m stornwthE DEIROCAALT ! 1! • 18 Pusuagua limet9iaTl4, 8* , _ tl • i - .' 1 A. tag 1:3434 1 M . , 1.11.0ia. 11 - ' OFFII3I ON PUBLIC itiii:111 , 111 1 , 1 :HI : . 'tram acions Aim: 824111 X. ILI 8 iYIII.I. 1 1 1 1 P ricsiks.—sl,Wper annum in. A ' *.AlitX ; d etbsrstet $8 1811 , he easeasel-szta OW eentig: annoto . ll ' added to annarapea, at the scan oft* Pato ,to pay ImPutsa et solhettua. etc. Apeasica - peyote% prefetee !I Ameginitassims will be insert r ed at the 1 -- , . . eat.ollt pm• loom or ten tints oriels, ititherthst three li • ' 1 . • ' weeks, .ad 93 cants tot each additlo m tad week— down. Lwow • -' , - w e Jom Ourselves to no t • Merchants, itn4 others, Who adCekise byil : . the year, srill be et reed et the fbllosing ratel, 1 ris.; r- ' - -- :Air ma orsdni, _or leas, oiie year; teilh otars4es, $8 ! atte* tOsosol wore, at Ike tuftor . J 6 , , . !Oereiltereet wept to those orknown Ttlf:p%.;UP MB ty. . • BUSINESS CARDS. of ice i I thatl was falling a great - depth; that I was being hurled to utter destruc tion—tera horribldeath,' Suddenly I felt that, I was cau ght by eomething—thit I bung:suspended. I was able to take breath,Jand to call out for "A rope ! a rope ! . ,- 1.3 y the most . eittraoidinary chanc e my. fall had been arrested by's little ledge- of I ice which spanned the crevasse like a bridge. ',Qn this frailstructure,, not more than two inches %Vide at the Itip, and (as well as I could Judge) about two feet deep; ithad fallen, so that•my head hung - down ,on one Side; mv.legs on the other. In ; stinctitely and- immediately . , by means which I cannot at all recall, 1 raised My... i self froiu this ledge,, in which there wee a little' niche sufficiently wide to admit one ! j foot . ltvatt now so far collected that - I ! could hear my fellow-traveler saying from above, it We never hoped to hear your voice again.. For God „s sakei take, heart. S. . , • Mt. WILLIAM. IY. 11111 EATON,.. The guide is running to Montauvert for - men and, ropes, and will soon he back." TAME= EILTSICIaN ..1: SITROEON DENTIST. =_-__H_ wag DR. MYRON WI/EA Tos, : • - . • "If he . is not," I answered, " I shall, liteeasatcat and Surgical Dentlit, reeentlYof My position Was an 'awful one. The 1 Blttamton, L Down a Crevasse. . ! never come up alive." N. .Y. tender their protsloutil services i. all iv o appro. 11 - ' • elate the ..Itttfornied Practice of _Physic t " careful -and . • -*---- 0------- sithillid operations On Teeth: . with I T .4 s'elftstne. slid - I " arrived in Chamouny on the 6th of -little ledge was so narrow - that I ~ c ould im p ro s zt ail ty . l o lt r e w plattzt. Teeth . ex mete, without , Awritst 185 , 3, 101 l a ... en tri d and - compan- ! not met both my feet upon it., - I was, in 4 -" , ' ir, Jackson, June ruin; brio. - 1. ion, lan Englishman, like myself. - We I fact, supporting myself on one leg, half . DR. H. SMITH & . riON,' two had been about live weeks in Switz- ; leaning aeainst - cone side of *the crevasse , QVIIGEON DECNiISTS,-Montrose. Is . ~_, erkuid, and in that/ had done event'- and pressing, my hand against the' oppo- ; . 1 7,.e=ii. 4 I .tiriall ' ai a c e ele b .ggs ng s'etli v a. iiii' ---t a - is °lin t; e"us'Qere'd necessarY by our soun- !site side. it was perfectly smooth, and Dertumed 1 4 good style and warranted. -.— trynten. AN e had acquired some experi- i . there was nothing to grasp.. A stream of __. - 11 - F. ounerean JL. ItEhD. owe:in glacier work, having, ascended" the .water poured ow my shoulders, drench- i N - DRS: OLDIStEAD& READ Alitseh Horn, "whose hnnunit had been ;ing . me to the skim, and freezing me with , WELI) ANNO.UNCE tit the Public F ' re a ched for the first.time by an English- dts icy coldness.- Overhead I - could see i maii 1 a iuenibcr of the Alpine Club, only the hmg, narrow strip of blue sky, bound i th ey Nave' entered into a partnership for the ' 1. • Practice Of MEDICINt4St Surgery, twb Months before. We tmade the as- !ed by the'. mout li of . the crevasse. There sent_isuceess fully, and were pyoud of hay- : was a terribly stolid, i i mrelenting look in I aid are pre t larad to intend to an calls In the line or their t r L if e e s r a lo a :. l. o D c i t ;i h A4 l . . formerly „ . amp nip by 7 in. J. lug be e n t hesecond vxploring i p:arty to . the intensely -blue tett . t that surrounded fi lnc 1 '-. stand on its l o ft y pea k, nearly fourteen on all.snles. The grim walls ot ie erev . . . • - DR. NI: •Y. -LEET - - • - thou Sand feet high. On that jecasion wo _ a r se looke,las if they would unite to eruslt i Phyekiire mut Stergam Frien - etarak, Pa. &re e,;pviee passed two whole days oil the( snow and 'Me rather tleut relinquish their victim. the Jileixot Hauer. -; ' tflacier. • T"NtimerouS rills of water poured doter the 1101. LEET gives. p,irgcular gqimil,nt 1 . 6 th e treatment ' c.,, I --, , _ , • . Air of dhowae u am,. lan and Eva ; a n d i. confhlent that remetnnered well the first glimptie' I crevasse, but in the whole sixty yards of i Ws knowledge of. and experience In that branch of pm- I had had into One of those terrible crevass- i itslength I could see no projection except ' lace will enable him to effect a cum In the must dlrdeult . i annes. For lreathY,' det's or thele'^rgfttl cynic • wll.: es which interest glaciers. Getting a.! thelittle ledge on which l had so iniracu- , ins charged unless the patient Is l'enctitted treat. - . anent. • [August )).Beara guide to hold my hand, I leaned over its i loualv chanced to fall. -. . SOUTILIVOItTI I & VAIIAXIN,. 1 : y.vyping brink and gazed carefully • into i. I ventured to look down, only ihr en in the Ifittliondess abYss. "The two perpen- : stint, :into the fteirful chasm in u Mehl t iiiirs'arriinits• %Nu nekt.ens In Itsilinnand . 4trittrVar i Alin i tr i ""V r n"t r ts and nC.elirrsZtialbcfletWkTO i dienlar walls of ice appeared to join -to-.; was suspended. • At the depth to which 1 gether About tlAe hundred feet down ; , I -bad fallen the crevasse was barely two \ -4.siess in ararbicitei Slate'for Mantles. C m't re-Tables* ic. *.eshop a fevr doors eau orsouie's doto on Tornitikel in appeara nce - resulting - : feet wide, but downward it narrowed rap- -sated. Moatrusc. ra. oce , yo 1 ,t v ofthe crevasse. - U , sually, I believe ; idly, a nd about two hundred feet below , . . WTI. A. sNoW, ~ . - the great ..split ends only where the gla. ! nit the sides appeared to -join: . I belieYe ItSTICE O' T PLACE.--great Bend. es. mike ' vier touches the - grotind beneath. • ' that if r had fidlen . .six inches on either el on Wain Street, opposltelhe 'll extent House.. apt I • • ------ --- ---,-, --- ---- - ------ 1 ”X o one who tails into -one. of these side of the little ledge I must •inevitably JorissArrrEn. , ever eimiee out Aye," said. one of our I have been janmed in head downward, at wasinoNa_utE TAU.01.1.-Montroee. Pa. Slip . I . gui l i e S. Is Niese..' s:tid ainither, "a lean ; a depth Where no ropes that could have 1 over I. h. Dullard's Grocery. on Main-stn Thankful for past favors. he Toilette a continuance ; once escaped, 'and lives still at the Grind- I been brought there could possibly inWtl --pledginghtmself to do all work tatillact <wily. Cut- elwald ; he was a ehamois hunter, and ' reached me.' ' Undone on' short notice. and icarrantcti to tit: i . litontroPe. Pa,. Jul., tth, 1110.-,4f: ! when com ing home alone o v er the glacier, ?•' I had now-been about twenty . minutes --• ... .his foot slipped, and he wait precipitated : standing in this perileimi position, straining . into a.crevasSe. His fill; Was broken. by `, every ner.ve - to prevent myself frOm giving ' projeCting ledges and blocks hike ; which ; way:,', k;oking pp at the blue sky above me I hpweter, gave way as he, clung •to them. ' and-.t lie clear -. ice oh all sides, but seideni , jo lt \-- Gi t ovFs .-• :. ' Afteri falling three hundred feet, ss he daring to cast a glance into the abyss be .. reached the bottom of the glazier, with a low. Blood was trickling over ine from - I,IASIITONAIthiI TAILt ith-N o i l t r ose, p a . Shop F near the Itantiet Meetly:: Ma,. on Turn pike . leg-anil 1111 arm brciken. Ile found a Ind- a cut in my - cheek, and I felt that my right Vg - „,.;l',, li t r e re „,72,l t i,T c ' e lP a Zi . ,,,'"2" l „ - ,7,r,n l L ''' ' ' low space between' the ground and the leg (fortunately the idle vile) WaS . badly • L.'. ISBELL, , ' ice, through which n stream of • water ran. bruised., In the meantime ins left leg ' - Instinctively lie folloWCA its course, des- ' was betiontin.g exceedingly painful from' W•re A M, eT e te t :,Z u e c e b r= n ea d tictiVra u o!"t o' - • pite the great pain lieendured,*and after i the strain upon . it, and I was afraid-of lo work warranted. Shop in Chandler ,and Jessup's 4 twee, movritom Pi. oe'Xi tf , tt ... 4r ): . : crawlinf*Al ng for three hours fowl him- ' sinoaty balance it' I tried tO relieve ins , , , . ---..- -- ' selffreed from the glacier!' .! pelf by changing te. the : other. I felt that WM, W..SMITH & CO., f - 1 Ordinary - crevasses are from three •to i I was growing benutithed by the . intense CINEst - se9:l,T uu ,•,T.." LTAcTur-Lu ' ;;; F :''' I eight feet wide at top, but the sides aii- 'eoldpfthe ice against whichl was leaning, - 1 pronch each other rapidly, so that a man ; and of the stream of 'water from under I.Would,be wedged- in between the two ,- which I durst noplove. . ! walls ,f ice long before be could -reach 1 ' . I Willed to my fellow_ traveler to know ,t, the ,ottom. • And then, unless . there 'if any one were in sight. There was no should be ropes at hand long enough, i answer. I called again.. No human be what Jim awful death. An unfoCtunate 1 ing seemed to be within hearing.. *A diz •Russiari gentlemen perished thus in a : ziness came over me, as the thought struck crevice only last year, half frozen, half i me, "He has gone to look if any - help is •sq.netiled to death,. the heat of his . body ' co mi`n? , andhe cannot finfthis 'way back err melting theice, he ever sinking deep- to the crevasse. There are hundreds of °rand deeper-into his dreadful grave. them. I' am lost." • , lily companion and I ascended the lire- I Again Iliad to strain every, nerve- to rant, itnd as few climbing travelers'. leave keep myself from sinking ; 1 almost gave ' Chamounv without visiting the, Mer 'de up hope; I felt inclined to throw myself ; IGlaceiantl. tic .lardin, we arranged to down and hive the agony oVer. At that make 1 that excursion. - Toshoeten our 'miserable time, I seddenlv heard my friend , day's-Work we left Cliantonny in the even- shouting from above. He had gone to mg and slept a t Mentanyert, a - solitary look it' he could I discern the guide ; and, • little Mountain inn on the edge of the Mer When he turned round to retrace his steps, de Glace. . • -, had been thunderstruck to see the surface We were.up betimes in the morning.. of the glacier intersected by innumerable ' We-provided ourselves with 'sonic eats- erevasses, :ill so similar in appearance as • Ides and wine, and started with our guide, :to leave hint no landmark by which to wliont we had brought front Courmayeu• i know my living grave. • Thank Ileaveit-l i It was a glorious- morning :old .Promised ; lieth had caught, sigh of a little liiiitrsack' well for ottr expedition. Our • road, for; left at e mouth of the crevasse by the almut !half ae hour, was along an uneven guide. This had directed him back-. • I path skirting the glacier, which lay l 4 low : e ,ealledto him to look at his watch—five Ins on bur left hand, Very touchccevassed Minutes more were'past. The 'cold ivas and covered With debris. The path then 1 fire idol; more intense. It is no figure of came to an end, and the guide said wt • : 4eec.1.1 to say that I felt the blood fret-zing must now take to theglacier: We de- in my veins. • I lialled to him again, to 4.ended qe to it, and threaded our. way . know if any one were in sight. 'lt was thir among the numerous crevasses. i ty five minutes since the guide had start- The excursion to the .Mer de Glace not ed, but not a soul wita visible. It was : beingdooked upon' is a - regular glacier ex- !Most unlikely that he could be • back -so peditiOn; is net ina4 with . the attendant : Soon, for we ourselves had-been three 'precatitiens of axes or ropes. We hind ' quarters - of an hour in coming thus far., • neither. ,We were in high spirits, and i I felt that I - eould hold out-but a very went along at it great rate', so quickly, in- Short time longer ; . and besides that, I did deed, tlit our guide, who had fallen be- ; not know at what Moment the little ledge, .i hind, Captioned ifs once or twice, and re- . i vhiith was my only safety, might giye i quested us to allow hint to take the lead. way under my weight. I "remembered ; Just then, our' progress was- arrested ! that I had tr large cl asp - knife in - my pock 'by a Wide crevasse. Looking to the left, ! .t., and I determined to try ti, rescue my ' I perceived that it-terminated some.twen- ; self with its aid. I called to my fellow ty feet from us in a • steep slope of ice, ;,traveler above that . I wits going to at ; which I-thought I could easily clithb. AS ! tempt it. lie implored me not to try ; the crevasse was about sixty yards long, I : but my situation was becoming so des- . •; determined to try this elope ,rather' than ' perate that I did try.. I be,raii by making go round by the other end.. . -.. i a little hole in the ice as e ",high up as I 1 17AT, my Alpenstock instead of an axe, ;coati reach, large enough to admit one • .. e , . therefore, I began Making - foot holes in hand. My next endeavor was to cut a the ice with it. The guide had now come i deep foothole :about tiro, feet Skive . the' up with us. Ile looked at the ice slope•i ledge: • 'I succeeded'in• this, and found 1 and the wide crevasse, and said,. very ser-.1 that, by placing my foot init, holding fast ' ionsly, "It ifealangerous, let us go round." lat the place-I had made for my hand, at I rßy thistime Thad, with the a i d of my A l- 1 the same time pressing W \ ith my h t ack ' I penstock climbed abOut-half way up the ;. ' against the opposite side -of the Crevasse , slope. I had already Ohne to the conchs- i With all my strength, I was able to raise,! Kinn that it waisinmik too steep to. scale 1 Myselfand stand firmly in inv. new posi t without an axe, and had determined to : tmu.• I again lot Myself down on the ' . 1 retrace my steps. T SO, when the guide had ,] ledge, and commence& cutting; another i I spoken, I carefully stretched back my foothole, about two feet above- the - last.' ! rif,dit leg, feeling for tlielas t hole I had 14: seemed to me possible - that in this man. Made in the ice.--' illv foot went 'past the.; tier Iniight escape from my; icy. prison; I place,pul I felt thatf was - slipping. 'flier. is a single slip or a, false step, and. I . was not the least projection - that.l could.lknew I - roust ',be precipitated down the F I grasp. The slope became perpendicular; [Crevasse. - I and - I fell head foretnest into the yawning i :,_ I was working dilligently at the.second crevasse • below. • foothole, when I, .heard. a joyfal shout I I heard a lona cry at' despair front my 1 from ab ove: "They area in sight—three 'f'ellcv*traveler and_the guide.. My own ,!e'en with ropes—rttnning as hard as . they .1 sensations cannot be described, or. even ; can . . . I distinctly,separatedifrom khe : Whirl and I ; J.steadied myself on- my terrible nar shock. I - felt that I was being bumped. row and slippery footing, in order to be able to seize and 'attach the rope a hen from .ide tt, side between the tw.O . walls atirrewe'coona =CET ,1411141LPIL. W3ll. COOMR & . /Mll3llllS.—Mantrme, Pa. Successors 1 1 ,trit, Coupe', C& (WM Lathrop' s'aew building, Taraplke-at. c a. *tours 31cCOLLITM. - tt ATTO7WiIY9 and - Coanialtaa at Law.-11Ontrnae, Pa. Mee to Lathrop' neve bantling, over the Bank. • RENRY B. IiteREAN, ArronAr snit Cannella a Taw.- -Toeraeraa, Pa. Once la the Likm Much: . Jed be ft._ DR. K. F. WILMOT, , e'IItADVATE of the Allopathic and itomceopithic Col- WOW !new of Medicine.-44t7reat Bend, Pa. Mice. corner 112 .3Entltbethirtli, nearly opposite the Methodist I, tetras . - aptial •; L W. BINGOAM it; ll: C. AN i KY 4 • - PrMOANS: 131.71RDEONS AND D&WiST§—Nevr illford %much. ra.. - . , • I)R. G. Z. DIMOCK, • • ANI:ISILINGEON.-31fintrapc, Pa. CHIC* over Wilsons igorc;' Lodgings ht Searles note!. I'. LINES, FASITIONABLY. TAILOR —Mont:men. ht. Sbop in PhcrnixloCk, over store ut Read. Wntrous & roster. All work %warranted. as to fit and Cutting done on'eltort notice. in bem. 4yle. jan C. 0. FORPHAM: ANtrACTrLIEII Of 800T5 1571/O.ES. 31ontrotr. all Pa. 'Shop over Tvler's 'tore. All kin& 'of ' , most; coda to order, and repairing dont; neatly. 'jet y ABEL T1.71:11EL1., "INEALP.R. in [)rues, Chemlcalet - lhe Stuffs, Glitss Ware : rainte, 01Is, Vazalsh„ Oskw Glass, Groceries, Fancv.Goods, Jewelrr rerfit ry„ Le."—Aizent for all tin; must popular yATY.NT 3171i1CINES„' —Montrose,. Pa. so; tr 'PItOF. CIiAI:LES 310R1{1S, !MD'S& and !lair Down.. 2Flontro,.e. Pa. Shop in ./Llr banment of S•virl-'. 111 - I.)EN BROTHEItS, wmoLmius DEALEMS IN -AND FANCY -GOODS. WY. HAYDEN. ) JOHN HAYDEN. '#! TRACY HAYDEN% r GEORUE HAYDEN. ,; P. E. BRUSH, D., MATING, NOW LOCATED PI RNI AN ENTLY, BroiDin.gN7l.lle, Irui attend to the dntiee of his pruf , , , , , inn pi.otn ptly . Ogler at D. Lathte note). Dit J. S. 43II"I-1.: '- The INVENTO.R, and DENTIST, IPracticing In Nos 31Lacing }Looms 111 the Nor 31.11roni nowt, In a plot ant totvn. .romid and itu•Ili:;••ht • ' <kr Zo AT ! NEW MILFORD, IS THE PLACE TO BUY YOUR HARNESSES, CINEAIP TOR C &SIC, AND GET THE WORTH OF YOUR MONEY. 3EIC Co M INSURANCE COMPANY, COS' INTeb are' . , CAPITAL:; ONE 'MILLION DOLLARS. AnummSts air 1160, \ 81,44610.27. =Jaunts, " 43,068.68. I:11114.oe Sipll3ol4o, Mu. J.Naitin,Pvikina Miro McGee,. Art " Wllsnarth. Vice Policies Issued apilsenewail, fKttir uudev.it•oid; a hit P2lce, tau door above fiesee'.llatrl, Mfuturo•e. nom y , _ • . 313101 . rt lit . 2 5 112 ! • I l lmarer r. Art:s ogro te asa iktorit Of new tkoviv, fur or itith Rare Pipe. Xitar. @!e ea sotesftt it ur.ectsottilestridpittobti will be v+ld oe the 010 gt favorable taw kirauter to •Praug ar idarf' New Il li ZZOot : 26th, VIM Dandelion . A ITEAtIrIiV bounragoc. , One pound add! iri/ter 74*41dindt e &Apuns& oncfee. Eu , . !ak. TUrreWs Pure -TIMOTY SEED! Warastrittree lkOft astir K iiihrtiasortoiasseeds 4LSO Lae *Clover, Be for saleft,rmie.y cr,eu 0t , 14.Fy APEL Trpo.l Xcistrui^. Mr.ral 7. ISO • • • • ,014. 18; I NO•`IONB 3 Pit' .VILFOZD, PA J. R. sminur . . . . . _ - ... , II il , , . • . ' - . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . , . . • - to • \ • , . . . ... • , . • . . M - . . _ . . . . . ... ' - ! iII . .• . . ..... . ` .. . .. . ..... .. - , ... -• . ~ - ' _ . • II • . . . • .• : 1 . - • - -. , . ~ .. .. . . , . • . , i • . . . .. , , ~, ..... . _ 4 T . : - . '' . . -...-.• ••••• - `7= - -- .7.7." -. ' g ----- " --- ; -. ..... - zzili - _-. --- ,:.."- - ; 7.- - _ - _ - _,, - .7=. - .1 - _ - .7. - : -.-.--•-,-.---- -- 2 . '.. Written for the Monocrat 3/116.1EstIP • • " 34AILT E. LOOMIS, Q. that to me the • trete gives, That guide the turtld•to her nest, r.a quickly cleave the vault of Heaven, Ata fly away and be at teat.—llynort. A where is the germ of happiness fond'-- Loth It linger where wealth and pride abound -- 4n the lowly cot, or the monarch's hail, *here the chandeliers gleam o'er the feeteoed wall 'Where thehright red wine is mantling. high, And joy butane' forth In each sparkling eye, Whero soft; low music, whose mystic tye," • Beams linking the spirit with' realms on high, • And beautiful goirers,'whose varied dyes, Brighten the senses mad gladden 'the eyes, Where glittering throngs to splendor dwell— pi.mi it linger there; with its seem spell 'O, no, fond dreamer. 114 not of earth, ;Tie a beautiful gem of heavenly birth; A,ntitwould ye secure itt--oh, trace your ways )ty the radiant ilea of ii , ell, Spent days; Content and happy to nurture the - powers, To bloom in heaven's neer fading bowers. Where the heart is pure, and the soul is free Fn the fair bright realms of eternity. the Flag and Keep Step MONTROSE, PA!, THURSDAY, APRIL '4,;1861.' iParty that Does- not C *own to; .me. I saa-the end of it dang- Hug over. ny head. "Merciful God I- It will•not tEach me!• It is too short "We havtit got another rope,'" was an swered fomabove • and it was knotted on and and loiVered. • caught the end, and tied it firmly round my waist. :Grasp ing the rope above, with -both hands, I gave the Word. T he strain began, and I felt, thatl was safe. In another minute I was standing on the glacier. I had been fifty ,mintdes in the erevasst, during which time,l had not lost consciousness - for a single instant. When felt myselt'once more tipot .firm. fooaig, an • all pervading sense of gratitude for the wond erful' escape I had had came lover.ine .and made me faint, and I should have fallen had, they not held me uji. This was soon over, and we prepared to start for Montanvert. fore leaving I took a last : 'look at the mooth of the crevasse, which had so near: ly been My sepulchre.' I saw that it would have been utterly i mpos sible to climb out,las I had been trying to do. The mouth wait so wide that, tts.l approached it, I couldthave no support from behind ; and witho4t such support, not _even a eat could have scaled the perpendiettar wall. • Our guide was in a terrible state, and had run the way to Montnnyert, bat could find no rota; lit for the purpose in the house. Ile' was in despair., - .and' starting off to Chamonny, when two. muleteers met him. :I Their mule&were laden- with wood fast Ifft ed on. with 'ropes ; he begged hard-for those ropes, telling the men that a young .I.ltglishinan was being frozen to. death in crevasse: They. threw the wood front, the backs of the mules, and came to nib• . rescue with the guide, bring ing the ropes- with . them. limit:at& tit gether, (tt seemed there were three in ,a 1.1) they tinde up a len g th—abUut sixty feet—enottrit to reach me. . • • l'he Weasel and the' like user' e the only depredators knunit about she 'moorland farm; buthire theyWemill occupied I I in - the hay-fie d, who should come that bra k but Geo y Wilson. !:- ' IVO the kitchen door wet'' , open, and Gerody step , in. - He banged the settee with hiss 4he coughed, bohemians], he saluted - the eat, who Sets punlig-on ',the window seat) and at length; discovered' the re Was.nelpne . within. Neither meal . ' :mir penny wa r s to be expected that day; the'' ,' rain was groping heavier; soots of the hay I lutist be wet, and 31risSimpseri would re. turn in bad humor. .•" But two 'objects potil cifultir arr'ested.GeordPe attention ; - one-, was the broth yet; boiling fin 'the -fire, 1 and the whet the silver 'spoofs nattered ins I the tabl.e. Bending over tithe former, Geordy took k consid.erable . sififf, gave the ingredients a l stir-with the s paihook, and 1 nuittered " very thin." . ' His) ,proceeding ! with regard tothe<latter Must remain un mentioned ; but half •an hour " a ft erward, whip he washiafely ensconced in a farm- I how a mile Off, the family 'Were:Arisen I within doom by the inerettaing. storm ; ' they found etSerything as it had been left i —tile broth 4- the fire, the,; cat on - the 1 window seat, whiting and flannel on the I table ; but nol spoon; were there: .•:' - i • " Whin's. ;the sp oons ?" lcried Mrs. Simpsetito- the entire family,Who stood by I the, fire drying their wet garinents. No- I body could tell . Nancy had le ft theM on the table when she ran to the hay. No' one had been in the' houie - theY`were ber thin, 'for mithing -Was . disturbed. The drawer was pulled out, and, the stocking .exhibited. Every shelf, every corner was searched but Ito no purpose :!the spoons had disappeared; and the stat.of the fliriii_ house may he - •Unagined, The widow ran 'through it like one distracted, (pies.. tioning, scolding; and searching. Robin, Nancy and, the farm men ,were dispatched in different directions; as soon as the rain abated, to adyertise the neighbors, under the superstitibin that Some strolling beg gar or gipsYlmight have carried off the treasure, and I would attempt th dispose of, it in the parish. Nobody 'thought ofd Geordy Wilson; he had 'not :been spied ; h from theay:field .; his eircuiti'were wide; ' his visit to a!1 y house not freqUent ; and if I lie eschewed Widow Simpson's froM th e , day of her loss, ,it was been Use Geordy knew that niiither her temper nor her lib- . prality would be improved by that eireum- : stance. Lost the spoons were. beyond 'a I doubt,. and tic wido* bid fairsto . lose her senses.- . . : The rich relation ame_at tke appointed A STORY t HAT HAS THE MERIT of - MKT% time, and had such a tea that; he vowed ' The parish of Bethgate, in Linlithgow- ! never again to trust himself in 'the house I shire, ought to be \ reckoned among t h e ;of his entertainer. But the search ,went 1 classic spots of Scotland,' inasmuch as it ' on; rabbit-holes were looked Into for the' , I formed - palt of the dowry which. Robert,, silver, and active boys were bribed to turn Brose-bcsiowed -on his elder daughter, out neigpies'nests., Wells and barns in Margery, fvhen she married ' Walter, the ~the rieighbotthOod - were explored. The High Ste Ward of Scotland, and thus be- 't' riers of the nearest parislis were eiriploss regularly came the Progenitrix of the - royal and un- ; ed to proelai n the loss; it was lucky houie ofStuart. Lying midway be- , advertised at kirk gate and she . .market I tween Ediukurg and Glasgow, those ri- places; . and 3,lrs. Simpson began. to talk 1 val queens; of East and West, but out of., of getting a 'starch-warrant for the beg-. I the common track of.traffic and travel, it ! gar's meal-pont:h. • Ba th gate Was alarmei has been fer ages a parish of small and -through all Its borders concerning the : w 7 rather backward fams.•ttl late years coal I spoons ;but hen almost a month wore has been Tound there, and steam and , away, and nothing could be ;heard cos trade, whi eh bid f,ir to leave the world eerning theta oons, the widowls suspicions 1 no rustic ebrnersire rapidly turning it in- I turned front 'eggars, barns and magpies, ,: to` a initung district, • which nobody to light on pier Nancy. She had' been thought of about the time of the geto : ra t scouring the ,peons, and -left ,the house ''peace. wh o, pstsgste lived on i ts own ; last ;silver equld not !cote the', table with - 1 barley and wore its ,own hodden grey, i out hands. It‘was true that Nancy had • and 1m butt two subjects always born el an unquestionable character, of interest—the but such spoons .were not to be met with corn markkt and the kirk season. Among I its peaceable and industrious population every day, and, Mrs: Simpsonlwa.s deter- , - 1 y there . was },nip dame who, though ne!- ! mined to ' hav e them back in her stocking.' ~ther the *ealthiest nor . the• best born, ; ,Aftersundrydiintis to Robin, :who could . stood, in her own esteem, above, all but 'not help thinking that his Mother was I the laird and the minister; and her style losing her judgment, she one-day plumped and title was Widow Simpson. This lady - the charge, to the utter 'astonishment' of I valued--neat on the farm le ft her` by h er the pooisgirl,l whose anxiety in the search 1 goodman, SOU" had departed this life sonic had been inferior only to .her owns— seven yeats before th e commencement of i Though;poer and an orphan, Nancy had I some Honest) pride ; I our story, for its acres were few, and they she immediately consisted Of half-reclaimed moorland—not turned out 61) whole contents' Of her kilt on her gro (box,) mist riiiig her pocket in I Mrs: Situp was counted a likely and sensible lad—nor ,I wn-up Son Robin, though he ; soil's presence, and then-ran with tears in : on her own thrifty housekeeping, though her eyes to tell the. Minister. parishs of &Wand, difficulties and dis- I it was knnwn to' be 0 the tight-screw I. :As : was emlimon then in . the country ,principle---iblit on the possestion of a dos- . I en silver It e s. s pooes. It er aceount _of., pines which might have employed the 7 them was that they had belonged to the I writers and puzzled the magistrates, were Veting Cqvalier, and had been bestowed I referred to liblearbitration, andi thus. laiy- I thaupon her gi ra dfather in return for enter t claimant to, the British crown suits and seat dal prevented. The minis t:Oiess . 1 n 1 ter had heard aS who in .I3athgate hail on his inarli from Cultoden—in proof of ,`not?—of 31r. Simpison'a loss.] Like 'the I which she ,was accustomed to point out a s! rest of th e pa -hilt,- he thought st was very I strange-; but 1. - agcy Canipbellfwas.One of half obliter 4 ated crest and the initials C. S:, with *ldol' they were. marked. Th e the most' exemplary g irls in his congrega- widow's neighbors, however, had a -diffr- ;-tion-4e could not b elieve thatithe charge t preferred against her was ~true ; yet the ; cut tale regarding their coming into the , family, It lvaS totheseffect that the grand- peculiarities of the case demanded investi- ! father, who kept. a small inn somewhere s gatiou.. With some diflieelty idle Minis in Fife; had kought them of' :us ' • ~ ill-doing ter persuaded! Nancy to rethrn to her • : laird for tkree gallons of highland ,whis- ; mistress, bearing.a.messsage tit the effeel - key, and had bestowed them on his grand- i that he amid two of his elders, Who happen daughter ds. the one of, his .family most •ed to reside hi the neighborkiod, would I likely tolnthilast to' such an important I come over on the followieg evening, hear acqUisitioin • \ . . • j what could be said on both sides, and if I i In the fainily resided, in the en t,„ e i ty or ..possible ekar up the inystery.s The wid- s ;'help, ou s STancy Campbell, a girl of about low was well-pleased with .th y - minister ninetsam Au was suspected of haying L s . " and his-elders, coining to enquire. after the.' . ken a lane& to . Robin s Who reciprceseted sposeis. -She Pnt on her best niuleh—that I the sentiment. Nothing; however; would ,is to say, eal4prepared herbegt speeches, 1 soften the heart of the widow as regards and enlisted tome of the • most serious and the match Until, at length the folloiviirg ! reliable of her) neighbors to assist in the in-., j event oecuiTed and s caused her •to give , vestigations. 1.. ;. 's . • . . way: Aboat the bay-making time, . 4 dis- ! Early in the eveUings)rof the following , ._ 1 , trait and cOniparatively rich relation' was i day—when th:e.suntruer daywas wearing expected th.eall and taketea that - evening I low and the fieliVivork Was tprer they I,on--his way: frogs LinlitligoWshire. It was i were all - asseuthled in. the eletin scoured not'often that this superior relatil'e bon- I kitchen. The ministers, &dela': and neigh= I . t s . testimony touching hEr lost eilSer, :N ancy, ored her lie'', e with a-r i- i t , and .31rs'Simp.i bors solemnlyi listened to Mrs. sSintpsun's ' - son, determined that nothing shonlii be. , wanting; to - . his entertainment; brought Robins, and the farm-men sitting by- till i out the treasured spoons early. in the af.., • their turn caine ;when thedoor,whioti had , ternoon, with , many -injunctions. to Nancy !been left open to admit the breeze L-for touching the careahe shontd take in bright- j the evening *as aultry--:ovas qUietly posh, eningtheni up. - While this operation was 'ed aside, and :in slid Geordy, with his mid- ; - being perfOrmed in the kite en, 'in, the- alaeccitit ptumrpents of qua and wallet, midst of One of . those 'Uncertain days ., "There'S'nacroont for yehere,;Geordy," which vary the northern June, a' sudden , ssid.she; ." we're on Weighty bbsiness. : darkening, f the sky announced the ap- 1 " Well, mem'," said Geerdy, turning to: -preach of a heavy rain. The hay was dry i depart; " it's ottnie Consequence, T only, mid ready for housing. Robin and two [cameos) sPeak , about - your spoons. . farm-men Were busy - gathering it inS _but i "-liati ye ikearit o'them ?". etied Mrs.-, the great drops began to fall while a con- iSitiipson, bouncing from her spat.. , iddai:able portion yet remained to the field I -. "../ could .fiewteise bein' .blesitted . .wi* the and with cthe instinct of crop preservii- I previous gift 4' hearin'; timid whites better, t 1 • tlon, ferth,rnshed the 'widow, followed by- I saw them.' i • . • _ . .\ , ' 1 ni 1 Geordy,wit . - Naileyi leaving the spoons N half scoured " Saw the , . aur, are they s on the,kitebee table.- In -her rapid.-exit and here's) a whole Shill& for; ye;' and the girl h a l. forgotten te.latebthc door, -- I .Ifiss Slniptimis purse, /lor isithil• a zloye - \ . ._ - With Ore assistance of my delivgrers, I was able ti) walk slowly haek to Montati- 1-c:rt. where I was immediately put into a e.omforta:ble bed; where the injuries I had rcceiqd (which were insignificant considerin'! the depth I iia4 fallen) were carefully - ressed. I dreamed, with un speakable 3 rt'iad, of .what had happened, c., when lying in the be and I have dreamed of it in many beds since. I Ibelieve that nothing wßald induce me to go ,among" we and gni* miw, without a lohg rope. I offer tholcantion to all other travelers in Switierlati'd, out of a great escape. i- .=.1.........---- .. WIDOW SIMPSON'S- SPOONS. ~.lisa dike of the :Montrose Desnoerat . 1v •'-` has ype ream , er beat we supplied 'with r a sewpoted sad w cho st kers:kir 11)! or t eta, sad ars my" pamphlets% , thalawa - sic, CI". in the Dist litirle. Oa to li AWOL . — . --- i ---7 -------':---- -- 7 ' : --''..-- - ' • '. "" —4'l Ii . • liSndbills, Posters,: Programme, and - .•;. - • I , „_. • I -- I.:' other kinds or inch - la Maass. dime st , c . mading to cedar. - tote to Music of -Lae Whole . - Unio#.l i!- Busineas, Wedding, - and Ball Cians 7' • , -__,..., ~.,_. ._.— _______ ..._ .. , II ' .Tustices' and Constables' Blanks, ?Totes ,NO 14 i•I , Dada. sad all fabler Blanks, as bpd. or Minted to mdm. —'- I , .hi UP' Jab Irma and Wake, kilo paid Ow an dellrmr. „ . -: -- .--,,------------ ---- -,- . naed,fg that purpOse..was instantly - Pre-. &med. ! , ..,- ' ' 1 !- • I "Weal" Saidgeortiy;" IslipPed in fine : , '.. -The folleWing is , an extract from a .pri - I day, and 'twain' the ' sifter unguarded - , 'll`- veto letter . from Holland : : t: thought some ill - guided bodyinight •cuy:!i - • -, . - "Marc'i —.-.....-.- You, [et it and just laidit by, I May nay, aniank:'- "Dear—:. A few days ago I ; wrote i the leaves of that Bible, - ,thinkin' You : you, about the terrible distress-of - the fitth-• I would bestire to-see thii-spricess when you I erlintt At that time twenty-oneficittrisb went to read." ~ • . ' : 1 lag riling*, with about forty thousand Before geordy - had' finished . his' reVeia- - 1 acres of land, were. inundated,- and twenty then,. Nancy Campbell had brought doWn - 1 thousand industrious men: in a fete days the proudly displayed but never opened ;- deprived of all their posaessions, and many Bibre,,antl interspersed between its leelies' of their wivett mid children, who were !lay the dozen long-sought spoons. '...- I drowhed amidst the ice. To day I re -1 ' The minister of Bath&te could scarce- : ceived later news of a still more. alareaing ly command his gravity while adinoniith- : calamity. Not only the Bommelerward ling.Geordy on the trouble' and vexation 'i but . the loid of Me= and Waal was total'. ; his 'trick had caused. The assembled 'ly inundated. To the twenty-one villages I neighbors laughed outright'when thdafttotally. lost in the • Bommellineard were I man, - pocketing : the Widew's'-shilllhg, , again twenty-two others added, nit which he bad clutched in: early part of ! about seventy-seven thousand fteres of his discourse , assured them , -all that ~ 41iti ` land inundated.. The last loss exceeded i! . . ,' keened Mrs. Simpson read her Bible sol'ofj• ; far-more than that of the -and we tem.' that the spoons- would be certainlto ! can calculate that about sixty former,thousand ' turn out of it.: GeOrdygot many a basin former happy - and, wealthy industrious . of - broth and limcheon of bread and cheile i men, are today reduc e d' to beggary. TIM on account of that transaction, .tt•ith which 1 Potpie in. Paris, some papers in .EnglaiA he annthed all the' firesides of the- parish. l and Belgium, have opened their- columns ,Airs. - Simpson was struck dumb ei!eii-! ofHoll . themselves, :without demand of the from fro scolding. . .: i.- anders, to assist: n the' tremendous - ' " The discovery ! pet an end to her ost@n- I calamity, not paralleled in extent of-loss tatious professions, and it may be hoped: during centuries. - turned her attention more to practiceit ! `The-King mid the Princess Wept with • By ways of making amends for her unjUsi'l the governors inPerson to the - brands- • imputations on Nancy Caniubell, she con-' ted spot, where eight flips wemaunk`iti sented to reeeiVeler as a daughter-in-lit* I consequence of the force of the ice. All within the Same yea'r.; :nut it' issaid that ; people were providing bread, &c., -for there was peace over. afterward :in' the I . numbers of the sufferers--nianyof whom,. firm-house ;;:but the good people of Bath- ! during three days, eoirld not'be approach- - hate, when discussing • a „character - i oft ed, when at last many were -found dead • more pretense than performance, still r4fer , amidst the ice and water, or on the roof!! - to Witlow-Simpson'ti spoons. • • [[ I :Of their inundated dwelling . S.-. Whole --- - -- -4.+-1.-- - - '. • [i . - , ,',, streets:with houses were emit, in a moment, The Bank of England. s• 1; ; • through by-the irresistible .force of the ' ice; litany with the people in them.- Bev- • eral peasants had lost more than one•luin• tired cows each, at fifty ,dollars apiece ;-=-- Very little cattle could be saved; nearly , . 84 were drowned or cut to pieces by th e ice. The cities • llertogenboseh (Borg le - - I)tic) the Capitol of N. Brabant, Nymegen, and.Zutphen; were more than half men- _ • dated, In the palace of the King the. cooks were day and night at work- te pre- - pare eatable and transportable provisions • • for the .60,000 sufferers, who saved nath ing-except their lives audthe clothes they - wore. The King himself had subscribeil 130,000, and large .nudes were provided by, the lit/Handers; but what'isthii when daily divided between 00,000 persons de prived of all? - " When it was ;urged , upon William 111. t'.6t.Jiis treasury - would not - allow more expense he answered : --. Never mind„ I shall continue to bring my offers,: and - live - rather More simply, to. ave more fOr the' poor sufferers.' , "Very respeclfally, yourr ! ,--- .. -.. -q; • . The Bank ofEngland , intifit be seen on the inside as well as bet, and - tb• go into the interior of this 'remarkable bnildipg, to observe the operations of an 'institution that exerts more moral and political p4,Av er than any . sovereign' in Europe, you must. have an 'order from the Governof ; of the Bank. The building oecupies' , „an !fr.; regular'area of eight:acres Of groundaw edifice of no architectural beauty, With npt one. window towards the street, beli , lighted altogether- from the= roof of the enclosed area. • . • - • ri I was led, on presenting my. .card i l l. mission; into a priA , ate rooin„where, after a*delay of a few moments, a Messenger came arid conducted me-. through *the mighty and mysterious building. Doyn we went into a room where_ the notes Of. the bank, received ilie2day -befo,re, wire now examined, compared with-the entri6 in the-bOok; and stowed. away. The &ink of England never issues .ithe same note; a second time. It reeeives in the ordinary course of business,- about £BOO,OOO, ;:or #4,000,000, daily in notes; these are Pitt up-in. parcels accorilimeto their denotinn ations, boxed up with (lie .date of 'their reception, and are kept ten years, at,the expiration of which period they are taken out and grand up in the Mill, which I `sew running, and made again into paper. If, in these ten years, any dispute in barn ! ne r ss or law suitfslionld arise, concerning I the payment of any note, the bank • * produce the identie al bill. • •To Meet the demand for.notes so cell stantiv used up, the Thank has its own ps— . per makers, its own printers, its , own mn• gravers, all at work under the same roof, and it even makes the: machinery ..by which most of its work is done. A cOn-., plicated but beautiful, machine is a tegis ter, extending. from the printing office; to I thebankingoffices,' which marks every , sheet - of paper . that is struck off from the press, so that the printers • cannot maim ' f.scture a single theet•of blank notes that is not recorded in the bank. On the same principle of neatness; a shaft is made to; piss from one apartment to another, cOif . - 1 I fleeting a ,clock m sixteen businesS wings of the establishment, and regulating them I 'with . such . precision that the wholel•Of them are always pointing .to the -.sante , second of time. In another room was-a machine, exceedingly simple, fordetectiligs , light gold coin, A row of them is droPp- i cd one by one upon ft spring scale.. ,; If the piece of gold, was of the standirill weight, the scale rose to a certain height, and the coin slid off upon one side of the' box ; if less than the standard,' it rosé a , little higher, and thi3 coin. slid ofropea the.! other side. I asked the weigher wllat I was the average number Of light. coins that 'came into his hands; and straiigely enough; he said it was a question he Was not allowed to answer. . The nett room! entered was that in ! which the notes_ ate deposited . which are ready for issue. " «e. have. thirty-tWo ; millions of pounils sterling in this room," the officer remarked to Inc; "will You take a little of it ?" I told him it woiild lie vastly agreeable, and he handed me a 'Million sterling,_ which I received with; 'many thanks for his liberality, but he io sisted'on my depositing it with him again, as it would - hardly .be safe to 'catty IsOl much:money into the street. I very nitieli fear I shall nerer.seQtfiat 'money again: In the vault beneath the •door was a- di rector and a: cashier, &Milting bags• of, gold. Which men were pitching down to them,-' each bar containing a thousand.? pounds sterliniti just froM the mint.. This ; world of money seemed to realize the bles of Eastern Wealth, and • gave the new I and strong impressions of the magnitude' of theibusiness'done here, and the extent of the relationof this one- institntion:to _ the commerce. of the world,— • SII.4I.I..DIFFERIENCE.-At a trial in this a .country short time sinbe aftne the retail- . tion of the verdict, the defeated panty - ' broke oat iii a tirade of abuse•against the presiding officer, and said he could " pur chase up: twenty such courts with a peek of.beans. , ! .1U was immadiateli summon- '• Eto answerior a-contempt of court, and being told ho•musf take back the aim tairelingukie or be eemmitted,.he cliOse the former alternative, and" took it back," lin the following handsome manner : !Your honor, I acknowledge that I 1 i; 4 44 I could !purchase iir twenty. strelt • einirtc with a peck of beans. I now take it hack ; but if I had aaiii halt a,kmieli. I el, woultfliare stack to it till dool*.•,1•;•:,". pTOB PRINTING of ALL KENDS, • • DONE AT TIEI OFFICE OF #lll 4 i:panas. cSR.AL . !/EATL'T AND PRO t • - :1 . . +ND AT "LIVE AND LET•LIVE" Man: Distrosui in Holland. Whispering, John. • In what is known as" the " upper-end" of Pike county; Pensylvania,-, there •is a man who"bas the : ironical sobriquet of "'Whispering John Rickets," This tido he has gained fiom The fact that he always talks (even in conversation) as if ha were a major-general on parade, nr• to Use a more common expression,. '°like 'he was raised in a mill.' This gentleman; who, .b3-the-bye, is "one of them,"• mounted his horse ono:_. cold morning, before daylight, for the 'purpose riding down to Milford in time to take the-morning stage coach 41K Phil adelphia. He„r'ode up the hotel just as the Warders :lid travelers had Acme their " breakfast. " - 'Hedismounted, and walking into the bar-room, spoke to thnlandlord in his usual thundering tone. • - "Good morning, Mr. L—,'-how do: you do this morning?" " Very "well, Mr. - Rickets, how do You . de-?" Oh ! I am well, but I'm so froze! Can't hardly ,talk.", Just then,-a nervous traveler who was present, ran up to the landlord; and catch ing hini by the coat; said: • "Mr. L—, have my horse brought as soon as possible!" "What is the matter,. my dear sir; has anything happened?" ,- 1 ;' "Nothing upon earth, only -I want to get away from here before that man - thaws" • • VERBAL VlCES.—lndulgence in verbal • vice soon encourages corresponding vices in conduct. Let any one of you come to. talk about any mean or vilepractice, with. a familiar tone, and do you suppose when the opportunity occurs for committing the mean or .yi!4z act he ' will be its' strong against it as hefore% It is - by no means an unknotvn thing that, men of correct lives talk thethselves into crime into sensuality, 'into erdition.' Bad language' easily runs into bad deeds. Select any iniquity you please; suffer yourself to converse in its dialect,. to use its slang, to 'speak • iri the . character of one who approves-or relishes itiand . I need not tell yon how soon your moral 'sense will lower 'flown its level.— . Becoming intimate . 'with it you Jose 'your. horror of it., This obvious principle,. of horror a reason for watching the tongue. [V. D. Huntington, D. D.-. Sva,tr or.Buivonv.—During the Revo: . Intionary 'Wai r Gen., La Fayette being in Baltimore, Avas invited- to a ball; Ho went as requekted, but instead of joining in the ainusenient as might' be expected Of a young Frenchman of 22; he-addressed the ladies AO: '• Ladies, you • are very handsome; you ANT very ptFttily ; . your ball is Vol* fiue 7 -bu triyuldiera have no Shirts!" this Was irresistible.' The ball ceased ladies - went home and - went to work, 'and the'riext day a large number of shirts-were-prepared by the fairest' hands of Baltimore, for the gallant 'defenders - of their 'c'ountry. • A SURE Cuwit.—The habit otdrinking tan be cured givibg the drinkers :all theliquorthey want to drink all the time. We,-know of. two in our !MU experiencn. who were cured in three week'. Ono jumped ont of a P.ourth story window and • ran a curbstone into his bead. • The other didn't get up, one morning and has now' curbStoue. growing orr hit. head intha gral''eyard . •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers