Terms of Publication. TTOGA COUNT? AGITATOR is published jgE T lu Morning, and mailed to subscribers *"? rerr reas° Da^e P rice of ,- OSE DOLLAR PER ANNUM,-S3? \ u . a Jrancc. It is intended to notify every /erorfontf the term f or which he has paid shall mbseritej » [he Etam p—“Time Oct,” on the mar h*ve «*P"rj t paper. The paper will then be stopped pa°,.,hfr remittance be received. By this ar- Itul » f “ . m an can be brought in debt to the pri° ter ' atoß is the Official Paper of the County, The #nd steadily increasing circulation reach -4 k 1 neighborhood in the County. It U sent iog vb w ® 1( 0 eny post Office within the county /rte c /f; T o « e most convenient post office may be County. i» “ jg not exceeding 5 lines, paper ioota ■■ For the Agitator* evening thoughts, at the days declining, Pale grow the rosy skies, And stars are calmly shining Like holy spirit-eyes j , Mv thoughts are upward>ovmg * Unto a higher sphere; 1 Tbcr seek the pure and Ipvmg Who still to me are dear. Perhaps, while I am dreaming Of pleasures that are o'er. Their tender eyes are beaming Upon me as of yore. And while my heart is thrilling With joys that yet may be, And tears my eyes are filling, perhaps they think of me. And then my truant fancies Will wander far and near,. Recalling smiles and glances Of some who tarry here. 2*ight winds are odors bringing Of lily and of rose, Rat memory is singing Of sweeter things than those. The d»ys that have departed; Rise up before my view, Friends, earnest and true-hearted, To-night I think of you! Tho’ distance wide may sever And many changes grieve, Oh! friends, beloved forever, Remember mo at eve. TO H. V. H. When twilight lets her curtain fall o‘er tower and hill and tree, And as I list the wild-bird's call, I think, yes, think of thee. When stars are smiling in the sky, And trembling on the sea, I fondly stay the half-breathed sigh, And think, yes, think of thee* When slumber binds my weary soul, Though light the chain may be. Then comps an hour from heaven stole I dream, yes, dream of thee! Clymcr. May 1859, Letters From Over The River. It seems no longer ago than yesterday that I at down, jaded and wet, after mastering my first lesson in experimental life; yet I may afely put it at upward of twenty years ago m the seasons turn. Iw was at the close of one of those July days ushered in by a round, red inn, which one may'! gaze at with impunity; whose mid-days are furnace-like and whose af ter-Dnon? not seldom are the theatres of those impromptu meteorological exhibitions conduct ed behind a murky drop-curtain depending from zenith to horizon on either hand. Tho storm had spenHts fury, and a magnifi cent rainbow spanned the eastern sky. I was but one of a group of twenty children busied In speculating upon the nature of the glowing arch, each joyous, thoughtful, and wondering. Many and diverse theories touching its nature and were advanced by the curious lookers pn; and all failed of other effect than the more hopeless mystification of their originators. I believe this, to some extent, is true of the theo ries hatched in older brains; not that theorizing i* at all a bad employment for the mind of man, for I opine that theories oftener lie at the bot tom of discovered truths in science and nature than any distinct knowledge of the principles which govern in either realm. The mind gets > glimpse of the fact, perhaps ; but the mental discipline that comes of theorizing renders the aind better able to grasp the facts which lie underneath. "Hullo, there I who wants to be rich V 9 We turned to encounter the quizzical face of Ben Walter, the “hired man” of the nearest fvmer. Ben sat composedly on the cart-rail, pipping a little paddle, left by the shower, intu 'linjry foam. “I! II II” shouted the group almost in a breath. “Well/' said our interlocutor, changing sides immense quid of tobacco and spurting a small deluge of juice some ten feet away, to intense delight of sundry boys who had metered their first quid and longed for the Kwnd, “well, you see that *arf” pointing to Ik- rainbow. “Yesl” said the crowd. ‘‘Well, the chap as goes to the end o’ that 'll find a two bushel bag of silver spoons. Haw, Buck! g’long!” , •'ow there was not a boy in the group that ’“d not know Ben Walter as an unconscionable not over truthful, albeit. But not a doubt * existence of the “two bushel bag of ’ entered the minds of any. After a } 5 consultation, sis of us volunteered to go . e spoons ; the others, meanwhile, to re in charge of our books and slates. We Wd upon an equal division of the treasure — e *uole to be exchanged at the store at the '“s-roads for sundry, pounds of candy, lumps pitch, fish-hooks and lineh, efc our point of observation, the southern °i the bow” rested, or seemed to rest, on topmost peak of “Pisgah,” a huge mass of w k° se sides were dark with hemlock mass covere d ledges. The older » : th n Gen BtU(^OUB to people the mountain t nneP beasts an d bugbears, was to us little folk a kind of « In fact, wo had been forbid r°SS^e **^ tone Brook,” which leaped i* the rocks, or slept in the dark pools * mnun taih , a base. But we reasoned that a humble confession of accompanied by an offering of fceth s P 00ns by each of us to our incensed secure pardon. So we set off. fop a. 0 i ta °gled grass, over walls, through 0(1 f,ta S na nt swamps ; now wading the Btreams un d now scrambling over rocks i our bare feet like knives ; now f()r r °d s under the matted laurel in try. rea, i of anacondas and boa constrict -1 ledges, clinging to a biting , some prostrate hemlock, or - Urse re3 t slowly and painfully by the aserted mto the jagged crevices of the c r icular rocks - We c ° uid not see n *? oud8 »” but it was there, un- Sa amon g ourselves. So we - _ fj * our eet bleeding, our garments m Vrt to m . But then, “the spoona”!- THE YOL. V., We had only to persevere, and then retnm to our fellows fabulously rich. The goal was reached. Almost reverently we turned from the fruitless quest, toward the West from which the twilight hues were slowly fading. Not a word was spoken as, jaded with the ascent, and for the first time seriously thoughtful of the accounts we must soon ren der of our disobedience, we proposed to descend. The return was compounded of groans and hairbreadth escapes, and each of us found an anxious watcher at the window when our homes were reached. No questions were asked, for our errand had been published in the streets in the early evening. I leave you to imagine the figure we ojit for some weeks thereafter. No doubt Franklin’s story of the “Whistle” is an admirable thing of its kind ; my grand father (rest his soul!) was never weary of bring ing it to bear upon that period of boyhood when swapping jack-knives becomes epidemic. Did I ask permission to go a-fishing, he straight way took down “Poor Richard” and set me to read the story of the “boy who paid too dear for the whistle.” But I never profited by the moral of that stale lesson. I never forgot to wonder why the fool did not out jack-knife and make his own whistles—since every willow bore an indefinite quantity ~of those simple instru ments of music. As for me—l never bought whistles; and why should that story be flung in my face so often ? .1 perversely determined never to give “Poor Richard” a place in my library, should I ever own one. And that was all the benefit I ever got from reading the ad venture of the boy who fell in love with a whistle. VIRGINIA. For the Agitator. But the journey to the crest of “Pisgah,” and the moral attached, sank deep into my life. I think it plucked up the passion, avarice, root and branch. If my young companions sug gested a capital place to make money with little work, I thought of the “bag of spoons,” and ate my crust in content. Later, when the California gold fever broke out, two gentlemen from the city called to see me on business. They unfolded their plans, by means of which a stream of the golden flood was to be diverted from the main body into their coffers. They would furnish all—outfit r stock, passage money, everything. I listened in silence until the golden scheme was fully revealed. “Would I go?” I thought of the ascent and descent of “Pisgah” and very quietly said— “No!” A. A. A. For the Agitator. Say what you will—we do no|b much profit by the mishaps of other people. The rod that sears the back of my neighbor profits me noth ing. Defeat—Bonaparte had his Waterloo— but what care I ? I must taste its bitterness in my own experience ere profit accrue to me. The sorrows of others may sadden us, but the griefs ingrained in our very souls can alone teach us the sublime virtue of patience; these, alone, can soften and refine; these, alone, are living preachers. An rtvoir, |j Insomnie. Our hearts were well nigh broken, as we left our beautiful and beloved one, to sleep the dark, mysterious sleep of Death. The winds swept by us sobbing, as Nature’s falling tear-drops mingled with our own. The sweet gush of melody which had so per vaded our beautiful earth, seemed changed to tones of sadness and gloom. One of the bright links of affection had been severed! As the broken chain of existence dangled by our side, we felt no wish, no energy, to go on with our part in the drama of life. White-robed memory touched our brow! In stantly we passed through the dim years of the past. A blue-eyed child sported amid the flowers. Yhe sky above her head was bright. The birds sung in [cadence with the soft murmuring of the winds, as she gently twined her brow with wreaths of flowers; and musical peals of laugh ter broke from her lips, with that joy which only the heart of childhood feels. As years speed on, her checks paled, and her eyes grew brighter with a strange unearthly light. Her soul sent forth its tendrils of love and kindness, which crept and clung to the hearts of her fellow passengers in life's journey. But their love—no love of carf/t could save her. She went to sleep, and was laid among the many who have gone to that far off “Sunset Land” where *1 Dwell those cherished ohCs, With snow white brows and waving hair; I see them now—l hear their tone* Of sweetness sigh along the air. Hark I how their silvery voices ring In cadence with the wind’s low sigh'; Not sweeter is the wind-harp’s string That wakes at eve its melody. They call na; see, they wave their hands— As hy the mirage lifted high, That clime in all its beauty stands Against the fore-head of the sky. With wreathed brows—with laugh and song> With tender looks—hand clasped in hand, They move along that love linked throng— Within the haunted sunset land.” Found his Shell. —A traveller called lately at nightfall at a farmers house in Alabama; the owner being from home, and the mother and daughter being alone, they refused to lodge the wayfarer. “How far then,” said he, “to a house where a preacher can get lodgings?” “Oh I if yon are a preacher,” said the lady, “you can atop here.” Accordingly he dismounted, deposited his saddle bags in the bouse, and led his horse to the stable. Meanwhile, the mother and daugh ter were debating the point as to what kind of a preacher he was: “He cannot he a Presbyterian,” said one, ‘for he is not dressed well enough.” “He is not a Methodist;” said the other “for his coat is not the right cut for a Methodist." “If I could find his hymn hook,” said the daughter, “1 could tell what sort of a preacher he is.” And with that she trust her hands into the saddle bags, and, pulling out a Bask of Ih quor, she exclaimed, “La! mother, he’s a hard shell Baptist. The paths of virtue, though seldom those of Worldly greatness, are always those of pleas antness and peace. Bebotesr to the Eftension of the area of ifmhom anh the S£reah of fhealths Reform. WHILE THERE SHALL BE A WRONG UNRXQHTED, AND UNTIL “HAN’S INHUMANITY TO MAN” SHALL CEASE, AGITATION MUST CONTINUE. fJt the Agitator. Leave, by the Wayside. WELLSBORO. TIOGA COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY MORNING. JUNE 2, 1859. MYSTERIOUS MURDERS DETECTED. PROIf THE RECORDS OP A FRENCH POLICEMAN. I had some renown as a sucessfal rogaecntch er; and I had some experience, too. My field of operations, as a usual thing, lay within the confines of the Department of the Lower Alps; and though I served under the Sub-prefect of the Third Arrondisment, yet the Prefect of the Department called upon me when he chose. One morning—it was in the latter part of May —I received a note from the Prefect, ordering me to come to Digne and see him with all pos sible despatch. The missive came through the office of our Suh-prefect, so I had nothing to do but to get ready and start, I took an early din ner, assumed the dress of a peasant, browned my face and hands, and set forth. I reached Dinge just at nightfall, and as soon as it was dark I waited upon the Prefect. He seemed to be relieved when he saw me, and at once took me to his private closet. “Now,” said I, “have you got work for me ?” “Yes,” he replied. “Sit down and listen.” We sat down, and having tasted a glass of wine, he proceeded. “Within a few months past there have been some of the most mysterious murders commit ted in this department, and in the department of Var, that have ever come under my notice. These are done, mostly, on the road from Cas tellane to Aups. The first victim was a Mar seilles merchant, who had come up to Castel lane to purchase preserved fruits. His body was found by the road-side, near |the line be tween the two departments; and'at first it was supposed that he must have fallen there, and died in a fit, as no mark of violence cbuld be found upon him. His pockets bad been rifled, howev er. The next one was found near Annot, and under the same circumstances. He was a mer chant also, and from Nice. Since then five or six more have died in the same mysterious way; and no marks of ill usage have been found up on any of them; but they have all been robbed." “Have most of them stopped in Castellans ?” I asked. The Prefect told me that they had. “And I suppose they must have put up at some inn there ?” I remarked. “Yes,” said the Prefect. I then supposed that some of the landlords must be concerned. But my companion in formed me that they had been narrowly watched and that no shadow of evidence rested against them. “But,” said I, “is there not some poison in this matter ? Some inn-keeper may administer the potion, and then send an accomplice after the victim.” “No, returned the Prefect, with a shako of the head. “Experienced physicians have exam ined the stomachs of several of the dead men, but no trace of poison has been found. It is a mysterious affair. The Sub-prefect has done all he could, but without effect; and now we mean to give the whole thing into your hands. You must go to Castellaneatone, and there you can get such information as the Sub-prefect can give you.” After eonfering awhile longer with the Pre fect, ha let me have a suit of ordinary trades man’s clothing ; and thus habited, I went to a hotel and put up for the night. In the morn ing I procured a horse, and set out, reaching Caatellane before noon. During the day I pre tended to be doing business. I went to the wool len factory and examined a lot of stuff; and also visited several places where preserved fruits were put up. I learned that most of the people who came there on business stopped at an inn kept by a man named Juan Fontaix; so I left my horse there, and engaged lodgings. I After dark I called upon the Sub-prefect. He told me that be had used all the means witbiu his power, hut had not been able to gain a clue to the guilty party. Most of the murdered vic tims had been from Marseilles, and the excite ment in the city was intense. Gendarmes had been sent out upon all the roads, and secret po lice had also been upon the watch. The Iqst victim had fallen only four days before, and the deed was done fifteen minutes after the police man had passed the spot. I asked the Sub-prefect if he.had any suspi cions. Ho answered that all the suspicions he had held was fastened upon Juan Fontaix, the inn-keeper. Nearly all the murdered men had stopped at his house, and he must have known something of their business. I bade the offiper keep perfectly quiet, and not even to let one of his own men know of my presence. Then I returned to the inn, and finally entered into a conversation with my host upon the subject of the mysterious deaths. He pronounced it wonderful, and assured me that it had injured him than he could tell. ‘.'Par-bleu !” he muttered, “they’ll be suspec ting me next, if they have not done so already.” I was soon satisfied that Juan Fontaix knew toothing of the guilty party. He was very fear ful, and at times blanched and trembled at the thought of being apprehended for the crime. Most people would have seen in this signs of guilt; but 1 thought differently. 1 spent all the next day in the town, ostensi bly engaged in business with the factories, but in reality hunting after some clue to the object of my mission. Night came again ; but I had found nothing new. ' I was perfectly satisfied that the murderer had laid bis plans so deeply, that no circumstantial clue could be found. If I would find him, I must catch him with the proof upon him. I had given an assumed name at the inn, and stated that I belonged to Toulon. On the next morning I called for my bill, and informed my host that I was off for home. Then I went to the fruit preserver’s, and told him the same, stating that I must confer with my partner be fore I concluded my bargain. After this I went to the woolen factory, and saw the business agent. His home was Louis Cazaubon, and he came to Constellane about a year before. He seemed to he a straight forward, business man, and yet he was the only one I hod seen whom 1 really wished to suspect. In conversing upon the murders, he had been a little too free and off-handed, treating the subject more coolly than a man with heart would be apt to do. But still, 1 had thus far beeu able to find nothing against him. On the present occasion I told him, as I Agkes-, AGITATOR. had told the others, that I mast return to Toulon. “If you have not the ready money with you, we can give you credit,” he said. I told him 1 had plenty of money, hut I was not fully prepared to pay the prices he had de manded. He said “Very well,?’ and added that he should be happy to sell to me when I came again. I bade him good day and then departed. As soon as I was alone, I began to suspect Monsieur Louis Cazaubon in earnest. When I told him that I bad money, but did not purchase because he charged me too much, why didn’t he banter me ? Simply because he wished me to leave town with my money in my pocket—at least, so it appeared to me. This was sufficient ground for me to work upon, and I.resolved to watch the man a little while. So I rode to an out-of the way place and left my horse, and then re turned and concealed myself in a position where I could see the movements of Louis Cazaubon. In a few minutes he came out from bis facto ry, and walked away. His step was hurried and eager. I felt sure he was not the man who did the direct work of death. The plot was deeper than that, or he would have been dis covered ere this. So I resolved to wait a while, and see if he returned. I would have followed him if I could have done so with safety; but be might have detected me, and that would not do. However, in less than fifteen minutes, he came. He walked, now, with a sober, innocent air. It seemed to say—“Oh ! I haven’t been up to any mischief, as you can see 1” 1 saw Cazaubon at his desk again, and then I returned to my horse. I knew that I had a risk to run, now; but was ready for it. If the factory agent was at the bottom of the crime, and meant to have me robbed, he had already set his machinery in motion, and the next de velopment would he upon the road. I exam ined my pistols, and then left the town, taking the road along the river, towards Aups. At the end of half an hour I came to the slopes of the Barjois mountains, and soon after wards entered the wood. I now began to be very careful, and keep my eyes abont me. I will not say that I was wholly without fear ; for the mysterious manner in which the murders ha,d been done, verged so closely upon the ‘ marvel lous, that a sort of superstitious dreed attached to it. Had the victims been shot, or run through with a sword, or had their throats cut, I should have felt no sort of dread. But this was new ground. Death had come here, nobody knew bow. It might have come from an invisible hand, and in dead silence. Yet, when I rea soned upon the subject, I felt sure that the mur derer must approach very near to his victim ere the blow was struck, since it must be some di rect and powerful agent that could cause death in so strange a manner. Iliad crossed the little cascade of Saint Es prit and was decending a short, steep' hillside, when I saw a boy by the roadside, at the foot of the descent, engaged in whipping a mule.— He was a slightly built fellow, not more than fifteen years af age, and his coarse garments were covered with meal. I knew that there was a mill upon a branch of thd Yerdon, not far back, and I supposed he might be the mill er’s boy. As I came nearer, I saw a largo sack upon the ground, close by where the mule stood. “What’s the matter, my boy ?” I asked, os I drew up near him. “This ugly mule has thrown both mo and my bag of corn from his back," the boy answered. “Are you hurt ?” I continued. “My loft shoulder is hurt,” he said, “and I can’t lift this sack again. If monsieur would help me I would be very grateful. Until this moment the idea of suspecting the boy had not entered my head; but the suspicion flashed upon me now. He was altogether too keen a looking fellow for a miller’s apprentice. He gave me a glance from a pair of quick, sharp eyes, that meant more than he had spoken,— And then, if I had not been very much mista ken, I had seen him holding his mule firmly with the left hand. I leaped from my saddle, and moved towards the boy, being careful to watch his every move ment. “Now,” said he, “if you will take hold of that end we will put it on.” He, lifted at the other end, and pretended that it hurt his shoul der ; and he begged of me to lift it on alone. I professed to be willing to comply, and stooped down for that purpose, keeping my head in such a position that I could watch him with a sidelong glance.' As I bent over and took hold of the sack, I saw him carry his hand to his bosom, and driiw something out. I saw his dark eye flash, and heard his quick, eager brea thing. In an instant I seized his wrist, and bent it upward, and as I did so, I heard a sharp report, like the explosion of a percussion cap, and saw a tiny wreath of smoke curl up from the hand 1 held. He struggled to free himself from my grasp, but ! held him with a grip of iron, and fastened my gaze upon him. “I’ve found you, have I?” I said, drawing one of my pistols, and cocking it. “1-will simp ly inform you that I am an officer of the pre fecture, and that I have been hunting for you. Just offer a particle more of resistance, and a bullet goes through your brain! Now give me the weapon.” The boy was frightened, and trembled vio lently. “It is only a tobacco pipe,” he said, as he handed it to me. And certainly it looked like nothing more; but I had seen enough of it to know that evil was in it. It appeared to me to be an ordina ry meerschaum pipe, the bowl being colored as though by long use—=on!y the amber mouth piece was missing, t did not stop to examine it then, but turned my attention to its owner. I saw that be was still trembling with fear, and I knew that now Would be the time to work up on him. “So you are selling your i soul to Monsieur Louis Cazaubon ?” I remarked, by way of let ting him know that I was thoroughly informed. He started, and I saw very plainly that he knew just what 1 meant; but he tried to recover himself, and clumsily asserted that he did not know anything about the individual I had named. “You needn't lie to me,” I sternly replied, “for I know all about it. Louis Cazaubon has been watched by me when ho did not dream of such a thing. He thought I was a trades man. But you are young, and I would save you.—- Confess everything to me, and I promise you that ypur life shall be spared.’’ I saw that the boy wavered, and I followed up my advantage; and ere long I bad him bent to my wishes. I made him understand that I held his life in my bands ; that I could protect him from the vengeance of any one whom he might criminate; and that he had everything to gain and nothing to lose, by a full confession. He came into it gradually and reluctantly; but my wit finally triumphed, and I gained his se cret. His name he said, was Henry Dupin. He was born in Paris, but never knew who his pa rents were. He went to live with Cazaubon when quite young, and had been with him ever since. He said Cazaubon used to be a chemist, and did some business in that line; and it was in Paris that be invented the infernal machine, which they had since used with such fatal ef fect. About two years previous they left Paris together, and spent nearly a year in traveling over the kingdom, murdering and robbing for a living. Finally they came to Castellano, where the master obtained his present situation, while the boy went into a mill close at hand. Cazaubon marked the victims that were to be robbed, and the boy then did the work. He used various artifices in carrying out his plan, but the usual one was the same that he bad tried upon me. The boy then cxplaned to me the secret of the pipe. Only the outer surface was of meer schaum. Within it was a pistol of the finest steel, and of the most exquisite workmanship. The stem was the, barrel, and the lock was con cealed within the bowl, and covered with tobac co, A thin plate of metal - protected the cu riously contrived lock, and upon this the tobac co rested. A pressure of the thumb or finger upon this plate discharged the weapon. In or der to cock it, the plate had to be removed.— And now comes the infernal feature of the con trivance. The powder used in the little barrel was Cazaubon's own manufacture, and very powerful. For a wad, a piece of felt was used, and on the top of this was placed the missile which did the mischief. The boy had two of them with him, stitched up in the lining of his cap. He took them out, and showed them to me. The projectile was a tiny arrow, not lar ger than a cambric needle, with one end sharp and the other beat down to a thin feather. It was of fine steel, but coated with a greenish yellow substance, which was the mostfvirulent and speedy poison that the chemists could con coct. That needle once within the course of the blood, and death was already at the heart. Its wounds no mortal eye could detect; It punctured the skin not so palpably prick of a pin. He who sent it on its fatal errand made sure of his aim, generally striking the neck, and the victim would fall into insensibil ity ere he could comprehend what bad hurt him. I returned to Castellano with the boy; and having left him in charge of the Sub-prefect, I took a gendarme along -with me, and went to the factory. Monsieur Cazaubon was surprised to see me back so soon ; but he was more sur prised when I asked him to take a walk with me, and when I called in the gendarme, and bade him put the handcuffs upon the agent, he was ready to sink to the floor. We had him secured before he had sense enough to resist; and he was conveyed to the Sub-prefect’s office without trouble. At first be denied everything; but when he found that this would not avail him, he swore he would kill the boy. In due time Monsieur Louis Cazaubon was tried and condemed to death ; and the Prefect of Dinge took possession of the infernal ma chine. Before the villain was executed he con fessed his crimes—told how many years he had worked to perfect his fatal instrument, and pro duce the poison—and also owned that the boy Henry had been driven to help him through fear of his life. So the rascal Was executed. Henry Dupin spent two years in confinement, and was then set free and commenced an honest life. As for me, I got all the praise I deserved, and perhaps more. At all events, I had done the country some service, and the people were not slow to acknowledge it. Standing by His Frien-ds. —ln the flush times of Vicksburg, when the phrase “hard case” meant something more than it does now, Harvey Jenkins was admittedly one of the hardest. By some strange accident Harvey found himself at church one evening. The sermon being over, the preacher requested all who were friendly to religion to rise and hold up their right hands. The whole audience, ap parently, were on their feet. After they were seated again, the minister continued i “Now, if there is a single one here who de sires to see Satan and his kingdom prosper, he will rise and hold up his hand.” Harvey, with some difficulty, got to an erect position and said: “Had the vote been less unanimous, I should have retained my seat; hut I make it a point of honor never to abandon a friend under ad verse circumstances.” ( Jefferson* and his Fiddle.— The writer of the Declaration of Independence was passion ately fond of fiddling, and is said to have ex celled in playing upon that instrument. In 1770 his family mansion was burnt. Mr. Jeffer son used to tell in after years, with glee, an an ecdote connected with the fire. He was absent from home when it occurred ; and a slave ar rived out of breath, to inform him of the dis aster. After learning the general destruction, he inquired, “But were none of my books saved 1” “No, massa,” was the reply, “but tee saved de fiddle.” A married lady out west nearly broke her neck, a few days since, while learning to skate. Since that period there has been an extraordi nary demand for skates, by married men, and the supply is nut equal to the demand. Neither to all, nor contend with fools. Rates of Advertisiiic. Advertisements will be charged $1 per square of 14 lines, one or three insertions, and 25 cents for every subsequent insertion. Advertisements of less then 14 lines considered as a square. Tbesabjoined rates will be charged for Quarterly i Half-Yearly and Yearly ad* vertisementi: Square, - 2 do. i eofatnn, ~ i do. Column, - - 18,09 30i»0 4*,00 '.Advertisements not having the number of iouftiot, desired marked upon them, will be published until or dered onl and charged accordingly. Posters, Handbills, Bill-Heads, Letter-Heads rad all kinds of Jobbing done in country establishments, eS« eouted neatly and promptly. Justices’. Constables*, and township CLANKS ; Notes, Bunds,Deeds, Mort gages, Declarations and other Blanks, constantly oil hand, or printed to order. NO. 44. EDUCATIONAL. Mr. Young: Dear Sir:—l hare been told that you would willingly answer any ques tion addressed to yon on educational matters, through your “Teachers' Columnand thin must be my apology for troubling you with • question. On looking in Webster's Dictionary to find the meaning of the word “Alliteration," I find the following: “■Alliteration, n. [L. ad and Ultra, a letter.} The repetition of the same letter at the beginning of two.or more words immediately succeeding each other, or at short intervals; as/and gin the follow ing line: Fields ever fresh, and groves forever green. * Now I want to know more about Alliteration than this. Is it not a figure of Rhetoric! Please reply and oblige. Mansfield, May 26. Of coarse we shall willingly answer any question through our columns, calculated to ben efit teachers generally, but we would prefer to have teachers answer each other. If "A Header” had but looked into her gram mar, she would have found that alliteration is not a figure of Rhetoric. It is simply an ornament of language and is most generally used in poetry, though we fre quently meet with it in prose. Of the English Poets, Spencer used it the most. It is found also in Pope’s, Wordsworth’s, Moore's and Gray's Poems. “The Professor at the Breakfast Table” in the Atlantic Monthly , often uses it— perhaps unconsciously to him—as all poets do, more or less. Everybody, remembers the line in Gray’s “Elegy,” ‘Tull many a flower Is bom to blmh unseen,” which, we think, is a better example of alliter ation than the one cited by Webster. The following poem which went “the rounds of the press” some years since, may serve as an illustration-of the extent to which allitera tion may be carried: An Austrian army, awfully arrayed. Boldly by battery besieged Belgrade; Cossack commanders cannonading come. Dealing destruction's desolating doom; Every endeavor engineers essay. For fame, for fortune, fighting furious fray Generals’ gainst generals grapple, grimly great Bow hold heroic hearts hard haggard hate; Infuriate, indiscriminate in ill. Jeered joins javelin, jager juvenile. Kinsmen kill kinsmen, kinsmen kindred kill! Labor low levels loftiest, longest lines ; Men march ‘mid mounds; ‘mid moles, ‘mid murder ous mines. Now noisy noxious numbers notice nought Of outward obstacles, opposing ought. Poor patriots, partly purchased, partly Quite quailing, quick quarter quest; -Reason returns, religion’s rijiht resounds,. , Suwarrow slops suctLganginnary sounds. Truce then to Turkey, triumph to thy train, Unjust, unwise, unmerciful Ukraine! Vanish vain victory ! vanish victory void I 1 Why wish we warfare ? wherefore welcome were Xerxes, Ximenus, Xnntheus, Xaviere? Yield ! yield! ye youths JYeyeoetnen yield your yell I Zeno’s.-Znrparbhe's, Zoroaster’s zeal, AH, all arouse I all against arms appeaL —We shall be glad to hear from our fair friend, “A Header,” at ahytime, but we trust she will furnish more fori the Educational Col umn of the Agitator than questions.— -Ed. Ag itator. Good Manners.—^ -The law of the State of Massachusetts, requires that every teacher shall be competent to teach “good manners/* To do it, they must themselves be exemplars of good manners, refined in their habits, and of easy and graceful deportment. Very many, proba bly the majority, are so; neglect, in modern times, among teachers, to inculcate the virtues, (for good manners are virtues,) and the omis sion of all the old-fashioned manifestations of them on the part of children, are too unplea santly obvious to be passed by without stricture. In the place of these we find often a pert for wardness, a presumptuous assurance, and, not seldom, a positive audacity of impertinence. The absence ! of restraint at home, the ill judged indulgence, or the selfish love of ease, which often prompt a parent to be too little watchful of hia children, are all fruitful nour ishes of this fault,—a fault for which even the God-fearing Eli was made to feel the awful judgments of the Almighty. “Manners easily and rapidly mature into morals, and the neglect of the proper culture of the former shows itself in a coarse and boisterous,-way of speaking, in rough replies to civil qnestions, in profane and obscene language, and in rudeness and bad behavior at public assemblies where boorish stamping of the feet, shrill whistlings and cat calls, shrieks and yells, disgust all civil* and refined people, and prevent all comfort and en joyment of what they may have assembled to witness.” It is unnecessary to enter, at present, into a particular statement of the common defects of elementary instruction. They may be briefly summed up in the great neglect of physical ac comodation, of comfort, and of health; in the small size, defective ventilation, inconvenient arrangement, and gloomy aspect of most school rooms; their uncomfortable seats; the long continued and painful sedentary attitude of the little pupils; the entire absence of appropriate visible objects, addressed to the active feelings and restless imagination of childhood; the want of cheering and invigorating exercise; a me chanical routine of application, producing hut little effect on the memory, and leaving the un derstanding and the imagination nearly inac tive ; lessons presented, in general, in the form of compulsory tasks; modes of discipline re trospective rather than anticipative, repulsive, therefore, and arhitary, not founded on reason and affection, and influencing the imagination only through the medium of fear or restraint; no social intercourse between the pupils per mitted ; and consequently the natural opportu nities for influencing feeling and character pre cluded. Willia* Russet. The philosophers tell us that the rain which fails from th cloueds makes a competent part of whatever grows Upon the earth. Thus in a passing shower, we may be unconsciously pelted with the component parts of bolls, sheep padt», patriot?, an*l 3 HONTH3. 6 MONTHS. 12 MO NT HI. 32,56 34,50 36,00 4.00 6,00 8.00 . 6.00 B,o> 10,00 10,00 15,00 20,00 A Header. Heplt. The Siege of Belgrasb. Selections.