' MOORE, PUBLISHERS. ME 27, ERIE OBSERVER. R1.1 0 1E 1) EVERY s ArtitnA r .11,01 N AND M. M. 111 1 100 RI, -•••••- • -II I. •4' .TATE AND runt sr s. F. 1, 0 A N. Edlt•r • a.triincr, or within . / months, $1 50, if .' ri.ror.“l me par within the rear, th• paper ail) , i+nt left atth a proper Aker tor eol. 7: 'l4 , .1' 4.11 V ERTIAINiII ,• .r oval, a tamare. ACI .••••\ $ One ovum) 3 month. 93 00 1 On. . 6 6 •• 500 125 One 4 •• 9 675 , hana.ithlo at pl , iuntr.. • , fel' 6 eatrettaa, sk. 9 monttot, 11l 50. 1 «luar —no. ymr, 1450 IS months. tar) 3 : ri the Monne:44 fltteetom a t $1 l at e a nn u m .. rarer .ta, ottut ender • noti , em, In rents a Otto , 4 , 1 , 1 of t ter ri..tli half the m 1,41,... I others reontrtnr frequent rhaner• in their sl:ow..d two ftrisres• paer...l-Icent for $l5, •,,.. rhsrre• will ho In preportion, and irb. At t. • tyl ,- th confined to Ihe leeitioute bnalswen P.. rn at 1 ,r sdrertiannsenns required •••.t rite he presented nil oseept teal- =EI ll=l E 195 DIRECTORY. NEILtIIt 41 V. lltitt.N. 4.. 4a I. s , i••••IL ollre r; iL. Pnm y.ai t.... `tale. mad •• vr... N.tea, .14.1 4, 1 . la 1..f..1 I.ld t iiiii WO. , 1 ..1,1 and located ~. t. n. • J. Q. , Ti:ll/11?,TT, r e.rry..; 4 se, in Wet mad Pry Groomes, p , vol 1 onesto I , rott, Wooden W0..1i, ..1i, I:inss, N. stilt, Powder, SAM, •• n „10 rt.n, A strut, oppooto the Reed 1,10,F.1 vi•CONKEY, • • k •LI••11, an I lard Itare and l utlery •li .11 411. i t."`r, Yo. 3 Hon., Kn. I: tIPI ILE PATOREN. lop 10,0 J01.ben.,11.n.1 41 14Aler, In ,orr .• ‘. 5&:14 Ihiroestlc afiwt , nioN Vtl -. Jae ifirort, corner of r me, NVEY /HULBERT, tS Co., o,mat l'lrnto., h.nu Heed Q...r .tilt %ITII 3 D ENPOILT, n..arl , 1/P•lr l'igart lig HEEHE tf,lll, %6.w ,bf En. awl it, units Epp,- tit..lf. .11. • " • • v • , Sell, Grain, • , stn Patio, ‘l“,wipti. Illo,or ' • • e• Wrkglit'i Jll.l.k'll ..rth nf Ilu4nL rtrort, rolulAntly for inm I. iip-n • hew anti el- Hitt - 11 arr..," a ith r% i,lernt.• LS Ili N 111.1.1 t 11 Tii()KNITIII I. I,....ements, and • ~ /05.1 !no. n lEEE ?ISO II tr.. ‘11)111til E tD, • lit hi. , r14•4•••• r 11•7411. ..elfre in .r.bpel I 'min • • “rn• r.,/ Vittb and ,Gsf. r , ••• • "T Ao. 'No I', I.• ,Irr. In I I i'l , ol, f •tat.. I CIAO% & '11 . 14 . ‘1.1 • ft!, to i,!, A ~,• I. I.otiziol ...di • 1.1 tii• •• Ult. I. I...ITIRAt tilT, • , 11(11, • \ rtkir 14 t,l nlll Atrrvtan .! r,rt n u. iii , ftillllollllllC nort Agit, ,/./krama, • . ott .1 i..itlvralr DiN :•••• A sr, Is 4 1. r,•• •• , rlg. 1111.1 1 n+ei 1 1111'1 k "At %Mk lit• 11:II II E. 4 CO., T r. 4 k. an os I • • 110 kil‘, 6e, 0 I Brawn • Mock, Env, Pa. 1 1 %1:11.I. r • r., , ntinar th• fa °thaw :el Bra tv a 111. ck, t.. f t • P[llol , ` , ,, r o.re, prrpared I. • .to sit ..t er :Won. ill prier., roll,al - .&,•• .4,1. , Its .01/10.111 and req./ • •ilue. 1.1.1:1 4 4 A. CR 11 I:, TA. I Hugh.. Y11 , ,k t.rl l'a. 11. t 1561.1., I II Sikerlo,l, • turt•rei, ui. ltn4 llowup and . Laen an the twat at, le of the art and Tt1411114 N. t 1 thefts.. of 1... , 111.141 CO are, Jewelry, Mk., Nuatcal Lamp.. a+..l tan.) 16 1../lelnie HIP1.1.:11.0 & liHNNEV . ..fired sad Beaadl . 1 • • • r, I iar4 wi.ft, I rodter,, Glarmahr s . . .r.. ISSKk, rn,ro4 r Mit sod tD . I I 1.1., ii.l:l'l.liii, d: CO., -, .., -.team 11”11. re. Vaud Doors, ... . ........ . 11.a.clautry sad k Lucy l ast -33 M. ' in the American Bloc*, • • •ud [tor Putobc Nuare, I.lf, u•oa 1,, and all boric warrebte.t. immi _ sINDFOKI) & \ erttheates of Deresalt, k constantly (or sale Office MEM T. lit.ltittlN DTI %KT, Ottl stn.c, Cow door. 6Ast of • ... 1, •.tw door Lost of thr old ROOTH 4. AMT. =EI I=2l== 1,.. H ~••• •nd Hrowo'. Hntrl 4 4. 11 1{1.1 - : H. (1 TI , BRI I. ..unty, Pg, foll•etiom 111.4 . •,ttt prqruptnrie and dist.,4o4-b I UCTI:It 4; RISOICREIL, „• n n rat., Me4tictoes, Punta, Ulla, d Row., Ene, Y.. S 3 /MIN *WENNY, • ..fhe, 10 ter roues formerly occupied by Mott. 33 1111 l HI.UI a! CO., `•—• •on Merchant., dealers In Coal, Einar, •!, line of I prerle Steamers, .Pubiac 33 J. W. DOUGLAKS, - h with Benyatnt33 333wnt. l a nrk .tar sod Brow - n . 13 Hot•i, Lne, 33 ' 1 / 1 81 (K I.K dr 7110)orp.oN. • Coal I.lme and Muter. Etut 1.4.111Lii E 3111/W TON. Sirrekkaut, Publ. .• sn.l Ylaptnir • K. % Rik:llT -• • &he,. Lo Gold and rolver Coin. necur • A and I'ortihrat.ll of Ikeposit. • , pat Pito.* In the. Union. and all parts of • •• WM:no Block, rortwr..f :state I . IIi!LFY T. H. A h.• .sale no. Itetall Dealer In Foreign and It. trwirrial Flowers, Ribbons, Atka, Laces, •nerv, No a Reed • Blowtt, state street, sm., • ;owl to linters. l'L n 11.nnestle•na lenpnrted Wines Fruit. Viotti, Ittl, •ad • 7 11,.n0e1l 111.. k, State otrert EH*, BIEI JOHN , IiKE4. 1.5 `.^` ,4, . •o-t fGt.ul P-ai•r in an kinds of Panty, 1 "... lon • %rt Dining Chen, No 4 ke 1.. w. (' Am?, ' B .tonow , n't hal - • ~ F - •tau+ ui Tamoeao• hall bolloimg Frt.., 'Pa ‘t .1 .11R111.1.:Y• n , : t•r r, 'KT 11.:.r, Trtiner h3...0rr , 0r e tho puhlsr H. will •... ' , ls: I.ln ttre whom •HIhpOW to z raw IN ttw , nt W l• BRALEY, I=l =I irt 11%1.1. lllLLtlito ‘ALAMVII. Fifth , tr... 1 anal Ow Park J. J. /.I ♦ T !n. Ilarancink rh.ap Yobllfa• ' •'i,~ 1:-14 Pena, P•mnket Cull•n, te. t:n• CMS I.w, 111.D.t a r 4).. an awl Rotall dmlers fo and rV ot, .„. • .h. , ll.apeat and torvt awor In am% • V , lO. Pa It/ r fano or moritaoies) • r iIIIIRI tT JUNE% (;11(Nlif. a Co. Poor'. and Blind*. Peach .4-, urb Jose.* t; (111- 1/4 - 11 - )0411.6 • • .1 1 Rectified WhiS k e ie Is the - •T LA; "r of ERIE WEEKLY OBSERVER T. W. .1110011.2., DIKALLI la Groceries, Provistein, Predtier, Pork, 14b Halt, Grate, Fkitir, nuns, Nista, Palle. Woollen, Willow sad Stow, Warr, kr. Terms Cash. No. 7, State stiort, opposite Browa's Hotel, grill. J. C. 8011LIPTIVRE, Prialrogiurnic Aitrukt tad drier la thirmerrsotype. Ambrotype and Pbotnirphic Materials of mil' detertption. 4 tate street, nppoodu Brawler Motel, Er* Pa. _ . KENDIII3 dr JUSTICti s flesutss in Goieerlos, Provisions, Protium Frdto, Note, ke , ke. ytt•te street, one door south of Fifth, Erie, P. sa.l Wool, /08111111 JCISTICZ COIIIKOT 41Ic 1041%1'7'0RD, WOOLALIIALZ &IMAM AGENTS for Eastern op,a[ors. (~}ter/ rPri•taell daily la Kegs and Cans. No. I Peri. Block, Erie, Pa. J J. CONILDT, 0 I. *.oroan CLARK dr BALDWIN, e' Seeman" to Ahrtita 4 /Arms. Buot.ticaLi and Itetati Deak.no to Drat" Ifokileiewn, Paint", MIA Dent D itromE olkntyt U Warns to th.• PaLW, t h a•r were thy ' roughly teetwl, sal the Yrapcharna can no.. ~orit3.lentN cornmeal them as a cr.rtain Remedy for They contain no Calomel or Mercury in any 6,N,, ‘ or env r .n.1 4 ."‘” , tngredtenitiand may be elven to the yountr. .t infant with perfect eater, The Wafer. are free from the nhuretion• t.. m. , yt other ermifuree u they are PLESAIiT Ttt THE. TASTI. hit , dry.. will yawl thenaraa rea d ily aa randy." Thev tune been before the public lien than one year, •ud wit/ 111 that dyne have won for tbemeelvie a reputation unpreeg len led In the Annals nt medicine. They are need and reeornmencted is our FIR*7 sicia‘h and moat reapectable (=the- will, the nine, morke.l emerges. ry- Pill...emit and sold, Vholess]e and Rrlul, by I. LARK. it lid 1.1)% IS, (Srecsamer to Bun.. 4. Herron,' Wholesab• and Retail Drualtl.., So 4 R.Yed House, Pa STEPHEN 1491 lumber. z.trwet, Y Y Wbobwale Acent•. lents per R. 111.4- 1:1, —l. Mew's. Usrk Sr . iiskilasin --4;itsvii.--1 have for u.me tom. paid roar "Antkielmoneic Wafers," and I tutoit ea, that in m. lane prartie I have never yet found am " nelson, ..qe and plenseeno reme4 r for AM thts Wafers prove themaelve. to bet I am daily rvonmnionding then, to my irirodo and istaent• and 001 hapin I nu in ev.iry instance with the ino•t narltr.l •111"14040 Thee have n. rer failed in a ',triple erdlio, operating as rife. , mall. upon adults arrhil Inn They have the advatitaew Derr rermittip • 'W ill,: s.. "pheasant to the tottite that children • ill eat them n. a. ninth • R. mg personally 16elltiaint...1 with their romlo,lll. 011111•1161tlagi• pr..nonnoe them the bent worm 11t14,111/ . now in no, am! it ran he admlnintere4 to the rnonitent infant with perfect isl e t"- I most confidently neomened.l them to the pat , voiir" ..r tin public P FA! I KNI- 34 I. rif F., gal, in Girard h. J, White •nd John - F ..tor terford by I npp k Littntiorn h• H I: Terre and tt Prountlt., Miilinerek ter S. N Metres', Lockport b. .1,1 and Wtn Tyler, 111mio be. lissetoptirt k Flowers, I t.. 1.1 X )t...4. i y Wm II Townson! tt..t rii. 1.1 b. Knee Potter. l'aireteor he It Pettia. North fi.eutt by J.,11. k Jewett, and hF Druggists venereal), MEIZI=II 1.1rh1V1404 PARER, GRAY & DAVIS, REAL ESTATE BROKERS; LAND, INSUR- 1' %ERRE Oic DOYLE, PAILICEU CID Fl,nkPrs, Deafer, In It wasanro, I Land Ag,nfn, •nd Res! I...tente ANL/ LAND AtIENTS, FIROKER., (*Magee. .1•1•2. 1.7.15 e. nn.? .or. r Vsewnr i.nrni. in it ...tern 1.01 N..rth rt, I 4 I*lwi, ati , l Pr...... 114111.1.4,0 In N.0, 1 ,, 1 1. r , ntr. an.l non-ronndenin, P., T. 111111%, Atiarwee I:4tira.s4.%Goiarerl'aoliklor, Si•is% tII 1:1. 1 F 7 ,, John i•skibraltit • suit M H ri. i A., i• 1. fte,•l If I r..l l morvi, . \l,••.1, 4 •11,1 i . e.'', 11,1 , s,,M#l, I 11,t1,r Wm, W.terlnr.l. I lo r - 11.1trytiler and nrl.l k•wrk lalarld 111 1.47 MENEM =MEE J. J. INSURANCELINTS7 th. 9,flerlns. reliable i • runins , jL At T V• 9 FIRE /v l ./;RA VOL' CO $11..4 •-nn. • - 1 . 0 14 i 4111111.1 , ,V V( NWA..II/.. /11FIRL 'VII .V.IRI.VE N... %, I. CO, I. tins , - • Csotul I`l , :v."‘ s Vt.,' 4Y! FIRE MAR/NE PSNI'R.V., i• co, Pitt.burg, - • - - - (Natal VSOU,UOU ACTNA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, "11.1.4111[1.101 a. lOW n security to th. Insured sn't. (*AIM"' frt. tici in Pool Unice Building. F rfr, April IS, 14611 49 IMEMIEMILI The Insurance for Town and Country ! rpUl F.rle County )11utusl Insurance Company ron,tnurs to make insurance on every description of property to Town and 1 . ,,0nte•, at as low rates *sate consistent with se. urlty. Rlsks a, diewleel orates two elsosess, viz the Fanner's, to which nuthlng hut hem property and dwellings, 00 het or neer from exposures, are insomd, and the rommereutl eido gerh all kind of property are moored The funds In either rat art not Itanle for loin.w in the other etsTCar.Li Insurance made in eitLer Departuu ut at the Luta./ ratea. DIRECTORS C X Tibbsls, oorbead. E Babbitt, A I frrd King OFFICERS .I.xas C. MARSHALL, James C Martha P E. Burton. 4 P Kepler, George A Llllot, . _ . CIIARLSIII Y. TineALe, Tyra" (Min, over J. S. Sterrett a, Cbratuudr Fn.., June 21, 1856. INSUR“CE COMPANY, ( op s Pitilo.deipkate, ) A Rt. now doinsbustoessoo the Mutual plan.tivoitg lb. )14 sursd a partitipation tutbe pnatit.oftheeonpany tittou, liability beyond the premium patd. Rieke upott the Lake* atulCanal t [mooed uu the tutoula sof a erms Losses will belt berollyand psi:mayfly adjusted riresislts on taetettandtie, building., and rt her y•-”perty lurr ureountry,fur a Hai mod term permanent.) DIRFAn't wiL4 J gXIIJh ma,r, Joseph It • 8 .1. 1 . Jame. C. Hand, Edmond .1 utt.ler TheophilvaPauld I ng, John C. Davis. IL, .1061[11 BtOokr, Kober* Burton, John Garrett. John B. Pearoar. Hugh Craig. Samuel Edwards, George der tell, Henry Lawrence David IL tftacey Edward ikartingtua 'Charles Kelley. Isaac R. Davis, J. G. JohavOtt, N'illiani Folweli, William Hay, John J Merlin lii S. Thomas, pr. R. M.lluntoa. Jahn Teller ,ir silencer Mc Heine., Richard S. . ewbould, Illecy , Win Martin Pres•l C. 7" A pplicatton can be made to J, K El, LOW; , Erie Agent 6rte. Feb. 10, in.Sl., .. FAILIML'h AND lIECILANIC*3 Pao. itarim. and Lid Lasurance Oomp an v tuilior, Lasater Baithosuy. N. Ir Owner'. decent .at Struts. Phaindslpecit. CAPITAL $30,000. rl'H tai cutapauy effects Pire Insurance uu lloildiugs. I Furniture, atc , Marine Insurance on Veseets,s'ar,,, amt 1 Freight, 10 all ports to the world. lu situ tue*tattre. un Guests by Rivers, Lakes. Canals. R.a.troads and Land Carriia to all yam of Ole Colon Al.o. Insurance upon all Lassa up.. the Moil favorable (ml. EnaiCTOXS thecae Two 311 tato Eine n R ItaLasoLD P Casein, bascarrrga {scar Ltithm, is Tnostas F. ?withers, Pres't ithostio B. Ital./.OLD. Accrete'', A LLEPI A. CRAIG. Agent. No. 1 . H.lgnesttlte ONE PRICE--CABS SYSTEM TIBBALS, HAYES i Co., ICO. 1, Browei l / 4 Hosea. We an., from and ally, thin natn, determined too adopt the Doe Price huh ".tem. rho .iio.! true eistimst of ourselves rtnasil ?robot, gum* gales and So Ti'..a3 sill be our motto In turning Over this new leaf in our bust nns* we behest. we eau other rarious good and substantial reasons w ay piny person ahoeld buy their goods at our boa, mart of trade biL W. make it a pupal Athwart to keep ever) thine pertsiione the Dry booods busmen, sod are constantly on the look out (or t ilea. or new thinfil is the trade. Yd. We hare the bonen of long .ginner. in the trade, wuirh enables ns to know when goods are to be bought cheap. soh the knowledge to dastruninale between Mond bargains and slut are not. Tbui same earner* teaches os that more profit ran be h t a uaticorrrt rate of priors than by the very common 1111itatatt , of Jeering. - oit will find oar goods all marked la plain firms so Iliat "be that rum mar nand." There will be no carisUna from the tutted price, as urry snide will be smirked as low as me MO poi.- *ably *ell it, or as low u soy perm. am sell who gets his rued. honestly. 4th ll at any time for any raison, we with to change the price of reels, or will mark them down. By this an-sages:lent the doll min trades[ well as tke parent or person of matunv years, as far as regards price hub. If at any time goods bought of as are not satisfsetori, or prove In be not what they were repounted. they can be orturced sad the money or roods will be gives in ...theatre. 4th. To enable oe tan enlarge one bemuses 1 a hirh we hope to do under this system) en will sell tor cosh, charging threat on all open aocoonta after thirty days. by the armagemest parts.. bai - tog goods charged an placed ern the suer footing with thole who pay nub. Wit will epee amounts with ann. but thou who are Rock Bottum - , • Ene, Sept- /So 1434. BONNET ROOMS. Hos, T. B. Puss sot 0 11. A astrraessi. E. Pews, holiost.sros. Uso, HEIL/cwt./4 Jas E. Beau. =I MEM WILL now be revelries every wok, from Neer York, Wawa sad tar Fasters Factories large 'applies of WILLL,LNIRF, STRAW AND FANCY GOODS. of the Labatt Isaportatteaa The beet styles, and at prices that defy competittoo. 16.Yie, Wt. ZS, 1116.5. T. R. BLOCS. A FAIN TO LIT. THE uzeirnagard trill lease for a term ot years a farm tutus*. to North Fast Toetaahtm itsoeta am the Newton tarsi. Tb. nr• are &boat oar hundred and sixty acres of uoprogred land—sad altptart to the elatry sod gratin leusario: Fnr tenor apple to Ene one h Pah—% tf JAMES C. MARSHALL iot , i LL.—Do you want gatal Gotha, than call at V I toc. 27. ItINDE RN ECM' at VISTICE', I . - rictit'S err ARCII, Cboeolote sad pan ?.*•.• 1.." Dar- 27. RINDXMA T k JrnicE : 4 - - - \%T 11.1.011 BASKETS of all kW. st Ire V. RINDIERNIDCHT h JrAlrr. Dc - WDER:Siwt, — cape sad load )0+ ,.). at Dee. 27. MOM WWl' k JUVTICIIt. HOftt.., i:h;;asol fresia, wily % eon's per possd, at Bee- 27. BLVOIENCRECHT k JCSTICE. IlitUrilia*,—Osstfaig, Sersi,Pshii, Whatireash,Ossfsdag, - - Auld JP Shoe Brush's, mug be fused M - Agiett IL STEWART k SINCLAIR', II L To, Cheap at MOO AILLIFT Par areas. OLP Doable nuitin.4 is entity, ew be bad at wooßr Piet. St, isas. Moody Pby Mary CEMEMl=i===l ANCL AND ONNEHAL AfiENTN,. towseit Mins amid Meas. Cl6lsw s. =ll 66-11 large dodo es lumolist the Mem MUIR IRO. L 223 ♦ bus vorleilar to bit hooll sa Pio rime a Cant& ♦ NI& YIl, 14r 12th,..7.6 The church of L iug Beckley (a large agrieu!- tur it t illage to vile of the midland counties of England,) although a building in no way remark able ither fur its fox •, its architecture; or its antiquity, possesses, nevertheless, one a d v anta ge t h Om to, door rs ot London have barbarmsly .1, tiled to their u0b1.4 eat hydra! church of St Paul It bag plenty of room to Fraud IN, and It van cA..t.i f uectly hi' seen with pe r t. or, ntence from every paint of v i ew , a ll round the •oittipass Tio. 'arce open space around the church can he ; I pp. 1 01..•. i in thnrdtfferent directions. Thert is a t i,..1 t, iti ii,. village, leading straight to the pro. , .lo Thi a broad gravel walk. wilt. at the vicarage gates, crosses the chtireh yard, and stops, its ID duty bound, at the vestry entrance ry w a fiat path over tloe fields, by which the I..fd of the manor, and th e gentrl in goneral wit live h.,. august (migh t, oI who ter th. ir natural humility (aided b) i I,t dile .0 it, of t!.. may Incline ii ,lirace S.' 41,1. it h ..I,+ e rw , itwe in •t 4. hr goin.! to ch u reh, lik • the lower sort of w r-, in their own kt h tll •i %I n o'elnek, on a ci rinen lin , r morning .11 the year ighteen hundred and I r. t ftdr, it iirt% int 4trariger 11.1.1 h a p ' , i i t b• .440,110. z to • 'mi. nun diced cur net. •.f the church yard, and to he looking about him with sharp eyes, lie would probably have been the witcv of proct edings which might Itif.`lsl NMI "teie trap iu church w the rJl,)ing p ant, and .4.c a o M ust f •Ap ct.ll.le ltiliarkiltauts tl .• principal lead. era 'titui li •ort lo .king to Ward t.... is the c'.ick chimed the half• h ur, I. !lave Viiitr of L .ek I .4 , the Ile vereti I Doctor ('h. finery, tear. log his lows • sit pteteusk • b) the 1.11 , k wit, glauvitig him guiltily is hr approat.h. it the gravel wa k 'ha' to tit. ve..tfr, • opiiiii;! f . the do ir, ant g, ana io u d r dowu ti ,v r.i,1•1, that lid from the vii lags noli , Ili it ...if ohserrant stranger would, up , n It o p ~ut :tad 1 0 ., k down the road, tit, vicar, he W next have seen the e l. r k .t* the church--in austere, yellow-faced dipniti d min, a Protestant Loyitla in appearance, a nd a workialr, shoeitiiik•l by trade—approaching with a look of unu•terible my.tr ry in his face a. i a 1)11 ich of big keys in his hand lie would base4.en the clerk hit*" to ILe vicar with a grim smile et . inte,ligence—as Guy Fawkes might have b ta. I 10 ('itesby when those two large gunpow der prop, ictors ,net to take -rock in their exten sive rand • of premises under the Parliament ius• s He would hare seen the vicar nod iu an abstracted way t,4 the clerk, and say—un doubteilly giVittit a garret pass word under the double disguise of a common II mark and a friend. ly roe-lion —"Pine morning, Thomas. Have s o ul t , /ur breakfast yet?'' He would have hoard reply, with 3 regard (or minute pirtieultirs: liar.' 1.14.1 a cup of tea and a newt S.r And he would then have seen these t ,v., Lica) conspirators, after lonakiog up with one nee .rd at the church clock, draw off t'geth. r to the door, which commanded view .if the foot pit!. across the fields F th. to—as our observant stratiger rou ll u it surely fail to would have de• tected thry more conspirators advancing along the foot path. The leader of this treasonable parts• was tin elderly gontleman, with a weather b ea t' r face and a bluff, hearty manner, admire. hlo caleulated to disarm suspicion His two rs were a toung gentleman and a young ;Ay, yr „king arm-in-arm, and talking together in whist' n 4 They were tlrcs•ed in the plainest i•ii-ttinic The flees of h ith were rath• of p.' , Yll.l the !Dinner of the lilt, was a little =I W 11. F It nth. Jn. M I WM B. Hays, Joss GrlrnAlos, Sec florriel Otto rwise, there was nothing remark- lugs were can-ed by alacrity in tearing hit clothes, shockingly thoughtless way of letting our sweet able t , ob.erve in them until they came to the I a nd obtuseness to learning the Multiplication little Amelia overeat herself Load the stomach , 5 .,,..,. n ., i„,,,ii„ g i n to •he chtych yr trd; and Table. The virtues of all three were of mud' in Youth, and what becomes of the digestion in the r e ti, cinln•t ot the y lung gentleman seem. I the same nature—they were well grown, they age? The thins whieh vulgar people call the eti, si fir-i sight. rather incarli' - able- 'tweed were ger time children, and they wereboiaterouslY in.ide—l appeal to Miss Sturch's interest in her ~t 1, .!ding the gate open fir the lady to pass find of Miss Sturcb.. eharming pupil as an excuse for going into phy t h r e n oh, he Ivig belt, allowed her to open it To complete the gallery of family portrait., art a irdogieal partienbrit—is, in point of fart, aft for h. r.. If , %mire,' till she hal glt, to the i,utilue, at the least, must b • attempted or the Apparatus Digeativel y considered, Wait Sturch, chnrith yard side. and then. stretching out his vicar himself. Dr. Cbento ry was, in a physical even the fairest and youngest of us is an Appar h.,„,i ,-, s . r the g. 1,., a llowed h, r te lead him p riot of view, a credit to the establishment t. , atus Oil nor wheels, if v"n like, hut clog them thr , otih the entrance, a s if h,. hid sal lenly which he VMS attached Ile stood six feet two at your peril. Farinaceous puddings and mu'- eh.,,,„ .1 fr .in a flown in in r i a helpless little in his shooting shoes; he weighed seventeen emu", t o n c hops, mutton chops and farnaceous pud. l i.i ,1 he was the liowier iu the L •rig 11.•cklc,) cricket- dings—tose should be the parents watchwords, String this, and ri marking also, that when club, he w,- ii ~rn•tly ortliod..4 man in the mat- iif I hail my way, from one end of England te the 1 „,- I i i from ih- ii Iris had am yed within, ter of %%tie au I toutt'in; he never stAr"-!if lb+. the other Look here, my sweet child, lo,ik at gr , •,,,: .1.-t•ince - 1 the ‘i,• ir, and when the clerk up ve..t.Oe tn,ori.•4 about p..,ple ' s future desinies me There is no fun, dear, about these little b., ! ni.4 1 Ills towel) if keys 1 , open the church it, the pulpit, n ver quartile' with anyb idy out I - cales- but dreadful earnest Se , : T put in the d.„, r . i t,. ~,,1,4 la iy's ' , lap tut is two , 1-d into of the pn'pit, never butt imdapltia pockets wive balance, dry bread (stale, dry bread „Amelia!) the iitti l .l . rig (this llinl he l)tol"r Crieno"rY's t h e neeessities of his poor I,rethret. ( dliss( u:ers and on the other, some ounce weights. 'Mr hal I I a s be had been pr•sveiusly led through OP Ineludal) pie OA with tom t $ -P.' l 3 Ilium Hilk Phippen! eat by weight. Mr Phippenl e a t the 4 ,,•1_,• ; .,, , e, our ,I,4ervlut o'r•ittive must hare it iur- , c, thrmgli the world was a steady ruareb I same quantity, day by day, to a hair's breadth li rivoi .t one inevitable conclusion—that the alert,: the high arid dry tali Idle of a -are turnpike Mr Phippen! exceed your allowance (though it , ra ~, r quiring such assistance as thin was suff r ,14. The rnrlP nine Sld ..- 1 ) I t 6 "f controversy is only -tale, dry bread) if you darer Amelia, t...rtritt trill •r The attlietion of Wiliduests. Startled might open as ktluriugly as they "leased on litta live, this is not fun—this is what the doctors tell ~ It by that disttoeer), le• said have been : right 11.110 ani .in his left, but he kept on his't me — t h e d,-,x. ) , %, my child, who have been ~ , •1 filch ,, i r ,:. .ze4 dif lo ha I li 01 into th- wry lour lily, cud never regal-Willie/O. luuovat• ' , arc hi ng m ratna through and through, i till,, LI, by •••• lag two il:ill I la in tfj I t h e y ,, erig ,„4 lino.. ~...r alls in ~,„ C:inrCh army alight for thirty yeses past, with little pills, and have i el) -•.,u liii, togetli•-r b •f• ire the al a r rails, with , lit rappingiy iii-tt the Thirt) nine Art cies under unt fnuadont where my wheels are clogged yet.— :!. •t t r.,, gen , leat in in ptruntal atteielartoe lots yen, 13.10 but the vet. , ran's, wary eye never Think of I hat,Amelial hink of Mr. Phi poem's clog. Ar, ) . 3 -pls.! .us he •iiig'it u ,vr rutertata that the 1 silted a It iir's Uread'h furtla• r than his ewe 1 red Apparstna,and say 'No, thank you,'next tint , ' borol wh eh unite! ti l e 0 oNoratora at that earl) siguature at tire b atom of them. He knew us Mists Sturch, I beg a thousand pardons fur in tiour •it Lii . iii 01'1111)..! V/ L 4 , if the hymeneal a .r, kale a. p wisthie of theology, he had serer given I trading on your province; hut my interest in ~„,1 g h at ,h,. o hje e r of their plot was to selebrite the Privy C mucii a minute's trouble in the whole i that sweet child, my own sad experience of the . , ae !dill_ well the strictest secrecy, would have course of his life, he was innocent of all meddle 1 hydra headed tortures—Chennery, you dear, :wen :o:airfield in live minutes by the spit 'tram' • tog willi the reading or writing if, pamphlet+, good soul, what were you talking about? Alt! o r Li ..:1,4 C!,conery frost the v i'lifiti full ern- and he was quite luespibie of fillmbug WI way tq t the bride-4hr interesting bride! And so, she is ,ilicals, and by the reading of tlo marriage coo the platform of Exeter liall. In shoe t he was one of the Cornish_ Trevertons? I knew some vis•e its (I, • r c s•cr• 0•1 grattriDits'• most barmoni the molt unolerieal of elereYnteer-4en, . fur all i thing of Andrew, years ago Eccentric and 0115 o th ei 41 iug t.ines. The ;erelong omeloded, tit It, lie had such a Agure fora sceptic* ais t nisanthropieal. Bachelor, like . myself, Idiom the attendant stranger most have been more sc,doin *two. Seventeen stone weight of - upright Stureb. Drepeptio, like myself, dear Amelia per pl ex ed than ever by observing that the per. 104'4401er deal t witiguin as angry spot ow a sore t Not at all like his brother, the captain, I should MOW concerned in it all aepersted the inotwollt plain is airy . part olt it, bu the .aserit elf eng ,, , s upp o se ? A n d so, s h e i s marr i e d? A o b ana t og the signing, kissing; and congratulating duties gestiogstsbilagt, massy rate—ms wessliest virtue girl, I have ao doubt. A charming girl!" =M= eltet Vottrn. Invocation to Spring. I=l Lotrtt G••• balmy gpring Come and all tilt itladno.• Come no beds of kinigt Sowers, With fragrance of tnartmlian bowers r.nue and paint the !tinted blue, And the 111,'s charm remote: I nt , lt ' balmy !aiding! and •rntind thy beauties fling' anti•ttho r.nersl rrave. Mdl arp.at the I•irda ..• .Iyreateat nate. that toetaat On high I:reeling Swing s tsbeeetals M. A'e the eentle pottobts that Boat Fmm th,se warblers tuneful throat I ..eels .osawss Issiensf :4 I. et and all th I hi/ dlioreo ' .R 1 an. 1 . 1.14 a it• r •'• 1.-rttitn. I=ll =I / • .. • ►ann ' L4Ollll prang , llio Ir,_r►nc- thy grm, st , ) , •rnevl in artl.►a Pt, aa•l I, I Cr. •tt. , o amine r (!. ~lciiu tlSCflianq. THE DEAD SECRET. =1 CHAPTER 111 Fifteen Years After $1 50 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 21, 18.57. proper to the occasion had been performed, and quickly retired is the mimes directions by which they had approached the church. Le er in g th e clerk to teturn by the village road, the bride, bridegroom, and elderly gentleman to turn back by the foot path over the fields, and the visionary stranger of these pages to vanish out of them, a prey to baffled curiosity, in any direction that be pleases, l.•t us follow Doctor Chennery to the vicarage breakfast table, sod bear what ho has to say about his professional exertions of the morning, in the familiar atmosphere of his own family circle The persons assembled at the breakfast were, first, Mr Phippen, a guest ; secondly, Mies Sturrh, a governess; third, fourthly, and fifthly. Miss Louisa Chennery (aged ten rears.) Mi..s Amelia Cheonery (aged nine year.,) and Master Robert Chennery - (aged eight years.) There was no mother's face present to make the house hold ptrtnrn complete. Doctor Chennery had hero a widower since the birth t,f his youngest child The guest wits an old college acquaintance of the vicar's, and he was nupposed to be now stay ing at Long Beckley fur the betel, of his health Most men of any character at all contrive to get a reputation of some sort which individualizes them in the social circle amidst which they move Mr Phippen was a man of some little character, and he lived with great distioctiou to the csti, mation of his friends, on the reputation of being A Martyr to Dyspepsia. Wherever Mr. Phippio went, the woes of Mr. Phippen's stomach wont with him. He dieted himself publicly and phys. irked himself publicly. Me was so intensely oc. copied with himself and his maladies, that, he would let a chance acquaintance into the secret of the condition of his tongue at five minutes notice, being just as perpetually ready to discuss the state of his digestion as - le in general are urge. , peopi to discuss the state of the weather. On this fa vorite subject, as on all others, he spoke with a wheedling gentlenes* of manner, sometimes in softly mournful, 'sometimes in languidly senti mental toned Ilia politeness was of the opprosi sively affectionate aura, and be used the word 'dear — continually, in addressing himself 'o others Personally, be could not be called a handsome man Ilie eyes were watery, large. and light gray ; they were always rolling from side t.. side in a state of m est admiration something or sutuehorly. 11x. nose was long. drooping; profoundly utelanchely—if sue! oti expressa•n may he permitted in reference to that particular feature. For the rest, his lips had lachrymose twist ; his stature was small , hls head large, bald, and loosely Act on his slinuld , erg his manner of dr e ssin g himself eceen'rie ou the •i•le of smartness; his age about five and forty ; his condittnn that of a single man Such Vie , Phipp• n, the Martyr to nyopepvia, and the gaiest of the vicar of Lang Roel f ley Miss Stureb, the governess, may be briefly anal acellrati . ls' described as a young lady who had never .r mbleil with an al , i • er a sines , the .1 av where 0, • was b am She we , . a h. t!, , . pltpup, 'later, white atly dressed girl, wound up accurately to the p-rformance of eertain duties at certain ti m es, and possessed of an inexhaustible vocabulary of commonplace talk, which dribbled placidly out of her lips whenever it was called for, always iu lily, at every niaur to tne'cay, tine t kronen every . change iu the seasons. Miss Sturch never ittugheN awl 'lever cried, but took the safe middle c curse of perpetually Sle smiled wit n she ;Ate'. down on a morning in January, and Friel it was very cold She smiled when she came .loan on a morning in July, 2E1 , 1 sail it was very hot St, Quilled when tit bosh ep came one , a year to se the vicar; she smiled when the buteher•4 h h ey eve r: morning' , for ri• r- She snail, d wh MI" L wise wept on her bosom, so i itn plorcel inelulgenee toward errors in ge og r aphy; smiled w hen Master Robert jumped into her lap and ordered her to brush him hair. Let what might happen at the vicarage, nothing ever jerked Nli.s Store!' two of the one sin I, Wh groove in which she ran perpetually, always at the same pace If she had lived in a reiyaltat family, dor 1 tog tie civil wars in Roglaud. would h er , rurtg f er the eet t cord .r dinner en the aviro• in ) ; of the execution of Charles the First. If Sli .krp ear had corns back to life again, and had e called at the vicarage at six o'elnek on Saturday evetting, to explain to Miss Stureto exactly what hi, v Ws were iu Composing the triage ly of Ilam. let, she would have smiled and said it was ex tretnely interesting, until the striking of s veu o'clock; at which time 'she wank' have begged the 11/rd of Avon to excuse her, and would have left hint it. the middle of a sentence to superiu tend the houient aid in _the verificatim tie • washing leeot. A very estimable young persou, Mts.+ Sturch (as the ladies of Long Beckley w, rt accustomed to say;) so judicious with the chi! dren, and an attached to her household duti• such a wt II regulated 11110 1, and such a crisp touith on the piano; just nice loolciog en 'ugh; just well &cased enough; just talkative enough; ant quite old enough, rrhapa, and a little , to, much inclined to be embraceably plump ab eut the region of 'he waist—but, on the whole, a vt ry estimable young person—very much so, in' dead On the ebaracteristie peculiarities of Miss Sturch'o pupils it is not necessary to dwell at very great length. Miss Loutsx's habitual wealt• nema was an inveterate tendency to cateh cold Miss Amelia•s ,arineipal defect was a disposition to gratify her palate by eating supplementary diunere an I let akfasta at tmaut honied times and seasons. Master Robert's most noticeable fail i n pillars pt a ll ki w is, but an especially precious quality, at the present time, in a pillar nf"tbo Church. As snnn as the vicar- entered the breakfast parlor, the children aasailed him with a chorus of shouts He was a severe disciplinarian in the observance of punctuality at meal times; and ho now stood convicted by the clock of being too late for breakfast by a quarter of an hour " Sorry tn here kept you waiting, Miss Stfurch," said the vicar; "but I have a gond excuse for being late this morning " " Pray don't mention it, Sir," said Miss Starch, blandly rubbing her plump little hand. one over the other. "A beautiful morning I fear we shall have another 'aria day Robert, my love, ynnr elbow i• on the table A be.au tifill morning—a beautiful morning, indeed!" "Stomach still nut of order—eh, Phippen?" asked the vicar, beginning to raree the ham. Mr Phippen shook his large head dolefully, placed hit yellow forefinger, ornamented with a large turquoise ring, on the centre cheek of his light green summer waistcoat—looked piteously at Doctor Chennery, and sighed—remove,' the finger, and produced from the breast pocket of his wrapper a little mahogany ease—oink nut of it a neat pair of apothecary's scales, with the ac companying weights, a morsel of ginger, and a highly-polished silver nutmeg grater Dear Miss Stureh will pardon an invalid:" sail Mr Phippen, beginning to grate the ginger feebly into the nearest tea-cup, " Guess what has made me a quarter of an hour late this morning," said the vicar, looking mysteriously all round the table " Lying in bed, papa," cried the three Ail dren, clapping their hands in triumph " What do you say, Miss Stureh?'' asked Doctor Chennery 1,4* Stl h ,tee Stureh smiled 48 U 81241, ru . her hands a. usual. olearod her 011.4' anftly an atenal, look tad fixedly at. the tea.urn, and bgmed, with the , mnnt graceful pnlitoness, to be excused if She , said nothing " Your turn now, Phippen," said the vic ar t , Crime, guess what has kept me late this morn ing " " dear friend." said Mr Phippen, givinat the doctor a brotlyrly squerz• of the hand. d ask me to know' r saw what von /11 , ." at dinner rester , lar—T -aw what vnuirank after dinner v,t dig e s tion ontabl stand it—not ' even nrirn y n on , rs On ~ es what has mad , y Lit , thin m Po A' T knaw dear, c lod soul, yon hay , h , o n taking physie!" " Haven't tntleh,l a ,Irep, thant: f , r the Ile ten years" said Doctor Chennery, with a to o k , of devout gratiPi l e " 1 ~ no : you're all wrong. The fiet is. T hare been to church; and want do you think i hare been doing there' Listen )Ti's Sturrh—linten. girls, with all your ears Poor blind young Frankland is a happy man at last—l hav• married Lim to our dear .almond Trererton this rery morning:" "Without telling tin, papa" cried the tw trifle together, in their shrillest tones of relation , and ourprise 'Without telling us. when yin know how we should hare liked to coo it! " "That Wll4 she very reason wh y T did not tell you, my (learn," answered the vicar "Young Frankland ha. not g ot no used to hie affliction yet, poor fellow. ac to hear heing puhl:elv pitied , ,room He net 811 1 '11 a VIPTY ,, IP. TT , .11 , .1 411 nhi.et of enrincity on hie wedding - day, and 1 Rneamcind, like a true. kind hearte I girl an .he i•, was •0 anxious that hie 'lightest caprices nhnnld he humored. that we nettled t 1 hare the wedding nt an hour in the morning when nn idlers were likely to he lounging about the neigh borhnnd of the church I was bintri over to the strieteet secrecy ab int the day. and sn .gas my clerk. Thnma% Exeeptine , ne 'sta. and the bride's father, Oaptain Trevertnn. nolan , ly knew—" "Trevertnnl" exclaimed Mr Phippen, holding hie teirenp. with the grated eitv , or in the bottom lof it, to he filled by Irks Starch " Tr...1-(Tbm! (No mere tea. dear Mina Stare') t How very re. m trkahle! I know the name (Fill up water, if you please ) Tell rue, my dear doctor t many, , many thinks; nn sugar, it turn' acid nn the stomach ) this Miaa Trererton whom yin have been marrying (many thanks again; no milk, either') one of the Cornish Treyertorin?" "To he cure she is!" rej ined the vicar '• Her father, Contain Trovertnn, is the head of the family Not that there's much family to speak of now. The Captain, and 110,1117//sn 1, and that whimsical old brute of an uncle of here, Andrew Treverton, are the last left, now, of the '4,1 stock —n rich family, and a fine family, in former times—goditi frienda to Church and State, you know, and all that —" " T ln you approve, Sir, of Am dirt baring a second helping of bread and marmeboler asked Mien Stnrch, appealing tn Doctor Chennorr, with the most perfeet unenuseiousnese of interrupting him Haring no spare roam in her mina for putting away thing. in until the appropriate time came for bringing them ont. Miss Stureb always asked quectiona and made remarks the moment they occurred to her, without waiting f , r the beginning, middle, nr end of any cionver, nations that might be proceeding fn her presence She invariably looked the part bf a listener to perfection, but she. never note l it except in the mien of talk that was aimed poi 4 nt blank at her own ears "Oh, give her a Reenn , l helping, by all means"' 'aid the vim., carelessly; "she must overeat her eelf, and Rho may a e w e ll do it on bread an mar malede as on any thing else " ")Tv dear, good anal," exclaimed - Mr Phippen, "look what a wreck I am, and don't talk in that "No better, truer, prettier girl in the world," asid.the vicar. "A very lively, energetie person," said Mies Stureh. "How I 'ball miss her!" said Miss Louisa.— "Nobody else amused me as Rosamond did, when I was laid up wi•b that last bad cold of mine." "Sho used to give us mach nice little early sup per parties," Raid Miss Amelia. "Sho was the only girl i ever PSW who way fit to play with boys," Raid Muter Robert "She enold e.iteh a ball, Mr Phippen, Sir, with nne hind, and go down a 'tilde with both her legs torther " "fil , i• me" Paid Mr Phippen "What an extraordinary wife for n blind man! You bo wa• blind, my dear doctor, did you not? Let inc see. what wa• hi• °some? Yon will not bear ton hardly nn my lo•' of memory, Mi•a l;kturch? When indication ha• ravaged the body, it begins to prey on the mind Mr Frank something. wi• it not' lilind , too, from hi• birth? Sad! pad!" "Nn, no—Frankl3Ell." answered the vicar "Loonar.l Franklan4. And not blind heist his birth by any mean- It i 4 not much more than a year azo %loco ho could se.. almost ss well as any of u 4 " "An accident, I supprss:" said Mr. Phippen. "You will PICUSC me if I take the arm chair? a partial reelining p , -,-ture is of great assistance to aftsr meal. S. an accident happened to hi 4 eye-' Ah, wile a dlightfully easy chair to sit in!•' Scarcely an accident, - said Dr Chcnnery .'L.onar.l Frankland was a difficult child to bring up; re 0 eonstitutinnal weakness, you know, at first lie seemed to g et over that with time, and grew into a quiet, sedate, orderly sort of boy—as unlike my son there as possible very atninhle, and what you call easy to deal nub Well. he had a turn for mechanics ( I am tehing you all this to make you understand about his Win loess, mid after veering about from one ..sieurration of that sort to another, he took at last to watch making (7nrions amusement (or n boy, hot anything that required delicacy of touch and plenty of patience and perseverance, was just the thing f amuse and occupy Leon ard I alwscs snl t , tobor and mother, i•f; •* him that break his magnifying "11.4 semi him to rn , , and I'll givo him a hack at L'ap - Froe', and frar.li him the use of a hat Rut It was rto a II is pirents knew hest, I th , 'r must be humored W. 'l, thing- went on smo ,th enough for some titnc, till he got another long illness, as I believe, from n taking exercise enough As soon as be began to g ot round, back he went to his old mitch.making necupation s again But the had end of it all v. 1- (-own. , About the last work lii, p o r WILY the repairing of my waic h—liore it is; goes as regular as a steam %int. I I/0111 ' 1' IZOT, it back int.) my fob very low b. f 're I heard that be was getting a bad .0 the back of his head, and that be saw all of m ruing spots Imforo his eyes String up with lots of port wine, and give him three .urs a day on the back of a quiet pony—that was my advice Instead ..f taking it, they sent for aoetor, from L mdon, and blistered him be bind the ears. and between the shoulders, and a s,, r s. , and worse, flickered and flickered, and went r-wr ,it 14st like the flame of a candle His mwher died—luckily for her, poor soul—before that happened Ilis father was half out of his mind; took him to oculists in London, and ocutists i n Paris All they lid was to call the blindness by lmg, Latin name, and to say that it was h less and useless to try an operation Some of them said it was the result of the long weak n fr urn which he had twice suffered after ill ness Some said it was an apoplectic effusion in his brain All of them shook their heads when thy heard of the watchmaking. So they r.. u ght him hack home blind; blind he is now; 3'l I blind he will remain, poor dear fellow'. for the ro , t f hi; life " ME 'a sh tek m.; my dear Chennery, vou shock me drea lid Mr Phippen. ••Espeeially wlit.n >on state that theory about loug weakness aft r ss Good 'leavens : Why, I have . ha I W-ak ric.se4-I have got them now.— s i , di Ih • see before his eyes? I see Ap()U4, I•liek spots. dancing black spots. dancing black I'va my word of honor, Chen nory. thi. e mes home to me—my sympathies are p.iiufully acute—sl-.(eel this blind story in every nerve of my holy Ido indeed :" "You would hardly know that Leonard was bli n d, to lo .k at him," said Miss L ,uisa, striking into the conversation with a view of restoring Mr. Phippcn's equanimity. "Except that his ti l es lock quieter than other people's, there seem no tlifi. , r.•nee ia theta now Visho was that to charaleter you told u' about, Miss Stnreli, w h o was blind, and diirot show it any more than Liouard Fr.nkland ?" "Milton, my love. I begged you to retneui. I),r flint he vial the mast famous of British epic poets," ansver;.l Miss Stureh, with suavity "He p .ctica iy .lescribes his 6141.11:1e5s as beiug caused by 'so thick a drop serene.' You shall real about it, Louisa. _Vier we have had atlit tle French, we will have a little Milton, thim tuerning Hush, love, your papa isrivpcakiug." "Poor rung Frankland !" said the vicar, ten derle , “that go .1, tender, noble creature I married him to thi. m .ruing seem. sent a+ a eon , ,,ilstion in him in hi, affliction. If auy huw man can make him happy for the rest of hi. life, 111samon.1 Tri.svort u is the girl to do it "She hag mad.. a sieri6ce," said Mr Phippen; "hur I lik.. b r f , r tie, having made a sacrifice my-' if in remaining 4ingle It seems indispew.; indeed, on tho score of humanity that I 11. , w c uld I c , m4ciLiotiqusly in fliet suet' a disgestion as mine on_ a member of the fairer porti mof creation? No: lam a Sac rifice in my own proper person, and I have a fel -I.w feeling for others who are like me. Did ph,. ery much, Cheat/cry, when you were marrying 11, r Cry :" exclaimed the vicar, contemptilougly -It oi‘rnond Teeverton is not one of the polling, senntu mtal sort, I can tell you. A due, 'uuxorn. warm hearted, quick tempered girl, who looks what Ahe means when she tells a man she is going to marry him. And, mind you, she has been tried If she hadn't loved him with all her heart and she might have been free months ago to marry anybody she pleased. They were engagel long before this cruel affliction befell young Frrokland—the fathers, on both sides, bawls" lived as near neighbors in these parts for years WO, when the blindness came, Leon ard, like the fine constientious fellow he is, at (nice offered to release Rosamond from ber en. K agomPot. You should have read the letter she wrote to him, Pbippen, upon that. I don't mind confessing that 1 blubbered like a baby over it, when they showed it to me. I should have mar tied them at owe the instant I read it, but old Frankland was a fidgety, punctilious kind of man, and he in%iAted on a six months probation so that she might he certain of knowing ber own mind. He died before the term was out, and that caused the marriage to be put n again.— But no delays eonid alter Rosamond- -aix years instead of six womb*, would not have changed ber. There she was this morning at fond of that poor patient blind fellow as she was the first day they were engaged. 'You shall never know a , sad moment, Lenny, if I can help it, as long as B. F. SLOAN, EDITOR. you live,' those were the first words she said to him when we all came nut of church hear you, Rosamond,' says I. 'And you shall judge me, too, doctor,' says ,h", quick as lightning.— 'We will come back to Long Beckley, and yin shall ask Lenny if I hare not kept my word.'— With that, she gave me a kiwi that yeti might have heard down here at the vicarage, Mesa her heart ! We'll drink her health ..after dinner, Miss Starch—we'll drink both their health*, Phippen. in a bottle of the best wine I have is my cellar " I a glass to,st and water, so far as am concerned. if you will allow me. — said Mr. Phip pen, mournfully. t•But, my dear Chennery, when you were talking of the fathers of these two interesting young peoplo, you spoke of their living as near neighbors here, at Long Beckley. My memory is impairNl,tts I am painfully aware; but I thought Captain Trevertnn was the eldest the two brothers, and that be always Iliad, when he was on shoro, it the family place its Cornwall ?" "Se he did," returned the viesr, 'in his wife's lifetime. But •inee her death, which happened as long ago as the year "twenty nine—let ale see, we are now in the year forty four—and that, makes—" The vicar stopped for an instant to calculate, and I.x)ked at Mis Stureh "Fifteen years ago, Sir," said Mire Stureb, o ff ering t h e acc o m modation of a little simple subtraction to the vicar, with her blandest amjte. "Of course," continued Doctor Cbeonery.— "Well, since MN Treverton 'bed, fifteen years ago, Captain Treverton has never been near Porthgenna Tower And, what is more, Kip pen, at the first opportunity he could get, he sold th e pl ace —sold it, nut and out. mine, fisb cries, and all—for forty th( usand pounds " "You don't "iv si exclaimed Mr. Phippen. '•Dpi he find the air unhealthy? I should think the local produce, in the way of food. men be enarse, now, in those hirhar, u• regions? Who bought the pinee "IPonsrh Franklanl's tulle•," said the vicar. "It rather io ne onry. that ail,• of Portbgen• na Tower, with , ou , ouriona circumstances in volved in it Surr.s , w. (Ike a turn in the gar , len, Phirpen I'll t. , 1! veil all nh , ,ut it over my morning' eilfir Vi i 44 S'urch. if you want Tr, I shall be n n the lawn i.ornewtirre Girls! mint you know your le,unni Bob ! remember O r o I've gnt a e i ne in thi. hall. and a birch roi in my arr.4inz r , oni C me , Phipm - n, rouse up out of that arm chair Wou went any No to a turn in the "My dear fellow I will say Yes—if yoti will kindly lend MC an umbrella, and allow me to carry my camp stool in my hand," said Mr Phippen "I aeu too weak to eneount..r the auto, and 1 can't go far without sitting down, The moment I feel fatigued, Mis Soured', I open my camp stool. 31/1 sit d iwn any where, without the .lightest regard for appearances. lam ready' Cht•nnery, wh , never you are—equally ready, my gaol friend, for the garden and the story about the sale of Piirthgeonu Tower Y-ti said it was a curious story, did you not ?" "I said there were sonic curious circumstan ces cnuo• cted with it," repl'ed the vicar. "And when you hear about them, I aortic you will pay en, too. Cote along : you will find your camp- With tboie amnia, awtor.Chennery opened hi 4 cigar ea4e, and led the way out of the break fast parlor T. be C,,nti'mued DR BURDELL. — Tbe „Sew York Heruhi gives the following description of this man, whose trag ic death has caused an intense axesitement in that city : "The tcstirorny of the dentists and persona who knew Harvey Burdell, is that he was a mer cenary, selfi-h man. with strong passions, be was easily excited, but was not a plan who would be likely to nttselt 'mother. lie , quarreled with every one with whim he came in c'intact He quarreled with all Lis relatives, and Lail law suits with m eet -f them At the timeef his death than.' th , en living in the eity were no, on speaking term , with Lim. liocesty was by no means a elyarncti ristio 11 111, ile.dinvs, sod his reputation among good men w very had. He was %cry 1 i-nuritimi Ile was a eery licentious man, and had a great wetly il.theul•ies in noose. 1 fir, his f .und on the books at the Toombs, in the 1.. w courts, and has been kmiwo t • the heal of the police for many years. While living in Chatubt r, street Lc araia sued by a disreputable woman for non pay went of money alleged to be due to her. In 1535, or thi•reab iut, Harvey Bunlell was eugdg(Ll to be married to a respectable young holy, but ht r father pre tow yr, fused to pert wit the marriage; at which Burdett gut angry, struck the father and gave him a Vatek eye._ quently be was .engaged to be married to another young lady, as adopted daughter of a wirthy laity and gentleman, the day sod hour was set for the wedding, the wedding party as sembled, when Dr Harvey Burilell entered the room of the old man and told him that before he married the girl he wanted a check for 820,000. The olil gentleman told him that if he was mar tug Lis , laughter for her money, he should have r, su the wedding was broke° up. Sabo., quently the. young lady married the person who was to be groomsman on the forma occasion; he reei iv. d the ehi ek f.ir s . 2o,ifffo The cheek on th • pies .us I.eea.,lou wa, ma d e out fur Burdehl; and wi aid Lace been given him immediately after the marrii.ge een mony v. a performed; and %vb. u he heard at)• ut it, he is -aid to have become greatly, excited, and d. claret' that lie would never get us -rrie d. Dr. Burdell had a vi ry eurious eervant girl, called 13olely, who was with Ii in five year. at 362. Broadway, and two years at 31 Bond street, during the %bolo of which time he never furnish ed her with a bed, or any thing to idea p upon.-- lie gave her a small weekly salary, upon which she supported herself, buying Ler finial at the groccrit s The girl could speak four languages fluently—the ELIO:di, French, Gernsati and Spniatt. She hail a great passion for atuddying and learning languages. She was an Irish girl, and ato faithful senatst. Di. Burdell gen. tr.tliy lc' tail !loame to p. news of bad character." - - so- - *kr .c Witty Druggist, ou a cold Light last winter, was w ke up by a terrible ripping et his door. Going down he found a poor fellow who wanted to purellise a doiie of salts. The bhop was entered, the dl.e prepared, and a hilt dime put in the drawer. " flow much did you make in that operati Jo?" ask, d his wife, as he got inn bed ‘• Four cents," was the r ply " A shame it is," r int-id - id the irritated dame, "for a man to disturb your rest j°,4 for a dose of salts " " Recolh ct, my dear," slid the druggist, "that one dose of salts wilt disturb the nases rest more than it hi p+ cultic., awl reflect that these tittle ineonvetticuers always w..rk we',l in tune." DUTCH.—Tue othvr day two Duebanea were overheard disettseaug a knotty question. rays il &SS :.-- " Shaoop, vat de lisekees mesa yea he say about the awaseter, sod de seerow?" " Vas," mid Jeoob, "you nix forstay volad ish." 'a Nis, vas be mese" " Ary," saidJaoub, "It say awaatsey biatabes below cap nix pit colder!" NUMBER 41.