THE MONTROSE. DEMOCRAT; IS PCIILISIIED TIRTESOAYS, NT • • 1 r.l • . I B. X. 4 0reri a lta023.. , OFFICE ON lII . IILIC-AENUE, . ~., , , - TIIREE DOORS ABOVE SE9zl.l: S HOTEL. - II TE,Tat - F,.—::51, - .10 per annul in ADVANCE; otherwise ;,2 - I will he charged--and ` , ,ilfte cents Per annum *44.1 arrearnces, at the option of;IAJ Pull Usher. to pur , expcnse of collation, etc, A DVANt* pnynteut preferred. ADVERTISEMENTS Will 14'111' rite of Si per,tquare., of ten lines ores, weelo,, and 25 cents for each additional V ,)lerehants, ana others, Nillo - tilvertise b the year, will he chaige.l at the rateF, vie - For one square. or kr!, oitf scar. CARloe2q.... Each additional square, at the raliaf..— • •••• • So credit given except to those of Low!: responyi b fifty. B.irtAiNf.4l- 1 • - Cf ; - A 111)S . ''..04 : r . WIC 11UNTTINci Cc. 113 . iih Arivz UT nr.mKin. WAI. 11.. COO PEN &, CO., .. ~ , BNKERS;-11:,,,l ri.e. 174. Site(' it4 r S. tr, fo , Post. COOl/ Cr '& CO. thrice, Litia ,, r , ticw Int Wang. 1 urupilie.l4. MCCOLLUM. tt; A TTORN ES'S and ftnnistlon , atif;Lnw,--S1 o ld r o.,a, p a „tv oilko in Lathrop. new buttdl4, our the Ilan* • • IIEYRY B. IticTiENN , - T?nu\Eti nr,l Connscllar . ilt ILPa -Li 0:lie; in the I:uinh Mock. hfe.:lsS if t RAIN:ATE or :hr. Allnpathic and lion tropathic T 3.l,dielr,—(4k.at 11,14 I. Otrn-4., cin - rwr •of Main at. i'Elizahv Sh-in, ta:arly tillpi.,dte the :Vethodi,t sr.:hatch. ni6O tf ‘"IIEATON, ECLECTIC PHYSICIAN & SOGEON DENTIST 1177"11 an - cox tifilE.l TON - .Mechanical :111 , 1*.;:trzic:11 nircntly of llittqltatufon, N. V. tender their ttrort, , toitril,:it•rtlre,tto ttll who nppre date " Proctico of':.rltyt:ic;" carefulunit tilillfutoperation- n•rot : with ma-t ,ienttite a n d approved or I .3at,work. eXtlAiettll without pale alt.1:,11 tt ork xt - Arratle.i. . Jack-nn, .tone t Ith, Iglu. y. • 1)] Z. IL SMITII 47' SON, '. • QUIZGE(IN DENTlsTs.—.:4ontr4o. l'a. 00fli,” in Iniinv.in , " in,' linilitint. oVer ...t4i.,,,,.... 11, lia,k . All 11, ni,d oinl - iiiiiin-4ii i'.l he . ' Ai_ A-.."• 11 1,rr.,1 - ,ned ii;;!,,,,,1-,131.: anii Niiirriaii•ii— .1. C. iil..l:`;TE.lll.. 1. L. READ. oLvistEte& EEO, . 11T01. - Li) that t'avy }la."a eiti.rc,l hod a partnerzliip for the Practice of MEDICINE ez. Surgery, and nrepreparoki to - st told I o'n`.l o.:e l ine of thvpr profr—ion. Oitit,—th, ono corn., Ay 0cru1. , ,1; byl)r, .1. (i, irm.tend, iv I)(7NDAEF. . my 7 :Tom DU. N. V. 4EET, rioisi,lah a,/ r. , OPPO"ite p 11.11 :tuilitical to the tre.tt mom if of ill, of the a; Etttr : :nut o entl.tc.n ra t th evn,..rlett4 11 in that 1 1 ra/11.41 prer tire wilt en lon. to .•11.., in the Tao-, Vor ,tin_ Yr .:111. 110 1. 0 0 will be charged the ptoient 141,n.•11.1,1 he the treat ment. Istio \\.. AND itt,lttnit.in and e Amertmn M... - „LeSte Iletult.tone, Torah-Tattle, Ott.tre-T41.1., dealer, in Mart.1..ir...1 sl Centre-Tat:ler, .hr. .• shop a f.e..e (too:- e.l-t Setrt..tlsliotel 1411 Tprnhilte street, N10nte,,... to. I oe4 )• \V \l..\. 1,1,. 11117 P.E.% Bend, Pit. Office „pp„-11e 'F17,1.;p1 app .1(>11N SAL i nA snioN.kr,LE -Jo ur 1. N. 11.11 1 .,1".• t;r”, uni I‘l,lll-t•tru.:f.. Ith - Inkful fur p. 1.1 ru n t imunte, hitt-t•lrt du tutity. Cut tlitz .101, tuul tv t trt - ,.111c1 to I:t. I'. .o";iiierCAßT.' . ; VI 31:,„J`tt,111:: ._ _ r . .R.' 1 .0.• t.l.()Vil ' IS, 11.11 1. .V‘IIIONAIII..r. T %ID LIZ.— N.,..trti.:.,.. t. 7,...!0p 5 i i ilr.ll . I It, P.,••• , . , ‘l , - • !1...•;.0. Lel, i ,- .1-11p:I.;,. --.- t All 1 I.- • .. . 131=2=M=M 1.. 1:. I -1:!.1,h, c -b. rt•.., • 57‘..111'11 4). CIAMNET AND ( !IMI! s:.;"-i-'p.1"'rtql of ( i 1):l ' LT 11E1'0.1 MEE - -~~~ ~. 11.1Y1531N 12:11111::1: ti - 11‘ , L.1:•; VI.1: /N PANS 1%,,7":21•X FANCY CO iI.‘YPEN `ri:Arlll.\.lll)EN. GEoI:GE. II P. 13f4 t, .1 T NOW LocATED,I'EPIAN fE4iir-L VA: I Will attend to VI, Nth.; of 11,:- fitttfo-- Office rtt c 4. LalZtroll 4 . not ~.....701-ZW . 7 - ... ?.. NEW MILFORD, PA., p IS THE PLACE TO iftrY ' - ',Orit Cil 7., AP . ..F C . al (Z. 7 si- ... r: { - 7a, AND . GET THE WORTH 0 -YOUP P MONEY. . ' i .J. . ..urim. , . . MEC, nit IT ' • -, I. . 1 IXStitANCE .1411 ANY i 4.•..„ itTe.w.•"4"cor" : CASH CAPITAL, ONE t ASatlb Ist July' 19 1 30, J,T A P1L1.11.1.5,. " T. Milton Cha , McUtte....Ar",. •`. A. I". auClT,nmetl,l,y one door «bovv Searle'' tho HIE LI-NGS .IEL 11:7.xsat. I TrAsiudr,.7o",d 111 Cookis :Lod or Coil. %vial ;ilor , e Zinc. Lllls4,,or:zuvot (1, aw:t the . lll(lia favoulle toms for 01f00f4, - /nryore. ilfurt. Oct_ -trill. :bra Daridelio. 1 HEALTHY Lee,aate.... poi .Imake /111:111 11. k. iwu putueek , titie by MEDICAL } -1 X 6. NOVIr-iner CPir :.radunte /. or t...'te,Aitoliatit• nua Jiinuipul,' • at 51.11 ! %clue, would ruturottir -Intern that 44.edt{lt. Pend and ridollyns t hthe tery iTher.t.. rsge With whit:h the !no,. fn. for him. and jut Lo 'by s ,drier at tention to` Itu.lue."tor...tit.rit. a lit4ral fh of the rOblfe. COLlatitai:i?. 'GrOlf BetA., ituis y'2:‘,l. :NM. ...: I 9 I • TAKE NOT .. , clevisita lr'es.l.cl. 1%:r.: .a NJ she,p yell=;itt•t4. Mint:, )ius,i.r..t, an Fars. - A doo4 ast.ortnittut of ..I...allter , Illto , :t , constatatty on lt.attl, Ottital.. Ti.niii Main street. • .• . ~ , Montrotot, Feb. nth; .4. P. d - .t AVi.l) C. ANIr..Y. iliVlNdlotnieet F •rin ft n f ray.ai 1.1 4 i will atti,nil promptly - to all rAlt , i, l e f a vored, Ofllct at July,l7. ' • ABEL - TIIRR is for sale. Metallic On. for IlLielock. St Watch OIL Rat Romoop3thic Iternedio. Pexiicrs•ra , aria, of Llnlments.Balvep..£lll.s. and; vartet'rtf Paten': Modicihne. II serto at tie . for the tin.t three veel—pay down. We _Join - Ourselves to no Party that DOes not Carry the Flag and Keep St Eva, the. Minister Wife. . • - I who fellowedln the wake of the Blisaes, !many illanatared remarlis.oonaernin,g her . BY stns. MAR J. UOLNIES. ' 1 self and husband, thelatter aff whom was T 1 *le pulpit at Ellingwood -had long ' se - v"elY censured forgiving to his People been • filled by Pal'son C---, a sand' 1 a wife who knew no better than to bake ;Andrea,- aged man, who a for thirty years l bread in-the morning and -throw it away had .broken to his people the'bread of life, 1 at night: r° ! and wbose palsied hand bad 'sprinkled the i' In Fdlingwood, which boasted of many '1 baptismal water onmanNe a youthful brow excellent - housekeepers, who thought the silbich noWin the land, was . e „oi a ,. kaa•robbing of a floor, or the dusting of . a ~: sled by a crown of never-fading glory.— lochair the chief end of a woman, to be ig- - '. But the old man's work. was Well- nigh niorant of bread-making was, of course, - a. ended,and one Sabbath he told his eongre. great fault, but it was soon forgotten, in gyration, with quiv er ing lip s an d ' s t reant ia g i the more .serious :accusations brought ..: eyes, that he could preach to :them no i against her by Matilda Bliss, Who said . longer.. • - I 'she was neither a scholarnor a christian,' And:so a young malt fresh from the' The former was proyed byber - declining University,•waa called to fill his pl ace ,— Ito write for the Young Ladies' , Literary . Seldom, beanie, or ; since, has the old stone l ; Society-„saying, as an excuse, that 'she church. at Ellingwood been so densely : had never Written an article lit to he seen arowiled as it was on the first Sabbath aa 'in her:life,' For the latter charge there , ter. .M.r. Stanwood'ai - arrival, fur many : was still - more decisive proof, as she had 'strangers, besides those who had become ,i more than once been heard to say that she • i somew h a t di sa tia ete d un a m oa araon c_t s ' thought there was-no harm in occasionally administration, now came to hear. the ; dancing in one's own .parlor, and wh e n at ;new 'M e i s t e r. Th e la t ar e , velvet -gushing; home she and her brother frequently . ed „ or o f yoidow,Bio,o, who li ve d w i t h : amused' themselves in• this way between , lier i f‘n• daughter ,'of a .certain age,in the ' daylight and dark. • lini•'white house on the hill .' i • - again l -se s, a:I:, This was enough for the, 'Misses, and .. I - ' , , ,peci: noett, -a...thing Which had not ea" ter . the next - sabbilth their . aadvet cushioned :months, as: the 'Wid o w h a d ta k en ot r e „ ces‘ je.ov, was again vacant, for they could not . I :rt ('arson C—' because he on one Sala 'in conscience listen to a minister who f bath reflised -to pre:Mh on abolitionism, would marry a woman that had no re!ig,- : 1 , also enevete. , 11l Wilie , il tie o eta nut exact- , ion! There must be something wrong in i y as Wid ow Bliss did, : h e t hi n ni„` o it just • hinnatid suddenly they remembered Many : possible that thelaF might now and then ' things which they had seen, All of whiell lie a gi)o,lCristi: . in south of `Mason and ! proaed that he was not what he should ' lli:xon's: line,' while Mrs. Miss ()lcitly do - ' !:'''• The Blesses were hotwithout their ::noinaced tla rn . all. , ' influence ' which ere long began to :mani- I - As the lamented husband oldie widow ; fest itself in the gradual dropping off of had borne the 'title ofrGynerld, hi s La o .: this: members of Mr. Stanwood's : emigre thought; her,tat of , ms id erii bl e com , e _ ' gallon, aome of wham went over to the quence, and so; Li-cause she couldn't rule : Methodists, while others betook them , the elrurvh, she m ithbehl ler . l+ntronage,i' selyes to the parlors of the.mansion,where 'bile her eldest daughter, Mitilda, who' every Sabbath an opposition meetingavas ! Went ,,, s lip s h a d, pi laf affected to be literary, ; held, the zealous Matilda usually leading . • ,; wrote SeVer:ii newsman. artieles,tonehint4 . and praying long n" loud kw l'iet""v thenecessityad hayhig. ; air •a minister ai - over h6r enemies. mail of linnmity,a roan of CA , IIIIIIOII sense ; To a sensitii e mil nre like Mrs. Stan :ola a man of God' Bet n o w a m a w ',J ra , wncers this'atate of thiligs was:exceeding .; w „, d,, wit i„„ „ 1 „,„ 1 t at. e ve Be-„. s. p ao : ly ant ioyirig,for she felt that in some way son C—had resigUeil.his post which. wag ' 'he-was the elms(' of it, amid at length her to Ite titled by a young, a handsome, an dhealth, always delicate, began to rail. She what was better than ' all an Ito 111 arrittl ''''‘v:ls the 1:1-4 L . Xlive beautiful sisters who man. The last .was possibly t h e reason - one by one hail fallen victims:to that great w hy ' o o d ie ti rst aamb at h ",,1 3L•,3L•, Si an - ;New England destroyer, coesumpthm.— • - e co d' s w wa , thigh's *ere in the. emigre_ ~- l ii her case as in theirs, . there "'ere no , gatton so'mlany yc.un-, latlit•s; idul, why ' weary days and-nights of pain and watch-. m at o ai , nr ,„ (h ., 4. ..,„, 1 _ lit s„,. h . „ id ,- ,„,- 1 , : ing, bat a gradual ufidermining Of the ' wcll spring (Vire. From the 'first Mr. i unnsual.care, thiarishing her gohl pencil and sheet of foolscap so that Mr. Stan-' Stanwood had foreseen the result. lle w ood m iant ',pa w she owns taking' notes knew thine . Was death in her veins, and 'of his s..rinoe, which she aironouneed to that s"oner.or later his fireside would be .! be ' the inost. imp: cative, tom...Lite:a; and adesque, and she would be.gone ; so all:it ' I glib IiIVI-! : 41 : 0“ .: 0113 . 6t . - Si i 0 had ever heard,' the storm without rolled it, angry , when and tiwn, 'OO, she knew he had a fine ear surgesover and around him,lie - eared but for nnok y oov the woo ho ~e„oh,d ' when ' lit :le if be only shielded tier from its force. -J u li e t Li n d s . e y se r e a t n e d so I th d i n _ t h e But - this he could not do, for she saw gallery' . ..everythi»g which was passieg, arid day was ~1„,, ever :1 0 0 ; 0 . 0/ - ~io , e rs ‘ii : i.i , hy day the liolo in her blue eyes grew did not quarrel more o r l es s ',;.: :La 5 ,,, i t brighter and brighter, wh-ile the hectic as was uot the choir afEag e aod, whieli . IP l ' lOlll "Pon her cheek tank 3 (it'' 'Per Ii to 1.w,..4 as Matilda Blass h lli a/ the vaa s ware And all this time she came among- the in 'a continual uOroar. Besides Lein g ' Per;Ple 3 .'i ~f old; not a Sabbath wits- she 1, -missed from the church until one anorn _olt (-lied on three flatono ilda's voice had m it a slight era:A - a :just big enough to let ing ni the Indian summer timeovbetet here all the had sounds iiiit, while it resolutely was hoard in Eilhig wood the tolling bell, isi it all th e goad ones in. Of this, hew. and as they encased seventeen, they won . , ‘ ,, r, , 10 . m . :0 „ 0 , 4 in the L oot „„„ re, „,,1 derod'who hail golie. Half an haur after ...„.1„.„ L a ,. f ,. :; „„ , 1i ,.,,:,., I „, ide . „„ omit to th e re ( al i ne to them the startling news:- woo - that Eva St anWood was lie:11---tilat 511.1 Iladoilge her (rout their tacks, ,flair I war -at Once, the five BlisSes, avith • a r aw • - died in the night with no ore -near her wilatrs, lieadinoaine party, While every--' bat her. huslialef 1 It. was tree:. Eva was . body else healed tho other. Th'e conta4, : dead, aml the next day, tOwards the hour was a tiereeoine, bait it ended in the I .„. lof sunset, the stone church was filled to m real 01'M:it:dal mill the installation in • its Illint'''t clOa:leilv," - end atnong these her plane of Jailii - at tindev...on whom the ],resent Dote_ sobbr‘l leader or lion; over five Misaes ever after honked with 'M'il the lifeless :limit more tenderly than did ' eyes.: The widow" sometime.: groaned I Matilda fliiss. Possibly remorse mitalie i and Ade and d ro pping -suddenly into her 'lllet:e -touched her hard heart but few had charity enough to thihk so. The , grief, sea: when Juliet, on purpose to tease her, named out some of her loudest howeveraofthe Miter : members, who had .:ains. ..o • . .. I strayed so far away, was more sincereamil w ta,. :in t l,, pi. ,,,,, were lea v i jn , t h e :nround young Eva's eoffin tit any ty fin hod church, Matilda whispered to Juliet's - sis- been estranged, grasped the friendly band ; and mingled together their tears of sot ; to Mary. askin-; her • if' het qrwid p:i)thrt w a: , Not in the gallery that da•y.' - • • ran: . w. i . - ; • Gan It was terrible tar witness the. anguish ; dina :. why no; exclaimed Mary ; ', --......a..-...----------. what made- think so? ..of the pastor, which was not maidested ; Me' A' person out West attended . ; in any loud outbreak of fee'ing, t , , Olt,'i eturned Matilda ' I didn't turn bitt was I Church' service on .a recent Sabbath, Mad 1 t (tend "Nylicei they were aingingalmt I heard ilisible'in every lineament of his face-Linl took &wit in short hand she limin.atesniea ~ . a Ida rby-the choir. The result ofhis labor] a voles, witieh'somuled so much -like an the; sPat.. loo (. l i o ,, . rinivermg of ; white lips - , and in the low bitter moans of; ! .)1,1 7a,pian.s that I thought perhaps Juliet duccd the following': . -..‘" agony, Whic.b. had in ihem the tones of a 1 , ' “Wah , haw. ‘iwtor.daw airwaw was sick, and your grandmother had ' taai Than taw, thaw law aw, waw , ken heir placo. :l And wiA a taen„g of re . broken heart, as he bowed hia manly head I - 'Wnivkaw. taw, thaw raw t:awra'w btaw 1 i lief the amiable lady walked-away. ; - l and won't over her he had ealled .his for 1 . Aw thaw-taw jaw saw aw." • t pe n. o f :the brief space of a year. 'They buried 1 •He subsequeutly taacertained that this Tor :4 few months after this the daring w hi c h t i me ,her oil a sunny slope, and : claim. her enrlV. Was the verse given out : i- the: Bli sae .. NV as, Va , all t ,-Welcome swei:t dat - pf rct.t. s 1 • , ! t h„, ,a (. ; , : ,„ a d :I d e rr ree o t . qu i et , an d w 1, ( 4, : trr:tve . eamettlOretn3n One lesson of gund 1 ' • Ttvit'snw the Lord arise, . -.i • illiy mute agaiiitilZathurch,the singing Was Ito the inhabitants of, -Ellingwood. At 1 . • welcome' And tit( s , rejtokime le this reviving . breast,, i ntltese.J." • .. : • of minornnpoolonoo; a , -m at i l ib, i i ,,,1 e o „., _.first they leared-lest their - pastor, would : • :- : ceived the.iihaa of IlnOITI:1112; -lira. •o t „. ; leave theiiablia'Era!s graste - was there,' I i': Seventeen years Gospel woad:, ago the Goel wood:. -'fo aceomplish thiS, the yoo, , !he sand, 'and he-would rathelarentabC— :: was , introduced into Gnosis, .Nrow there minister,: full ten ; :s.arsher junior, Nvaa ,Sohe sl ai4l, arid, from that time fi,rthfire eighty Protestant Missionaries, Fpm'eat-If week invited to : take tea at line ; act:freely one Was ndssing'from his emigre- I fonetecar hundred commonicanta, and three Mansion,' as they termed their pi of-: gation, mid when lie saw how 'united- in 1 thonsland Chinese ChriStians. It. is -Sups :ell resalciice—_Mrsalilisa aiul her other three : mind and heart they were, he felt that { posed that within -thirty years 100,600 aawAier, tol:illy managed to leave him through his afflictions good had conic-toClKilretS - IlaVe - been brought to 'the light • ''withthe • , ' • them, - and that EVa hadn«li • in 1 ,- i tilnae' for some tune - ~ 1 dirs. who..s . parcd no pains'. to impreas )iiin' e ' _______....a la -0-- - ---- ~. I should encomage the Church to put north a • 1 re -•-a- • giteater efforts for . the Salvtition of the with a, stelae'. of her Sliperior avisiaan.. ~aas. ‘ - andreW.Kesslei-; jr., a memberaei I Many of his books' Were : borrowed., look- ' the lateTMaryland•lfouse of Delegates has i heathen 'world. ' , . ~ ..., , . ... - --0.-40. am.- i ed a hrough, nuirkeitarel ret urneilail ways , been released from Fort Waraen, on' ttik- 1 . • its---o-ttooo, The enstomerif•of a certain c?;t - fper ,by Matilda lijrelf, 'who thus betiate a ; ing the.onth of allegiante, and has return. ! i n a town - out West caused Min' a vast freqnent visitor:at his study,. where . ake ;ed to ids house in Frederick county. -. -1 (hd of • ,:' 1 ; •e: s a t tioe by teem saving habits, sometimes estaid for flours, gleatly to lbe r, So reads the telegraphic Frederick_ It i iiMl.Per:isteric * e in getting all. their lade tinnoyance cd" tile - young men, who ,grpw cis the old story over hgain--imprisbned I .• • Iwn bout authority of law,.and relenae , rl up- ! firkins, and casks Tweaked and buYing , fidget y under the infliction. but litile Work. " I ";lood ' it , however,": ,I At.. last he one day left-t'or the. City of ion taking the Oath of allegiance.: -'" ° `v i said he, "until one day old Sam Ciib- I Elms, where, rumor said; thera. dwelt a : the case of Mr. KeSder_r_e,a,sciviveosf:iitsrel6fa. .i_,na 1 tree brought in an old bung hole; to which 1 da'rk-eYed girl, who would- ere lonaioeoine to-this": he was either guilty of ihe wanted a new barrel made. Then I 1 - Ell'' 'dl 1 1 • el' to. , to ofea as Jae ....ergyman'aagainst thn - Government or tie was l'quit basieess iradisgust.” I Bu l l to this Mra. Bliss Was lateen incred- • It' he t as guilfy it waS wrong to release I . i, ,wrrirvi.. f.',01) i'lthict. .4,1>1t• *li! 1111EMMMEI - 1 ,-.- , z.. t. .. 2 _ R` --I. of tn, t. MIME „e, ..„ ,Ir , .. ......; 'clans. she keteiv better-Mr. Stanwood 't him without (Aid and, punishment, bv 1 - . t-Al --- W N ithin a few ecks past 'a corps 1 would ne,v-r frife given se.; inueli`eneour- merely taking the oathofallegiance,whiel lof English .enoineers arrived at Windsor, wiement to Matilda if he - b:e . l been en- : rebels no how to take with mental res- lin Canatlii.';W7eSt, opposite Detrcit, i and 1 gnged in s?one; - 011e else ;It was all sheer , erYations - , lche Was,'not,guilt..n. .th.ett :.his , proceeded `to lay out fortifications, lering : . falsehood and and so they Would find.' - arrest and inearceratiem was an - act, of; ing f that city W ?thin I.:lnge. ' The works ; i • Wheii !tyrannylipon the part of tho pe - yernilfent' I bare - becii commenced, and, it cOnfinUed; ;She 'changed her mind, however,. richly deserving punishment. • Outrages i 'lon the first Sabbath lifter Mr. Stan woPd's 4 will he ready for mounting the ..!-guns! in a 1 return, he-hrotight With hind to the church such as• these upon: individual . rights or i short time: The fortis. sit bated, on ' ait I a - pale, fra‘rile creatutT, W/4 0 leaned, con-_1 Upon public justice—for one or.the other ' (4iiincitice, and completely commands:. the Gdent Iv. uPonlis arm; and then, the too- : must have suffered—are unpardonablc,and 1 wh ole •river front and the • principal bust . Intent he let her shrank like . a startled" i have caused revoltiti'on in. g-OVerinnents 1 ' T e s s . portion of Detroit: : i ' 1 fawn frOrn !the I prying eves - which' gUzed i far less .. freeftlifth Ours pretends to • be.-- - -- I ' 1;so curiously upon- her. • She was .verv...... ;No man's person is secure While gni;ern- I - • h their houses -----In thisclititude . , men wit, . .. iheautiful- T 'ioeiheautiful .for.f the -- enYions i. merit assumes the power of. imprisoning ! send farms are carried along by the .rotary !Matilda-4nd 'forthwith from the maiision I :Without Fausearid:releasing without; war- 1 motion of the earth just-:shout ati. fast its :a • - cannon ball ,moyes, while the revolUtion on the hillsideopen hostilities _were de- i rant,. - - • • . •i , ' -, of the earth around the Sun carries iitywith Blared-against it ue neat cottage, in the i -. --.. . 1111 r -'"- i • a velocity more than sixty times that of a' -Valley ; where fle young stranger, scarce-1 Wlf this war ends in :the course of i s : •-• • . cannon all.. .. -' ' ' ' • ' .1 ' ly vet setitnteen,' first tried the mysteries ; the' present year in the „establishiiimit of i " . —........,......,-----, lof housekeeping, of which tillii_ ~...Was,:as ig- !the authority Of the - Government over the , —The steamer - Gladiator Toglishl has norant its.the inercit Clad: . ....OriiitursP.her -insurrectionary, States, , our ' -. 11 - 400fial I : run the Meek ade; it; is.rePqrfed, ;loaded miStitkes'*erepuii.eroils....* . a: lufbProtts.,.l . delt C - Mitio(be,oill4 ..10 K than $109,0.00 tivitl'armS-in and . 4ni ni qn, 10 spi il , : -- The fert; lit ' c.iicitiri- , - froth ihil'pokion of llt`e Villagers 000 anti-may aMoiinCtri fi 3 O,00,009;00Q. '' ' 'whleli Vie . arrived 'hind nained. c I - !.! - `• - 1 - -•-• , . . • IetOMIC, all Iciud, of td. Boom stud ry, b Shop oil KEE 1,E12 Ps.. which he may Inv. 11inchtnes. nd Mout‘e Poi act. and a mat Instrre, and an VOL. 19. MONTROSE, PA.,THURSDAY, JANUARY BAs inniortant English letter by the Europa,from one familiar with English opinion, especially in high political circles, suggests - emancipation and - arming of the slaves as calculated to counteract the war feeling in England. Englishman would *illingly range himself on the side of sh , verx. They insist that both sides are for slaver-, with perhaps Maya differ ence in degree.—N. 1: Tribune. England whose desire to did the rebell ion and break the back of the Union, has been maneested•sm.unmistakably, !.fliVors. the policy of that portion of the Republi can party represented by: the Tribune,' and would willingly see the war-for the pres emoion .of the Gov. turned into a war of abolition, and the - knife and the firebrand placed in the hands_of the black popula ti on of the South. IV hat a warning does this convey'against the teachings of this school of politiCians. The most dangerous foreign enemy of the Unio' knows tbil welt that a war of abolition would end in tlic destruction of the nation, and so ad vocates the same policy • that has been promulgated in the halls of Congress by -Republican Senators and Representatives and preached by no inconsiderable portion of the Republican press. Yet these mis chievous agitators on our soil, would corer up their treason by the flimsy pre tence that they are loyal. to the Govern ; ment and true to the thank 01 the States. LoAlts - roxE.--Sines the ,discovery. of i ‘ the galvanic battery, loadstone is not, used to impregnate magnets. . This article is known to science as magnetic oxide of iron, and is one of the iron ores. The IMnons Swedish iron is made from this ore ; and Iron ; Mountain, in Missouri, is, foriie col of it. —Magnetic trOn ore, (according to Professor Sf - wan)is• 'found only in the azoie`rocr.4 those that existed b w efore the creation Of life upon the earth. As-this ore will TdOact itnip while 'none of ad other oxides of iron Will, it is very easily dist inguisined ; and it' is very easy by it.j means to determine the age of tine geoli ogiend formation in which it is fonnil.— The scales which fly from : wrom - dnt iron, when it is being forged, are tine innignetic oxide of iron. What gave ihe name of ,magnet loaclstone was the person wing first discovered it. -A shepherd olancicid Greece-, named ..Magnes; noti c ed that a certain black stone adhered to tine iron of his-crook, and making known his dlscov 7 ery, the stone was called magnet, after the mane of tine discoverer, who was tiluct made immortal Tin TRU E G ENTL:E MAN .---The man, in - offering his respects to others, or fet:s an equ a l, or rather the saxue, respecit to himself; and his courtesies may flow without stint or jealous reckoning, Lt:- cause they feed their sOurce,lieing not an expenditure, :but.a . ling to the inward law of honor; and tIM free sense Or what befits a man, ter a laW perpetually made and spontaneously ex ecuted- in his own' bosom, the instant flowering of his own‘soul—he emninauds Lis own °twilit:nee, and obeys his cf,ip tnanditicr. Though throned above all Mt t i on s,a h in ”. oft ings,y et the faithful,bunqc vassal of his own heart ‘, though he serve, yet regal, M;ing imperial anticipation ;arid all that could he rightly named as his duty to ot hers,,he has ere demand, already dis covered and engagedin,. as 'part, of htis duty fo • . Ti; . e enmin,7 Gazette;says: "By the revicol hsi of the killed and w o umi e d at the late fight at Drainesvige, Va. we , r.e that our Lyeominr , boys- did come in ft rr a full share anmil4thi wound= LA of the "Bnektail Regiment." John P. Blair, of Company r;.,. had his rif:jht thumb shot °XL George , 31eGoNven, of Company C, was shot in the hip, -and- Sanmel C'mupbell had his nose' shut (fl. When he lost his nose, he. said he bad "'smelt powder, but , never expected to smell a rifle ball." I=lll The Goole • , 1 1 , , In the regi course marked out ti'Human ! Epoch• l \sou t - 1 4an, . and be the especi tireniefr' -i ~ :in corder to el,— y tbeli ntan era was . tiShei•ed in , we •.tuist . go' back r.m.l trace thd . history or ou . moan ' tail* systems an c'Ontinental .uplieavals . -- - for the earth's his ory•can be ti aced .by - its mountaing as w Iles by its- r:ocks, in scribed with biolo&leal character Indeed the dynamics 4'llo globe from one of Its most profound and interesting chapters. There are many theories for the eleva tion of mountains. - IVe select the one of M. E. Beaumont, modified by PrOl'Dana, for:the elucidation of our SubjectJL. Accor ding to Beatunont, mountains otielevation arc Caused by a collapsc of a 'Waal-. ,of, the earth's surface crust upon :its cooling, and. therefore contracting interier.- . . . It is manife,t that, upon the Supposition of the earth It one stage of , its history baring been a cooling mass .of molten matter, that the first crust formed would neee::sarily be a thin one, when Compared.; with the main bulk: ol" the. globe. 'Any 1 -r this crust circling the entire i von tlie cOolinf , .center Id of rieeessiOcirce . up portion Of the cooled to the. fracture', and j ld • haA'e corresponding l i caused by• lateral -pros- i !ys or depression of col- was upon the planet, ith the same: Thus, op lent system of ineuntains., rresponding 4stems of portion ot inass, flit n g iu.o • of the sj)here, 'we) a carrell( 1111.1 crust contiguous hence Are ridges I;mdward, - sure, and the van =INEZ would be filled w posed to everygi there woulti be-e vallifys or :cos Upon the . No thk.l. first mountai tiara range of L: east and west, a: eastward ftc - ros' throwing -. .tr head, of Lake Si of the Woods to sippi, While anal West to the Arti ling these 11101111 ‘174:5 eV Mille in from th son's Bar„ana f t.ween these tw as that or Labra • northern portic pression of Lak caused at the sa ithmediately sot eating force. ith Ameriew :continent arethe Capo- . brador i running nearly extending froinithe abrador intci Canada, I :pur southwest In the )erior and by. the 'Lake the Source Of the l'er spur extended -north seas. The fdree eleva [ain and the; primitive :erted from tht north ;it Artie seas, from find; rifled the land lying. be-; bodies of witt4 as - well kir and the vloie of the n of Canadai The de-.; Superior ina3l have been ae time,while Oe country th..of it, partV felt the el "he Athronibiek 0 l arki Iron 3.roulitaiii4:, the of this age, atioutlicrs of tains, the Ozark Black Hills, are the.great systcr , The second great elevatinVforce was exertefrom th3.Atlantir, giving us the eastern fold ofl the great Appalachian. range,extending froni Canada o..:\laliatna, niche than fifteen hundred milts, corra::ra- Ong the earth into folds' wimp we now, call the Katabdri • Mountains f of - Maine, White Mountains . of New 'Pampsbire, G - men Mountains • of rel.:lmit,. .Taconic . llouhtains ofMassachusetts, lii. , lilanils of New York;•South Mountains i)i'NencJer sey and Pennsylvania ' Blue 1102. e of Vir-. ginia,lron 'and ramokyMountaiiis of North • Carolina and tnaka of Tenn'essee, with brclinl continentialereas of 30 .6 DO miles in width; extenUing.eastward to the At lantie, ocean and far under its' waters to the inner edge of the Gulf st.i eani. This force was exerted • after •. ,e primitive 0 rocks *ere formed, and durin* the laying down of th e•Sil orlon and Devquian. . • • ,Tim third great system . seems but to have 'been a continuation or a [resuniption of the.second after a long . pause, - suffi ciently lOng for the completion -ot ' the' subcari mill Ccro us and carboniferous system of rocks... 'Phis fOrce elevated the Allegba-; ny or Appalachian system Mtn' three great folds, With intermediate vallei-S, and''v.-ith I an extendeilplateart inland extending from I Canada to Tennessee west Ward of rhea mountains and far out toward, the 3fissis- sippi and Missouri rivers • I -.-- The fourth 'systein was that Of thellockv Mountains where the force' . v . .:IS exerted frrom the Pacific occan, northwest and southeast direction from the nortk of the continent into New 'Mexico,:ind . perhap 8 ,1 Central America. This system was after the permian and cretaceous. l • The fifth n-reat'Svstem is ' that of - the . sierra Neva t dajlombohitara other moun tains running north and send), which was also eaused!bf the Tueifie dorce, subse- I pent to the chalk, theecicerni, and mhiCe- ! . ne•Of the tertiary age. - . , tile sixth , rgai, system is Ot a contirl. 1 . . -; nation of the latter, giving. the Coast range - ofthe-PaCifie, which stems to have : ,been at theAose of the tertiary orafter 'the pliocene and perhaps polt-plioce . ne2-- These.latter systems gave us he continent i west'ef the sources of the MiSsouri'to the Pacific.. . .. •-' • • • 1 Subsequent - to - thiS age theic followed a subsidence of the eastern portion of the continent t`rtfin the:month oil the Yellow ' I Stone , rivet;t:o the - Atlantic, when the eon: tinent was depressed beneath its present level at! least. feet, hnd perhaps 1,000, for certain nig that, Mountains ofi this bight bear tinniistakable evidence of having beets worn by water,!. &ro,v - ed and( scratched by icebergs,timiting me or oth er canscsi: and have rest fit 4 -, upon their summits 'rocks - :evidently' brought from I some•othersimre - e, and-that z#ouree always ving tits to the north.: "•1 It was during , this': depression - - of' the 1 -United . States that - occurred.all phe notueua the drift; so called. These con sist or ate - grooving, striating, stnootl, 2 ling of rocks--the.gulleyingi out • of- sub marine. "Aialleys---the • transportation of large mssses of rocks—the ;faccuinulati.on of beds of sand and 'gravel nifiler the lee ward's eof bills • acid • mottntains, called °stirs and- ridges, lake and sea• shores; rind I the spreading - over.the .sinliteti• generally - ' of 'a' : bed ot - ,coir t minute.di matter: , chiv e I gravel - and sandslif from•tt ffiw : feet 'to 200 feet in thielmess: ' : ' i. During-the continuanet4this I sion•the,fiiintitient4ttbfentioitlitts,wash bY the waters - of the. .414-tic -ocean,: -fol.- Music of the Whole Union .. • . -. ' - - • - - I all the anaimale and plants Indicate a bo- 1 - ImpendingFamino in Ireland; I real origin: The waves of - this Lmighty 1 0• We take the follOwlag from- the Dub ... i delhge swept the face of. the country or, lit, .Agrieuititra/ Ifevlew : - , . 1 those enormous animls described in my i t • That much and 'serious, r distress . exists last-]centre, and buried them in' the cold at-the present, moment - hi the westentilis--' 1 waves of the Arctic Ocean.' Itivipkid out' trier oflrelaial i.- . bra too. tree, Letters t the past-and prepared for „the ttel, for' from various parts •or the country testily the old hadbecome effete. It N. no• Itinger ; j a ,- i ha t • i mp.,7, 1 „ 1 ,„ te f act , p ro r ess k ur a , ' subserved the grand purposes in the sub- inem:siirveyors and v al na t, o , - „, w r,,,,,,, ,Th, , lime economy of progress. A new earth ',ties oece.jsarilylead them into'remote (Es : was to arise from the bOsont of the waters Ltriets, not altogether on-:." outside cars, Ito be clothed with new foreStS, its plains - i lining at „ rav i7r rau. , , o ar e .E d„,... f.ant l y I with nes- verdure. A . new creation._ of obliged, to.admit the existence of -cotsid w .41rew. 1 animals were to roam over its woods, to ' crable and ; 1 ; 1 4 , 1 ;s - tress. COM ; feed upon its pastures ; new birds roskiin'', mercial men, too, like Mr. M'Swiney, who- I the:air; new fish to switri the seas, Mid ti- 'in-th e interest Of trade, require of their 1 nally man to:enjoy Ate World. ... 'Lcorrespondents and -trawlers . to inform 1 The seventh and the last upheaval 1 then of the tondititin of the people, have ' l'brought the northern heinisphere.up trout I also told ii-how Ouch suffering.• and pri- thebottom of -the, waters . lbr the lak i ration is already hein - : . 4. expo-le:weed by the I i .. time.- It was a return'to the first eleva- Ipeasantry and small fanner-:_ of the ,1:01111- ting force, coining in from th e Arctic 1 try, 'lt is useless to attempt to disgujse. !Ocean and Baffin's - Bay, ele v ati ng 'tile the firms.: The The thin is unlcirtunatoly too i ' _ depressed. portionlromheneath tile, wa- i mil already, ar:d the sooner we si.-t otit... . I ters, and giving out land.. • earne'stly to grapple with - the evil the bet- . I Man, the microcosm of the whole . erea- . : ter it will be fors all . class es. Extensive 1 ted kingdoins . of Miturei pursuing his in- 1 , employment; of some kind or . other, must ' vestigations, finds onthe-mountain Bight ,be provided fir the people to keep them (evidence of allowin. , ocean, hidden in .`from- starvation or .fn . an turthi , ning the ~... the, valleys submarine - ridges and sea ' rates. • Let us tra , t, __however, that. the I beaches fir-out in the -prairies,' fi•Ownin.!': : mistakes of i Qiu wild not he repeated,- cliffs, furrowed and- Water torn; loin: ;; with respert t6l.h.enat are of -.the .works 'narrow ravines worn -ant., of th e • solid 'to be undertaken. It is generally admit rocks, which are theancient fiords of the.-, t,d, liovvev-(1 1 1-,that tile want ()Hue: is,one of ' eoa . k. ; buried thither and bones, - Whichttli e elnet canses - of the pr,;-ailing. distress. ' indicate sotnber evergreen forests, with 1 Fabuloespriees are miw 11',..i:ifX. paid- for a , 1 the muskox andraindeer of the northern cleei - c of turf in parts of the West. Coal latitudes. From these relies - of the ,past j is not to be had- for any money. • This Is _ I by the laws of comparative anatomy, the ; a state ofthinr , ;. un;st melancholfto ton sil-latest rules of analogy' and the profound ! i template. - ---, • , , , deductions of philosophy, with unerring i There-is-nil alanala . nee of tnrf cut in all -certainty he lilts the curtain ormist Which !, th e I, o c, districts ; blit, bi•ing wet tx the covered the cradle of his race, when - the ' continuous wet weather, it is,of euar'se,to ! "earth was without form and void, and, ! tally unfit for fuel: It is pertec•tly mini= darkness was upon the deep." - '!.test that the ordinary nietlxd of firying it fails itt this . season. Here is the mister. . A Disunion Agitator. . , ; tune, there :11)0S$11illit,y of inaking this - - - ' nic , t peat available for fuel ? - That pestilent agitator, Wendell fail-.`; lips, -delivered one of his-characteristic - * Twii Notips :A Monure•, aboliqon tirades in New York 111:1111.4.1:, Th „ i i ,,,,,„ ii„.„f;.,t.,,d.1.3. tar- 1-,.;!!„,i,:,, A Republican journal adopts him as a ; from 1111.“01 of IL , II. F. ll._ Ifell,i - 6ol:, - in . friend to the Administration and the rn- 1 , the New Et/gland l'n: met-, .ik tme•cfgeent ion. his friendship for both is -shown in-i „ :1 1,,,, t,., the t!ii,,i;i„-:,.nirii:c.,..: theatinexed extract freni his eddress: :. '"llow true i: , . the rt mark ( - 4".11r. Cu - 1: e, "I do not believe reconstruction pot- :ate Earl of Leiees ter, that the valhe of ble, Ido not believe tale i e Cabinet ntendl farmyard Manure is in pr;.portion to Avitlit, it. If they did, ailow me to sayfor one I.:a. : ei made of: • If eat!lt• eat straw :thine that any statesman who leads theSe Stal-et -d , th e w . :1 u ng is stfa -. 1,E1: ; thy eatile are back to reconstructiou will he damned t.O i straw,' the farm is st raw-, :aid the fanner an infamy compared to which Arnold Was.: ;, , ,, tra „._,, t l„ ; ,. 8 ,,, : 01., 41 . :t ., 1 . - I ,, got h - ei ..._ , - a saint. Ldo..not believe, that recutistruet-j Not' loror a : ro,. I- had. four eows - coine_to - ion ii possible; nor do I believe the..:Cah L 4 the stal„de . in the NI, n 111':h I thought net have any such hopes. '. Indeed, Ido !mi. z ht yield a , zoo t i sapply ofm on ilk-throh n ot know w'here 'you will find the evi- :. th ,,,,, i ,, t „, if „-,...1 f , a. ~., I .„!,„ 1 ,, t fl ,„, dence of any such purpose in the atlminis• c , t l i i:. , . an i,„„i,, ,:,,.,,.., :. „•1 1,,,p;„,, , .„.1,i d , .. tration at Washington 2? • • - ivere unit . ..txpeete - ,1 to , ive . ' Milk till th; , Could anything having a stronger tear - ' l fft, ow i m grass svat , on. - The ;first foal' . deney to discourage the Northern peopj., wer , : , tie . ' in 0 , ,i , „ .tielo , ~.i , 1 , 2 1 ,, , i , it . , - mi. -,. lathe prosecution- of.the war be uttered ; ri. e pi v ed each ; in a.hlition to law anti than this ? The. tremendous yont est, in , . tstat,is, war plans of sll 1:1 I.:.tatoes en t: ll which Wgare now engaged has but one i mornine;_and - two, quarts of eoni and o:.t legitimate object,,and that is the' -restora, if inealciiih cveitin ,-, •hrf-ae'll the- vi-inte , . lion of the Union. Convince the people iA, we ex p t .„ te ,i; t l ley ! -: av „ a ~ .t- ) .1 111,2 f..: that all hope of attaining that, result is at : o f m ilk, and cam e oat Weri in tTile . ;:prin:. • an end, and Naat ij to animate them and i Th e manare o f th e -1;,,u 1 J, cow 'was thrown our soldiers on the battle licit-Lin carry-jog.; t;:it of a stable 'Window -under . the cattle on the war? Yet to create such it con- s h e a t, v i t „.ll. The ether four -animals viction Mr. Phillips. is now laboring. - .11e.. Wer.i. lied in the's:rum stable next. to the boldly: djelares bcfore „a New York midi-1 first lour: sail received (.r.iv.hay and ecrti ' enee, that the - reconstruction of the Union I eid,f,„,.. Their manitre'lcas' -thre„ wn ' oat `is impossible." lie - goes further,, anti Iby itself at the next suit& wilid•ow, - till seeks to 'weaken public confidence in the I 'under the same shed, - so that: the.- tiv-;• administration' by charging that, so , far h eap „ , h,, s 'id„ ht. ,isle. Ti,6' i„ . .. ni , ii,Nt . as-reconstruction is concerned,. the Cabi- I wa,; made by the first four etovs that, weAte • net do not intend it.' And hisspeeeb ii'; I d a ily - messea with ' potatoes'• and mc.7.1, I published in full in republican journals, kept hot and smokin::• ail winter, and-was and he is desigeateda, friend of the ' nil- wholly the froin frost, . 'll,:e lie-n , made Ministration and tirtinion! Ilt..,pulltiefm! lir , the of heir anima's tl at. hal only neWspaper, a friefid, of the I,Tnion . -This , hay' a mi sta lk s , flon - i d no si2-ns of lemon: is. a paradox WWII inestpt•rsonS will be I talion and was somewhat frozen, frozen.. Ob- - unable to reaoneN. It !nay surprise thos e i 4.1 . % .i n , t hi s . d i f y i , rellec , f:..,,,n tint,, to time who are not unniindful how well Meaning i cUriositYprompt.ed me in the spring 'to criticism has been . silenced ( 1 !: 11411 &" the i spill- there two heap's of manure. sepa , - past year, that Mr Phillips roams freely ! y„,„1„. )nit, in equal quantities, side : liv . about delivering, his iliSumon, anti-war ha- ! silo, (,„, a pi k , oe o f c or n groin), 'FiV e , i angues, and assailing the government i ~pc..rica.it e .. : ~ l' Lie corn crop . ivherc the without - a rebuke even frOrtv the . Repubh- , manure from theltnes,'A , l cattle ira-s appli- . : can press.. - s . . • - I e.l, over rant "whi..re.the tither heap. Iva: . . prertil,'N'lS• qiiite apparent and striking, anti called my attention more particularly that', it waS ever lieft;re directed, -to the -importance of fip,;ing our our -best or , riehest protinet if v. - i•,u - ould t. have the best kind of mannre ti,- oar lan'is, and. large.: crops front theta." . . North . • ,W! One day the Mice of Newcastle and the Duke Cleveland were travelitt, together in' a railway carriage. Neweas- ; tie is 3 fine noble looking man, frank anct! sociable ; while" CleVelatid is a little dried up old fellow, proud Its Lucifer. In jag throw - di Nottingham, a gentliAnan got into the same carriage with the two Ditkes. (An English first ;carriage will! seat but eight persoms and•few entnnum people-travel in the first class.) - lle ed- to be a manuflictarer ; and Neweastle:; soon entered into conversation with him —asking him all about trade, the state of the market, &c., and deriving • considera ble information. Cleveland on- the con-; trary was . silent and- exclusive not deigning to talk to a - mere. business man. ;. After a while thejourncy of the Duke of f Newcastle was ended, and left car- 1 riarre. The . Nott in! , ham gentleman, who had beeen delighted with the easy . •eom versation of the departea.duke, urned- to! to othcrstranger (proud Cleveland) • aml \ i asked if he knew the gentleman's name with .Whom . he bad been cbnversing. "rh, Duke-of Newcastle,' was the- reply: 'You don't say .so ?' rejoined the astonished manufacturer: now, only -to . think ; that such ti great:gentleman should have talked in so-free-and easy a way to 2-rwo such snObsai You and jr.. • • . •WOMAN Spy,—Quite a funny Incident occurred in Washington recent rminir to prove that-in Spite of•all dance, the secession Spies often suceeed in escaping detection; A horseman, clad in ti - sort eft 'cavalry costume ' 'With a heavy overcoat and slouched hat, has been no ticed for some time .dashing :About the , city' in rather a suspicious manner. At, last the authorities felt atemselvO' war ,ranted in arreiting him; and Accord-; inglY one . morning-, when . trotting 1 .down Penntsyttlaititravetme; lie foutid himsel suddenly surrounded by . a file ofj soldiers, and-was `carried 'Off. to prison. -7-! -But the funniest Part ivas to come: The investigation thatfellowed resulted- not the discovery of 'Certain inaport ant pap . o; but atsci;thq fact, that'the gal , Tant - cbeiitlf§Fyini.a *bruin.. long i'll . ol4,4 r bia at the pine it, is iMpoSsible rd grss: • • •- NO. 3. O INCIP JOB pg,lNTigg of it.LL . IclZi7l) S, DONE AT TILE OFFICE oiTtiE ItomrittolM/•it - xt.'t2, ‘.. ;titAtLY _xx:"l.lVl Asp 1.4:T I,l` . E ol PIUCE T.,u office of the Montro6e 'Democrat hae meetly been nupplit d Int n new and t Lott t of type, etc., Juld we ate now prepared to print p:ttnpart 4 circulars, ht the t .1: 0 41 not ft v. Hand bill .1 ' 1 . 0 , 11111J abet. kincil of wuTI. !Li, I ine,",i,,ke nc.oolitn.;uglier-. Business,: Wedding, and Ilan (:Ani.fi 11.dict.t, etc..yrialtedwitli ntge.nou and derpalcir. Justices' and Constables7l;iauks. s Meth, and an other DlankA, on banal; or printed. ..ri et rsr_ Jo work and Blank., to Le p 2.14 for or delliteit,) ==o , DI - Tt - tt I'Ass . .- - -Ab anoti.ing stor3 i.l. - lOW rn I ffl y soe Dulmyte troops of the lowa I sI, about :the change::: which' a ' c'ertain . pa'ssword under Went •altout the tirliC of the battle df Springfield. One of the - 11.11. , bu c cae tlf!iiv.., whose tint yiit was to hr. nil'olle guards with a password for the' night, gave the word 'Potomac.' A ger man on guard.ni.t understanilin,e* diqinct.- - . lyithe difference between the 1;s, and Ps,. understood it to be . 411c.ttomic:,' ai; ,l . thi s on being trtinsft%red to anol her; "A:ls .cot. 'PO ea to 4 1111(0..01ln . : 'Soon Itrt or srarti the offieer who bad liven the word, wi , lied to return throit , th the linc:t. mid ay tproaeh. .. ing a seaittel, was ordered Co . halt, and. the wor 1 41011f:1111W. Tre gave pwoi nno : .Niclit , ght-z-yeat•don'i pass mit me dislf 1 way-' ... fl3nt this-is-the word and I . will . pass.' • Ic.Nc,,--you Stan;' at the same time placing a bayonet-at his hreastim a man ner-that tollMl.-ofiicer that 'Potomac' • didn't paSs in Missouri. What is the word' then ?"But termilk, d—n' you' ` 'Well - . Buttermilk, d-,---a you:: 'DA ish right;t. now pin pass mit you - rttelf all abOitt- your— •hizines.' . There was then•a general (Ml . ,' hauling ofthe- password, and the differ -ence between the Potomac and. Batter i'milli being understood, - the joke became • one of the laughable incidents of the cam . ptiign. .. . ' . _ "ANT Oulu: MAx."—This common' and popular term has orig . inals at ivark for the purpose of, nseertfupiwr its start ing point. Being somewhat of a archaio log.ist ourself, and prone'. to search the scriptures, We have discovered the origin.' Of the term': It can be fOund in the rth verse of the lath slialiter - ofJudges,wlire,' Delilah was coaxing Samson for the,,seret• . of his 'great strengih. - lie divulged', as follows "If I„be shaven,then my strength will - go from ule i and I shall llieCoute weak;' and be like any other man 2)::" / . 1 - 2 The'Preety Girl's'' stthly— lbw to ieisp :tier eountertittice.