qualified to impart instruction to others. The specimens we have seen from the Marble establishment of F. H. BALDWIN, at WaverJy, have been highly creditable, both as regards material, and the execution of the work. Mr. G. H. POWERS, who does the cutting for the establishment, has mnch experience, and good taste, and sends out some of the best let tering we have ever seen. Nothing adds to the beauty of a monument as much as this, as the most elegant marble is disfigured, if the work upon it is not correctly aud tastefully ex ecuted. WHAT DID AND DID NOT PASS. —It takes some time after the adjournment of congTess to find out what passed aud what did not. There were forty-seven public acts and resolutions passed, and about three times that number of private bills, mostly for individual relief.— Among the public acts was one to purchase a suitable steamer as a revenue cutter ; one for a wagon road from the Rocky mountains to the eastern portion of California, with military posts thereon ; one to iucrease the pay of offi cersjof the array ; an act to promote the efficien cy of the navy ; the foreign coins and new cent bill ; one authorizing the people of Minnesota to form a state constitution preparatory to ad mission into the union ; the bill modifying the tariff ; oue to ascertain and fix the relative value of the coins of Great Britain and the United States ; one to prevent counterfeiting of coins of the United States ; an act to expe dite telegraphic communication for the uses of the Government in its foreign intercourse, which Congress will be sorry it passed and the President that he ever signed it; and an act granting public lands to Minnesota and Ala bama, to aid in constructing railroads. These are all the bills of general interest, except the appropriation bills for tbe expenses of Govern ment, all of which passed. The bill to distri bute the surplus revenue now in the Treasury among the several states of tbe Union, which had been passed by tbe House, was not con sidered in the Senate, and, therefore, did not pass. Neither did the bill to extend the opera tion, for five years, of the act to continue the half pay to certain widows and orphans. The bill to refund money advanced in 1790 by the States of Virginia and Maryland to aid it the erection of the public buildings was also lost. GIVE HIM THE SLIP. —A complaint was made before Justice GALATIAN, yesterday mor ing, by COLUMBUS PALMER, a farmer, against JAMES SMITH and JOHN BROWN, alleging that that they came to his house in Troy, Bradford County, Thursday morning, and engaged his team for the pnrpose of going to Athens.— IN the night those men took his team, and loading a wagon with furniture started for Elmira. Mr PAI.MF.R, in the morning, suppos ing all things were not as they should be, and learning that the men had not gone to Athens, but hearing they had come in this direction, started in pursuit of them. On arriving in this village the warrant was issued, and Mr PAL MER, in company with Officer GARR, proceeded in direction of Coming, whither GARR and PALMER went in pursuit, but did not succeed in finding them.— Elmira Republic. THE REMAINS OF DR. KANE. —The remains of Dr. Kane were received in Philadelphia on Wednesday afternoon last, and deposited in the Independence Hall, from which place the funeral procession took place, on Thursday. The greatest respect has been paid the remains of the deceased, ever since their departure from Havana. The event seems to have penetrated the mind of the nation, as a public calamity, and every one is desirous of honoring the memory of him who had so many of the ele ments of true greatness in him. ACCIDENT.—A brakeman named JAMES BROCKWAY, from Cooperstown, N. Y., fell from a freight car on the Southern Division last Friday night, the whole train passed over him, killing him instantly. His head was completely severed from his body, and was found several feet from the spot where he fell. He was not missed until the train arrived at junction, we understand, and his body was not found until the next morning, having been passed over in the meantime by three coal trains.— Scranton Republican. ANOTHER MYSTERIOUS POISONING CASE IN BOSTON. —The Boston papers contain an ac count of the supposed poisoning of Mrs Lavina Briggs, of Stoughton, and the arrest of her husband, Hosea Briggs, and a young woman, Miss Adaline Drake, as the supposed authors of her death. Mrs. Briggs' body was taken up, and charcoal tests were applied, which showed arsenic in the stomach and bowels. The case is now under examination. THE PRIVATE SECRETARY to President Buch anan is his nephew, James Buchanan Henry. He was admitted to the bar a year or two ago, and had commenced the practice of law in Phil adelphia when he was summoned to his duties in Washington. Mr. Sydney Webster, 'the predecessor in office of Mr. Henry, will return to New Hampshire and resume the practice of his profession. SENATOR SUMNER. —Senator Sumner took his seat in the U. S. Senate a few days before the 4th of March, and was warmly welcomed by his friends, but no Southerner approached him. Mr. Sumner has since sailed on the Steamer Fulton from New York intending to spend some time on a tour through Europe. The Young Men's Republican Association gave liitu a parting salute ot 109 gnus. Frightful Railroad Catastrophe^ Disaster oil the Great Western Railroad-\ Tram Precipitated into a Canal—Fiak, Persons Reported Killed. TORONTO, March 12.-A dreadful accident occurred on the Great Western Railroad The train which left Toronto this for Hamilton, ran off the bridge at the I) ts Jardine's Canal, above Hamilton, precipitati the engine baggage car and two passe, Jr' cars into the water. The locomotive and bfJ gage car passed over the bridge in safety hni the two rear cars, containing one hundred and twenty passengers, fell through, and between sixty and eighty persons are supposed to have been killed ou the spot. Among the kilhd are— cu Samuel Zimmerman, the banker and con tractor. . Samuel Zimmerman was a native of P enn sylvania, and some years ago went to Canada and be< ome a contractor on some of thereat public works of the province. lie amassed there a large fortune. Mr. Street, the millionareof Niagara Fall* together with his sister and mother in-law ' Many of the bodies have not vet been ta ken from the water, and the names of but few have been ascertained. The passengers who escaped death are ull more or less inaiHed Most of them ore injured beyond recoverv The doctors are leaving Torouto to attend the wonnded. The passengers were nearly all Canadians as the train was running between Toronto and Hamilton, yet there were several American's in the cars. The bridge partially broke down, and the cars, one on top of the other, fell a distance of at least forty feet The excitement caused by this terrible ca tastrophe is beyoud precedent. Parliament adjourned the moment it lieard of the acci dent. Nothing has heretofore occurred in this vicinity that has created such profound grief SECOND DISPATCH. BUFFALO, March 13.— We learn the follow ing particulars of the railroad accident at Ha i milton, C. W., from a gentleman who left the sceue of disaster this morning. The accident occurred ou the Great Western Railway at !at the bridge over the Des Jardines Canal which is elevated some sixty feet above water' | The bridge swings, and it is supposed that the train which passed for tle East a short I time before, had sunk the bridge so much that j the locomotive of this train was obstructed bv the abutment to such a degree that the pas senger cars were raised up and thrown into the canal. The train was the local accommodation from I Goron to Hamilton, and left Toronto at 4 o- I clock yesternoon. The immlx-r of passengers was estimated at from seventy five to one hun dred, of whom only "fifteen were taken alive from the wreck, and of these five have since died. The water in the canal is eighteen feet deep, and nearly all those not immediately kill ed were drowned. The engine and tender with the emrinecr and fireman, were pitched headlong into the Canal, and are buried twenty feet below the surface. The baggage car and two passeneer cars are completely shattered, and one of the latter turned bottom side upwards and nearly submerged. When our informant arrived this morning, the parties were still bnsy in extricating the bodies front the wreck. In an outhouse ad joining the Station House at Hamilton, about fifty or sixty corpses of men, women, and chil dren were laid one the floor. No inquiry iuto the cause of the occideut had yet been" had. Most of the passengers were from Hamilton, Toronto, and the adjoining towns. Sanil. Zim merman, of Niagara Falls ; Isaac Buchanan, of Hamilton, Vice-President of the Road, and Captain Twohey, a popular commander on Lake Ontario, are among the victims Only one of the lady passengers was saved, and she was considerably cut aiul bruised. A German lad, in the hind car, seeing the con ductor hastily retreating to the back door, took alarm and followed hiui, and he, the conduc tor, and two others were the only ones who escaped with trifling injuries. Mr. C.J Brid ges, the Managing Director of the Great Wes tern Railway, and Dr. Macklem aud Mr. Thomas Street, of Chippewa, were on the train, and although considerably injured, es caped with their lives. The following is a list of the bodies recog nized up to this morning. Donald Stuart, Rev. A. Boaker, the father of Mayor Boa ker ; Erastus W. Green, and a little girl, the daughter of Mr. J. H. Clark, all of Toronto, James Gannon and Thos. BCIKSOD, of Port Hope ; John Sharp, Bookbinder, A Grant. Mr. Russell, of the firm of Mellest, Merrell & Russell of Brant ford ; Joseph Barr of Chi cago, and John C. Henderson of Hamilton. In one of the Compauy's buildings lay the bodies of sixteen men, two women and one child, and of these bnt three were recognized —Edward Puffield, Rev. Dr. Heisseeand J no. Morley. The remains of Mr Zimmerman will be taken to his residence at Niagara Falls this afternoon. He was in the baggage car at the time of the accident. [From the Rochester Democrat of Saturday morninp i Mr. Simeon Sinsebough of Ithaca, who came direct from Hamilton yesterday after noon, saw the body of the engineer extricat ed from the water before he left. As many as seventy jersons were believed to be killw at this terrible casualty. The most intcuse ex citement prevailed at Hamilton and other pie ces in Canada, some one or more persons froui the towns along the road having been num bered among the dead. Beside the newspaper vender, whose name is given elsewhere, we can not learu that any one from this city or ne'e borhood was among the unfortunate passcu gers. A gentleman who was at the scene . vc?u J t day morning, says passengers from the crossed on the ice aud took cars on this sue o the bridge. Western-bound > to pass the bridge in the same way. lie cribes the excitement as intense and agonizi.i.- He saw sixty-three bodies lying at the t-ta K. House. The foremost car was shattered m very small fragments. Its destruction was complete as to be a matter of surprise. Another prominent contractor, whose 11 a our informant does not remember, was ed to be among the lost, some articles je c ing to him having been found in the wret His body, however, had not been recover The conductor had taken up 90 pUN-en. tickets, showing that at least that num e persons must have been ou the train. THE SUGAR INTERESTS dislike to come i in their prices. Iu Cuba the planter* 11 combined to keep it up, hut letters from vana say they will be unable to do so af e present delivery, and that the price niu* down. Well, the consumers will not onjee