Terms of Publication. THB TIOGA COUNTY AGITAXOBI* published arerj Wednesday Moving, rabsonSir? tktto -Wy-iefioneßelpnoeof * >., DOLtAB FSK i '■■^se^ss^^sSSsA el* be' hrdaght in debt to the ls thef Official piiper oif the County, •tK »l*rge jmdtrteedily iporswing cironUtipn Much tn» into eVery neighborhood ini the County. Xtis seat fra of pott*9* towny gost Office within the county . limits, but whoso most Econeenfeht post office may be , n c«ds, o 6 fines, paper’ inclu ded, ssper'yesr.. j>. ~ -,.- .Vt - -.-TTORNKYB M CO&NSEI.tOitB Attend the and ScXCeerf "iTe. ; RBOoKs, ; ■; tTfnRNEY Aftti&DNSELLOR AT LAW ■“? ■ BLKiiK«t»;’noQi co, wl ; •lath.oaWtode of Contseiors thefe Is Mfetjr.V^t Sept. 2S, 1858, ly. L,_!j —’ i. : ■—— c7s7»Aß'jrT, DESTMT, ; t; . f\StICR at his residence near tie Academy. AIT work pertaining to mWfPhis line of business dOneproiapUy and HOUSE. . -.O.OBiSIKO, N.'r. ~. ; Maj. A. F«u>, . . . ...•••• t - • • Proprietor. QaesU Ukeß to and from the Depot free of oLaJge. j. C. WHIXTAREB, j : Syinpatkie .PJfystciun and SHrgeon. , - ' BhKbAF-D, ifOGA CO-, fBSHA.it Will visit patients in (il paTtSjOf the County, or re icoire them for at his honsei. [June 14,1 .i " izaak WirroK house, s. c. veeMiLy&A.,- pbopsietob. Gaines, Tiotfa Cannty, Pa. ; ,' : 1. THIS is anew hotel ] heated access of the heat fishing and&unting grounds in Northern Pa. No pains will oi sjated for the accotnmodatoqn of pleasure seekers and the traveling public. i -.April 12.1800. i! “ 7 B. O. COLE, ; BARBER ANJ) J £S HOP Ip the rear of the £o»t Office. Everything m aVhia line will hi: don? M well and promptly ad it ;£n be done in the city saloons. Preparations; for re moving dandruff, tad beautifying the hair, for sale .cheap. Hair and Whiskers dyed any color. Call arid ; see. Wellaboro, SiPpt. 22,1659. . / THE CANING jpilßJlAli. .j " George and proprietor! IS published at («rni)g, Steuben Coo N-Y-i at Ohe • Dollar and Eifi f Cfuls per year, in advance The Journal is l»Etics and has a.firenla ‘tion reaching into levety part of Stenheri Those desirous of hltenditfg their bnsinast intorhat and.tbe adjoining Amhties will find.lt an excellentad • 'vertUlng medium. ’■! Address as above. , j - -t S» BLESS HfAK/IKCi. MISS M. A.- si HNBON, respectfully' annonnees to the oitUsnaitf Wellabopp and vicinity, that ah® .lias taken rooms Cffer Nils* 4 Elliott's Store, where «he is prepared 11 execute all orders in the line of DEBSS MAKING. Having had exponence in th® business, she feels Sonfident tbat she can give satisfao . tionito aH who ms h favor hCr wEh tbcir patrooage, •. ~ . Sent 29,1859. - j ■ JOHNI *. ffIAHESPBAB, i ■' T AtliOEr - -i ['l HAVING oeeredhis shop in the room over Bhß. Smith * Bril’s Store.-respectfliUyi informs, tbf eitixens offfcllsW o’-*o* ,vieuuty,tb»the to exeeyU.ordera iil hta iuta ft Wuiness with proinft| cess and'-de^a^h,. 'j ... , T da»d «« Aort wotted.' 1 ' Hellabard, Oct 21* IB}B. —8m ' > O. BACOX,Jff. x>4' Graduate 0/ BufMoJUediuJ CaUrgt, 1 ,j KAB established Mmetdf fa the - practice of'Medi. eine ahd gutgew i of TjogJ. »°4 mill promptly attend ail professional caßs. Officeatlo H. Smith's Hoteh’d'herß he wfllalwar* ho found fcneept jgf Particular aUentfaa paid ie.th* * •roman *n d childwtt- i : . > Tioga, May 24,18f1(L - / « v- ■■N/fDU BOIS, ■< i !| SOJLICATOIIrOF PATESTB, ;! WASHINGTON, DC; M , 'j. 4 D VICE as to *he patentability fa invention* given : free of charge; Bracings £nm model* «e*iy, executed. Charge* for obtaining patents moderate. , • EEranascKS. , ■ I ; lion. a. A, Srow, pa. ' Hash Touag, Ed. dffOator. ; Hon. O.W, Scran toa, Pa, *t U. EraiUr, Ei^S&*lOc*n.\ « " J I i ; TO (MUSIC* AHS. i ACHOICB LOT of ike host imported fraliaa anp, 0 “".io 1 f Im Viol strings* stringy. Toning fffkq '•ridges 4e.,just received snifor sale at ’ - . ‘.V ; aovs ate* STORK.- _ • - ■:■ r~i\ .• _s " u WKU^»B»ItOHOXEI-, - , raj . X. a. rABB, r*. - WWBKWfc Ae&tuled &aU* Hotel.) ■ ; Having leased this Hoooo,; solicits the patronage of rfhe p«blie. Wia »»»&» and obliging waiters, together wit* «» Rroprtetec’s knowledge of the business, be hopes to make the stay of those who with hia both pleasant and; agreeable. ~-11 . . j Mayffl, 1880. ; , . | , ■ - WATCHES! WATCHES! fTJHE has 4oU fine assortment of heavy;- 1 ENQUSX LEfER HUNTER- CASE ; Gold aud lyJver Wafcbea, I i •rbieh Be will sell Oheapt pthsli “ dirt’* on !. e... sis will »ell\‘ Time RieeeiPdn a short (approved) credit. Jill kinds oT EKPAIKTirer done promptly, j If a r jdb-of work is ndtSonO to.thh satisfaetoon of the party ordering xo icjjairgo w?M he jnpd?‘ j. ' ■.‘‘l- ; Wellsboro, Jurre'W,lB4B. /•' I ; ! ILW. KBXSJB, '1 SADDLE AND .BADNESS. MAKER, \ ' WBtMBOBO. BT.,TIOGA,, PA. . j■; ; TAEBS this method of informing ; citiMpa of, Tioga, and County generally.that betas; ettabltahed himself at Tioga* where hd jnana£ftc-; ' tare and keep on hand for'aale a goodl atobk‘ of 1 Saddler, BridlMi, Heavy-Hamaas, Carriage Harness; of all kinds 4e. ‘-Alio games, Halters, w hips,Traces,! Collars Ao. .AU w«k Warranted. r_'; Repairine doprfßn, short notice. Tioga. Sept. iy. ncll(i|«t,A BULE¥, ~ ] Vl/ Otto, Inform the, public, that having purchased. Tv the Hill propertyrknownM'the '"CtiLvlSit, .MILL," and havid£'-rejiSlfed and .supplied it With' . new bolts and mict|Uiety,'a»e now prepared'to do ' / CUSTOM WORK : V ; ' to Urt entire Eatisfactiou of lU patroOS. '■ With theaid . of.onroaporidoood.roUler, Mr.L.DvMitohel, and the . unsparing effort*. Of -the f proprietors, thyy intend to . beep up an establishment Socondto none in tbe county. 1 h»«h paid for wheat add theh?Ehest market {hi test yen: •- ■ ; - EDW.MoINKOY; ■■ 'UH&U.ISQOAtJ . . JNO, W.BAII‘E'2. v. tiooa BEGBiaroift. : ; /XEOS.GE K.UtMPHREY hae.Opened ; new. XX * ■ : - ■ ,■ TtogaVlUftge, Tioga Comity,‘fai 3 |WwSei*’U prepaid ibdb all fends dt 'WiichL Cfock Mil 3&tbf rspsiu, jjfc lfa **oi*t»iiililrt t*oniiar.':AlF WorkTWiretJSed to, iW# snUrt MUlfaotiw. «- :■.■ •■ j. Pf®«j ji to do v worltbetter than nqy,other man* but we can dt M wad-work m. can D&doito in fee c!Uw or^ewmjra. f Watches Pfated; ' ! yl HCMPHttEYi -■ Pd 7 si«r(i» is, jaeo, Brtm^ITATOR •; i Dffcotpsr tv iff* SPUM&u bftDc sn?e» oc iPmtrdm atrfc Hit Spread oi IDraltDg l&tfprm, . , ‘ t ‘- ' ; ■ *' ■- ■ *'' _! ' M ■ -' 1 ■ ■ ' * ‘ ’ » t , r S d ' ' j 1 * ‘ : v, /: ; J TVHIEB s&A%£| 3® A WRONG UNEIGHTBD/AND UNTIE -.f'uAirff INHUMANITY . TO' HAN” SHALL CEASE, AGITATION MUST CONTINUE, *■ - vol. m AN HOPE AT THE OLD PLAT mOVsd. ’’ i - mAabbt uonvonfi. " •* .' I’i»tib 7 bdo* to-d»^'Jol)D,' '"••• “Bmid»th»old brookstream,- : When wewere boysintheoldeatime, „ ■ When manhood was a dream. • ’Thdhraok is choked With fallen leaves. The pond is dried away— • ■ ’ X-ecaree believe that you would know - J. ’ The dear did place to-day. -i ' Thcschool-honso is nomoro,Johnj .. Beneath our loenet tree,; The wiid’rose by tho. window side, ■ . I?o more wares in the breeso ; •• The scattered stones look desolate. The sod . they rested oh - Has been ploughed np by stranger hands, .. Since yon and I were gone. The ehestnnt tree is dead, John, And what la sadder now— The broken grape-yine of onr, swing, ; Hangs on the withered bough; I read ear names npon’tbe barkj And found the pebbles rare ’ Laid up beneath the hollow side. As s|a bad piled them there. I tookthe old blind road, John,' ' I ■ .That wandered up thehill; . ’Tis darker than it used to be, ’ And'seems so lone and still!, ! The birds sing yet among the bonghs. Where once the sweet grapes hung, But not a voice of human kina . J Whore all our voices rung. I sat me'os the fenee, John, - ' That lies as inoldon time; . The same Half pahnel in the path . _ j Wen set} so oft to climbt— And thought that o'er the hara'of Ufa ' Ourplay mates had passed on, ■ • , And left me fopnting on this spot The faces that are gone. . I From the Atlantic Monthly. THE WHlBiaoiO OP TIME. “ And thus the whirligig of time brings in his vengea.’’—Twblvth Nioht. My friend'Jameson, the lawyer, has freqtu ly whiled away an Evening'in relating incide whiohoccnrred its hie practice daring his p dence in a Western State. ' On one occasion gavea sketch of a criminal trial in which ihs -was employed as counsel; thestory, as devel oped in coart and completed- by one of ' the nar tieseubsequentlyjmade go indelible an impaes eion on .my mind- that -I constrained’ to wjfite down its leadingfeatuhes. .At -the same time, I must eay l 'tbBl,.iif I had. heard If ' without a • voucher for its-authenticity, I shonld have re garded itas the mbst improhableof fictional— jfcut the observing I reade* will remember tljat - remarkable coincidences, and the signal {si umpb of the right} called poetical justice, are fsometitoes seen in actual life as Well as tin .novels. ; . : ■.j • The talemusb begin in Saxony. Carl Proph was an honest: fanner, who tilled -a stnalf tract of-crown land,sndi thereby supported an-aged mother.' faithfultehis duties,, he'had’nove* a thought of discontent, hut was willing to plod on in (ho WOy his father-had 'Went before him. .filial affection, hoWbver, did not so far engross him as to;prevent bis castingadrairing glancjes :Ch' the lovely Katrine, daughter of old Raucbeja, themillcr; and noi wonder, for she was- as fas cinating a damsel as ever daisied and perplexed a bashful lovcr. SW .had admiration enougnj fOTtn.Beeher was to love her j many of the vil lage youngsters bad looted unutterable things as. they met her at and holidays, but up to this’ time she had received no poetical epistles nor direct proposals, and was os ohee fid-aod heart-free as the bircls thatsangaroui her windows., tier father was the,.tradition] guardian of beauty, surly as the mastiff th| watched his each* of flour and hie hoard of th lers; and though he doted oh his darling K trine, bis heart to smthb.-world beside seem l to be only* chip from one.pf,bisold mill-stone When Qari thought of the severe gray eyes th shot such glances stall lingering yguths, tl difficulty of winning the pretty heiress feemi to bequifa enough, evsawith* flaldclear rivals.' But two other, suiters .now made TOneps, 'more crises openly, sad poor Os thooghthimielf entirely overshadowed.. Oj was iSohpnfieid, the most considerable farmer the neighborhood, a widower, with hair begil ning to shpw threads of,' silver, and a fieri man withal, who’was. supposed to have one slain si rival, wearing thereafter a seam in hj cheek.*s'a souvenir of the encounter.. Tie ether was Hans Ktolsen, a past thus a ghrevri, welhto-do fellow, with nearly (a thousand thalers saved from his earnings. - Cafl had never fought'a duel—and he had nk saved so maefa.u a thousand to say nothing of thalers; he bad only a manly fig ure, a cheery, open,face, the freshness of onp ; and-twenty, tad. aheart. incapable of, guile.-|- Katrine was, hot long jh ; discovering these ex cellencies, anil, if.hia boldness had equalled, h|s passion.,-she would have sjho.wn, hinj how little, shehsteerae J the pre’iensjoMol 1 the'proudlaßf holder orthe miserly,carpentaf. Eu44re took it fdr^anted 'fharW r was-;a fool to contend : agains£ such hdds, and, buttoning hi* jacket tightly oWhis-throb,hipg heart, toiled away.m his Tittle fields, thinking thpt ,the whole world had hever eontained so miserable a man.’ ; j. : , Haas, S token, was the .first .to.propose.,, He began; by paying court to the jealous Baoehcjn himself, sfit fo^.hik- property and and askedato become bis son-in-law. The ,mil ler heard him, puffed long -whiffs, and anaWerdd civilly,:but; wifhontf committing himself. He -Wasin nohurry topartwith the only joy he bad, ; and, V» barely .eighteen',-he tmto t»iiy thought there; would J» ; tiroe' ienoagjb to considet of. he* ipwmge, hereafter.. i Hans hardly expkted. anything .moto decisive, atm, ,ae ho. had ...not been -flatly, refused, came frf iquepUy lQ;the;henBe,)M»d olmtted er, while his eyes,,folfowedvthe.Vivacious K&r rino as shetoippstLtoQßtiier-household dutiey. -Blit Hansjwas perpetually kept fttV.distebcel; the butntning-hird wonld pevet 'alightnpon the out-stretched band, ■Ho had,not the wit to see that their natures '-had; nothing in common, at thiongb he did not, Katrine WBBiui terly indifferent towards him, and after eomjp months of hopelaaa.pqrsnitJbe began to grow ’Sullenly angry,, He-was-pbl Ipng mthoift an ,n]^e^np > yh;ifth,toveut,,S)B J sase»;-.,i j. One evening, as Katrine was returuiug-.homd ward, she "ba"p»d fo-pfyta tlarl’a cottage. Cam . WQS-loitenng,nndoT- a tree hard by,/fistening to j kept titpi fC' : ■.*-» WELIjSBORO, TIOGA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 19, 1860. It was, tlie oomingof ,Fate to him, for be had made op his mind to tell her of the ' love that was consuming him.’ Two' days before, 'With tears on his. bashful face, ho, had confided Jail to his mother; and,jat her suggestion, he had nowprovideda little present by way of intro duction. Katrine smiled sweetly as. she ap proached, for, with a woman’s quick eye, she had read his glances; long before. .His lips bad •first rebelled, but he’stfuggled out d salotation, and, the ice once broken, be found, himself strangely unembarrassed. •He breathed freely. It seemed to him that their relations must hare been fixed in some previous state of existence; so natural was it to be in familiar and aim ist affectionate communication with the woman whom before he bad loved afar off, as aptge might sigh for a queen. ; “ Stay, Katrine,” he said,—" I had newly forgotten.” He ran hastily into the cottage, and soon returned with a covered basket. “ She, Katrine, these white rabbits I—are they not pretty?” ; j ' “ Oh, the little petal” exclaimed Katrine.— “ Are they yours ?” , i . , . “ No, Katrinchen,—that is, they were mine; now they ore yonrs;” J? “ Thank yon, Carl. 11 shall love themdearlj “Forimy sake!” |, .“ For their own, Carl, certainly; for yot ra also, —a little.” “Good-bye, Bunny,” said he, patting the bead of one of the rabbits. “ Love yonr mis tress ; and, mind, little whitey, don’t keep those long ears of yonrs for nothing; tell me if ym ever hear anything about me." “Perhaps Carl had better come and bear for himself, —don’t ytjn think so. Bunny 1” said Katrine, taking the basket. The tone and' manner said more than the words. Carl’s pulses bounded; he seized her unresisting hand and covered it with kisses— “ Sol this is'the bashful young man.!” thought Katrine. “I shall not need to encourage him any mote, surely.’'- The night was coming on; Katrine remem bered her father, and started towards the mill, whose broad arms coaid scarcely be seen thro’ the twilight. Carl accompanied her to the gate, and, after a furtive glance upward to the bonse windows, bade her 'farewell, with a kiss, and turned homeward, feeling himself a man ■ for the drat time, in his life. Fran Prooh had seenthe pantomime through the flower* that stood ,on the window-sill, cot ill-pleased, and was waiting ber sbn's return. An hour passed, and he. did. not comeanother hour, and she began tb' groW ansionh. ’When it was near midnight,' she 'roused her rieaftfst -neighbor and asked him to go towards'the mill 'and look for Carl. -Airi-hour'of terrible Sus pense ensiiedi It was! worse than she hsd'eyen feared. - Carl lay by the roadside, ; not'far from! the thill, Insensible, covered with blood,-moan ing feebly al first; and!afterwards silent; if-hot breathless. Ghastly wounds covered his head, and his arms'and shoulders were' livid with; -bruises. The neighboring-peasants surrounded the apparently lifeless body, and listened.with awe ,to the frenziedimprecaUons of, Frau Proch upon the murderer,of-her tson., “May he die in a foreign land,” said she, .lifting -her wint ered bands to Heaven, 1“ without wife. tc>. nnrss him orpriest to.speakjpeaceto-his soul 1 May his.body lie unburied, a prey for veolves and vultures I, May bis inheritance pass into the hands of strangers, .and his narae perish from earth 1" They mattered their prayers, as they epcoimtered her bloodshot, but tearless ayes, and left ,her'with her son. , - -For a whole day and night he did not speak; then a violent brain fever set in, and he raved continually. He'fancied, himself pursued, by Hans Stoken, and recoiled, as from tbs blows of his.staff. When'-this was reported, suspic ion' was directed at -once to Stoben as the crim inal,; bat before, an arrest itould be made, it was. found that he had fled. Hie disappearance confirmed the belief, of bis,guilt.: In truth, it was the rejected suitor, who, in a fit of jealous tage, hod waylaid hia rival in the dark, beat him, and left him for dead. ' Katrine,' who had always:disliked Stoben, es pecially after he bad pursued her with bis coarse and awlsward gallantpy, now; naturally felt a warmer affection for the victim of bis brutality. She threw off all disguise, and went frequently to Frau Prooh’g cottage, to aid -in nursing the invalid daring hie slow and painful recovery. She had, one day, the unspeakable pleasure of catching tkc first gleam of returning sanity in her hapfess lover, as sbebent overturn and with gentle fingers smoothed-his knotted forehead and temples. An insoluble tie now bound them together; their mutual love was consecrated by suffering and sacrifice; and they vowed to be 'faithful inlife and In death, ... t 1 ne When and passed same time -at his.honse. ft .wap perlisps only a coincidence fcnt it struck the neighbors ,aa yery pdd ■ at least, ;thait Carl :'Ptpoh;was the. firs t.pjan drawn'for thearpjy. ’ He hadnomopey to hirengubstitute, and; there yraa;no tittsnwtfye,';: lw..aw> jwrjte~ ; hlp. three .years. ; la»tblotv was.toanmoh for bis poor jnother-i • Worn ,tJown ; by pen constant assiduityin nutting himiinpd •ovotoqnie-by thß. sense of utter desolation,.she sunk,,into her grave, and was buried on tbs very da/ that Carl, with the other recruits, was marched off. What new torture the betrothed Katrine felt is' hot to be told. Three years were to her an eternity; and her imagination called op such visions of danger from wounds, privations, and disease, that she parted from her lover as though it were forever. ■ The miller found that the light and the melody of tig boose were gone., Kat rine was silent and sorrowful; her frame wast ed and her etep grew -feeble. To all his Coffers of condolence she made no reply, except to re mind him bow with tears she had besongbt bis interference in Carl’s behalf. She would not be comforted. The father little knew the feel ing she. possessed; he had thought that her at tachment to her rustic lover was only a girlish fancy, and that she would speedily forget him; but how her despairing.look frightened him.— To the neighbors, who looked inquisitively as he sat by the .mill-door, smoking, he complained of the of bis tobacco, vowing that it made bis eyes so tender that they watered upon the slightest whiff. For six months Schonfeld wisely kept away; that period, he thought, would be long enough to efface any recollection of the absent soldier. Then be presented himself, and, in his usual im perious way, offered bis hand to Katrine. The miller was inclined to favor his suit. In wealth and position Schonfeld was first in the village; he would be a powerful ally, and a very disa greeable enemy. In fact, Baoohen really feared to refuse tbe demand; and be plied his daugh ter with such argument es he could command, hoping to move her to accept, the offer. Kat rine, however, was convinced of the truth of her former suspicion, that Carl was a victim of 1 Schonfeld’s craft; and her rejection of his pro posal was pointed with an indignation which she toqk no pains to conceal. The old scar showed strangely white in his purple face,'as he left the mill, vowing. vengeance for the. affront Rauchen ; and his daughter were now more solitary than ever. The father had forgotten the-roaring stories he used to tell to. the neigh boring peasants, pyer foaming flagons of qle, at the little inn; he sat at his mill-door and smoked incessantly. Katrine,shunned the festivities in which she was once queen, and her manner, though kindly, wag silent and reserved; she went to church, it is true, but she wore a look of settled sorrow that awed curiosity and even repelled sympathy. But scandal is a plant that needs no roof in the earth ; like the houseleek, it can thrive upon air; and those who separate themselves the most entirely from the world are apt, for the.very reason,; to receive the larger share of its attention. The village girls looked first With pity, then with wonder,-and at length : Whh aversion, upon the gentle and Unfortrinafe .Katrina, ■ Careless as she was with regard to. public opinio’n. slie saw not witbout pain the al tered. lacks of her old associates, and before she came to know the cause. A cruel suspicion had been whispered about, touching her in abost. tender point It was not without reason, so the gossip ran, that she had-refused so eligible an offer of marriage as Schonfeld’-s. The qtory. reached the .ears of Rauchen, at last With a fierce energy, such as he had never exhibited before, he tracked it : frqtri cot tage, to! cottage, until he came to Schonfeld's housekeeper, who refused to give faeroothority. ! The nett-market-day Rauchen encountered.the former suitor and publicly charged him with the ' slander, in such terms as his baseness deserved. Scbonfold, thrown off his guard by the sadden iattaok,.struck bjs adversary a heavy blow; but the miller rushed upon him, and left him to be parried homo, a bundle of aches and braises,— After this the tongues of the gossips wore quiet; no one was willing to answer for guesses or ru mors at the end of Rauchen's staff; and the father and daughter resumed their monotonous mode of life. ■ The three years at length passed and Carl Proch returned home, —a trifle more sedate,' perhaps, but the same noble, manly, fellow.— How warmly he was received by the constant Katrine is not , necessary ,to relate. Raiichen was not disposed to thwart' his long-suffering daughter any further; and with his consent the young couple .Were" speedily married, and lived in bis bouse. The gayety of former years came back; cheerful songs and merry laughter were heard in the lately silent rooms. Bauehen himself grew younger, especially after the birth of a grandson, and often resumed his old place at the inn, telling the old stories with the old gusto, over the over-welcome ale. But one morn ing, not long -after, he was found dead in his bed; a smile was on his face, and his limbs were stretched out as in peaceful repose. ‘There was no longer any tie to bind Carl to his native village. All bis kin, as well as Kat l vino’s, vyere in the grave. He was not bred-a millet, and did hot .feel competent to manage the mill. Besides, his mind had received' new ideas while he was. in the army. He had heard of countries'where men were equal before laws, where the peasant owed no allegiance but to so ciety. The germ of liberty bad been planted in his breast, and he could no longer live content ed with therank in which he had been born. At. least be wished thathia children might grow up free from the chilling influences - that had fallen upon" him. At his earnest persuasion, Katrine consented that the mill should be sold; and soon after,; with bis wife and child, ho went to Bremen and embarked for America. * *, '*' ' * ♦' ■ * We must now follow the absconding Stolzen, ■ who, witb his bagof thalers, had made good bis escape into. England. He lived in London, where he found ,society among his countrymen. His habitual shrewdness. never deserted him, ■and from small beginnings he gradually mossed a moderate fortune. His first experiment in proposing for a wife satisfied him, but in a great city his sensual nature was. fully developed.— i His* brutal’ passions were unchecked; . con science seemed to have left him" utterly. At length be began to think about quitting London. ,He was afraid'to f return to Germany, for, os he had 10ft Carl to all appearance dead. ho thought i the offleerref the law would seize him. He de ; terminedito’goto Australia, arid secured a berth in -a clipper ship bound for Melbourne, but eoma aopidept prevented his reaching the pier in ?cfvwtr,; ( thg ve?sel sailed without him, and was rievorheard of afterwards., -Thou bo-pro- posed to buy on; estate in'Canada; but the owner failed to make bis appearance at the time appointed for the'negotiation, and the bar gain was not completed. At last he took pas sage for New York, whither a Hebrew acquaint ance of his bad gone, a year or two before, and was established Us a broker. Upon arriving in that city, Stolzen purchased of an agent a tract of land in la Western State, situated on the shore of Lake| Michigan; and after reserv ing a sum of money for immediate purposes, be deposited his funds with his friend the bro ker, and started jwestward. He traveled the usual route by rail, then a short distance in a mail-coach, which; carried him within six miles of his farm. Leaving his luggage to be sent for, he started to walk the remaining distance. It was a sultry day, and the prairie; road was anything but pleasant to a pedestrian unaccus tomed.-to heat and dust. After walking less than an hoar, be determined to stop at a small house near, the road, for rest, and some water to quench bia. thifst; bat as he approached, the baying honndis, no lew than' the squalid children aboutthe door, repelled him; and he went on to the next house. He now’ turned down a green laocj between two raws of thrifty trees, to a neaflog-cabin. whose nicely-plastered walls and the regular fence inclosing it testi fied to the thrift a|id good taste of the owner. He knocked; all was still. Again, and thirsty as he was, he wds on the point of leaving, when he heard a slop within. He waited; the door opened, and bjefora him stood Katrine! ( She did not knoW him; but ha had' not for gotten that voluptuous figure nor those melting blue eyes. He preferred his requests, looking through the doorway at the same time to make sate that she had no protector. Katrine brough t the Stranger a gould of water, and offered, him a chair. She did hot see the baleful eyes be threw after her as bbe went about her house hold duties. Stolzbn bad dropped from her fir mament like a fallen and forgotten star. Se cure In her unsuspecting innocence, she chir ruped to her baby knd. resumed her sewing. That evening, when Carl. Procb returned from his field, afte* bis usual bard day’s labor,- •he found his wife on the flooh, sobbing, speech less, and the' child, unnoticed, crying in his cra dle. I|is dog sat by the hearth with a look of almost Intelligent sympathy, and whined ns his master entered the room. He raised Katrine and held her in bis arms like a child, covered her face frith kisses, and implored her to speak. She seemd to hie in ja fearful dream, and shrunk from some imagined danger in'the extremes! terror. Gradually 1 her sobs became less fra l quent, her tremors ceased, and‘she smiled upon the manly ■ face that met' hers, as though she had dnly suffered from an imaginary fright— But .when she felt Iter.hair -floating upon her shoulders, saw-the |llmost speaking face of the dog, Bruno,, and became conscious of the cries of the neglected child, the wave of agony swept over, her again, an0f , Advertisements not having thentunber of tascrthmf desired markcdnpon them, will be published until or dered'oot and charged accordingly. . ' Potters, Handhilltf-BiU-Heodi, better-Hoads andtl( kinds of Jobbing'done, (n country establishments, bi touted neatly and promptly. Justices’, Constable'll and other BLANKS constantly on hand, .. NO, 7. If qow the Hebrew bad followed the ezialtonis, after themanner of hi* racein ancient times, itmight have fared badly with, poor CarL Bu( aa soon as the broker waa satisfied beyond a peradventure thattbe depositor eras actually dead, he.hostened book to New York, joyful ng a crow over a nawly-fband' carcass, to, admin, iater upon the estate} leaving the law to take its own course with fegard to the murderer. Beyond thefaots justmentioned aa impfica ting Carl, .nothing Was -proved at the trial.- Jameson, 1 the lawyer, whom I mentioned at the beginning of this Btorjr,w*s engaged for the do fence. He found CarLsingalarly onoommunca. live; and though the government failed to make oat a shadow of a case against hia client, be waa jet puzzled in bis own mind by Carl’s silence, and bis real or assumed indifference. Katrine was in court with her child in her arms, watch ing the procedeings with the closest attention; though she, as well as Carl, was unable to an, demand any but the moat familiar and collo. - quill English. The] case was speedily decided; the few foots presented itp'tha jury appeared to have no, necessary Connection, and there waa noknown motive forthe deed. The jury unani. mously acquitted Carl, and with his wife and boy he left the couijt-xoom. The verdict .was approved by the spectators, for no roan lin the neighborhood was more universally loved and respected than Carl Proch, ; Having paid Jameson his fee for bis services, Carl wag about to depart, when the lower’s on, riosity could ha restrained no longer, and be called bis client back to the private room of his office. ' 1 j , , ’ | “Carl,” said be, ’,‘you look like a good fallow*, above anything mi|anj or wicked;.but yet I don’t ktfow wbat toniake of yon. 'Now you are entirely through with this scrape; you are ac quitted ; and I wsntjtoknow wbat,is the mann ing of it fall. I will, keep it secret from 111 your neighbors.. Bid yon kill StoUen, or not?" “TFell; if I did,’’ he answered; ,“oan they do any thing with me . “No,” said Jameson. “Not, if I acknowledge ?” , “No. you have been acquitted by % jury; and by our law a mancaki never be tried twice for the same offence. are safe, area if yoa should go into court {and confess the deed.” “Well, then, I.did kill him,-—and I would againJ” ; j . , i For the moment, ’a fierce light gleamed upon the calmand kindly face. Then, feeling that, hie answer would give a false view of the without the previous history of parties, Carl.sat down and in his .brdkcs English told to his lsw> yer the story I have her attempted to record. It was impossible to'doubt a word of it; for the aimplicity and pathos of the narrative were above all 1 art,, Sere was a simple. case, which the boldostinvsntor pfsohemes.to punish vil lainy would have been afraid to use. Its truth is the thing that moat sUrtles. the mind accus tomed to dgnl witb fictions. , ... We leaye Carl'to return, .tp. hiafarm with his wife. fqr- .Vbom He bad suffered., so much,' and with the hope that no further .temptation may come to him in such a goisO.aa makp murder a virtue, ; - ,tllESpar Ot THE AtrQK4N,SIABL*.—Ac«)r -dingte fabulous history.tbere, was a king qf Elis. earned Aogeap, who was famed for basing . three.-the pjsand .cattle in bis, stable, thelatter not basing been cleaned mthirtyyeara. Her cules'was desired away theaccumula ted filth.in one day, and. if hesucceeded be was to receive, as' a recompense, the tenth part of the cattle! .The task was performed by siraply turning the rjyer-Alpbeua,or, aa.some say, the Peheus, by which the accumulated. filth of 000 cattle for thirty yesrs.was harried, . T|p king refused to'fulfiU his promise, alleging th|t Hercules bad neither labor .nor trouble, -and that he need some artifice f and he even ,batj isbed frnmVis kingdom bis ownson,Phjiess, because hesupporteji the-claims of flaroules, whereupon a .war,joommenced,and Hercules oTer-ran Etis, pat Hm (king to deaths recalled the exiled son, and'piaced him on the throne. Of the. Victoria, bridge a writer saysTJwo mournful objects attend one’s sight-at the ap proach. These are fia great, stone raised by the workmen to thememory o| .the many, the very many, who died in the' conk traction of the bridge, add the far greaternuchber who. at that spot perished, by pestilence. -The other, is the simple record of two names on the frame of tbe bridge—George Stephenson and A. ,M. Ross, the! Architects; the,former lies in West minster Abbey,.the latter feels the terrible re sult of an overworn! mind, failing in its, deli cate balance under the weight °f suoVcares " and responsibilities ;as attended .’this, conquest of art over a fierce river. -!' { , Very Pressing.—A young girl who had lim come tired C-of-single ble'ssedneis L wrote to.hor true swaip'fts foltbwE; ■ . ; ” ... “Dear.pira/oum rite off, ef you air cum mi a at awl.. Ed Codings tBh.>ll hev him,! & kisses. me, so hoptinetallyi.that ’I kan r t hold out’ mutch longer,.butwill.hcv 2 'ba?e In. f • . ■ .. ’ / Betzy.” ; The “Ijough-Faidea”,still jireßisfin speakjng of the Republicans aa a “SBctipn|il" party.— And yet-it is a fact, officially. Recorded, that Lincoln received eighteen more void from South ern Slates than were cast for Douglas ] .Which, then, i‘a the “Sectional” party, and which- tbs “Sectional” nominee ? ‘ A SiMeih Behedy,—A, friend informs ns ♦hat by sprinkling a little, nnslacked lime over potatoes, when they Are inclined .wUl stop the progress of, the rotcomplotely. * Ho says he has tried.the experiment .Avery year for eight,ortep years, and 1 it has, never, failed. A small family, may he 1 mathemati pally de fined, as that into which “twooahgopnco .wi,th nothing to carry ' .1V ... . .. , Thpsa beings are, only fit .for .solitude. vim like mobody, are like nobody. and ar'o by nobody. { .’ I .•Fast wop, like fast river?, are genersylly ebal low, - : ■ 'I .. ,