ERIE WEEKLY OBSERVER mit E, PUB LISHERS. MISERVER. I 1,1 • 1 rr RDir si t • . . 1100K K, r FIFTH ST•4 ) t N, Itdit.r. thin i month; $1 50, if the ear, the paper will r usln r for col- DMZ= nwl , a moan. xi tne,tttli 01 8 ‘lO 5 INII IS 75 One lne " V e •a 1.1.• at piPaßun • S• L month., $ll :AP 1 y.• month/. $3l). sine. 1 1 1,1 - 1", .1 t 3 per Annum rPIA. an ti9.i. r eight, $4 111,f-tat,. I Ine. at, and .112er outielna, half the %bow* req nont rhangea in their 0...;.0r, and rani. for SI. rti•.n, and the pthnate bunines• •rwata require,' ,-• oto.llf , • tn•rt lon- DIRECTORY. Hl.l hi IL it,,,, kr, TIN I TO urit \ TON, • ,• n• • • rt•mds and M.• rte-a -•.,% drawn. • other on , t\\l 1111) • - • • t'4 , L. F sh, exit, Grain, 1,-, W,,. W k ll,,w , • \•• 4 Wr.:' to I' I's 4; A. It IL k. , I ti• • •,• t 1. '-tatt• autl 14.144 Gold A .- - 3 , ••• and 10.-entPil r Lltit I. FT, - • s. • . . :.• 41, - .• W.bo”lL., li• A. ONkh%. v Ilanhaft, sr.! l'a.:ery - rkr INEME ,-. • ary..lleiz.., , I 111 • •. 1111 hiNsON, , •: - 1111 1,•p•-• i• E, I , I,•lers l•i MERE E=li=ll =IS ..14tA1 %UT, I=l =IEEE I •-11 IMRE, MIZE MEM I TI t 1 _ _ 1 & -~, 1 .~ n, t., , .. !tl•~ s, h~~ 1,. aCM=:II (1...1.• • Blnek, . oir• 11 ,0 N -0 1411 , ..!1, In prn..-o, Ili 1. 1 It 111:, .10 • %TIE - LI.. , t II an.l IiEMEIIIII 1 1. 11 'TIN. 'II n m t*l In- •16. h ENNED q.aar so.' br..ru 3r.. I •• Ts t.161101 , i111 k, IL:o1 J K. •11..1+1., I%EI'I,EIL. 0., ~ atll lIMINEIIIIICEIMS 1.4 kl'IN, a;lv knit r... 4% •.4.•••I ~ ;.14re, up ...' I , w"rk snrrsnts4l. FII lIU.I ( 0.. r r • l'.l stf.l Of 1,41.4•1 14 t, ke ; • ; -r...tant;r f, RAI, I Ithe. 101\ litT, • f .( a few !1..," East c.I , • L. obe, L 1411: sTEW IltT g I. AI, PrT 1;004111 11Id 1:14 lir..yro • 11,1 tel. 3.3 TLER, . C..lll,ttnns •nd - -. an ..lupavli 33 ICIITII E It . 4-d vrow•.. Paints. II Krlt Pa J 3 stt 11.1,1inK, up-ttalr* i• %RN 1••• • milt, 'leaver/ in Coal, Finn-, :iteinnierii, Public J. Vion • rti, 11 - t. Pork, En... dnler ItaiT 0., ant .11", Coln, anew.- - an, ..rta.l.-•(.. .4 I /..prtsit in 1, I nt,, and all parts .4 11.nl•hug. to the ronnno /k. 1 n.l Tan, N..1•1a Park' kilo( T, t•t - ISI.OX t. 111.11 K 11,3.1 I in V , irii.ign and l• V. It•-••' • k, 'tate .irrPt, V & el. tHK. . •-• In 11.... •• and 1mt.,10.1 Wine. Vrt) 1 /tt, an.l Acvnts BEIM \s. f • '7' 4 MEM I I. 0 ,I 11, , , \ HI. 1 tir, J it I.rtor.uonn I 11..okotore, Vitt Tamm•n• Ifall MEE lin ME', • •••••••••••, trrrir Dealrr, Train, • n ~•••• tr. the lit. , ltr Fir • ~11 • w. II I 6. glowi t.. i' 11121,1 PY, 1. 111 t Itli r 11.00 N. • • f, r t• .'r et en•t ttte Ark 1.1 NT ., 1. • ket , Rr ( 0.. •,•• I‘l, ti .1. , .n Wril •o.t fu • $, • riA...;6,0 and bnl IV to es►. I= EMEEI 1111!1;♦ Mind•, P.lieb it., ITO I Ilf It( 111 Ll.. 1,/ It'il ... i.i%E. T rgr i r r \. r.:.•••••• I nrr wr of li %% I. \ I'llitT l/t! ntiOr ('Loll 1104. P. • V /111.1114'1N. ^ , / //orr•oio. •• '••••., •••., • Point., tills, ' • • - , Fin..rot po no! =I k Hall. • .r.n., lirtar.y , llll.l run- F•art. Enquire at •/1 I n 1. 1 1,• it. 11411 lAN CLEVELAND & ERIE B. R- IikantRAININIRINEMIN tai after MoOda7 , brarth MI, 146; Psaseoger Trains wilLron F.A....4TWAgyr, Leave Cleveland for Kris at 0:00 all., r u. and 10 00 r a The 0:00 a 111 train will stop at all way station except Wickliffe. Mentor, Perry, moonlit and Saybrook. The 10:04 r tram will stop at Ashtabula, Conneaut and Girard only The i onnevit traan will bare Cleveland at r a. and stop al all Wai Stations. I,,rarn Fspresa 4 1111 !nave rrie / or Cleveland at 17. r M stopping at Utrs , l, lug(leld, Kingirtlle, Ashtabula, Genet, and l'atust II i•• no t Nli‘ht Express will leave, Erie for Cleveland at 3.30 • C., llul Thin 1 , 1-50 A. and Day Exprea• 2.30 r ■ The 3:30 A. A. train will atop at Girard, Connesat, Ashtabula and I'm...vide only "h• 10 SO A. a train will ati.p at .h tlor kept paybrook. Unionville, Perry, Mentor and Wicirlil• Th. 2.30 r Y, train will atop at Girard, Conneaut, Arlitsiol• an. Painerrilir Poly. The I onneatit train will leave Conneaut at 7 1.5 ♦. K.,antl lan!. at all V., ,ta.I4,DS. All of the th r owiti,th train. rata, Weatwaed tonneet at Claire Land with trainii for Toledo, t pica o, Columbus, Cincinnati, &c., ke the through trams going Eastward connect at Dunkirk nth the V Y. k E. IL It, and at BOW* with those il.rk t antral and buffalo and Now Yuri City Raitrotala. ()Ma.ofC.k E. FL R. t H. NOTTINGII 14 !Larch 2s, 1957. tf-27 , Su Vt. 1866. Buffalo & Erie Railroad. PIC Mill A ILIKANGAXENT. W and after Monday, May 1, Trains will lea.. F.rw sa f " W 2 1 99 A M , Night I.:scream, atopping at North F.ast, Dunkirk, rivlrrr Curia, eounrrting at Dunkirk nut Nodal° with Morrung Exprvas Trsatio for New York 0 au A 11, War Espnew., stopping at all alatioria, r oaa,..ettn g rt Dunkirk and Buffiaio with W.r Traina Eaat P 11, EN pn.n. Mail stopping at all Vail Qtation• a n d ,n tiectlog at Dunkirk and Diablo with Larry... Train. (4, N.. York 6 6.1 P Lizhtuityr Expresa,•t North East, Wowtasid, Pu •kir, anA •iikerereek, roonvetang at Dunkirk ar. I with Express Truing. for New York. 11 tt 1, 1151, 31-tf DF.NNN, cursl/11.11111 LIIII! RING Ah'RANGEMENT Trains run through to Wheeling & Pittsburg. r: a nd after Woodsy, Marrh 9th, 13:.7, trams run C 4, , • • areonitng to tL.. h'.ow tog on TIME T(III.E EMI MEE MEMEME Ii 44 t. ..: i 1: I. la o .. 4 :Al r. 1..4 I'l ';. 2 • ;`, EETIMEM3 I' II is 11. .4 11 it, .1: 105: • f4 ll I I :2 4 I I 40 11. 12 1,1 0 Pi I'2 .1 eA 1. i. MEI .17 R..chetter, 441 , • PirrmprGH Tr•:CARkwAs BR &NCI( Tr-s.n I.•sers N.r.l. l'hilade4 hi. 7 4 a .11, , losat 1 1 - W. Wavol.-- 1 ,,,, 0r at 't -'. 4 , 1r...At Basar 1.1 10..0, ~U n., ling ..t , ; , tl'l • s, it on ',sop for (.1., eland, l'lttabur,r, .1 Wh.,!ist: 1 ...irra Itas as : a: 1 4. p I , om arm al 4.1 Train from t Ito ristl. }',.;•- to, r , ~. I Wt,...,,,,.., W., ....bur,: at 215 I. to Arr, ‘ ,ot • . 1 1 .,ar a' 1..% .fl,i \,,,r P../iale'ptua a' 10 1 , a hanan , nt Cara 1.1-tan.. n l I Ireland an.t I';uaLur; an „ z --, - \ CONNECTIoNS Th. Train, courieet at Pittsburg with tit. Prrinsi Irani, it% Emi=laztzustomm MEM It. with the . -tatheni and lnA.w. lotma r.,, Vevrark, I •,1 Li nib... 411 i 1 %. - 1,14 all tt lit, 'I With tl/.. 11.1titu , ), •ntl.ll'no Ita 1•)r 1 ) 1 1 1 •1.. W... 11.144..) an.. lialtimort. 1.• •• Mani , . 1, lanknne..l) . 4 ant Twin t• on It)‘,.. ‘• • 1,1&n.1 tue lalc. gib, ro• ac•l I & T r ,• ti • 3: . lll.earet Falln , emly.: l Am; n 1 .k TI. n B irhn tL,n, It•nt k I.l&nd. I.are•tir•n,, ia, ,k , .1411 vr3 , 11.••••, - I Pa a 111.1 I!, North ni n: rr t . * rird,‘,o,l o , th. ••tnr.• on Ihr• L, to , n • nl ail n • run Ipsti flektt I /thee,. of thr larl.•uft r•qint-elltag How ft• b. an% r 1•4 ".11. rmt , wimint I . . k 1' it ft . Iwo%ml, pleb ft. 10.,' 1 ii -_a U I= INSURANCE COMPANY, pA44....i, /ph itt. ) ARE now doing 'minima. on the Mutual plan. tio• .n -gored a partiripation In the pniflto of the (741111rIltlf, withont haltshtr heyonil the prvinium aid ofum the Lakes and ('anal innured on the Trio.: laiocald. terms lAA.CS will he liberally and promptly adjiiiited Fireniik, on toorehandute, huildin,ni aryl other property, in town or country, for a limited term permanently DIRECTORS. Joseph II .al, Jame. Hand, Theophituo Paulding, John I'. Ititeirt Barton, John Garr..-it, lin I.verrenor iiarnuel Edward*, llenri Pared /I utarey, I I,•-ie. Kelley. home R. Darla, IfdMm :well, William Hat, lir S. Thomas, lir R. M. Ruston, Spenert. vrg Yawn*, ?relit R. n tow S Soc'y AppLacatlon con .0e motto to J. KELLOGG, EA* Aire t prtl 4 NV. Fire!! Fire!!! TITS G 0 TO G. A. BENNETT, Insurance Wks. corner of 4 tate and Firth street, Wrial,F• Block up stairs and set your property r swans'. He represents the following rellial•le ompa- MERi'IIANT" , FIRE ANII wAR..mr. TN:lulu:icy COMPANY of .1 •IpLia. A a thur wed Capital $400,000 mil LAS 1,4J0 V AEA ERR UNION IN 4 rRANCE CONPA,NY, Athens, Brut ford Capital IPUu,nUu. All paid up and securely invested Rat:ems lan as security loth. Insured lull permit, Fru., Der 13, ISMS. G. A_ BEN FTT, Ae JOE' B. BOGERT, lIdPoETER AND DEALER IN FOREIGN AND DORESTIr HARDWARE, a —A ND--- CIZTTIAMIR , Y, •;,, Fig PEARL STREET and No. 56 STONE STREET, NEW YORK. 3n-11 PARICE - R, GRAY 6:DAYII3, REAL ESTATE BROKERS; LAND, DOUR- ANCE AND GENERAL AGENTIi, Cassell MUM mad *Wu Mi. lawn. PARKER de DOYLE, PARKER et. GRAY nank.ru, IMpainv in Exchange, I 1111.1 A la, and Wel Israte AN! , LAND .14,ENT:i, hholiE Ii =5, Cliaelosi, ....lowa. . .1 ewa. Seine and enter Vacant land* In Western and North Weirtern lo hump, and Pre—emption. In Nebraska Ter'y for resident. and non-rowidenta, Pay Tate., kc. M. T. DAVIS, Attorney at Lasediai:Netary R 11..% Pilloatz C y REFER 741 Don. John Galicaith. and ill B Lowry, D Derriekson and /I 1.. Richmond, }wife. Relation,. lion. M Trout, .itaron, and Samuel itnntherton, Nat.rtord, Pa., Dr. C and Connelli, Rork Maud, 111 1,47 J. J. imirrivEntyLwat --- A - G --- Eter. R EPRESEN T IN fo G the llowing reliable Coil ompaniet, .ET.VA FIRE IN sCRANCE CO.VPi.YY, Of Ilartf..rd, Conn. • - • apttal PO O , OOO CO-V.llO % WEAL TH FIRE MAR/,TW ITsrire vCE CO, it,m.t.rt, Venn., - Capital Saw,...Jo. PE % FLl'.4‘l4 FIRE A YD VAR/YE LYS CRA.% liti•ours, Pa., - - - • Capital $390,000. ,ETNA I.IIE INQURANCE COMPANY, 11.0.f.,rd, Cann , - Capital sl:ol,onri Ran •in .ash u In. as wearily to tiwt lowered will permit. fit in P... 1 (Aft BUIMICZ Erie. April IN, lablt 49 The InsuranceforTolntiiid Conntey ! Tx Erie County Mutual lnyuranys I ompany enntinues to invite lesuranne ..w etery description of property in Town 111.1 I •t as low rate. as are romistent ..th remelt,. Iliske are d,,,y4„1 .nto two elamess, cu . the Farmer's. in yr hien nothing but farm propgity and dwelllnya 00 fret or noor emu ezpowiim, are toured, and the Commercial. in whirh all kind of property are irmum-d. The fund. in either department are not liable for Comes in the other; taah Insurance made in either Department at the usual Pt rates DIRECTORS. James r Marshall, I. M. Tlbbalii, WM. F Riederneeh.. PF. Burt.... John Ziesinprly. J. II " 4 14.rrrtt. I' Keller. Thew. Mnarbesal, Jamb Ilanis.a, clears.. A. }.11.0, T. Babbitt, WM. H. Bays, Alfred King. ()Frit:aka. Ja..11110 C. Il•statit.u.i., Pribst. JowA Gryst own, See eIIASSJ/0 M. TIIIIALIA, Irma. Ogee, riser J. R. litarratt's, Cbeapalda. Il Erie, Jame 21, 115.5,11. _ Erg BLAZE 'S BONNET ROOMS. Wll.l, b. itirs•lting emery Irrek. ferns Nevi York, Smarm and the F.aahrrs la...tort. lame ampplies nt • STRAW ASP tANCY GnODS, er ihr Sara hisprrtatirsaa This Met atylea sod at priors that drfy Serb. Oct. 26, Ib 4. T. M. BLAYK. CANAL MILL ERIE, PAL JA maw J ACIIO4IIIIII, Wbatarla sad BMW Saashortsiter et rt.ouß °mem, MILI-FW), BRAN. 4C.. 4C nob paid tar all kinds of Gala. Ifd isliand ;Spirit. iiirpraisraTa, by Um horiel arta qassi. IA bars tr• *sit ',ambi t ion.% hp Jan. 7. I$M , CARTE% b PIRO. TI TI .10 GOOD amortmosta an Mods ii rod Tip,god at amid 4 01 pewV IRKIe bow to Ila per lb, WO lb. shialb I . )oAgr e r s. Alos , 4 J. B WESTW ARD U=NEE=I =EEC 111 1 N r .1 1• 4 /i 1 41J 4 ig B 1 10 tn. 44 sl3 • I 4,, 7 4+ t ' , ereLsntl. Iteaord, Hudson, Baran& t~•t Bar arJ Hanover, 1 show (Wet. Wlbrdlw. -mall • I,l'l, Industry. I'itt•burg 4.. • 50 1 t , 1: 1 ,, 1111 11 • 11 44 4 11 I_ 44.. Ir. 4 10 VI .1 4 10 V 4 . IiZEEMMEI ME= 4 1 t PI I _ 4 ' 2 2 t I r 4. I 10 • .s 0 Ilvite Air It rierp..rt. I . ,tintnl IZuvh Run I.snrrn.n,e I.vu'.envt!n• Mr+ Ili's. nwk 11'41vrtlIr rverpnr.l `untlt'r P. -ry BEI 1 1 1 - 11 /I I. 1 11%. J It 1 11 i IMII I=I2I=MMI .1 IlriZ I\ll. Edmond A10u,),,, H Jorwn Ilrnoke, J..ho H Darlinoton J 1,. Johnson, John J John Teller, Jr iticct rp ottrn. -an,— Far not at Berths Bun woo high, While evened the wind aad Upped thorns/1— We new a soae-whit.butteelly thtncing bet.re the fitful rate, Par out at OM The little stranger, elan had toot Ilia wet, of danger nothing knew; ...tiled awhile upon the mad, then nattered o'er the water' blue; Far out at ame. A 1..,,.. there gleamed the cloudless AY. Beneath, the Immediate oases awes Beigre..n them deemed the batteray; TL. In thin rear Beene; Far oat at sea. Away he eped ill shimmering glee! Dim, indistinct—now eiwo—neinirone, Ni t rht comes, with wind and raitt—and be \ al.re a ill donee before the UOllll-- Flr oat at ewe. Eal 3 dice unlike hie 'nate% I 1" ..n; Perhaps not Wallet, nor worse mend: Awl he hatli kit, and known and sees, A la rE...r !item:lJ hop.—thourb lost, Far out at sea. o'hoict Illiscellang. TII E DEAD SECRET. CUAPEEI XII. I Plot Airaimat ere 14eeret Toward. tho elo4r ,•f the Peening, on the day after Mr Orridge's interview with Mrs. Norbury, the I►rrtid fart roach, running through Cornwall es far a 4 Truro, set down three inside passengers at the door of tho bonking-office, on arriving at ita destination Two a these passengers were an of 1 sreot letnao and his daughter; the third was Mrs. JA:' The fither and (laughter collected their lug gage, and entered the hotel; die outside passengers branched off in different directions with as little delay ns p Mrs Jazeph alone stood irre. so!ute on the pavement, and seemed uncertain what she should do next. When the coachman good wituredly endeavored to assist her in arriv. iug at ade -' 'n of some kind, by asking whether he c-1(1 I •1 • :(1,) thing to help her, she started, and 1..-Ic, (I h t 111111 suspiciously; then, appearing to ree ii.. t lo , r(o•lf, thanked him for his kindness, and inquilc 1, with a c Infusion of words and a hesitation of manner which appeared very ex tra,,r(linary in the coachmen's eyes, whether she !nigh' I ..!lowed to leave her trunk at the book ing •(- I tile while, until she could return and eat! f r it again Rec._ p-rinis.ion to leave her trunk as long os sh,• please], she crossed over the principal street ..f the t. wn, ascended the pavement on the opposite .111 I walked down the first turning she came t entering the bye street to which t l ., Turning lid, she glanced back, satiafied her.ett that nobody was following or watching 1, , r, ha.., nr l ~ n a kw yards, and stopped again st a AID i • h.p , 1 ....‘.,ted to the sale of book cases, c a, N. TIC b. le., had writieg desks After tir,t k.ng up at the letters painted over the r-- •-cIIMANN. CABINET MAKER, !Lc —she pi; p. in stinp winckw A ...ditty aged inAt), w. , li a. •; t eat behind the counter p r w . tracker. nil nodding brisk ly at reg.thr if.tert al.. a• if he were hunitning u two ; k. 1 I;g t' it with h i . he a d S. , .11. r• it/ the shop, Mrs. Jazeph oloo,c t'. f, r uttd walked in. - to aa- tn•ide, she became aware that the cloerlul MTh I.ehicol the counter was ic cp,tig low 1,..1 tn a tuu, of his own humming, I,‘ to a I.lr, I l.y a niusiegl box. The c. , %r nrgio .t• trnm a parlor behind the o, air 111 , 1.1 was playing was the I ly 1;1'6," nf Mono " 'I , 131piehtuanti kt loaner' asked Mrs Jaz Ye!, oil: on, - said the cheerful man, point ing with it to - war,i , the door that led into "Tl,e anvirers for him When• rMr 11u.rhruann's t>,,x k playing, Mr. Bußch• in..lin It ( 11,4 fir if from it Did you •.. til.Caui7" •• If uobody with him.'' " Oh, on, h. i. quite alone Shall I give any nano?" Mra Jaz ph opined her lips to answer, hesitat ed, and said nothing. The sbopman, with a quicker delicacy of perception that might have bern ezpoeted from him, judging by outward appeatanei s. did not repeat the question, but opened the or at once, and admitted the visitor, t o the pre4eurc. of )1r llusebmann The shop parlor was a Very small room, with an odd three.cornered look about it. with a bright gr.en piper on the walls, with • large dried flab in a Ow*. CaPt• over the fireplace, with two meers chaum pipes hanging together on the wall oppo• site, and with a nest round table placed as accurately am possible in the middle of the door. On the table were tea.things, bread, butter, a pot of jam, and a inu4ical box in a quaint, old' fashioned ram.; and by the aide of the table sat a little. r faced. white-hrired, simple - looking old wan, sr)), %tatted up, when the door was open wit h an appearance of extreme con-resins, and touched the step of the musical box so that it might cots° playing when it came to the end o the air. " lviy to speak with you, sir," said the the rrul ,h-rtign "That is Mr Itnsehmann, ma'atn," in a low tone, seeing Mrs Jazop!, s•4.p iu apparent uncertainty on entering the 01.'0r. Wtll please In take a sea t, ma ' am r said ?dr Bu-chmann, when the shopman had e lc..ed the It.or and gone back to his counter.— " Exouse the music; it will stop directly." He spok.• these words to a foreign accent, but with perfu et 4 flu ,, ney. tlr- Joseph loi.ked at him earnestly while be was a :drissing her, and advanced a step or two before slin said anything. "Am Iso changed?" she a.livd softly "so sadly, rhanged, Uncle Jo'rrl'!" "licit ill' Himmel! it's Sarah Leeson:" cried the old Marl, running Up to hie Tilsit(lr as nimbly as if he was a boy again, taking both her hands, and her with an odd brisk tenderness on the ch. Although his nice was not at all above t h.. average height of woman, Uncle Joseph was short that he bad to raise himself on tip toe t rf..rm the ceremony of embracing her. T. , think of Sarah coming at last!" he raid, p 11,,r into w chair "After all these years awl %. .., In think of Sarah Leeson coming to PP.' l isle J.••••ph gain!" "Sarah still, but not Sarah Leeson," said Mrs Joseph, pressing her thin, trembling hands firmly togethf.r an.l lc.king , town nn the floor while she Fr , ke. • Ah! married!" Raid Mr Itiocitmane, gaily "Married. , f e..orae Tell we all about ,our ho-hand Sirah " Ile i- .14..1 Deed, and forgiven." She murmured the Iset. (ht.,' words in • ',Wolper to ber.elf. " .1h: I am sorry f r you: I ppoke la) suddra• ly. did I art. my Auld?" Raid the old Irma., 4 .Nevur m.n.i: No, no; I don't mean that-1 Wed let ea talk of somethisi else. Yoe will have a bit of bread and jam, wallet you, Sarah? -,raviabing rwapberry jam tlid-lister is your GENIIIII I=l $1 50 A YEAR, I ADVANCE. ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING ) APRIL il l 1857, J-1"' mouth. Some tea, then? So, so, she will have some tea to be sure And we won't talk of your troubles—at least., not just yet. You look very pale, Sarah, very mach older than you ought so look—no, I don't man that; I don't mean to be rude It was your voice I knew you by, my child—your voice that your poor Max always said would have made your fortune if you would have learnt to sing. Here's his preuy music boa going still. Don't look en down hearted— don't, pray! Do listen a little to the minim you remember the box?—my brother Max's hoe— Why, bow you look! Have you forgotten the box that the divine Monad gave to my brother with his own hand, when Mix was a boy in the music school at Vienna? Listen! I have set it going again It's•e song they call 'Bud, Ilstti;' it's a song in an opera of 31ozart's Ab, brand. full beautiful! your bade Max said that all music was comprehended in that one song. I know nothing about music, but I have my heart and my ears, and they tell me that Max woo right." Speaking these words with abundant gestieula• tion and amazing volubility, Mr Busehmann poured out a cup of tea for his nieed, sti rre d i t carefully, and, patting her on the shoulder, beg ged that she would make him happy by drinking it all up directly. As he cam.: close to her to press this request, he discovered that, the tears were in her eyes, and that she was trying to take her handkerchief from her pocket without being observed. " Don't mind me," she said, seeing the old man's face sadden es he looked at her; "and don't think me forgetful or ungrateful, Uncle Joseph. I remember the box—l remember everything that you used to tale an injerest in, when I was younger and happier than Prn now. When I last saw you, I came to you in - trouble; and I come to you in trouble once more. I seems neglectful in me nevtr to have written to you for so many years past; but my life has been a very sad one, and I thought I had no right to lay the burden of my sorrow on other shoulders than my own" Uncle Joseph shook his head at these last words, and touched the stop of the musical box. "Mozart shall wait a little," hu said, gravely, "till I have told you something Sarah, hear what I say, and drink your and own to me whetlit r 1 mp, Ak the truth of al* What did I, Joseph Bust.thaiann, tell you, whet' you first came to mo in wuble, fourteen, tiftetn, tai more: six teen years ago, in this town, and to this satue house? 1 s.td thou, what I say again, noii: Sarah's sorrow is my sorrow, and Sarah's joy is iy joy; and if any man asks me reasons fur that, I have three to give him." Ile stopped to stir up his oven's toa for the second time, and to draw her attention to it, by tapping witu the spoon on the edge of the cup "Three rests n-, lie resumed. "First, you are toy sister'schild—soinc of her flesh and hlcsA, and some of mine, therefore, also Seeoud, my sistcr t in) hr.,' her, and, , me mysslt, we owe to your essul English father—all A little wo r d that mean- mach, and may said again and again—ail Your father's friends cry •Fie' Agatha Bu-ehmaon is poor, Agatha liusebinann is foreigu! lint your ratio r loves the root Ger MAO girl, and be niarri, s tier in , rite ~ f their 'Fie, tie: Y'oir father's fi!.'nfla er) 'Fie!' again; Agatha liuschtnann 11:11, a 1011.i4:.! n r, gabbles to tis ab i n ' Mozart, and who cannot make to his p 1111111 1,, ,. salt Your r- - 4- : 1. IA- h; . .4. I Ilk. I.;- I ntrtll t him peoph to each; and wli•I I hate pinehPs of salt in toy kitchen, t hi- p ,ridg- shall hate ,if -,:t, too' Vow f •r's (riot] Is cry 'Pie" for the • , ,it I ton A.!,thi Huselon tun has another blether, a huh. 'supid - head,' aho to the othor'. gabble can ouly listen and sty 'Amen' Send hies tr,...tiog; for the love of Ilearen, shut up all th.• doers and scud •stuped head' trotting, at lit-t! Your Libor says, 'Stupid head' has his wilt his Lau he C. 11.1 cut, p 1p hint a little at the starting; and, after, he shah help himself.— They are all gone now but me! Your father, your mother, and Uncle Max—they are all gone: 'Stupid head' alone remains to remember and to be grateful—to take Sarah' sorrow for his sorrow, and Sarah's joy for his yoy " He stopped again, to blow a -peck "f du.t off the musical box tits niece end ,, aecred to s p ea k, but he held up his baud, and shook hi= forefinger at her warningly ‘• No," he said. "It is yet my business to talk, and your business t.. dl4& tea !Jaye I not my third reason still? Ah! you look away from me; you know my third. reason, before I say a word. When I, in my turn, marry, and my wife dies, and leaves we alone with little Jo sepb, and when the buy falls sick, who comes then, so pretty, so neat, with the bright young eyes, and the handy so tender and light? Who helps me with little Joseph by night and by day? Who makes a pillow for him on her arm when his head is weary? Wit, holds this box patiently at his ear?—yes! this box, that the hand of Mo. fart has touched—who holds it closer, closer al ways, whoa little Joseph's sense grows dull, and he moans for the friendly music that he has known from a baby, the friendly music that be can now so hardly, hardly hear? Who kneels down by uncle Joseph when his heart is break ing, and says 'O6, hush! The boy has gone where the better music plays, where the sickness shall never waste or the sorrow touch him more!' Wbo? Ab, Sarah; you cannot forget the long ago! When the trouble is better, and the burden is heavy, it is cruelty to Uncle Joseph to keep ewer it is kindeas to him to some here." The remlleettoni that the old man had called up found their way tenderly to Sarah's heart.— She c(mld not answer him; sbe"eould only hold out her band Uncle Jo , eph bent down, with a quaint, affectionate. gallantry, and kissed it; then stepped back again to bie place by the musical, box "Come!" he said, patting it cheerfully, "we will gay no more for a while. Mozart's box, Max's box, little Joseph's box, you shall talk to us again"' Hacinq put the tiny machinery in motion, be sat down by the table, and remained silent until the air had been played over twice. Then, ob serving that his niece seemed calmer, he spoke to bee once more " You are in trouble, Sarah," he said, quietly. "You tell me that, and I see it_is true in your face. Are you grieving for your husband?" " I grieved that I ever met him," she answer. ed. "I grieved that I ever married him. Now that he is dead, I cannot grieve—l can only for give him " " Forgive hie How you loulc , S ara h, w hen you pay that! Tell m , —" "Uncle Joseph ! I have told you that my husband is d.'sd, and.that I have forgiven him "You have forgiven h:m ? He was hard and cruel with you, theu ? I see; I see. Thisis the end, Sarah—but the beginning? Is the begin nieig that you loved him ?" !ler pale cheeks flushed ; and she turned her. head aside "It i+ - hard and bumbling to conies. it," she murmured, without raiaingter eyes I; "but you force the truth froth me, elm . I had en love to give to my husband—no 'lore to give to any man." "And y. t, von married hire I Wait I it I tint for tee to blame. It i• for use to Sod oat, not the bed, i.nt the gootl. Tat, yea}, Labatt ay to the married him SOMAS vas pxn. sad br:ples., she married him ahem site should hate come to Uncle Jeeeph. instead. I shall say that to myself, sad I shall pith, but I shall** as asre." • .. , • . SAnth half reached her hand out to the old man again—then suddenly pushed her chair back and changed the position in which she was sit. ting "It is true that I was poor," she said, looking about her in confusion, and speaking with difficulty. "But you are so good and sv kiad, I cannot accept the cumin that your for bearance makes for me I did not marry him because I was poor, but—" She stopped, clasped her hands together, and pushed her chair back still further from the tale. "So! eo!" said the old man, noticing her con fusion. "We will talk about it no more." "I had no excuse of love: I had no excuse of poverty," sbe said, with a sodden burst of bit terness and despair "Uncle Joseph, I married him because I was too weak to persist in saying No! The curse of weakness and fear has follow ed me all the days of my life! I said No to him twice. 06, uncle, if I could only have said it for the third time! But he followed me, be frightened nip, he took away from me all the lit tle will of idy own that I bad He made me speak as he wished me to speak, and go where he wished me to go. No, no, no—don't come to me, uncle; don't say anything. He iv gone; ho is dead! Oh, if I could only go away and hide somewhere! All people's eyes seem to look through me. My heart has been weary ever since I was a young woman; and all these long, long, years, it has never got any rest. Hum,: the man in the shop—l forgot the man 111 the sh y. He will hear us: let us talk in a whisper. What made me break out so? I'm always wrong Oh, me! I'm wrong when I speak; I'm wrong when I say nothing: wherever I g.) and whatev. er I do, I'm not like other people, I seem never to have grown up in my ( mind since 1 was a lit • tle child Hark! the maii in the shop is moving: has be heard me? Oh, Uncle Joseph: do you think he has heard me?" Looking hardly less startled than his niece, Uncle Joseph assured her that the door was sol id, that the tuan's place in the shop was at some distance from it, and that it was impossible, even if he heard voices in the parlor, that he could distinguish any words that were spoken in it. "You are sure of that?" she whispered, hur riedly. "Yes, yes, 3ou are sure of that, or you would not have told me AO, w.uld youT We may go on talkinging now. Not about my mar red life: that is buried and past. Say that I had some years of 140rr. , w and suffering, which I de. served—say that I had other years of quiet, when f was living in service, with tuash:r. and mistresses who were often kind to me whrn my fellow servants were nNt—say just feat much about my life, and it is saying enough The trouble that I am in now, the tr.•uhl • that brinrs me to you, goes back further than the years we have been talking ahout—goes hack, back, back, l'ocle .Joseph, to th, dist an t day when wig I t.t met " 'Goes hack all through the aixteen yelra:' ex claimed the old man, ineredulouAly. Gots, hick, Sarah, oven t•t the Lug Ago*: 'Even to that time Uncle, y• n retnetul.Pr where I was living, and what hid happened t. ruf. , , whet] --- •Wheu yOll came 11,r, In ptrret: When yea laked me to hide you? That way tit , -atme we, k Sarah, when )our miatres. died--)our reag whq lived away wcat, in the 01 , 1 ifoii:e You were frightened, then,—pale and f r ightened ac I see you now." ..:‘,ry one tne: People :ire alway. qtartog 411, f../ t. „„ .1,. . 0 „ r , " was, always pitying me for being ill Sating these words with a sudden fretfu'ne-s, Rh.• lifted the teacup try - her side to her lip., drained it of its contents nt a draught, and pu-b ed it aeons the table to hi. filled again. 'I have oome all over thirsty and hot,' slic whispered 'More tea, Uncle Joseph—more tea ' i 4 cold,' said the old man 'Wait till I a..k for hot water ' 'No! . she exclaimed, stopping him as he was about to rise 'Give it me cold: I like it cold. Let nobody else come in—l can't .peak if any body else comes in.' She drew her chair elo'e to her uncle's and went on: 'You have not for. gotten bow frightened I was, in that bygon^ time—do you remember why I was frightened?" "Yon were afraid of being followed—that was it, Sarah. I grow old, bat my memory keeps young You were Ofraid of your master, afraid of his sending servants after you You had run away; you bad spoken no word to anybody; and you spoke little—ah! very, very little—even to Uncle Joseph, even to me.' told you,' said Sarah, dropping her voice to an faint a whisper that the old man could barely hear her—'l told you that my mistress bad left me a secret on her death-bed—a secret in a letter, which I was to give to my master I told you I had hidden the letter, because I could not bring myself to deliver it, because I would rather die a thousand times over than be questioned about what I knew of it I told you s-i much I know. Did I tell you no more? Did I not say that my mistress made me take an oath on the Bible? Uncle! are there candles in the room? Are there candles that we can light without disturbing anybody, without calling any body in here?' 'There are candles and a matchbox in my cup. board," answered Uncle Joseph. 'But look out of the window, Sarah It is otfly twilight—it is not dark yet.' 'Not outside; but it is dark here.' 'Where?' 'ln that corner Let us have the candles I don't like the darkness when it gathers in corners and creeps along wills.' Uncle Joieph looked all round the room, in quiringly; and !, mile kl to himself as he took two candles from the cupboard and lighted them. 'You are like the children,' he said, playfully, while he pulled down the window blind' 'You are afraid of the dark.' Sarah di I not appear to Lear him. Her eyes were fixed on the caner of the room which she had pointed out the ailment before. When be resumed his place by her side, she never looked round, hut laid her hand on his arm, and said to him suddenly: 'Uncle: do you believe that the dead oan come b ac k to this world, and follow the living viery , where, and see what they do in it?' The old man started. 'Sarah!' he said, 'why do you talk so? Why do you ask me such a question?' ' 'Are there lonely hours,' she went on, still Dever looking away from the corner, still never looking away from the corner, still not seeming to heir him, 'when you are sometimes frighten. ed without knowing why —frightened all over in an instant, from head to foot? Tell me, uncle, have you ever felt the coldsteal round and round the roots of your hair, and crawl bit by bit down your track? I have felt that, even in the sum mer. I have been out of doors, alone on a wide heath, in the beat and brightness of noon, mad hive felt as it chilly-fingers were touching me— chilly, damp, softly creeping fingers. It s a y s in the New Testament that the dead came nut of their graves, and went into the holy city. The den& Have they rested, rested, a l wa y s res t e d far ever, since that timer Ussie Joseph's simple naive reeoiled in be-, wilderment from the dark and paring speculations to which his niece's questions IQ. Wi t h out saying s word, he tried to draw away the ens which she stil held; but the(ooly result of the effort was to asks her tighten her grasp, and bend forward In her °hair so as to look closer ssilkinto the sorest of the Nes. llkpWalrus was dying,' do ,said, guy Eds .(1 -- i - .` f -.~- ---- tress was very wear her grave, when she made me take my oath on the. Bible. She made me .wear never to destroy the letter; mad I did not 'wain it. She made me swear not to take it sway with me, if I left the bones; and I did not rake it away. She would have made me swear for the third time, to give it to my master, bat death was too quick for her---death stepped her from fasteaing that third oath on my oonseiewee. But she threatened me, uncle, with the deed dampness on her forehead, and the dead white• nen on her eheeke—she threatened to come to me from the other world, if I thwarted her, and I hare thwarted her!' She stopped, suddenly removed her hand from the old man's arm, and made a strange gesture with it towards the part of the nous on which tier eyes remained fixed. 'Rest, rest, rest,' she whispered under her breath. 'Li my muter slice pow? Rest, till the drowned rise! Tell him the S4"6.et when the sea gives up her dead.' 'Sarah! Sarah! you are changed, you are you frighten me!' cried Uncle Joseph, starting to his feet. She turned round slowly, and looked at hint with her eyes void of all expression—with eyes that seemed to be staring through him vacantly at something beyond. 'Gott im Himmel! what does she seer He looked round as the exclamation escaped him.— •Ssrab: what is it? Are you ill? Are you dreaming with your eyes open?' He took her by both arms and shook her. At the instant when she felt the touch of his hands •he started violently and trembled all over.— Their natural expression flew book into her eyes with the rapidity of a flash of light. Without 4aying a word she hastily resumed her mat ind began stirring the cold tea round and round in her cop, round and round so fast that the liquid , tverflowed into the 11611041 T. 'Come! she gets more like herself,' said Uncle Joseph, watching her. 'More like myself,' she repeated, vacantly. SO: so? said the old man, trying to soothe her. 'You are ill—what the English odl, out of sort They are good doctors here. Wait ttil to-morrow, you shall bare the best.' I want no doctors. Don't. speak of doctors. I can't bear them: they took at me with such curious eyes; they are always prying into me, ss If they wanted to Ind out so sething. !list have w- been stopping for' I lad so much to say; and we seem to have bees stopping just when we ought to have been going on. lam in grief and terror again about the Secret—' 'No more of that!' pleaded the old man. 'No lucre to-night, at least" 'Why no:?' 'Because you will be ill again with talking atinut it Yuu will be looking into that corner, and dreaming with your eyes open. You are too y..., yea, Sarah, you are too ill.' .1 in not ill! Oh, why does everybody keep tolling me that I am ill! • Let me talk about it, uncle I have come to talk about it: I can't rest till I have told you.' She spoke with a changing color and an em. barrassed manner, now apparently oonscious for 'li e first time that she had allowed words and ao. tions to escape her which it would have been more prudent to base restrained. 'Don't notice me again,' she said, with her soft voice and her gentle, pleading manner.— .1) , n't notice me if I talk or look as I ought not. I,se myself sometimes, without knowing it; and Rll TlAlta ED Teel f lust now. It means moth tog, t uc l eJ osepb; notnnag inoeeu. En. Favoring thus to reassure the old man she again altered the position of her chair co as to place her back toward' the part of the room to which her face had been hitherto turned. 'Well, well, it is good to bear that!' said Uncle Joseph: 'but speak no more about the past time, for fear you should lose yourself again.`. Let us bear about what is now Yes, yes, give me my way Leave the Long Ago to me, and take you the present time. I can go back through the sixt et' ycary *4 well as you can. Ail! you doubt it? Hear me tell you what happened when we I 'At met—hear me prove myself in three words: You•leati•e your place at the old house—you run away here—you stop in biding with me, while your master and his servants are bunting after you—you start off, when your road is clear, to work for your living, as far away from Cornwall as you can get—l beg and:pray'you to stop with me, but you are afraid of your muter, and away you go. There! that is the wbole.atory of your trouble the last time you came to this house.— Leave it so; and tell me what is the cause of your trouble now.' 'The part cause of my trouble, Uncle Joseph, and the present Ofinle of my trouble are themes. The Secret---' 'What! you will go back to that?' '1 moat gm back to it.' 'Aod why?' 'Became the Secret is written in a letter—' 'Yes; sad what of that?' 'And the letter is in danger of being dissever. rd. It is, uncle—it is! Sixteen years it has laid hidden; and now, after all that long time, the dreadful chance of its being dragged to light has come like a judgment The one person in all the world who ought never to set eyes on that letter, ig the very person who is most likely to find it!' 'So'. ro: Are yon very certain, Filarski? How do you know it?' 'I know it from her *wit Ups. Chases brought us tlyetlier--' 'ts? u..,? What do you 1143111 by us?' 'I mean—unele, you remember that Captain Troverton was my master whoa I Used st Perth geniis Tower!' had forgotten bis name. 'But, no 'batter— y on.' _ _ 'Whew I left my place, bliss Treverton was a little girl of five years old. Eibe is a married woman now--so beautiful, DO clever, sub a sweet, youthful, happy face! And sbe has a child ay lovely as herself. Oil, uncle, if you could see her! I would give so much if you could only see her! Ureic. Joseph kissed his hand and shrugged his shoulder; expressing, by the first action, hom age to the lady's beauty, and, by the second, resignation under the misfortune of not being able to seo her. 'Well, well,' he said, pkilosoph bully, 'put this shining woman by, anti Ist us go on,' 'Her name is Frankland now,' said Barak.— 'A prettier name than Treverton, a saßeh pret tier name, I think. Her husband is fond of her; lam sure he is. How can he have any heartat all, and not be fond of hear' 'So! so:' exclaimed Unele Joseph, lokg airy much perplexed. 'Good, if be is hod at her— verp good. But what labyrinth ire we pill* into now? Wherefore all this about a hashaad and a wife? My word of hosor, Illaralt;but your explanation explains notiting-e-it osly softens my brain." must speak of her and of Mr. /noir uncle. Porthgenna Tower belongs to her hus band now; and they are both going to live there.' 'AL! we are getting heck into the straight reed it la.t.' "They are going to lira is the yeti hessoilist holds the Secret ; they are going to sepsis that very part of it where the letter is hidden. She will go into the old rocs s—l hosed her my se she will seszeh about is this to mow her ass riosity ; workmen will slier than est, sad she will stand by, is her idle boars, leoltiog es." "Bat she suspects =thin%bellows" r «Ciodlarbid Om */1114".. B. F. SLOAN, EDITOR. NUMBER 48, "And there are many rlottis in the house ? Asti the letter in which the Secret is written is hidden in one of the tunny roomer Why should she hit on that one'" "13ecamie I always say the 'song thing I be. Brine I always get frighterked and lose myself at the wrong time ! The letter is hidden in a room milled the Myrtle Room, and I was foolish enough, weak enough,ersied enough, to warn ber agaitiet going into it." "Ah, Sarah Sarah ! that was a mistake In. deed." "I islet tell whit possessed me—l seemed to lase my senses when I beard her talking so in • noeently of amosiog herself by searching through the old rooma, and when I th•-ught of what she might find there It wac g , tr:ng en towards night, too ; the horrible damns~ was gathering in the corners and creepin. , a! ing the walls; and I didn't dare light the eanllts for fear sheshould nee how anxious and frighten,,l I was in my face. And when I did light tbun it was worse. Oh, I don't know how I did it ! I don't know why . I did it! I could haws horn my tongue out for saying the wordq, and y. t I lltd them. Other people can think for the ; r pr..)ple can act for the best; oilier h iv, Lail a heavy weight on their mind-, au.l :14% C not dropped tinder it as I have Help me, uncle, for the sake of old times when we were happy—help me with a word of advice :" "I will help you; I lie lip you, Sarah No, no, no—you must 10. k s forlorn ; you must not look at me with thos.• crying eyes.— Come ! I will advice t6t3 minute—but say in what, only say in what." "Have I not told you ?" "No; you have not toll me a word yet " "I will tell you uow—'' e She paused, looked away distrn.tful:y towards the door leading into the 'hop, listened a little, and resumed : "I am not at the end of my jour ney yet, Uncle Joseph—l ant hero on my way to Porthgenna Tower—on my way to the Myrtle Room—on my way, atop l,y st,p, to the place where the letter lies hid. I dare not destroy it; Idare not remove it; but, run what risk I may, must take it out cf the Ayrtic Room." Unole Joseph said nothto.t, but he shook his head despondingly. "I must," she repeated, "lrfore Mrs. Frank !mad gets to Porthgenna, [ nitt-t take that letter out of the Myrtle Room. Trosro are places in the old house where I may hoe it nfzlin—plaers that she would Dever think of—place 4 that she would never notice. On l y let me get it out of the one room that she is sure to search to, and I know where to hide it from her and from every one for ever." Uncle Joseph rf fleeted, and shook head again—then said : -One vr-rd, Sarah: do , v Frankland know which is th- lyrtie Ronal?" "I did my best to destroy all trace of that name when I bill the letter , I and believe she does not liut she may find .Iy—remember the words I was crazed enough to 1 - elk , they will set her seeking for the 31y rtk ; they aro sure to do that " "And if she finds ? And if she FCCe the letter ?" "It will cam misery to innoeent people ; it will bring death to me D ,n't push your chair from me, uncle ! It is not shameful thath I speak of. The worst injury I have bona is in jury to myself; the worst i. ath I have to fear is the death that release. a worn•out spirit and cures a broken heart " m.. "I ask tor no seeret, Kirsh, that 14 not yourimi give. It is all dark to me—very dark, very con fused. I look away from it ; I look only towards you. Not with doubt, my child, but with pit', and with sorrow, too—g-rrow ever went near that house of l'orthi:rnna.--• rrow that you are now going to it again " "I have no choice, unok, lut g.) If every step on the road to I' .rtbg ,, nr, t to , k ire hearer and nearer to my death. I tr,u-i tr, ad t linow• jug what I know, I eiti't F!. , , —env very heath won't come freely—till I hay- cot that I, ;ter out of the Myrtle Room II wto d It, Uuc'e Joseph, bow to d) it, with .ut h ink without being diseovire,l by inn}, , !c—that is what I would almost give my !.r.‘ to know ! You are a man ; yon are older arid than I am ; no living ereaturo ev, r you for help in vain—help me now! my ion , ' in all the world, help me a little with a Icor I , advice Uncle Joseph ro-c from and folded his arms resolutely, and I , ! id, ee full in the face. "You will go ?" he said it may, you will go? Say, fir the 1.1,t. time, Sarah—is it yes, or no ?" "Yes ! For the last time, I pay, Yes " "Good. And you will go coon "I must go to-morrow. I Jr not waste a single day ; hours even icily 1.- r.r. Li .u. for any thing I can tell." "You promise me, my child, that the biding of this Secret does good, and that t he finding of it will do harm ?" "Ii it was the last word I kiwi to speak in this world, I would say Yes !" "You promise me also that y , n want nothing but to take the letter net of Ih • Nlvrtle and put it away somewhere 1.1-e ' "Nothing but that." "And it is yours to take and yours to put ? No person has a better right to touch it than you?" "Now that my master is deaf!, no person." "Good. You hive given the my resolution I have done, Sit you there. Sarah; wonder, if you like, but say w.thing \Vuh these wosds, Uncle Joseph steppe(' lightly to tbe door leading into the shop, opr.ti , tl it, and called to the man behind the counter "Samuel, my friend," he said, "t•.-morrow I go a little ways into the country a ith my Deice, who is this lady, bere. Yon keep shop and take orders, and be just aa careful a 4 you always are, till I get back. If anybody comes and asks for Mr. Busehmann, say he Is gone a hale ways is-. to the country, and will be back in a f. w days. That 'is all. Shut up the •hop, Samuel, my friend, for the night ; and go to your supper. I wish yon good appetite, nice victuals, and sound sleep.' • Before Samuel could thank his master the door was abut-stasis. Before Sarah could say a word, Uncle Joseph's hand was on her lips, and Uncle Joseph's handkerchief was wiping away the tears that were now falling fast from her eyes. "I will base no more talking, and no more crying," said the old man "I am a German, and I glory in the obstinacy of six Englishmen, all rolled into oue. To-night you •leep bere,to• morrow we talk again of all 111,4 You want me to help you with a word of advice. I will help you with myself, which is Futter than advite, and I say no more till I fetch my pipe down from the wall there, and ask him to make me think. I smoke and think to.night—l talk and do to. morrow. And you, you go up to bed; you,take Uncle Max's music box in your band, and you let Mosart sing the cradle song before you go to sleep. Yes, yes, my child, there is always court fort is Illloisrt—better comfort than in crying Why cry so much ? that is there to cry about or to think about ? Is it so great a wonder that I will sot let my sister's child go alone to make rinantame in the dark ? I said Sarah's !wow um my sorrow, tad Sarah's joy my joy; and now, if Awe is no way of escape—if it most lo dised be dean--I also say : Sarah's risk to mor ns, is Uncle Joseph's risk tomorrow too." astrissed.)