THE TIMES, NEW BLOOMFIKLl), PA., OCTOBEll 23, 1877. and the lace work In tho otlier, be iIbkii ed out of the house.' Meanwhile, at the court-room, the lawyer for the prosecution had Hummed up his cane; and now the counsel for the defendant, after nicking ft few re. marks, In which lie drew attention to 3u Antolne'i statement h crha not io foreign to the, cane after all, added that lie thought it fuifllclcntly strong without It. They would soon see that 'Squire May could not have committed tho murder, for he was about to prove an alibi, and would bane it entirely upon the testimony of one witness, nnd so saying he led I Io)H to the stand. Bho liad known Bhe would bo called upon to testify, but now her courage left her, and she felt as If she must fly through an open side door and escape from them all. But a glance from her father, and' tho thought that she might save lilm, re strained her. The little figure looked very piteous with its white face, black dress, and flowing flaxen hair. Already there was heard a murmur of sympathy in tho room, beginning with the women. But the prosecuting attorney was equal to the occasion. " I protest, your Honor," he said ' against tho testimony of such a mere child being admitted In court. I am willing to assert that she does not know itho nature of nu oath, und it is a well known fact that bho has visited her father in prison, and been instructed by ihlni as to what to say." " The Court grants you permission to nsk her any questions you choose," said the judge. Hope held tho back of a chair tightly as the lawyer turned upon her. ." Do you know tho nature of an oathy" lie asked fiercely. " O.i yes, sir I" replied Hope. "It's swearing, and I've heard Colonel An ioine swear lots of times." A Hubducd titter, which Hope did not 'hear, greeted the words, while the prose cuting attorney turned with a gesture of despair. " Your Honor sees ," he began, then suddenly turning to Hope, " One question more : what did your father teach you to say here V" There was a murmur of indignation 3n the house of, " Why do they let him saes her so?" and the like. But Hope Tcplied firmly, " lie told me, whatever they asked me, to tell the truth." " Yes, I understand, he told you to say that he had told you that. What else?" " Nothing oil yes ! ho told me not to be afraid if the lawyers were very im pudent and tried to put me out, but just to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, and God would lielp me." " I think, your Honor," said the law yer for the defence triumphantly, " that there Is no longer any question as to the eligibility of the witness, and that she may now be permitted to give her testi mony," The judge bowed gravely, and the prosecuting attorney took his seat. " And now my little girl," said the other lawyer kindly, " will you state : briefly, but as clearly as you can, the events of the day, from the time the twelve o'clock whistle sounded until Qus Antolne left you V" " Wo were all eating when the twelve o'clock whistle sounded," said Hope, timidly. " Father beckoned to me, and we left the others there and went around to the old cottonwood tree on the other aide of the house. He had meant to fix a swing for the children, but he had been so busy about 'lection that he could not do it before, and he wanted me to help him. We finished it while they were eating, and then called them out and surprised them all. I . heard the notee the pistol made. Father was up in the tree. He said, There, some of those boys are firing at a mark. I must put a stop to that. It's dangerous." This was all of Hope's testimony, but the most rigid cross-examination did not impeach it. No other witness was called. The judge's address to the jury was brief. As they retired for con sultation, Gas Antolne elbowed his way through the surging crowd, brandishing the confession in his hand. He made his way to the judge and handed it to him. lie glanced it over, then rose and read it aloud. A cheer rang through the room, but the judge, with lifted hand, com manded silence. "This paper," said he, " comes too late to be used. The jury Lave retired, and we must await their verdict. If not in accordance with the present disclosure, the prisoner can petition for a new trial." Their absence was brief, and upon their return a breathless silence reigned in the room ; and the words, " Not guil ty," were heard in the remotest part of the house. The cheering was now some thing overwhelming and not to be re presced. Nobody heard the judge's ad journment, thongh all acted upon it. ,'JSquire May had been acquitted simply upon thevldence of his little daughter; lut Ous Aotoine's confirmation of the verdict has a tremendous effect. And while one enthusiastic youth was passing around Ills liat, " to buy that leetlo gal a present an Injun pony or somethln'," all the women and girls in the room formed In file, and, marching around Ous, kissed him heartily, much to Ms disgust. Mrs. Antolne remained only to kiss Hope under the folds of her crape veil. A few weeks later tho w ldow Antolne and her family left for tho Houlh. lie fore they went Ous found opportunity to'sce Hope alone. " I shall come back again for you when I am a man," he said. " I have brought you that pleco of embroidery, but I want you to give me n Uttlo piece of it ; I will keep it always." 1 ''And did you never hear of him again V" I asked of Mrs. Uutherford. " Yes. Tho family went to Virginia. That Htato had been Mrs. Antolne's homo. Ous joined the Confederate army, under Stonewall Jackson ; and shortly after tho close of the war I received a letter from his mother saying that he had been killed at tho buttle of Antletam, I hud been married for several years then, but I believe I cried heartily when I road it. I wore tho embroidery with the Aluncoii stitch at my wedding. As we turned to come down the aisle, after the ceremony, the sou of heads reminded mo of tho scene in tho court-room long ago ; and I seemed to see my first love hurrying forward triumphant, the con fession that completed tho vindication of my father In his hand." Wisdom In Love-Making. WE KNOW that men naturally shrink from the attempt to obtain companions who are their superiors ; but they will find that really Intelligent women, who possess the most desirable qualities, are uniformly modest, and hold their charms in modest estimation. What such women most desire In men Is gallantry; not tho gallantry of courts and fops, but boldness, courage, devo tion, and refined civility. A man's bearing wins ten superior women where his boots and brains win one. If a man stand before a woman with respect for himself and fearlessness of her, his suit is half won. The rest may safely bo left to the parties most interested., There fore never bo afruid of a woman. Wo men arc tho most harmless and ugreeu ble creatures in tho world to a man who shows that ho has got a man's soul in him. If you have not got the spirit to come up to a test like this, you have not got that in you which most pleases a hlgh-souled woman, and you will be obliged to content yourself with tho simple girl who, in a quiet way, is en deavoring to attract and fasten you. But don't be in a hurry about the matter. It isn't creditable to you. Especially don't Imagine that any disappointment In love which takes place before you are twen-ty-ono years old will bo of any material damage to you. The truth is, that be fore a man is twenty-five years old he does not know what he wants himself. So don't be in a hurry. The more of a man you become, and the more manli ness you become capable of exhibiting in your association with women, the better wife you will be able to obtain ; and one year's possession of the heart and hand of a really noble specimen of her sex is worth nine hundred and ninety-nine year's possession of a sweet crea ture with two ideas in her head, and nothing new to say about either of them. Bo don't be in a hurry, we say again. You don't want a wife now, and you have no idea of the kind of wife you will want by-and-by. Go into fe male society, if you can find that which will improve you, but not otherwise. Strange Boston Case. There has been an interesting case of " married but no wife" before the su preme court at Boston last week. Thomas J. Herring widower with five children fell in love with Miss Althea Butters in 1871, proposed and was refused some half-dozen times, and finally got her consent by threatening to blow his brains out. But Thomas indiscreetly boasted of his conquest, and Miss But ters broke the engagment. Then there was another long series of proposals and refusals, until the young woman refused even to see him. . Then Herring wrote a long letter fixing the hour of his death, and told her to be at home to hear the news, but discreetly sent a friend to plead for an interview.which resulted in her marrying him secretly in April, 1872. ' . .' Bhe repented of it as soon as it was done, and compromised by agreeing that they should not live together as man and wife for six months, nor tell anybody. The result is that they have never lived together ; the more she has seen of him the more has her early dislike for him grown, and she asked the court to annul the marriage. Judge Endlcott says, however, that threats of suicide do not constitute duress, and as there was neither error nor fraud the petition could not be granted. The case will probably be taken to the full bench of exceptions. MURDEft WILL OUT, NOBLE COUNTY, OHIO, is the roughest in the Btate. From end to end it Is one constant succession of hills. There Is nothing in tho shape of wagon roads, as they aro understood In the rest of tho State, known.' Tho hill side paths, stony, rutted out by tho heavy rains of spring and fall, are al most impassahlo to wagons even in tho best portions of tho year. But hero are magnificent views of wlldness. From tho tops of many of the hills one may obtain a view of tho surroudlng country extending many nillei in every direc tion. Hon. John A. Bingham, who used to represent this district in Con gress, called it tho Bwlt.erland of Ohio. Tho pcoplo are at least fifty years behind many otlier portions of the Htato. They still live in the rudo log cabins, tho sites for which have been dug out of the hill sides. Tho chief employment Is tobacco raising, nnd has been for half a century past. They produce a very poor quality of the weed, and after a laborious pro cess of curing It Is sold for about $3 per hundred weight and shipped to Balti more, where it is exported to Franco und Germany to bo used In manufactur ing. On account of the insurmountable hills the people travel almost exclusive ly oii horseback, and u Journey of eighteen or twenty miles Is considered a day's ride. Home twenty years ago a drover and cattle buyer was known to huve gono down into this country for the purpose of gathering up a drove of horses and cattle, for the Baltimore market. He was known to have hud considerable money upon his person, and was last seen at dusk us ho left a little town cull ed Whlgsvlllo on his way to another called Barahsvlllc, about four miles dls taut. Ho suid to his host at the former place that ho would rldo on and reach tho latter place by bedtime. Nothing more was thought of tho mutter at Whlgsvlllo for several weeks, until some friends of tho drover came there inquir ing for him, and then it was discovered that ho had never reached Barahsvillo at all. It is remembered by the good peo ple of Whlgsvlllo that the night on which the drover departed from their village it became very dark, and they say that murky clouds overhung the sky In every part and vivid flashes of lightning, fol lowed by terrific peals of thunder, came in rapid succession. But it was not till lute at night that the threatened ruin be gan to descend. The friends of the man who had thus suddenly disappeared made as careful an investigation of his disappearance as it was thought possible to make under the circumstances. He had no near rela tives, having lived a life of celibacy, and thus the matter died out sooner than it otherwise might have (done. But the people of that section "fctnembered the mysterious disappearance and related during all the intervening time curious legends of the probable manner of his taking oft'. Old settlors have departed from the stage of existence and another generation has been born, and still on stormy nights and during certain sea sons of the year the story is related by old wives, and children are made to shudder and draw closer around the cab in hearth. But within the week the mystery has seemed to have as superstitious and won derful a partial solution as it had origin. A young lady, not yet eighteen years of age, and who was .accordingly born some two years after the drover's disap pearance and could have only heard the story as a tradition, bad a dream, which was in short that the drover had been murdered and his body concealed in a certain spot. Hearing the circumstances of the case, your correspondent called upon the young lady. Bhe was found at her parental house, an unpretentious farm residence situated upon the hill side. Bhe is of light complexion, rather retiring in manner, not especially pretty but possessing remarkable eyes. They are large, and although bright, still pos sess an indescribable dreaminess that can not fail to attract attention. Upon being presented to a stranger she display ed the diffidence natural to one unused to the ways of the world. 1 But upon my remarking that I had come to hear her relate her dream, she seemed to regain possession of herself, and keeping her eyes fixed upon the ground, spoke al most word for word, as follows : " I had heard the story of the disap pearance of the drover, twenty years ago, just as every one has in these parts, and I hud dwelt upon it much ' in my thoughts. It seemed to me very strange ana very unjust, and I could not rest within myself and have it all remain a mystery. Bo bad I been thinking lust Thursday night after I retired, and upon dropping asleep I think I immediately began to dream. It seemed to me that I was In a place familiar to me, though on account of the great darkness I could notccrtalnly recognize landmarks. Pres ently the lightning began to flash and the thunder to roar, and between the flashes I began to see wherd I was. I knew It was thd portion of tho road about a tulle beyond Harahsvllle toward Whlgsvlllo. I was walking along, but at length I sat down and something seemed to say, Walt and see what will happen.' I did so, and almost immedi ately I beheld a man, a stranger to mo, riding up the hillside, lie seemed In great hasto, nnd I thought ho was hurry ing on to Haralisvllle before the ruin should come. Bo far as I waB concerned I did not care to seek shelter, but some thing seemed to call all my attention to tho stranger. Almost immediately I saw another man cmeige from the dark ness of a fenco corner opposlte,and with a beuvy club or bludgeon in his . hundi ho ran up behind tho man on horseback and dealt hint a terrible blow on tho head. There was a full, a groan, and then I seemed to awake; although, as I am now cerudu I did not. That was simply a part of the dream. When I next looked the murderer whs conceal ing the body of the dead niuii in a huge hollow trio. I recognized this place also, and still awaited developments. Tho murderer next took tho money from tho suddle-bugs and placed it in a large bag of his own, and taking the saddle from tho borne, turned him loose. Then tak ing the money in his hands ho start ed awny. As ho did so a flush of light ning shining full upon his face, revealed William Styles, my father I I then screamed in reality, und awoke At first I thought nothing In purtleulur of tho peculiar revolution, deeming It only a nightmare, but tho more I thought of the matter the more it Impressed me, and I was absolutely led to go to the spot whwre It seemed to me tho body was concealed." "Did you find anything that resem bled the spot pictured In your dream V" "Certainly; I recognized tho spot shown in the dream, and I could go di rectly to tho spot. Upon arriving there and examining tho ground, I found nothing remiukublo ; but I was not sat isfied with a superficial examination. I got a shovel, and, digging among tho rotten wood, I found what you have heard." " A skeleton , which you are convinc ed is that of tho dead drover V" Bhe bowed her head, but made no aud ible reply. " What is the truth in regurd to the finding of portions of a saddle supposed to bo that of tho lost drover ?" I asked. " Oh, I should havo remarked as I proceeded with the story of my dream," she said, "that the murderer seemed to hide tho suddlo beneath a pile of leaves and brush not fur away, first digging a hole in the ground." " Did you search here '"' " No,I dldn't.but after I had discover ed the skeleton and had told about It to some of the people I told them where to dig for the saddle, and they did so, and found all that could have remained of it through the years viz., the stlrrups.the buckles, etc., much decayed with rust. Thanking the young lady for her cour tesy in relating ber dream, and filled with wonder that her account should so closely have followed that of the neigh bors, I went away to make further in quirles. I found that the bones, after lying in state for a day or two, bad been interred in the graveyard ; that the por tions of the saddle found were still on exhibition, and I examined them. They consisted of one stirrup and two buckles all exceedingly old and eaten with rust They are kept at the harness-maker's. Upon inquiry among the people of the town, it was discovered that considera ble suspicion, wholly on account of the dream, fastens upon Mr. Styles, the father of the girl, but as he is dead al ready, no . criminal prosecution will probably be begun against him at pres ent. It was remembered that he had for many years before his death been noted far and wide as the most consummate coward in the whole region. He could hardly be persuaded to go out at night, and during thunder storms his fear was painfnl to behold. He usually betook himself to his cellar and covered bia face with his hands in an ecstasy of agony. All in all the case is certainly one of the most peculiar and interesting on record. My account of it as given above reads more like an extravagant story than an adherence to facts, but never was there a more painstaking effort made to arrive at the truth, and what was obtained has been recorded. A Miser Sold. A noted miser who felt obliged to make a present to a lady, entered a crockery store for the purpose of mak ing a purchase. Seeing a statuette broken into a dozen pieces, he asked the price. The salesman said it was worthless, but he could have It for the cost of packing it in a box. He sent it to the lady, with his card, congratulating himself that she would imagine that it become ruined on its way Lome. He dropped in to see the effect. The tradesman had carefully wrapped each piece in a separate bit of paper. SCHENCK'S PULMONIC SYRUP. yur tht Curt of Voniumptlon, Couyht A CoMi. The great virtu of this nicillnlna In thus It rlpm) the matter anil throw sit nut nf tha it. torn, purines tha blood, and tliui tfloctt a euro. Nchtnck'l fita Wttil Tonic, for tin Vurt of Dyi- P'jma, jiungmton, re. Tha Tonlo produces a hrnlthv action of tha Stomach, creating an appotlto, forming chylo, and curing tht most obstinate cases of Indlgct tlon. B Schenck'l Mamhakt VUU, far (At Curt of Liv- Those Fills are alterative, and tirndum a. healthy action of tho llvor without Ilia lead danger, at they ara free from calomel, and yet more eiiicaciout in restoring a noallliy action of tha llvor. Tbcso rcmertlei ara a corlatn cure for Con sumption at the Pulmonic) Byrup ripens the matter and purines the blood. The Mandrake rills act upon the LWor, create a healthy bile, and rornovo all dlaoasoa or the Liver, often cause for Consumption. TheBna Weed Tonic give tone and strength to the stomach, make a good digestion, and enables .the organ to form Rood blood and thug cronU-s a healthy circulation of healthy Blood. The combined action of those medicines, as thus explained, will cure every case of Consnmtlon, if taken In time, and tho use of tha medicinal persever ed In. .i , Dr. Bchneck la professionally at his principal ofllco, corner Blxlh and Arch Hts., l'hllldelphla, every Monday, where all loiters for advice must bo addressed. Bchonck't medicines for tale cu all druggists. M USSER & ALLEN CENTRAL STORE NEWl'OltT, l'ENN'A. Now olTortlio public A It A It U AND ELKOANT ASSORTMENT OF DRESS GOODS Consisting sf all shades suitable for the season. BLA CK A LP A CCAS AND nioiirning Goods A SPECIALITY. BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED MUSLINS, . , AT VAKI0U8 PRICES. . AN ENDLESS SELECTION OF PRINTS) ' '' ' ' ' We sell and do keep a good quality of ; . " ; f V SUGARS, COFFEES & SYRUPS, And everything under the bead of GROCERIES! Machine needles and oil for all makes of Maihlnts. To be convinced that our goods are j CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST, 18 TO CALL AND EXAMINE STOCK. f - No trouble to show goods. Don't forget the ' CENTRAL STORE, Newport, Perry County, Pa. $10 TO $25 A DAT ! MADE by Agents In cities and conn try towns. Only necessary to show samples to make sales and money, for any one out of employment and dispos ed to work. Used daily by all business men. Bend Stamp for circular, wltb prices to agents. Address ' SPECIAL AGENCY," Kendall Building, Chicago" JEATHER &C. THE subscriber has now on hand at LOW PRICES, Good Sole Leather," Kip of Superior Quality, Country Calf Skins, French Calf, LININGS, ROANS, &c. J?. Mortimer, NEW BLOOMF1ELD, PA. TRESPASS NOTICE. Notice It hereby by glv en to all persous not to treses on the grounds of tha undersigned, situate in Madison and Jackson townships, by picking berries, Bsh liiK. hunting, or otheiwise tresiMtkalug, a they will be dealt with according to law. Bor. V. Gbet t J. B. Coup : Solomon llowia; I. Johnson i W. H. Ukay : Anokew THoerui ; S. (i. Smith ; June W, 1877. pd Isaac IIou.rnbacor t Mrs. Makit B. Smitu s Mua. Sakau Stamhaituh; Jams a. Aniukjom; Jkkkmiah Hkncu s James Wooum 1. bTAMBAVOU; I '