The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, April 20, 1870, Image 1
, . . ~... . . ~, ;.;:,.,..'..',..,,,. i:- .::.'• - 7. .'IT. !• 1 4-1.31;:g ... ~ , `;'.11. 1 ..j2;.- W .- : ; i.Y. - , -.: ~. .) ".4,'..1.: , ;.:._;.":. _ . . - . . , . . . . .. . . -,..- . ~. , ~ , - , , —E—ELZAWLET, Proprietor. guinea ciao: E. McNamar.. C. C. FAlrecr, W. H. McCain laiLENZIE,...FACROT & CO. Dealers In Dry Goads, Clothing,' Ladles and Means One Shoes. &am ggenta for the great American Taa and Coffee Company . rtlontislie, Pa , at, 1;70, CHARLES N. STODDARD, Dealer in Boob and Shots, Hata and Caps. Leather and i Pindintlm. Main Street. ad door below Senrier Hotel. Work made to order. turd repairing done neatly. mares°. Jan. 1. 1870. LEWIS KNOLL, SHAVING AND HAIR DRESSING Shop In the new Portotnce bonding, where he will be fogad ready to attend all who may want ma7thing In Tals Ude. Illoutroae, Pa. Oct. 13, 1301. D. REYNOLDS, ArCTIONERR—taeIIo Dry Ganda, and Iderchanina—alao attend. at V.:lnduct. All order. kit at my boase will make prompt attantlast. [Oct. 1, ISGS—tf 0. M. HAWLEY, DEALER In DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, CROCKERY. Ilardwara„ Hank Caps, Boota.Slseea, Ready Made Cloth ing, Pawls, 011 a. ow.„ New MlRoad, Pa. !Sept S, `69. ' Da. S. W. DAYTON, KITSICIAN & BURGEON. tenders his services to the citizens of Great Bend and vitinlty, Office at his tealdenee, opposite Barnum bowie, Wt. Bend village. Sept. let, tee.— it LAW OFFICE. cilialtimints a MeCOLI.Cht, Attorneye and Conn- Italian at Las . Once In the Brick . Mock over the %MIL titlontrotLe :tog. 4, A. ezwinsns.u. . - .1. 11. MeCou.wa. A. At D. IL LATHROP, DEALERS itt Dry Goods. Groceries, crockery and glassware, table and pocket cntlerv. Paints. oils, dye stuffs. Bats. bouts and shoes, :sole leather. Perfumery de. Brick Block. adjoining the Bank. Montrose. —tf LATIZROP, - - • 8.11. Lautnor. A. 0. WARREN, ATTORI.MY A. LAW. Bounty, Back Pay. Pension, and Steen on Claims attended to. OM, fir nor below Boyd's Store, liontrrme, Pa. [Au, 1, 'O. WM. A. CROfiSIVION, dUaracy at Law, Montrose, Sopq'a Co. Pa.. tan be l'ossuluit alienator:Able business boars at the County Comm...osiers' Often. Montrose, Aug. 1. tend. W. W. WATSON. ATTORNRI" Err LAW, Montrnlke, Pa. Offer With L, F. Fitch. Oluntrose, 18(44. 111. C. neTTOI, Auctioneer, and Insurance Agent, ant ait. Friendsville, Pa. C. S. GILBERT, TY. Et. angl Ott Auotloaear. Great. Bend, Pa AIN I EL Y, .3N.1.014C0.111.42)C0r. Aug. 1, 180. • Address, Breeelyn, Pa .30/IN MOVES, F v 4 IIIONABLE T.UIOO. MantioPe. F.. Shot , 0 , ./ Chandler . . Store. AP "Herr filled in firm-rat. style. I..linitl): done on short notice. and nvorrantod to At. v. w. worm, c %BINE? AND CHAIII MANUF ACTU Saint L. Xoutrose, Pa. Jays. 1. M. BF RRIVT, DRALER in Staple arkd Fancy Dry Goody, Crocker) hardware, Iron, Stares, Dru Fa, 011a.and Paintr, Llootaartd Shoes. Rata & Capt.. Pura, Buffalo Thaw.: Grocerlea,Provisiorw.t..4., New Milford, Pa. OIL E. P. 1111111 ES. nse peralaneraik located at Priendavitie for the par pone otptacticing medicine and enrgery 1n all It. breaches. Re may be bound et the Jackson Rouse. Oghoe !morale.= Ba. m., to 8. p. m. Friendevlile, Pa.. Aug. 1. 1069. STUMM & BROWN. FIRM AND UPS 17717,1ANCR AGENTS. Al' businer• attended to lumpily,p on fair terror. Offire first door north of • Montrose Hotel," west side 0 , Public. Avenue. Montrose, Po. [Aug, 1. 11:01.. BiLLI2O. tiTitoCD, - CRABLXS L. 1t120.1. JOHN sAUVTEU, There are so very few of us here in Mar mora.t hat we take the greatest possible in terest in each other. Now, sometimes this is just the least bit disagreeable, as, for imitatice, when Mrs. Brown keeps stieh! a sharp lookout to see wheu I shake use breakfast table-cloth, or when Mrs. Jones' is able to tell. by frequent and close ob servations, precisely how much trimming I had on my new poplin dress. But then there is another side to the case, it is ex tremely nice to know that if my yeast jar ABEL TERRELL. gets low, probably Mrs. Brown s s is just Diumvg, t o D r am patent Medicines, chei.icau running over, and nothing will. delight Lipner*, Paints, Oils,Dgo Muffs. Vandshes, Win o the poor soul more than to let it flow ()ler Masa. Groceries, Glass Ware , Wall and Window Pa, igto . ne i zre, Lamosteprover.i.Mactitii7:ll., into mine, and can I ever forget with tir'unie...rsjcy ° ' 'CTZT,``.l:,c2iry. u Peg; •ac what tender and untiring love Mrs. Jones being tone of the most numerous. extensive, sad helped me watch over my little flock. valuable collet-Lions of Goods In Susquehanna Co.— Establiatied In Vas. [Montrose, Pa. when they had scarlet fever? All this by way of preparing you to un derstand what a thrill of excitement stirred all our bosoms, when Katie O'Brien. our good washerwoman, told us that at last the long looked fur "Tether" had come from the "ould country" saying that her money had safely reached its des tination, and her little Pat would set out for America as soon as company could be found with whom he could be trusted. DR. E. L. GAIIIDNEEL '.t. Now the war little Patrick O'Brien came to be left behind, in Ireland, when PRYSICIAN and SURGEON. Montrose. Pa. Gives especial attention to diseases of the Heart and his mother came to America, was just Lanza and all Surgical Maeases. OM= One( W B. , ,t I :8 `he { rasa poor widow with four Deans Boards at Searle's Rotel. [Aug. 1. Rsn. I children—the old- st ten and the youngest two years old—and she could only scrape , together money enough to pay her own passage. But she had a courageous heart, and was she not coming to the land of gold, where her stout arm could soon earn , enough to bring over all her children. So the children were scattered about with uncles and cousins—for the Irish will ever give each Offer a 'lift"—and Katie! , with her brave heart and strong arm, came to America, and, as it chanced, here to Marmon- This was a good many years ago, and women's wares were low ; a dollar a week was all Katie could earn at doing general housework, but it was saved. Ihe good woman for whom she worked, and others, who become interested in her. kept her scanty wardrobe supplied with cast.off garments;ofikeir.4Wn. . Katie was lade-, pendent vieugh naturally, and begging j she scorned, bat wfiat was offered now, sbe thankfully accepted. "It's all for the saki of the children, ma'am" she would say. So,''very tinm there was a remittance sent to old Ireland to help stippOit the children, and every fetr months a little more; and something was laid by every week;And counted tover'and over, till' at the end triti*r4 there Was entingh to send rfor'slitike,u the - oldest boy: He vitae ' in company with two emigrants, and had 8144# walcsuat flaw his good' =tiler you would have from: , littb, man, if the wain had liM its great bil- RffSPILVITI:LLY announces that he l• n,vr ota. pared 1,0, cut all kinds of Garment. In tLr moo, fashionable Style, warranted to at with eleilwOCr TS save. Shop orur the Post °Mee. Montropr, Pa Wilt. D. LIUSIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Montrose. Pa. Creme oppo. Mte the Yarbell Howse, near the Court Moos, Aug. 1. la69.—tf • DR. W. W. SMITH, DENTIST. Rooms over 3oyd Corwin's Hard vans Store. Office hours from 9a, at. to 4p. m liontrose, Aug. 1, 1869,—ti D. W. SEAULE, itTrOILVEY AT LAW. othce OVC/ the Store of A. Lathrop. to the Brick Block. Mont:oat, Pa. loul'ol DR. W. L. 11.1C111ARDSON, PHYSICIAN Es BURGEON, tender► his pnotessionnl wakes to the citizens of Montrose and vicinity.— Wane at hi. residence, on the corner as Sayer Bro. Foundry. (Aug. I, Inn Ti. BURNS dc NICROLS, DRAA e6RS In Drugv. Idetlidnea. Chemicals,Dye. 44216, Paiute, Otis, Votnieh, Liquors. Splriv. Fancy t - I .e.. Patent Xedielneo, Perin MC', and Toilet Ar ticles, O`t•reseriptlune carefully compounded.— untie Avenue, above Searle'. Rotel. Montro.e. l'a A. B. Bunn., Amos fitcaota. An. 1, 1869. DR. E. L. HANDIIICK, rrtasicuts £ SUMMON, r y tenders hi. professional services So thetisen of Friesideville and vicinity. llTOince intim office of Dr. Levt neard• at J. ilestertrs. Aug. 1.08.. e. PROF. MORRIS, The Hayti Barber. retains hls thanks lot the kinds:. rotate that has enabled biro to net the bent rest- ! hist 1 too , nt time to tell the whole stce7.lett me and see dn..roronseses 119 - et the Old Stand. No lend hatertag allowed in the shop. [nptil 13, Idttl. - - SOLDEERS' BOUNTY', PENSUYNS. and DACE PAT. Theoadersigned. LICENSED AGENT of the GOV. EithatiniT. harlot obtained the s.-- .iiudy forms, dt.4.ietli give prompt attention to an Claims inuon e o to hilcace. No charge oiliest oncoesofttl. „. • CEO. P. ILITIPLII. etontrovie. Janeeth. ISM. . DENTISTRY All those to want of Wee Teeth or other dental work should caUst the otter of the eutaerlbere, .who see pre paretto do sll kinds of work In their line on slicutoolate. Ps:Matta attention paid to outing Maui settee teeth on gold, ether, or alnattnaro plater • =al ll Weaten'aenst compostdou ; Metter latter mete:ok to an tit..r6seesper sabsianeer now toed for dental plates. natural The advantage of having work done by perrnanenttykr. rated and rreponslble parider, Intuit be apparent to an. ALI work-warranted. Pte call sod examine epee'. mean of plate work as oar dace, over Boyd& Coy bard. eseeetore. W. w. wars • Ak:arose. Act la, 1969.—t1 foefil Corner. The Fortune In the Daisy. Of whet are you dreaming, my pretty maid, With your feet in the summer clover Ah ! need not hang your modest head— ! know 'tis about your lover. I know by the blushes on your cheek, Though you strive to hide the token ; And I know because you will not speak The thought that is unspoken. You are counting the petals one by one, Of your dainty, dewy posies ; To find from your number, when 'tin done, The secret it discloses. You'd am if he waltz with gold and land The lover that is to woo you ; Or only brings his heart in his hand. For your heart and your hand to sue you. Beware, beware what you say sod do, Fair maid, with your feet in the clover; For the !mores! man that conies to woo May be the richest lover. Since not by outward shoe• or sign, Can you reckon worth'seue measure, Who only is rich in soul and mind, May offer the greatest treasure. AL! there never wax power in gems alone To bind a brow from aching ; Nor strength enough in a jeweled zone To hold a heart from breaking. Then be not catight by the sheen and glare or %; orkny «calUi and splendor; But speak hint soft, and speak hint fair, Whose hears is true and tender. You may wear your virtues as a crown As you walk through Mi. serenely, And grad your simple rustic gown With a grace far more than queenly. Though only one for you shall awe, one only speak your And you never wear in your shining hair A richer dower than daisies! —Orfand .Vonthly. A Glrrs Faith. No two above us waving Are finite alike in form and tine, No t» o flowers in equal measure 11.,1d the Itit,sing of the des% , Nothing is on earth repeated, All is special, till is new•. Su of all the host of lovent, Now and in the days if yore, Loving deeply, loving lightly, Loving less, or loving mow, None have loved—l bold it rennin— Quite as you and I before! Hearts have beat, but not as ours did When this hope upon u' broke All our former life mere araming, Till to consciunantc,s. we woke, In a wurldanew created By a little 'word puke. Not as ours ! for that was needed What behma's tons alone; Juf , l the years we too hare counted, Just the sorrows we have known, Just your mreng - ,th and jam, my weakness Love ! our love is all our own ! P, iocellantous. LITTLE PAT'S TRIP.-lIOWV RE CAME OVER TOE SEA. MONTROsE, Pa., WEDN:ESI)O, lows between you and her for two long well. "And now tell the lady," said ; now you'll not have to change agin shure,' years. Katie, proudly, "how you've come clear) Aesoott after I heard 'em holler Mermo- Mike was soon at work for a neighbor- , from Ireland all by yourself, and river t ra. Sure an' here 1 was, added Pat tri ing farmer, earning his own living, and gone out o' the way a bit, or lost a single nmpbantly, wid mother a ehokin' an' the once in a while bringing a half dollar or ' ' penny! Wasn't he a smart b'y,. and ve boys hollerin' and my cap rolling en quarter to add to the good mother's store. ever hear the likes of it?" To which I I der the oars, for I couldn't hold on to it Three years more of u nr e l e nting to il • warm ly a nswered Tea - and No! So, with when mother gripped me so and the cars brought over Tommy and Margaret, and the help of some questions, this was little ; screeched, and the eonducther sed, 'Good the mother's heart lacked but one thing Patrick's story : I bye, this is Marmots, Vermont, United more. "If litte Pat could only have come "When we were already to start from t States of America, Pat, and good luck to too!" And now she rented a little "shun- Limerick, my cousin he was sick wid a you r ty," and supported herself and the chit- fever, and he says, Yer mother'll be crazy i Here Katie made a sudden descent up dren by going out to do day's work. This if ye d o n't come, and if I wasn't afearcl, on him, and fairly lifted him off the floor, was about the time I came to Marmoru! I'd . better come right along by myself, au' i and felt very much as if somebody, or to live, and I soon found that Katie was l I wasn't : so he got a man to go on ship- something was choking me. Bat when one of our institutions. Her cheerful I board with me, and paytny passage mon- we were in talking condition again, I face and sturdy figure appeared on our ey, and he sewed the rest of my money t thought I would ask another question. domestic horizon, with the sun, once a into my cap, and sez he: 'Now, hold on t How did you , knoir your mother when week, as regular as the Sabbath. And to yer cap wherever yer go, and keep say- you saw her Patrick ?;" then how could any of us house-keepers I in' every day a hundred times, 'Marmora, 'Oct, faith and I didn't know herat have survived our biennial house-clean- Vermont, United States of Atnerica, that's it was she as )mowed me I' ings without Katie for an ally ? I rather t where I'm goin:' And the sailors said And then Katie brought out his cap think we, as a community, would have they'd be good to me, an' so they were; and exhibited, it proudly. It was a rough taken a notice of impending war, peeti- an' there was some of our countrymen on ! little home-made affair of very old fash `knee, or famine more coolly than an an- board, and they was good to me too, an' I ion, and much the worse fur wear. nooneement of Katie's departure. lint so we sailed away, au' the wind blew ' 'Och, I wouldn't sell it fur its weightily ; Katie am happy to say, was a stand by. every wa but the right way, an' some- gold and see, here is the five dollars he We changed scflool teachers every six thin'got to leakin'and we was ever so I had left, and it shall go to the blessed months, and our mini s ter about, (MIX a lung gittin across the sea, and at first I t Saints, ivory cint of it, and she crossed year, but. Katie, dear old soul, remained was eu ful sick. I u ishd." said Pat, with herself devoutly. Ab, whu can doubt her steadfast. Once, to be sure, she was sick a c,itnical look, "it had been the last part thank-offering was accepted by a higher with a fever, but all the old ladies in Mar- of our v'yage. for then it would a' saved power. morn combined together, and gave her any bein' so awful hungry, for we had at Brave and sensible, and shrewd little such powerful "hemlock sweats," and so last only a bit of hard 'bread and some' Patrick ! Hew many of our little Van many bowls full of ~herb tea." and she had taste water, tu. keep ours e l ves a li ve kee boys could have found their way us had such cheerful confidence about her aid: We immigrants all sl e pt in the far and as safely ?—Riverside .11 - agazute. own recover " God will r die i f boards nd - never let me , lu:castle, on boards, and sometimes it was and lave the childer," she said, that it wet, and sometimes cold, an' exit but we really was au incredibly short time hair,- was glad when we got into port!" she was around at her accustomed tasks What did you du when you got to Now again. It was more than two years after York, said 1. the children came before it was possible . "Well, then, Tim Larkin (he was my to get enough to send for little l'utrick, best friend among the sailors) he took me and then, alas! by some blunder or dis- aid him an' got me such an illegant male honesty, the money never reached its des- us I nicer tasted afore, an' thin he took tination ! But Katie aas not the one to me to a big house where lie said he an' I sit down and idly bewail misfortunes, it would bunk together that night, an' in was only the signal for fresh exertions. the mornin' early he would have to go Mike's wages, too, began now to amount out- way an' I another, so we slept there, t o something, and even little Margaret but Tim went out in the evenin' and got I could earn a trifle, and, above all, they all most dredful drunk, and early in the loved each other, and -pulled together." month'', when I tried to wake him up, I And now came the time when my story couldn't do it. at all, at all. So, thinks I begins. ' to myself, I'll just go an' find my own Katie carne running over one day with way, hut before I went I took his heavy another "tether." 0, these wonderful Irish hand, and sea I, good-bye, Tim Larkin, - lethem!" which those exchanging them an' ill net er forget you, never! Tim had can neither read or write, but which, some kept my cap lucked up ill his chest, when way, always go straight., and answer retry we were on shipboard. but now I held on purpose for ;illicit they are intended. tight to it myself, and nicer let go of it Welt, Katie's letter said little Patrick' our". would sail with a -cousin," they're all ; " Well, 1 went out in the great roarin' cousins in Ireland, I think-in the very city, and all 1 knew was I must go oil the , next vessel that left Limerick, but it eas cars, se, thinks I I'll nut ask\ anybody a ship , of course not a steamer, and so we Ii iv I. find the ears, except some pieta, mil make no exact calculations as to' decent looking woman. So I walked when the little fellow would he due. along, holding to my cap, and soon I SIM ' "Now, Katie," said I, banteringly, "you' a pleasant-lookin' young leddy a brushing won't know him/ when h e comes, he'll of some steps afore a shop ill and I hardly look as hedid when yen left him asked- her where the cars were that wo . -,ev e n veal's ago a little da - mriine of a take me to Marmorc., Vernmat, United Italw.” •States of A menea. And she called into . "An' sure. ma'am an' do ver think I the doer Johnny. Johnny, (some right wouldn't know the little etirl3 load of down. end go with 1164 fellow to the al ad him wherever I should see it, if it was son River Depot, And Johnny came and fifty years?" was Kate's assured reply, went wid toe, be teased me some about and I looked at a dear little curly Ii at my cap, and so on, but he was good, at my knee. mid thought I could hardly tier all, and I thanked him kindly. Make a mistake in its identity, while 1 "When the cars came thundering : Meng, ' had eyes left to discern anything, so didn't it skirted me sonic, lint Johnny helped : dispute Katie's assertion by word or look. me in, and sea lie. 'bond-bye to you and Of course we knew that Patrick could ver cap,' and I laughed, and sex I, good. not come that, week, or the next, but bye to you an' yer puny sister! and off somehow, every time the train cause, if we went. Then the. condnether (Johnny , we happened to be in the right place, we told me that wot they call the mavther just looked: .Marmors is such it filthe bit on the ears) he come Meng. and sez he to of a place as I said before, that we ran me, Ticket ! and sez I. Woes that? And each of us command a view of the whole sez he. well, yer money, and wid that I place, and everything that is going on, pulled off my cap mid began ripping as f rom our own w i n d ow , Well, w h en w e fast as I ',mid, and he took some, and he looked out we didn't see Pat, but we Werell heave me back some, and sez he. You'll sure to see Katie, generally bareheaded,. have to get out once before yer get theta% and with sleeves and dress pinned up in • and that at 1,!.ey.. And-we rode, and rode, her usual fashiou. eagerly manning the ; and I held on to my cap and watched for little group which always (-lusters around ; 'f'r'y, and sometimes I asked folks a (mes a country depot on the arrival of a train.: Lion about the way; and some was cross. Weeks slipped he, and still no little Pat-'1 and one leddy was-pie:dant, and told me rick appeared. Katie's good motherly , she'd tell mu when we got there, and she face begun to look sharp and anxious. and i did. Ansi all the folks went rushing out, we took to studying the papers, to see; and so did I. Some of 'em told me I'd what vessel arrived, and sometimes we; have to wait an hour ur two in rry, and couldn't help thinking of all that might' ; I Sat. ‘,il some steps and waited, and by happen, of shipwrecks and mishaps by ; and-by a gentleman came along, and I land and sea. Poor Katie counted her I Saw by the way he ordered the men he beads, and said Ave Marias, while we daily I was masther among 'em, and so I sea to commended the little wanderer to the care him, Will yen honor tell me when the of the good Father in Heaven. I had ears come that will take me to Mamoru, about given up keeping any watch at train V erniont, l'u'te. Slates of America? time. when, one day, just after the arrival And he answered me pleasant, and then of the evening train from Trey, it was sez he. I know the folks there, who are just in the edge of the summer twilight. yet- gain' to see? And I tould him it I heard a whoop and hallo at the dour, ens my mother, and her name was Katie land my Hurry burst open the door, how O'Brien. Harry does op e n doors! fell headlong in- "An' sure I know her sez be, 'she's done to the room, picked himself up again by my washing often, ramie round to my, titrnin„„e a somersault, swung his cap, lionse. - Se?: he. tun' gut something to eat, round his head, and this is what he said. I was meet dreadful hungry, an' first I verbatim : "0 mother look out o' the Pat . thought I'd go, an' dint, I tliuu,„cht maybe an' gee the window, and Katie's got him !" ' he'd rob me, ur muther me, for all he and with that he popped out again mid ; speke so fair; so sez I, - thank you kindly, shut the door, and 0, how Harry does; lett I guess I'd better stay right here. Au" shut doors! So 1 understood that Pat had i he looked at me, and sez he, "You're a really come, but I was stirring up bread, : bright 'tin?' and with that off he went. ! _ " Whv don't it e wh e 9" Mid I had to brush the flour off my hands, ! an' come back in a minit with an elegant . mid Harry had waked the baby, and I had ; pi..ce 'o bread au' butter, and a slice o'l said a close-fisted trad you tra dees to a friend the other day. The reply was character to take him up, so, by the time I reached cold mate! Q lint it was good, an' I was I ....1!, " You have never asked me to, sir. the window, I had what might be rolled hungry, an' I ittimbly sk a his pardon I a vanishing view of Katie logging sonic- for duubtiu' him; b ,, i a , 1.1",- said, ~,' antic. I g have looked all throne-1i the papers for thing . into her shanty door. But, dear mind it at all, mat all; att' he stayed bNyitcnee. i lin advertirment, and base never yet ere fcfund the sight of any. I never go wh - • me: if I stood still for ten minutes, I a bit till the cars tame: an' eelhe P ed me 1 1 t ''elit'-d. am no I shouldn't have Roll anything,for how in an' spoke to the canducther about me I -,-- - ---ce-ewies- - - can anybody see whose glad eyes are rain- au' not a bit o' pay did the conducther -A youth, repentant, but incoherent, ing down a - flood of sympathetic tears ? I take o' me: but he told me to look out over his dissipation, signed the following declare, my eyes are misty now, when l and be ready when he hollered 'Marmora' I pledge: I solemnly promise to abstain think of it. an' I just sat on the edge of the seat, i from the use of all mtoxicating beverages, "Mother," said Harry putting his head close to the door, an, it - cry time we came . otherwise , than as a drink, and profanity, it, again, "he came alone."to a town, I thought sure that was the ; unless prescribed by a physician, at leak "Well," said I, "probably his cousin has place, for '1 couldn't tell what they hod- t four times a day, excepting cider." lied to go in souse other direction, and so lered at all, but I wasn't sure, an' fwaited ! _. - -- --1..1w.-- -- sent him in some one's care." to see the conductor, and putty sown. we , But the next day I ran over to Katie's came to a place where they -The heart is six inches in length, four to rejoice with them that do rejoice, and some one hollered 'change cars, an' all I , Bt6 P,P OI . Lin fin diameter, and beats seventy times e minute, four thousand one hundred per to see the new American citizen. I found people run out ; but thinks I, it's nothing ! hour, one hutuired 'thousand eight bun- Katie trying to work as usual, but eri- to me, and I sot still. Putty soon a man den tly somewhat- -dated with - her greatl conies rtinuin' through, and sex be, I. died per day, and thity , seven million sev `w-Y en hundred and seventy thoiisand times joy. And such a sturdy, brave looking , don't yer get o P lf? An' sea I, I'm goin' to little fellow as Patrick was! To be sure, 1 Marmoro, Vermont, United States of' peryear. For a female heart in love, m ul the curly liead of , him was just a trifle America. An' sea he' git out thin, ( tiply by four. _,......_.„.....,....- reddish in hue, and his face was consider- or you'll nivergit to America ; this car's' MrThe following' conversation be. ably freckled, but he was bright eyed and gain t o stop. 'But, sez I. 'I shan ' t get out I tween a colored prisons -and a temper strong - . - limbed, and - I rent:lily appreciated till the condnether tells me.' An' wid 1 ancelectuter who !amine search of - facts Katie's pride in him, as she bade him that he took-hold o' my collar, eel held to fortify his yogi:whit and - ilittstrate his stand 9 and Mao a - bow to me, which on to my cap, wid one hand, an' 'fit wid,l subject, esplains itSelfr ''• '; .:: - - he did to true old- country style. Katie tether, andjist thin, cametha conducther; ,-' "Whatlirmight }ion - to-prison ; my &a= 'had got him ecrubbed and brushed. till he an' sea he, 'What's the row!'" au'-I,towld-1 orediritmd!! , ! :, . t 1 ,!: c , -, 1 r:"''' . '" ' suit of 'fairly shoneitind - ramyed in an outgrown him, an' he laughed, and ses..be, , 'ion* 7 "T*o COnitiblaWila" ' .:.' 'j. ~...''' '' ' ' '':' :Ml . Kall y'iv ‘ rhich hatt bOettirait- a 44 r ol fr tp,,e4-,44a4 may:;bei . ;Kit h '. ,J ayfitv tilt tatitaftrzhiulcitilit inebriae; it' viatrtilitiaktneiliitig; ited Wei Ife; leome along with Mel' -1- got out, anythideolity with ilif "'T —"j. - not quite broad enough, but it did 'very , an' he put me in another ear ;an sez he, . "Yes, lush ; day was bofe uv 'em drunk. U;E=3IUII Ei=MEE The Life of Iron A scientific paper,.discoursing on "The Life of an Iron Bridge." remarks:— It sounds a little oddly to hear of the life of an inanimate thing. But it seems to be pretty well settled, that things in animate, as well as animate, have life per iods, varying according to circumstances. Thus iron itself, when wrought into cer tain useful things, has a period beyond which it cannot Le said to have life suffi cient for the purpose fur which it was wrought. It is not simply liable to be used up by wear and tear ; but also to Jose its tenacity and elasticity, and to be disin tegrated and weakened—in short, to lose its life and become useless long before it is worn out, and even when not worn at all. For example, a wrought-iron girder-bridge can bear only a certain amount of daily use, without rapid depreciation of strength. It must hue.. aaneone of re-et from t.t ruin, just as an animal regnires rest, and its life depends an these. If subjected to a heavy strain, often repeated. with little inter vening rest, its life will be proportionate ly loss than it would be under other cir cumstances. The Engineer has gone into certain cal culations to show how long a Wrought iron bridge may be expected to lire tinder I •'yen circumstances. And it comes to the elusion that: such a bridge, subject at intervals to a dynamical load, nut (*Ted ing a fourth part of its powers of ultimate resistance—that is to say. not subjected t, this strain more than one hundred times in twenty-four hours—may be safe to trav el forhbont 828 years. But, as Many. of the hardest worked iron railroad bridges are subject to twice, or even thrice this number of daily strains, the conclusion reached is, that a girder-bridge cannot be safely counted on for more thou ahont one hundred : years. These calculations, if re liable—and we see why they may not Be— are very important tont] nsers snb ject to heavy strains. They tend to show hat a thing may be as strong us the best iron can snake it. and yet be subject to loss! of strength and life even without wear. ; - A Terrible Winter The winter of 1740 is described in an old book quoted by a German paper us very terrible. This work, "Brocke's Con tentment in God," thus awake of it : "An unheard of frost seized with extraordina ry severity on the world And elements, so that it is scarcely possible to number or relate the many strange occurrences that took place through its violence. Men felt so oppressed that days passed by u n heeded, One would, and could hardly speak"; one sat and thonght, yet could not think ; if any one spoke a word it was with a hard set face. Many hens and ducks, even the cattle in the stalls, died of cold ; the trees split asunder. Not only beer but wine in cellars froze. Deeply sunken wells were covered with impenetrable ice. Crows and other birds fell to the grunnd frown in their flight. No bread was eatable, for I it was as cokland hard as a stone." Brocke further relates that this extraordinary winter was follewed by an equally nneom mon spring. in May no sign of verdure was yet to he seen ; tt was still cold in Ju le. and vegetation was then still further hindered by drought. TT,c harvest was not over till late in the antumn, and by the middle of October the frost returned before the fruit in the gardens had time ' to ripen. _ ~:710() VarIii•;:NTIMBER-'. TO. R. E. LEE: An Interview with the Chieftain. David McCrea is furnishing the Was- , gow (Scotland) Herald with a series of in- 1 teresting sketches of American Men and women. He described his first interview with lien. Lee as follows: "When. I got back to the hotel I found that Lee s who was aware of my coming. had already (with 'the courtesy so eon spicuoas among a class of Americans) sent his servant to inquire if I had ar rived, and to say that he would like to see me at the College. "On going there after breakfast, I was I taken up stairs and shown into the room set aside for the use of the College Presi dent. "A noble-looking num, dressed in a gray military coat, who had been writing at a table near the window, rose as I en tered. lie was tall, straight and soldier like, with crisp hair turning white ; short trimmed beard, pointed at the chin, and dark imperial-looking eye:, very keen and searching. It was Robert E. Lee, the old Confederate commander. "As the first word of greeting passed between us, there was a hidden sadness in his look which impressed me painfully, lie was suffering from HI-health at the time; but it was not a look of physical pain. Perhaps it was only my feeling, but It seemed as if the shading of the past was over him—as if r•on could read be hind the vigilance of his dark eyes the fate of the South, and of the myriad who lay sleeping on the battle-fields. "When I was seated he began to in quire where I had liven iu the South, and about my journey up—smiling at the somewhat doleful account I had to give him of my experience in the stage from Goshen. He said there was another road I might hale taken—the one from Stan ton. "But they say whichever road you take, you wish 'by that you had taken the other." He had . been twice by the Goshen road on horseback. The scenery was very grand. ••fie began to speak about Scotland. and said.:—`You will meet with many of your countrymen here: The Valley - of Vir ginia is peopled with Stoteh-trish—peo ple who have coin, from Scotland hr way of Irn•land. They are a tine race. The'y have the conraae and determination of the tie,teh. with th.. Iti‘h dash and intre pidity. They make tine soldiers.' - Ile said it wqs an old wi:i of his to Visit this conolry : but it would never he realized now. l-4onewall Jackson bad been in Scotland before the war. Ite had heard him speuk of it. ••\l - hen sane reference was made to the odds against which the South had fought, and the want then• was of accurate sta tistics, I told him it was understood he was preparing a history of the war him- •1 have had that in - view: he said ; 'hut the time is not come for all impartial history. If the truth were told just now it would nut be credited:" `•When the books that had already ap peared-wefe spoken of, and I mentioned one. the proof-ebeet of which, it was as serted, had .been submitted to General Grant and himself for revision, he said : 'lt is a mistake. 1 hate utter read a his tory of the war, nor the biography of any man engaged in it,, . My ON% n life has been written, but I have nut looked into it.• lie added, after a pause, I do not. wish I. awaken memories of the past:" "lie spoke highly of Sticirman.,l at ili ties—said Sherman had always been a good soldier.'.' "IL/seemed much gratified when I told him of the estimatMn in which he and Stonewall J;u•kson bad Leen held from the first by the British people. irrespective altogether of Northern and Southern sympat hies. lie after a pause. •Jack sou lies in the Presbyterian burying ,round at the other extremity of Lex ington."' Hard of Hearing—A Love Story' A vottug Jonathan once courted the daughter of eu old Mall that lit et/ "down east," who professed 'to be deficient iu hearing, but, forsooth, who was more cap tious than limited in heariug, as the se quel will show. Tt was a stormy night in the Tiles of March if I mistulas not, when lightning met lightning, and bald peals of thunder answered thunder. that. jilnalhan .f ,, at by the old 111:111'S fireside discussing with the old lady (his intended mother-in-l: w) on the expediency of asking the old man's )011111ESSi011 to marry "Sid. - johnathan resolved to "piip IC to the old man the next day; "but," said he, "as I think on ; the task my heart shrinks. - To he brief, night passed, and by the dawn of anuth- 1 er day the old mat was to be found iu his, barn lot feeding Ifni pigs. Jonathan rose from bed early in the morning spied the , old man feeding his pigs and resolved to ask him for Sal. . _ Scarce had a minute elapsed, after.bm athan made his litst resiilation, ere he Ind the old 'man ••good morning." Now Jonathan's heart heat.; nomplitf Eeratehed his head, fund ever and anon- Oitve birth to a pensive yawn. Jonathan declared he'd as lief take thirty-nine "stripes" as to ask the old man, "but." said he aloud to him self. ••however - here goes it, "n faint heart never won a fair gal,'' and he addressed the old man thus— say, old man, 1 want to marry your dawrhter ' on want to borrow my halter. I would loan it to you, Jouuthau, but my son has titk , o it and gone off to the mill Jonathan,.patting his month close to the old maws . ear, and speaking in a deaf ening voice. "rye got five huuthed pounds of money." Old man, stepped back as if igreatly alarmed, and exclaimed in a voiceiof stir ' prise, "YOu have got five h undred pounds of honey. What in the mischief tan you do with so munh honey, Jonathan P, Why, it is more than all the nefghborlidod has use for." Jonathan, not yet the !idiot U ,des -pair, potting his mouth - to: the ", era :14D 4 8 ear "bmWled out; Vve ggdt gold." old 3fan-'So hate I, , lciiititV; and Vs the ever Wit wilt:wart ski:wet - 0, . By this time the old lady came up, and having observed Jonathan's unfortunate lack, she prat her month close to the old man's ear and screamed like s wounded Yahoo. "Daddy, I say, daddy, you don't under stand, he wants to marry your daughter." Old Man—"l told him our calf halter was gone. Old Lady—" Why, daddy, you can't un derstand ; he's got gold, he's rich I" , Old Man—" He's got a cold and the itch, eh!" So saying, the old man struck at Jonathan, with his walking cane,- but happily for Jonathan he dodged it Nor did the rage of the old man stop at this, but with angry countenance he made after Jonathan, who took to his heels, nor did Jonathan's luck stop here; he had not got far from the barnyard nor fat from the old man, he run him a close race, ere Jonathan stumped his toe and fell to the ground, and before the old man could "take np," he stumbled over Jon athan, and fell sprawling into a mudhole. Jonathan sprang to his heels, and with the speed of John Gilpin cleared himself. And poor Sal, she died a nun. Never had any husband. Proverbs of the Billings Family Don't swap with yer relashuns unless ye ken afford to give them the big end of the tnud. Murry yuug, and if circumstances re quire it, often. Don't take yer terbneker box out in kompany. If you kant git pal cloaths and edica t ion too, git the cloaths. Say how are ye l to everybody. ultivate modesty, but mind and keep a g-ud stock of impidence on hand. If you argy, never git beat. Bee charitable, the sent pieces writ Made on purpose. Don't take ennybody's advise but your owne. It costs more to borry than it due to boy. Ll' a man flatters 9n, you ken kalkillate that he hi a roge, or yure a fnle. Keep both rze open, don't cee morn half vuu notes, When yu pra, pra rite at the sentre of the mark. Dou't mortth Ow flesh to much, twant the sure , : un Laz...tras that sent him to livav in. If yon r fame, go inter a .grave yard and scratch yourself against a tune stun. 13e gars don't hay to advertise for nit a Log:, lon o trlane that has no twiny" and tis a pod mill that always due. Young man, be more amsns about the petligre vat going to leave, than ytt are ;Wont the non sum body is goin to lefty vu. "in ti, self snne, and sure to Nat i- nut r, tiatut alter the krook of a ,log's tale much, and presarre the tl. to 1111 the young men "go in,' and to all the old fellers " kum out." About as sure a wa to git rich as enny I no of, is to git inter tlet for a bondted thousand dollars, and then go to work and pa oph the dot, Filosopliers tell us that the world re , volN,s on it axes, and Josh Billings tells es that full half the folks on the artb think thu ur the axes. N. b.—thse ar proverbs hev stood for ni..r.“ a }ears, and hain't gin. out, \ et. Somnninbulhm. A farint.r residing in Bristol, Ogtario county. in this State, is a somnambulist. One jay while working in a field he lost un iron tooth from a harrow, with which he was putting in his wheat crop. He hunted an hour to find it, but was unsuc cessful. Dnring the ensiling night he rose from his bed, partially dressed himself and star ted out. The night was very dark;_ one of his boys followed him with a lantern. He kept up a running talk with himself about the " drag tooth." He Walked in a straight line to the field where he had been laboring, perhaps a quarter of a mile from his residence. Arriving at a certain point he stopped short, kicked away some earth, and brought forth the miss ing tooth ! Then turning square around he proceeded directly to his home. Arriving, at his axior Are performed the feat of lifting the heavy stone step, which required the combined strength-of himself and another man to raise the next morn ing. He threw the iron under the step, let down the stone easily, saying, " There you are, and can't get away again;" then coolly. and apparently without the least excitement, retired to his chamber, disrobed himself and went to bed. He was entirely unconscious the next morning of what he had been doing. • Now the question is, what peculiar power enabled the man to perform this wonderful feat ? It would seem little less than a miracle, but of its truth as related there is no doubt.-7'roy (N. Y.) Times. ng — lsahella Ingleton inherited an im mense incomprehensible idiosyncratic/11 imagination. To ignorant ignoramuses, and impertinent, impudent individuals Isabella Ingleton indifferently indicated ineffable indignation—and on the Illum inati, Isabella Ingleton invariably inflict ed her irresistable inestimable ithosynera,- ilea' imaginations. ;`,.:411A fool, says the Arab proverb,timy be known by six " Anger with , out cause, speech without profit, chargo without motive, inquiry without. object, putting trust in a stranger,and not know ing his friends from his foes. Pharity is friendship in common, and friendship is charity enclosed. RIT-A correspondent of the Maine Flo , mer haa.a zew use for cats. Ile says : " My way to cure a sulky steer that lays down when you first yoke him, is to take a cat and let her put her paws on the end of the steer's nom, and if necessary hold hold her rather lord. My word for it, he will he on his legs quick. It is better to endoursgs whet - is right gial:LAPTWiatimb,tisivrong. • 4:loniefenio carry be obtained by attention to frugality?