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They will be entitled to 4 num. routined exclusively to their business, with privilege of change. ft" Advertising in all cases exclusive of snb rii'tion t<> the paper. .101! PRINTING of every kind in Plain and Fun ics. d"iie with neatness anil dispatch. Hand j, blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, &c., of every va ,, ilU ,l style, printed at the shortest notice. The ]., !>, ,|.FEI: OFFICE has just been re-fitted with Power p r , ssi s. and every filing in the Printing line can 1,, , x. eiited in the most artistic manner and at the j,' W st rates. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. For the Bradford Reporter. THE STRANGER'S SMILE. BY PACE PKMBERTON, JR. S me lights there are upon my memory streaming That mark life's journey with a sunnier mile, u. 1 wake me from a night of bitter dreaming— The very brightest is the stranger's smile. I v, ..tillered far from my paternal home, \ 1 vi lice familiar in that foreign land 1 1 ■,< itly. an undying friendship telling— H w welcome then the stranger's cordial hand. I; a.aiilie scenes could not delight my vision, Tin trilling birds 110 joy in me awoke, riny only mocked me with a gay derision, T'ntil the stranger friendly words had spoke. Tin jasmine sweeter was. the sky was bluer, 1 felt at home again with fancy free ; 011-ver was a heart more pure or truer Than seemed the stranger's kindly heart to me. slight ills in life are often made the rougher l!y an unthinking world's formality, V.. ii sweet relief may come to those who suffer, In one good word of hospitality. !;, 1 arefiil all to entertain the stranger, What time ye thread earth's wilderness defile ; It' ' ■ s an outcast, think of his great danger— IT avcii luay to him be in a stranger's smile! TIWAXDA, July 11, IHC>3. THE PALE FLOWER. My old Iriend Joe Harris, who has long since been dead, was, when a wild 3'oung man, induced to try' his fortune in the new j w rid. lie left England with the intention i el settling in America, but, to the surprise : I.is friends, lie returned borne in middle ge, an altered man, settling down in a, iittle village, where be lived a bachelor's hie, tiil the end ot bis day's. That there t was a romance of some kind connected with tin- old man's sojourn in America, was well known, but the particulars were never di- ! vulged, till a few years before his death, ' when lie related the little episode to me ! which caused ii is return to England. The! '.towing is, as nearly 7 as possible, in his I ivn words : U hen first 1 saw the upper .Missouri, no v te man had never crossed the Black 11:11s. or woke with his litle the echoes of; Kocky Mountains. The vast pararies, j waich lie at the hase of the Cordilleras, j ehiwg for hundreds of leagues towards j tb Mississippi, had never heard the voice j ■t it pale face, or been pressed by the foot j ! civilization. All was wild, solitary, and j - iijiinc. Even the trader had not penetra- J ted tliis wilderness ; and the beaver built, j tte i ulfalo herded, the eagle soared, and •e red man hunted, safe from Chrisatin rapine and wrong. St. Louis was a frontier town, and still :a the possession of the French, and it was t quit.* a common thing for the Sioux to come j down there to trade. A young brave of i that nation was there when I arrived ; I i ■'ot him at the Governor's and we soon got quite intimate. He was a noble fellow, as j tail and graceful as an Apollo, and with a v '.nine of .sinew that might have been the' tin del for an Hercules. We went so far as ' ' change names, and so he always called j me " the War Eagle." At last he asked me ! e> visit his country, and hunt the buffalo i m ath the Black Hills. Voting and ven-' tures<>me, it was the very thing I wanted, i a wus . me thing to penetrate where no ! w '|ite man had ever boon. So, bidding' •"lieu 1 civilization, I shouldered my ritie, ai-'i plunged into the pathless wilderness ! ami. r tiie guidance of my young Sioux ! brave. Mi- crossed prairies, upon which one ■ay travel lor months without seeing a ato c, or speaking to a human being, mi Mm rises and sets on a boundless ex ji ii.se.;! green. At times you will tiud the pontic as level as the ocean in a calm;and then for several weeks you will travel a- j - robing uplands like the same ocean 1 ; and by-and-by you will come ' ■ -a at steep hills, like the cross chop ** as ,a the mouth of a tidal river. Now • a hundred thousand buffaloes 1 A go tramping by, shaking the solid : >u- an earthquake ; and now the ! u > outline of Indian horsemen will be MAECPUIG gracefully along the far off Amid such scenes we journeyed j '""ks A hen hunger overtook us we 'ring down a buffalo, light a fire,and ' '■ ' clioieest morsel, and liavea feast ' kings ; and at nightfall, spread- I oiitialo robes beneath us, we lay j " the velvet turf, with the balmy! • n, ,!ng us to sleep, and millions of j -'uttering in the calm blue sky above. : 1 wild but fascinating life,ever full ! variety. Now we would be - the wigwam of some friendly ' uow passing some tribe of hos- J 1 ■"'■•uis. At sueh times what a choice , ,u y Sioux brave ! How he i ; i -daver to the old chiefs, and talk of 1 medicine man as he called rue.— , he tli iught this wouldn't do how ia V " * V . u " u 'd creep around their vil !l the night! Once or twice we had . I:i ; way through ; and we only es • Ino .11 ml Pawnees, encamped on by_gl ding with the current past ' ark canoe during a night storm. ; , w , u ' ( lield the Sioux village, far Lie horizon ; and a hundred war -tir "s at once, galloped on iti■ !■" wav ' n g their lances, and j '*>., l!? V 1,1 Wt -'^ c oiue us. They had , •in 1.1 ' what I was—for few of; iihi j 1 "'! lorc Becu white man—than ' 1 me from 1113* horse, ,ne 111 triumph to their village. t 13. O. GOODRICH, I'tiblislier. VOLUME XXVI. Here I lived for months. Here, too, I met the sister of 1113' Sioux friend, a being all grace and beauty, and with a complex ion so fair that she was calh d " The Pale Flower." Few in any clime are so beauti ful as was Mencatecab. She had an eye like a gazelle, dark and languishing ; hair soft and silky like the tresses of a moun tain nymph and a form as light, elastic,and sylph-like as ever trod greensward, or haun ted the classic woodlands of old Greece.— And then, how artless she was ! 'Tis 110 use to deny it; woman, endearing woman, is sweet the wide world over ; and with what chattering in bad Sioux, and telling moonlight tales of 1113' own land, I began to look upon her almost as a sister ; and the dear creature, I reall3 r believe, thought of me with even tenderer emotions. But if she did, her tongue never breathed it. I fell sick once, and she was my nurse. I really think if it hadn't been for her kind ness I should have died. She bathed 1113' fevered head, sang me songs to lull me to repose, and almost wept for j'o3' when I re covered. Well, at this time the Sioux were at war with the Pawnees, and it was not till six months after 1113 7 arrival that a great smoke was held between the hostile chiefs, and the hatchet buried in the big lodge of the village. As soon as this was settled, 1113' Sioux friend found leisure to escort me to the Rocky Mountains, where we went for a great hunt. In a fortnight we reached our destination -—and I stood upon one of their loDy peaks amid the region of eternal snows. What a magnificent scene ! Below—peak, cliff, and gentle slope fell down into the plain 011 each side ; while lar a\vu3 7 to the west, over forest and river, the setting sun sunk into the vast Pacific. The eagle sailed un harmed on these solitary recesses, and the sun shone down on the clouds thousands of feet below. Now the hoarse roar of a cat aract broke majestically on U13 7 ear, and now the imprisoned wind, like stifled thun der, was heard far down some dark ravine. I lifted up ni3 7 voice, waking the echoes that had slumbered since creation. A crowd of sublime emotions thronged in my bosom. Never had civilized foot stood where I stood. A continent was beneath me ; its past history was a dream ; and the names of the races that peopled it were un known. The graves of nations were under my feet. I well remember when, on our return, we first caught sight of the Sioux wigwams dwindled on the horizon to a speck, and the eagerness with which we pressed on across the prairie to reach our homes before night fall. Suddenly we saw a crowd issuing from the village, and Contained scarcety a single warrior. Instead of the wild tu multuous joy which ittended our first ar rival, when a hundred braves swept huz zaing around us on their fleet horses, we were met with solemn silence, and all the stoicism of the Indian character. The cause was soon explained. A party of our Sioux friends, when returning from a visit to a neighboring village, had been waylaid by the Pawnees, who. after murdering the braves, had carried off the women as cap tives. M - sweet prairie flower was one of the prisoners. " Does my white brother hear ?" said her brother, turning tome with unnatural calm ness, but a fire burning in his dark e3 7 e that forebode a fearful vengeance—"does 1113' white brother hear ?" I told him that I would go with him to the world's end to rescue Meneateeah; and then a smile of approval lighted up the countenance of the 3'oung chief, as he re plied in his deep, guttural tones. " Good —very good. The War Eagle and his brother will be after the dogs of Pawnees before sunset." The proposition was hailed with a shout; we made our preparations for the war par ty ; and, before the moon was an hour high, we were already far upon the track of the tlying Pawnees. All night we continued the pursuit, and only towards the morning did we pause for a little rest. In an hour or two we resumed our march, and night had long settled on the prairie before we halted to bivouac till morning. We had moved forward for some hours with extreme caution, for we suspec ted the enemy to be in our near neighbor hood ; and accordingly, when we stopped, runners were sent out to reconnoitre the Pawnee camp, and scouts stationed to pre vent all possibility of surprise. At my urgent request 1 had been per mitted by the young chief to accompany him to one of these outposts, where he pro posed to spend the night. It was a still hazy evening. A few stars flicked through the mist; the moon waded heavily amid the clouds above ; and occasionally the wind moaned across the the silent prairie, with a low, mournful sound. In an hour, however, the clouds totally obscured the light, and a thick palpable darkness set tled down around us. Occasionally a low sound, like the stifled neigh of a horse, would be heard amid the stillness ; and then the wailing tones of the night-wind would come to the ear with a strange mys terious sound. A couple of hours had passed, when I fancied 1 heard a cry, like that of a human voice, coming out of the darkness a short distance ahead. I put my ear to the ground, and heard several voices conversing, What they said, however,was. in a language 1 knew not. I looked hur riedly around to apprise my companion of our danger ; but I found myself-—I could scarcely credit it—alone. For one minute I fancied I saw a dark form stealing along in the uncertain gloom ; but even while I looked, the shadowy appearance vanished. Left to my own resources, 1 did not quail, llurridly throwing my rifle across my arm, with one foot extended, and every sense alive witfi excitement, I waited the ap proach of inv foes, llad the chance given me 1 should have sold my life dearly ; but all at once, as a dark form rose suddenly before me, I felt myself tripped up, and fell prostrate on the prairie. In another in stant four swarthy figures sprang up at my feet, and 1 found myself a prisoner. My hands were instantly bound, and I was hur ried oil toward the Pawnee camp. The In dians had approached by crawling noise lessly on their hands and feet; and while 1 was looking for them in the gloom, they had me already in their power. Never shall I forget the emotions of that night. I well knew the manner in which prisoners were treated, and I looked for ward to a death of torture. Morning at length dawned ; but it brought me no com TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., JULY 20, 1865. fort. The savages who held me in their custody seemed to take a fiendish delight in anticipating the tortures they intended for me. I tried in vain to open a conversa tion with them ; but they pretended not to understand me, maintaining a dogged si lence. At last we reached their village. Boys, women, and children thronged around, heaping _ opprobrious epithets upon me, jostling, pelting, spotting upon me, and shouting in derision at 1113' bonds. I knew it was useless to talk of mercy—l'd sooner die than show the white feather —and so I took it all cavalierty as if I'd been used to such things from a bo3 T . 1 was carried triumphantly to a lodge in the centre of the village, and left to the gaze of the idle and curious while the old men deliberated about my fate. What were my emotions during that ter rible day ! It was one thing to appear stoical, but riot to feel. I shuddered to think of Ul3* probable doom ; and I saw no hope of averting it. M3 7 Sioux friends, 1 doubted not, would hasten to 1113' rescue ; but I had seen enough of the strength of the village, in my hast3 f passage through it, to feel certain that its warriors trebled the force of ni3 7 friends. There was 110 gleam of hope. But I resolved to die as became me. At night the lodge was deserted, through a couple of warriors kept watch beside the door. After .a day of agony I was glad to find relief even in a last troubled sleep; for 1 felt that I should never enjoy another. 1 was buried in deep repose, when I fan cied I heard my name breathed beside me, and awaking at the sound, I started half up and gazed around me. lt was deep in the night; and ever3 7 thing* in the village was silent. The tire had gone out in tiie lodge, and its whole inte rior was wrapped in darkness. Th i door was open, and through it a solitary star glimmered in the heavens ; while the dark form of one of my jailors sat motionless and statue-like in the dim obscurity. 1 was about to return to 013- rude pillow, satisfied that the sound I had listened to was caused Gy ni3 r fancy, when I heard 1113 7 name re peated distinctly in a whisper at my elbow, and turning suddenly around 1 beheld to my surprise, the form of Meneateeah. As tonishment for a moment deprived me of speech, and before 1 could recover 1113' ut terance, my companion placed her finger on her lip, silently motion'ng towards the im movable sentinel at my door ; at the same instant, before 1 could comprehend her meaning, she severed the bonds from 1113' hands and ankles. I started to my feet with a jo - words cannot explain ; but a motion from my deliverer again warned me to be silent. tshe beckoned me to follow her, and hastily lifting one corner of the tent, ushered me into the fresh air. Paus ing but a moment to listen if our escape had been detected, she again imposed si lence upon me by a gesture, and led the way swift ly and silently out of the camp. 1 was too well acquainted with Indian life not to know that we momentarily ran the greatest risk of discovery, and that cer tain death awaited us if surprised in at tempting an escape. Acute in ear, prompt in action, relentless in revenge, it was an act amounting to madness to attempt lly, ing from our savage foes. As we stole noiseless through the village, 1 scarcely dared to breathe, lest we should arouse the sleeping inmates within. Once, they ba3 7 of a distant dog startled us, and the wind sighing over the prairie was magnified into the voices of pursuers. Meneateeah still glided before me, occasionally pausing to listen, and then stealing softly among the wigwams towards the outskirts of the vil lage. Not a word as yet had passed be tween us ; and I could not account for her opportune aid. How had she obtained her liberty? By what means was my prison house gained unobserved 1 Even amid all our danger I could scarcely refrain from in quiring ; but m3 7 sweet guide always si lenced me by the same hurried gesture. We had just reached the edge of the village, when suddenly a dark figure emerged into the light. It was a Pawnee scout return ing from the prairie. We had scarcety time to glide behind the shadow of a lodge when he came so close that 1 could have touched him. 1 felt my companion tremble violently. For a moment I held 1113' breath in agony, but the scout passed us, and was lost to sight behind the clustering lodges. With a thrill of joy we found ourselves in another instant on the open prairie. A mo mentary ejaculation of gratitude to Heaven burst from my bosotu, and then, turning to 103' guide, I inquired in what manner she had been enabled to lull suspicion and to come to U13 7 aid. Until this tooment Meneatefeuh had not uttered a word, nor had she scarcely lifted her eyes from the ground. When she did so now, it was with a timid, uncertain glance, half in doubt in what manner I might regard her conduct. The excitement which had hitherto sustained her had passed away, and her native modesty began to as sert its supremacy. Iler words, though soft as music, were trembling and low. " The Pale Flower," she said, " has done a great thing in the eyes of the white wor rior—has she not? The maiden of his own land come not to the lodge of their enemy to set free their warriors, and Meneateeah should not have done so, even though she loved the War Eagle like a brother." "No, no," said I, taking her hand ; "the War Eagle owes his life to Meneateeah.—< The Pale Flower is dear to the white war rior—what can he do to repay her J" "It is good, then—Meneateeah has not done wrong ?" said the Indian girl, looking up iuto my face, with her dark eyes swim ming with the tears of joy she could not repress. "No, my sweet preserver," said I ; for no one could have withstood that look. 1 pressed her to my bosom ; 1 kissed away her tears ; while she in all her artless hap piness, leaned upon my shoulder. "But how did you escape yourself ?" said I, after a few moments silence; "and when did you learn I was a prisoner. Will the Pale Flower tell her brother ?" She looked up into my lace with a glance of unreserved confidence, and narrated her capture, and her succeeding events up to her appearance in my lodge. The real object of the attack, she said — and her sunny cheek and bosom crimsoned as the spoke- was to secure her as.;the bride of a celebrated young Pawnee chief. He had seen her at the village, when at tending the council prior to our departure for the mountains, and inflamed by a pas- i . D ... ' REGAKDI.BSS OF DENUNCIATION FKOM ANY QUARTER. I sion for her had disregarded the admoni i tions of the old men, and wantonly way | laid the peaceable company with which she ; was traveling. As soon as they reached ! the Pawnee village she was adopted into i the family of her conqueror, and though I loaded with ornaments, and treated like a I princess, had been narrowly watched to I prevent her escape. To every entreaty to ! wed him, however, she turned a deaf ear. ,At last intelligence arrived that a medicine man of her tribe, a pale face warrior, had been brought in prisoner, and was the next morning to be burned at the stake in the center of the village. In an instant she de termined to rescue me. Assuming a sud den cheerfulness, she no longer turned a deal ear to the gallantry of her captor, but promised to be his at the moon, the Great Spirit having warned her in u dream to name that time. Now the Pawnees are superstitious, and even the ardor of a lover is nothing to a dream. So the young brave made a virtue of necessity, and was glad to wait a fort night to secure a willing bride. In the ex travagance of his joy, he did what Menea teeah had expected ; he gave orders that she should no longer be treated as a cap tive. She contrived, during the da 3', to learn where I was confined. Night came. She affected to sleep, but in reality was waiting for the village to be buried in re pose. Long after midnight she rose steal thil3 7 from her couch, escaped unnoticed from the lodge, and succeeded in setting me free. " Whist, whist," said I, as she ceased her narrative, and I pointed to the uow distant village, which we had left already miles behind, " is not that the barking of dogs ?" She started, like a frightened fawn, and as the sounds broke distinctly on the still air, said, in a voice of alarm, " The Paw nee braves are up—they find that the War Eagle is flown See, they seek him J" and as she spoke, the flashing of lights, among the lodges, along the horizon, told that the enemy were awake to their loss. What was to be done ? We had scarcely an hour's start, were without horses, and uncertain whither to go in order to reach our friends We might in fact be further from them now than when we left the vil- lage ; for the night was so dark that we c mid not see a dozen yards before us; and, from the absence of both moon and stars, I knew not whether morning was near or dis tant. Our enemies, 011 the other hand, would soon be on our trail, and were more over mounted 011 the fleetest horses. Dis cover 3' I knew would be death. But I cheered the noble girl beside me, and we hurried hastily along. Nimbly as a moun tain deer, nr>3* companion advanced with a rapidity that set even mo at defiance. But we soon found that nothing could save us. Already the loud shouts of our pursuers,as they followed up our trail, grew nearer and nearer. In spite of eveiy exertion, hy the end of half an hour, it became evident that they would soon overtake us. 1 had no arms, and what defence could I make ? But, thank God, the increasing darkness had been the sign of daybreak, and the gray morning slowly appearing, disclosed to my joy a party of men advancing toward u*, whom, even in the uncertain light, 1 knew to be Sioux warriors. Their num bers, too, provided that our own brave par t3 7 had met with that which had set out be fore. They were still far down on the hor izon, however, and our pursuers were rap idly pressing on our rear. "There is hope," said the Indian girl, in a tone of joy, but joy 011 my account more than on hers; "the scalp of the War Ea gle shall not dry in the Fawnee lodge, lie will return to his people. See, the braves of 1113- tribe are nigh !" " You are weary, Meneateeah," said I, perceiving she fell behind as she spoke ; " you cannot go on aii3 7 longer. I will re main with 3*ou, and meet our fate. Or, stay, I can bear you in my arms." " No, no," said she, eagerly, " the Pale Flower is not weary. But if the Pawnee's arrow is sharp, had it not better pierce the weak girl than the great brave ?" " What ?" said I stopping suddenly, but half penetrating her meaning. " U11I3" that the Pale Flower can die for the white warrior," was her simple answer, as she drew her robe around her, and looked into my face ; "hut hark! the Pawnee dogs sees us ! —fly—lly !" Had you been tliere, said ray old friend, on that treeless prairie, and seen a horde of enraged savages galloping in your rear, waving their arms frantically 011 high, and shouting with demoniac exultation, over the anticipated slaughter of their victims, you would have some idea of what danger really is. But the noble devotion of the sweet girl's words drove all thisjjfor a mo ment from . mwanind ; and it was not till she urged mo dguin to hasten forward that 1 forgot my admiration for her in the sense of mutual danger. 1 east a hurried look behind, and saw that before live minutes, unless some mira cle happened, the Pawnee lances would be driven through 11s. Our only hope was in tin: succor of the Sioux, who were now sweep ing down on their lieCy horses with the speed ola whirlwind. Two warriors from their body, as well as one swarthy savage from our pursers, were respectively far in advance of their several parties ; ' and if we could escape the latter, we should gain the protection of our friends before the rest of his force could come up. Aware of this, the Pawnee was urging his steed forward with incredible velocity. All at once I saw him drop his spear, and I shouted encouraging ly to my companion, thinking that we were at length safe. But the wily savage, fear ful that one might escape if he trusted to his lance, had only resigned it for a more ell'yctive weapon, i lap idly assuming his bow, lie fitted an arrow to the spring, and riding at full speed to within a dozen yards, he drew the weapon along .his right thigh, and let tly the missile witli a short quick cry, and a force that would have driven it through the bosses of a Grecian buckler. Truly and unerringly sped the shaft, aimed directly at my heart, and in au instant 1 should have fallen its prey, had not Meu e a tee alt, perceiving the mark, sprung with a rapid gesture before me, and received it in her bosom. But she was avenged, for at that instant the arrow of the foremost Sioux quivered to the iiaather in the Paw nee's breast. The blood gushed in torrents across my preserver's breast —withdrew my attention, however, from the combatants, so that 1 neither saw or heard anything of the ensuing conflict. I caught her hastily in my arms, forgetting everything in that moment's agony. Poor, sweet, devoted being!—she had first perilled, and now sacrificed her life for mine. I would have given worlds to have saved her. "Meneateeah, ni3 7 preserver! Oh, she is indeed gone!" 1 exclaimed, wiping away a few drops of the blood from her face. Her eyes had been closed, but as 1 spoke she opened them faintly, pressed my hand, murmuring in tones scarcely audible, "Will the—white warrior—think sometimes—of poor—Meneateeah?" I replied by a gesture, for 1 could not speak. Hot tears rained down 1113" cheek. I turned away that she might not see them. "The—white brave will—see his—lodges and tribe. The Pale Flower—is happy." I could not speak. I pressed her cold brow. "Brother farewell; —the waits," she slowly articulated. A faint smile flickered across tures, her head fell heavily upon her bos om—she was dead. She was dead, but her last thought had been oue of jo 3', that, l>3 r the sacrifice of her life, I should behold 1113* home once more. With the consciousness that all was over, a total forgetfulness of everything but her fatal devotion came over me. I remained stupefied, with her form resting in 1113- arms, gazing intently on the features of the murdered girl. II >w long it may have been I know not ; but a deep gutteral voice at length startled me. "War Eagle," it said, "it is the brother of the Pale Flower who speaks-luok up-she is avenged." 1 raised ni3* head. The chief stood be fore me, every muscle rigidl3' set, as he held above his slaughtered sister the tro phies of the Pawnee's fate. Not a man of that band of murderers ever reached their camp. They died be neath the arrows of the avenging Sioux. NOON IN A BRAZILIAN FOREST. An almost death-like quietude reigns,but it is a quietude induced by the furnace-like heat with a direct fierceness from which there is no shadow,except actually beneath some thick tree, such us the mango, whose dense and dark foilage affords an absolute, impenetrable umbrella in the brightest glare. Such, too, is the smooth-barked maughbaria, a tree of vast bulk with a wide spreading head of dense foilage, be neath which,when the sun strikes merciless ly on every other spot, all is coolness and repose. The birds are all silent, sitting with panting Leaks in the thickest foilage ; 110 tramp or voice of beast is heard, for they are sleeping in their coverts. Ever and anon the seed capsule of some forest tree bursts with a report of that like a musket, and the scattered seeds are heard pattering among the leaves, and then all relapses into silence again. Great butter flies with wings of refulgent azure, almost too dazzling to look upon,floatlazil3 7 athwart the glade or alight on the glorious flowers. Little bright-eved lizards, clad in panoply that glitters in the sun, creep about the parasites of the great trees, or rustle the herbage and start at the sounds themselves have made. Hark ! there is the toll of a distant bell Two or three minutes pass—another toll! A like interval, then another bell ! Surel3 7 , it is the passing bell of some convent an nouncing the departure of a soul. No such thing, it is the note of a bird. It is the carnpanero, of bell-bird of the Amazon—a gentle little creature, much like a snow white pigeon, with a sort of soft fleshy ho*n on its forehead, three inches high. This appendage is black, clothed with a few scattered white feathers, and being hollow, and communicating with the palate, it can be inflated at will. The solemn, clear bell note uttered at regular intervals by the bird, is believed to be connected with structure. Be this as it may, the silveiy sound, heard onh 7 in the depth of the for est, and scarcely ever except at mid-da3 7 , when other voices are mute, falls upon the ear of the traveler with a thrilling and ro mantic effect. The jealously recluse habits of the bird have thrown an air of mystery over its economy, which heightens the in terest with which it is invested. QUICK REPLlES. —Napoleon was fond of quick replies ; he could bear contradiction, but invariably turned away from those who addressed him with hesitation or em harass ment. The following anecdote will suffici ently prove that a ready and well-timed an swer was an infallible passport to his fa vor : "At a grand review which, on a particu lar occasion, took place 011 the square of the Carousal, the Emperor's horse suddenh 7 reared, and during his exertions to keep the animal steady, the rider parted com pany with his hat. A lieutenant having picked it up, advanved in front of the line, and presented it to Napoleon. "Thank 3 OU, captain said the Emperor, still occupied in patting the neck of his steed. "In what regiment, sire ?" immediate^ 7 demanded the officer. The Emperor considering his features attentively, and perceiving his own mistake, replied with a smile, "The question is appropos f—in t.he guards." In a few da3 7 s the newly appointed Captain re ceived an official notification of the promo tion, for which he was indebted solely to his presence of mind, but which his brave ry and long services had merited." "HAKDLV KNEW YOU." —A maiden lady, ; residing in great seclusion, had not been to church for several years; but on the as cension of a family property, she bought herself a new bonnet, shawl and dress, with the appropriate gloves, boots, (tec., and ap peared on the following Sabbath in a style which almost destroyed her identity with the hitherto shabby and hopeless old maid. Just as she was walking up the aisle, and as every eye seemed to be turned up on her, the choir commenced singing an anthem, the burden of which was "Hallelu jah! Hallelujah!" The indignant spinster retraced her steps down the aisle in high dudgeon, exclaiming: "Hardly knew you," indeed! Why, this is not the first time I've been dressed up. — 'Hardly knew you 1' I guess 1 don't come byre again very soon." "WHAT'S whiskey bringing ?" Inquired a large dealer iu that article. "Bringing man to the gallows and woman and children to i want," was tho truthful reply. #3 per* Annum, in Advance. SHOCKING TRAGEDY. Wednesday's Philadelphia North Ameri can gives the following account of a recent tragedy in that city : The tendencies of the retail liquor traffic, by unprincipled people, were illustrated on M onday last, near midnight, by a terrible tragedy at a groggery, No. 1,107 North Third-st. The circumstances are extremely shocking. A woman named Adeline Reidy formerly kept the tavern above referred to. Joseph and Isaac Sides were two brothers. Adeline resides in St. Jolm-st., between Willow and Noble. She keps a drinking house, and has a number of women boarders. She was a married woman but her husband had left her some time since. Joseph Sides had also left his wife, and die, with Adeline's husband, had opened a tavern in Third-at., below Girard-ave., the Icene of the terrible tragedy. This place also contained a number of female board- era, and was similar in reputation to that kept by Adeline. On Monday afternoon Adeline and her bartender drove to Fairmount Park. Here they met Joseph Sides in another carriage, accompanied by a woman. The party con versed together amicably. On their way home all stopped at Sides's he being pro prietor also of a tavern at the corner of Gerrnantown-road and Girard-ave. Here several drinks were taken, after which they drove to the house at Third and Gi rard-ave., kept Ly the wife of Joseph Sides and Adeline's husband. Several more drinks were taken, and all seemed to be very friendly. Adeline suddenly left, went to her home, changed her dress, and came back to Third and Girard-ave. l T pon en tering the door she encountered Joseph Sides, and asked him where Johnny Reidy, her husband, could be found. Sides replied, "He is in the yard," where upon Adeline exclaimed, with an oath.— "You are one of them," and immediately drew a large dirk, which she plunged twice into his back, under the left side, piercing the heart. Sides staggered, sezed a chair, with the intention, it is supposed, of de fending himself, and, raising it about three feet, fell. The woman withdrawing' the knife a jet of blood spirted upon the floor. There were two or three pulsations—pro bably spasmodic—of the punctured heart, that sent the deep-lined arterial blood in a welling stream, and the man was dead. The knife had cut to his heart. Isaac Sides, the brother of the young mau, attempted to detain the murderess. The woman is 24 years of age, has ouce been handsome, but bears upon her face the wrinkles that are the signet of ungoverned passions and habits of irregularity and dissipation. Isaac seized her, caught her by tiie back of the head, intending to push her upon her face and thus disarm her. He teckoned without his host. The girl or woman was nerved to strength beyond that of her sex. He failed to seize her hand, in which she held the gory knife. On the contrary, she turned upon him, and giving thrust after thrust with the rapidity of elec tric flashes, spilled out his viscera upon the ground. He died shortly afterward. The murderess rau precipitately from the house to her own home, where she had clothed herself in sailor's garb when the police came upon her. On Tuesday Coroner Taylor summoned a jury and held an in quest upon the body of Joseph Sides. TOY-MAKING IN GERMANY. —In Germany the wood work, so far as English importers know any thing of it, is mostly in the form of small trinkets and toys for children. The production of these is immense. In the Tyral, and near the Thuringian Forest, in the middle States of the illorganized confederacy, and wherever forests abound, there the peasants spend much of their time in making toys. In the Tyrol, for ex ample, there is a valley called the Grodner thal, about twenty miles long, in which the rough climate and barren soil will not suffice to grow corn for the inhabitants, who are rather numerous. Shut out from the agricultural labor customary in other districts, the people earn their bread chief ly by wood carving. They make toys of numberless kinds (in which Noah's Ark animals are very predominent) of the soft wood of the Siberian pine—known to the Germans as /.iebelnusskiefer. The tree is of slow growth, found on the higher slopes of the valley, but now becoming scarce, owing to the improvidence of the peasants in cutting down the forests without saving or planting others to succeed them. For a hundred years and more the peasants have been carvers Nearly every cottage is a workshop. All the occupants, male and female, down to very young children, seat themselves round a table, and fashion their little bits of wood. They use twenty or thirty different kinds of tools, under the magic of which the wood is transformed in to a dog, a lion, a man,or what not. Agents represent these carvers in various cities of Europe, to dispose of the wares. NIGHT, THE POOR IL/S FRJE-NU. —Night levels all artificial distinction. The beggar on his pallet of straw snores as soundly as a king on a bed of down. Night—kind, gentle soothing refreshing night, the earth ly paradise of the slave, the sweet oblivion of the worn soul, the nurse of romance, of devotion ; how the great panting heart of society yearns for the return of night and rest 1 Sleep is God's special gift to the poor, for the great there is no time fixed for repose. Quiet, they have none ; and instead of calmly awaiting the approach of events they fret and repine, and starve sleep, and chide the tardy hours, as if every to-morrow were big witli the fate of some great hereafter. The torrent of events goes tearing past keeping eager expectations constantly on tiptoe and drives timid slum ber away. A YOUNG lady of California recently broke her neck while resisting the attempt of a young man to kiss her. This furnish es a fearful warning to young ladies. We know from personal experience (in days gone by, alas?)--it is the Sartoga Republi can that speaks—how prone young girls are to peril their precious necks by twist ing away from a Fellow at a time when, by judicious exereise, or sit and hold-your-head steady-activeneßs, perlcct happiness would have been shed abroad, and the ambient air made luxuriant with glory. Dear girls, I hold your heads steady, and don't break I your darling-necks ! IHTEBEBTTNG FACTS OF THE LATE ASSASSINS Rev. Dr. Gillette, pastor of the First Bap tist Church, improved the goleraitiei of then past week by au appropriate discourse, es pecially to young men. He had never been more impressed with the importance of this duty than during the sixteen hours which he passed with the convicts in the penitentiary between Thurs day afternoon and that of Friday. On Thursday I)r. G. was called upon by Assistant Secretary of War Eckert, who invited hirn to visit the cells of the doomed convicts for the purpose of administering to them such spiritual consolation as needed. Stepping into the Secretary's car riage, he at once accompanied him thither. On their arrival, Mr. Eckert introduced him to other officers, and then to the convicts. NUMBER 8. Their first call was upon Payne, whose real name he soon ascertained to be Lewis Thornton Powell, his middle name being af ter the Rev. Dr. Thornton, a Presbyterian clergyman of Charleston, South Carolina. Powell welcomed him, and at once pro ceeded to relate his early history. His father was a Baptist minister. The con vict had been from infancy brought up un der religious intluence. At twelve years of age he was by his own father con secrated to God in baptism, and became a member of the church. In direct opposi tion to the wishes of his family he entered the rebellion. For a time he endeavored to retain his religious character, but be came connected with Gilmore. This was his second great step downward. That was followed by his getting into Mosby's gang, which was far worse. His next com panion was Booth. Dr. Gillette found Powell to be a young men of cultivated mind, ingenuouH, frank, candid, and an earnest supplicant for Di vine favor. In conversation, he referred to his moth er and wept bitterly—to his sisters—to the pleasant seasons once enjoyed by him in the church, the Sabbath school and the social circles. Powell frankly stated his conviction of the enormity of his crime. The moment he fled from the house of Secretary Seward and leaped into the saddle of his horse, his mind was quickened into a realizing sense of the horror of the damnable deed which he had perpertrated, and he became miser able, wretched—life itself became loath some. The Doctor here corrected two points in the published statement. It was reported that he wore "a jaunty hat." That hat was placed upon his head by the advice and bauds of Dr. G., when Powell's hands were pinioned behind him. Dr. G. suggest ed the hat on account of the intense heat of the sun. Secondly. It was said on the morning uf his execution he ate heartily, Ac. On that morning he positively declined taking any food; and was equally persistent iu refusing stimulants of any kind. His last prayer was, as suggested by his friend, the Doctor, ' Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." Dr. Gillette here addressed his audience with deep feeling, referring to his own sons, to the sons of his congregation, to tilt young men of thit city who habitually vis it drinking-houses, restaurants, &c. The preacher then visited Herold, and his description corresponded with those al ready published. With great eloquence he described the scene in which Ilerold's sis ttfs were present. One of them read to him from her prayer-book; and after Dr. G. had offered prayer, the same sister followed in an invocation to the Throne of Divine Grace on behalf of her brother, which affected ail present. His next call was on Atzerodt. He at once commenced remarks which crimina ted Mrs. Surratt, but was gently reminded that higher duties now developed upon him —a preparation to meet his God. In this he acquiesced. For twenty-uine years, he ac knowledged, he had been steeped in sin; the victim of base passions, and of the wiles of artful, designing men. His won der was, if his soul could be saved! Rev. Mr Butler, the Lutheran preacher soon ar rived, and attended him most faithfully.— From the latter clergyman we learn that he professed to have found peace witli Heaven. The peculiarities of the Catholic church prevented him front offering any assistance to Mrs- Surratt, for site was well attended by Cue Rev. Fathers Wiget and Walter.— D„\ G., described the scene of the daugh ter's hasty return to her mother's cell—the anxious inquiries of that mother, "Is there any hope!" she replied, "hope is gone!" " Oh, Father Wigget and Walter prepare rny mother for death!" In her agony, site fell against the speaker iu the door-way, and said " hope is fled." The Doctor stated that these remarks were made strictly in a religions point of view, that being the place for none other. IN a recent volume of reminiscences, we find a very neat anecdote of Madame lioths child, the mother of the well known capital ist. The old lady's wit, which was remark able, and her intellectual faculties, which were of no common order, remained to the end. In her last illness, when surrounded by her family, ber physician being present, she. said in a suppliant tone to the latter, " Dear doctor, try to do something for me." "Madame, what can Ido ? I can't make you young again." "No, doctor, 1 dou't want to be young again; but I want to continue to grow older." THE quantity of digestion that a German can get over is truly wonderful. We once boarded with one who disposed of six meals a day, and filled up the intervals with raw herrings and sardines. We never knew him to groan but once, and that was when he heard that the steamer " Houfer kass " loaded with sour-krout, had foundered at sea,and nothing had been saved but officers and crew. THE cure of an evil tongue must be at the heart. The weight and wheel are there, and the clock strikes according to their motion. A guileful tongue and lips. It is the workhouse where is the forge of deceits and slander,and the tongue is only the out er shop where they are vended, and the door of it. Such ware as is made within, such, and no other, can come out. Gov. BROWN LOW has recently delivered himself of the opinion that he would ratlir er "trust the poorest colored man in Ten nessee with a vote, than a miserable cant ing hypocrite of a Rebel, who had sneaked back into the Union without time to wash the stains of loyal blood off his hands. Two Lawyers having a dispute, one sai d to the other who was a dwarf : " If you are not more civil I'll put you m my pocket." " In that case," replied the little one "you will have more law in your pocket than you ever had in your head." A LITTLE boy at school, when called upon to recite his lesson, was asked, "Of what is the German Diet composed ?" The boy replied, "Sour-krout, schnapps, lager beer, and nix-coinrous."