THE 'MONTROSE 'DENO IS PUBLISHED TIT/SDATS. L B re,2* - I•l."tss OFFICE ON MIMIC AVENLE. TFIREE 1)00ES ABOVE SEARLE'S . i Twtts.—sl,so pet annum n, Al ntherwiee $1 wilt be charged—end' Arty cents a hied to arrearagtns. nt the option of the Pabll etpen se of collection, ADVANCE papaya . "A or Hai IS E VENTS will be insert d at the. rate of St per square. of ten lines or less, for the first three l weeks, Bud 23 cents for each additional week a y down. 3ierehants . -antrothers,' who adr rtise by' the year, will be charred at the 11,ollowing tat 14.4 • ' Per one square, or IM. one treafr...trii 11 arniOe ' s - $8 Maul a.teutionat KrUalle, at he ktr . . i 6 ......... _.... Nocredit given except to tbosti of known resi l uinsibtiliy., _ BUSINESS bARDS• . HENRY r!. TYLER DEALER In Dry ()wide, tintions. Boots and sone Ware, WoodeiiWart '¢alien. Public Avenue. Montrose, Pa., May 13, *X. RUNTTING COOPER WM. M. CO' TIANKER - S.—liontAme. F LP d Co: (Mice, Lathrop( EIIXTEIEZ! McCOLLTJM AITORIsTiY9 arid Commllo 01lee In Lathrups' :saw buil. DR. — WILLIANI. W. .ECLECTIC. _PHYSICIAN & • - 97771 DR. MYR° 'Mechanical and Surgical Dentkt. tender their profettaional • elate tiee' ••11eformcd Practice °per:alone on Teeth; wit xproved Istyles of platcwdrk.. :onto and all work warranted. , Backe. m, 4 tine 140), DOA: . DR. R. smrn nttlEON DENI'IST, 2 -"1Iont I.73othiv Lal Imps' new handl the Bank. All Dental 'operation, performed In gno4 style and war I I C.•OLMSTEATI .... ORS. lOLF`ASTEA' ‘170J71.1) that , hnrc enter,..d hi k'rß •-f F, DP , itiutitre privred to rittvriti to oil o:llm—thii one forme' -tilin•teacl, in IKINDAFF. 1()I N ',ll TAILOI2.-11 1 ,ver I. N. liall;tmr, Grocer T 1; , nkfrd for pa-t .oljt to dot al work :Air... done on II 6.1 Ulla Iv. M • ott tiwto. Pa,: July 1111:. 1,7;(1. . P. I.INF 11.\7;1110NAIII.r. TAILOR.—'I: Block. over frurt! Fo:ler. Ali y.cnli. WlllTUllted. • durc• un short hotivv. in .1011 N (;U( 'I ASIIION ABLE TAIL R.—\l. omirthe MeMinz ID tree!. All ore.t.r. 111411 promptly tlouc• no 1...1i0nt notice. 8110 T. B. TSB!. . T.. TIErNTIN rlorl;., nt, 'hone-7 r 1.1,•••• nisi wnrrautco. Shop in Chi:l.4l4i 110:v1111,r. ht. WM. W. sMiT r,AIMN - NT 17.:11 CIIAIR MA. Morark.c. C (I. •i i-'()1t1 s'i ovvr ,:.:;d,• co .rdvr, nud rov4rlng7lo. ABEL TUU r r , ` itt I)nz,. Met Nine. Iwy Goo ....rv. A:c.—Agvnt I r ntl ilie EbiIASES4—MOIIII , Me. Pa. 1).1 \ - 11) C. IANI•1 Ty tV17 , 711(rz1te...1 no.rmanpnly 11. ;.r..miltin. C. 01.:".; he.f.tvoretl. 0:11, 1'0.11 , 4...40; 1 Milford, ju1y.1".% M,EDICA)- • DR. LI PATRICK; & DR. E.L. GARDNER, T T,E (111 1D 1'.17'.F.0r TDB MA'DiCAL DEPATMENT XJ VF y 1 CM.LEki E. have formed a miartnerehip for thprtctice or .11,111 cine and ..,fir..,reiy.nntiarepreparred n attend Mettne.a 'Talthfhlty and punectottly. that may hejncrueted to their care. on teems commepeurath ,ti 01 the time.. Di.ease+ and dernrmitiea or the ESN.. snreidal opera tiona. and all eurciettl.dieentea.parttentarly attended to. ,rl* - 0 Mee over WOW' , Store. 'Doke ilOlll7 from R a.' m. to 9p. m. ATheorte of amid ry prof' cn.nt, at the hito.4t vain*. and CAMI MOM rOIC,PA.. May 7th, 1962.—tpt lIAIMEN BROT ~-. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN "Ir.A....NSEIE NOTIONS T . , -AND- . , FANCY GOOD§. WII HAYDEN. 1 4011 N lIANDEN. ' ~ ' • i TRACY DAYDEN. I NEW ,v.aroxf, PA. (.; n goGE HAYDEN., .1 -F. E. BRUSH ' AL .13 ... 9, , ~ , ' t ' HAVING NOW LOCATED .O:IOIANENT'i attend to the tuties of hill, profession ,11. Latbrprs flat el TAKE NOTICE!' Cash Witilci • for Si Sweep eldte, Fox, Minn, 'Muskrat. and all' Fart. A zood a4sortnient of Leather and Sluice eonatantly on hand. Offied, Tannery, Main Street. Montrose, Feb.fith. '4. P. &L. C. SE• FIRE INSUI{A,NC THE INSURANCE CO. SF NORTH AM PHILADELPHIA, , PA.. - Has Established an Agency in 1s The 014Icst hrsur<rrrcP Cr;. in th'e UT CAST( CAPITAL PAlDsrg -- ASSETS OVER f 1111 E rates are:4olot% . ar those of any goody°. INew 'York. or elsewhere. and its 0 irector. ir the first for honor elal Integrity. . - AItLES Ser'c. 3MTnCR G. COFF , 41outro!le, Julyls. )31LLI-NGS STROUD Szt CI) ME I\SURANCI: COMPANY, OS Nobv~Yoric. CASH CAPITAL, ONE MILLION •DOLLARS ASSETTB Ist July' 1860, ',81,481,111911. LL9ItILITLEB, " 4 .43,084;68. ChaP..l. 7.lartin.Prveldent. A. F. Wilmarth. ticg T. Milton smith. Seer. lulu; McGee. Atet " P 0116.4 iwwil tnd renewed. by tneimdertignoa. at his Ant , . otte 440r-abovt. Searie'f autel:Valltr.?ft• Pa, LLINGS $111011D;'Agen1 33. 33 zr z I IAS 1 AS .111, , t received a large r.ttx..k AK- nrw titOrna. fur Cooking. Parlor. o:lV:rant; Sto.ip porposes. ftir or Coal. with Stove P2Pc. Zinc. Se. r • 11 is esn.ortment select and ne=iralk.. dud will be sad '3 It the ;nog tivurnble tertne . for Cw,/,.nr to r wm pi 617 ModAs /*arc • New Milford. Oct. 2Stlt. lion. , LitTANTE D_ A r e mpirt able parson . of dither in Every usiihhorluiod to !wit 4. It. titaffortrt ()Wit Tan, and ati.o f. it. !non MID tivi.slign Pow- Dims. Olive. Tar i. n thin. trausparent doid : It 1. thb I.c4l l retnedv known for diseases of the throat; 111117,P, Or C Itarrh. • A.it(i for diphtheria, Croup. Whooping Conch, Irna and sulphur Yowifers strengthen the sv.- tem, the digootion. and purift - the blood. I have • i rteen Vate PAID uhlet eontalnion full explanation.. and oVer one hundred te.ttmoulni. from well AlloWn proud.' nent persona, which.' will Fend to any one free tlf mail.- ' .1. It, S'AFFiIIID. Chemist. 442 Brolidwy.s.l.;. F. Jn3o-1p• Coffee,-, • 4 HEALTHY ;Terence. fine pound 0104.1610 e grill 41: make is sap& as tiro peqpds of round , roffait. Par esle A. • • • _ ABEL TURRELL: S 4 1,T•67 tbzlsSzT4 , l44); c ^ 4114 ' VIMAEU. ' VANCE ; per aem u n her. to pay prererred. . . , , We Join Ourselves *to - no Party that Voes not Carry . the Flag and :Keep Step to the Xiisic of the Whole tinion. 1 - VOL. 19. I - "Come Back to Us, NcOlellan!" (After .31eCiellan hadtaken leave of the Army, hid Was passing,•by the eneamp meuts of the various army corps, Many - of the ioldiers rushed after him, crying, `Come back come' back to us, licCltillaur They order Cattie—the die . was cut, 31eclellan was removed at last; While far and near, o'er x hill and dell In tones the accents fell— • "Come back to us, McClellan .D. W. posAat.i. Law.-31w0teolie, Pa. lug, over the ' 4.AT 1:1110E011 IlEtTlfst Itl/EA Tdx, retry tly of Itiorhamtoh, mica+ to appre iPhyl:tei" c*.reful mot the moot uributitiCatol eeth eitracted Without ,71telteroes of Afitietanes ground i'Arr,stiged their filootkitaine4l banners Gaye to their chief a last.adien; .fronnd ;. i And cried, while yet he was 'in view ' • I. Come back to us, McClellan I . • theibbld, the brave, the fearless men, When lie,had liassed, beyond their ken, llowed'down their heads,the tears t9hide, While, still within their hearts they cried— ,,C.OMe back to ns, -.3leciellatt. SON, [ OP e Pn will be nted. Ills ,chigtfain's eatne4o - say farewell,. ,11sijit the ruddy caity.light fell. •Thekears they strove. in vain to hide, .• NVltile from theirsorro'd hearts i.hy cried Conte hack to us. Neck:lran. J. L. iTtEAD EEO. 14: to the-Public l o r Spartnerrhip for tie H T ! & S - ure cry. 11.11. in the line of their ly peCtlpied .1).34;;.e• The prayer has spread, Ave' heat it here, As wide it.eelmes The'army's prayer, thio. artny'wery, • As ther.the deadls'l4ittle try,— ". - CoAte back (Was, Mcble)lan. Gii•to the warriors oii l .the field, Charging iiputi the rebel steel, And while 1 hey deal the fatal hloW, -Hark . tti-t Weir cry, - now high, now loW,- - Come bad to us, IEII. IltroLLV. Pa. shop 011 Main-Omet. 11.1 a continuance ,atkfaetorilv. Cat- L :anted 1.11 [ I. • , Itrnse. P*. iihop I Read, VittrottP to titlyryd /11114. •pt myle. jai, .TOll. . go to the tesintrded soldier's-aide; Standto the .jck,nile's• - ltnie bedside, Stana by the diem when he. dies, And listen to his feeble cries— Conte tfack to its, McClellan .Itrb,.., Ps/4. Shop on Turnpike firou-r.itel4elr.. - • writTallted tort. G to the tented camping ground, , SIII;\W and z , leet, :ire freezing round, And frt/111 the restless slumbering ones ,' Yth Intirmnred' i Words t Mr:entreaty...coin-O.— .Tou•olry at the 11,tu tvrinp. All I •r anti 004 ti 1 ci: Iii,ACTUILETiS, , Go to the wiatew'a.lio . oelv IMnie, T i i,t to the orphaned moan,. Go tcy ht.Lipluoe,—Leare trot %viten!, z4till for ace, you hear prayer • liaeic to them, )...ontroke: .if work dcrt ty, ;• le net is enst, • 314:C14.11;w is rthiatyt ed dt last . ; The 'Alpilition I.tininls are pleased, Yet still that. ery will - never .cease— ._ "Come back to 1,1 s; _McClellan." Cher.iicztls. Pyr PL.II , itlytt'air PATENT 40 , • M. D., t - New MIT. 1. with which 1 " . DISSOLVE THE MIAOW ? Di55,.1%.0 the ! Wk . () would part Che chain that hinds us heart to heart'? Eaell link was fi.rged ity saint s eyireg • A mitt'-ilie revolution fires, And cooled—oh, where so rich a flood-- 4 Warren's and in Stinter'S blood. CARD Dissolve the Union ! Be like France . When terror reared her bloody hand, And men became destruction's child, • - Arawoman in her passion's wild, Derived in the life-blood of her Queen, Bern* the dreadful guillotine !, Dissolve the Union !. poll away . The'.spangled flag'frnm glory's day, '- • • Blot out the history of the brave And desecrate each patriot's grave,. And then 4bovethe reek ofyears . Quaff an eternity. of tears --• Dissolve the.tnionl Can . . That. they Who spit& *tch WOrdi are friar Great God ! Did any- die to save` Sncli . sordid wretches from the graye, When breast to breast and hand to band Our patriot fathers freed'tlie land? Dissolve the Union! Ito, forbeari , - The sword of Damocles, is there ! Cut ball hair, and earth 'hall know A darker, deadlier tale of wo , • Than history's crimson page has told, • • Since NerG's car in blood o'er rolled ! 08, I inch, of la and 'Shop on 1.;E: Dissolve the Spesk,,ye hills! lac everlasting,momitains cry ! yestreams and mingling rills ? , And , neean, roar in al. - tpny!. Dead heroes leap froM glory's sod And shield the manor of vciur blood! "A very 'poor investment these horses of inine, and all this behaviour. a la good boy in story-books," muttered FitzAtibyu about fuur weeks subsequeinly, as he strode into the brilliantly lighted' ra/ous of ! the club house.. Waiter, a glass of brandy , .' ' and water, "Shotild..you suppose any mortal yontli 1 w ha $, the • :quick.'- E. ? • would have the enurage to bring such e a : last century•specinten to a place like this, t s mitter, Its you look as black as athunder f cloud observed a by- where he might knoW fie, would meet all , stander,who was leaning against a marble pillar, picking his teeth in. a most; epicn- hilt bishionutile at ? 'Pon my rear , wanner. .. i , . . word, I believe, he'll take• • I 11(.'0 then Pera Th e ma t ter? Do you remember tliat a n ii e , x i t e l ot t 7. , i n -e i l l i t i t t ll n o i. ( lr ta ry• ! iitg r il:z ,t ili i ? e rocab in a ( g i :magnificent Agatha 3lilue, the Queen or, • . - you of Doh Quixotte in his youthful days." ; , all " the beauties-?" Probably she has money Vile:we one Of Course Ido ; she has not, lost. her ay -" . r .. i lof these dal said said -Agatha, the distrust : i ,k it.s ar her property, I !tope.e "No, out I've lost the latter item pretty'; ! ful elementlippermost in her mind for the moment. effectually. Whom do you suppose she is I, .goi ng to marry?" "'_riot a solitary red cent, Pknow, for I :. She is - in greatly '"I candot gueis.' Tell . your news at ! have inquired " re= i once, and .don't keep it fellow in - suipimsel 1, duce& eirctimstaneestliat's the term, I:. "Well, she is' going to - liecome' Mrs. believe-,-but Staunton is very fond of her, nevertheless . . She lms comae up from the Charley Staunton ; actually going to mar- : ry. a man with*a fossil 'aunt, and priiitip-; backtwoOds 'fair a rely dayk - and—," - i les that won't anew him to rink a glass i . He' paused 'abruptly as the very pair in of wine! Bali !: the humbug that passes question , approatilied, still absorbed in eurrentiii this World." picture gazing. ",My dear Charles," said ' -I could'have prophesied as much' betore 1 the old lady at length, -'yon cannot um- . my dear boy,. if youwold only hitye'dohe ' aginc what a treat: tis is to . me;---I -Itaye. me,the honor to listen to we," - obAerved not .sevn etth pictures as these since I was :'. the other, coolly Unfolding the 4 - eivsfisper .; debit - a. . Hots thoughtful of You to bring ,soat to get at the-inside columns., '"You .1 me here." L.-_ ' . . • - . 1 gay and dashing young tellows'are very "-I knew von Wotthl enjoy ; it, .aunt I" I. well as long as -girl wants to.anititut her- 1- "And you.are net aShained'Of yotrold- ' self; but when it comes to - alife - long at 7 . , r fashioned. relative among all these gay . fair, she is apt to prefer a true' to a false I. young p eo ple ? " . - I man for a husband:" -• '' • " I ‘--"Mer-A promising boy. was reading the 3 ~ On the contrary, dear aunt, lam proud } • Fitz Atibmr, i roaned 4 deePly,... but con- Bible rery attentively, . when his - father as a monatoti.ivhile yoti are . leaning on sidered his,position too precarious to be . - came in the : room 'Dna •asknil _him what lie- my arm !" Worth arguing. . - . . had found :.that.w:Q . sointerestitin . . The , .A g atha heard it all, and she also. heard, ag 3l bus ear as h a ile b l e i e ttl w e o ß r u k t it h ig E . allte;ewrocuuod- cousin's boy, looking op eagerly, *lel:tinted: him answer, in reply to the challenge of . _. 4 lliaveliMild a placein the Bible where some companion : . • ' ' i wedding robe 'ofspcitless white.satin,And . _-: • they are.4l Methodists?' . -.1 . • .:. -' ; . "Thank,yei4,buti ; dpal.reekon upon'tne . asking ten thousand "questions, , the .fmale . _ . "Row so?" inquired the,,father..- • ias one of your partf - this - evening at . .the,l'of_whieli always was:. _ - ; - -• I ''" ikpause 6 ail tbepeoplgorg, Ales:" i Opeei.' - ItO go . ini*ith mY . annti*hoj. "But,Agathai ycru never wouldtel! grin ? , The nrigiu of this roininoti iihra•l s e has been discovered, and is too - good to be A ftlehti ot oars who had been •aliFent fUr some time, rgurned home and tailed 1111011 an AISt : Vil/It'd lady :friend.. Ile wul surprised' to And' her'eonfttuld- toga Sick .bed: After the first salutations were over, our friend.'anxionsly inquired; " Why; what's the matter?"' .Qhickly rt6ciiing• over—to the bad:fide of the bed, the invalid turned down the coverlet, dit,cli,sing' a luau:W.' infant, tVralit iu tlw embraci4s- of • the ro , y god, mitt said trim:l9)4.loy, ' "That's . what's the matter fl t 174rA friend •otSlours,'v,,ihn NO taken prat-, bur iieveral years in cultiyating'a fall:crop of 'hair-on his titce was called way -from holm. on business some time sin c e.- While a toUln t *an' tnexpericnced -bar ber spoiled la(: ' whiskers •in tiimmini , them, which so eh:lF:rifted him that he rocted•the harber to make a .cleUtikib of it by Waring whiskers and moustache hot it ofl The: hilrber ointycd, and our friends e we wti s sjnooth -and" as delicate as owhen in his.teetts: 1-I‘, returned borne in' the ,night. .IsText morning his little girl did nottzi4tinike Look ipgover, her ,ropther,_mid.tweittg she 4upposert lai-stranger'- ' - itt • thel heck she- re. n tarked, iu i Idish _".Mis ter, get out of here; I.{l-tell eey Pu , teiten he eunivi home." - - . . .. .. . . • - . , . . . . .. . .. . . _ . .. . . . . . _ , ' .. • . • , . . . . . . - "lir , . . . . • . _ . ... . - ; . I .. . . _ . ~ s : . • , . -., - , .. - . ..,1 . .. • , .. . • . . . . . .. • 7 . . . . • - il , - : . . .. ," : . . ~ . 1 . .. - , . , . :, .. . ' . - . .•• , . , • . . .. . ~.., - . .... ',, - .• ~ ......R.,_.__, ~.... .. ~ .......... . ~.. .. ..... : ~. "... , . . ..i. S - P. , : ,.- .-._::,..... -- ' M_' - ',.'_ - :::o' .. *C .;,. .... From the Doylestown Democrat. Cubic hack ,itt That's What's' The Platter." MONT ROSE:PA., TUESDAY, DEC. { NO. 43. LOVE AND NODAL-COURAGE. " But why...do you not like him; Aga tha? .; "06—because." .p, . What philosopher ever solved the mys- i, ten .. . ,_ . . .tery.of this true woman's .reason? " Be.: " Never; : was.,,Agathit's • teply, , lmt it cause" means ten thousand things that was so emphatically spoken, that 'Fitz Au pretty, dimpled lips ..dtin't _choose to put bye started, °And that night,' while the [ into shape—it means that they..knowsslay courted beauty brtisbed out her luxuriant perfectly well themselves, bin won't tell ; pausedhair,.she__ ,many a .. timelu revery: . nlfellinto ,_ and not all the coaxing rof curiosity can a, thotightfal get it out of Oietii. - ' - ' , ‘•M Moral courage!" :she murmured to • And Sopretty Agatha Milne played, with I herself...4i have somewhere read that it the knot of .. . 'scarlet roses, whose - velvet ; is, nobler far than the inutremalution which petals glowed in her belt ribbon, and lift- I makes, men reckless in 'battle.. I won 'ed up her soft, hazel-brown eyes with a i'de`rt--'._ .. . . . . proVokingly absent,turconscious look. ' l . And here she stopped resolutely: .. - • "But, Agatha," pursued Rose - Ellen-1. What: a-gloriona bracing New Year's wood, stopping for aMonient in her work I Day it was.! There • has . been ju5t...8)10%- i of braiding and arranging Agatha's' bean- ' enough in the night to term a white, glist- I rift!' Wave . ; of auburn . gold hair, " I'm sure ! ening coal over everything, and afford an ,-a pleasant partner radians and parties atid,ex . ,4„ielleirtetetisefort .. heineriT sleigbs'tliat —oh, Agatha l- don't jerk your) head so,Or , darted h ither and thither with streaniins i I shall have to braid all these strands - over, ~ f urs and jingling. bells. All. the' fashion- -1 . • agaiti.'?• . • ' able - world. • wan . ast ir --the gentlenien - " Nonsense ! that's no test at all," •• . • . said busily consulting their inte rminable, list ofi Agatha, pettishly, the peachlike: crimson ' : calls,.and the ladies putting the last touch- i ' mounting her 'cheek; " what catt , 'you tell : es to they gorgeous toilets: ' abOut a - young man from a mere hall-room • There were not many .upon that dap i acquaintance ? Any one can be agree- i 'velia received more adulation titan Agatha ;utile etiOugh to-hold your boquet, or bring, Milne, as she.atood like a young empress . ] • you an ice-cream ; - that is if he know s in her spleedid drawing rooms, every Mir- I enough nut to tread on , your toes,. in:,,tue ror flashing back her loVeliness.. . Her polka, nor to step on your flounce ,in a • dress ivas. very simple—pink silk edged promenadent !" - , , . = around the slioulders with snowy ermine, i,, sprays of Jessainims-drooping ' thou s— " I kn/tlw it" said Rose, "but the.ques- ,and t„. 11, • . . . 1 from her'liair; yet she knew that she had', "But the, qtrestion is„ interrupted the . never been Si) beautiful as now, as she lis-; ' imperious young beauty, " how du I know ' tinted with languid smiles to the compliy meats showered upon lier. It was twill- that . 3l.r..,Fitz Aubyn, silver tongued, as he is to me, with his lionetge and eompli-. ; i„„ new. _,. . • 1 i ; meats, don't go home and swear at his ; , .1 The gilded chandeliers had been lighted 1 mother mid, sisters? How dol. know t hat ; and the jeweled lingers of the tiny alabas, Me- lennings,.who has the wbeleldieue, n : ter chick on the mantel pointed - to a late.' ary at his thigere4ends, dues nut cheat - nis - liour..wheir the peal of the doer-bell -an t landlady ? ,What means have I of! know- , umv- , nthuiced a pew incurSion of ;guests, and ling that that young St- , Simons,' who is : Mr: Fitz Aubyn entered, surrounded by a such a :graceful waltzer , and agreeable : ba , p,„,y o f..y oung men . I small-talker, dosen't finish his evenings in 1"Good evening, - Miss 31ilnel surely I a drinking saloon ? Oh, 'Ruth, we have ttnitiot too late to•wisii you the happiest • the tests bit ascertaining spuriops dt ' ll ars.l of all imaginable Near Years'?. Whons do ' and co ll uterfeit Intlik 11.0 7 1)4, iiew• un . l lotiastipposelsaw' steering in the three.. 1 e4qh.,, , tce W.G 3 - ,0 3 ,44kW 41 `, 0411406% .lo is tifillLof yourbospitableAnai*lcjilai-stowt- I bandy Mitil he istieil to • our ; util ucky apron- l he ti ; h e eetvestetspe o rfor ... hit4b , vli s Lthe , , ' . i ' fur ' • . stymg..life:' -: '.... • -. • ' ~i Chevalier -Stemma) !" ...She laughed - as she sprang - up, to leek , ~.Agaim.t,ured he .* v an e weleometh . 1 , for her bonnet, _but the long eye - lashes 4 •new.sanuer,- and; the .*venest Teie • could, , , drooped with a . suspicious MoiSt tire- • .: I scarcely discern . the deeper shade of t:,.Aur i . Weir P.ahl Om hi. caivi.'NinlY Patting.: that. gtowed onlier'slelicatis... cheek as he Ag:itha's thin hand, '•I mill veleery',.,• ve-!•Y i quiet le caine• to greet , her. Illiatiktid that • Providence didn't niake.-nie y "'Fill your glatises,gentlemenrexclairn : a beauty and an heiress, since it. has such!, ed FitzsAubvii, holdiug high aboVe. his ',`-k tem - limey •to awake snspicion . and dis- 4 • h - e ,„. 1 a ' t i e y chalice of eligraven Bohemian i trust. ' But,Agatha, in. spite of all you , glass; brininaiii,,, ,, ,with,criteson wine, let us i have said, I feel convinced that , Charles I drink to the health of our fair hosteis„ ~ Staunton is a noble fellow." . '..- .• .1 3 . 16, 4 .g ,, t h a mii 4e. 7 . . -.r . , "-Very likely," said Agatha, lightly; 1 - Theampromptu toast was recei ved with " but here.coniew Fitz- Aubyn, with those] aeclainationa of satiSfactio3l. and, P Aphyn ; splendid horses 61 his, so give me nlY,rglanced around to see'if, all had followed shawl." . • • I his - injunctions, ere he touched his lips to "-Ind where are your footsteps, directed , t h e , r i„,, to-day?" _ - ~,. . . • i "(7.,eme• Staunton, no hick of chivalry I I "Oh, we intend to go ' to that private i h ere . , where's vonr :;fuss?" 1 view .ol pictures in —:---: street, which I i "I willtdrink Miss slime's health in clear }told you of. , .; iced water with , the greatest pleasure,"' , • • And Agatha swept out oft:he-room with' i said Staunton; smiling "but I never touch the port of a queen.' • • 1 wine." ' . - . • The white lustre of nthinilight, pouring 1 .'Never touch wine! and pray why not ?" doWn through the circular dome of frosted, - "It is against'my principles," said Stan- - glass; gave a life-like glow to the superb ton, with quiet, firmness. . s paiutings ;whose s gilded framea literally • Fitz Aubyti curled his lip in contem' pt- I covered the walls of the spacious- apart- uous silence. that was Several degrees-bar-1 menu. Here and there groups of absorb- der ed. dilettanti moved, with -sulxlued. whis- der to bear than spoken obloquy, but an-J other youug man leaned forward to inter - pegs and brandished their opera glasses, as '; pose his word. : - • I if it was a forbidden thing to speak above "Oder ~ tlie wine - - to him yourself, Miss ones breath in the - presence of those fair i 3lilne; surely he canna be so lost to all ' ) landseapes, and scenes - from bistorie's sense of gallantry as to refuse it from her Pages' - • , ' 0,.1/E1 — fair hand." - - . . D irectly in front of one of- the finest ' Agatha had grown very pale, but with-, Works of sit stood a pair . 'Who 'had un- out speaking, 'she filled'one of the goblets consciously been the object of many curl- i and held it towards 'Staunton. • . ous glances and whispered observations 1 "Will - you take it from me?" 1 of o th er sight-seers` s a tall and stylish . , StAuuton looked at her with a' calni . young tuan, with an, old lady leaning on ! gravity as he replied : his arm, whose antique dress, of Snuff col . ored hombazine and oddly-shaped beaver • "'Miss Milne, I should be a. coward, in deed, didl,, the fi x ed allow our,. persuasions to bondevoccaskpied a great many covert sinks, and ' half concealed titters, froth sway me frSm pnrieiples which' are-the guiding star of my life" • - Ithose 'present. , -.- . .- Ile bowed mid withdrew. The glass " Oh, by • the way, Miss 3litne," said . fell from Agatha's hand and shivered into FitzfAtibynas, in their progress _across !_a thousand sparkling fragments ; she . bit 1 . the rooms, this couple gradually came in • her saarlct lip until theblood started with I view "you have not seen the-greatest Cu- I a strange sympathetic thrill of exultation. 1 riosity of all-yet." . --. • 1 Ilid lie-wavered for an instant in his de -1 " Where; " said Agatha, raising her op.; termination, she wo'd have despised bin era glass:... - - I"You are mistaken-; it don't hangon i the wail," said. Fitz, libpi, laugh ing.— " Look nearer. earth if you -want to see Staunton and his fossil aunt." l :Agat h a turned. her, head- accordingly, 1 without remark—she smiled hlittle, how ! ever—'t was all Fitz Aubyn wanted isTassionately fondofiiiusie; so yea:must n - xcuse me for once." • "I told you 'so " said Fitz'Aubyn; 'in a sotto roroone, shrugging his shoulders:— .... • ro z y ou ever see such a fellow 4s Stalin- why lon-did hot like Lim, and.flow you are Just as had. , :„ Tell me, darling, Why von clumgc . d . yonr *mind." • An . d . Agatha only laughed ; and crim soned, and made the same old,provoking answer: , • .:'"Oh—becnuse - • THE FORCE* ca.i.:oono" ssOT., .Wheii OE4 mishei to convey ~ the ides i of the destrictiye. force =,.with: which .twO moving' bodies come in contact - with each other, he, is almost Icertain , t4 - • - speak. 'of theif, Momentum, 0r,.. to . pluralize the word, .their-. Momenta. :We hear of the. motnentuot of a battering ram, •, the mentuni•of it...railroad train, the moinen tam of ,a ,canpop shot. • And most iif.us' have bee n, taught that. the momentum of a muting . boy is its .weight multiplied by its velocity. - The mementtim, therefore, • of a railroad train,;rinming' at forty miles , an hour, la twice that of the same train running at, twenty miles sin hour. And • thus the destructive effects of a train rim-. fling into another, orinto any obstruction, are twice as • great, it would -. appear,, at forty as at twenty 'hoar. „Here, liewever ' is . exactly where. the Word mo-- mention breaks down, for, it is here thet,l upon investigation, we Sndmonientimi to be'a word which, if it . have 'any useful 1 meaning at all,' has none for the practical . ' man. No dictionary or :gloSsary,' with,, any pretensions to accuracy, .: Will defiee, monientain as the total, mechanical power stored up in. Moving body. It is Often defined as the quantity of motion n a moving bed y , -- and this definition•may be, and indeed - commonly is, misinterpreted to mean the total destruetive.fince stored up in the body. The real meaning c.f the word -inomentumis the mechanical force which' a moving body can exert in a giv en time, and we may as well observe here that this distinction or - conditioticoncerns , l no practical man, and that, feral! purposes other than - mathematical, the .word mo- I menthol - might as well "le banished - &fun our vocabulary. No one car require to • kno tn what„echanical e power or destruc tive - effect - a rifled shOt can:earry bra in time, however much' lie.'may,de sireota f:nosrwlta4 is- l the-power ei.fOoke4teiled itteSlnTt 4,7 e, time.., trim e, indeed,fortits..l ne . element in - . our censiderntion the.ef tect : prod geed . jinn? ediately : alter the in ! .; slant ut which tiro, trains run -together, or:, a. •GA lb. idiot : strikes it, : 4, ~•,-toch.,plate.r What may be the progress of Abe, shock • ihiring the first hundredth or. the second • ' or third thousandth of a Second after . col-, lision; is practicallyinniniferial:. We on- Ty - wish to know what,is the total, effect,. and, this will inevitably, be, in the case .of bodies moving at, different VelocitieS, as the sq, }if their Velocities, ~, • It . h been -- prOV,ed, we may bow 14i3", centuries ago, that thebeight to whitAi a boilY - will rise front the earth,willbe four times as•great with a given initial veloci, fy as at half that_velOcity, - niiie tirneti as great at thirty feet per second as at ten • feet •per Second, and so on; the - mechanical work done being always' proportional, With bodies at different speed, to the sqnare - Of the Velocity. We know abso- • lutely, by experiment, that a railway train at forty miles an hour by virtue,ot 1 its own stored-up mechanical power,. run' four times as far, when left to itself on a levet line,as when moving at twenty miles an hour ' and,sixteen- times as Sir as when released at ten miles att hour.. It would; be incorrect to say that:the train was.car ried along by its momentum, inasmuch as momentum is, in. the first place, only a' mathematical abstraction, signifying an effect; and -not - a`catiae, and, in theitext place, momentum varies only directly as i the velocity. „Thus ..the train-which, ran niug at forty miles an hour, has four times the stored-up rpechanieal power Of anoth-, er train moving at,ball that speed. haN i i neverthelesc hut twice the moinent um, asmuch as the faster train would only run twice as Sir as the slower train in a given time, say in the fir S t. second after the pro., pelling pewer of the engine was removed. • The 'faster train would run four times as. far-as the slOwer train before ' stopping, and would occupy twice the space of time in• coming to a rest: As applied to the effects of cannon shot, moinen,tom has generally been misinter preted as representing the destrnctive ef fects produced at short ranges, with•giv en initial velocities—that is to say the ve locity at which the shot leaves the and hence a great number of persons have concluded - tat these effects were necessa rily in proportion, in the case .or shot of any given weight, to the velocity of the shot on striking; the final velocity, at short rangers, being assumed to be but little less than the initial velocity.. When . it was known that the rifled shots from, the Armstrong and Whitworth guns, al thoufdi fired - at known low initial veloci ties, had attained ranges of from three to nearly six miles, nothing short of actnal and repeated experiments - could divest the - popular mind . 0 the idea that these rifled guns muse.proye the most efficient against armor plates. We have abundant • reas ons for believing 'that the ordnance au thorities fin , some time held the same faith, • . . It was nothing' that the charge of pow der in 'the rifled wins was but one-eighth or one-sixth of 'the .projectile,_ instead Of one-fourth, as in the:ease - of the smooth bores t nor.ilid -it matter that, in the ease of the - rifled-gun, a large part of the ener gy of the powder was spent ip.Overaorn ing the friction ' - of the projectile; and 'in giving it an normouttlyTrapid rotation, The real reason. why" thd long range was . obtained- - --to wit, the small froutat r and consequently . moderate; resistance the • proketile—trastiot fully . understood, and so it was believed that a ritleld bolt,'• which conl4 bo.thrown :three , tinies•as far est:i round. shot, e.ould allo - be.sent , thraug-h,an armor plate three , thick:as- vhat Ihroligh which , the litter could malt%tf breach. The erroneous opinion has now been . pretty.well dissipated by the amt. mulcted results of many experimente,.and indeed wediave at last had it from the ,l'esics that the Armstrong guns are, of all others, the least -efficient against armor platas,.Londan Engiueer.: • , . —Save your rits; if yari ripen EDITCA.T IGNAL. ALL • CthillltitiCA7lols6 onontstn POfl tirio COLL - WS ..1511017LD DI ADDIMISED pIONTF.OIII,- IPIKIL7O.ISNNA. OOIIXSY, P 551.515.4. , wrinAapxzTe:3-. Do, you expect to attract the tktention of any portion ofthe people in the times, when our denary is Surrounded with 0'660,4 to tbe_subject 'of good 'reading?' asks One: . Ve are, not fully. pre ared to say yeal'to,the above . question, 'Os true, fiot we feel Sore that'll :we ,had . S4leeted for a subject, - "good fighting,"'and then offer to the distracted. country ,?nigges tiens that, if carried:out, would result in good and successful fighting ;. fighting that would be caleulafed to terminate the press cut deplorable 'state of affairs, ail di restore .slur country .to its once happy and prus perOs condition, we should fereli, sure of attracting the - attention of nearly every . man; .woman and' child l -.throughuut•the land. . . . _ Notwithstanding our countr y is ;entitled t o great sacrifices, both of blood and trims ' itre, .and it' is the scorn 'ditty of every lover of freedom, and free institutions-, to rdo all in liis,power to aid' the government to suppress the liresent qursed and wick ed rebellion, still those who are permitted I,to . remain at home have impertant duties rto perform,..that should not be wholly o •verlooked; for!with.us we shall have the children and youth, and they will ho donbt. need - as-much` care anitatteetion as every and perhaps more. At any - rate tliey need, I and are entitled' to a good - edtication.— lAnd we venture to make at this time a few . 'suggestions, calculated to -arouse ! those (if _possible) who have under -their } - charge the.youth'of the land. to.instruct. :All are agreed ; we think, that in all oar ;Schools,. of all grades and kinds throtigh i out the county, whe have bet very. lbw - 1 scholars who are good readers.. And . why 'is it that- we find . but here and there :i i good reader? Certaiuly not because our. Children and youth- are destitute of the natural ' abilities. requisite to make god readers, provided those abilities are right ly,Cpltithited and trained..-, TheTTeachers, i then,, afg!the lilies : SO : bel;:iircinied.th' 'the: importanen Of 'it mac tkao' . .:Alifi r . correct tramitig*ef 'their'phpila;";bi,",clrao't hat , 'We may - Wee ';tileeided tniproVeMent lin' that ,trittch neglected branch of :study; 'tend: . ing. -. WA' s teOf sure that the ability to read' aloud in an easy and agreeable manner, at all pro Per times andVlaces,jaMl 'in the. ipiesenceof strangers even,) ought rank I first ainong',the_physical :Led Intellectual accomplialiments of the young.! liesides. theNaluable service it enables u 4 te'ren der" others, the- habit of exercising' the I voice - by,reading . aloud: under- priper're iStrictions, tends greatly •to' benefit -the , health. "Recitation; and reading;:ilond," l says Dr..Combe . , "are more useful andiu : vigorating Muscular exercises than is gen., erallyiniagitied." To aeqUire elcientioun-: i ry delivery, the.articttlattou should be fah _and cemplete, the pronunciatien"strictly, correct,,!the management. ; or modulation :ofthe voice appropriate, and•the;expres shin animated and sympathetic. If these' conditions are properly. complied ..with,. i the delivery. will 'be clear, sigriiticitt7t and impressive. I To be clearly lieard - ,,and correctly un derstood, depends less on , a loud voice than .orra clear and distinct arthiulation. j The term articulation, in anator6V l , signi &it the connection of - the bone.;'i Or 0, Iskeleton. by the 'hints: 'ln ortlloCpy: it may signify, in addition to its more geiter: at meaning, the'proper,connection, in ut teraitee, of the joints or syllables of words. Forinstante,fn the ; words,, ap- . pe-iile, siur- erlior„, correct articulation directs us to .pronfirince every syllable distinctly, ih- , stead of fusing the' second into tic first, Land pronouncing the words as if written, laptite, portior., Thus we see that icorrect 1 1 articulation . regulates the. enunciation of syllables, and also letters, and directs us I how to correctly pronounce them. ' - h Says,a writer by ore nadte of - :Austin; "In just articulation,N'the wordsiare not hurried'over, nor. nielted together; they are- . neither abridged nor. prolonged; they are not swallowed, nor are theyshot from the mouth; neither are theyltrailed, and then-suffered to. drop unfinished; but they are delivered from thelips as' beauti ful, coins are issued from the,inint, deeply and' accurately impressed, neatly struck hp the proper organs, distinct t •sharp, and _ perfectly finished." , • • , i • Every teacher; before attempting to , impart instruction to their pupils upon the art of good reading,'. should fully; tinder- I stand that no person, without a clear and correct articulation, can give proper effect , to language in itadelivkly. Svrifineas in speech, which dropi some syllables and utters °tints too faintly, is the ninst com mon cause of 'imperfect articulation, It must not, however, be understood that a proper rapidity of .utterance is ineonsist- I ent with distinctness. The oppoSite ex. , ' tfeme is a habit of undue precision; and of fectation in enunciating, which is 411ite as . ; offensive as the baste which confoutids.l syllables and words. -But the extreme of speaking-and-reading too fast Is the more' common fault.- 'To utter syllables and words with - - accuracy and completeness, •thOugh it be-slowly done, is the•first and nost.essential thing to be studiedi! . I If' the teacher expects his scholars to be- come good readers, he should remember i that the simple elementary• sounds of the'. letters of the English language, must be I thoroughly understood and correctly prat I ticed, before the complicate ; sounds, flow- • - ,1" -- A 1:111V who had . a silk gown spoil ing from them into speech, can be tittaed [ed. in, being re-colored, 'brought an, action with propriety, ease and force.. .. i against, the establishment, and summoned Pronunciation, modulation, and emplin. several of the worktuen,to give their " dy . sis,' are - three things of. great impOrtance ! ing't - eiiiiMony." -• . . to ell that wish to read well, and should i - • -'''- - "''''''----- both te , :toi, i. • -"Cotton -has be.en drafted, I see," said be thoroughly understood by Valentine lapettidly,as he dallied with the, . ers and scholars. .; Pronunciation iiicludeas, q .1 ri rwlish Itetris " - • ".• ".- not only artioulation,(that We have alre*l. -ag . t ,-- ' - . • "Drafted !" exclaimed. !Orson, "Cotton dy men t ioned,) , bet -• Allan tity - mid accent. l' !. it ', . d 1 , It tells us not only . how Words and eillables-: 'dr24,•i, „7. lied • • rep Should be articulated,. hut on which sena..? ' tryinz to find a substitute for it in Fog blei(if the viord•has twoor more,)lthe ao- i land." Cent or stress of voice ought to fall. - ,-The i i ; •'' sr. MN 411. correct, modes of pronouncing a r ti,pariiy ! . 'ln Connecticut they find use for the results of custom, and partly kred.' t,,y ' alrmlsti•everyt Ling. A RAT old lady is laws,' springing treat ' the tiataiat igenies ; collecting all-the old Tribunes she can lay and :teadeney of the language. ; Those he r hand, on, to, make sass of.. She sass modes ; should geaerally be adopted, we they area detput sight-better'n ashes—as think., that are easiestoi•eatutabowo, and gee,' as Cleir LIE. . .. !ALL HINDS of JOBTRIMINNY bosr. Ai THE OfrlC2 OP THE M 3106 k 6 c NeiTLy AND, riuntrai, AT MLIVr. AND LET 1.1" E" 'PRICES: ; 1 • office .of the ,Montrose_ Democrat Isis recently been supplied with a new an choice iarier# type.bt ate. ; and it , t are now prepared to print pamphleti iciteu-sra, etc., etc.. in Me best style, on abort nonce. Ilandbills, Posters, PrograMmes, sad other kinds of work in this line, done according to Oita Buainesa, N'creddin, and: Ball Canna inntetie *rot:, printed witti-naatness and diapattb,.. Jusiies' and donstables' BlankajiOteg. !Deeds, and all other Blanki,Cot hand, or ptinW4 otde • Sub vrnfk ind 61an.1: ( 4, to be paid rot or delivery. - • , . rpost satisfactory to the enr.• In some few instances, the esilloqnial promiticiatimi of • a'n'ew words is ditTerent . from that need in deviit ionid discoursil nud,;in poetry. In readin. , .the scriptures Ike" sly blessed i current speech• we say blest: Sometimes ode give to thu i in wind its long• souriai, it rhyme 'wig) mind: 'At effect el the biList discourse and 'the moat Byte& pathetic I,7oies is sadly marred by a faulty !minim-of pronunciation. ;No person, we ' think, should trust. his ()sin' judgment,.On • :-gnestionsof. pronunciation, but should , I seek to be enlightened by thn authorlty.of the learned. - The weed , modulatifyq islefived_ from It word -in J..atih, which sig,nifieo -to : mutat - 0, to meo / Ture oft' properly ; and it - can be ap- plied to "singing and dancing* as well as to reading and,speaking. ' • . That. syllables and Wards are correctly enunciated; andithatlthe marks of punctn % 4itiOn are duly obser4ed is not enoughr- 7 iomething more is •Waniing. The hearer. cab but imperfectly interpret what if'tit , tered byAlie.reader, unless the voice f gym- - pathetically adapts itself tci the emotion or eentiment; and regulates its pauses ac cordingly. -The study of - pronunciation should conprise 'not 'only ivhat syllables of a ivord ought to be. accented, but what words Of a sentence ought to be emphas ized, The term Imphasis,. from -n Greek word, signifies to point out, or show. Some writers-divide it into emphasis of foref, • which .we lay on almost evary significant Word, mid emphasis of scusec .which we.- lay on particular words, to distinguish, them from,the rest ofthe-sentence. , . To correctly deliver thoughts in speech, the,importnikee of emphasis must be obvi, ous to . every One on the slightest retie°. tion. ' Says a father to his dutiful son, , I "go and ask IMwdold Mrs. Bonner is.7—.:— The Voy hurries away anti soon returns 1 with the report, that Mrs. lionueritad re -1 plied,: plied," that —it was none of .his business 1 how old the wits!" The kind Man siuip- - 1 v intended to inquire as to the .state of .. her health, -Ina he accidentally placed a Wrong emphasis on the adjective old. To illustrate thelinportanee of k emphasis;let . uobse'rre t 4. following instance:. A per-j, sOrt:'obserkiitg .11- a table .au Ordinary.rol=:, rter-rttle, lei)k . it: tip,'Mill; 'on askingw4it it ' , was:used for, wa,; 'eniwered i ;'" It is a. rule tor t.!ottirtiiii4 . .hfllaiCt." - After turning it tiver..; and over, anamp and doffs n, andper...7ln. ; his • brain for sonie-tiMe,,,he at "last, in a" . r parOxysnfof hafittql ciiriosity, .e.elaitried :r ' ("How. in tire' name: of wonder do yen. 1 eoant houses witty this ?'"fhlis miscon ) eeption,of meaning; We elm see - conlditot !-haVe taken pineo - lia.i the emphasis -been- I.rightly 'bestowed. To avetintulate..rnleis' i on the subject of ‘. emphasis', - we' consider. ' delusive and Miprotitable; as the.- cases ?- whlere_ the- rules hold good, are ottetrless numerous than 'the exeePtions: A "cele rafed Writer.luts - relit:lrked, that "env_ phasis and' iistOnntintr must be left ) entire``7= ' .1y- to' the "good sense eltd..feeling of tbe .. : reader, •i'• --- . "Uwe thoroughly Miderstand and feet ' what we have to utter,- and have our at-; tention concentrated upon it, weshall em , phasize better, than by attempting.to'fol low any rules or marks, dictated , by one writer, and perhaps contradicted by tufo- - them Boys at their play and sports, net , er rid to properly emphasize and make expressive theAtnignage to -each other.— And why? Simply because they express ' thoM,elyea- natttrallY, and are controlled by ni) arbitrary rules. ,Let 'those. whci auxiensto read well, study to know what they are to reel means, and their timtf . will he more prOlitably employed, than in ponderin7 Over marks and rules of • dispu ted application. If We-are to have better reading, or roders ; it 14 for the teacher,by his oral example, to instil into the minds of the young a realization of this'importe • ant fact. • It appears that i3r. 'Whately, in his . Treatise tin Rhetoric;:pointedly condemns - the artificial system of teaching elocution by marks and rules, as worse than' use lass: his objections have been disputed, • lint never answered. They-are, first : - That any fixedsystem mnskneeessarily be . imperfect; secondly,, that,lf it were per fect, it. would be a circuitous path to the: object in view; and, thirdly, that even if both these objections were removed, the . object would `riot be fully acquired. All t h at is:Decded . on'the part of-teachers,. to eflect-a:grent improvement in this highly useful Ad - important branch of - education,. is to have their pupils not only. fully en derstand -what they are reading, but also' have their minds 'earnestly occupied with the reaLsentiment it contains. If this is aceemplisbed, they will. be likely to 'read iii a correct style, and to read as . reading, they themselves_ understood ; what they„, were and would communicatr the same iml,res,don to theft hearers. 11T . trust that every teacher in the country will fh•ndv re;!ve to adopt measures to improve titelt• pupils in-this Much neglect ed: branch of study, even if the sugges- Ilona Wye thrown outdo nit suit them, fur all twist admit that-111f improvement , ' is pee led. Arid an improvement we ckrt, hate, it-the teachers will first - become pod readers thein!elves,- and then faithfully 'discharge their.duties to their pupils. ". The hisrdog story is of two dogs who fell to tightin , r• in a saw mill. littne course of tho tussle one of the dogs went plump against.. saw "in rapid motion, which cut him in two instanter. The4tind legrcran away,lint the fore legs continued to tight, ,and Whipped-the other dog:
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