, . , 1 - . ..; 'r! ,: , ,:'-' ';'''T:;;: , ..) . , , _ . . ~ _ . , ~ . t THE E. B. HAWLEY, Proprietor. §uointoo Cud% & BLAKESLEE, Attorneys In CommMors at LAW. Ofbee the one beretotoro occupied by LEL &O. P. Uwe. oe briln street, Montrose. Ps. lAprll 90. ts.' a. urns: am. r. crrrts. autumns. XCHkEWLIII. C. C. FAIMOT, W. H. IleCacao. McKEIVASIE, VALTROT & CO. Dealers In Dry Goode. Clothing, Ladles and Misses fine Shoes. also, agents for the great American Tea and Coffee Company. Montrose, Pa . sp. 1..70, CHARLES N. STODDARD, Dealer In Boole and Shoes. Data and Caps. Leather and Finding', %Into Street. ad donr bow Seskrle• Hotel. 'Work wade to order. and repairing el done neatly. • Montrose, Jan. I.IIWII. LEWIS KNOLL, BRAVING AND lIAIR DRESSING. Shop in the new PoototSoo building, where he will be round ready to attend all who mey want anything bobbin. blontrose, P. Oct. IS, P. REYNOLDS, ArCTIONE EII--Sella Dry Ocaida.. and Merchardze—aleo •rtenda nt Vendneit. All orders left at my house will receive prompt attention. [Oct. I. Isl39—tf 0. 113. HAWLEY, 'DEALER th DRY GOODS, OROCERIES. CROCKERY. Hardware. Hats. Capp, Booto.ShoeP, Rody Made Cloth Ina. Paints, Oils, etc., New Milford, Pa. 'Sept. DR: S. W. DAYTON, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. tenders his services to the either's of Great Bend and sit lofty. Office at hie residence, opposite Barnum House, Bend village. Sept list, ISO .—tl LAW OFFICE. CHAMBERLIN & ItcCOLLIIII. Attorneys and Conn. action at Law. °tavern the Brick Block over the Bank. (klontrore Ang.4. 186 1 . A. CnAiresuLui. . d. B. McComtrat. A. & D. R. LATIDROP, DEALERS in Dry Goods. Groceries, crockery and 'glassware, table and pocket cutlery. Paiute. oils, dye tariffs, Mat.. boots and Idiom colt. leather. Perrnmery de. Brick Block. adjoining the Bank, tiontroac. [Augnot it. - tr A. LATHROP, • • • D. R. Lituntor. A. 0. WARREN, ATTORNEY A. LAW. Bonnty, Reek Pay. Penekna. and Rem on Plalma attended to. °Mee 11 r nor below Boyd', Store, blontrore.Pa. [An. 1. W. W. WATSON, ATTORNEY lII' LAW, %Marmot. Pa. OfHee with L. P. Pitch. ploutrore, Ang..l, I&Z). N. C. SUTTON, Auctioneer, and Insurance Agent, Frlendeville, Pa. C. S. GILBERT, .111,..asetictaa.(34ar., Groat Bend, Pa 17. IEI. .., 1 ant : . .4.1111 I ELT, V. ES. ..9‘.1.1.01.11.022. 4 0.02 - . Aug. 1, 189. Mithess, Broutlyn, Ps JOHN GROVES, FASIIMNATILE TALI Ott, 'Montrose. in. Shan oVe! Calandler's Store. AI , ,• re.err , Oiled in first-raic ntyle. dune on chart DOM°. end W. W. SMITH, c tBINICT AND CHAIR IIANUF AC TURERS,— ul of MAID Street . Montroso, PA. Jong. I. MD. 11. BURRITT, DEMLlntin Staple and Fancy Dry Goods. Crockery Mardarare, Iron, Stoves, Dro _and Patois Roots and Shoes, flats & Caps. For., Buffalo Robes Groceries ,Proeislons, New Milford, Pa. DR. E. P. DINES, nos perotancotJy located at Friendeeltle for the pot =e:rptafie may I,:ci e loe tteing ledle!o d e a a t n t d he ou j rge . ry a l p n all tt, llouan Office boor. from 8 a. m., to 8. p. to. Prleodartlle, Pa., Ang, 1. 1869. WI ROIrD & 13110tr1i,' FIRE AND LIPS I'.IS7dA..CB ACRNTS. Al' business attended to promto Iy, on Tilt terms. Office first door north of *Montrose Rotel," west We s• Panne Avenue, Montrose, Pa. LAng..11.18119. Mouton htscorn„ Coale:me L. Moye. JOLLA! 'SAITIMIBR, REparedSPECTFULLY announces that be is ewer yes to eat all kinds of Garments In Me mos. ilasidonable Style. warranted to St with elegance nd ease. Shop over the Post Orrice. Montrose. Pa. WM. D. LUSK, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Montrose, Pit. Oflice oppo site the Mabel! House, neer the Court House. Aug. 1. DS. W. W.\IS2IITH, \ DENTIST. Rooms over Bel . & Corln's Itsrd ware Store- &Moe hours from a. ro. to tp. m. Montrose, Aug. 1, 1059.—tf . . . ABEL TERRE DEALER in Drugs, Patent Bea:lces, Chemicals Liqwors, Palate, Oila,Dye Stuff Varnishes, Win a Glass, Groceries, Glass Ware, Wall and Window Pa. per, Stone-ware, Lamps. Rowena, Machinery Of le Guns, Ammanftfoa, Knives. Spectacles Brashes, Feucy Goods. Jewelry, Perth ~ dc— being Tone uttbe most numerous, extensive, and ',liftable collections of Goods in Susquehanna Co.— Established In Montrose, Pa. IL W. SEARLE, ATM/MET AT LAW. office over the Store of A. Lathrop. Is Bar Brick Mock, Montrose, Ps. [ant'M DR. W. 'L. RICHARDSON, penninciAS taimagoS. tenders bts profersiotel services to the eitizens of Montrose' and afelnitl. Office st his rosidence, on the corner east of Sartre & Bros. Foundry. [Aug. 1, WM. DR. E. 1.. GARDNER, IPITYSICIAN and SOIGEON. Montrose. Pa. Glyes talgelal attention to diseases of the Bean and and all Semite diseases. Office oreeW. D. Dams Baud' at Searle's Motet. (Avg. t. 1869. RUBINS & NICII6 bit% t ABS in Drugs. Medicines. Cliata` _ /tats, Paints. Oils. Varnfah. Liquors. Rpti tr:_ctitti, Patent Medicines, Perfumery and Tattatitr illicles. 1111rPreaartptions carefully compounded.— Public Avenne.above .6earle's Rotel, Idontrore. Pa A. B. Bunt% • • • Amos litcnuts. An. Q. em®, DU. E. 1.. -11ANDIIICH, rairsiciAust S SIMGEOIL respectfully renders hi professional services to the citizen of Friendsville and vicinity. ifirollice Baku office of Dr. Lee , Boards at J. lloaford'a. Aug. I.lBiA. PROF. MORRIS. Tbe MOO Better, returns Ids thanks tor the kind t• eatulge that tuts enabktd %tate cet the beet I ' bat i Whit time - to tell the whole atom hat enme and seethe yomeverdP tairet the Old Stand. No load leaching allowed in the shop. [April th. DENTISTRY. All those in went of false Teat, or other dead Work should tall at the office of the rabstaibms. Who are pre pared to do all kinds of work in their Ilan on short notice. Particular titration paid to making fall end setts of teeth an gold, slicer, or aluminum plate ; *Cl a m Weston's east composition ; the two latter preferable to motet th4chettaer substances now need for dental plates. Teeth ofynangparsons regulated. and made togrow In anvil tame. The advantage of baring work done by permanently lo cated and rosponsible parties. must be apparent to all. All work warearted. Please call and examine speci mens ofplate work at our once, over Boyd& CO hard ware store. W. W. SMITH A 1180 TIM. Maatme. Aug. 18. 11369,-41' GOLD JEWELRY. A New.nd.huve supply, Kontroie, Nov. 24;1507. ABEL TLIpLELL. Notro Oar= What Makes u Man Not numenma yenris. — nor:lengthened Not pretty childrertnnd a wife, Not pins, and challis, and tncy rings, Not any such-like trumpery things; Nor pipe, cigar, ntrr boded wine, Nor liberty with kings to dine ; Nor coat, nor boots, nor yet a hat, A dandy vest. or trim cravat ; Nor houses, lands, nor golden ore, Nor all the world's wealth laid In store, Nor Mister, licvlcnd, Sir, nontiquire, With titles that the memory tire ; Not ancestry traced back to Will, Who Went from Normandy to kill; Not Latin, Greek, nor Hebrew lore, Nor thousand foltuttes rambled o'er ; Not Judge's mile, nor Mayor's mace, Nor awns that deck the royal thee, These all united, never can Avail to make a single man. A truthful soul, a loving mind, , Full of affection for its kind, A helper of the human rare, A soul of beauty and of grace; • A spirit firm, erect and ace, That never basely bends the knee; That will not beat a feather's weight Of slavery's chain, for small or greet ; That truly speaks.of God within, And never makes a league with sin, That snaps the fetters despots make, And loves the truth for its own'sake; That worships God aitd Him alone, And bows nowhere Met at his throne; That trembles at no tyrant's notiL A soul that fears no one but God, And thus can smile at curse and ban— That is the soul that makes a man. Green Apple's. Pull down the bough,-Bob I Isn't this fun Now give it a. shake, and—there goes one! Now put your thumb up to the other and see If it isn't as mellow as mellow can be. I know by the stripe It must be ripe! That's one apcace for yOu and me, Green, are they! Well; no matter for that, Sit down on the grass and we'll hare a chat; And I'll tell you what old Parson Bute Said, last Sunday, of unripe fruit. " Life," said he, , " In a beautiful tree, Huwcily laden with beautiful fruit_ " For the youth there'd love, just streaked with red, And groat joys hanging just over his head ;' Happiness, honor, and great estate, Fur tl.se who patiently work and wait Hlesswgs, elanu - Of every degree, Ripening early and ripening late. Take them in season, pluck and eat, And the fruit is wholeiome, the fruit is sweet But, oh, my friend r Here he gases rap On his desk, like a thunder clap, Ind made such a bang, Old Parson Lang Woke out of his Sunday nap. " Green fruit," he said, " Oixt would not hie, s But halflife,s sorrow and bitterness, . Half the evil, and ache, and crime, Came from tasting' before their time, The fruits Heaven sent" Mien on he went, To his fourthly and ftfthly—wasn't it prime!. But I say, Bob. we fellows don't care fio much for a mouthful of apple or purr : Bat what we like is the fun of the thing, When the fresh winds blow and the bartgbirds bring Home grubs and sing To their young once a-swing In their basket nest tied up'by its string. , I him apples in varinua ways ; They're first rate minded before the blaze Of a winteis fire ; and, oh, my eye', • Aren't they nice, though, made Into pies; t scarce ever elm One cooked or raw, That wasn't ftt, fora boy of my size But shake your fruit from the orchard tree, To the tune of the brook and the hum ofthe bee, And the chipmonk's chirping every minute, And the'elear, sweet •ndui of till gay little linnet And the grata and the Bowers And the kink arniirnel hours, And the flavor of sun and breeze are in it But this is a hard par! Why (Barn: we Leave them another week 011 the tree I Is germs nit bitter t ' Clive us a bite. The pulp is tough and the seeds are white, And the taste of it . puckers mouthatte a, sucker's ! I vow I believe the old, parsen wait right! VAPI, E IF R E! 4 * —The monograp FLO is,thelatest nov elty of the ladies. •' ( —ln New York - thirty tionsekeeVera , have united to iiiifiOrlChniese Servants. —They wear 'pink satin slippers to b rea kf as t, at Woga. —The Grecia&Bend is to be Succeeded by the 'Bogor' dEp,a port of limp witb one foot. A,New, Hareii 'editor recently wrote an ehdiorat.e.artiela about his " Alma 'Ma .ter," and wastsatounded to find it.appear, in the paper,na AlunrWriter." —Bessemer,,tbe steel man, is engaged en a desset , ' passengers in which- will be free frani ;statsml4tess. The entire cabin is to be movable; —German ladies propose, as the climax of self4acrifipe, 'abstinence from French fashions. • • —California ts shipping fruit east in care with rerolv.ing dogs m Boston. It acts orii•tV64lAnciple of Cuban gar rote. Meetings* caned in lowa counties to organize -ooni*ies fertbe •Janttise of defeating the 61Mcfitm - of taxeBlo.paythe interest on -bond& MONTROSE, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7, 1870. plocellantouo. now a Grumbler Was Cured A DOMESTIC SKETCH lIIMI Many a wife is grievonslY wounded by the constant and unnecessary fault-find ing of her husband over the food which she has prepared, often with direct refer once to his expressed predilections. Often time woman have been heard to declare that the first few years of bouselr6eping were made wretched by this. I have known a man to leave a fifth rate boarding-house, where soiled table cloths were the rule, and sloppy tea, tur bid coffee, and the inevitable "hash," were not the exception; and sitting opposite his young wife at their own table, mercil lessly stab her with unjust remarks upon -the well-cooked meal before him, just as if he were not voraciously devouring bet ter food than he had ever been accustom ed to. Perhaps this fanit-finding has the same effect upon the appetite as-a celebrated table-sauce has, for the habitual grumbler generally eats with a relish of the con demned dish, thereby giving the lie to his words. The following story contains its own moral:— " Mary, your corn bread is never done ; I wonder what is the reason everybody else has things right and we always have things wrong ?" " Why, Joe, I am sure the Corn bread has never been in this state before. You see the fire 'had a fit,' and couldn't be made to burn this morning." "0, yes, you are always ready with an excuse. Now, there is Mrs. Smith; her stove never has fits. And she always has the lightest, sweetest bread, and the nicest cake and preserves I ever ate. I wish you'd take pattern by her. " Well, I am sure, Joe, I do my best, and I think I succeed oftener than I fail. I wish I could suit you always; but that, suppose, can scarcely be espected," and Mary gave a weary sigh. Mary Starr had been married about a year, during which time she had found housekeeping rather up-hill wdrk. She was a neat little body, and conscientiously did her very best to please her husband ; but he, whatever might be the reason, was very hard to please—in fact, seemed determined not to be pleased with any thing she did. Perhaps, like the old sol diers in one of Dickens' stories, he had a vital and constant seas, that "ii scipline must be mamtainetl." At any rate, he never allowed Mary to be plea , ed with herself on any occasion, if he could help Mary was an amiable wife, fortunately, as al not ea.stly irritated ; though to ‘ll i the truth, there were tirne4 '" h— h ` . R. ''' . bearancc was severely tried. For instance , whenever she and Joe took tea out, or I went to a party; or .even to church, sel dom allowed the opportunity to pass un- embraced to animadvert upon some deli- ciency in cookery, or manners, of dress, ; on the part of his wife, :mil that in pub- ; lie. For instance. it would be— " Mrs. Jones. what beautiful sponge cake you make! Marv, take notice how light this cake is. I wonder why von can never have it so puffy. - Or. "'firs. 1 Brown con certainly are an adept at en- ; tertainiiq company. I wisfi Mary that ' you would try to. steal Mrs. Brown's - art: Or, "Mrs. Green; your dress is always most becoming your taste is exquisite. I don'tilee iihy it is, Mary; that with all I. , fipcnd for you, yob never can reach the piquant style of Mrs. Green." On these occasions Mary would blush and bite her lip, And be inwardly annoy ed. but she was a woman of too much pride and good sense to make a display of her chagrin ; and she was really too good- I natured and Christian a person to let it change her feelings towards' Joe, whom she knew Vibe, after all, very fond of her and a very just man at heart. After a while, too, seeing that the fault was prob ably curable, she bethought herself how she should proceed in order to brake him of his disagreeable habit. Fortune favored her. One day a lady, one of her most valbed friends and best neighbors, called to invite Joe and Mary to a tearrty, at her house. "It will be a small affair," said she, "but very pleasant, I think. Yon only are wanted to make the scale of harmony 1 complete." " Well," said Mary, "I will come, Mrs. Vane, on one condition." "Condition! Is it come to this,that you must make 'conditions? Well, my, dear Make your demand." " The condition is," said Marv, "that . yon will allow me to furnish all 'the re freshments." " Well, that is an odd idt. Mary. my dear, I hope you don't mean to insinuate that I am getting poor r • "No Hattie ; thank fortune, she has showed her favors upon you quite libentl- Cy. But I have a hotion for this, which if 'you please, I will'not divulge; only let me have my way this once, just for the oddity of the tiling," '" If any body but you, Mary, had •made such a request of . me. I certainly shieild have taken offence. But I.never could be angry with you. ;/So, if it Will be any sat .isfaction to you—though for the lite of me I can't imagine what your drift is— I will accept your conditions. When may I expect -my supplies ?" "Let me see; to-morrow is my baking day, and your tea-party isuot to be before Thursday. ,on Wednesday after nooon you shall Are supplied with bread, I biscut, cake, and all the other accessories; and mind, the only thing I allow yon to furnish is butter, which I do not make." "Very well; ies settled, then, and I I will leave you. On the whole, this ar- I rangement suits me; it relieves me of a great responsibility, for your cookery is well known to be particularly nice. So good-by till Thursday." " Mind yotriaY nothing about • this. Hattie. to an Otte • it is a secret of ,mine." " Very:well, as you say; I'll keep mum. Good:by again, for you will k have your I hOndsftill i atid must not intelrupt you." So off Mrs. Vane went, inwardly won deriut.Whitt'erochet demure little Mary hailgot into her steady little head. EverY thing came off on that baking day precisely as Mary could have wished it. Her bread was light and sweet, and white as a snow-Hake, with just a golden brown line of Crest surroundnig it; her cakes were perfeetiou ; her crullers crisp and delicioos. Then she knew that her preserved fruits were nice, and if ever :there was sponge cake more like solified froth she would like to see it. Every thing was sent into Mrs. Vane on Wed ensday after noon, and she had all Thurs day to devote to her dress. Mary looked' very pretty that night at the ten-party, for her eyes shone with a purpose, and she had just enough excite ment about it to redden her cheeks in a very becoming manner. Add to this that she was dressed. with neatness and taste, and you will not be unwilling to believe me when I say that she was quite th e belle of the occasion. Joe evidently thought so himself ; for, strange to say, ho made no remark on her appearance that night calculated to lower herself-esteem ; but, contrariwise, gazed at her from time to time with the most profound satisfac tion. But "murder will out." It came out on this occasion when they sat down to sup per. Every body was delighted; there had not. been such an uneseeptional"tea" in that neighborhood for a long time. Country people are very fond of their "teas," they compare one with another with admirable conatiosseurship. This one was a triumph. " Mrs. Vane, you are the protection of bread makers.. Your biseuts are quite beautiful. Were ever such crullers made? How do you manage it Mrs. Vane? What lovely sponge cake!" Mrs. Vane and Mary occasionally changed glances and smiled, but nobody noticed it. Joe had been behaving so beautifully all the evening, that Mary began to be afraid her plans had failed. He came out. now, however, greatly to her satisfaction. "This is a feast, indeed," he said. "A fellow is fortunate who has a wife that can make such bread as this, to say noth ing of the sponge cake. I can't see why it is Mary ; yon improve, it is true ; I give yon credit for that ; but I don't see how it is that all women cannot have the knack that Mrs. Vane has of cooking to perfection. If you could make such bread as this, Mary, your husband would be a happy man." Mrs. Vane looked at Mary, and Mary looked at Mrs. Vane. .Light had broken upon the mind of the latter. It broke like a flash of lighting, and then there was an explosion—not of thnntler,but of laughter. .Joe looked up amazed. He was a man who petted his dignity enormously. What did these women mean, to laugh so at a sober, sensible remark of his ? Particular ,: - Xca'ry mean to so trifle with the respect . Ile began to grow red indeed. Mrs. Vane saw it. presently, and came to his and Mary's relief; for poor Mary began to be a little frightened at the success of her scheme. She did m,t. like Joe to be angry at au v rate. gr. Starr," said Mrs. Vane, "I am truly glad you like this very excellent cookery, for it is all your wife's. By your own showing, .you ought to be a very hap py mall. - Here the whole company caught" the infection, and joined in the laugh against Joe. It was of no use to get angry with so mane people; so, before lung, Joe joined the chorus himself. And so the tea-party broke up with the greatest good•nature all round, and Joe went home with a lesson he never forgot; for it was the last time that Mary ever heard any more complaints from him. He is now the most easily pleased of any husband for ten tidies around. Them Good Old Daze. How I long (once in a while) for them good old daze. Them ,daze when thare was more fun for thirty cents than thare is now for sev en dollars and*a half. Them daze when a man married 145 lbs. of woman and less than 9 lbs. (awl told) of anything else. How I long for them good old daze when edekashun consisted in what men did well. Them daze when deacons were as aus tere as boss radish, and ministers preach ed to men's souls instead of their pocket. Them daze when polytics was the ex ception and honesty the rode. Them daze 'when lap dog; want known and when broWn bread and baked goose made a good dinner. Them daze when a man who wasn't bizzy was watched, and when . women spun yarn to knit stockings. How i do long for the good old daze when pow and then o gal baby was call ed Jerusha and a buy wasn't spil't if he was named Jerrunier. And ye who hare fethers and fuss of life, who hare codfish. of wealth without sense under yournose,cum beneath this tree and long for an hour with me far the good daze when men were ashamed to be fools and wirmniu were afraid to be flirts. ---Josh Billings. ~__~♦T Dorms SIN PAY ?-A little boy, to sell his paper Lold,a lie. The matter came up in the Sunday school. "Would you tell a lie for time cents?" asked a teacher of one of her boys. "No, ma'am," answered Dick, very de cidedly. "For ten faints?" "No, ma'am.'• "Fur a dollar ?" "No, ma'am." "For a thousand dollars?" . Dick was staggered. A thousand dol lars looked big. o,.woultlit not buy lots? While he was thinking, another boy roar ed out, "No, ma'am," behind him. "Why not ?' asked the teacher.. "Because, When the thousand dollars are all gone, Ond all the things they've got with them are gone too, the lie is there all the same,'. answered the boy. •It is so. A lie sticks. Everything else may be gone; but that is left, and you will have to - curry it round with you, whether you. ill or not; a hard, heavy load it is. . It Post us .sl.Q,ClOrto investigate Gen Howard's chinicter. Brief Summary —lnstead of hops at: the watering pla ces this season, there are so many-round dances that they are called " twists." It is very common to see a gentleman walk up to a lady, reach our his elbow, and say, Madam, will you favGr me with a twist?' And she twists. —The following ludicrous sentence is the result of a compositor's erroneous punctuation : " Caesar entered upon his head, his helmet upon his feet, armed sandals upon his, brows, a cloud in his right hand, his faithful sword in hi s eye, an angry glare." —You can't get along in this world with a homely wife. She'll spend half her time in looking in th© glass, and turn, and twist, and brush, and fix, till she gets completely vexed with her own ugliness, and she'll go right off and spank the ba by. —A green academy student, being re quired to write a composition in his regu lar course of study, commenced thus:— " It is rather difficult and pretty near im possible to communicate to others those ideas whereof we ourselves are not pos sessed. —Since the Ist of April 5,108 dogs have been killed in St. Louis, which, ac cording to estimates made, is about one fifth of the canine population-of thaLoity. —A New York tailor was startled the other day by the return of a bill which be had sent to a magazine editor, with a no tice that the manuscript was respectfully declined. —Mrs. Fillet, of Thomaiton, Me., a widow lady in a..tlepred state of mind, jumped otr the wharf a few nights since, on suicidal thoughts intent, but neglect ing to look iu the Almanac to see about the tide, landed in the mud, and was to cry lustily for help. —A young mother was exhibing with considerable pride to a number of admir ing friends, her first baby. Finally ap proaching little Dan, a lad of five years, the happy parent said, " Dan, isn't this a dear little baby ?" Dan hesitated a mo ment, turned up his eyes and answered " Yes, but it's bald headed." —The Laconia Democrat says that a couple recently married in Guilf;rd,N.H., after two week's experience of the sweets of matrimony have dissolved partnership without the intervention of a court. She said she wouldn't live with him, he said lie would give her a hundred dollars to quit. She took the greenbacks and went. —A pair of blue-b;rds have built their nest in a large gong used to warn passen gers of approaching trains at West Ches ter, Pa., and do not seem to mind the discordant noisea,a u,-,v —A Montreal woman thought she stood in urgent need of a change of hus bands, so she melted some spoons and tried to pour the hot metal into the ear of her lord, but as he was only shamming sleep, he knocked the metal all over the ceiling, and spread her nose 'over her face with his teeth. The injured lady is now in jail. —The latest style of :summer costume far ladies in Paris is the feather dress.— Ladies appear on the boulevard in short dresses, trimmed mini countlss rows of beautiful feathers. The head dress is a rarefallv arranged plume of ostrich feath ers, and the parasol is studded with little humming bird's; All that is wanting i to turn. the fair ladiJs into birds are a cou ple of geese wings. —The work of building the new inter national bridge across the Niagara river is being pushed forward by the contrac— tors us the circumstances will admit.— Three of the caissons have been sunk,and two abutments completed. Each caisson is tilled with rive feet of concrete, capped with blocks of stone, a ton iu weight. The mason work will rise above the water lev el to a height of 20 feet. —A preacher at Washala, Wisconsin. has been discharged for being personal to his hearers. Ile said' '- If you should take a barrel and till it with the Holy Ghost, and another and fill it with whis ky, and (hill this congregation up and let you take your choice, and the whisky would be gone first." —A bachelor in New York bad the blues, and applied to, a doctor for som e medicine. The doctor inquired into his case, and wrote a prescription in Latin, which the bachelor took to a drugstore. Translated; the prescription read, ",seven teen yards of silk with a WOlllllll in —The war is getting into everybody., Here is an oil region paper publishing no account of a prize tight. 'from which 'we extract the fallowing: •"Round 11—With prompt at the scratch and get-Jo wdrk. quickly. Tom lands a mftrailletise-in . Jim's mug, nearly closing his port peep er. Jim sent a chassepot back of i his op ponent's starbizird bather. Round 12— Jim's tong looked seAly.. his left Bis mark color," lie. —The female Pri qtiipals of the „,,,o-ratn mar schools Fit_Lims rave recentivitati their salaries' rniied frdm WOO fti g2OOO per annum by a resolution of the board of, education, making' thT salaries of princi 'pals of first class schools uniform. The female principals, two in tintifbet', have occnpied their positions sixteen years. .j,r'A lady from the country, who ha.s lately become a resident of the city, was very much troubled at her son's long ab sence from home the other evening. A neighbor calling,,suggested.that , her . boy had gone to see the elephant, "Alt!" said the mother, with a sigh of tsdief, "why didn't he tell me ?,J Iwo no objec tions to him seeing, thit clophari4 and (.didn't even know it was iu town." —For some years past, this country has eclipsed Russia in the wheat market of England. The United States now fur: nishes to the IT witAxt liing,itont inure than a third of its whore simply.. In ti‘e ears the increase anionnts t 6 123 'per cen.t "In ordhuirytimes," remarl4 Gold-, win Smitli,,"the income:4la is a taxon . honesty, a prem.;nmpa ilislioneity, n core ruptor of inptional,,and especially of nWroial, honor." 'These. are . ordinary, , . times. , VOLUME XXVII, NUMBEft,436. Two foletttres. There lives now - , in Coffee county, I Tennessee, an old man in his 86th year— Gen, Wm. Moore. He was with Gen. Jackson in the war of 1812—was with him in his Indian wars.. On one occasion, when Gen. Jackson called for one hund red young men to wade The river and join Gen. Coffee, Capt. Moore stepped out and walked down the lines and brought back his men who waded the river, though there was ice in it. At the battle of Tal adega he was wonnded in the ankle by a poisoned arrow. From his wound he has never recovered. The town of Hunts ville. Ala., would have been destroyed by the Indians but for the energy and bold ness of Moore. He was then living in Fayetteville, Tennessee. The morning alter he heard the Indians were marching on Huntsville he had raised one hundred and fifty men, and was on the march to meet the hostile foe. He met seven hund red Indians nt Ditto's landing and held them in check until Gen. Jackson came IT. In the late war he was a decided nion man until the fight commenced, and then the honest, faithful, brave old soldier went with his own country. He was the bearer of the vote of the secession of Tennessee to Richmond. This lost him his pension. There lives, now in New Orleans, another, soldier, not so old as the one who is noticed above, whose early history is less known. Now, however, he is well known throughout the Union. In the late struggle between the North and South, Gen. Longstreet was one of Gen. Lee's generals, in all his battles around Richmond. Thousands and ten thous ands of Federal soldiers lost their lives in their battles with Gen. Longstreet's Con federate command. General Longstreet with his arm} marched through East Tennessee. lie it was who besieged Knoxville. Who of the people of our section of the State will ever cease to re member Longstreet's march through the country' Ile was fighting for slavery— fighting for secession. For this, tit the close of the war Gen. Longstreet was re warded by Gen. Grant with the best office within his gift. Moore fought against, the Indians, fought against the British. and carried to Richmond the vote of Tennessee when she seceded. For this he lost his pension. Longstreet fought to maintain the in stitution of slavery, fought to sever the South from the North—fought to es tablish a Southern Confederacy. For this he won a support from the Union he attempted to destroy. It was a Mulical President and a Radi cal congress that lost Moore his pension. It was a Radical President and a Rath tAno.4 l.cb vt- I;. Rising In the World. You should bear constantly in mind that nine-tenths of us are, from the very nature and necessities of the world, born to earn our livelihood by the sweat of our brow. What reason have we then to presume that our children are not to do the same? If they be—as now and then one will be—endowed with extraordinary powers of mind,those powers may have an opportunity of developing themselyes ; and if they never have that opportunity, the harm is not very great to us dr to them. Nor does it hence follow that the descendants of laborers are always to be laborers. The path upwhrd is steep and long, to be sure. Industry, care, skill, ex cellence in the present parents lay the loundation of a rise under more favorable circumstances for the children. The children of these take another rise ; and by and by the descents of the present laborer becomes gentlemen. This is natural progress. y attempting to reach the top at a single leap that so much misery is produced in the world ; and the propriety to make such at tempts has been cherished and encourag ed by the strange projects that we have witnessed of late years for making the laborers virtuous and happy by giving them what is called education. The education we speak of consists in bringing up children to labor with steadi ness, with tare, and with skill; to show them how to do as many useful things as possible • to teach them how to do them all in the best manner • to set them an , example of industry, sobriety, cleanliness, and-neatness; to make all enese habitual to them, so that they shall never be liable to 'fall into the contrary Ipractices; to let them alWays see a gOod living proceeding from labor, and thus to remOve:from them the-temptation to get at the goods of others by violent or fraudulent means; and to-keep far from their minds all the inducement' to. hypoerisy and deceit s new style .of water-proof boots I has lately been brought out in Lynn. I The material is the ordinary lasting or ,serge.and in appearance exactly resetiv Ides the ordinary sere boot. Before making up, however, ;the serge, as well as the lining is impregnated with a.preparar thin ofpar.affin i e ? `Witrith.reuders the cloth ,impervetiV te` Wati.r, except whengreat ',effort is made ; to forte it through. When 'hpon the foot, this boot, it is Said,'Sheds the water peifettiv:! The proceeN which has been , patented, adds bat little to the ceSt 'of a' boot . and must,. lately increase its valde for winter . trear: • pr-That, man is'a bad preacher in the pulpit who is not a the world has a right to stand , op for God; if God has not adorn ed bin' with personal holiness. We should preach by .what . we arc as well as by what we say. "All those;' `said Lorenzi de Medici, "are dead for the'present life, whO do not hope for a Mare.' So trne is it, that a hope full ofitirinortality is the death of death. and the life of life. lit' who hath , I ii6t sinit a•hope, hath not known life. young female has been swindling the ladies living en York street, New Ha:- yen, by representing' herself as "the'ser vent girl from the neat deifir," and request ing the .loan of a quarter for her mistress. , In this way she heti'colleeted a large. sum of mousy. ,for the' ogs and Sit Afruk of a Laugh. 'BY A. Ai B. ft •,, ( "Please, Aunt Eleanor, I can't ao JO' said Normari.- klak.,.fr‘tho boysoopld laugh and tope me so ;,todeed I saanuo.'', "So my little nephew is afraid Of a laugh, is he?" asked - Mrs. Place, looking quietly at the boa by her side; Ito is go ing to be like the weather-vane, iS• ho? turning with every shade of public opin ion, afraid to do what is right'atid proper, because, forsooth,'sOfne of ConiPalitons may raise a laugh at his expense." Norman did not reply, and his aunt con tinued: "Let me tell . you, astorrof two boys I knew years ago. I will call them Moses and Giles,-lest you .shorild.reertznile the men before my story is begun. One of their playmates had received a box of valuable present's, and' in iinifation of his elders, thought he would treat all his young friends. His father furnished him with a decanter of reduced alcbol, (just right for boys, he said," a bowl of ango,r, several glasses and spoons. This Boy whose name was Silas, arranged 'them nicely on a table, feeling q'nite phind the display, and invited all in the village to come and take a drink., A large:num ber soon flocked around him, write elated at the prospect before them=free drinks and plenty of sugar. • 't Sitting at my window,•l heard Moses and Giles conversing. Neitheryrelished the idea much, but. Moses said. it would look odd not to go through the, motions. 'W needn't taste only the thilest drop, you know,' while Giles thonght . ' best to abstain from any appearance of evil-and not go near temptation. 'But everybody -will laugh at us, and say we're terrible afraid of becoming drunkards,' said Mos es. 'Let them laiagh,:theri,' replied Gilk 'lf "I never taste, I know I shall•nevet be one. Per -my part,' ho..continnedi "when I know a thing is right, ITnean to, i rlo : it, be the consequences . r what , they „may.' Poor Moses could not foTleiv 'Giles's ex ample, for he was brit one - to atriYaiiay, while dozens were going. I don't know as the villagers perceived any immediate ill effects from !Silas's treat, but Moses and Giles are now men, and which, Norman, think ,would prefer to he ?" , - • • "I don't know,"'Teplied ; 'Norman, "I don't know who they-are." ~ , " Very well. I can 4-11 you, then, .Yon remember the mall who lectured to I nt .so earnestly and eloonetilly the erier " Of course I d.e; papa said' he vitislhe richest man in: .13nford, and the most . vt , v.. so 1 . - ..t... - oN.:ACet • 410 1 1 , that cao be.,, But who.is tho other?" • Well. thr. other niaii,icpoor drunken Mills, who is so often 'semi staggering through our ;tre.et.' "Oh. I know him: some of' the' boys were hooting him yestenlay, .and ,be threatening to chastise them. I.cortidift help pitying . h " I es, he is truly an object of pit and has been so from his childhood, for Jik# a little boy I know now, he. dared not do what was right lest he should be laughed at" "Oh ! Amide, I won't lie atral,,of a latrgli•any longer, bdt go right about gotting'signers to the Tem penineeTledge, and.perhaps I'lliwin commission .etne of these days",— Young Peopfee Helper.. - Who.are your AT!l)clatesl' Allen Winfield lived nest door- to the school-house. So he used to .work inntil quarter of nine even morning, and - . then expeditiously changAl his - working garb for a neat schoOl-suif, Whibh' nitide him "I wouldn't be digging:-away there: so every morning," said.Llugh Rogers, as be lounged over gzi4en fence about eight o'clock. "I'm going 'to 'School 'to have some fun." • "The teachei-does not likerto have ns come much before school4irne," .said Al len "and I take more plmstre in seeing these things come on sO well inlhe . garden, than in a game of ball;even, though' I like that well enough, too." "• - I " Well, yon have u curious taste," 'said the lounger as he wintered .on,_ to join a company of like-nlindqd lads, who.,thougt play the main business of life. : 1 • Mothei was siiti; to call Allen at 'the moment lie desired. "Don't be late, Allen," she said,,glanc ing at the clock which said' one minute of nine. "Never fear, mother,' said thelad, fastening the last batt l ed Ortis "the teacher just passed. , • , I Will be. there a s soon as-lie," Antl.,giviug.hie,Mother a hasty good-bye kiss, he,,botinded ,dmv . n the steps, and in another minute was in his Seat, at school. - • • companions-were 'qttickly seen, let hint be.'where be would. ;!Theo, were always the best boys, und:bes4 l scholars in the school, no matter . whether they, wore broadcloth or homespnm 'A noble: heart ed mother hiid taught him frialhs-hhild hoed that charaCter, not , clothe, ma; • the standard by which to niensure people. No wberelmore.tlitin at t solioal is, the4ld adage true Jibed, ` ! girds of a, feather." At recess, you would Si.4"Alleri ne of ii knot of boys, who werd talking ' intelligently over cessions; or matters of .improvement, or joining heartily in ,bracing,i manly sports. • Hugh, just as regularly gravitat94.:to wards a very different . circle. Theyvi . ,,ero the tricky boys, those Who 'alway4- kept the teacher on :the alert, nipping iin::the bud their plans of mischief, or correcting them for misdemeanors. ,They get „little -profit out, of their ercelleht athiptages for obtaining nu ' Now, can not any /me' eaSilt o fhtioy the future history -of those -two boys.,, One sinking lower, and; timer) Jed , on ; by,evil niso , eiates into the rounds, of, ilisshrAtion, beginning at the drinking saloOn. other risingg to a . nObk'; presperons''Man hocid, intake the the responsible positions of honor in •sciciety.. . " He, that.walketh• with wise men , shall be,wise." A young man's, whole •Intnre life depeAds largely the ai4oo.lites. he chooses, ._ ~~ :~