s , U )ORE, PUBLISHERS. X 111; ERIE IiSERVtR. rf 4 f ;ERY SITURD/Y Ry I. MOORIC, -7A TE A 'CD MTH srs I, 0 . 114111 t• r Or •It lOa4 i mvntbs, $1 6p, /f .i:htu ill< wear, 11k4i paper Wl/1 lot 1..11 a . llll ♦ proper Offiet< tor col- >..•.r 41 , VERTLANG L-11 or less mate a square , ouviquw• w, nta. $ 011 i hl Oar " 6 " 5 tx, I I toe r 9 6 7, , rhe.,,,reable at pleasure. $' ,t, rt 6 mouth*, $& Y mouth( $ll :A. Na, 46,4 --oou /ear, $.50, 6 mouths, $3O, • Dire , l4lfry at $) r auuut, .r.l. over pc,' o rid under Ptitht, 1U r hne t*.mip.any ~tlirr [lntl nee, hlti , tlo.• %Nor , 1 other. requiring frequent chugew in their ...lowed two quarto, paper, sad ear* far ES. Alumni will be n proporeloa, sod the etl• entwined to the legitimate " ad•rrtieeWeta rwluir .I • Over/aping will tw pretwinteot . ...it. will be uts& on all eteppt tern . , iu ad vane, NESS DIRECTORY jolt'. LYTLE. .;...,k1 by J E .tame. till, ~ , \ .11.1rplo between the Heal j 4 p4,P11 ... CI. \RH F; 11.1.) t lA/TILING !•TOKK, . . Last •,..lbts Head, ; i1r,,t.11 1. 14El halt. • • 1 l' - •.I iKlr•, 4,e 1140 • ••• • •,••. • .14.,•ante, Erie, 4 %1ILI•l\1I THORNTON, r. 14re•rmeat Bootie and Ilortga , .n t drawn. UtLewnn •,-,••••,t, :4 tore Ene, PI. Nl\\ll. tt - %NI kill), , • • Aait, • • low ••;,, 4 Wnght's , , , ,then. 'r:rir. 47 „ , • ollet• t. • .! t -.tate. avrl Beni Note., l;oi.1 • ..• .. - A • and I. q. -.T Pit it urT, , 1% rc 401 Y r. - , th. FGrd , 11.01% KIEV, , ,orican tisnlyram nod l'utiorr Ln. 4 F. - ..1•, and tiotail (V.. 21 4 ,1• a..• Yr% lie. • ~rf.. A 1)14 ist`OiON. urtLs; ;•• 1.1.; op; • "..:•“1; ;P.; ; tt• ••• 1.-t lu 111:1( I . \l., ki to , 4.1 . •••• MENEM , 11.71 %IJ n,• • I. .1011.1. I I rretS. 411./ ',•••• 1" uu• • • an.: .14 ...it, .TEN IHI 1=111:11 . •4111.MOILE, rata& Ju ( u -I- • ,(\( .lank IM=IIIIIII I= 1111 Kr (IV CO., AM' I and . .ra,dt. . •, ad , finda , n • kilock. w En.. h.. tt.l 1.1. CO., • LI , i•f6l, ILI I.3est 'll filock., , pr.-Tama 1.. • 16.-r , p,..t, , r• 1.13 prices, satin.- . • ••••Im; •ti• ,itmAtt• sod real ralue. %. 1.11,xx rnrn•r Pftelk r. N. 1:4.41 11 .)kersuis„ rtr, .or H... 1 110(1.4. Mid • 10 eJ.• ,01"• i 1.t . 1 O . Or Iti• art sad Till It \••• %I. %I %TIN, u yr. "I h L.. 1 , 1, 4 , a 1 in 11.1)4.1.1tS A Kt:N . 4IEIII. • 4.1 r. and he•neft h•upirt. 111.,A. 1...:14 • AMU.. KINPLEkt, I'o.. •teniu r., \ IV! it. ( II %1•1•41, • ; (11.«Ich th , k -• • r... 5 ,1 • ,, tad all It r•rk N 111.0111) • • rtitira:e• or ,•••••t ‘lO - r.r • p•tn, T Iik.IZHON sTI. 11{1'. 1 , • I , ":..; r., t, tyr 4.1 . SMYTH d ....TE'l% (UT, .r sad I , r 4 MA tr a tiro% , t ~ 1111bleE 11. ( l TIEIL. 46 . "• .-• i't IMEINCIMII 111111 A titTlAt A. • • k- 11.1,. I &luta. UAL, " • • • • J°lo \KN d (0.. U. n• 101.1 r I 'M/KG V. J. NIARTA/N M.r. 1»nl , • Firm r nn' P,••1. • H. WRIGHT et. I U.. ►,r• uncut i• 1 ni .n. UP: • , 2I• Isar:, . i i Ji.l:ll,lC 1. , Or rl.vm k r •an, X. -•`. l'•rk 4.1 .;i T. t .R. RI. ht:, r.i.~flip s not . .I.L. Eno., 1.%1th ' t • r In.. rt : r a Erin, \ J I ~.,,,,, JIM% N. 11 Rh'. " r ,n.. 1 144n1.,.!1. ton • , 14,,,, z 4 4a44-1., \n 4 key MP. " nts.l!..ol.toro, 4191 , • t • 11 tIOMAI.i. anan• ALL Env. fis I.ii.-T [healer, Trainor th. pullHe H. iv In r glut to HRALEY, I " T It %lA. KILL %ICH ..tAltikiN• ""' t a.: the l'atk J. 1.1 NT, , :u.st.ea, Cheap Yobllea : ~. cutlery, k • 111.1 Y.. & (), t, Use. to W. abrl h•morrt and Irrrt Lrl Cr ar I-• I. ram/ nr oso , llukiesl r M. t. I • (11110 K A U.. and Blinds. P.sd , st t' rt. k. If! 11.111 Whiokev, m tb, b. Lt'E, tiorthesal corner or :LI t , %Rh & 1111.1)%1N. 4 ..... i• a wl*. 4 , /Ann.%) ..". IPrd,7%, %rheum. Paint.. "/•• Itewl Iv P(nenun, •rad, Fine Sonya and s • naa, En., PIL as a. a. latinitlll. . . _ . A ; ..., • • . .. ... . .' . r . 1 . -1 11 It 1 L ~ .._ . ... NW 1 t . . . , .:' - ,', ... „ '4'' .'" ' # 7''''- .: :• , : :.; ': , ''' 77-7 ! -. 1k 4:' - ': - - -.-- • : . , Ac,.,...1 ,, t.: ._i.,.. r . • , . .. ....f,,. . " . . . . . IT . ~ .,4 ,07- .- 1. f 1 ..... .... • _ ".. -, . .41 . . • . _ • GRAY & IPAltitAllt, Wsortssuz Gauen", sad dealers in West India Goods, Pcdoder, , hot, Caps, gsfay Fuss, Tobacco, Clears . Push, oil, me., No. , BIN*, 140ite Divot, Itt tie. Pa. • IL wucr. P. P. PiAlia, ItLIKNIVAPTT, SARA is CO. 1110:1 Forsaste, Wheless' aad &tall Dealers le Steers, Hollow- Ware Ite., State street, ID*s. Pa $. A. DAVIAN" Arroesar Ar LAW, Dice wearly op, o .o new Court Hews, Eno, Pa. J. W. DOI'S:LAWN, 4TTOIVICI AT I.A w --016os P• 11101011 TO MIT bellclfse west of State 5t1144.4., 4/0 the north aide of the Part, over Clark k lletealts Ea t hangs oaks. al J 0.01131•11 EICRENLAIIII, Jr. MA, 1 ACTrILEIR of Boot, and Sham, and Wbotamtle And ket&al Metier in oak mei Hemlock 'tole Leather, French and American I alf skin. , tiorrnee... Linings, littadlara Mpg and Splits, Thread a eke, Luray Lastinira, teualoaaa, Ramada, Hammers, harem.. ilk.' 4 Taielok, Prgs„ Naila, to AUMPritill Mack, Mate l'a . ski AT Es wAI. Jt rr.cs or nu Piece. Will praeticel , - Courts of Erie Count', sad glee prompt sad ihilkfal e, t. u•,on to all bosineu entrusted to bis handle, either u sa AU. ..ry or kluutnt...°the in Empire Block, ranter of , t‘t , Ind Fifth rt , Kyle, F ir 50. MMMMMG3 JA. 1...1 C %ON, W - bolovalo and Retail Matiuracturrr of FLOUR CORY, M1:41., MILL-FZED, SIRAIff, 4C., *C. Cash ;rid for .i!liciud• of Braun Park Hall. A I aittil. and eaddisodlous Hall forCoacerts. Legumes. sad Pair it lie Reeding. of all kinds, Katt side of the Part. !Cavan at the Banking I AC, of M. Strofont k Co., Ali. Reed ROW!, RA*, l'enott. Erie, 'kept f.'7, lead !NH JOHN B. BOGERT, IMNIRTER 4ND DF.ALER IN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC was HARDWARE, I -AND CUTLERY 7 N., 3:1 'PI (111.. STREF:r, and Sn 66 STONF: STREET, NNW YORK. CLEVELAND & ERIE R. R. O N: l l:hatter M.ryla,, March 23, 190, Passenger Trails* will rts EAATWARD, Leave Cleveland for F.rle ►t 111.10 A. ■.. 3720 P. ■. and 10:00 P. • • au • m. train vu •top ►t all way rtatlnna except Winkldl.•, no,ovil, and .a•brnok TAe IU OU P N, tra", will rt,•p at Painesville. Ashtabula . , Connelant aad Girard oul v The t.,,oneaut train a ill leave Cleveland at 4 1.1 P and .t..p a, a:I 11 a, •tat..u. h1...4.4.4• Frit. 14, C9ere.lantlLt 1212 P. Y. 44144pHiG! at Girard, Kingsville, Ashtabula, Geneva and \ F :,..1 le•Arir Er44.4 . 44..1 . 1..,1/10..1 at 330 I. N., 1141 T 4-4.4 1 .4 4. and Dar Express 2.30 r The 3 :to • a trait' will atop at Girard, Conneaut, Ashtabula and Pal ors% “01. The 10 , 0 • a train will stop at all the war .ta u"“. er.s.pt I.rook, t rattuTillP, Perry, Elector and Wicillffs. . u. train a 411 MIT at Girard, Conneaut, Ashtabula and Pad, s,l:lf. 01/ 1' The ronn•sut trim till Lore C./nu...lt at 7 1.. •. /11,1141.1 atop at •11 War :•taltions. An 0: th• th tra(o■ crofir Weld Ward compact at 1 31issiand with t ratnr 10r Tote•do, t hteairu,tolumbus„Cinemnati, ate.. Ite. ri.l 4.1 th• odsig Eastward conneet at Duakira w i th •::: N K. R. •nd at Buffalo with th.•« of the No. Y:irt t antral and Itatfabi and Ni • York CII) itailrada. twice OIC k K. 14 It t li NOTTINGITAII. Nar'6 23, 1.467 tf•27 3u p' t . 1857. 1857 Buffalo & Erie Railroad. riimitWANICAIMINARIP ruviEnt ARRANG PM ENT. ( no ,,.•Nrt.r Hondo, • klareh l'aeaentger Tralns Hove kri• 1..11.,ws I A 11 F: prim., stopping' at Weatfloid. Dunkirk. reek, connecting at ihtnkiak and iluitalo with Morning Exprwa• Trams for New York f..• 1 k ‘I Vt.\ F ‘pre. , • t..pplag at all atationa, cOntierfinK nt I. awl Burial. with Wax Train. Knot. I. 41 P 11 , •4 Wnti Pt.tppili¢ at all Mid ant e0O• nectinv at Dunkirk and Bufraio with lixprens Train/ f.. New York. 1. ,w-lbritt mopping at Womtlield, Dunkirk ennnoctia b : at Dunkirk and lineal , . with Ex,.reee Train. for New York. TICK FT • f `lab at 1 , 1. ~ttinn to the pnaetpal eastern and if, and tow na. =EMS CLEW & mug 1111110A1 1.111! WingaiNAININIIPIN S'l'R ING ARRA NOEMEN T. Trains run through to Wheeling & Pittsburg ) • %to *.t• - • Mar-1-1, 1, 111,1 1 4 . •7, trains run Sun • • ,•••••,.•• .1, ••••rordm, to 16• futile wit TIME TA111.1.. A 11 11 7 0 14 '•L. 344 A*.! t 4 12 1 I I 4 In 1i 5 In 11 04 11 :+4 5 1: 11l t; 6 12 20 AJ. 12 31 64 1114- EEO 1 - ' C . - - h ) Irelli 11 P 11 Air H - 1.1„.:oport Portland. Kush Rim Laizranice. stouneurttle J.ddo. Yellow Creek W.44.11:0. I.iworku. rry Industry P.o.nester, TUSCARAWAS BRANCH. ruin Lass Ptu/adtlphia 745 Dover at fl l lOO, Wafwa. .1, rz at 1 Z. 5 Arrive. at Havant at 10 20, eonnitettnt'Orith Train OM Main I in.. ror I Loveland, PlltaburN and Whoa'mg, Leave. 13.”ar01 at I 4. r a. , I nrl arrival of Train (rum Cleveland. hits. V. Wavnetburir at 246 r N. Arrivew at 'lover at 4 no. and N.. Philadelphia at 1.0 r a. 1.7- \o (-hang, oft an beta nen Chweland and Yttt.hurg and Wheolinz and Pittaburw .1;6, 1 2 - 2 4 1.40 4 4. , 1n 6 .1 0 I. 3 , Al 6 46 2 4.1 MIME lEEI I lho 7 4, The Trains connect at littatourz with the Pennsylvania Railroad for Harriaborg, Philadelphia, Baltimore, New York and Bootee. At Souben‘ille with the Steubenville end Indiana Railroad for Cadiz, Coalincton, Newark, Columbus and Claciaoati. Win,3ng • kth th• lialtinnom and Ohio Raiknead {or Camber redrick•burg, Washinetna and lialtimonaAlao.,with in,,• • Marnnta, rwrlterabnrg and paints on Um Ohio At Cleveland with the Lake ration and Ctiresinad k Toledo Rail raid. for Buffalo, Nugars Falls, Canada and New York, Toledo, Chicago, Harlington, Rock island, Illavenport, Galena, Ratite, Mil waukee, +t Paul and the North Wewt. E y- Tiek.t.e.. be purchased elite °Mee on ths Line, aloe at t haprincipal Ticket Offices of the various wonsoeting Roads. E r Fars as low Le by any other Route. at:admit'. Office C. k P R. R,] Cleveland, Mardi 6, 160. I 43tf KEPLER, BOOTH 3, 00. S PERRY BLOCK. ell' ATE St., BET WELIi Ttb and nth, Erie, A l Pa. Hai • Just returned from tbe teat, at* • limp and well .;..etod 4 1,KA of Winter Pry Good., biros...tea Queeeneware, Hard- H.,..ta and :shows, lists and Cape, and a rood admorttnent of Mitlinery litrodx. DRY GOODS: Yreneb Yneinoa, SaUneta, Alt wool be l'arank•ttaa, shade & ssalltles, Woollen Flannel, al color., Blank Camumers, i'onoll, do laney do Brown Sheeting, Mask Dress Silk., ik Pansy do Glnahlunv, Jacomitla, Tirkait, Cambric., nispPr. GROCERIES. quoit. !lona. Vollmer., Sugars—Brown, Refined, Sy raps, and Pulverised, Rice, Teas—Black and Green, Rio. Jars and ',amain Cotes, Soaps, Pee Sluff., of all kind.. II ARDWARE. T eels, Axe., novels. Fork., BOOTS AND SHOES. lien. floe Calif Roots, 31[0. Bootee; " Calf " Marie " " ..11 n. 51 U. ( utlerN Pocket ilo Butts, -.crew •, iota sod Shoes. Mimi Me. aid Calf Boaboda, bd•lr.u', Hen.) Shots. Child'. fine Shoes HATS AND CAPS. 11,n'o Wu. Coaxial** Hato,los's Cloth Cals. Wool Sots Rath '• Moth bouisd Cepa, CliotD MILLINER'f GOODS. Itoarot Satins, 1.11 Basel Irhiakor Blood, Crows Lialap, Hoist Straw Bonnet., Hooke& t bore IVe hare rtuatoelste.l a few et the arts le w• keop; bat the fart Is we keep shoott ever, clam of goods shoat aMpatiolasa et metaled ha a hunilv. limo CIO ondexamino oar moth No troabie Unbolt Imola Covatry Pro:toot takes la eukulare,Sot which the highest mariet peters will baallogred. Jaitualy 31, 1557. 11010114;IMIlifi .111011. _.-.l—A Tlry amila i ssa ,1) suet, Painriri, Sorubbing, rmieb., randier% of Elauti, Cniab, C 41 14 Cloth. rumen, ?Lateran, hiporr Haarmi, Am be Mil Um. Drug Sine* ' CARTER IkV. Erie, Jllllll7, ISM. FLOORING! FLOORING! "wrap,mop 0..4 a geimmarts yoowari COMP BeR FLIMI *rs, is; lath*. thlik ass Rosa Ibe MD hobo at our MalinYlll oa Eknaatli Mina& ". Erie, Pal. 98, I CAATILII & KAILLIZRY. To all whoa it lar Owen. Al.'. persons vim Mao. UmmosimeaDMAW to the sehmiblei A. either by Nola nr so.k A•••••1010.o . 4 tb. ( u 'trot is rondo oa or Wats the Garb Earl=seilvlbillr Eft* If senoileta will be MA with loollime Itne, Mond" 21. 7. & j CST Rtet:ll47 COAT rworroi J. V. DOWNING. WESTWARD R N. HAI Sup EEG IEIMI=3I3 -r TI 0., A-31 11.16 950 10 40 4 . 14 0 1 10.00 3„,4 %43 9 : 17 313 '.1.1 2-43 7:46 1 45 kb° 1.1% CIS 12.40 54 4 12:10 514 11 59 5.13 11 44 4.57 11 4•45 11 10 43 0 1052, 410 943 dOO tioveland itedt,o, Hu0.01., Haran, Atwater, Allmace, daraPt Hanor.,, AaltuestOW Yellow Crdmk Wenovt Lavery.•• ;• 4 r nab' • I err, hid wary. l'aubwrz 'TiLiWis Auk: v ME= k• .Y P 415 300 66 7 44 .1.00 7 It , 246 7 10 :La 655 1.66 6.4.1 1.10 600 12.50 6:4 12.14 530 11 50 5:20 11 44 4.57 11 32 4.1 •. 11 16 431 10.56 4 10 45 31.10 CONNECTIONS J DCRA ND, Sispl. r- ,* r Stitft tiottriL THE EXILE AT UST. His figebies Ilaisb'd sloe. the %Ws; RI, best b• WI throne' Al** .wv.: (Ter Ifiessaffles tennis, UM &est the While, Ills amale flow umwelir4—aild *air. Here door b. now.abone- oot ore Of idle)* thaw grime mons be pm% Nat. We, mar brother. wt*., ear aue. Hatb evPr smo.e or notairbt his grave Hers Blips be nu• alone the star Mid led tilm on frost crown to prows Hsi sank: the sitar from sir i:osed ma It faded sod oust dolts. Ile strops ahmr• tbo esomotala cloud That night bangs mead libm, awl the brrath 4 . morale' wafter; Jo the &brow. That .ra-te him mortal form In 11.stis limb al his couch • the mesas !Seed Far, far below by derma is cern!, Aa ri4itee lune liseed. 141111.11114* be eased. A eternty and loecatinnet world. Plot' Comm alai." reap lb, Pyramids AIM from Milwras's wallies If mow, Sod kuram's dads, motor that bids The world Mt awed to amain him The nuly, the perpetual &OM • fhers baud there ie the esebud's try, The mournful murmur of the sum, The etnud■ ?Mop Inlet; the wind's low AO QT,lpirt illisttliang. TILE DEAD SECRET. The day and night had passed, and the new morning had come, before the husband and wife could trust themselves to speak calmly of the secret, and to fame resignedly the , duties and the it imposed on sacrifices which the discovery of them. • Leonard's first question referred to those lines in the letter, which Rosamon had informed him were in a handwriting that she knew. Finding that he was at a lobe to understand what means she could bays of forming an opinion on this point, she explained that, after Captain Trevor ton's death, many letters bad naturally fallen in- I to her po•seasion which had been written by Mrs. Treverton to her husband. They treated of ordi nary domestic subjects, and she had read them often enough to become thoroughly acquainted with the peculiarities of Mrs. Treverton's hand writing.' it wits remarkably large, Grm, and masculine in character, and the addregs, the line under it, and the uppermost of the two signatures in the letter which had been found in the Myrtle Room, exactly resembled it in every particular. The next question related to the body of the , letter. The writing of this ; of the second sig. nature, ("Sarah Leeson,") and of the addition al lines of the third page, also signed by Sarah Leesen, proclaim.-.I itself in each case to be the production of the same person. While stating that fact te her husband, Rosamond did not for get to explain to him that• while reading the , letter en the previous day, her strength and courage had faded tier befone •be got to the end of it She added that the postscript which she had thus rn tied ...eead. was of importance, he cau.se it we n d the circumstances under which the secret had been hidden; and begged that he would list. n while she made him acquainted with its eontents without any further delay. Sitting se close to his side, now, as if they were enj..ying their first honeymoon-days over again, she read these last lines—the lines which her mother bad written sixteen years before, on the morning when she fled from Porthgenna Tower " If this pit. should ever be found, (which I pray with my whole heart it never may be,) I wish to state that I have come to the resolution of hiding it, because I dare not sho* the writing that it contatus to my master, to whom it is addressed. In doing what I now propose to do, though I am acting against my mistress's last wishes, I am not breaking the oedema engage ment which she obliged me to make before her on her (blabbed. That engagement forbids me to destroy this letter, or to take it away with me if I leave the house I shall Jo neither—my purpose is to eonceal it in the place, of all others, where I think there is least chance of its ever being found again Any hardship or misfortune which may follow as a coneequenee of its deceit ful proceeding en my part, will fall on myself.— ' Others, I believe, on my conscience, will be the happier for the hiding of the dreadful secret which this letter contains " " There van be no doubt, now." maid Leonard, when his:wife had read to the end; "Mrs. Jazeph, Sarah Leeson, and the servant who disappeared from Porthgenna Tower, are one and the same person." o Poor mature!" said Rosamond, sighing as she put down the letter "We know now why she warned n.e so anxiously not to go into the Myrtle Room Who can say what she must have suffered when she came as a stranger to my bed side? Oh, what 'mil rtuit give if I had been less hasty with her! It is dreadful to re• member that I spoke to her es a servant whom I expected to obey me; it is worse still to feel that I cannot, even now, think of her ass child should think of a mother Flow can I ever tell her that I know the secret? how—" She paused, wi • heart-sick consciousness of the slur that was cam on her birth, she paused, shrinking as she thought of the name that her husband had given to her, and of her own parentage, which the laws of society disdained to reeogniee. " WLI do yen stop!" asked Leooarl. " T was afraid—" she began, and paused again "Afraid," be said , finishing the sentence for her, "that words of pity for that unhappy wo man might wound my sensitive pride, by remind. ing me of the cirettastasees of your birth? Rosamond, I should be unworthy of your match: less truthfulness towards me, if I, on my aide ' did not acknowledge that this discovery Ass wounded me only as a proud man ass be wound ed. My pride has been born and bred in me.— My pride, even now while I am speaking to you, takes advantage of my Snit moments of compo sure, and deludes me into doubting, in the free of all probability, whether the words you have read to me, can, after all, be words of truth.— But, strong as that inborn an inbred feeling is— bard as it may be for me to discipline and master it in 'ought, and mast, and will—there is anOther feeling in my heart dm is stronger yet." Re felt for her band, and wok it in his; then added: "From the hour when you fi rst de voted your life to your b ind busband—from the hour when you wen all his gratitude, as you bad already won all his love, you took a place in his bean, Rosamond, f rom whi c h nothing not even such a shoot as has now assailed as, eau• move you! Migb es I hate always held the worth of rank in my esti. Basins, I have learnt, *ln before the eenat of yesterday, to bold the worth of my wife, let her parentage be what h nosy, higher still." " Ole, Letosh . tps Lenny! s r Ma's bier you praise me,94 you talk le loupe breath iv if 11411 =te a saeritice in Martyiugyoul- But few' sip milif t iwter him doomed Want langlianaspid eft g& Who I drama dot 62 Ml= CM - * illa; SATURDAY' ■T WILI(111 COLLIN/. CHAPTER XXIII. tad. Jose, ls. ..• V5O A Y I IAB4 nlr:m!rws fearful letter, I bad one mom eat et vile nagrste• fal drabs if your love for me would hold out against the discovery of the secret. I hell one moment of horrible temptation that drew me away from you when I ought to hips pat the letter in your hand.. It was the sight of you, waiting for me to spegh again, so innocent of all knowledge of what had happened close by you, that brought me back to my sews, wad told me what I ought- to do. It was the sight of my blind husband that made me miser the temp tation to destroy that letter in the first boar of discovering it Oh, if I bad bees the hardest_ hearted of women, could I have ever Woo your band again----could I kiss you, eould-I lie down by your side fi and hear you fall asleep, night after night, feeling that I bad abased your blind de. pendent* on me to serve my own selfish interests? knowing that I had only succeeded i 4 my dec e it because your affliction made you incapable of suspecting deception? No, no; I eau hardly be lieve that the basest of women weld be guilty of su c h baseness as that; and I can claim nothing more for myself than the credit of having been true to my trust. Yon maid yesterday, lam, in the Myrtle Room, that the one faithful friend to you in your blindness who never failed, was your wife. It is, reward enough and consolation enough for foe, now that the worst ;Is over, to know that you can say so still." " Yes Rosamond, the worst is over, but we must not forget that there may bard trials still to meet." . " Hard trills, love? refer?" "Perhaps, Rosamond, I over-rate the courage that the sacrifice demands; but, to me, at least, it will be a hard sacrifice of my own feelings to make strangers partakers in the knowledge of the secret that we now possess." Rosamond looked at her husband in astonish, meet "Why need we tell the secret 1.0 any one?" she asked. " Assuming that we can satisfy ourselves of the genninese of that letter," he &emoted, "we shall have no choice but to tell the itecret to strangers You cannot forget the circumstances under which your father—tinder whieh Captain II Trevert.bn " Call him my father," said Rosamond, sadly. "Remembfr how be loved me, and how I loved him, and say •my father,' still." " I am afraid I must say 'Captain Treverton' now," returned Leonard, "or I 4 11111 Lardly be able to explain simply and plainly what it is very nee r t t you should know. Captain Treverton rep ithont leaving a will. His only property was the parehase•money of this house and estate; and you inherited it, as his next of kin--- Rosamund started back to her char and clasp ed her hands in dismay. "Oh, Jenny," she said •imply, "I have thought PO much of you, sines I found th.• letter, that I never remember ed this!" "It is time to remember it, my love. If you are not Captain Treverton's daughter, you have no right to nee farthing of the fortune that you possess; and it must be restored at once to the perms who is,Captain Treverton'e next of kin— ur, in otti , r w,rds, to his brother." "To that man!" exclaimed Itosamond. "To that man who , is a stranger toina m who holds our very mane id - eoutempt: Arr vt.. , to he made poor that be may tv• riete—" "We ore to do what hi honorable and just, at ,aeritioe of our own interests and ourselves," Lermard firnaiy L 61trieVP. R sa mon d, that my consent. as your husbanti, is necessary, accenting the law, to effect this reslitution If Mr Andrew Treverton was the bitterest enemy I h tel ou earth, and if the restoring of this money utterly ruined 1114 both in our worldly cit.- cumstrinces, I would give it bark .4 my 'own sc. eon! to the last farthing ; I would give it back without an instant's hestitation—and so would you!" The blood nuantletl au his cheeks as he .poke. Rosamund 144 rd at trim admiringly in pilence. "Who would have had hiui less proud," she thought foundlv, " when his pride speaks in such words as those"' "You understand now," continued Leonard, "that we have duties to perform which will oblige us to seek help from others, and which will there fore remit it impossible to keep the secret to ourselves? If we search all England for her, Sarah Leeson must be found. Our future actions depend upon her answers to our inquires ; upon her testimony to the genuiness 6f that letter.— Although I am resolveil boforehand to shield myself behind uo technical quibbles and delays— although I want nothing but evidence that is morally conducive, however legally imperfect it may he—it i* call •ropossible to proceed with. out seeking advice immediately. The lawyer who always managed Captain Treverton's affairs, and who now manages ours, is the proper person to direct us in instituting the search; and to as sist u., if necessary, in making the restitution " " How quietly and firmly you speak of it, Lenny! Will not the abandoning of my fortune be a dreadful loos to us?" We most think of it 114 a gain to our con sciences, IlAsamond; and must alter our way of life resignedly to suit our altered means. But we need speak no more of that until we are 164 oared of the necessity of restoring the money.— My immediate anxiety, and your immediate anxiety, must turn now on the discovery of Sarah Leeson—no! no the.discovery of your mother.— I must learn to call her by that aline, or I shall not learn to pity and forgive her." Rosamond nestled eloper to her husband's side. "Hvery word you say, love, does toy heart good,' she whispered, laying ber bead on his shoulder. "You will help me and strengthen me when the 'me comes to meet my mother as I ought? 0, how pale and worn and weary she was when she stood by my bedside, and looked at me and my child! Will it be long before we find her? I she far away from us, I wonder, or nearer, mach nearer, than we think?" Before Leopard could answer, he was interrupt. ed by a knock at the door, and Rosateoad was surprised by the appea ranee of the maid servant. Betsey was Age,bed ezeited, and out of breath; bat she contrived to deliver intelligibly a brief message from Mr. Munder, the steward, request ing permission to speak to Mr. Frankhuid or to Mrs. Frank land on business of importance. " What isle What does he want?" asked Rosamond. "I think mem he wants to know whether be bad better send for the constable or not," anowered posy. " Send for the constable!" repeated Rosamond. "Are there thieves in the hose in broad day. " Mr. Mender mys he don't know but what it say be worse than thieves," replied Betsey.— "It's the foreigner again, if yogi **a seam. Be come up and rung at the door es - ImM as brass and asked if he ectlA see Mrs. Franklaad." • ", The foreigner!" exelehoed Itseurood, laying her bead eititertrotrirer homband's me. " Yep, seam," said Bewley. "Him se ease here to ge over the boas, eking with the " Rosamond, with characteristic impalsiveuess, mute& taktur feet, "Let lee g o down .she begin. " Wait," intvrposed Leonard, catehing bet by the band. "here is not tbnkust ;reed for you ____ to go down "elm now*" fooeiew er. UM' "Yon will suppose their' szelsissa Uncle he maim* adarkeeleg Mama to Betsey, Joseph, looking friady relieved. "Abl Munk *Aiel teat Mr. tinnier diet we wilt take es 'rag, sir, sad yea, good wawa, • ilwwwwwd Nita lIIIIBINTISOSS of this business into our oint far tapiocas oat of By own andiateast with 0 111 4 1 *s, * ` l Oll O l OOO - las all ever eadimitit tam nay • 44 : 4 . 4 4 . • ',W1:6..1i: a • To what trials do you - VP Roeurioad Wilma again* her haskalre side. “Thie history etesage*ldest," she said, is a low, eatioturiswe. be soalethhtg sore thaw tam elawee that rata the clue fa* ow heads at, the manse whew we least expe to lad it." The door opened fur the second time, and there appeared, modestly, on the tineabold, a little old man, with may cheeks and long white hair. A small leather sass was slang by a steep at his side, and the stem of a pipe peeped oa of the breast-pocket of hie oast. He advanced one step into the room, stepped, raised both his bands with his felt hat crumbled ap is them to his heart, and made Ere fantastic bows is 2niek enoessaion —two to Mrs. Frankland, twb or her husband, and one to Mrs. Franklaad again, as an act of separate and special homage to the Indy. Never had Rosamond seen a more complete embodiment in human form of perfect innotenoe and perfect itemisations, than the foreigner sr was des cribed in the housekeeper's vagabond, and who was dreaded 14 . Mender as something worse than a thief ' u Madam, and good sir," raid the old man, advancing a little nearer at Mrs. Franklead's in vitation, "I ask your pardon for intruding my self. My name ri Joseph Bumehmann. I live in the town of Truro, where I work in cabinets and tee-caddies, and other shining woods. lam also, if you plase, the same little foreign man who was scolded by the big majordomo when I came to see the house. All that I ask of your kindness is, that you will let me my for my errand here and for myself, and for another per son who is very near to my love, one little word. I will be but few minutes, madam and good sir, and then I will go my ways again with my best wishes and my best thanks." " Pray consider, Mr. Busehmann, that our time is your time," said Leonard. "We have no engagement whatever which need oblige you to shorten your visit. I must tell your before hand, in order to prevent any embarrassment on either side, that I have the misfortune to be blind I can promise yeti, however, my best attention as far as listening goes. Rosamond, is Mr. Busebmann seated?" Mr Bachmann was still standing near the door, and was expreuieg sympathy by bowing to Mr. Frankland again, and crumpling his felt hat once more over his heart. Pray came nearer, sod sit down," mid Roes. mood "And lion% imagine for one moment that any opinion of the steward's has the least influence on us, or that we feel it at all necessa ry for you to apologise for what took place the last time you came to_this house. We have an interest —a very great interest," she added, with her usual frankness, "in hearing anything that you have to tell us. You are the person of all others whom we are, just at this time—."— She stopped, feeling _her foot touched by her husband's, and rightly interpreting the action as warning not to spea k too unrestrainedly to the visitor before he had explained his object in com ing to the house Looking very much pleased, and a little sur prised also, when he heard Rosamond's last words Uncle Joseph drew a chair near to the table by which Mr. and Mrs. Primal/tad were sitting, crumpled yii.f.elt hat up smaller than ever and pot it in one of his side pockets, drew from the other a little packet of letters, placed them on his knee as ho sat down, patted them gently with both hands, and entered es hie- explanation in these terms: "Madam and good sir," be began, "before I CM] say comfortably my little word, I must, with your leave, travel backwards to the last time when I came to this house in company with my niece." "Your niece!" exclaimed Rosamond and Leo nard, both speaking together. - "My niece, Sarah," said Uncle Joseph; "the only child of my sister, Agatha. It is for the lore of Sarah, if you please, that I am here now. She is the one last morsel of flesh and Mood that is left to me in the world. The rest—they are all gone! My wife, my little Joseph, my broth• or Max, my sister Agatha, and the husband she married, the good and noble Englishman, Lee son—they are all, all gone!" "Leeson!" said Rosamond, pressing her hus band's hand significantly under the table "lour niece's name is Sarah Leeson?" Uncle Jisseph sighed and shook his head "One day," he said, "of all the days in the year the evilmoet for Sarah, she changed that name.. 01 the man she married—who is dead, now, madam—it is little or nothing that I know but this: His name was Jaseph, and he used her ill, for which I think him the First Scoundrel! Yes," exclaimed Uncle Joseph, with the neire:t app proach to anger and bitterness which his nature , was capable of making, and with an idea that he was wing one of the strongest superlatives in the language—" Yes! if be was to come to life again at this very moment of time, I would say it to him to his face: Englishman Joseph, you are till First Scoundrell" Rosamond pressed her husband's bard for the second time. If their own convictions had not already identified Mrs. Jaseph with Sarah Lee son, the old man's last words must have amply sufficed to assure them that, both names had been borne by the same person. "Well, then, I shall now travel backwards to the time when I was here with Sarah, my niece," resumed Uncle Joseph. "I must, if you please, speak the truth in this business, or, now that I am already backwards where I want to be, I shall stick fast in my place, and get no more for the rest of my life. Sir and good madam, will you have the great kindness to forgive me and Sarah, my niece, if I oonfess that it was not" to see the house that we tame here, and tang at the bell, and gave a deal of trouble, and wasted much breath of the big majordomo's with the scolding that we got. It was only to do one curious little thing, that we came together to this place, or, no, it was all about a secret of Sarah's which is still as black and dark to me u the middle of the blackest and darkest night that ever was in the world; and, as I nothing knew about it ex cept that there was no harm in it to anybody or anything, sad that Sarah wee determined to go, and that I °add not let her go by herself; as also for the good resson,that she told me she had the best right of anybody to take the letter and and to hide it again, seeing that she was afraid of its being found if kegler in that room she left it, which was the room where she had hidden it before—Why, so it happersed, that so, that she—no, no that I—A Gott!" cried thirds Jo seph, striking his forehead in despair, sad re Having himself by an invocation in his own lan guage. "I sit lost in my own muddlement, and whereabouts the right pleee is, and how I am to gat myself back Into it, as I am a living sinner is merathea Uproar' _ann. is aet the least Deed to go back on our seenst," lissesoed, forgetting all nation sod e4triaft , aNit in her anxiety to restore the old mans tendideme and awsposnre. "Pray don't try tenpin year esplanationa. We know "We will Nippon," said Lenard, laterpoing abruptly Won his wife could add soother. weal, "that we 'know sire idy ~rift boo asa dir sire to tell as is relation gb your aleoe's menet, and to year Entine for desiring to see the hone." , 4Nes r e ! w ew • tops to my to but I can go on now, I think, and lees myself no more. So! let us say It In this way; I sad Sarah, my nines, are in the house-401 t o the first ',appals.' I and Sarah, my nieeiWor4 of the bone—that is the w oad 4 sappose.i Good! now we go on ones more. On my way bask to my room at Truro I ea frightened for Sarah, Beams of the diet she fisllinto on you stein hers, sad beemme of a look in her biota that it makes me heal" at ay heart Itrise. Also, lam sorry tar her asks, be. cause she has not done that one anions little thing which she came into the haw to do. I fret about these same mitten, but I see ein mL p self too; and my comfort is that with me at my house in Truro, and that I shall make her happy and well again, as soon as we are settled in our life together. Judge then, sir what a blow falls on me, when I hear that she will not make her home where I make mine.— Judge you, also, good madam, what my surprise must be, when I ask for her reason, and she tells use she must leave Uncle Joseph because she is af r aid of b e i ng found out by you." Re stopped and looking aslionsly at Rosamond's face, saw it sadden and turn away from him, after he bad spoken his last words. "Are you sorry, madam, for Sarah, my niece? do you pity her?" be ask , ed, with a little hesitation and trembling in his voice. "I pity her with my whole heart," said Ross' mond warmly. "And with my 'whole heart for that pity I thank you!" rejoined Uncle Joseph. "An, madam, your kindness gives me the courage to go on, and to tell you that we parted from each oth er on the day of our getting back to Truro!— When she cane to see me this time, years and years, long and lonely; and very many had paw ed, and we two bad never met. I had the fear that many more would pass again, and I tried to make her stop with me to the very last. But she had still the same fear to drive her away— the fear of being found out mid put to question by you. So, with the tears in her eyes (and is mine) and the grief at her heart,(and at mine,) she went away to hide herself in the empty big. ness of the great city, London, which swallows up all people and all things that pour into it, and which has now swallowed up Sarah, my niece, with the rest: 'My child, you will write some times to Uncle Joseph" I said, and she answer• ed me, will write often.' It is three weeks now since that time, and here, on my knee are four letters she has written to me. I shall ask your leave to put them down open before you, because they will help me to get on farther yet with what I must say, and because I see in your face, madam, that you are indeed sorry for Ss. rah. my niece, from your heart." He untied the packet of letters, opened them, kissed them one by one, and put them down in a row on the table, smoothing them ent care. fully with his band, sod taking great pains to arrange them in a perfectly straight line. A glance at the first of the little series showed Ro samond that the handwriting in it was the same as the handwriting in the body of the letter which had been found in the Myrtle Room "There i+ not ranch to read," said Uncle Jo. sepb. "But if you will look through them first, malain, I can tell you after, all the rexsos for showing them that I have." The old man was right. There wail very lit tle t 1.,re311 in the letters. and they grew progres- , ively shorter as they became more recent in date All four were written in the formal, con ventionally correct style of a person taking up the pen with a tear of making mistakes in spell ing and grammer. and were equally destitute of any personal partieulars relative to the writer; all four anxiously entreated that Uncle Joseph would not be uneasy, inquired after his health, and expressed gratitude and love for him as warmly as their timid restraints of style would permit; all four contained these two questions relating to Rosamend:—First, bad Mrs Frank land arrived yet at Porthgenoa Tower? Second ly, if she had arrived. what had Uncle Joseph heard about her? And, finally, 'all four gave the same instruction* for addressing in answer: "Please direct to me, 'S J., post office, Smith street. London"'—followed by the same apolo gy, "Excuse my not giving my address, in case in accidents. for even in London I am still afraid of being followed and found nut I send every morninc f•ir IP••er-. -0 T am sure to get your ,answer "I told von, nvi•litm 31.1 the uld man, when Rosamond raised her hea from the letters,"that I was frightened an sorry jfor Sarah when she left ine. Now see, if you please, why I get more frightened and more sorry yet, when I bare all , 1 the four letters that she writes to me. They begin here, at the first, at my left hand; and they grow shorter, and shorter, and shorter as they get bearer to my right, till the last is bat eight 144 lines Again, see, if you please. The writing of the first letter here, at my left band, is very fine—l mean it is very fine Co me, be cause I love Sarah, and because I write very bad ly myself—but it is not so good ill the second letter; it shakes a little, it blots a little, it crooks itself a little, in the last lines. In the third it is worse—more shake, more blot, more crook.— In the fourth, where there is least to do, there is Buhl more shake, still more blot, still more crook, than in all the three put together. I see 'this. I remember that she was weak, and worn, and weary, when she left me and I say to my self, she is ill, though she will not tell it, for the writing betrays her !" Rosemead looked down again at the letters, and followed the significant changes for the worse in the handwriting, line by line, as the old man pointed them out. , "I say to myself that," he continued," I wait and think a little; and I hear my own heart whisper to me, Go you, Uncle Joseph, to Lou don, and while there is yet time, bring her book* to be cured, and comforted, and made happy in your own home! After that I wait; and think a little again—not about leaving my' business: I would leave it forever sooner than Sarah should come to harm—but about what I as to do to get her to come book. That thought makes me look at the letters again; the letters show me the same questions about Mistress Frankland; I see it plainly as my own hand before me that I obeli never get Sarah; my niece, back, unless I can make easy her mind about those questions of Mistress Frankland's that she dreads as if there was death to her in every one of them. I see itl it makes my pipe go out; it drives me up from my ohair, it pats my hat on my bead; it brings me here, where I have once intruded my self already, and where I have no right, I know to intrude myself again; it makes me beg and pray now of your compassion for my oleos mod of your foodness for be, that you will Dot den me the means of bringing gir ab leek. If I only say to her,' I have seen Mistress Fruitland and she has told me with her own lips that she will ask nose of those questions that y9n fear so mush if I may only say that, Penh will come bask with in., and I shin thank pis every day of my life for making me a happy mass"' The simple eloquence of the old man's words; the innocent earnestiess of his manner, towelled Rosamond to the heart. "I will do anything, I will promise anything," she answeed sartlip "to help you to bring her back! It she war 'thalet me am her, I promise not to my one word t she would sot wish me to say, I promise amot to ask ass volition—so, not oar 6.lest Is will pain her to sinter. 0, whit eistodier sway ow I sari basidssi Opel mit I sayP' EiMMO!!1!II!IBMI!ill she s= 4 ;ol' feeling tar hesimed's foot. " • • "Ak, may ao Asp 110111.111!" 'Tied Ue da Jesipk,lyinget pasha. of with hie eyes sod his osidy,ti in a glow. " mid to losing &rah Maki mid to asks lee feel ipaisfal for all my Ima so Wimpy, so happy , so ham; akin is toe small to hold leer 'He lolooli or the pekoe of letters into the air, might it, kip* ed sad pod it bask again i 0 peeket, all as bettind. "Talmo sot going!" mid Brimmed. Pam. ly yea ere sot god yeti" an is ay loss to go away from hies, whisk I art pat up with, beanie it is also my pia to got sooner to Sarah," said Miele Joseph. "Par that raison only, I shall ask yore , purism if I. take my leave, with my heart IM eirillehis t owd 0 my way home main.' "When do you propose to start for Landow, linsolosaanar' inquired Lemma. "Tomorrow, in the morning, early, sir," vio• plied Uncle Joseph. "I shall' blob the work that I suet do to-night, and shall !MVO the rest to Samuel, my man, and shall then "le Serail, by the first coach." "May Inkier your niece's address in Landes, in ease we wish to write to you?" "She gives me no address, sir, but the pt , for eves at the great distance of Lowd os en, the sum fear that she had all "the way from this imam, still disks tr- her. Bat here is the place where I shell get my own bed, continued the old ma, predating a small shop card. "It is the hones of s ownstryssaa of my own, a fine baker of bans, sir, and a very good man indeed." "Nave you thought of any plan for finding oat your nine's address?" inquired Rosamond, copying tits direction cut the card while she spoke. yes—for I am always quick at making my plans,' aid Uncle Joseph. "I shall present myself to the nester cif the post, and to his I shall Pay just this and no more: 'Good morning sir. lam the man who writes the letters to S. J. She is my niece, if you please, and ill that I want to know is, Where does she live?' There is something like a plan, I think. A•hal" He spread out both his bands interrogatively, and loloked at Mrs. Frankland with a self-satisfied smile. "I am afraid," said Rosamond, partly must ed, partl; touched by his simplicity " that the people at the postoire not at *tidy to be trusted with thelt ad I think would do better to take 'Metter with you directed to 'B. J.;' to deliver it in the morning when letters are received from the coolantry; to wait near the door, and thee to follow the person who is sent by your niece (as she tells you herself) to auk few letters for 5.'3." "You think that is better?" said Uncle Jo seph, secretly oonvinemk that his own ides was unquestionably the most impalas' of the Om— " Good! The least little word that you my to me minim is a command that I follow with all my heart." He took the crumpled felt hat out of hie pocket, and advanced to say farewell, when Mr. Freakland spoke to him again: "If you fled your niece well, and willing to travel," said Leonard, "you will bridg her back to Truro at moo? And you will let us know when you are both at home again?" "At onee, sir," said Uncle Joseph. "To both these questions I say at onoe." "If a week from this tinpe pages," continued Leonard, "and, we hear nothing from yon, we must conclude then,, either that some unforeseen obstacle stands in the way of your return, or that your fears on your niece's account have been but too well founded, and that she is not able to to travel?" "Yes, sir, so let it be. But 1. hope you will hear from me before the week is out." "0, so do I! most earnestly, most anxiously," said Rosamond. "You remember my mes sage?" "I have got it here, every yord of it," said Uncle Joseph, toughing his heart. Es raised the hand which Rosamond held out to him, to his lips. "I shall try to thank you when I have come back," he said. "For all your kindness to me and to my niece, God. bless you both, and keep you happy, till we most again." With these words he hastened to the door, waved his hand gaily with the old crippled hat in it, and went out. "Dear, simple, warm hearted old man!" said Rosamond, as the door closed. "I wanted to tell him every thing, Lenny. Why did you stop me?" "My love, it is that very simplicity which you admire, and which I admire, too, that makes me cautious. At the first sound of his voice I felt as warmly towards him as you do; but the more I heard him talk, the more convinced I became that it would be rub to trust him, at first, for fear of his diselosing„too abruptly to your moth er that we know 'her secret. Our chance of winning her confidence and obtaining an inter view with her, depends, I can see, upon our tact in dealing with her exaggerated suspicions and her nervous fears. That good old man, with the best and kindest intentions in the world, might ruin everything. He will have done all that we can hope for, and all that we can wish, if he only succeeds in bringing her bank to Truro." "But if he fails—if anything happens—if she is really ill?" "Let us wait till the week is over Rosamond. It will be time enough, then, to decide what we shall do next." $ The body of a woman was fousd in the' Mississippi, near St. Louis, last week, and is a pocket of her dress a letter, addressed "W. T. M., Bacratoeuto City, Cal.," in whisk occurred the fbllowisr— "My dear William—l now write toyou for the last tines. When you reed this, I will be so mote. You have drives me to death by your last unkind and unfeeling letter. You believed the lying tongues of slander, and the false oath this wee takes. One that loves you and only worships you—they bare lied about me. If I was sot true and devoted to you, wio on this earth is? I have been a faithful sad true wife, and now you have driven me on to this sold world, without any mosey, toned a few friends, and you say for me to lead the TA of a &soy woman; for sash was my life whilst living with you. But that I powwow a lie ittil those EMS 1m life weasel who told you so knew it to be a so. A gentleummi and lady were walking in =Tuesday afternoon, she in all the Donne, sad flowiees, sad he palag at a villainous eigsr, when suddenly the laWs dress was disoovered tole on be and btig briskly. A serifs'of well &teased hugs exting uished the lases, bat **dins' was ruined.— The be was potable! osuesunistad to the light and airy' enseiriebi by she sips. A salutary main might beidedused trona this incident, if theft who rue SO ill-bred as to make is ladies ecanpany were not also tee obtuse to profit by the teseUtip of experiesee sod tenunon sense. I. As maser maniaite at s wealthy =Wilms, who sublessor the IMO- Witt s patty helm, who jumped *Mgt $ window fists aesteksesbis sow mess hiltaWahlimags*LC, sortbilesters pot wt the lay., ....Ths - saatee Jim lis ow Omni is wog go. pesel t —Caseatarti Auriga. ow: =S=2M! BEE EMI BEIM. - NMI 4.- ( (;unlined.) ETC IM:1