Xcrm« «lt Pah! icaHonv-^- T’JE TWGA CO ONTY AGITATOR is pub- every Tharsday Morning, and mailed to sub scribers at tlio very reasonable price of One Dot-. I.\R per annum, invarinblij in advance.- It ia intend i'd to* notily every subscriber when the term for which be has paid shall have expired, by lhc stamp —“Time Out,” on the margin of (helast paper. Too paper will then be stopped until a further re mittance be received. By this arrangement no man can be brought in debt to the printer. Tiik Agitator is the Official rapor of the Coun ly With a large and steadily increasing circulation reachin-r inio nearly every neighborhood in the County-’ rt is senl / r ? e °f poslagr. toany Post office wiibin the county limits, and tolhose living within the limits,but whose most convenient postoffice may bo in an adjoining County. Ru-dncss Cards, not exceeding 5 lines, paper in cluded, SI per year. A Curious Incident Now that “life’’ at the watering places is over for the season, and the returned absen tees, after several weeks spent in setting things to rights, are entertaining iheir inti male friends with reminiscencies of their en joyments at llockaway, Newport, Nahaut, &c., we occasionally hear of a Summer in cident worth repealing. A droll one .oc curred at a marina resort at (he head of! Long Island Sound, to a couple of the 40 or 50 boarders in the hotel. A newly arrived gentleman and lady slrolled away one day in August to long sand-beach far beyond the bath-house, to enjoy the grander sweep of the wave ns it rolled majestically to (he shore. The sublime solitude of the scene appeared to be shared only by Old Ocean and them selves, but they were lovers just about to be married, and wanted no other society than that of each other. After walking till they hud become so warm that they looked wish fully to the templing water, with its clean sandy bed, and long to lave in its cool trans lucent depths, they decided to try a bath. They hud no swimming rig with them, but fortunately there was a cosy nook on either sale of the little rocky promontory which projected into the Sound several rods beyond ;be main margin. The gentleman modestly retired to the further side of this natural screen, and the lady divested herself of her < lothing without a bit of fear that he would j incur her Diana-likc indignation ; his honor 1 biing above suspicion, and her own being sans ptur tt sans rcproache .■ Soon she heard him splashing in the water on the other side, and as there wasno harm in using their tongues, although they must not use their eyes, she cried out to him cheerily as she rose like a naiad from the wave, and they had quite a social lime of it, in spile of iheir s'-paruiion. “Wasn’t it beautiful?” “Yes, it was glorious.” But, unfortunately fori them, a small but quick wined and mischievous boy—a sort of marine ike Partington —without being seen himsell, saw it all. He had been fishing upon a shelf of rock, at the end of the prom ontory, and not having very good luck had fallen into a sleep from which he was awa kened by Iheir exclamations of delight. There are some youthful minds to which the conception of a roguish trick or practical joke is as inevitable as lying. Unhappily, this lad was one of them. From the point where he lay he could, wiih only a slight movement of his-body, see the gentleman on one side of the ledge and. the lady on the other; and not far away from each Iheir re spective heaps jof garments. What a jolly good joke, he thought to himself it would be and hide (their clothes I or, still bel'er, to change one pile for the other. With him to divise was to execute, and he went fear lessly about if, yet with great caution lest should be discoveied and his fun be spoiled. Watching his opportunity, and taking advan tage of their absorption in what they were the little rogue managed by consum matrability to effect the ominous exchange in the situation of the unsuspecting bathers’ clothes, and then stole away from the scene. As lie ran behind a sand-hill his long shadow between her and the sinking sun attracted the lady’s notice, and in some trepidation she hastened to don her apparel. Fancy her “fi'elinks” on finding not her own clothes, bui his hat, coal, vest and olher articles, in exlenso, of the gentleman on the other side of the promontory ! How could it have happened—and what was to be done? Was ihai fearfully long shadow some spirit of the sea or shore, who, offended, at her intrusion upon his solitude, had resorted to this method of punishing her temerity ? It were bet'er ' •'> imagine her situation than attempt to de scribe it. In Iho meantime the gentleman, too, re paired to the shore 'to dress. Speechless astonishment was depicted in his counte nance as it fell upon a heap of woman’s (clothing. -j “What in thunder,” he muttered lo himself, j“does this mean ? Is the place turned -around, or am I crazy ?” In the greatest perplexity he took up one article of feminine apparel after another to the number of about thirty letting one after another drop again upon the rock where he stood, with many a half audible ejaculation of wonder. There was no doubt in his mind as to whom the things belonged, but how did they get there, and where were his own clothes '! With one arm akimbo, he pressed his other hand upon hia forehead lo collect his bewildered senses, little thinking that the mischievious elf who was the author of his embarrassment was laughing at him from behind the sand hill. After a few moments of hesitation, the gentleman shouted to his iady-lovo the awk ward intelligence and in return was informed that his clothes lay at her feet. All that was to be done was to exchange the lots ; but, >w, m the name of delicacy, was that con summatiou, so devoutly wished, lo he effect. ’ . s “ n s nolv down, but it was not jJ'! ’• F‘ n *dly, it was arranged that the lady soouhl venture into the water with her eyes seaward while the (over should ex change the clothes and return to his side of i CvS ' Unfortunately, just as he was ut to cut around to the other side to per rm that duly, he caught sight of a couple i young ladies not far olf, and he felt com g 0 • lo retreat precipitately to his place j,” m ’, ™ S ISCom ® ne d companion would ladll r D oul hasli| y and called to the and J* ' leir U®lp, but they were distant, nassm„ W T n * lerBe^aQ d them she saw n boy “neenlfn ? ° Dg ’ To cul lha slor y shorl > lf >e iinrjt ‘ y un P' ea sant predicament” lasted l irr yoan " * a dy felt it necessary, lo save j „ Yr ro , m being chilled to death, to attire ueraell m her lover’s clothing, H c , on his THE v :a \ BefcoteiY ta the Sxteustou of ttie area of JFrcctrom nub the Spm&of a^tform. WHILE THEBE SHALL BE A WRONG UNSIGHTED, AND UNTIL “MAN’S INHUMANITY TO MAS 1 ’ SHALL CEASE, AGITATION MUST CONTINUE. VOL. IV. pari, put her garments to the same use for his own benefit, and a pretty good fit it was ; (or the two friends were about of a size, and but for the discrepancy of a full beard he might, in a less dusky light than then pre vailed, have passed for a lady. It was his intention, in some way or another, he hardly knew how, to rectify the matter immediately ; but when he had ventured to rejoin his laugh ing and blushing sweetheart, be.saw the mis chievous boy a little distance off, with a grin on his impish countenance, closely watching their motions. Quickly putting a handker chief to his face to conceal his tell-tale beard, the gentleman took the lady’s arm, and they sauntered on the shore until it was dark, then entered the hotel as privately as privately as possible, and making the best of their way to their respective rooms lost no time in donning mojp appropriate habiliments. How to Toll Here is a bit of advice to young ladies, selling fonh how they may know whether a young gallant is really courting them, or only paying-them polite alleniions. The confounding the one with the other has been the source of very much trouble, both before and since the era of Mr. Pickwick and Mrs. Burdell: A young man admires a pretty girl, and must manifest it. He can’t help doing so for the life of him. The young lady has a tender heart, reaching out like vine tendrils for somelhing to cling to! She sees the ad miration is -flattered; begins soon to love; expects some lender avowal ; and perhaps gels so far as to decide that she will choose a while satin under that gauze, &c., at the very moment that the gallant she half loves is popping the question to another damsel ten miles off! Now the difficulty lies in not precisely un derstanding the difference between polite at tentions and the lender manifestations of love. Admiring a beautiful girl, and wishing to make a wife of her, are not always the same thing; nmJ therefore it is necessary that the damsel should be on the alert to discover to which class The attentions paid her by the young gentlemen belong. First then if a 'young man greets you in a loud, free and hearty tone; if he knows precisely where to pul his hands; if he stares you straight in the eye, with his mouth wide open; if he turns his back upon you 10 speak to another; if he tells you who made his.coat; if he squeezes your hand ; if he eats heartily in your presence ; if be/ails to talk very kindly to your mother; iC/p, short he sneezes when you are singing, cri-f ticises your curls, or fails to be foolish fifteen limes every hour, then don't full in love with him for the world! He only admires you Uet him say what he will to the contrary, p On the other hand, if he bo merry with everybody else, but quiet with you; if he be anxious to see if your lea is sufficiently sweet ' ened, and your dear person well wrapped up when you go out into the cold ; if he talks very low and never looks you steadily in the eye; if his cheeks are red and his nose only blushes, it is enough. If he romps with your sister, sighs like a pairot bellows, looks solemn when you are addressed by another gentleman, and in/acl is the most still, awk ward, stupid, yet anxious of all your male friends, you may go ahead and make the poor fellow happy I Young ladies ! keep your hearts in a case of good leather, or some other lough sub i stance, until the right one is found beyond a j doub 1 , after which you can go on and love | and court and be married and happy, wilh -1 out the leas; bit of trouble. A Good B.ink Customer, —The Hartford Times tells the following of a case of “idle capital.” “A remarkable case of the careful preser vation of bank bills came to light in Middle town about two weeks since. Rlr. John Cone, who resides .near Haddam, appeared at the counter of the Middletown Bank with 81,000 of its bills, and asked for the specie, which was promptly given lo him. These bills were paid lo him in 183.5, and they were returned it) the same packages, and with the same strips of paper and marks that were upon them when paid out. Mr. Cone had kept them 22 years, of course, without inter est. Hod he placed the money in some good savings' bank when it was first paid to him be would now he entitled to nearly 83,000 instead of 81,000.” This is what might be called (says the New Haven Register) keeping “a good bank account.” A few such benevolent men as Mr, Cone would enable a bank to keep out a very respectable “circulation.” It is what may be determined “the height of confi dence.” Advantagb of Punctuation.—Punctu ation, that is, the putting of stops in the proper places, cannot he too sedulously stud ied. VVe lately read in a country paper the following startling account of Lord Palmer ston’s appearance in the House of Commons : —“Lord Palmerston then entered on his head, a whi'e hat upon his feet, a large and well polished pair of boots upon his brow, a dark cloud in his hand, his faithful walking slick in his eye, a menacing glare, saying nothing,-ijhe sal down.— Punch. An anecdote is related of a young preacher at a city church, who had for his text a verso from tho parable of the ten virgins, and in the course of his sermon exclaimed —“that in old limes it was customary, when the bridegroom and the bride were coming, for ten virgins to go out and meet them and escort them home, five of these virgins being males and five females /” WELISBORO,, TIOGA COUNTY, I PA., THURSDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 3, 1857. THE AGITATOR. m. H. C0bb,.... ..Editor. WELLSBOROUGH, FA. Thursday morning, I>cc, 3, 1857. Al)Busincss,and othcrCommunicationsmuet be addressed to the Editor to insure attention. We cannot publish anonymous tommuiiications. Jo accordance with the request of the editor we again issue but a halt sheet, contrary to our adver tisemenl of last week. We shall make no excuse, and allow him to offer his own apologies in the next issue. Bank Applications. —-The Harrisburg Telegraph publishes notices of intended applications to theinck l Legislature for chartersJbr twenly-two new Banks* one for a general Banking law, three for increase or capital, and two for extension of charters. Mb. C.- D. Brown opened a Singing School in the Session Room of the Presbyterian Church,on llie Ist inst. Mr. B- is highly spoken of as a Teacher, and wo cheerfully recommend bis School to those who wish to improve in this much neglected branch of education. Mas Rucksian opened a Select School at her resl dcncc on Tuesday, the Ist inst. Wo presume the name of the Principal will be a sufficient recommen dalion of tlie school to all parents who wish to place their children under a faithful and efficient Instrnc. tor. Her charges arc moderate; but double the amount would not be an equivalent for her services. Wisconsin.— The official and unofficial returns from all the counties in Wlscouson elect Randall, the Republican candidate for Governor, by 45 majority accor ding to the Milwaukee JVeics, the democratic organ, and by 219 according to the Republican count. The Republicans also elect most of the State ticket, and have both branches of the Legisla ture. The democrats crowed too soon. How to Mend the Times. —The Lebanon Courier submits an admirable plan to mend the times, and one which we especially commend to the patrons of the Agitator, and suggest the coining Court term as a convenient season to. pul it in practice. It says : •“The hard times now prevailing are in a great degree attributable to a want of confidence. Wc know how confidence can be restored, and it is thus ; Let every one who owes the printer pay right up.— This will satisfy the printer that money is plenty.— He will tell it to his readers. His readers will be convinced. Money will again be circulated and all will be well again. To you that owe the printer, come right along and fork up. Patriotism now de mands it; and he that is deaf to the calls of his country is a sinner indeed. 11 Like the boy who contracted the habit of begin* ningat the wrong end of hia dinner—to wit—the pie and cake—l skipped the relation of things seen in the intermediate stages of my journey, arid wrote last from Windsor in the Connecticut Valley. The truth being, that ray sojourn in that ancient town was, in many respects, exceedingly interesting— more so than my short stay in New York. I thought Gotham monstrous in size and in ini. quily half-a-dozen years since; but it was hut a ba by.city and pure as the driven snow then, compared with) the interminable congeries of streets —so to speak—fenced in with huge piles of stone, and-britk, and mortar, and the startling tales of wholesale mnr. dcr proclaimed in every nook and corner by the daily press of that great city as it exists to-day.— It will not do to compare New York, with London or Paris, for the simple and sufficient reason that neither of these great cities have Fernando Wood as Lord Mayor. Violence and outrage mark the reign of tyrants and villains only. To the sights. We (that is friend B. and myself) look our first peep at the elephant through certain and singular glass boxes at Barnum’s Muscum | which boxes of glass were filled with salt, or fresh walcf, containing marine and fresh water fish and vegetables, and which we learned from the canvas bulletin outside, is called an aquarium. This aqua rium is one of the few “puffed*’ wonders of Gotham really worth seeing. It is no humbug; and a few hours may be spent profitably by any one at' all cu. rious as to the modus operandi of "life under water,’’ in the halls devoted to the mysteries of the “great deep” on a small scale. In one corner of the Hall we observed two beavers in a strong cage, whose ample tails, webbed feet and surly bclWvior atlractcd the eye, while certain unmannerly spittings in which they indulged from time to time, warned us through the olfactories to keep our distance. We forcborc looking for the “real, genuine” club which killed Capl. Cook, it being, as friend B. fancied, "in the keeping of the man who struck Biily Patterson.” Sunday mnrning found us early on Broadway in search of the "Church of the Good Shepherd,’- whore as we learned from advertisements. Rev. T. L. Harris officiates as pastor. We found a room capable of accommodating two or three hundred persons, with plainly furnished seals arranged ara phitbcalrally. Bat few persons bad arrived when we entered, but the room was comfortably filled by the usual hour of commencing service. We were there to bear one of the most remarkable men of the age, and who, were bis cause more popular, would find Trinity Church too small to accommodate his audi ences. Mr. Harris is under the medium size, and not likely to bo “picked out among ten thousand.” lie has a fine eye, however, and in his moments of inspiration its expression is fascinating. His ser. mon, which -was one of the most strangely moving we ever listened to, impressed us ns partaking more largely of the heart than of the head, yet it was a fine intellectual effort. Painfully intense in earnest ness, and with an unlimited command of beautiful language, his discourse was a series of brilliant fig ures, each R perfect lesson in itself, in which the path of Christian duty discovered itself beset with the rugged rocks of self-denial, bat lending upward —ever upward, until it melted away into the view, less paths of the angels. Mr. Harris is a Swendeahorgian. We scrutinized the faces of the audience closely, and were gratified to find no face there blistering with the brand of vice. We saw an intelligent and earnest band of men and women, evidently of the best class—that is ol the middle class. The women displayed mure soul titan-crinoline. In Iho afternoon wc crossed over to BrooUyh (o A 6 I T A TO R. t '> Editorial Correspondence. North Colebrook, Conn., Nov. 25,1857. ( T listen to Henry Ward Beecher. As luck would have it, Mr. Beecher did not prcacb. Wc next sought out Dr. BethuneV Church, nnd ascertained that he too was absent. Referring to the Herald we found a lecture by Miss Eauia Hardinge, advertised at Clinton Hall, and thither wc tifent. We found the audience already assembled and tlio Hall filled with earnest and intelligent appearing men and wo* men, with nothing of tire fantastic in their looks or actions. Miss Uardtnge is simply good looking— not beautiful as the world goes. She spoke in the trance state, and her discourse was a masterly thing —brilliant and solid aa well. Her rhetoric was faultless and her reasoning cogent and just. “The Uses of Spiritualism 11 was the theme, and we had never heard the theme so well handled by mao or woman. Toward the close, wc were reminded of the fact that rowdies sometimes vex decent people in large villages as well as in small ones, by certain well-dressed individuals who persistedin hissing and other noisy demonstrations In the passage-way from the stairs to the Hall. Yet that discourse enjoined upon all men obedience (o the moral and religious precepts of Jesus Christ from the beginning to the end. Sunday evening, we went to Dodsworlh’s Hall, far up. Broadway, and listened to a lecture by Miss Charlotte Beede. This ludy has a calm exterior, and is of a prepossessing appearance. Her lecture was well written and well read, and was listened to with earnest attention. The preliminary services were similar to those witnessed in the churches of other denominations;' so also were those at the “Church of the Good Shepherd 11 and at Clinton Hall, Thus passed our Sabbath, and profitably. Next day wc wcut early to sec “Rosa Bonhedr’s Great Painting of the Horse Fair at Elmira. 11 This work of art would be remarkable had it been the offspring of masculine (?) genius instead of a wo man's. 1 shall not attempt to describe this magni ficent work of art. To be comprehended it must be seen.' Thence wc went to the Dnsseldorf Gallery of Art, where is on exhibition the celebrated OussclJorf 'paintings, and Power’s Greek Slave. Here wc saw Lessing’s great masterpiece, “Huss before the Stake, 11 —to stand before which will repay a journey of a thousand miles Here also wc saw “Diana and her Nymphs,” by Sokn, a “Fancy Scene 11 by Stein bruck, “Othello and Dcsdemona,” by Hildebrandt— a magnificent painting, of which friend B. became quite enamored, “Lear 11 dying, (by the same artist,) “Return of the Reapers, 11 by Becker, and “Falslaff Mustering Recruits,” by Schrodter. Among the landscapes wc noticed particularly “Stag Hunt and Storm in Autumn,” by Lauge, ‘'Morning Landscape in the Tyrol,” by Schiller, and a Landscape by Les sing which must be looked at a full hoar in order to appreciate its incomparable excellencies. The Greek Slave forms a prominent feature In lliis Gallery. I admired it a full half hour, and as sured friend D., that it could not be bettered; to all of which he rcmarkcdi very dryly, that he had dis covered something inconsistent, to wit, —Ural the statue is nude, yet the hair is dressed in the'Grecian stylo—wreathed up—and the hands are chained ! This droll criticism, as well as original, drove the poetry of the tiling out of my head entirely. The Dusscldorf Paintings arc by the graduates of the Dusseldorf Academy of Arts, and were pur chased by the Cosmopolitan Art Association at a heavy expense. They form the most attractive ex hibition in the city, and he who visits New York and neglects to spend half a day there, if be be a lover of the beautiful and the chaste, is not wise. What else we saw need not be chronicled in this letter which has already onUravelcd its projected limits. I may just remark that we saw Charlotte Cushman in Shakspcarc's Henry the Eighth, and the Ravel Troupe in the Pantomime of “Boreas,” at Niblo’s. Winter has set in in earnest. M. H. C. Fight With am Eagle —Two Mem At tacked. —We learn from an altogether re liable source, that two men were attacked one day last week, on Sideling Hill by a large grey eagle. The eagle flew nl ihe throat of one of the men who was a short distance .from the other, but the blow was warded off. The eagle then struck him ihrough the wrist with his claw, when they closed and fell to 'he ground in a fearful struggle. The other man had his gun with him, but was prevented from firing by (ear of killing his friend. He ran immediately to his assistance and cut the throat of the eagle. It measured nine feel between the lips of its wings.a We learn that the enormous bird is in posession of Capl. J. A. Mann at Harri snnvillo, who has promised to send it to a friend in Bedford. —Bedford Enquirer, A foreigner appeared in the Supreme Court at Troy to perfect his naturalization. Judge Gould, who was upon the bench pul certain questions to lifm, and among others whether he bad ever .read the Constitution of the United States, which be was about to swear to support. The applicant said he had not, and did not know a word of it. Judge G. told him he could not be naturalized in that Court. We quote the Judge’s language on ibis point : “I hold that Ihe due, even the decent ad ministration of the oath depends in part on the condition that the applicant should at least understand it; and I will never allow such an abuse of the law as would he com mitted by your taking that oath in your present circumstances.”— Pat. 4’ Jour. “The Fearful Judgment.” —The Holli daysburg Standard has information on the subject of the man sitting on a chair for blasphemy, which throws some light upon the origin of the story. It is said that a man in Union county, and not at Mf. Union, while winnowing grain, became exasperated on dis covering that the weevil had destroyed a portion of his grain—that he indulged in some tall swearing-—went into the house and sal down, and the excitement brought on a severe attack of the apoplexy, from which ho ultimately recovered. This was the basis of the wonderful story of a fearful judgment of which has been extensively circulated in the newspapers during the last few weeks. David Wilmot ou Defeat. The Erie Constitution publishes the fol lowing letter from Judge Wilmpt to the editor, who remarks theft'it was’not written for the public eye:' Towasda, Oct. 31, 1857. Dgar Sir : The battle is lost, as men ordinarily estimate results, ft will discourage the weak and doubting ;lthe venal will seek shelter in the camp of the enemy. The men of courage and faith will stand firm, with confidence unshaken incite final triumph of the right. Courage and perseverance’ are qualities essential in a conflict with error and wrong; these, with untiring activity, are ihe elements of success; in all great revolu tions. | . I look lo the future, with unshaken confi dence. Liberty cannot,- bo crushed out in ibis age and country, I Oppression has oo charier from God. The tyrant that exults in power, and defiantly assaults not the con siituiional rights of American citizenship, but the God-given rights of jtnani shall soon fall a lifeless and loathesome corpse, under (he persevering and courageous assaults of truth. The mete politician believes in the potency of great interests. He scoffs at the idea that any other than selfish motives influences the action of men. This is an insult both to God and man. Truth and Justice are might ier than Selfishness and Wrong. The he roes and martyrs of our race attest the no bleness of humanity.- IMen ate capable of the highest motives and the most loyal stead fastness to principle. Truth is never silent, but pleads ever with irresistible persuasive ness and power. Tljeie js strength in a no ble, battling in a just cause, ihaKcapnot be overcome. All the great moral forces of Nature are working unceasingly on the side of the right. In the struggle of life vile require sirengh in overcoming obstacles that beset our path. Disasters lest the constancy and courage of parties as of men. In the nature of things reverses must contb, but if we are true lo the cause of Freedom and, Humanity our triumph is certain ; nor will the day. Tae long post poned. Oppression j injustice, and wrong cannot stand against righteousness and truth —if so. Omnipotence! fs dethroned—then is the earth a province! of the Evil One, and man the helpless victim of his, malignity. In the hour of disaster and deleat, we must preserve an abiding fujth in rectitude, and in the living energies 6f the Truth. We must never despond,jnor weary in the per formance of our high duties. There is nothing in the result ofjlhe late election (hat should for a moment dishearten our hopes or relax our efforts, ft has not changed the essential nature of things, it has not made the right, this is'beyond the power of a majority. Majorities! can make the rulers of 10-duy, but they-cannot make oppression just, nor eradicate .from the hearts of men haired of the oppressed. They may uphold for a time violence and fraud by the strong arm of military power,!but they cannot law. fully lake from man it he rights -with, which his Maker has invested him. Not a stone in the citadel of our strength has been thrown down ; we still stand ion the impregnable rock of Truth. The tyranny, outrage and wrong ngainst which! we protest, is in no de gree extenuated by a majority given against us. Oppression has gained a new lease of power, but not an iofa of sanction for its cruelly and injustice. [ Let us renew our vows.to Freedom, and fgnin streng'b lor fu ture conflicts, by divesting ourselves of every selfish and ignoble desire. Fugitive Slaves —j-Two fugitive slaves, one from Louisiana, ifiejolher from Marytand, arrived in Providence last week on the Un derground Railroad,;and one of them has been forwarded to Gahada via Worcester. The Louisiana fugitive rbade an attempt to escape two.-jears ago,[and reached Cincin nati, where he was captured by his pursuers t and taken back, and'afterward cruelly treat ed. He determined, however, that he would escape from slavery, and the incidents of his escape are thus narrated in Ihe Providence Transcript : I “He seized the first [favorable opportunity and fled, determined-loldie before ho should be again taken back.; Bloodhounds were put upon his track, but filid not overtake him. He adopted a novel [expedient lo balk them and keep them back.)' [He left Cayenne pep per in his (racks, iihief, after being snuffed by the hounds, rendeie'd their progress slow. He reached the Mississippi, committed him self lo a leaky boat, lying close to the bottom of the boat, to keep jont of sight of his pur. suers. He said when her entered the boat he was resolved that he would find a grave in the waters of the river before he was cap luted. Ho got beyond! I,he teach of his pur suers, and finally secreted himself on board a ship bound lo the j North. In a short lime be was found ; feafful that he should be relumed, he begged,'if that was to be bis fale, to be thrown overbbard, preferring death to the horrors from which he had lied. The captain told him lo calm his fears, he should not be sent back. And,‘said the captain, “I wish 1 had » load just [like you.” The cap tain brought him safely to New-York, di rected him to.lako the;Fa!l*River route, and named the boat. He directed him lo come lo Providence, where, hej would find friends to aid him in his flight”* Robbing the Grave!.— Marlin Quinlan, the city Sexton of: Qhjcngo, a Democratic Irishman holding his appointment from the late Democratic Mayor of that city, has been detected hi rifling the!graves of their dead and shipping them off in wagons. He was caught in the very 1 ajet, nine bodies having been taken up by him in one night to be sold for dissecting purposes; He was sent to jail. Advertisements will be charged 81 per square of fourteen lines, for one, or three insertions, and 25 cpn£« (yr cycrysubsfquqat insertion. Aliadvertise menu of less than fourteen lines considered as a Squire'. The following rates will bo charged for Quarterly, Half-Yearly and Yearly advertisings— i 3 months. G rnpnths. 12 mo’s . t Square, (14 lines,) - 82 50 84 50 86 00 ,2 Squares,. - ... 400 600 800 | column, . . - . 10 00 15 00 20 00 1 column, 18 00 30 00 40 00 All advertisements not having the number of in sertions marked upon them,trill be kept in until or deted out, and charged accordingly. Fosters, Handbills, Bill,and Letter Heads,,and all kinds of jobbing done in country establishments, executed neatly and promptly. Justices’, Consta bles’ and other BLANKS, constantly on band and printed to order. no. xvin. The Great Eastern. —An unsuccessful attempt was made to launch .this steamship on the 3d instant.. Immense preparations took place, bul lhey were rendered futile by misunderstanding among tbs workmen. The weight of the vessel being 15,000 tons, it was necessary to provide great attractive powers to pull her into thowater, and almost equally great to prevent her from slipping in too rapidly. To accomplish Ihe former, four lighters were moored ahead with- machines pulling sixty tons each, and. chains passing round blocks in four other lighters were worked on the shore. The restraining power was applied by the cables passing round drums firmly attached to pile work 20 feet square driven in the ground. The prepara* tions for launching being, complete, an order was given to wind up the slack between the drums and the vessel, the tractive machines at same time commenced operations. The men at one of the drifttw instead of winding up the chain paid irout, so that the vessel began to slide, whirling round the drum, and throwing the men at the windlass high into ihe.air breaking their bones and killing one. Fortunately the brakes were applied, and the momentum of the vessel slopped, but not until some of the machinery was broken. Another trial was subsequently made, but Ihe vessel would not move. The launch has been postponed for a month, and the danger now is (hat the vessel will settle in the earth, so as to become immovable. The Susq ueihxxa Lumber Bhsi.vess.— As every one of our citizens who contem plate building next Spring is interested in the price of lumber, and as the supplies come almost entirely from the Susquehanna, it may not be out of place to stale the prospects of the lumber trade al that lime. The Editor of the Clearfield Journal, who has been making careful inquiries says : That the existing financial trouble must necessarily have a de pressing effect, as the eastern dealers will find it difficult to raise funds, without paying ruinous rates of discount, to pay the balances now due, let alone making further purchases. Another thing worthy of attention is, that a considerable portion of last year’s slock re mains unused in the hands of the consumers. With these facts before them, out heavy dealers, who* have heretofore been in the habit of advancing money to pay the expen ses of making limber, &c., will be lardy about doing so now. Indeed, one of the heaviest dealers in the county told us that he designed making no advancements. If a large business is done next Spring, it cannot reasonably be expected t hat more cash will be realized from safes than will pay the expenses of running, if even that, and those who have bestowed their VVinter’s labor on it, and undergone the hardships incident to rafting, and find themselves in a worse situa lion than if only a light business were done. We think it is clearly the policy of every man to contract his operaqaps this season, or al least hold back until such a lime as a brighter prospect presents itself.—Harris burg Telegraph. Dr. D.unfBACK in his (ravels on the cape of Good Hope says : I found very frequently among the Dutch B tors of the back country, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, which they keep hung up by a thong around the neck of the bottle to a peg over the hammocks. Indeed this seems to be'their sole p'rolection against the throat and lung disorders which are quite prevalent among them. I thought it a speak ing comment .on the practical genius of the American people, that they should furnish the staple, I believe the only remedy this people buy to use. Asking if they used the same manufacturers. Pills, they told me that belter purgatives grew all around them than any body could prepare. Somebody has invented a clever fiction about Henry Ward Beecher, which we print for the sake of the fun that would be in it, if it were a fact. Mr. Beecher in his wander ings about New York, disguised, to study the different aspects of society, recently dropped into a mock auction shop. He stood some time, when the auctioneer called out, “Mr. Beecher, why the devil don’t you bid 7” He was greatly astonished at finding himself known In that place. He retired and sent a friend to ask Funk how he knew him. “How do 1 know him? Why I have been a promi nent member of his church for the last five years, and own the fifth pew from the front I” Butter. — A letter in a Newark (N.-J.) paper from a farmer in that Stale says : The yield of butler here is truly enormous. Never were there so many pounds of that article produced—and of such a fine quality. But little of it has yet reached the market, the farmers having waited for higher prices; they thought by this time it could be sold for twenty-eight, twenty-nine and thirty cents per pound ; but are just finding out their mistake ; and next week and the week after will find the market flooded with fine butter, and the holders willing to take 14 to 16 cents per pound. We have (be same reports from New York and the other butter growing, regions. Unlucky Lawyers sent to Jail by an Indignant Court. —Judge Claggett, of the first Judicial district in lowa, made a rule that lawyers who had cases in couit should not leave without notice. This did not please them. And to put his honor out of counte nance, they would get up, one afler another, and say, with long faces and juvenile accent. “Please, thir, may I go dull" His honor bore this as long as he could, when he had them nil put in jail. The Burlington JHdirfceye says that “no pubiic edifice (not excepting the Penitentiary,) ever contained so much latent rascality as the Madison jail, « hen.filled with the lawyers of- the district. Kates of Advertising.