The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, November 02, 1870, Image 1

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• .; • v•ii ; • •• j. : • 171 ' ;
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.11,0 1 , ;1110 ,• I
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E. B. a ANTLET , Proprietor.
lusingos fads.
MIMES & BLAKESLEE,
il=rert ftenneellore Las. omee the nee
orriplel ty 8.8. & 0. P. Llttie. on Mato
street. Montrose. Ps. Moll ID.
M. L urea. azo.r. %mtg. I. L. asAiticual:
I. NoSaris. C. C F.ciarr, W. H. Itc/Cant.
ancILENZWE, FAUROT Etv€o‘
Dotter. In Dry Goods. Clothing. ladle end Dineen
gas Shoes %Inn. agent, for the crest merles..
Taa and Cone. Company rblort.onn .p
COARLES N. STODDARD,
Dealer In Dom P and Oho. •. Flats and Caps Lev h•ar .nd
Wadlngt, Vain Strret.beton Brarle.
Work 1124de Vi ord.• and repairing done neatly.
Ignotrose. Jan. I. IWO.
LEWIS KNOLL,
SHAVIWO AND RAID .DRESSINO.
mop tn the new Postnatal building. where e .111
be foand ready to attend all who may want anything
la Ilse. Montruee, Pa. Oct. I
P. REYNOLDS,
A1TC120112611-B.llaDry Goods.and If azettanize—also
Wanda at Vending. A ll orders Left at my bongs win
rash% prompt attentical. [Ocs. 1, 1210-41
0. M. 111AWLEY,
mum DRY Goons. asoccann3. atociienT.
utrihnirohn, ow, Boot...abet* noisy Madq
his,
-
he Maui, Otto, etc.,'Near Ulfford, Pa. [Sept 0.11.
DR. S. W. DAYTON,
MAN i SVROBON. tender. hie centres to
residecrp o p oe d ß a n rnumHo mide !
M,
BOanaMiaes
Bess Mt, Ida.- if
LAW OFFICE.
CRAIIIIIFRIAM • MoCOU.OII. atterneya and Conn.
Niters at Law. °flee In the 11,1 a Block taw W.
Plat. (Montrose
J. B. Ang. 4.
A. ClunialJA. . MC*antra.
A. & D. IL LATHROP,
DRALERS in Dry Goods. Groceries.
Cretketry and stemware, table and pocket eadrry.
Pilate. oil.. dye etude. Rate. horde and 'Mors. noir
Ratner. Perfumery dee. Brink Monk. n.13..111{11' the
Rent. Montrose. Angoet 11. 111811- tt
A. Lamar, • - • D. R. Warmer.
A. 0. WARREN,
ATTORNEY LAW. Bounty, Back Pay. Pellekm
and Ext. v Claim. attended to. bre ,
..or below Boyd's Store. Mantra. P.. [Au. 1, '6ll
W. W. WATSON.
ATTOWNICY ST LAW, Metrace, PA. Office with L
ff. TOW, (Montroe, Aug. 1.180.
N. C. MUTTON,
Auctioneer, and Insurance Agent,
mil 6ft Fig endsvillio. Ps.
C. S. GILBERT,
ALlaclacozweem - .
Grant 800/6 Pa
17. is.
011111 Ott
AMR ELY,,
V . . 191. .A.va.swelcr zi.e. co
us. 1, I. 444, ass, &scanty's, Ps.
JOHN GROVES,
p‘iIitCONABLE TAL Pa. Shop oval
Clasdlres St.*. Alt./Idell , OBE dla emt-rate *Lyle-
“ttu.e dolne on abort notice. sad warranted to fit.
W. W. SMITH,
.61NUT AND CLIAIN bIANIa At TI REhb - •
ul Nato street., Mentsvia. ?a 0 laos. 1. ISM
H. BIIIIRITT,
13111ALSii to Stapi• male .1 , 414.1.4 lbr) ,tecter
Ilarderens. (rue. Stoves. Dm ge. Ulle.an4 ?amt.
110insand Sbeee. Hate I Cape. Fur.. Made , . lint
(braorriet thweleielets New Milford. 1a
DR. QS. P. HINES,
ges paraeasently Fouled et Friend*, tie forth , p
puss Ot practiclag medicine and surge,' in all it
nranchse. Re aliq be 1-ond at the Jackson anilse
Odle@ bran from a m_ to 1p m.
Friecidevi Ile, Pa., sag, l tRa
STROUD & BROWN,
FIRM AND UPS AC".'ATS. AC
bantams stuoreled to promo iy, on fair terms. °flies
&sr 4.aor north of •al ware*. are.* aide
riolic Avenue. Montrose. P. [seg. 1.1901..
• ens/ruts L mein
JOHN ElitUTTElt,
ILICSPECTI,OI.LY announcer that ac IP a.or pr.
=to eat all binds of Garments Sr tbe zoos
suable Style. we:rotted vu et sr lib &cranc
ad sum. Shop over the Poat Woes nlootrose. Pa
WILL D. LIISEE,
iTTORTISY £T LAW. 111••otrose. 019 u of po
alUit.ths rarbell Haase. aear 'Da Court Cow.<
majr. 1. 11019.-41
DR. W. W. SMITH.
DENTIST. Rooms r.r B“yd Dar
WIMP Stirs. •Ofitc• boors (mu, 9a. ea. I. 4 p. se •
Nuntros, Aug. 1, tat—D
ABEL TURBELL,
D 'ALMS iu Musa. Patent Ytai. lava, la , tato.
Liquors. Paints. Wls,ur iino Varnishes, Win
Masa i/r.earies, Wm—. Wave, Wall and Wndt..
Pn.
par, Stoma ware. Lampe. Kerne/ere. 'Machinery
Trams.. Onus, Smtatioltlon. Colees, epecterie•
Smells% Fancy G..ovls. Jewelrr, Perfu e.—
being %Inv tette mast namerope. at/melee. and
!Valuable collation/. of Gouda in Cll.-
Slatabltzbed In 1/3411. (Illoatrooe, Pa.
D. W. SEARLE,
♦T'CORNET AT LAW °trice tb. Mort iro •
Lathrop, In the Brick Bloc*. 311 octcrou. Pn ['AIM
DW. W. L.
paysimmi & 9EMOVIN. trnderr bhp pre.ler..”
sardeer to the citizens of Montrose and wirinit).-
011roa at Ns residiruos, oaths corner etam of gavr A
Bros. Foundry. Lang. I. MIMI
DR. E. I. GAJEDNEII,
rIYSICIAI4 and SURGEON. Montrose. Pa. Gli.r
papacial attratoo to diseases of the Heart Oni
Lamp sad all Surgical diseases. Office over W. B.
Daao.a Hoards at Selarie . • Hotel. (Aug. 1. 'era
BURNS & NICHOLS,
DCA -119 to Drags. Medicines. Meade:els. Dye.
a: Oa. Palau, Oils, Painted. Liquo rs, spines. Panes
r r ms. Patent Medicines. Perfumery and Toilet Ar
*ems. cfr'Presmiptions earchilly meows:Laded--
Panne k• 511.11. share saaries liotrl. liontrare. Pr
11. divans. • Amos Mimosa
dog k,
DR. E. L. HANDRICK,
PHYSICIAN 4t SURGHON. respectful', tendert Ir
professional services to the ettlseo of Retet,4. ill.
sad rict firt7llllcd lathe Glace of Ir.
swards at S.uelty.
HOsford . s Aug. 1.1811
PROF. NORRIS,
The Hard Bather, alarms ht. Wake for the X=
ITTCMattis enabl d Waite gee the atop.
ber•ot rime to tmn the whole atom bet come
mad see for youterree Or et the Odd thand. No toad
laughing allowed In to. shop. Lapel) IL UM:
DENTISTRY.
in
d than Oi want of haze Teeth or other dental wort
ehoti eko Wiles of the eabscribeg who see pro
g=all lands of work In their Illieco shoot totem
tat= WA to making dallied
Rua of egg on gold, afteer. or alnothinto gate ; &i a m a
Westool neat cotopoeition t th e two latter fesellrah to to
eivet h fttiedobisper =balances now and far de s
ntal pietas.
oleggsgperione roglated, and clad topper le
amend dope.
TwiiimmapetWft_wolitemo pewilmtly kr:
aged sod tingoasible elan be t all.
All work wensoted. Plume call ere mato, to
roams
gene &Plats go* It oar office, over Boglik CV. hard
ware glare.
W. W. iparn IMOTHEIL
wows, Mg. a. len-0
GOLD JEWELRY.
• Now sal tage_apply.
AM rinutia.
Zortrase,
N. N. ram
turs gam.
- 'i.
SY I. V. ansovaissr.;
It pleased us well. whoa WeVere boys,
(And barfly thought 'twaa wrong.)
To boot and make onseemly eo as
'thereby to drown her song,.
For Margaret, they said,. was mad I
It made us laugh with glee.
The worn uld face, so hruwa, sad aad ;
The shrivelled lips to
Those Zips, we thought, were never red,
The cheeks u air as girls',
And th' hair beneath her cap we still
Was never worn in curb.
Mid Lbongb oft:times the
Grew awangelygralre and valise
Wbeneer be beard =Saki:While
With Jast,and inocidnridighi
We nothing cared ; behind our boot
We'd whisper, half in dread,
flow grand the bald old head would look,
Were he and Margaret wed I
A silent distant man was be,
Whose bosom seemed to bold
A troubled bout that would not be
Uplifted or consoled. '5.
Amazed, we stared with all our eyea,
The evening'that we met
The schoolmaster, so old and wise,
Walking with Diarg;szet. I
0, how we shouted, when, one morn,
As forth we went to play,
We saw the touch of the corn
Strung round ha head so gray I
It mattered not the fan we made—
She never/aid a word ;
And when, one day, we ail essayed
To steal her singing WA,
That trilled within its home made cage ;
We surely thought to see
The crasy woman in • mea—
lier eyes beseechingly _
awed into ours, and lined with clerk
• And, blnahing alidashamed, "
We dropprd the cage and ran with ream
While each the other blamed.
We bond to pinch the unripe unit
That grew behind her bonze,
And well our wanton minds 'Mould suit
To scare away her cow.—
Twc unclean, gaunt and famished Deana
That broused upon the brake
And weeds upon the road. What feasts,
We leered, their frames- would snake 1
Sometimes we used to hedge them la,
And each and all would try.
In some old battered cup of tin,
To milk, their udders dry.
The village butcher used to say—
And how it made us laugh—
A gale some day would blow away
Old Margaret's - cow like chaff!
Bat, eh I en:while our mirth wu turned
To sadness and dismay,
When from the schoolmaster we learned
That site had passed away ; •
That she had gone to mansions built
Nor planned by minds of men I
And then we knew how deep oar rah—
Bow wicked we had been.
I mind e'en now, although my hair
Has lost its golden brown,
How on my daces., then lamb and Lair,
The warm tears came wielding' dowla
When, in the schoolhouse, still u death,
We stood up in a row,
And beard,,the while with athlad breath,
The master's voice so low.
Re told as she bad gone from earth,
Wiere :tutu' would return ;
That she lad had another birth
Beyond the stars that burn.
And then, from next his heart, he took
A picture in a case,
And, one by one, he made as look
Upon the shadow-faros
A sweeter, dearer face than this,
We thought we'd never met ;
And when we raised' our eyes to his
With tears we saw them wet.
And straightway, then, our easy Wank
We knew not why, fell fast.
And some, grown wise beyond our yens,
Bb secret knew at last.
The are, he said—dear sehoolmaeter—
Within the cachet ea,
Was, years ago, the face of her—
Poor, crazy Margeret I
111 - ii i
—Cure for the ear-ache—get a pretty
girl to whisper in your ear, night and
morning.
—How to make diamond cement—buy
a good diamond, ring and give it to her.
—There's a blind carpenter out west.,
who, though he can,t see a peg, can saw a
tog.
—Some poor but pretty girls attract
lovers WOE . face ; aoute - plairrrtckuries
~ y the figure. ) . • - ~• :;-).,- \
—T4eiiithtutitaiie of Duulettltin)..
want. their. toot! Called " diti - lwafttre)l`
of the ansaltedtteael
—Otir—greatetlt-gla . r.y il*.t . tieUlt:tir.lin
never falting„tiukin runag everylim) 3ie
fall. . _ . . \ - ' ' ' •
—Whew—the , truth—ollbxds ,.. golme, it
ought to *lrina of the nidtitli as readily
as the air we exhale.
—An lowa woman advertises for a hus
band : "Money no object, but most be
bealtby and willing to work."
, man in Illinois, who was bitten by
a isttleimpace seventeen years ago, is
still taking whiskey in large quantities to
cure the tiite.
—lt is inspeetto rinebny Fortnate the
Witten of nente;'-beconiteia hereelf she
is nothing, but is sled by bedews.
MONTROSE, ,T.,4.%,,.,,,itEbN.VADAtt NOV. -2, -18741.-
. rlo
411 , 61b0ut SW?"
Residents of - die lowerßoki, about
a mile Mid if bid? 'Wit 'Ottietlieille r ,_have,
been considerably eicited fOr the pa 4 few
weeks by a ball , orate` 'wbiCh b 4 Peen_
seen at differenttitneaedf the {tight'''
in different loealities whithin • the '
.of half - a Mile. certain' i the,
neighborhood has been' scireitaticted
within the last , few' yegre by the 'visitation
of death k fink the 'mother; then a delight-
er, • the father and ' two remaining
daughers—the latterlying within, year
or so of one another—and all three of the
daughters taken in their young worium
hood loved_ byall for their gentle qualities
of heart. We would not ;pain,the re
maining members of the farnilylitts 're
ferred to byisrention or their afßintidn,
but for the purpose of giving to stipend
tion the Credit or a fair portion ti the
tales told, such as, that" one pers is
said to have seen a light in every:window
of the bowie 'on a certain night, and
another saw the light at another time,and
'approach the house and apparently cuter
at a window.
A young man, son of a well-known
gentleman who resides in the vicinity,
while driving along the 'road one evening,
saw this light , approaching in a 'direct
line toward him, but it disappeared when
within a few feet of him. This person
was thoroughly terrified, and drove Into
a neighbor's yard, hat findiug they had
retired for the night, put the whip to his
horse and went home, where he' arrived in
state of terror, and, le ft his h orsestan ding
at door for another member of the
Slimily to unhitch. This is bat an instance
of similar experience by several. It is
not a story told by children or, weak
minded grown persons alone, 'but , is
qualified by persons of mature age —not
by two or three, hat many —in whose
minds snprsition has never had on abid
ing place or even a temporary hold., It
is no trick of a mischieous person, as it
has been closely approached, and proved
to he simply a strange, wiered looking
light, coming and goingapporently at the
bid of some unseen power. Th , mglitfu'
and sensible persons hie astounded at
persons who have fated death tintiinch
ingly quail before it as it mintes Sbout the
highuay and over fields and fences.—
Go. AiKa Repubiican.
Tettlns Her innocence.
The following touching scene recently
occurred in a Parisian court of joptice:
A poor pale, wan seamstress was ar
raigned for theft. - She appeared at the
bar with a boy eleven or twelve mouths
old in her arms, her child. She went to
get some work one day, and sole tbr .e
coins of Mt each. The money was niist
ed soon after she left her employer, and is
serva.:l was sent her r •,,m m
The servant fonnd her ali to quit he.
rooms with the three gold e •dis hi•:
hind. She said to tie iiervsni, sins
going to carry :hem back to \ en." Nese
artless she was carried t • Th • C.,•: mi,sioti
er of Police, and he ordered her to t,
sent before the p lice for trial. , 'he
to.. poor to engage a lawy r, aid w n
asked by the judge what She Ila.l 1. - , say
for herself, she answered : day I
went to my employer's I earn d me c ...d
with me. * lt.was in my a rm; 1., n ow
I was not paying attention to
were several o:h-r gold c0,..s m the tutu
tlepiece, and unknown t. , it sir. •c -
ed out its , little hands and sett
ed the three pieces. wl,ich I did not o ,-
serv-,nntil I got home. la once pu. on
my bonnet, and was going batik to my
employer to return them when I was ar
rested.. This is the, s demo truth, as 1
hoe for heaven s mercy?'
The courtdid nt believe this story. They
upbraided the mother forhet impulene.
in end. avnring to palm off such a • manl
ier lie for the truth. They besought her
for her own sake to retract so a'lsured a
tale, for it could be of nueffect, but oblige
the court to sentence her to a mncli
severer punishment than they were dis
posed to inflict upon one so young evident- ,
ly steeped so deep in poverty. These ap
peals had no effect except to strengthen
the poor mother's pertinacious adherence
to her original story. As the firmness
was sustained by that look of innocence
which the most adroit criminal can never
counterfeit, the court were at some loss to
discover what decision justice demanded.
To relieve their embarrassment one ..t
the judges proposed to renew the scene'
described by the mother. The gold coins
were place on the clerk's table. The mo
ther was requested to assume the position
in which he said she stood at her. em
ployer's house. There was then a breath
ing in the court. The baby soon dis
covered the bright coin, eyed it fur a mo
ment, smiled and then stretched for its
tiny hands and clutched them in , its
fingers with a miser's eagerness. The
mother was acquitted.
Wbat a Woman Said.
"Isn't it too bad—long dresses seem to
be coming into fashion again I Not the
real long trains they used to wear, but
what are called idemi-trsine,' drugging
about two inches on the ground. Fug'
two or three years everybody haswytii
short dresses for walking, and 1 ilever
spoke to a single woman *at' didn't like
them, and rejoice to be delivered from
those troublesome, dirty. long trains. But
these demi-trains are worse than the old
ones. Those dragged so long on the
ground that only the under aide might
the dirt, and we used to line that side'
with leather—no not leather, but that
shiny glazed stuff they cover sofas with,
I forget its name —with that. or wiggin,
or some such star, so when you got home
from a walk the dirt could all be brushed
off from that, and the dress was fit to
wear again. But this demi-trains cover
the dress with dirt outside and in. Now
to-day I saw two tulles wearing them ;
One had on a blade SOY - dress with heavy .
Bounces half wij `to the. kneed , the
ilariee. trimmed-with Maid +tiled three
inches deep, obi litres et'elititnediiitel
The Ahem* , 14' Wait , treuidhiii;Prid
ewes wee s prefect little deed et duet
,'~v.r~L ~ [t7s'4
s ti r red lap about each of them lifi She
stalked, jakt raitioitsl ' I tellyoul Won't'
coins into i the fashlca as )(ink: as X "
cani
help it; ''Bien eve rybody dreasei one
'way' l id 'wornitti'grante to kittraht' itteiitlon 1
I A wake bhSelt 'enhsPic"ol M r Pi
ittitiOstilitifiebtoti — but nriresi t le, sty l e
hectriotit tinfientiLl won't ceinn'intii I r..
'T 'We'are`goiagtrork niithese risioarks
into att editorial'parawsph 'apd, take the . l
'e edit io obritlves, but we ' saw ' that .yo
'prio l iii to he ours,lves conversant Frith .
4 . , ,riggin'•and 'hissed vele,t" woOld Y)ripg_
down d F rision on our masenline head. ' So .
*e tell tlie tale is it was told to us. To'
be mire, we are probably only 'helping to
spread the fashion demon , ad.. But as a
champion or all the rights of women. we
cannot make•no appeal and protest against
tois freak af one of their tyi . ‘anta. Is it
not fair, we admit; - to ask any woman to
stay 'out of a 'fashion that has become
arniverisal. But 'canunt every sensible wo
man, by her ban action, help to prevent
an ugly, uncleatilylkshion'freim gaining
the nntvereality that makes it a law. ,
A as Story.
Dawn in Tuckahoe, there is a man
named Simpson,who has a flat 'roof un
his house coverd With tin. The rout gut
to leaking badly a few weeks ago, and
,it
happened to occur to Mr. Simpson ,that
it wriiild be a good thing to cover the
whole sterface with the material out of
Which concrete pavements are made,, "So
as to make her
. 01 tight and nice," said
Simptin. A man was accordingly engag
ed, and he corered the tin with concrete
to, the depth of three or four inches. The
curse of Tuckahoe is cats. In warm
weather millions of them assemble and
hold ratification meetings and rellearsa's
and Geneial Synods out in the back yards
and on the roof& In Tnekahoe lag July
the heat was unusually intense, and Mr.
Simpson was exceedingly ! annoyed by the
animated discussions of eats in the migh
borhood. The more he -shooed" them
and thing old boots at them, the more
they yelled. Night after night it continu
ed to grow more terrific, and day after
day Mrs. Sitpoto9 observed teat the mys
terious caterwauling cuutintied &Ira,: all
the honrs of da‘light. Simpm hadn't a
hoot-jack or a black i lig-brush or a run'
ingpin or a cohigne-bottle I. ft 4.,:t!.r,w at '
them. At last, otie moonlight mgir, t;:e•
up our •,.:ot to he so outnte4reons 'ha •:,11 p
,-oti arose fr his lad and !I.:term:ad tu,
ascertum what in the thu , der alr l'.is
growling meant anyhow! It appyart d
him that the noise rime (*ruin tln rte
the house. Re went up int- the gat; e:
and pat his head out of ,h,- rrap i. r.
There he found one hundred and I, I•.ei -
six cats stuck fat knee-deep in t e c
which had been softened by the
heat. 'Sume th.-,n had been there
days. The minute tr,ey chauLtiit stgti ut
Simps an the whore .•n hit 'r .
ninety six douldetl n.. -!,
'r hack lei e -ha! d •r • or,
to Ir. t A::: I.
Y , t. • .
-htt• k• , l
lat• d-•tttp- ti tt.,; ,
tiro. stttp• uld t - h n. •
son. who .4a , s . a ~1 n.:
thin , ,v th a Fran; n t.
a pa' tnlegf ram and it t , .;
t pr tee! s:m;a n t t
neat day the ;•::, - 1,111
h e ca T a w,re• dag 11, y
t.t uga •L.
, tay.• $,PO'll 4 71 Ill) , • .C 1
Vi.•M'd .nee. trt.t:t . •
nnle f d •1 1, t
up ..fr the, : vtd.‘r
t let I.im g a i d A .) ,1
mire h , St.rir ire a orpo' a *r •r vu
.
Vortaring Criminals in China
China evidently believes . that punish
ment should be deterrent ruttier than re- ,
formatory. The tat mail from that
country brings news of a fiendish ease: of
torture intl.cted upon a native of Foil.
chow, for the crime of kidnapping chil
dren. The poor wretch. we are told, was
exposed. by. the side ,i 1 th e s t,,, et in - a
wooden cage of such . a height that while
his head protruded through the top he
could just touch the bottom with his toes.
His hands were tied behind him, slid his
ankles were chained- t..ge h e r O n t he
first day of hi., impri-oitn.int he was- al
lowed to sit on a b•hir 1 place] across the
cage at the prop-r h-igot. but after the
first twenty-four hour- ibis wus: retitoved.
and he was then only supp ,, rted by his
n•-ck and t Sonic of the crowd who
surrounded him threw b u t of broken
,bricks into his caire, and watched with
jeirs his iiieffevtual attempts to place them
,under his feet, to relieve -the r frightful
istritih upon hip neck. His grtianings met
'wall no sympathy, and he •was deprived
,of all .fi od. In this state he was lett to
die.. Of course, the torture is long. or.
short according to the vitality of the
I,crimitial. I A week before this poor crea
ture suffered, s notorious thief bad been
subjected to, the same torture, in the
satne place, and bad heed six days in the
:cage, :
•
THE Titutiolt.--ITn Ind iarina a h nehand •
after a spree; was led home, by one or hi,
,frietids. who, aftei posing hirn safely on
'the door steps, rang the boll, and ,retrear.
ed soinewlitit deviously ,to the othrr _side
'of the street, to See if it wou'd he answer
s-d. Promptly the "p .rt" was "ouverted;
and the fund 'pause, who had waited up
this
her; traaht 4')deliand, tiebahl him in ttli
whq; iiralt i o , r. is thie,Yon
"Yes, my dear:" ,
"What in the world has kipi' vnikso P7 l
Beim out MI a 1141 e taro wiih'erboya,
my •
" Why, Water, yOtere intoxicated r
•'&dear; I estidate that's -&:).'; ,
"What oil earth mad}' ychlget eo tirneld
And atliy—ohcAoliy a 0 . ocinio to me
this dreiidfiiT state ?"'
"Beeatitte; my diritag,, a ll , , o er
•
places shnt up r
—One Zf am popnlar preiclittri says
have'ittne hope orjt wicked, man . ; nlen
derhnpenf
.# mean one.. wick ,, l * 4
may be'dmirtitea and !?E' koofilli' a i Pte-42-
eihdt. 'lhe4in Ciiot .to be
converted sit or sev e n tim% one right af,:'
tertheitithiCto' ver; awe aria
put Sill iquaity with bold wick:,
sti sae.
nlts:El3
--A deer dish-venison...
—Patt t ernwomem—the;milliners.
—Lone deli'diunon= 7 4 Buie throat.
—Always found wauting7-beggar.
'niaterial—Landode. ete#lt.
—Fast and louse—a XlIpAW4y 11008. •
• —Skylights—the nun, moot and stars.:
wi4tern settleFLlhe su at,OF,G-1
7 -Big bugs—the mam-math and behe
moth. ,; ' ' • '
--Steady work —Artilkipg 011 the iikht
-Moist amusement—a n divaF4inn,of wa
lady's sleeve link. -4 gentleman's
arm.
pitch battle-4 Eight between two
—Spirits of wine—after dinner excite
ment.
—Marine intelligence—moat of ,die war
—The needlewonian'a exclamation—
Ahem l
—Base coin—money placed in a tout
dation stone.
.—it turned out that a recent built
ruyt'iii only &seem were thirteep•hig and
little children his creditors let lumkeen
them.
—The attempt, says an exchange, to
start an asylum fur useless young men
failed, as no building could be constrnct
xd large enough. I ,
-The discovery of what is true, and
the practice of that which is good, are the
twu twist important objects of.i.hilosopy.
—The late James T. Brady once re-
Marked that his experience with clients
een%mced him that a man's wife was his
best lawyer. , •
—Read not to 'contradict and refite,
nor to believe and take for granted, nor
to talk and discourse, but to yr.f.:kin and
cut) bide r.
—Ralph Waldo Emerson is described
a. a,.. tali, rather slim, and shambling
ugure, with his sloping back eud
1116 crav4i. awry."
A rianantic young lady, one of the
en,iddy faintly, at Newport, thought that
1,, ,ul,-eia were were "about a hackle
berry atn-ad" of any thing she had seen
r411,-W nee.
A paprr tells of a note" diave, who
keeps ,t.he creek euricaintug his aecurities
pear the head of his bed, and Java awake
..; he.," them draw interest.
—Some ,11-hred fellow has found out
ha. hushat.ds are like dough, because
HU ad them. May not this erplain
41k , 'tit, ar• so many crusty fellirws ?
Nf..chigan censustaker camesicross
: ,`• h., had been married five years,
-ir ni•ver inquired his wife's aria
s H always called her " Say."
—ln Wyoming territory a wife beat - her
~n,nrinl in a nomination for a local of
,t• .ud they went home perfectly Sabi
office was to remain in the'
isuiliy.
- A not”rions - sharper having'bserved
ha' there was no knowing one's friends.
ull they were triad, was askial if most of
hrF , fri nds had been tried.
—A Miss Lucy Lee advertises in a Alia
si,sippi paper that she is of good oath
anti edlicittaon, and is willing to mar iy
editor, believing herself able ,-to support
o.ue.
. —The influence of a•pione examiile de
seen& downward from a head of a fami
ly. &Mises itself over the main body tal
it reaches the rery.lowest of it.
—The temperance people of Marquette
County, Wise() propose to. publish
the name of every MBO who gets drunk,
where be , got his liquor; and what he said
and did While drunk, &o.
—Here is 'a matrimonial advertisement
mit from an exchange: " A young lady of
n teel exterior and pleasant apptUrance
wishes to marry a gentleman of just the
same way or thinking!'
—A young lady of Richmond was so de
erinim-d on suicide that she bit off the
tube of the stotnach pump and swallowed
t when the doctor attempted to relieve
ler of the laudanum she had taken.
-- Habit is like the dropping of water
upon a rock -it wears into the life, and
the marks it tilakes can never be effaced
without the chibel of self denial and the
hammer of self discipline.
—False happiness renders men stevn
and proud, and that happiness is never
isommunicated. True happiness readers
them kind and sensible, arid that happi
ness is always shared.
- . --Wisdom does not show itself so much
in precept ap in life—in.a. firmness . of• Ole
mind and a mastery of the appetite:, It
teaches us to du aa well, as to talk, and to
make our actions and werds all of &color,
—Satire is e sort of aglass, wherein'be
h..lders' generally discover everybOdy's
lace but their own, Which is the chief
reason for that kind of reception it meets
in the world; and that so veil few are of
fended with ft
Co orodo boll whacker, with his
arm .in a „sling, explained that a comrade
Byer los ,coffee pot, and, when he
remonstraiedd put a bullet through hie fin.
But he'a gone where be won't kick any
,more coffee, pots," he added. . . .
—The most fashiOnebhcmithiages now 1
a days are the simplest. Several have oc
curred lately in which-there were neither
bridesTaid or, roomsman n cards, reoep
tioni. 'or di41 . g14 .'P flit te'theltiost
sensible °tufoa ern tuna'''. ' ' '
_Nn old farmer tend to one of hhi sone
—"Boys, don't you ever i spekelati, or
Fait for.somrhiw.to torn up. Yeti might
lustwa well go andiit down on a stone is
,thelniddlustf.k madder; with: - a taill ba;
tween your tege, and waft'fdr'lrceoeto
beak up to you to be milked."
VOLUME XXVII, NUMBER 43.
& -Wirt
A clever arid genialwriter.in the -Mich
iyalit.Pieentwon gives
sketh'tiii in incident nea,umng dor
nig a ddasimio excursion the Miskissip-
Fus. which. (10•31 ,and chivalrous -IChight
remplarship sl onel Bawd from proving fa--
tally disastrous., , „ „ 1 .
It was a inagniticerit sight tq j ar „our
immense boat aceontpihied b tbe Lay
Gay and the. Belle of Alton, their 'dicks
crowned. isjth i ,fair ladies , and- illtriglits
Templar,bands of. .music, distinguished
'citizens, and invited pone, a 9 they steam
ed up the Mississippi, then dawn to Jef
ferson Barracks, where We again went on'
shore to spend a pleasant 'hour, after
which wo,again went on board and steam-
I ect merrily . up the river.
" I was litindiiik near the 'captain, The
conmiender of tbe Tem pier's' came and
leaned wearily ow the' captain.' I taxied
to Reuben Milton.and whispered in his
ear, these words: . "That,man-. was born
to command,", bad the form of a
Hercules, the bead Of in Apnlln, end the
eye of an eagle, iind as cirmimstances af
terwards demonstrated, the heart of a
lion. Although not so very large, he ap
feered Larger than be re,ally was ; : be
ull ind'atble'lie„ and still every, propor
tion ails a symmetry, and every move
ment a grace,
While he.waa.still leaning silontiv --on
the captain, and while I was •yet analys
ing his fine coup,teDituse t t h e captain of
the steamer with pale him and bleached
cheeks, approached the young Templar,
and in a low..tone and trembling itice,
said:
"9 '
"(treat Goal sir , we are shaking. We
are snagged,,Sir„ in the liottom,and noth
ing can save t i e.
"How long can' you keep her afloat ?"
carelessly inquired the young Templar.
"She may.go down in five minutes; she
cannot keep afloat more than fifteen," re
plied the captain. „
"Do not Make your situation known-to
any one except our creW; or we tl - }l hay'
a panic, and then all will be lost tifignal
the Lsdy Gay to heave.to ; none will. no
tice or undeisfarid the signal, of distress.
Get your' crud and bands ready to move, , I
will managelbe rest"
"Blow, Warder, blow?' said the yonhg
Templar, speaking- to his ensign: -who
stood 'neer bim, at the same time 1-upiu r
upon capstan. Every one was artlec
by a sbrrll blast from the Warder's 'rum
pet. A hundred Templar's swords leaped
from their scabbards at theAblast.
Attention, Sir Knights I? shouted ;the
commander. "The next ceremony ip the
proltaminne is for the Sir Knighta,iadies
and gentlemen on this boat to ,matte a.
visit to our friends on board the tidy
Gay. As the atetimers are rapidly ap
proaching each other, and cannot be kept
but a minute or two together, the move
ment must - be a rapid. one. Aron wiil
form procession at once, as the boats come
together' pass over the' gangway under an
arch of steel, to the lower deck of the Lti
day Gay. Forward, lair Knights, to the
gangway. 1 Music in front. The band
will play, 'The Kni.ght Templar Quick
step."'
In olieliience ''YS• l lll',:We 'Orders, the
Knights formed a doable line to the
gangway, facing round, with swords
crossed above the heads of those forming
the procession. In less than eight. Nuin n
u kes the whole precious cargo: of human
had passed from the 'Mississippi to the
I4dy Gay,-creirto the colored - cook, ex
cept that WO fileaof TeMplars, whenthe
yang commander •stntieredrf "'Fenn the
rear, and left inward' Wheel, ittaittir and
tiling inward, the Templansi*Ully,ritiii;: i
ed over, the gangway to the' Gay,
the young commander being the hie td
leave. One minute More and the Idiss
iaaippi steantersanictethe bottodi.
A, Common Mistake.
Many s man seemstdregard the, house•
hold duties of the wife as not to be' com
pared fora moment with those which en=
gross his attention. He expects; it 'bad
ness has perplexed,or• made hint anxious,
to,have, his.. Wife's sympathy , when he
comes home at night, but never imagines
that during the day anything cola have
oecurred to trobble thatwile. He returns
from , his- workshop or countiai-rOom
soured perhaps, by some bad bargins, an
noyed by a stupid workman or unseason:
able employer, morose from some' 'ill-spo
ken word, and expects to be received with
smiles; it matters not how surly
. #oly lie
his looks, his.. wife innst , ibe in catinte
nance,,in a word, all sweetness ancl'amin:-
'bility. He may have no pleasaiit'Word,
may take his place moodily at MS :able,
but his wife's words most be affectionate,
and his wife's looks , full only of •gtadness.
_What, be thinks, has she to trouble `her?
And this when, the poor wife has through
a longand weary day hien , toiling~ With
family work and vexatious . card till her
head, Is aching and foot and 'hand and
heart are sore with the woriyirl'iie , " tea'
is dispatched, silently, very likely'' With
sombre ccnnplaints,over the' trials he' fins
during the day, or the badness "Of • the
times; and then the evening paper is ta
ken in hand and_pored over until the very
advertisementa,are devoured, or the read
er's fice la bowed upon the crumpled
page,in sleep. Or, it he, be not weary
enough for that,, be seizes histis hat, and
'rushes for the reading room, or more'
probably for the lounging-place 'where
such as he do congregate; tiler& with a
'fragment of segariti.his hand and his de
sultory talk fromlis lips, • be lingers till'
'the,nothe of .the,f.Plexing shutters warns
him to leave. napes borne again because
he can go nowitere-elce, ...Meanwhile the
wife has with 13eary heart and tiredretept
,got the little 'ones Into bed, and, as. best
the &W i lms tern away the long hours
of the AeOirigiii'silinde and ° loneliness.
Shotild a tbodght ot his selfish ,injustice
eroini the inind 2 ol i the husband, he respond
with'Of : r otireplar g eney, "L require • rek,u,
thin and inust-See my friends.", The night
41 witness of the same or greater lack . of
~yeopethy. „Perhaps the babel; not 'ace
44,17.1111M;POOlaCitsotinlill bilaineas
Matteryrat tho.pooi‘pale wife has
113.241 an3wittatingh the
40D6,41- • pitvforlt witbilidc.!tatia;
' ll ° orlbe - vieWalkorrtaltne.toznitist
..actebe disturber I ave known moles
husband provide a distant slaoling apart
'
knob, ,
it .., ~f) .v.~~t~
vent that he might not he diuttihed, end
he scoring in: , leaded J., Unooncionsness
11'bile iv„ fr aiklrires with•Sw.ollezveyee, and
=he 'that emus; refused_to.obey in iron
was walking to and' fin' with hie
Eugenle9alioalusnee.i"
A correspondent of the I .l.4tichkurg
Virginian 'blokes a recent' le ttkr 'inp4r
:ence to the Imperirl fatnily Fri4oe
!with-the followiogi very tieiliatitio aMtiref
the Empress, bitherto unpublished,, bat
for the exact truth of which bectinvotioh,
and the curiosity of which such, ;that
be relates it erielat the risk ionic im
putation of egotisirt:
In 1851 the uncle of the writer resided
as American Minister at ,Paris with a
large family around hip. At thtatial_Thre ap
peared in society there &genii de
Gar man, Conn tees of liftrtoo, a loVely Per
eon and an aristocratic name wearing her
I brilliant conquests inl that society; and
constituting her one of the, most Jealous
ladies in Paris. It was thought, end;. in
deed;freely remarked, Olt „her mother
vies more ambitions than Ilenielf;ihal, the
former designed for her some • great alli
ance, while Eugenie herself • appeared a
model of simple sinctifity—a girl Who
would chooie to consult her heart in any
matrimonial affair. ' Her sister hid lust
married the Duke of Alba and 'Berwick,
a lineal descendant of Janie II °England,
and the worthy, mother, Donna. Maria,
no doubt designed at least ari equal mat
rimonial destiny for iliePore beautiful of
her daughters:'"But theleart is not al
-1 ways to be controlled, evett"in the most
aristocratic life' or to yield to. its exactions
of convenience. , Eugenie lost here to a
doe-looking blonde Virginian, young
William C. Rives, son of the American
Minister. They were engaged to be mar
lied. But Aunt Judy Rives, a 'Virginian
matron very decided and angular in her
scruples, interferred , and broke off the
match ; the Countess was too "fast" for
her Virginia views of Society sobrieff.
The woman for whoin future bad rewir
ed so much escaped the licmpatatively
humble match that her heart had decided
upon the destiny of a quiet Virginian
housewife—to ascend" the throne efl • nce.
Alas, what other;kontrasbr. they. yet re
main for her! If an event bad been brd
ered differently ; if a prospective mother
in-law had proved complacent, the Em.-
press, the woman who his adorned the
throne of Fre.nee, and diaplayed `to the
world the charms of another Cleopatra,
might at this wowent be a quiet country
matron, living in a farm bongo pear Cob
ham Depot, county or Albemarle and
State of Virginia.
An account of the shocking treatment
of Cuban ladies by thi i Spaniards in Ha.'
vans appears !Et Oho World, correspond
ence from that city. On the 23d ult.,
twenty , prisoners, all Women and children
reached Havana by railway; and were led
from the depot to tht,Fimude Prison tin
der guard, and all tied, even children on
ly 5 and 6 years old being tightly pinion
ed by the arras. At the head of the sad
procession marched two handsome young
ladies of 18 year both; handcuffed; One
was the daughter-inAaw of Preshitmt,
er
ped,ea, the other the danghtei of ,Oenerai
Figlueredo, recently garroted.m ,Sautiago. ,
The ladies were all members' of the best
families on the island. As these udfortn=
nate creatureg passed thiough the streets,
the Spanish mob jtered..and threatened
them r and,in some ; instances ntternpted.
violence. Sach outrages as these onglit
to arouse the indignatehflif the ciyßitM
world.
Off — There is but a-tit-path of air and a
beat of the heart between this world and
the next.. And in the brief interval of a
painful and awful suspense, while we' feel
death is with us, that We 'are powerless,
and.be all powerful. and the last faint
pulsation here is but the prelude of ,end
leak life bereaftero i
re feel n the. midst of
stunning calamity about to befall its, that'
earth has no compensating gebd to -the.
severity of our loss. 'But .there is no grief
without some benefioent provisions to sof.
ten its intensities. When the good and.,
lovely die, the memory of, ,their good
deeds, like the monnbeanilinf the stormy
sea, lights np our darkened' hearts, and
lends to. the surroundings' a beauty so
sad, so sweet, that we would. net t if we
could dispel the darkness
.oat eratransas.
far Not long since, a young man was
called upon to make some remarks in a
Sabbath School, at. which' quite a largo
number of young ladies , and gentleman
were in attendance. After descanting
upon the importance of Sabbath Schools
in general and theonecessity of gathering
in the little ones to be taught, he naively
proposed that a "committee of young hr.
:dies andgentlemen be appointed to raise
children for the Sabbath School." Noho
'dy laughed in the rootri, but several eases
"of strangulation were. reported, and • one
of suffocation. Theineit morning sever
al of buttons, more or less, were
found on the floor.
Wstrrsn.—A Paris banker has devised
what he considered an igenioua measure
to prevent a defalcation :by his cashier.
•Re places an iron cage in front of his gate,
and insiata that the cashier Alia 6 be lock
ed in it, until his account, is verified at the
clthie Of the day. 1-.le htis as yet, found
only one Man willing to accept this con
dition.
naust enter the cage 8t.6 8. 133.;
antl_y9u will by liberated at 4 p, my
attar
your anew:int is Verificd ? ",iskid the banker
to a i applicant: -• • • •
"'Agreed," - • •-• •"' ''', • '
" You meat not leave: - dikrimihe day
under
pocket. " any pretense, L keep td .*:•• ay in my
•. , .
Aa right ; rut used . to Confineinent."
Where have you been ?" .
Irothe' penifeiathiry for the last 16
yerirse",l ; ~•• • , :
Q OA 41, 114 •
-;. l Tiete is ale t!fficiaoy in • calmmesa of
`irhich we are unaware. The eleucent
qJ
I tieroity, one iVhi6,lllWe PeOnliiirrYn eed •
I Warlingol7 .l re taios---'Efi--Itaaning a
medical &Mew.
=BIM
1=1E:192:11
Spanish ca Mty