. . .. „ . . . . . .__ .. .. , .. , . . . . _ ,_ •," ". ~. . . _ -, ..- ."•" ... . . , . , - ---,, i i r ,-: v • "-,..; ~. .., ..,,,..., . . . . . . „ . .. -- -. .. ~ .•,;.. ~... --, ', .. .-. .. '-..-,.: , "-- , .-- • <", ....-C . ' ? , . ~,.. . .„•,,, . , .....,...., ...,,.• :, .....,......:. .., , ~ • ~... . . . ......„..,... . .... ~ • .. _. . •.,,•........• . . . .. . . , ... . . .. . . ~ . _... ~. .. . ..... , E., B. HAWLEY,. Proprietor. - guoittoo:lo. .SMIPHAPJ & CASE. - saddle, Boom sun Trenktotkels. Bbop In Q. Rome Stare Bolllatorr, Brooklyn, ft.o* b Fogy ium4 Itettt, rude to order. - Brooklyn. Aril 3, 1612.—nr0 • !IL D. SMITIII • liming located at gartzpin Center. lasaantaetstrer clang' Dealer to Welt end Helm Hamann. Ceara. Maps, Trait* Saddteabe..hoplng,betrtet attention to bast. nen and fair dealing, to- baTa * 10=1 shun of patronage. )Laren 6, 187.3..n010-7m&' zooms a locums, DAL:IRS 'Dra, lEredlelnes; Cizemicals, s tas.Palots;o ll s. - Varnish , Liquors. Sploes.Faacy es, Meant Ilediclaes, Perfamensud Toilet/tr. tides. tirPreserlptions carefully compounded.— mek Block. Moutrpse, Pa. , A . 0. Bonne. Asios Feb. 91.1572. . . Dfl 11: A. LATIIV.OP. handl:asters Bizerte:. Ihuttutu, Flavin, at the Foot of Chestnut street. Call and eptienW In all • Chronic ieesios. hiontone. Jan. IL '7l.—tto3—tf.• . . I. 1. 8110 ENIAKEII.=% . - Attorney et law•, lloniroseiPa:: °Men mat dOnelielew the Tureen Itoure—Pnblle Avenue. • entreee., Jan. IT. 1879...n03-I,y. C. E. BALDWIN; ATTOMIT and Conessnonav Law, qevat Bend. Penn .ylvanta, dm, - • B. 1.. ISALDBIDI, Arms= er LAW. MOntrale, Pa 01115. asltli Same' E. earsaali. Esq. Mputrooe, AllgaSt 50, Int. LOOMIS & WM. Pusuoys at Lay, °Oleo IQa SSlELadottrauas Jaienne. wanton. Pa. PfACtlee In the several Courts of Lu. seas and Susquehanna Contains.. • F. E. Locals. Vt. D. law& scantly. Sept. fth.lB7l.—tf. • W. S. CROssmo7.o. Attorney . of Law, {Mike at tho Court Haw. In the Commtltteoefa °Mee. W A. Chasms. Montrose. Sept...4lh, 11321.—tt. McKsx. my. C.. C. Zarin, McKENZI6, & FAIIROT. Wen in Dig Goods. Clothing. Ladies a nd Mi sse s So. Shoe.. Mao, agents for the great, American tea and CoAce Company. [Montrose. ,ap. 1.10, DR. W. W. SUIT% --- Disrurr. Rooms at We dorelltna. *old tlefoh east of the Repetalete printing °face. °Mee hove trot! 9a. te. thee. et. Dlottttose.3b73.lBl/-41. THE BABITEII-11a2 8011. Charley le the barber. tibia can glare 'amebae ey 'M n order; Cow brown, black. and grizzle,' hate,in his ecimpa.t op rktalri, There you will 'and as,. neer aere'e owe. below alcHenales—)n=t peke door 4=o 7,1821.—tr C. maims. J. 113. &11.1111eCOLIAT31. Are. Mo morer' r..r L , eer Oat 10. en ce lB2l.rer 'l3ealt., Montrose ntrose May tt J. D. VAIL,_ floarararme Perneletale iarr.Scnotort. llaa permanently tooled hinnelltu Idonnotta, Pot lettere he will prompt- I) *newt to all nano In h4profeaaloa with which be may be fanned. °dice and naddenea an tut the Conn Hann nen Finn dc Wanton's caw. Ilontroon Febrodry RIMS. • L 1« OFFICE* PITCH tk wArsot:, Attnnoyt at Low, at the old office of Bentley d FiteS. Idontr.e. IP ram Ran. It. '71.1 w. w. warms. CHARLES N. STODDATID; Dealer in Boot. and - Shoo., finis Ana Cana. Leith.? and Findino, Slain Street, 1,1 door below Boyd's StOre. Work arida to order. and repairing done ; no:dlY. Iloutrose, Jan. 1, td7d. LEWIS KNOLL, STUMP - VD PAIR . 11,7""'" Shop In the rinciVatorate,hnllddint, liters ha will .e (nand ready trtnAtentlitO who my want, anythlng In hl.llne. Alordrose, rt. Oct. IE, MD. DR. S. W. DAYTON, P l Sm's!' ( - lAN t SURGEO. and bit verecee elecenc of Groat Bend anal aria Salty. Wilco at Me meeencc. oppontic Barnum Unit'. o\l:lead Tillage. i.pt. Irt, ti A. O. WARREN, ~ ATTORNEY .A, LAW. Bounty, Rack Pay. Peartcnt Loa Ezem on Mateo attcodod to. 01Roe sr war Del ow Dord's Store, Stentroae.Pa. tAn.7.YO n. C. scrroN, Auctioneer, and Insurance Agent, aut vetenavvie, re. C. S. GiLIMIT, Cr. - cesmaolticorLeole. • aigt ant • -Great. Bend. Ps. Affil'ELY, VT. F 3. 11.1.2A,I;Icazimo'gr - _ A. 1, tra. Mllresr„ Broaklltß.Tl6 . - • SOISN GROVES,- riirnoNADursTAnoit, Montrose, P. Shay over trundler's Stine. !Word= ik4th erst Ante coning dozs on abort notloo. end astritatodtals.: W. -W. 6311T11, CABINET AND OMB IIikIMACTRE II9 ,—Yoa r Mag atm; 26mxtrose. . /auto /./Mk STROUD 46-.D1WW2 1 , -. - ME AND Lin • 111534ANCE AGSM& AL bairlskenaUondrdtaprucoptly,orthat tams. OfLes Ir 4 door norr.b.of • AOLIMOSO Hotel; we alley , rablic Avenue, 3tanttoseS Ps. jAng.I.IBIZI., Duaisas Steam. PECUMVI L. Bloani. /MAL TVIIIRELti •• •. DILLER In Drags, Paten/ kedtaimpi iTheadcals Liquors, P4has, 0118,00 Gtaffs, Varatiliousjila w tilww, Groceries, Glass Ware, WallentrWilaGow Pas ye,Steue-ware, Lamps, lierosene, Mathias?, ODs, Trams, Gans Ammunition, Bth BPet Lida bashes, Fancy ' hoods , Jewelry, Perfa. Wang tout etas moat numerous. extmslie, tad saleable eelleonons of Goods In susquebanna Cite listablished 'in 1848. i r trionptmr.PS. • D. W. WAWA% • - TTOIVET AT LAW, omen over the" Store 01' A. Lathrop, to the Beek Clock, Moarroas, Pa. - (aura DEL W. L. lIICELAUDSON, ISYSICLAN iC aUIIGE.O3I. tenders Ills prcifessions lienicet to the citizens ofilontrose and stelnity.— Office at hisresidence, en the Cotner castor Saheb Dm, Fonary. • talig• /. / 612 . • MIMIC/AN and 8111143BON; Alantrose. Pa; Gives Lanes attention to Mamma of the Heart and Lanes sad all 3arecaldtreeeen. °Mee over W. B. DCIIIOI . Binrde at SeerWri Rawl. jan.1.1.80. H UNT BROT.ELERS,- • sczwrazi, P. vnuiews C BMA!' Du&AO* - HARDWARE, IRON; STEEL, , - NAILS, SPIKES, SAOVELS , .TJILDER'S HARDWARE * : - azzia Bdt4, caunzasmar ib 7a3il ARUM L'AILSOILD dr JUNLVO EIaTLIES. CABBIAOR BPS De SS . AXLES, SKEINS ANE BOXES, BOLTS, NI77S and. WAEUNS2 3 . zzarED BANDS. ILiL.W.SALL' • 180447 NUBS. SPoSES, - FELLOES, SEA T SPINDLES. Ealat a lL. a _ ANVILS, VICES, STOCKS and DIM Wu ILAILMERS, SLEDGES. FILES_ CIILLTIAR AND MILLSAWS, DRATING. FACMUTAS TACKLE BLOCKS, SLAN_TEW_,A223B - CEMENT. HAIR & GRMDST.B_ 117E2C11 WINDOW GL ASS. LEATHER & iffspl39B - ZAMBANZ's SCALES. '. frl4F9P.ALtreht4.lB33. • :17 , . mono NM - . • AnBol*lio4l . ZeiIIIPI=III3I, cum:tins sed aad padble Drive ' , Wheel. Id tto 9, iNitt iv.794WNqattenalPrawlata Nw4he Galas %le Sweat' Pletctlaati 1, held at pm, is MO. ..• _ Axil the Peardrylm i ts yerylepf eq. rryf.lqtate• are P. gd i P im= an e ill cf ttrectPaY alf pad at Rae aparadpa tau be thaaied %gently box Chigh iPted.lepao aildfrd &Pit; 10 0 3 0 MP , Ad' 114 ** awls to lad Odes had ildbytad paict=trtrti ll =d t ''d N bt the' atl on e t =hive la the world, pad 05 can dt ' 1- 5C4 P.:. attscsb taltahle mutt:titular. • _t 3 AME,BaSq• •••• • • - erry VIOLETS. Fatiest efliprinfs &r Children, Babes of the flowery year, Violets with dewqrprent eyes, • Deep - hued as midnight skies— • What b It ye do here ? Here, in the pent-up city t Far from your native dell, Where the finch her nest entwines, And through the budding pines, Fitibi March breezes swell in place of streaming sunshine, And free, bud-blowing air, Upon your beauty falls The shade of prisoning warbi, And gas-light's yellow glare. Through street and crowded alley; Your fresh.pluckcil buds are borne, Laden with pleasant tales Of woods and ancient vales,' , the *the sloe-thorm Ever amid the tumult . - Of traffic's ceaseless ham, Sweet as a babbling rill, Or a wild linnet's trill, YoUr guests of perfume come. Seem they like fairy vices, Those odortreighted Telling of vernal hours, And rain-drips in the flowers, liew•chaliced from the skies. And that taint floating fragrance, Like a low loving word, Stirs many a heart of care, As the passing air • NAIL= chords are stirred. The worn face of-the weaver, As be hurries to the loom, -- Grows brighter, while he stays Ilia weary glance to me Upon yonrpurplo bloom. The palo-browed seamstress pauses A moment, as she feels Within her room your scent, That from the road-way pent. Through her dull casement steals. To thousand.. thousand workers ' • In labor's serriediunks, Bright breezy thoughts ye bring, or meadows white with spring Green crofts and sunny banks! And therefore, Spring', fair children; Babes of the flowery year, Violets with the dew-spent eyes Deep hued at midnight skies— Thrice-welcomed ate Se herel • NORODVS DARLING.. Little and pallid, and poor and shy With a downcast look in her soft gray eye, No scornful toss of a queenly ham, But a drooping bend or the neck instead! No ringing laugh, and no dancing feet, No subtle wiles, and abandon sweet No Jewels costly, no garments fine— She Ls Nobody's Darling—but mine No "Dolly Varden" coquettish airs ; No high-heel boots to throw her down stairs; No yachtingjaeketand nautical style, With R sailors hat thatelfe calls her "tile." Bul'Lridy" Is stamped on her quiet brow; And she crept in my heart I can't tell how, Not made to dazzle not born to shine—. Nobody's—nobody's Darling—but minel No saucy, ravishing girlish grace, But a settled calm on the sweet pale &cc ; No sparkling chatter and repartee; Very silent and still is she. White and still Is my pearl of pearls, - Yet to me she seemeth the queen of girls; Why I love her I can't define., For she's nobody's—nobody's Darling—but mine. Were riches hers, or a beauty rare, She would lose her charm, become less fair; :Were rings to shine on those fingers small, They could not add to their grace at all. She would learn to smile end to speak by rule, In the foolish book of Dame Fashion's School And the world to spoil her would soon combine; Now she's-Nobody's Darling—bat wine t "Tia not for nxat to tam . Life Wet And sin is hero; Our age Is but Om iaUing of a leaf:- • .1. -A drooping tear. We tare not time to sport away the hours. All must be earnest in a wiattd likettnis. Not many lires,but orilj , one hare wo-. - Orte,,cutb , one_ Haw witted should that one lif ever be-- That narrow span! Day alter day Ailed up with blessed toil, llour afterbonistill bringing in new spoiL Our being is a shadow of thin air, • No vacant dream; Nor fable of the things that never were. But only seem. ?Tin till of meaning ns of watery, The' strange and solemn may that meanlngbe. Oar sorrows are no phaittonas OD the night. , No idle We; ' No eland that nests along a sky of light,. Orr suntatergale. They are the true realitiet of earth,' " Friends tunreemplutions mit hem eras tilith. guvittegi and Wititiono. Spit-ones" are' in fashion again. —Chiaar„o tuxes one cent on the dolhir. —Ono' of onr- exohanges speaks of .a new color, "burnt lore-letter tint." That will do. . • —An ohl 134,12 years of age, was de clared the hest dancer present at a recent Cincinnati balL —When a company respond to a • senti ment in -Nebraska, they giro hearty "three eheers, big inj n, elephan t and shanghai!" —An Indians girl who liad ben iiilted, bit off the thumb of her faithless lover. She evidently wished to secure as much of his band as possible. • • —There is Some difficulty in getting - a Competent court to _try Marshal - Bazaine for the eapitulatien of • Metz.' He can only tie tried by.bis peers, but nearly all the marshals o 4 France were - concerned in some 40h:dation or surrender during =The meanest maiiiiak. lonia lately packed hie wife off on e traltigoiog&ca4 .oa the pretence of aonoiripanying her, and then jumped off and lied to - parts unknown, because the partner of his joys and sorrows bad lost her comeliness by Tr The Portland Argustive that at -the R 9. pleating in Baited it One %Mani tpono v Vetel to exempt Ilom taxation for ktatM ei o .years the Property-or WV ecopeketivpirehivonld engage In mann hanging in sitirthO sPVIPeat-therelli ' t ttLa s'api 01 ' .810,000 Or jrre. • - MONTROSE, PA., - WEDNESDA.Ti. APRIL 17,:-1872: piscilhutrouo. Alba ReturnWs Yearlltiffoind now It Ileppillit Her a Busband. ' "I don't belieye Ketury would sell that critter for its weight in gold. It's a cosset broUght up on bream, I tell her, and see ing she's notional to keep her ciompany,it ain't a wonder she sets such store by what she's raised. That's just how the case stands, Lisher r ' The Man addressed as "Lieber," was leaning on a pair of bars that led into Miss Keturah's pasture, doing just what the - geridd hook commands nanot to do,viz: "Coveting his neighbor's possessions." "I jocks," said he, with hill gaze fixed on a pretty, frolicsome ' young animal, clean of limb and straight of back, with soft, bright eyes, like a girl's,"l wish I could contrive to got hold of hat Alder neyyearling :.there ain't another like her in'the country,MulTd be frilling to fork. down anything Ketury might ask." "You'd better not get your heart set on it," said his brother Jabez, in the tone of deliberate emphasis, common to him, "I do believe Ketury wonld almost as soon give you herself, as part with that year lin." Just then the graceful creature in the lot, with her white feet buried in rich feed, and a whisp of: gran dangling from her mouth, gave a little caper, and a frisk of the tail, as much as to say, "You'd better believe." Jabez, the _elder brother, moved out from theshade of the butternut tree, where the two men halted to look over thevail fence. "I musthe gettin g home," raid he, "or my old woman Frill scold about my keeping the table standing. You ain't got any wife, Usher, to fret if you don't come to time on meals." Jabez, a sturdy, bronzed farmer, went trudging his way homeward with his coat over his arm, and his checked shirt-sleeves, and the red flannel back to his vest show ing. Lisher, however, lingered in the road. He was,a-different build from his brother,- not sosquare and thick set, but taller, with cheeks hollowing in a little about the mouth, a bushy beard and kind grey eye.. He lingered behind, half mus ing on the words Jubez bad so carelessly spoken. '"t believe Ketury would almost as lieves give you herself." He knew'his brother meant nothing, but the words were sweet to him. It seemed as though he had needed:the assurance of their truth for a long time. I There, down the road, which wound a little, and clasped a thicket of trees in the crook of its arm, was the old red farm. house where Keturah lived. It was a homely place,and no effort bad been made to fix it up; but its air of snugness sug gested comfort and good cheer. The sheds and ont-honses straggled to the barn, or else the barn straggled to the sheds.— There was plenty-of shado.from the cher ry 'and apple trees, where robins and thrushes nestled. The old eaves were swallow haunted, and there was a roomy. old-fashioned garden, and a patch of green sward, sprinkled with white clover, where Keturali stretched her drying line, and let her clothes flitter out Monday morning earlier than any of her neighbors. It was a tidy old place, and had conic down to her from her father's estate, with a'fevi oat-lying fields, well fenced and tilled ; a bit of timber hind, a good spring of water and several other- blessings belonging to this sublunary sphere. Keturah knew how to prize her hide pendence. ,Theta; were a few plain rules she never transgressed; to deal fairly, to always live within her means, and to make the most of blessings, seemed pretty plain duties. She was not supposed to be friend ly to matritnohy, and she did enjoy being her own mistress, with an nnlimited scope for the exercise of that which is knownin New EnglaUd as : faculty- - She was is :woman of middle height, with bright, frank, blue eyes, a face fresh yet in color, and dark hair, combed smoothly behind her ears, and twisted in a smallish knot at the back of her head. None of these; thin-yarnaas Miss Keturuh said, for Der.: She was a world too,sensi ble to wear a false wad on her cranium.— She had been'tout jnst at nightfall to at tend herrickens, and to , see that they were all in the , coops , under the feathers of the chi ling hens. iAn invalid crea ture, a pretty ball of down, with a sprain ed ankle, she brought and put in a warm basket on the mantel. There was a shrew ish wind blowing entside, although it Was May, with blessoins from the apple trees whirling Own to thoass. Asmall wood fire snapped and cracked on .Miss Ke ttirah's hearth, and the lilacs were in bloom, and 'ho door yard gay with jon quils and da y-d•iwn dillies. The dog and cat, sleek an . well fed as dog and cat need be, were lyin ou the hearth in their own appointed places, and there Miss Ketarah sat, with a little round stand beside her, in the circle Or light from the genial fire, wiling away at a pair of unmentionables, for little Billy! Shaw. Mrs. Shaw, his mother, was 'poor, always in hot water, With a dre.silfu want of ..tralonlatiou and good judgmeht in her upper stoiy..lt was either a feast o a famine in the Shaw es tablishment all the time. The juvenile Shows had to go without. their crust but tered six days 'lithe week;.but if on the seventh - their in ether happened to earn "a dollar, jtist asakely as not it was all spent in butter, atiefeten up at one meal. Ile turah despised such shiftlessness, but he? hands never , stopped doing good for the Shaws. i 1 • , . Now, as she at the& in her cheerful and contented loneliness, with the. big clock ticking in the corner, there came a knock at the door. "CO* ini 3°11'44 Shale,"eallej out Zotnrah, - without, turning robndi--- !There's the Rig 4 potatoes •Lp_ronused -year reother in the cellar-way.. - You , can help; yoirsalf. - .1 shall churn to-morrow, and your wither tray said over-for a pail m of butteitilk." ' " - - i‘Aheml"..; , Keturah, tiraij'rouid "suidenly,"and there stood Usher Bates _holding his hat, iinttlooking Cato it as it his expected to . disdaier , the a profbitudost 7isdomin its depths.:.` 1 :' --" - - 1 • - . . . • "Megailior exotaimedkio gaturah, ' you give ate ; molt D.start.:_:l, thou ht, to De ittroOt Irtil• Johnny ; Shaw. s:ake •4 chair Usher, aug, " draw up to the tiie.— • Cold, ain't it, for this time of the year?": "Good fur blue noses," said Usher; but ho:felt as be expressed it afterward, "streaked," much as a man feels when he is about to break the ice, andplunge into a cold bath. However he eat down on the edge of a- chair, carefully.depositing his hat under it, took out his red silk hand ,4 kerchief, and mopped his face titterer. There was a preliminary clearing of the throat, and then Lisher said, with that circumlocution of speech habitual to the born Yankee: "I don't epose lieturah, you've got any grass seed you'd be willing to part with for a fair pnce "Going to put down more of your land to grass?" inquired Retard), with a slight accent of disapproval. "I was squinting that way l" .returned Lisher, hesitatingly, almost wishing he could babk out of the sonfpe, and go to grass himself, brit be gave a hitch to his chair that brought him a little nearer St torah, oti the other side of the 'stand. "Instead of seeding down any more, if I had your farm, I should put a few bar rels of limo on the triangular lot, and sow with clover." "That's what I mean to do," responded Lieber, giving his chair another 'Mob, ut terly forgetful of St. Paul's 'command, "Suffer not women to teach." "Your pas ture looks uncommon well 'this spring," he added. "Yes, the feed is good," said Keturah, i sewing away calmly n the candle light. The chair hitched a little nearer. "Ke turah,tbat'a a mighty fine Alderney yearl ing of yours." The tone was soft, persua sive, and melting. Keturah just raised her eyebrows;:— "L'mph 1" she knew what Lish was driv ing at now. The chair hitched a little nearer, the tone grew more coaxing, and oily. "Be tory, would'ult you, conld'nt you bo per suaded to sell me that critter ?." The small unmentionables dropped from Betiimh's hand; the audhuity dm) ro quest filled her .with anvement; "How can von ask such a question, tither Bates ? . You know I would'nt part with her for any money." Lisher had heard that "where there's a will there's a way," and another wise say ing: "Faint heart never won fair lady." He determined upon the strike. "Then Ketriaili;\ said he, suddenly, "you mutt marry me, Tor I am determined to get a lien on that critter, some way or other." If his unheard of temerity had stopped here, Seawall might have thrown the small unmentionables at him, but he did not wait 'for such" a dlsaster—he got up, made one stride over to where the, bewildered spinster Sat, and gave her'a rousing kiss un' the cheek. It is utterly impossible to predict what would have happened, if an nninistakable "snicker" had not soundeiithrOugh the room. The door hadnp'ened during the loving scene, above described, and admitted Johnny Shaw, just in time to witness the denoue msnt. Ile had come for "them potatoes." "Them potatoes" saved Lishir's bacon, althungh I suspect Kettirali had always a sneaking kindness for Usher. At any rate, some months afterward she gave him the yearling and herself along with it; and he-being•a good man, who knew the use of the door mat, was regular to, bis meals, and was appreciative of a good wife, whose price is above rubies, I can safely say that Keturales last state has not been worse than her first; and as to the yearl ing, it has grown to be a fanons'cow, the best milker in the country and lives in per petualclover. Buffing a Store by Steam. On the Upper Sacramento River a novel business has, for a number of years, been conducted by Captain-Geerge -W. Case, which partakes somewhat of the romantic 1 style of the - homer-traders of early times,, withlhisdifference—that a well appoint ed steamer supplies the place of the prim- I itive canoe, and the customers, instead of bearing the redskins of the forest, are well-to-do families settled upon and own ing ranches along the banks of the Sacra mento River. Captain Case commenced trading between Sacramento and a point a few miles above Colusa about eight years ago, by taking a small'harge load of goods as high up the river as he wished to go, paying a steamer to tow him Up, and then dropping down with the current from house to house to do his trading, supply ing the settlers with whatever goods they wanted, and taking in exchange all kinds of produce, especially butter. and eggs, hides and petrees—anything that could' be converted into more goods for another trip.. Some four years ago - Captain Case built a small- steamer at a post of $6,000 and fitted her tip for the trade Which- he had found so profitable and to enable him to keep np with his increasing business. The floating store was supplied with nn assorted cargo of goodsworth freta 65,000 to $6,000, and with the assistance of a pilot and an engineer, round trips have been - made about once in two weeks ever since. The settlers along the river and this fl9ting store a great convenience and one of them informs us they get goods from the steamer just as cheaply-as they mild from merchants in town. The .Captain -and-. his steamer are anxiously looked for every week up or down, when he makes his regular calls, does his trad ing and gossipping, and posts his friends on the , news of the outside world.. .The call made, business .transacted, nod ashore"-given out, they haul in. the bow line or steam nuchor,'es thet - case may be, and steam nn to the next.. mnohe. -The. enterprise of Captain' Case has been well rewarded, as it'deserves to be, for he owns a comfortable property - in Sacramen to, be sides his steam store,a - fine stock of 'goods 'and being in the enjoyment- of an :,unin terrupted and ..iriereasing , ..trade.,,M Democrat. - - • • . -A storekeeper at , :Qamm Mich, haying a pup that habitually.. upset the paint cansfla the rear end of the store, rubbed the dog'a nose in the spilled paint as tt reminder that he must not do. -so agam, Last - week the animal'again spill ed the paint, and, observing that histnas ter was engaged in waiting on a customer, the docile pap rubbed his own nose in the mixture end ranlowling out the back • How Beecher Beinti'Prectehlom. Beecher thus tells how. - he began to preach: "I' wasitiaked - to cross the river from Cincinnati and; preach in Coving ton ;. an d I Went over and Vegan' to preach therm I did not know but I was going to stay,there: And I was perfectly - willing to stay, But I was soon called by a worn an to Lairrenceburg. She: was the fac tor= of the whole church, And I went there and spoke tots Well-nigh empty build ing. ..I was settled over a town with two distilleries and twenty devils iu it. I was poor. There was noi patritriony coming to me, as you know: The moment I was out of the seminary I was without my fathera support, and obliged to take care of my self. I had a salary, but it was a salary of only 8400. And I took half of that to go to New England to get married with.— And as the parish paid half of it, and the other half .waii to come from the Mission= ary Society, I found myself very short of funds. I had just eighteen cents in my pocket whin I came back. I was taken up by a good Methodist brother for about a week ; and then I got two rooms. They were up stairs. One was the kitchen,tel lar and sitting room • the other was the library, bedroom and parlor. So that we had six rooms, calling each three. The cellar was made by putting things under the bed, and other rooms were added by sundry devices. You who go into flush houses, furnished byyour grandpapas and. gmndmamas, do not know anything about , the joys of housekeeping. Persons ought to begin at the bottom to know what these joys are. And I began down there. I had no idea that I could preach. I never expected that I could accomplish much; I merely went to work with the feeling, "I will do as well as I can, and I will stick to it if the Lord pleases, and tight His battle the best way I know how." And I was thankful as I could be. No body ever sent me a sparerib that I did not thank God for the kindness which was shown me. I recollect when Judge gave me his cast-pff.clothing, I felt that I was sumptuously clothed. I wore old coats and second-hand shirts for two or three years; and sometimes, as I was physically a well-developed man, and the Judge was thin and his legs were slim, they were rather a tight fit. Enamelling the Faee and the Result A lady in Lewisville paid seventy-five dollars, we are told, for having her face enamelled for the ball given at the Galt House to the Grand Duke Alexis. The enamel was warranted to last three days, and so it did. The lady was taken ill up on her return home from the ball, het: face became greatly swollen, the most acute pain succeeded, and it was only. by the employment of medical skill that her life was saved. This statement we have from an undoubted source. But the case of this lady is not so bad , 1 as that with another Louisville lady who became enamored of the odions fashion of enamelling the face. She visited another city, far to the eastward some five months ago, for the sole purpose of having her face' enamelled according to the latest Parisian mode. She had heard that a noted Parisian was engaged in the enamelling business at the city in question, and to him she went on her arrival. Fur the aum of 8500 he agreed to enamel her face so scientific ally that the enamel would remain un damaged for three years, hod a year or two longer if extra care was taken in wash ing the Tice according to his prescribed method. Tho devotee of fashion conclud -ed the bargain and paid three hundred dollars of the sum named, the balance to be paid in yearly instalments divided into three years. The lady received the enamel and returned to her home in this city.— Since her return she has disappeared from society , There was so much poison in the enamel that its effects.were almost total , paralysis .- of the facial -.nerves, and what was once a truly beautiful face is teeday a distorted, disfigured, and ukurous one.— The lady's beauty has disappeared , forever, and if her physicians succeed in saving her life they will have accomplished more than they had a right to hope for. Her eyes are terribly inflamed and disfigured, and the sight of them fast failing.—Lewis ville Ledger. Holmes on Women. . In the fourth installment of The Poet at the Breakfast Table, in the April num ber of the A tlantic, Dr. Holmes says a good mane witty and wise things about women, which might be read with pleasure and profit at the conventions over which_ Mrs. Julia Ward Howe delights to preside. For instance:— A woman, notwithstanding she is the best of listeners, knows her business, and it is wotnan's business to please. I don't say that it is not her business to vote, but I do say that tlto womsn who does not please, is a (also note in the harmonies of nature. -She may not have youth or beau ty, or even manners; but . she must have something in her TOICS or espression, or both, which it makes you'feel better dis posed toward your race tolook at or listen to. 'She knows thetas welt as we do; and her first question after you have been talk ingyour soul into ber consciousness is, I did pleaZie? A woman never forgets her sex She would rather talk with a man than an angel, aily day. And again:— " The less there is of sex about a woman, the more shit is to be dreaded. Bet take a real woman at her bestanoment--well dressed enough tribe pleased with herself, not so resplendent as to - bo a show and a sensation, with the varied outside influ ences that set vibrating the, hannonio notelet!' her nature stirring in the air about her--and what hast soeial Well) conipare with one of those vital interchanges of thought and feeling with her that make an hour memorable.. What cari'equal her tact, her delicacy, her subtlety of appro.; tension; her quickness to feel the Changes of temperature as the warm and cool cur rents of talk blew by turns? At one moment she is m icroscoincally intellectual, critical, scrupulous inludgment as an an alyst's balance, and tho nest as symphetie as the open rose that sweetens the wind front whatever quarter it finds its way to her bosom. It is in the hospitable soul of woman , that a Man fotgeb3heis a'etrun ger; and 'so becomes natural and truthful, at the same time that he is Mesmerized by an these • divine ditierencea whieb' inks her a-mystery and a bewilderment.- - Wild mu. Among the white scontkwereumubered some of the most noted of 'their class.— The most prominent. roan Among them was "Wild Bill," whose highly varied ea , ' receives made the subject of an illustkated sketch , in 'ono of• the popular. monthly periodicals a few years ago. "Wild _Bill., was a strange character, just the one which a novelist might gloat over. lie was a Plainsman in every sense of the word; yet unlike any other of his chtiis.' In person he was about six feet one. inch in height, straight as the straightest of ,the wariors whose implacable The' he was ; broad , shoulders,* well-formed _chest arid limbs, and a face strikingly handsome; 'a sharp, clear blue eye, which stared. - you straight in the face when in conversation ;13 finely shaped nose,inclined to be aquilne turned month, with lips only partially concealed by a handsome. moustachK-- His hair and complexion - were those of the perfect blonde. .Tbe formey wart worn- in uncut ringlets, falling carelessly over his powerful shoulders. Add to this' figure a' costume blending.the immaculate neat ness of the dandy with the extravagant taste and style of -the frontiersman; and you have "Wild Billr then as now the I most famous scout on the Plains. Whether on fOotiii on . horseback, he was one of the most perfect types of physi cal manliood I ever saw. "Of his courage there could be no question ; it had been brought to the test on too many occasions to admit.of a doubt. His skill in the use of the rifle and the pistol was unerring; while his deportment was exactly the op posite of what might be expected from a man of, his surroundings. it was entirely free from all bluster or bravado:: He sel dom spoke of himself unless requested" to do so. His conversation, strange to say, never bordered either on the vulgar or blasphemous. His influence among- the frontiersmen_ unbounded, his word .was law • and are the personal quar rels anedisturbar.ces which he has check ed among his comrades by his simple an .nonneement that "thin has gone Tar enough,"•if need be; followed by the om inous warning that when persisted in or renewed the quarreler"must settle it with me." "Wild Bill" is anything lad a cinairel some man ; yet no one but himself can enumerate the many conflicts in which. he has been engaged, and whicll have almost invariably resulted in the death of his ad 'versary. I have a personal knowledge of at least half a dozen men whom he has at various times killedyone of these being at the time a member of my command.— Others have been severely wounded,yet he always escaped unhurt. On: the Plains every man openly carries his belt with its. invariable appendages, knife and revolver —often two of the latter. "Wild Bar' always carries two hand some ivory-handled revolvent of the large size : lie was never Seem without them.— Where this is the common custom, bra,wls or personal difficulties are seldom if ever settled by blows. The quarrel is not from a word to a blow, but from a word to the revolver, and he who can driw and fire first is the best mau. No civil lan. reaches him; none is applied for. In fact, there is no law recognized beyond the , frontier but that of "might makes ri,ght." Should death result from the quarrel, as it usually does, no coroner's jury is impanneled to learn the tame of the death, and the sur vivor is not arrested. Bat instead of these old-fashioned proceedings, a meeting of citizenstatesplace, the &writer' is req cd to be present, when the.circumstoneee of the homicide aro inquired into, and the, unfailing verdict of 'justifiable," "self-de fence,". etc., is pronounced, and the law stands vindicated. That justice is often deprived of a victim there ¬ a doubt. Yet in all of the many affifirs of this kind in which "Wild , Bill" has 'peiforateti a imrt, and which have come • to my knowledge, there is not a single instance in which the verdict of twelve fair-minded men would not be pronounced in his favor.--ifpr Galaxy. Peter the Great. It will be two hundred years in June since Peter the great - was born, and it is proposed to celebrate with due solemnity the memorable day—the eleventh' of, the month—which gave to Russia its greittPst Emperor. As usual in this highly culti vated age, the commemoration will assume a prominently educational Oharacter, the foundation of two six-class• elementary schools being contemplated, for the build ing of which, government has set ap t lri a sum 0t2,000 roubles, and for the main tenance of which an endowment of 7,000 roubles a year is appropriated. •A statistic al, topographical and historical, account of the city of St. Petersburg is likewise to. be published in honor of the - day. Czar 'Peter's marritime merits, too, are not forgotten. An imposing stone menu ment, to be erected at lAchten, is to com memorate his gallant saving of shipwreck marines at that place, and collections will be set on foot for the enlargement of the mercantile fleet in the Baltic. A full length portrait to Abe painted by one of the first artists of Resale, and a solemn procession with it through the streets of St. Petersburg, will corielnde the festive programme by Whienhe grateful "eiipital purposes to record its tllanks to its found cr. Loadon Poor. The evils of "overcrowding" are begin ning to attract general attention in Eng land, and it has been found that in Han over Square, London, 25 houses contain 480-persons, or several, tinies as many as a moderate regard for health Would allow: In one district of the' parish of .St. Gilea there' were 570 fatnilie, none - Of, whina oc cupied more than a„eiuglo.ioom. This was the &as° throughout a dozen districts. In one ioom 12 by,l3 feet, and=7 feet inches high, eight persons were packed ; in another;cady six and one-half feet high, a - man, his .svice,, and five children were crowded: -The worst feature of the ovir crowding, is the occuPatiom of:the same bed by two sets of ppeeople during the same night. Certain attending= the theatre - everynight—ballet danears,supes, and the.r.nob which is 'attached to a pan tomime--let their beds to market people, whb: are Pat ready to. get up and.go to wink, whoa • the'Jheatrical folks. conie. bome. VOLUME .X.,-.lXtitfUltipEß'l.o. Tlid Eurthquiike4n osiOinrift, Lati:advidefi from "Itykr- where thi-enithquake:of Tuesday' .s morning centered, reports thab-Vamti frt. • dependence is in complete rains. .. The court house is destroyed,,Mid nett 1 . single abode or brick building is standing from Bishop creek to Inderndeuctl.'"- Feamare entertained tbr camps fiirther, 7 South in the Sierras., Mrs. West, residin near Independence, vas seriously injured, and child Ives • • . . . Stage . passengeis 'report aireral - fastirla miles m length; auci fifty to two 'hundreit feet wide, along the eastern hose of tho Siemt NevyKlF, near Big- Pine Camp. • At - other places in the, vicinity the, ground is hewed up; in..: great nip& Large springs bate stopped•running, and other* have brokemant... • • Heavy anow-elidea occurred.: in ahs:,a Sierras and large:rods rolled down the 1 mountain's; blookitig s vip OM/ stage Too&•• alto shopla i das,,tedat intwm.Wfrom twat" . : mintdea poctio to'sit At Antora, , - Nevada; no dotage was - done, • and at Belmont only , a mill maellinwirnalttrorni down. , No ench earthquake has before viiid4" . ." hie place' within the memory of the' - ' radians. • . • , Can Women Keep anneroit bfen say women can't keep a secret. _lt just the reverse; women can, men wet men carry with them to their±graten - secrets that would kill any man. - Woman "• never tells; man always does. The womon-:. suffers and dies.; man blabs and lives,— 2, Men cannot keep a secret; woman cannot, , 'make it known. ,What is sport to the man is death' to the woman. Adam was e. sneak:. -Eve would have kept the apple a. secret. Be ye fruitful.- Who era heard a. woman talk abontherlove fiascoa? Every. body has heard a 'man gossip. Man de ! - lights in -yelling of his , illict conitiests;,, „ woman would cut her tongue outfirste-r- Men are coarse in iheif club room talk; women refined ,in -their parlor converse,. • tion. Who ever heard of a woman telling,_ of her lovers? -Who has not listened to the dissipation of the , men? Men bond, , women don't ' W ; Women never tell et out ' of school; men tme nlways.blabbing.• Bo' 2 - down with another, old adage.- Women k_ can keep a secret, - and her ability to do as is proved by the conduct of. a st. John's. (New foundland)L girl, who did not tell her" lover she was worth forty millions in heir. own right until after marriage. A: CrOwn of Thorns. A Madrid letter says; ":Thepreitent generation may boast, or perhaps nom- , plain of having been cast into the world'-' • in troublesome times,more troubloui,per. haps, thin the rough age evesof the red repnblic• of 1784. Spain. has got a sov- • • ereign on the throne front which o by own free choice, and in the exercise of her- - lndisputEtb!e right, she expelled. Queen ' Isabelle,. The acclamation which greeted' .- him on his late progress through his do- sad sounded melodious to hie ears; are turned to discordant yells-of div, content. • The king had - violated none Of the conditions imposed by the constitn-.... tion ; yet the 'country would seem to be- • 5 wearied of his rule, and has expressed its diseontent so audibly, that we do notmar v-el at the rumor of his - abdication, which ' runs'throngh -Madrid likeWildflre. They . who..have access to the loyal person, as!' sure us that these. rumors* have.no &un-, nation ; that the king will not shrink from the task which he has undertaken." Who would, be a king?' •• • • • - A. Madero Allegory. A mart-had 'sold himself to the devil; who was ta-posalt him at a'certain time, u Mesa he could Vroponn d a question to his satanic majesty which he could not an swer, he being allowed to put tbree queries • to biro . The - time= came for the devil to claim' his own, and he consequently tip: peared. Tho.fiilt question,th e man asked was, concerning theology,• to which • it' caused the devil no trouble to reply. The second ho also answered without hesita-- tion. The man's fate depended on the' third. What should it be? Ho hesitated and turned pale. The cold prespiration stood on his forehead, while be shivered with - anxiety, nervousness and terror, and the devil tnumphantly sneered. Atilhis jnncture the man's wife appeared in the room with ,a bonnet in her hand. Alarm ed at her husband's condition, she de manded to know the cause. When inform—' ed, she' angbed and said: "I' can pro pound a question .which the devil himself cannot answer. Ask him which is the front of this bonnet ?" The devil gave it up and retired in disgust, and the pan A Terrible Eairniqtiake. On the 16th of last January an earth quake destroyed the city of Schemacha„. in Russia. According to the 'official .re port 118, persons, were • killed and forty four wounded, but all the inhabitants were left without shelter. Schemata is, or. rather•was, 'a city of 25,000 inhabitants, and hes betweenrTitlis and Baku, at the foot of the Caucasia Mountains, about 'seventy-five miles distant from , the latter city._ Schemacha is 2,516 feet above the Caspian and 2,230 above the Black_ Sea, and wiis formerly the seat of - government of the province,•whieh, however, on ac count of the frequent earthquakes in that region, was transferred, about ten yeara ago, to Ilaku, on the Caspian Sea. The inhabitants of Schemacha are nearly all Armenians. •- - --Phsebo efiry;lid thetime of berdeath; was at the head of a. movement for tho establishment of . a " Woman's Dress Guild," similar to the , one: instituted in England. - The Klan has been taken. Ur. by other influenbal women of Boston, and the following Are some of the rules of - tba proposed -association,: To purchase for cash only; to -buy nothing sbioli is,not wanted merely '•eause It it 'cheep; to dreza in a manneitecotiiing the stapon tit , life, to pay . proper deference to the tastes and peeumary ability of families; to. wear . no false jewelq, falsibsir. pads,-et4 to avoid an unseemliness indr . ess, and to do aWay . with the foolish andial:(custout of ' dressing a number of times a day. ' " ~.. ~