‘l,OA\ ITBLISITER4S. MEIN tli Elm )BS ER VER. i ,A 'T RD i 1 L 1 • I h " ♦ l‘ I ) "I . M• OOOK L, Ilt fi I. .0110 ‘N. OMB .• ' .04, • liar :•.: th• • •• .4n •u yrup , •i obc.r .• I 1,1.11,'", 'k KU oarn 11 lal,o • • ya•. 41...2 4 PLO aqu•tt 4 •,• It Rai OEM ES , mar at • .nnoUln, I .01. • , • t 0 taw l A ,. • • 1•• ,• •„4 17111,1, wr am i i Dot. la rnt. I !tto. ^ Fire r.,r Ts , an . rner n,... • ' p oth , r. r. f..pc .LA 101.1wo . n .., osj:wr, . Lir 414. t-r the rliarp- • • kg pit • wad t •- roc.. • otrt 71 , •-• .to lb. Ir:tt t 1 *woe* ..• Pll - 1 - 11•!1 • ! • An4i.lit ',oar d , • It .1 ho'f• • . ,' • •, t t,•11, •1, k ~i" USINESS DIRECTORY HU Nt 1.1 11ULIti • I. %EDH 41T111 A II ti h NYORT r 1 oft, , • in 11 ..gur 1ik.1.1 1 1 S Dll • .t 1.41. a 411', • I 4. •A• P • , ... . • •, It •-„ W •a -; k Pr. . • Yr • 4 Tri e r,l.• . 4 • P.rht • .ir , P J 0.4 r, • .1-• • . •t arvi U. won r, awl a to I seda cx•uslaurlf M 1.1,01. Mrs-... • s . . • vet) 1%11,4.1 t I• .••• •••:11 , 11 • •• AU: '• - •• v • (••••,..• •• • `l.a • c r• •f, 1-1 , THD t 11001tH 1 , 1 , •••1 11 , I I= lit'l 141 !•1.14t -• • .• \ AIL., Erie, Pa .L. ..T VIII: A, I'l.l NI., t IC) irt .\ I. •La t t a o n *ll ' t I {* - , Min Die. .1. 1.. 11 1 HT. l'lr •Ir of., ,teA at ^ts •• diemitte atm. Lti • tr•••• 84 mei . B. HI 1., ri v T 1111111.... II %I S. ( 0 =I %I 11v I L I. tik. th.. , • • I. nl th , • A lh • t ••• 11I1.LIA11 11 ILLINI., .1 , 11 LI, T....CI:IntI:TT 61. ( 0 IN ( lIENI 4 .S Ct11:11E1. • .r 7'l I . n•• Wln %%ILL( tl ( . 1V 1.1t1f1.). • • . .0 / Zl. • . r. u,' 4.• • \ . Lt•re.t Fr.. vR ta/.. II 110 , • •.• • al, • • ~,C.at,; 11.1.F.N \. I HAIL. F. 11. %BELL . If h ll= IMEN11:1 . n•-• UR it 1.. 111.1tR0N, •• • , • , I ,Do. 4/3.• THU r , , 4 , 11 • ' if l / 1 1•Eit... 4.11 t.., aad b.. ..u., 6 It e, 1. la.. (..f ,r. L.ou , corUf LIA wa =OM 121ILIT 4, a a. 1 it A •...1 Dr, + -• %% ./. •• ' % ADS, . r L., LIDO' LI , ItEPI , Lit, -T.1171. H 11-n, T - .•h, \ 71. T. a El= %% /ELI% II -. I.l\l =NM f 0., •• T. 111-At/04N i•Tt %UT. •.• wtr. et, f 111 ul 0 114.1, E.ar. of the 115 Ifi FtEll, 11. J 1111ECKI, L k . }. HOOT /I STEM • a. • IL 'a 1.4 m ^ n iC 71ro. l•I iti:Gr H. ( UTI.EN %UT I IL & Wel/THEM, • • • to Veditlue.. hunt.. If ouor., bnr•, JOIIN ••%%}.ENI • 11ZB JOIIN I►E(lt\ ei: in I VlntPt, •••• ' I akr - ••"‘M•tr., Pi/ J. 33 . Ulll (.I.l$P . . . « .0« .$ 11.1,104 I.«ti., Park Rut :11. a , no.t Lyle, 33 ARK"( hl.k. & THO PI•O‘ W. ' , -4..••••• r 4 st.io: both -0 its ( • AL t ui",.l. ka.t J. MORTON. r. .~.. tl. -~Lu.. ~ubl ~~;..~ 1• • R. WIt111:1IT A 111 " "a•l , t• •nt ; • . " .• TT T. N. 111. JIKE. IL•alar In I o-.Forn and • n-aora. qatrons, I. 11104 laaaelk .• \I • 111061, 4 606 r slt. £m, • •1,,t, /{4•••.% 1•. W. lIE A kW, r ..nan.oon's 11, , ,Latorr, Park ME _ - . 10 1). B. IIeCREARY, '=4"l' •IO ‘IALLOA AT 4.,* um.. ennw of Q tats "4 0,,, , st...a.r. It tnaclaare Drag otort . JANIS C. ,LIRIMEIALL!., '4•• • -011 ( 4 ) ap - geatrs to Timmil3 l l/%111 , 04#011. .13 lisks, . ERIE - - WEEKLY 7013 SERVER Ali 1.011 & %LNG BANdeltS ',al AXCHANAR IlltO/VER I, ( j amitt f. •.. " iwrne. %Cu New Vrk With:Word, Pe , r ~,,,,, dub C. J. Sllrt.oll . _ ______ . W. CASUALLA l' , kli4 1 ,TI K' ,‘ . It 1 -.. tett& and rilitet, LITOTI DIIIIIIIT, rltlkaskal k ad :tokama anon his 'wriest to the pablk. He will I. ...1., 1 Ikt the sit, ~ . - 4 4.t ...ohm! Lauding, where ha will be lad t.., 4, ~, the two Blood Hons lo the twt4 W. C. , Ert , ‘l,-• I TJ, I. e. 46 It, la T. W. MOORE, r) A gar .n t.ineeters, Urovtalons, Prertuoa, Pork Fish Soh. Gists, F : : I Ll'• 't% uo.len, Wino." and -ions Mari, to rtn• I ask N., 7, *sae street, opposite Etroiren Sokol. Erie. J. C. tiCALLPTLILIS, PHory - TR.rn:, Miller and dealer In Daguerreotype, Arebrotypo it,, Piautoogrialbe ilatieriela 01 every deeeriptise. :IVA* streak An • n•. IT, t I, Frt., Pa. . Lt. Lt ',Latiotrere, IlouthlJ 1 1 / 1 41.dultd, chap Publics • 1 h.. -hen Vnair, Newmpaprra, 001 d Pun, Pocipot Clatiatv, ke F.:at door %tat of the Baked llowie, LA* 1111111 FZIZi P•013111$ OF Pierce's Snper'r Percussion Matches, TEN (IF WHICH ARE THIS DAY RECIIVIrD! rp - Te. next Week, sod so en, Rijn Mann's Piano Forte Agency and Depot, sign of Tilh. 611: FIDDLZ:4II3 A 111.1N1: '.h hsr I.II , ARIALAV, GRAY k t celebrated c 4 11P4 V P/A.V0 , 1, with the new PA TTMT coitßvoi ri li : , 01,ALII.Vi BOARD, which took the 911R,VT PALM/UN "1. n Ili Plano. only received the TR7RD premium. rircrh.,....t sod hiereseing danisod toe times isetrinsechiros d. r tur the aisauflicturore to All their orders, notwtth.tandlna the Immensequantities they furnith, vandte rid fir 114. laza I • rodeo/ilk/wiener/row 10 to 00 pis mot. le elfad a ash. Li r --,„. .t.,ch way th. wind biews At liana's Ware innntr. ma. 10. fund s LARCH{ B . rocx tit^ vAluors MAXIS, leaf an uawartmant wf traa.) au esioctsst by the best judirs al, at/. rir Ifs. Lug just • I....ntrsct r.r 100 lANO ROMS at t xtrsordinsre nst.4.l ass pupated to furnish Ulm on taros So, Itt any ca., Call sad caw. March 29. PARKER, GRAY & DAVIS, REAL ESTATE BROKERS; LAND, LW& 1.4. /Malt fc DOYLE, I P,YRSt er GRAY • l , .►.ws iu Eselasags, Lad Assay, and Rost Kar►4 \ : ANT ACE Vr9, BROXER ,, , Clinton, Lyems,.... . lowa, r.,•(,• ,IG .... r. 1,%%1.... Art n•Ret , at Lay end Notirry Palau., %Wilt , I • I r ERI and M 110. i 11. L. R. bmond, 1.80. 114.441vi1.: Hue 11 Tr • an: ',mu., 13 , ,,tbert,.11, Waterfnrd, I.r ;• 1 • r , ; am. I.land, Iy4 MERCHANTS' INSURANCE COMPANY 12, Ib.rch a nu' Exchi, vs, Phitadett4 GENIC • . Authorised Capital, $400,000. Amount Se curely Invested, $200,000. =I I t -• •,, •• 'ho I er,,tileture of Huns, 'vault, under 11 7;:o ' . 1, 1 1 :rt ' s, '" :1 " Rt... take° a, rat ,, , Litt, Jobt, YuDmnll, J r Bey. L. Wool•kba• in t. , doetir..alort, k. k Witmer. Jolt L Massieeil, Om.. w. W•failioM, , ~. ,A LI. )4 Plummy, Jon. M HaY, il J. 11.11••••• • Hiram lalliar. Clue.B. Wright, ,111 I. rAiltr.... Wm. H. A 11.3. AMOR H. Day. i i Nl ITNIER, % ire ?mat. WY I PETTIT. Prost- DAN ILI. S. Fri) . .. S.e.ret. , . , '• , - :r -49 G. A. HENN ETT, Agent Eno, Pt. J. J. LINTS INSURANCE AGENT. R EPRESENTING tt. , IN; reliable Compaatea, Tit .f IN• I I..4\CE COMP4.YY. , if Hart' rd, 1-(4111 • ca pi tal $ 300 . 000 0/..WO.ii WEALTH I !kJ. \L WI Ri.vi LYS URA,NCE CO., Harr siiitra„ Penra , - • Capital $300,000. PL.% ! l LVAXIA lIRL A.NO MARINE LYS L'RA XCE CO., t • - ...Catital $504,0 00. 14... • • ti.• s. I BM I= I " ( , 1111 • - - Capital $140,000 • e •a h to u.r lcumrsol I.l.li 4 pettnit I I(- ki : I T. K. BLAKE, UOLE.s'ALE a• RETAIL MILLINER, . a kt' -T ATI sTRCT, PA. , rhi I. 16/.• /St returoto !roam Vooton and Xv•r•Y.,rt I wi•h tho *V AL of Matti:um, wood. that b.. lase • , In p.a.•-• B It ETI4 • , - En,7llsa, Coborg, Nrap..ll.l n 'ld A en 014411 r4lWir. HILDHENS' HATE AND JOCZEI r , Rutland, Lace, Pearl, wad Leacy Bloomer •tlapeg A few French Pattern Bonnets as they War. imported. &Lid LALIFI.I Bonnet. In grwkt. canal% villa. Levu, Crapes. bogie? •Dreao Cops Mi- An 1h .1 1nt.... Mew!. Ls," Eeshrot r ierua r , )irti.. ways, Ratites,AL./war Alrowis, Scoop Sias, rieeiika, n , .1.1151y oar , /nada of roods. too .morass to ocoolsoo, 711 la H , LF.SALZ. OR RETAIL FOR CASH ONLY thi cities, Gad at Use 1ir .4.1 11340 LI fAllt 11.(1/1. lee the first eviertlithe at their /084 WU! 'so% log a.rared the oon•imPa of some beat Boataa wilittosca, I dater tayealt that Ei •ry ift mmie to please my w antennas Patrons crownt.". .Tth the t.tmoat sucoses. 123 E propretor. thankful for part Siren., bores that with the wa n at factlltira he La. and ..tort attention to but ma to r.•-.t s r , ntinn.d .hare of patronago T k. BJUb, Propriotor Milliner. from all quarters will he supplied with *very had of noel, Goats, ?wises; and Pattern flats, at wholesale prime lb.- Bleaching and Proofing depariment le motet the super ten den , f Mr Albert A Blake, torn our nf tb• largest nranalhe ., h"r.e. in Maasachuortta His work needs but a trial to M. . ' l 7 lrell hti' Orli= li tiog sod Presallig, 3 41111Ulauss. A H.V • ti t Tait of to 111,'Inere. ...• U w i. 41. rnrm Or mewl-Ana*/ I -., March 211, 1434 fk4g— Erie & Meadville iNg%g EX PRESS X. TRANSPORTATION CO r the mamayement of the P7ata Rota Co.) Daily Lines from Erie toElLeam Edinboro, Kleoknerville, Saagerstown k Meadville. nue Maica. • 1,-ode, • V...e•ale I.N ti at Erie witb the Amargosa Eastern, ,•t,rn end Southern Express, will attend to the eel „ non I , f Drafts, notes and &coolants. Haab Warm baa a :•ate lac f u ecantapaniod by a Messenger. 0 D SPAT/TED. Supt. L. La at.s.% a, Art.. Erie, A. M. Dammam, Moadatla. January, 26, 15.6. 97 EMMEI 0• :• :I il•` •- .. t I low-L 4toe Catches Ime lima pat on f ~:ta-d tot m above and intetweediabe placer. Peamen ,,re mud tam the most direct roots or mast of the town, La rmelord, Mercer, Butler and LAWTON* eseadss. Stages will leave ht • In Girard du, , e_toeplanf Bandaya, it See P. Y., oa ,m. as of tb• Ciprees Tram from the - east Fete to New Crude only tr, Wr•At rim/wino f 2 lt —Foeoerteera ma,t as pan to Inquire at Girard Depot for Cee•A•• is It rsdrilit a eel IVRIGRT, BATTLES It NA.BIE, Proprietors Girard Stan* Co. I= WILLIANS AND ()DION'S Ad dr io t L uLD BLACK STAR K OF PACKET*. . - • r.l Sr! AGE from spy part of Groat Omits and -11 111 I r =7 v !:11Tll: 7iWl ot ttZtl%:l t=ri New York every ip rate. teat in4got eat ships: -tripe Tonnage Ships Tonnage AustrNtift. 11100 North America. Man trdn,a. lien Owego. 14 00 i'onitierer. 1000 Ohio. Me ileo,ti'hitit,ii, 1600 Robert Retie, I/00 Lawry, i.e. 11110 deratomiL 1100 f•oy ManucrJrig. 1000 Southampton. IMM (,eoree IVe•hlnyton. 1010 TheOndetoll. 14i /aeon A IVrtterrelL I'M l'nlinerlim 1700 Irrne. lienil Vaafuard, 1600 Mow , Brlight, 1300 William A Harbeek. 1900 ii,,lflllfl. 1400 Thornton. /kW Niaf .0 icrn. 1100 New Ship, 1000 rhe .1 , ,,1.. of th!* Line are the largest and reirleet In tlliti INI ti. i 111 1r attotriliiodAlloll fiCK parwengere are trammeled. And in. If rwirot) and punctuality of their (Miniature Meer ad v 3 noi2r, to ,he rin 'grant rot so be bad by ay suet Line GI Packets time b pawiesmrs as decline C01111•Ip Mat the EDON, I ate lon thew will be promptly retemied without &Mount. 710 eert.demeol ' , mileage will be Muted for children under li )11n , of all anteing accompanied by an adeit who mile be paid tor ore Ile mi tor certificate. lan.. ,- .Irttrour of bevies filmic (monde breesat oil Arne dery Britian raid Ireland, by lie Meek OW Lime of rackets. can 11 , . re ha se I ir kris at my t IMMO (want) aeretheo mars le teem li.it ,t ,;,,tir li all4i good i rrat meet for which the above Iblos are OlOttC, lifllltr , of .0 I and ups/144m 1311,)11ritale,Irt and and G moot%l -mat be procured at this OW* the paynieet of which ii au .. ranteed without diircount la the overeat Baal of the per 1 1 ..a either to the .hove mimed Cannttlea. RICIIA RD Welt FIJI, Afoot Corner of FOWL" and Mime arena. Brie Sept.**. toil. lit. IT•rat• b 11 Eureka! What have you Fogad ! rprte nF , rt it opleadod so . pere esecirtoust of Goode J eb b e adt t° eA l t jthi r : t 9, Drawee i la tee .ten busy oripitut ""! jl / 1 4rgadag Lyn+ OA 961 MX % rISS. e . a flit Lon.t Inahionia. !Vie* and Potions; unithirtnuota Ws& Mule of evert' dlNNeripttou to se% Nis lute at fth. 'boot hutidious and the parse of the wee oeterweel, If won doubt it, call , .ee see A..MMied at the Mose of the (lbods, otd Low Mew The Pottle will readyr: 1 0... sod him ready rid willing to aecomenuldo nwery eau ie by h dock t o ail who give beet feerwi Xe. ev Ilatir 9e *tab mtrert 7 . ewers Week cut sal mho is theleeheleeer are sm. op provl.l idyl's. Let is AMA their owe We rye by in exanntbsti o l b. nirg= bid thee Ene, 19,18511. JOHN MIAIiirINN4L D.,. 4 , prip,,l••:er 4, • - in anrltr ' Also, 1,1 part• ..f f -isto IEII ME= oila) UM sad 11964te Tarpositro, br Or Wool for to tow utle• k. Isla porebassea. by Jetty ?../641. CLZ?U It IMO, - -- • - Kn.& If& Wolcott. ""'" OVEILIMPI MEM" TM tbe 1111kmill. Sibrameirear Mat AL VIA/ and 11= Idea la tbe mist grow= .• J. 11. el !VNIISON I. W. RIIII3ARD & CO., ro rrnoDliiirDcar c TRaI it 11l a a.a.lb, RI It a. maxi.. r II tA•Aa 100 PIANO FORTES, ANCE AND GENERAL AGENTS, Conseil MIMI &ad Mims Ctiy, t.Aa. k son.t.t Lands In Western and North Weenntt h Yre-emptiono la Nebraska Ter - and tioa-rem6rats. Pay Sari, be rou 4:A\ , I. (011P:O'Y === No 8 Itood's Block, State Argot. lireo Green r (tie, Aaron and Sew Cw44s DETROIT, MiCii. April 12, 11156 " If I were to tell you all, sir, they cannot drag we from my death bed here and hang me, can they Besides, lam innocent. But what does that matter' More innocent men than 1 have been hung for less mimes than iourd. , r, fore this I will not tell you " " Murder?" said I, with unfeigned astonish '. Murder, Charlton?" For this man I was attending in my capacity u house-surgeon of the Ilenborough work - house I bad known him for years, and of all my present patients he had seemed the simplest and less violent Ills anxious eyts—which closed so lightly even in sleep—hi; averted looks when spoken to, his nervous timidity at the sight of any strange face, I had set down as the outward signs of a broken spirit and a waning brain; for he had had enough of sorrows to shake a stronger mind than his I could remember him with wife and children about him, In a respectable, if r not an extensiv, way of business ; and why it suddenly fell off sod was given up, and what misfortune had changed the couple who had before been co blithe I bad often wondered Their boo, Robert, was fnow in the Crimea, a sergeant ; their dangtrter, Clara, a milliner's apprentice in the north; Mrs Charlton had died a few months afto the failure of their trade. of ,a lingering and somewhat strange disease ; h. .r. husl..and Nu+ indeed, ar. he hgrd sad, upon b.. .1, ath ti..d I had ..ffered to s. n.l for Clara at my own chile., hut he w,oll I riot hear of it I would n ot have a soul at in% t".l,ide, save you, doctor. for worlds, - he said He was quire fro ndlt•ss, to chamber was c mm. n t tit. workio , to. folk, but it was a July ‘13%, and they w r. sunning them selves in the rivirrii eout outside The noonday beams whirl. poured into the long bare room fo u nd nothing fair to ri at npon ; no print upon the whitewsehed wall , no c o mmonest wild flow er in any of the few drab entered mugs that strew ed the table ; no signs of comfort anywhere The sick man lay upon his little iron bed, and I was sitting upon the wooden stool beside it ; his hand lay upon mine, and his face was tweet towards the door, listening I rose, and locked it ; and it was then that be began, as I have said to speak of murder, and his innocence—to ask if it would be dangerous to confess all I said "No ; nothing can harm you, now.— What you ray to me is ■ secret as long as you shall live ; you may speak as if I was the clergy man"--whom be had refused for some reason, I know not what, to see "If it will ease your mind to tell me anything. say on " " You have known me, doctor, this twenty years, and will easily believe me when I say that I no more expected to become dependent on the parish and die in this workhouse, than I dreamt of the possibility of my committing—any very terrible crime I was young to the world t h en , a nd foolish ; and my wife was not older or w iser We were not strong minded folk—nor, alas! even straight forward Through a plausi ble story of dear times coming—which may yet have been partly true—we sold many a pound of butter and ounce of tea ; and if it was not al ways a pound nor always an ounce, it was never over the just weight, but under. Spirits also-- there being no public house close by—which we of course bad no license to sell, we would let our best customers purchase, and drink in our bock parlor. which appeared in their weekly bills un der the head of candles, or what not ; so that opeakiug before our own children, we had to fabricate strange stories, and give things their wrong names ; and many other devices we had, which, tl ough they got us little gains, seemed not much; on the whole, to benefit us, I have purposely told you the worst of us, because it will explain our future conduct the more easily but you must not suppose that we were thieves, nr very wicked people. We scarcely knew wha• wrong , we were doing to others, and far less to ourselves , and I don't think in other respects we were a bad pair I know Sarah loved me, and I her and our two children, dearly Our .hop. as you relabel., was between Ilenborough and Swalfham. which were then quite seperate t own s, with straggling houses and long lines of railing to connect them Our house was the farthest of the last row, not detached " Here the sick man raised himself on his hands, and whispered—t' Are you sure there's nobody at the keyhole F—nobody at any crack or cranny, nor at the skylight 1" I assured him that there was not; and then the wretched creature pulled out from a sort of oppossum pocket in his very akin, and under his hone' vest, a thin piece of paper. folded, keep. ing it carefully beneath the bedol thee, an as to prevent its being visible from without. R e open od it, and I read these printed wor d s: Two IIIiNDKID POUNDS DZWAILD. The above will be given to any pereno. not me tufty croteeroed in the crime, who shall give such information u abaft lead to the dineovery of the murderer or murderers of Joho Spigot, in the Swaffhato Road, Hentorengh, on the night of December the tiairty.ilret, eighteen hundred end thirty-live. 41 %y, you, Charlton, were owe of the jury men, if I remember right, who were upon the 'moat in the matter rr I said• hI vu, drotorire you sere there's nobody midst go Woo is lb* opium* or behind the ahem hod ?.-and =warn aims r *itlrct Vottrp. THE SHADOWS 1:111 TA! VALLEY sate', • taway, miudy aLley Where the waters wind Lad 5... Axel LW dudes sleep la water, 'Ninth o calorie of mow Mod oboloto, Morey 4 via.* Moos to beauty lo the orpring, 404 tbo sanbeasoo kW tho gracolooo, Till thoy MOM to lama and slag But Is'eutual e when the suallip Crowas the aehir-eoveeird hadowe chutes la the valley, Shadows noalaceas sod ; had the Fallow lame Mike bean,- or ha elan bolt, that'. led, ?teed ..Ith gold sad reset perp., Faun., madly amertbeid and atiedows, 'foamy flaclow., Übe dim passion, oa tia groaa.l ! ,, tvetcla tioar Oreas7 leactbe forme. ths a dolly covered mama& And I loved Inv. yes I loved bar. Rut the aorta loved Ime too, 1. , eV. ideeplag fa tlJe valley 'Smith the sky as Wight sad No. AJd ao stab of pallid ittart,la, aftll Ile twilit@ aid ghastly head, tellies araederees la the vane, 01 the virtues el the deed. but a Illy IS bat aceshsto&a, /tad a dee-drop, dark sad Might. La the epitaph au angel Wrote la the atilloeee the alaLt ad rICI MO UDALL, very inotirrim. For nay soul dote emir mare For tb. Wing of the Marlowe From to t uttl..oodeled grim } or the memory of the lowed Dee From my seal will emer pert end tepee ',bedews la the valley Dee tee sumetse la my been. (linicc Jisctllan. 4 TWO HVXDRED POTINDS REWARD. • DIZATII-lIID ?WYNN mrot 81 50 A YEAR, IN ADVANCI. ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 4,1856. Gond heavens!" I etehdued. '4Wlry, what a hypocritical radian you must bare been' " Dnflor, S" "d doctor, here mem epos SS; ftql!ltint tell ! and don't think so hardly of we until you have heard me ow ; I as not so bed a. I Fret " It was on a New Year's eve, near twenty years „,1 %..ry late at sight--elose upon twelve—when I Lad pat up sy /an ehlatter,ftea was ving ti lock the door or my shop, that a stranger called. He had coati from the Swat ham end of the road, and I had never mew him before in my life ; he cou ld hardly speak it all, he was so awfully dank Red in foe, thick In speech, and trembling all over like a thief, he said he must have mews rum. I told him that we only had some ginger-beer aid such Ihtla drinks ; and, beside*, that it was tee late at that time of eight to sell p_ le anything. Bemire horribly at this—said that I and my wife (who was still behind the counter in the shop) were both liars—that we had sold rum duo mocegb t , ) other folks, he knew very well He managed t o stagger up the two atone steps aid posh is at the door He should get into the bast parlor, and sleep there all night, he said. I took him by the collar, intending to set him outside the door, but be was a tall and stout made man, and I could not—he struggled with me in a dull heavy manner. I had hard matter to thrust his from the parlor I did so, and pushed him violently, and he fell on the floor at full length, like a log. He never groaned after he had touched the floor, but lay silent and motionless. " My wife cried, 'What have you done, George? You've killed the man.' "'Nonsense,' I said; but when we tried to raise him, and sew the glassy 1051 k of his eyes, I knew it was true. A hundred horrible thoug . hte would have crowded into my mind at once, but that, swifter than they, devices for getting the corpse away, and removing suspicion from our selves, had already filled it. The simple honest plan of telling the truth, and calling in the po: Ike, at once, never so much as suggested itself. What if a neighbor should step in, as this poor murdered man had done, and find him lying there. If one of the children even should be awakened by the niise, au , l come down into the shop If the watchman himself, seeing our door yet epee at that time of night,, should call I There was not a moment to lose : I took the dead mast by the head, and my wife, all is a tremble, manag. rat It. raja., hi. left! and Shutting Use else assn. fully after us. we bore our dreadful burden about fifty yards along the Swale= Road. We tried to set it against the railing* which ran along both side s of what is now Macartsey street, bat the inanimate thing slipped down again sash time in a mere heap It is surprising how anxious we were to prop it up, and, although every instant was precious to us, we spent some five minutes in doi ng so—it seemed inhuman, somehow, to leave it on the pavement In a sort of desperate terror at last, I twined the arms about the bars, and we fled back in silence Nothing was stirs. ring We heard the tread of the watchman out. side our closed door, and his " Past twelve o 's clock "' die Away in the distance, but we had put out the lights, and felt certain he had observed nothing unusual—nothing of ours—oh horror —dropped in the road, while we had gone about our terrible task.. O ne of the children, Clara, began to cry .ut, 'Where have you been motimer She had hearl tx-, then, leave the house "•1 only. your father to put up the shut ters, i 1 , 1 ...11 , answered, An d th e c hild wa s the ready w e wen t to h, atimwedistely, but not to ..Ur ears were , tu the stretch for the wo. T.J lit whin the ery uld arise, anti we should knew the ledy we- found line o'clock, two, three, four : the time ..rcpt on with painful slow nevi, and the hour., mud quarters seemed to pro- Innv their v,.we horribly And now the dawn w • i.reakinit, and there was light et:tot:10 f. n. a Lane , TrAveller to see the corpse. We .:3W it all night lug, a- we were to see it for year and as I see it n , w Fire, six : it was time for us to get up and open the shop, lest suspicion should arise that way. and we did so. Theret was • turn in the Swab= Road beynnd ' , or house, atrl it was farther than that ; and yet T lared n t lo 1 in that dirctetion as I undid the shutter 'Watch, watch Help, help !' Theo they have found him at last ; and the streets All with a hurrying crowd ; and I run with them, mug the first But my wife, she is faint with t error , and dares not move, telling the children, who have heard the cries, that it is nothing. " It leins against the railing where we set it; but its right hand—yes, by beeves, it poiats to me l Nobody saw my face, they were all so hor ror struck with the dreadfu' thing, or I should have been carried off to prison at aloe, without any further prooff. I know As they were about to take it down, Doctor Scott (your predeoessor at the union, sir,) who was in the crowd cried 'Stop!' and called attenti , n to the position of the arms do not think—bear witness all of , you —that any fit, or strong convulsions whatsoever could have thus twisted 'them.' And I bone witness loudly with the rest I woe, as you have said, sir, upon the jury. I thought it best, safest to be, despite the thing I had to deal with.— When all the evidence, which was aided) , medi cal, had been given, I was with the minority for 'Wilful murder against some persons unknown,' against the rest, who were for 'Death by apoplexy; and we starved the others out. Oh,sir, the shifts and lies I had to invent, the terrors &list racked me by night and by day—and all begotten by my cunning. dishonest ways, would have been punishment for a murderer indeed I About this great reward here, of two hundred pounds, there was a ceaseless talk , and the wildest surmise. es to how it would be obtained, amongst our 'sigh bora. They came into our little beak parlor just as usual, and wopuded us with every word Now, mark me words.' said one, 'the fellow will be discovered in the end and be hanged ;' and 'Aye, ay, murderer will out, Demur or later,' said the rest 'Sooner or later!' Good heaves., how thew. words haunted nal for now indeed we bad played a part whieb, if discovered, would have p ro v e d n • a t once gniltv My wife took to her bed, and fairly sickened from sheer aaziety.— She had fever, and was delirious for weeks • and k I never dared leave her, or let another wete by her bedside. for fear of what she might rave upon. When the end came at last, my poor wife wanted to pee the clergyman; but I said 'No.' It was for the same reason that I would sot seed Ihr Mr. Roland here, myself: he was a magistrate. You're not a magistrate ?" demanded poor °bari um, suddenly, with the damps of terror mug. ling with those of death upon his forehead. I quieted him u well as I wet Ititia4 and begged him to set his mind at ease as to soy earthly tri bunal. After a little time, and without nothling the warning contained in my last words, he eon tinned— " Amongst the folks in oar parlor, am man in particular, a tailor, by name of Depollte. twee ea never weary of talking of Spigot's murder.— He was a miserably poor, ill-favored person, who had drilled his way into our enmpany by means of a sharp tongue. Ooe night I told him fatly enough I did not like such laminael talk, sod was quite tired of dial theme. 'Why, owe woad really suppose that you killed the rum self rhe retorted. It seemed as if at wow had darted through my brain for a *owlet, PR °mild hardly keep upon sy less 1 but Wsed off as well as I eow.W. Be staled, lsoit, 10 sh e ver y last; and Awe we two TAWif . . eV' ha *ow s mall kip, mik es tailisi lit foot, from 1111 inner poodet, and asked Ise wheat er it was sine; 'for I found It,' sad he, 'inside your hones, betwixt the book of the door and the wall.' 'No, it is sot,' I replied, but miser hesitatingly, for I saw be bad some purpose is the question. thought so; be west_ oa, 'for it is the fellow to that fond epos John Spigot, the sus who was murdered fifty yards from hers in the linsiban Road.' "I Gould not speak at fort, nor do saythiag beyond making deprecating sadpitiful motions I with my heads; but afterwards made shift to tell this Dedham the whole teeth. " Likely enough, Master Charlton," he said, pate cooly; 'slues friends, however, such things looks better lima before a judge soil jurr I'll put a pad. look on this hers tong‘c sale enough, if you'll et it, as Pm sure like a sensible sea you will, with a goldes key." I felt the baker already round my neck--this fiend jerking it loosely or lightly as he would; bat there seemed then to be no be'p for it. I paid five pounds that evening --miserable dolt that I was—es a retaining fee to a villain for working my total rubs. Many and sassy a time did my aildren and myself go without the barest necessaries that this mu might have the means to indulge in debauchery sad extravaganoe. I sold the shop, and removed with my motherless bairns to another part of the town; bat Henborough itself my tyrant would not permit me to lave. Lou. of custom, loss of reason followed, of which you know the cause. This incubus bestrode me day and night, sod wore my very life out. Often and often have I been a murderer at heart &manse of that mock. ing lead. Once, indeed, he confessed to me that a vague suspicion had alone induced him to try me in the matter, and that the strap story was oily an ingenious touchstone of his own. Cu. nisi; se I was than, I bad beep overreached, and anxious to ethos the very breath of slander, l had given a ions proof of gc&t. ere is this wor khouse,(Headless, penniless, I am safe from his persecutions; but I tremble for my children, lest he use them also as his tools." I strove by every possible means to comfort him, and to represent the folly of his having sabmitted to sash a treatment at first; but I was speaking Wears that mold sot listen. The wife. less, addles, sass was dying fast, as awful ke no to the crafty and untruthful. What a little leaven of dishonesty had leavened all this lump! Mow the path of life had been darkened to it for ever by the merest shadow ! While I almost dosbeei whether he was alive or dead, be sprang up once again into a sitting posture, and pressed the paper, which he had annealed so carefully, into my hand. A sudden dread of awakening suspicion, even after death had nerved dissolving nature for that effort, and hardly did the grey head touch the pillow before his worn heart ceased to beat Near twenty years, as long as most burn oo in fruitless hope, it had throbbed in groundless fear "111X11" WWI PILL! WHO ARA THI FRIANDO OF FROZDOW NOW ! To the bill for the admission of Kansas as a State, passed by the "Republicans" of the Na tional House of Representatives, by a vote of Ss to 74, is attached the following proviso : "Provided, however, That any person, lawful ly held to eervioe in either of said Territories, shall not be discharged from such service by rea• son of such repeal, if such person shall be per. manently removed from nab Territory or Terri tories prior to the first day of January, 1858;--- and any ebild (.r children born in either of said Territories or of any female lawfully held to scr vice, if in like manner removed without said Territories before the expiration of said date, shall not be by reason of anything in this act emancipated from any service it might have owed had this set never been passed ; and "Provieledferther, That any person lawfully owing service in any State or Territory of the United States, and escagng either into the Ter ritory of Kansas or Nelska may be reclaimed and removed to the person and place where such service is due, under any law of the United States which shall be in force upon the subject." It will be seen that in this proviso, the Re. publicans assume the most ultra ground on the subject of slavery, ever maintained by the fier cest fire eater of the South. They admit there by that slavery can exist in the Territories; that shives can be born upon the soil ; that they can be taken trout these as slaves, to eternal bond age; that they may be takes to other Territo. ries ; and furthermore, they thereby sanction the Fugitive Slave Law of 1860, giving it fresh vi tality and vigor! Atari this is the proposition of the great Re pellant" espousals and apostles of Freedom ! This is the "Free Kansas" Bill, about which they have raised so pertinacious a clamor ! This is the manner in which they redeem their pledg es to what they are pleased, in their declamatory ha:naves, to term "their virtuous and liberty loving constituency r Out upon snob hypoerioy ! out upon these hol low heartedre of a philanthropy they have not the professo rs feel, but only the craft to assume, as the deceit best adapted to forward their own seldeh purposes ! Away with men who will thus seek to appropriate sentiments which, however mistakenly directed, are commendable in themselves, but guided by these false teachers are fraught with ruin to the country ! Remem ber, too, that the very persons who thus voted in favor - of the doctrine and principles of slavery are the same men who rejected the- bill of Senator Douglass, abrogating all laws in Kansas deemed unconstitutional ? • providing for its admission as a State under oreusamaaces which would have ensured foe its freedom ; and in every respect restoring to that disturbed country the pesos and happiasse it has been deprived of through the Uhristiaa menials of these same pharisaical mis representative* of the people I Even Henry Ward Beecher could not stand snob a bill Hear what he says : "Now if those provisos do not constitute a po litical ip ecac for the soul of an antislavery, man, then r much mistake the basis of esti-slavery principles in him. Look at them for a moß r ent. They acknowledge that slavery dooi and no ex ist in those territories ; t4og tney tan be taken from thence into interminable bondage and labor on the ries swamps and on the Gehenna's of cotton at the South. Aid furthermore, that the 7 may be taken to other territories of the Vatted States, thus impliedly admitting what limey freedom and Coostitmioa loving man de- Mee, i. it., that Mowery an exist is the territories under the- Cimmtitatiou. It effectually ignores the Ad, tree do/trios, that if slavery hie any existence whatever, it has it positive mats law; and whets th at pints of sight does sot mist, every sea kips sate life a freeman, his freeman's rights being the gift of the God 'be=birobeing. Another &stare of these is feted is its sanctions of the infamous Witry: slave essetwouts of 1850—e eode for the rendition of fugitives from slavery that is revoking to every Northern and Western as tare." Dies sad brethren ! by their fruits shalt ye know them ! We ask you to reed and ponder this setter, sea we law wUltitg to she& the inset Chicago NO. !IVit a, auk ilia boOk tip oat of as io siablimpik . - bratitis • It MAR IC. 1 4 ANICDOTZ Ol MODIMN IttrNOAILY It seems as if fortune delighted in extending her band favorably towards some individuals, while to cabin she puts it forth only to decisive sad buffet them through life. Her eaprioes have furnished is with a lively example is ho' non nets of dealing. We relate the simple facts as we have heard them, without adding a word. In Hungary, towards the close of 1848, war was the only theme in vogue; in Pesth, the word "peace" wu quite out of fashioo. The ho tele were filled with guests who met for the par pose of discussing the favorite topie--martial music wu heard from morning till night—the European war was preparing. Two personages were sitting together before a small table at the hotel Nagy Pipe, to whom the German saying might have been applied—'One keeps dhows, the other listens to him ;" for one of these per sonages seemed attentively considering the prob able or possible cause of his companion's silence, casting from time to time a scrutinising look on his countenanee, intended to penetrate whatever dark project might be passing within. This ob , servant individual was no other than the humane Muter Janos, police corporal and vioe-jailer of the noble city of Pesth ; and wheu we inform our readers that he ooeupied this post during Metternich's time, and that notwithstanding that minister's overthrow, he still retained his posi tion—unlike the usual fate of the adherents of a fallen system—they will surely admit that the favonte of fortune oould not be better personi fied than by the same Muter Janes. Nor can it be denied that the individual opposite wu as much persecuted by the fickle goodness as the other was favored. This was obvious, not only from the fact that he was at that moment the object of honest Master Janos's suspicions glen• cos, but that be was in that locality at all—that a nailsmith's apprentice from Vienna had wan dered into Hungary, of all the places on earth— s country where the craft is carried on wholesale at the corner of every village by the Walachian gipsies. - Muter Janos had-not studied Lancer; but long experience had led him to conclude, after minute examination of the man's countenance, that some counterrevolutionary scheme was turn ing in his head ; consequently be drew his chair nearer, and proceeded to break the silence. "Where do you come from, sir, if I may pre• 111100 to ask ?" he inquired, with's wily glance at his companion. "Hyay from Vienna," sighed the stranger, looking into the bottom of his glass "And what news from that oily " "Ryay! nothing good." "Eh, what ?—ootbing good ! What bad, then ?" "Hyay war le feared." "Feared : what audacity ! Row dare they fear ?" "Hysy : I do not fear, sir, at thirty leagues' digtanee ; but ones I heard from the Geller bow they were bombarding the streets, and I found notllng very agreeable in it." Muter Janos found increased reason for sus picion ; he resolved to make the man drink, ox. petting to come by this means upon the traces of some dangerous plot now much does • n•ilemith'e seem•ok re quire ? At the second pitcher, his head sunk slowly back, and his tongue moved with difficul ty. "Now for it," thought Muter Janos. filling his Film -Eljen !—liberty !" he exclaimed, waiting for the nailamith to touch glasses. The latter was not long in responding to the invita tion, and echoed the word "Eljen !" as well as his thickening tongue permitted. "Now it is your turn to give a toast," said the vice jailer eyeing his victim "Indeed, I am npt tried to giveitoasta sir I only drink them." "Come, be social ; drink to any body you con sider the greatest man iii the world." "In the whole world?" replied the nailsmith, reflecting that the world was very large, and that he knew very little about it. "Yes, in the whole world," pursued Muter Janos, confidentially.. The nailimith hesitated, scratched his nose, scratched his earl f scratched hie head, and finally cried out : "Souses to Master Slimak !.' The vice jailer shuddered at this public demonstra tion What cluld Muter Slimak be but some low plotting fellow ? Without any ado, he seised the nailsmith by the collar, and escorted him to the town hall, dragged him into a narrow, omi nous looking chamber, before a 'tout, red fatted gentleman "This man is a suspicious character," he ex. claimed. "In the first place ha bas the audacity to fear war; in the next, be sat from seven till half past nine—two whole hours and a half— without opening his lips; and, finally, be was impious enough to drink a public toast to a eer tain Muter Slimak, who is probably quite as suspicious a character as himself." "Who is this Slimak ?" asked the stout, red faced gentleman. "Nobody, indeed," said the trembling Vien• nese, "but my former muter, an honest nailsmith, whom I served four years, and would be serving still, had his wife not beaten me." "Impossible !" ejaculated the red faced per. sonar. "It is not customary to give towel to such people." "But I don't know what the customs are here." "If you wished to give a toast, why did you not drink to constitutional liberty, to the Upper and Lower Danube armies, or to freedom of the press ?" "Hyay, sir, I could not learn all that in a month." "Bat in three moothe, I dare say, you will be able to learn it well enough. Muter Janos, take that man into custody." The humane Master Janos again seised the delinquent by the collar, and escorted him to the place appropriated to snob malefactors, where he bad time to consider why.he was put there. The three months passed slowly enough to the nailsmitti. It was now in the mouth of March. Muter Janos pnactually released his prisoner; s:d the holiest man determined to prove the re form in his sentiments, and thereby rise in Mai: ter Jane's opinion. "Success to liberty-and the Hungarian arms:" cried be. Master Janos stumbled against the wall in specchlese horror; and as soon as he re covered his equilinrium, he seised the astonished nailsmith, who, when he had regained his terri fied senses, found himself again ea the narrow, ominous looking chamber; but now, isamod of the stout, red faced gentleman, be stood before a lean black one, who, when he understood the charge against the prisoner, without permitting any explanation, condemned him to three months imprisonment, informing him that henceforth, unless be wished to fare worse, he must exelaim: "Suotiees to the imperial armies, the great eon. 'dimities, and the one and powerfit Austria !" And the sailamith, having made three steps be yond his prison door, was brought back to renew his captivity', and to ponder over his strange fate. Tits time math. again peered, aad it wu ooso tine is Joss- that Mosta &au retraced ids captive. The poor sus, sin at his prim door Iva to bawl oat minutia/gum& to "Lag a r i ses Somas P leLi Mawr Janet loii lti Mai B. F. SLOAN, EDITOR. tippet his sword, u if to protest himself fiimo this intiorrigible man "What!" demanded he, "was it not imettgli imprisou you twioe, Have jos WS JOS learned whet to uJ f Step in here 1" ewel fee the third time there wall the narrow tatir;:ie but, instead of the meagre Week geodesist), it was &pin the stout red faced iudividtml bulbs whom our victim appeared to answer for Mir 00 reputed crime ?me Ito Nw Cadmis• Piserai. • Love, Lum_sad on Lack an = thelrair d Ws have is our time beand a good 110117,41100 fish stories,and among others that of the lth" reoentlY caught at Chicot Pals, I= State, which 4 appesis to be a ersis we ths alligator, gar and - shark," and had is ids Manna 83,17 in small change, together with a glad bowie knife, a revolving pistol, aid ather amide of a fillibustering character That many of these tales ass mere petwegory Actions, we have always held sisoe osr arrival st man's estate, and now, that truth isogonal's/PA* strangsr than lotion, we shall proceed, with dim soberness, to show. A few years ago Jarvis Wright was one el lie shrewdest and most successful of the "Usage in the Choctaw Nation. In early life be had len the granite hills of New England, sad wooded his way toward the setting inn. His = making instincts were pretty strongly dee and in his race for wealth } be forgot the ideas affectionsl wants of hisnikture, and so growing rich be grew old, and \rag known - out as the rich old bachelor. Now it so happened that in thing, 41.4 cit the heart of Jarvis, during his waniennis money gathering, became hardened, and la an matters of religious faith he was voted batman. In fact he was almost u heretical as the Imbibes Choctaws ' with whom it was his boast MMus skillful "trades," and for whose spiritual besdi oissioaaries were seat annually by the Christian of the North Among the missionaries who visited the Choctaw wilds during the year 186—, than this one who had a daughter whom he loved well. Jarvis saw her, and he, too, soon her with no common love - It was, Mealtime, to witness the effect of the tender purees en do hardened unbeliever. Time, whisk was ed to bare blunted and almost deadwood= finer sensibilities of his humanism hod been only concentrating theireaset kiai sa ilree, eves as the spirit in a cider barrel is oonoentrated and strengthened by the frosts which readmits eaters ion cold andicy So the love of Jarvis, in its wild ',lmmenser was a riddle to the men and maidens of the hoctaw tribes, and even the traders wondered. Jarvis in love ! So strange was the ides me le be eonaidered ridiculous, and most of kis obi friecdo concluded ths4 his brain was rain turned. And so, as the diverse fates too ohs* have it, Jarvis's angel proved unkind. The richly freighted bark of liishopes was shipArraelk ed, and a "rooted sorrow" settled on kis soul. Fair daughter of the missionary ! She never for a moment thought that her mind,* was Se wed the rough and heretical, though rick old bachelor, while younger and more attraetive gallants were suing for the favor of a smile.— She refused him, and he became inoontiaedy crazed, and moped and wandered, still talk* but of her At length his friends oonoluded to bring bl to this wayward city of New Orissa+, Thin several of his relatives reside, and after spesdise a few months here, the demented lover bora Is be in some measure forgetful of hie gnat.— Occasionally, indeed he would be as sass assay man in existence, ,but with the changes ei as hour his fit of love•lunacy would resits, sad be would be as wild and wandering as ever. As be was perfectly harmless, even whoa the fit was on him, he was transferred to a plants ti,n at Terre &enf, where he was allowed the privilege of hunting. And in due time hsatiag alligators among the bayous and lagoons boom the favorite pastime of the love.lorn Jarvis, sad it was hoped that eventually be would kart how succeslful he bad been when hastily' kw a wife. But now a new mania soma to seise him. Of killing alligators he had blooms timed, but to catch and tame one was now his sew ides —the mission of his life: He thought tied if be could only catch and tame a live snips", the star of his fortune would again rise is the aw oendant, and in the amphibious creature be would find a "guide, philosopher and friend." With all the "method" of his madness tent about the realisation of his wild idea, sad ' day, about six weeks ago, be captured &juvenile monster of the class he sought, and oommeemed at once to cultivate with it a kindly, sociable ia dismay. No more did he visit the distant liej , one ; for to the wants of his new found filial he devoted all his time and attention. 13eareely, indeed, did be speak to any one else, bat whoa he did, it would be the same parrot phrase ' "The man that's lucky enough to catch and tams a live alligator can draw a prise in the Hawses lottery." This he would repeat, not only to the people of the house where be resided, bat to his - alligatorship, a thousand times, sad a thousand times agile. After several days oonsultation with his nay friend, Jarvis determined one he mown to visit the city, buy a lottery ticket, and prows has luck. So he engaged a passage for hilliest( sad alligator and same. After, arriving, he omit straightway to a mercantile house, where his money is deposited, and drew $lO, sad ems. 'Lanced his search around the eity for a tieing that, his saurian counseller would. be satisisd with. Long and weary wu the search. To a hundred shops the alligator wu carried,. and the wares of a hundred ticket venders were mom& ted to him before he manifested his mirollettee by en approving wag of his caudal appease,— As soon however, u the ticket with the say* numbers was displayed, the mysterious mei?" eyes brightened, aa4 his tail wagged And Jarvis interpreted the cabalistic wag as a sign to buy, and forthwith be bought the debat and went home rejoicing. Two days after the drawing tables of the Ha vana lottery arrived, and strange as it may ap pear, the ticket selected by the approving the alligator's tail was down for the 120 prise. The story may appear improbable, bat ft is no mere strange than true, as several repo& table merchant's on Carondelet street, who aro familiar with the facts, and the members of dm commercial bin on Camp 'tau, where the mar ey has sines been deposited, can attest. Ladisii we have the story from the lips at one nearly hems lated to the usineky yet leaky Jarvis: Noy al the luck of the alligator buster ead with dis drawiogof the prise. Recently, as is well haws, exchange ea Havana has bees eosunsediag a handsome premium, and Jarvis, received one of his relatives for his tickft not 4:7 11 to 1120,000 it called for, but a plemium ot 1760 I besides. Who wilt hereafter say that the tail of as Bator is not a thing of wildly= 1 With this phils. sophio query our tale shall end. °palletizing hie load ben . _,t 2 141411 of as a peat stasisaleit. As WAIL is 1111.1% id* and predawn askingpaha% it met a very ligb bappluesu A better pbibleopby would be to wit* *es everythieig mateward ewe nee r 0 edveseeeseat. NUMBER 2t