2 but a moment to live. Aro you afraid you will lose me ?" " No, but I want to be sure of you." " Well, then go and get ready, and I'll bring the carriage roand to the door." fOuce more Sir. Judson Judkins groan ed, but there was no one to hear him. The lovers had left the room. " 0, the perfidiousncss of woman !" said ho, " arising in all his native majes ty," and stretching his limbs. " I'll never trust one again." And with one bound he came out from behind the sofa, and stole up stairs to his room. That day at dinner, Mr. Harry Jud kins, much to the surprise of every one, introduced to his sister and her guests, the quondam Jennie Gushington, as his bride. " Why, how sly you have been," cried Florence Richmond. " Sly ! why, 1 didn't even suspect that they were lovers," said Mrs. Mugworth. But just at this moment Mr. Judson Judkins entered the room, looking ex ceedingly savage. " Returned so soon ?" cried Mary. " Why, where have you been ?" "I have been," said Mr. Judsou Jud kins, looking fiercely at Jane Louisa, who looked scornfully back at him, " I have been in a renj vvplmsant situation." lie said no more, and no questions were asked, for every one saw that tho usually genial Mr. Judkins was decidedly out of humor. That afternoon the bridal pair started on their wedding tour. They were living happily the last time I heard from them. But Mr. Judson Judkins is still a widower. How the Atlantic Cable Is Operated. The press dispatches from Europe to New York during the last four weeks numbered about one hundred thousand -words. New York has been better posted in the issue of the war each day than London, Paris or Berlin. These dis patches have almost wholly been sent by a single cable, full one third of the whole to a single daily paper, and with mar velous rapidity and accuracy. Familiar as we are with tho work of tho telegraph, it has been a marvel to us. To hundreds of thousands of minds the whole process is and has been a deep enigma. Here is a man sitting in a dark room at Heart's Content. The ocean cable terminates here. A fine wire attached thereto is made to surround two small cores of soft iron. As the electric wave, produced by a few pieces of copper and zinc at Valen tia, passes through the wires these cores become magnetic enough to move the slightest object. A looking-glass, half an inch in diameter, is fixed on a bar of iron one tenth of an inch long. On this tiny glass a lamp is mado to glare so that its light is reflected on a tablet on the wall. The language of the cable is de noted by the shifting of this reflected light from side to side. Letter by letter is thus expressed in this fitting idiom in utter silence on the wall. There is no record made by the machine except as the patient watcher calls out to a com rade the translated flashes as they come, and which he records. It seems a mira cle of patience. There is something of awe creeps over us as we see the evidence of a human touch 8,000 miles away sway ing that line of light. By such a deli cate process as this, and after being re- peated from line to lino five times before its ultimate copy is in New York, have the late great battles been recorded in our daily papers with particularity, and sent throughout the Union. Nothing like it has ever before been accomplished. The enterprise of the N. Y. press rather of a single press in New York, has eclipsed that of tho wealthiest and ablest presses in Europe. It is characteristic of the nation to do its work grandly and well. A Long Nose. Old Deacon Barleycorn had the mis fortune to have a very long nose. One Sunday morning just before going to church, he had the bad luck to skin the end a little, upon which he put a little piece of courtplaster. As he was start ing around among the congregation with the contribution-box, the piece of plaster dropped off, and Boeing some little white article, which he thought was it, lying on the floor, he hastily picked it up and stuck it on. As he passed around the church he noticed that every person was troubled to refrain from laughing, which lie easily accounted for when he discover cd that instead of the plaster, he had put on a thread ticket, reading " warranted to measure 200 yards." This would make rather a long nose. ALFRED MARTIN'S TERIL. 6 6 TT IS A FOUL and bloody murder, JL and may God punish the one that did the deed ! But may there not be some life remaining ? May it not be in my power to rob the grave. It is a danger ous undertaking, and if I am found here, I shall most certainly be accused of the crime. Blood upon my hands and clothes, and I have not touched tho corpse ! Ah .! I see how it came. The bushes are Btain ed with it. Tho body was dragged to this lonely spot. Lonely 1 Who would ever think of coming hero unless ho had a foul purpose, save, it might be, a geolo gist like myself, whom tho simple people in this part of the country would call mad. Yes it would go hard with mo, es pecially as I am a stranger, and though poorly clad, as becomes my present oc cupation, have a considerable sum of money upon my person." He drew back a few steps from the corpse upon which he had come suddenly and unexpectedly, and looked around. Without noticing his path, ho had jour neyed to the bottom of a deep ravine be fore his progress was arrested. High hills roso upon cither side, covered with a heavy growth of trees and tangled un derbrush. A little stream found its way with great difficulty through the rocks at the bottom, and its waters were never gild ed by a single ray of sunlight. Even in the brightest clay it was gloomy twilight there; and a more dismal place would have been difficult to find tho very spot for dark deeds, for a murder's hiding ! And there, before him, stopping the path lay a blood-stained human body, as if to fiuish tho picture aud give gory evidence of its evil character. His first thoughts were to pass on. What had he to do with the crime of another'!1 Why should ho mix himself with that in which he had not the most remote business 1 His clear head and logical mind foresaw all tho difficulties that would arise should he bo discovered and charged with the commission of the deed, and the fearful net-work of circum stantial evidence that would surround him ; yet he was a man of tho most de termined firmness as well as having a tender heart, and not for the sake of escaping troublo, or even danger, would he sulfer a chance to relieve suffering", or save life to pass uncnibraced. So he drew nearer, and bending away the bushes, look ed scrutinizingly upon the victim of some fiend's cupidity or revenge. The corpse was that of a girl who must have been under twenty years, and tlie face was one of more than common beauty. The oval of tho checks was per fect, the nose straight, tho mouth small, and the lips, now parted by agony, were full and arched. The eyes, wide open and glassy, were blue as the depths of the of the ocean, aud curtained by long lash es a shade darker than her glossy brown hair. The figure was tall and delicately proportioned, the feet small and exqui sitely arched, the hands white and slen der, denoting good birth and freedom from manual labor. The clothing, now stained, was of fine material ; and the dis coloration of the nock, ears, fingers and wrists the piece torn from the bosom of the dress, and the pockets turned out ward told that robbery as well as mur der had been committed. At once deeply interested, the stranger knelt down, brushed back the tangled tresses, gazed sadly upon the sweet pal lid face, and examined both pulse and heart for symptoms of life, hoping against hope that a spark at least might remain. But his intellectual and unusually sunny face clouded, and he shook his head in doubt. The marks upou tho base of the skull, caused apparently by heavy blows from a sharp stone, seemed sufficient to have produced death alone ; but, in addi tion to them,' blood was slowly oozing from, and congealing upon, several wounds, in one of which a knife was sticking. His profession had taught him skill as well as coolness, and with extreme tenderness aud delicacy, he made a still closer examination, and began prepara tions to ptanch the blood and dress the wounds. " With this knife," he said, giving ut terance to his thoughts as he drew out tho weapoi, " I could even thus kill all my enemies, make myself rich and I- " The sentence was never finished. Be fore it could be, a dozen men, who had been watching and creeping near, sprang out of the bushes, and pinioned him be yond the power of resistance. Taken be side the corpso, with the blood-dripping knife in his hand, what could he say in defence ? The situation he had foreseen had come upon him, and he stood con victed, in their eyes at least, a murderer. To appeal to their reason he saw at a glance would be useless ; they were not of the class that would look deeper than tho surface. His defence must be made at another timo and place ; and in truth, he was thinking more of tho corpse of tho murdered girl than of his own des perate situation, and, drawing himself up proudly, he asked that she might be cared for. " Whatever may bo your purpose with mo," he said, "at least see if thero is not life remaining. Take your hand off, and let me see if my skill can be of any avail. I am a surgeon." Scowling brows and clenched fists were tho only answer he received. They paid not the slightest attention to his words, except it might bo to grasp him even more firmly than before, and hurry him before a neighboring justice to be examined and exhibited as a monster ! It was even a more unpleasant situation than he had anticipated, aud tho chances were desperately against him ; but he re tained his coolness, and prepared to make the best possible defense. The evidonco was given with the ut most bitterness honestly given, perhaps, but without the slightest leaning toward the side of mercy, aud with the morbid desire on tho part of tho majority to see a man hanged, for such a thing had never happened in that neighborhood. And what could he say to rebut the sworn statements of a dozen witnesses '( What were his assertions against the evidence of their own eyes aud his bloody hands and clothes. But he had tho satisfaction, if, indeed, it could be called by that name to learn who the supposed victim of his murderous knife was to learn that her name was Ethel Loring that she was comparative ly a stranger upon a visit to an old uncle who lived near the scene of the tragedy that she was an orphan, and rich in her own right that she was known to wear coscly jewels, and curry with her a considerable sum of money all of which was missing , and that she had gone out to take a walk alone, aud was found as described. These facts, togeth er with his having been detected bending over tho body with a knife in his hand, the out-of-the-way place, tho provocation for the deed in a pecuniary point of view, the almost certainty of remaining undis covered, that ho was poorly dressed, a stranger, had been seen lurking in out-of the-way places for several days, and that in his pockets was found about the samo sum of money, and of the same description as that known to have been in the pos session of the murdered girl, were dwelt upon by the prosecuting attorney with remarkable force, and tho prisoner saw that it was next to useless to attempt a defense. To all questions ho replied in a simple and truthful manner, stating that his name wa3 Alfred Martin, his ago twenty five; that he was by profession a surgeon, unmarried, possessed of some means; that a lovo of geology had led him thither ; and that those who had accused hiiu of loitering in out-of-the-way places would have seen that he was innocently study ing the formation of tho earth, if they had given proper attention to the matter. As to his being the murderer of the girl, he denied it in the most emphatic manner, and explained how he come to bo bending over tho body with the bloody knife in his bauds. " You will deny next," sneered the at torney, " that you threatened to kill all your enemies in tho same manner." " I believe I did use some thoughtless words to the effect that I could, with such a weapon, kill all my enemies, and make myself rich, but none such as you would put them into my mouth. " I heard him distinctly,'' volunteered a strong, rough-looking man, who was said to have been among the first, if not the first, to discover the murder, who had guided others there, and had been the most willing and strenuous in his testi mony against him. Martin turned his gaze upon, and no ticed him more closely than he had done before; caught his eye, and thought that he shrank back. It might have been mere fancy, but he become more and moro convinced that the fellow had some object in getting him convicted, and tried to remember if he had ever been as sociated with ever met him before, and given him any cause of enmity. If such was the case, it had entirely slipped from memory, and his own position gave him little time for thought, as ho was asked to account for the money that was taken from him being tho same in amount and of the same character as that of the mur dered girl's. " It is a easo that might happen a thousand times, was the reply; ' but per mit mo to ask if she is indeed dead 1"' " You will soon see," growled the stiff necked justice, " see more than you want to." " If dead I have no wish to look upon her again. The horrible sight I have had is fully sufficient, and 1 have seen enough of death not to bo curious in such matters." " No doubt of it ! Murder and robbery are your trade." The old uncle of tho murdered girl stepped to the side of tho justice, and they had a short whispered conversation but evidently an important one. Tho purport of it was soon mado known. " Alfred Martin," continued tho officer of the law, " as you choose to call your self, though no one hero is fool enough to believe that to bo your correct name, you deny all participation in tho foul deed that has been done ?" " I do." " And you are willing to prove it by any means within your power ?" " I am." " Officers, guard him safely, and re move him to the next room. We will soon see his guilt clearly proved." Without the most remote idea of what was going to take place, the prisoner per mitted himself to bo led into another apartment, and saw to his surprise and horror, tho corpso of tho girl stretched out upon the table, still as bloody and ghastly as when he first discovered her in the gloomy ravine. It was a sight that would at any time have caused him to shudder; now it almost unmanned him for an instant, especially as tho dress had been cut away so as to expose a wound in tho lair white flesh, llis natural emotion was at onco taken as evidence of guilt, and he heard whispered comments to that effect. The " I told you so !" of the man who had before volunteered his testimony, particularly attracted his at tention ; and, from that instant, he watch ed him as closely as possible without being detected, and summoning his cour age, he turned to the pompous justice, and demanded what was intended by such unusual proceeding. " It is the death test !" was tho solemn response. " You will have to explain more fully; I do not understand." " We believe that the corpso of a mur dered person has power to distinguish be tween the innocent and guilty. Place one hand upon that wound, raise tho oth er to Heaven, and assert your innocence if you dare ! If you are indeed without guilt, all will be well. If not the blood will flow again." Another time, Martin would have laughed outright at tho stupid supersti tion of which ho now remembered to have read. Yet, thero was something solemn in thus calling upon the dead to give evi dence for or against the living, and he would willingly have been spared tho or deal, for the most simple accident might cause a drop or two of blood to exude from tho unclosed lips of the wound, and then his fate would be . sealed in deed. " If guiltless, why do you shrink ?" asked the man of tho law. " It is only the murderer that need fear." He could hesitate no longer without convicting himself in their eyes: and, stepping to the side of the corpse, he laid his right hand upon the wound, and call ed God to witness his entire innocence. Then he stepped back so that all could seo that no blood had followed. " God has attested your guiltlessness," said tho uncle of the poor girl. " But, see, tho blood is beginning to flow, and the guilty man must bo near. Let each in turn do as this stranger has done." In the opeuing of the wound, and tho oozing of blood, Martin saw far other things than did the afflicted old man ; but he wisely held his peace, and managed to place his back against the door so that no one could go out, and watched each as they went through the death test. But there were no more crimson drops bub bling forth as a sign of guilt ; and, as the justice declared that all had gone through the ordeal, a sigh of intense relief burst from many lips. "Not all," replied Martin. "There is one yet remaining," pointing to the one who had made himself so officious. " That man has kept in the background." " John Kirkpatrick, is this true V u No; it is a lie !" was the answer. " It is true," repeated Martin, firmly. " I have kept him under my eye all the time, aud I swear that he has not been near the table" " I have, you all saw mc." Hut, upon reflection, no ono had seen him, and ho was forced forward. Then an entire change was visible. His flush ed face grow palo as ashes, and his brut ish lip trembled. He looked wildly for a chance for escape saw there were none and, putting on on air of bravado, ex claimed, with an oath, " Well, I can do it ogaiu." With the words, ho had raised his hand and extending it had nearly touched the corpse when ho shrank back with a fearful groan. His eyes had been tho first to seo that the blood was flowing freely again from the wound not one alone, but all I A strong man at all times, he was ren dered doubly so now by desperation ; and in his efforts to get away, his coat was torn to shreds, and the jewelry and money of which tho girl had been robbed, fell to tho floor, and raving and cursing, he was carried away to prison. During this exciting scene Martin had remained unnoticed. When tho justice and tho uncle of the girl thought of him again, they found him with his hand upon her head, and a smile playing upon his lips. " What is it?" they both asked in one breath. " She is not dead. Show mo where I can place her upon her bed, and summon some women. She is not dead ; only stunned." And he lifted her in his strong arms and carried her to another apartment. It was weeks before Ethel Loring was sufficiently recovered to appear in court. Then her evidence was conclusive. She instantly recognized the prisoner Kirk patrick; and the simple manner iu which she told the story of assault, rob bery, aud attempted murder, added much to its force. Without leaving the box, tho jury found him " Guilty," and he was sentenced to death. Tho trial over, the uncle of the girl called Martin aside, and asked the amount of his charge for his professional servi ces. " No matter I will repay it I will give you anything you demand." " Hero, then, is my charge," he replied, taking the hand of the blushing girl. " I came here to study geology, but uover an ticipated such a rare specimen." An Amusing Incident. MANY years ago there was in tho eas tern part of Massachusetts a wor thy 1). D., and although he was an emi nently benevolent man, and a good Chris tian, yet it must bo confessed that ho loved a good joke much better than the most inveterate jokers. It was before church organs were much in use; it so happened that the choir of the church had recently purchased a double base viol. Not far from the church was a large pasture, aud in it a huge bull. Ono hot Sabbath iu the summer ho got out of the pasture, and came bellowing up the street. About the church there was plen ty of untrodden grass, green and good, aud Mr. Bull stopped to try tho quality; perchance to ascertain if its location had improved its flavor. At any rate the doctor was in thc midst of his sermon wheu: . " Boo-woo-woo" went the bull. The doctor paused, looked up at tho singing scats, and with a grave face said: " I would thank the musicians not to tune that instrument during service time; it annoys me very much." Tho people tittered, for they well knew whatthc real state of the caso was. Tho minister went on again with his discourse, but he had not proceeded far before another " Boo-woo-woo" came from Mr. Bull. Tho parsou paused once more, and again exclaimed : " I have onco already requested tho musicians in the gallery not to tune their instruments duriug sermon time. I now particularly request Mr. Lafevor that ho will not tune his double bass viol while I am preacljiug." This was too much. Mr. Lafevor got up, much agitated at the thought of speaking out in church, and stammered out : "It isn't me, Parson B. ; it's th- th-that mischevious town bull." A clergyman in a certain town iu Massachussetts, having occasiou to call in the services of a brother minister, ten dered to him ut tho close of the day the usual fee for preaching, which, in those days, (it was before tho war), was ten dollars. Such a sum for such work was then thought good pay ; but on this occa sion he was blow to tako it, aud finally said, while putting it in his pocket-book : " I talked to tho Sunday Schools nearly half an hour, and besides I had eomo conversation with an impenitent sinner ou the steps of tho church, and I thought fifty tent more tcould he about rt'yht."