E. B. liA.WLE'ir, Proprietor. 115inc0,5 Curb. Runturr. Dealer .n Staple and laney Dry Donde, Cenc kery b orte. Iran, Stoves, Dvt4v,s. Oils, and Paiute. Bouts •nd 5Ww flat , Ana trap., Furls, Buffalo Rubes, Gra- Nor-11111turd, t a., Nov. a, 111-It. EXCHANGE HOTEL. D. A. MCCUACEEN, oleo.* to Inform thepahllctbst hating , realm! the Exchange Motel In Montrose, he le nom prepared to cocaina:was/a the trnecllozpublto in lost-claeoPt3lo ountooo, SUIPMAN & CASE. rlarrieso and Trmlk waken. .Shnp In C. newer,' Ittriotklrt, Pa. Oak Ilarneescs. tivivy , t oi ,10, made to onkr/ 8,11041,11, April 3. ISTI —mG U. D. SUIT!' n ,„" intett at .t.Aquatmnoa Depot, Ilatatfaearcr of .I,le c r a lo lizht an , f heavy Marne..v.oot era, t Whlpa, T coal- •tallttles.,te.hopltrz,hr ntrict attootton and fAlr deaking, to 'Java a Ilbeial ahara of fLoch 6. Is7l.—nolo—m3. BURNS & NICHOLS, net. A RS In Drugs, Medicines, • As. %%trials!, Liquors, Moires Filar; r Latent te4lcl tea, Perfirmoryoud Toilet AT eurcrUlly compounded.— BrIA Wort:, Mout rose, Pa. A. H. IVCRNS. • Feb. °I. 1M Wit. 'D. A. L ATIFIDOP. n i l l.orr. P:Lcr•gt. Taint"! Vt. tltTllO. At the Font nf .trect. Call and consult in all Chronic MITEE3 ME= J. F. SIIOENIAILEIrt. A:.orn•s . st Li. Mont Pa. Ofnce text door below r.• Tnrl,lll` , ll , lle)v , tme. Nlolltrwr. Jan T. 'Sit —no3-15. C. E. EII,DWIN, A 170,... CT and C0C11.10.1 ST Law. Great Bend. Penn Irattta. _ U, L. BALDWIN, A•-rortyry AT LAW. Monlime, °Cue a:th Jam" E ea-malt F.-q. Itwa:n•-r. ArEvim 941371, tf. LOOPIIS LtSt 011,n 'n 221 Igirkawnnnn venne n. I'a Pr-Kline In Ibn tover..tl Courts of Lo .:11-qu..hanna C..urn F. Wu. D. Ltsn. Fth. Is7l --If. w. I. caostioN. Attmree• 11 la,. 0f9c..1 al the Cee A. CILUSILSON. rt In ,tite Com , no , -1..0. - e- Oltkr. V Soot hth.ls7l.—a. Ac CO c• er• In Dry GOOdS. Clothlin:. La4l.re an . llVl..er nzant• for the great ....merlean Tea and Col., Company. plogtrpen. July 17, 'Ta...] nn. W. W. slum, ito.•noi his diretlin.. 9ext door edn of the u to; oilier. liftlect hones front 9a. It. 4 r Munnro•._ litny 3, - - - TUE it 1111:11:1Z—lia: Ha! Ha!! he 1,, 'h.., who ran vhnve your tacr to ru•• brown, black and ariaalev b air. iu v ja° nitur.. Tbere n m 4'lll and him, over vry heluw Mrlieurivs—japt one dour. libb,rome..lnue :.I 71,-IfS C. :NORMS. J. U. & t. U. IfIeCOLLI.I3I, ATronvr, •T LAT, OM, OTT( the Muth. 'Montrose 1.1 houtro,e, May 10, lett. 11 .L D. %%IL, tort rem P. AN . 11.51r11 , 1 , :0N. permanently ...1:e1 .111,1 f In Nlontru-e. i'a , where be trill prompt . rna lo all rail,. tii hi. proftw.iinti with which be may ..aseie4 In9er amt re.litrnee west of the Court tiouat. near Fitch other. • In== LAW OFFICE• ITCH & W kTSOV. Altorneen Al Law, et the old office ot mantle• i nice. Itoutome. rurcti. it. RAMON. CIIAILLES OtTODIDARD, Lei er In gent., and F.lmay. Ilato and expo. Lenlher and :Am:, 'flak, Ntreel, 1.1 door below Ilnytra Store. W mad , to or ler. and rep.ticyn; done neatly. Montrose. Jan. 1. 1a 10. LEWIS KNOLL, SIIAVIVti AND HAIR DRESSING. Shop In the sew Poe:office huildinc, where he will be found ready to Intend all who may want anyihtlig la bin line. Montrose Pa. Oct. IZ4 IsWi. DR. S. W. DAITON, TOTsiCJAN & SURGEON. tenders tils yrryteev to vac titinen• of Great Bend and vicinity. Of!ire at hi, t,nuonno. opposite 11.2ruum Rouse. G'?.. Bead village, Sept. Ist, 160.—U A. 0. WARREN, ATTORNEY A. LAW, Bounty, Peck Pay. Petelou and Ereol • 012 Cl.tme Attended to. Orce a• ..0r below Boyd'a 6unte, lloutmcc.PA. (An. I,'G9 M. C. surroN, • Auctioneer, and Insurance Agent, 59t1 Frienduftlle. Ps. C. S. GILBEILT, ET. 8. . .to colt Great Bend • Pa. AMI ELY, J. O. .A.lsotilcamoor. Au, 1. 1.1 4 73. 'Aildrcep, UrooklyD. Pa. JOHN GUOVE, .1' 1311 uNAIILS TAII3II, Montrote, Pa. Shop over Chandler's More. AP order* tilled In tratArete etylt. done on abort notice* and warranted to tit. W. W. SIIITU, CtiIINET AND CRAM MANUF ACTUREDS.—Pm , of M uu.trueL iluninhtc, )aug. L 1869. BILLINGS STROUD. V IRE u 1.1.1q1 ACIttNT. uslue...tteucled toprwelp.ly.ou fair tettno. (num uurth .4 • 31.11.1T0PC Iluiel; • wrests. ..• , unlic A ',e.t.a.:, Siollirolle, Pa. 1;. 1311.1.010 s assoutt. ABEL TUELBELL, LEIt le inuo, Yateei till.vmuus, Chemical. Liquore. fatale, Jlid.l.llo VAIIIIELCS. a IP Mass Were, Well and stiliadote Pao kr,. it u.,-ie r nre. ti.eturebe - ;Mailbittery Oil.. %to/nautilus., linlves. opectativp B rainy Goode, Jewelry. Yerfu •r,, one att., meet 4°4l tina4le °De. of Goads in Huequelmurn 4.101116 k -it to 18.10. [..llentrete. Pa. D. W. SEARCE, TTOILVEY tT LAW, otllce Lbn t torty, in the Bring Bionic, lautttrone. PA. DIL. W. L. ILICLIARDSON. tr, It Int(jgON. [enders hie Kula...l,MA ervlnc, to ate et [item; of Moutroft and vicinity.- 1,, Tien ,st ttiorusidlinCe. un thd eumernnstol Sayre 8r... Foundry. (Anti. 1..1860. I IL N 1 . Bat) IHEIO. • SCRANTON. PA. hulevale 41, Ratan Dealer, 11.1111)WA1IE, ILION, STEEL, ' NAILS, SPIKES, SIIOVELS, 111,1 )Rlt's HARDWARE, Itse ODD'S] BB.SILNKA T BAILIIPLKEt AlLllO4It d MINING SUPPLIER. 1'.1.11/t/.1 tiE SFS/EGA. AXLED. SEEMS ANL BV%IIS. BOLTS. NUTS au/ WASHERS, PLATMO BANDS. .11ALLEABLB 1113. SPerEs., - POI,LBKB.,sILATIRONS. B P 7II LITBLED, BOOR. 4c. • NVIL.M. VICES, STOCKS :and DIES. BELLOWS II A XMERS. SLEDGES. FILES. &C. &c. c iscuLA it AND RILL SAWS, B FLTING. PACELNG TAGELE MOORS. PLANTER FARIS • cEXENT. HAIR & 0 RINTISTONES. P ItENCH WINDOW GLASS.LEATIIEROINDENZI I FAIRBANICS SCALES. li , rar top. gtreb g. 4 11011. . IF . _ . t_._ I ROCERIES.:—Teas in . great' variety NA set cheep for thetitcallties. Dried Peaches, the ie sisrArt.. A riles snalltrof Molasset,Degq,Cs& re. el , s assortment of Spices, *e. nolitqle,l42.ll).-4. 433/LTITEGIUBIL gect'o earntr BEFORE TIM WEDDING. Milk-whiteand.honey-sweet its flowers The locust tree Is shedding; 0, it this weather would but stay, I could not risk a lovelier day, To-morrnw, for my wedding! Tts, %lain truth, my bridal path The wind with flowers is strewing, The thing a woman says she won't, Blie's !Away sure of doing; And, tromp child. I have declared I'd choose s maid to tarry, And single handed fight my way, Before I'd ever marry. (Though he by all his deeds and words, Were worth and wisdom proving) A Methodist itinerant, And keep louver moving,— Stopping here and off again, With scar= a breathing space. But when camp-meeting came around, A year ago this summer, The Sundbury people bad a tent, And 1, with Sister Hartley. went, And first beard Brother Plummet. "A young man looking for a wife," Was some one's sly reminder, " And he may look, for all of me," I said, "And never find her." Amos Stan°La But when I came to hear him preach, He to!d the Gospel story So thrillingly; thmugh all the grove Went up nne shout of •• Glory !" Itough men were bowed, hard sinners wept, I owned his power to Uhl me,— Ilia glowing ferver, like a spell, Against my will controlled me. i•`or who is he?" I said, my own Adn.iring, thoughts reproving; • A Methodist itinerant, Who keeps forever moving,— Just three years in a place, That's ton•hard a way, thought I, To run the Christian race. I said 4he preacher pleased rue not, 1 did not wish to meet him, And when we met I tried to Fee How coldly formal I could be And courteously treat him; But when at woman tries to hate, Be cur ihrinve's bra - inning; The more I frowned, the more I felt That he my heart was , winning ; Doll (may the Lord torzive ti efound The class, unless lie led 1,, And sweeter ,eemed:the blessed word „AM Scripture. if be read it. And from the closing love-feast, when, As w e wulked home together, He led me down a quiet path. And calmly asked me whether " My future should lir our with his"— And I must take or lose him, I tilt my bold on earthly Joy Was lad, should I reftise But if I have, there's 'Mit our way," I arid, •' my love of proving; And I am willing for your sake, To keep forever moving. Moving, moving. tuoVing.— Just three years in a place,— Happy wherestier I go, If I but see your face." -....,....- 'SOUTH AND AGE I:=3 While yet my bloc,) ran 21%11 and free, Gay girls the 'Sluse4 seemed to me, Forever young, fore'ver lair, With laughing eyeirtbat challenge care. Yo hour when they would not he wooed ; If I was, they - word in the mood; We played at murtillip all day long, And cured our painless grie!s with song. Too happy days put wiser now, Three matrons with unjoyful brow, And eyes severe, that conquer wine, I see replace those w•itchs fine. Their looks convict the unthriftv years, Their's am the rock, the thmnd, the shears, Symbols, the artist's triple clew :go matter, furl% arid measure due. Each lays a finger oh her lip And signs, " tiewsrp, the moments slip I" How shall I hope the three to gain! Together, triumph singly, pain. SCHOOL. Sir In n row on thtj, doorstep there,. Nice little schoolina'am, prim and lair Funniest noses, dimpled riling, Listen - gAshile, the school bezins. " Classes in 'rifmetic, come this way Why were you absent. 3lury Day? Now, Miss t.ts.sn, whst'slwice tour; 3laybe its 'lever!, mhybo more. ".Tohnny don't blow in your brother's ear ; Stop it or must I Interfere Suy your tables—now begin ; ' Trustees' might come droppin' Id. What would they ever say to us, Fir.ding school in Mich a fuss? Baby Jenny, how is that ? 0 6, dear, don't Spell cat. "Terrible boy! your Cane Ls red— Why will you stand upon your bead? Class in spelling, Ulu wilt do— lien is 'stertleates tor }ou." Faces pure as morttins's sun. Voices that ring with harmless (ma; !Sweet is lesson inn imnart Sweet! and /learn it all by heart. Six inn row on the doorstep there, Nice little schoolms'aat, print end fair, Free of the world,' and all its pain, Would I could join ypur school again. SOIIEBODY, inyairingat the Springfield, Illinuii, far a letter fur Mike llutve, received the gruff answer that there wa.i 110 letter there fur aitybudy's cute. AN exchange says "tipporiticity has hair iu Trout, but behind she is bald."— And many people di cuter, when it i2l t.1)0 late, that they hare grabbed her where the hair is short. AT the Troy Dinforency sess'icip at Sar atoga, Rer. Dr. 'Wentworth gai;e'a reason why the Baptist church is WO a:hearer's hut. "There is only one eutr r suct to it, and that is under • water." , "Trtsnr. is but one good r}•jfe in this townl" said a clergyman. in the course of his serinon—tho congregation looked expectant--"and every married mat. thinks he has got her," added, the minis. ter. " • - Nati"rotT, Kamm!, has rapid way . or startinstartinga graveyard.. It has one contain ing thirtyrtwo grates, and -thirty-one of them are filled • by occupants who were. either kilbd, or died by accidents. A irousa man who went West from Danbury. s few mouths ago, bas sent on ly one letter borne. It came Friday. It said "Bend no a sag." And his fond gamuts don't kaoyr Whether hi is scalped or married. VAIUETIGS. -U-- , ' , ‘,• , ,, 1, E.--!s' oe•-4116‘' (iv' . i t ~.....„1,0,4 ItIONtROSE, PA., WEDNESDAY JANUARY , 8, 1873. Our First Nuno. [Tun following is the first article that Fanny Fern wrote for the Ledger. It was published in the Ledger of January sth, 1856—over sixteen years ago. Since that day she has never failed once to furnish an article for every number• of the Led ger.] ••iiow sit down, and I will tell yoq all shout it. Charley and I were engavd.— Youth conies but once, you know, and if we wait to be married twill we could fur nish a house in fashionable style—well, you see, we knew too much for that : we got married, and left other couples to grow gray, if they liked, on the distant prospect of damask curtains, gold salt cel:ars, and. trams of innumerable ser vants. Charley did not know the meaning of a "club-house," and the shopkeepers flashed their diamonds and satins in vain in my face ; I never gave them a thought. We had some nice books and some choice en gravings, presented to Charley by an old anti:query who had taken a fancy to him. You might have gone into many a parlor on which thonsandl had been lavished, and liked ours all the better when you came back. Still it wanted something— that we both agreed ; fur no house can be sal.' to be properly famished without a baby. Santa Claus, good soul, under stood, that, and. Christmas day he brougot us one, weighing the usual eight pounds. and us lively us a crick'-t. Such lungs as it had ! Charley said it ;was intended for a minister. Wen, now it was all right, or would have been, if the baby bad not involved a num. We had,-:o be sure, a vugae idea that we 11111. t havZQUite; and as vague an ide a of what a nurse was. W e th i atzhi her a kind of creature who understood halw-domatid never interferred with any little arrangrment& Not a bit or it! The very first thing she did was to make preparations h. el 'p in my miim. and send Charley off into a desolate spare chamber.. Charley r sty Charley ! whose shaving nrieratinn; I had watched with the intensest interest. mixing up little foam seas of "lather" for him, banding him little square bits of paper in wipe hi'. razor upon, and applying nice bits of court-plaster when he accidently chit his chin. while we we•e laughing. Charley ! whoseqt':nuts I hal Heil I. seit my fancy every'fifess•d moraine', whose hair I had hrit-hed up in elegant confusion, whose whiskers I had coaxed and trimmed. and —well, any one, unless a bachelor maid. who mods this, can sic that it was perfectly ridiculous. Charley looked at me. and I looked at him, and then we botli looked at the brand-new baby—and there's where she had us: You might hare seen it with half an eye, as she folded leer hands com placently over her apron strings, and sat down in my little rocking chair opposite the bed. I felt as thonoh I was sold to the Evil One, as she fixed her himilisk eves on me when Charley left the room. Poor Cl•ir lev! lie did not want to go. He neither smoked. nor drank, nor played billiards : he loved home and—me ;.so he wandered up stairs and down, rat with his hands in nis pockets staring at the parlor fire tilt he could near it no longer,and tl-el came up stairs to he comforted. If you'll be liere it. that woman came fu.sing round tne bed after him. jest as if he were in fringing some of her rights and immani ties. What if be did bring me a sly piece of cake in lilt pocket ? Who likes to live on gruel forever ? What if he did open the blinds and let a little blessed sunlight in. when she tried to humbug ns into tho be lief that "it would Inct the baby's eves," hecellse she was too lazy to wipe the dust from the furnitnre ? What if he did steal one of her knittiog needle., when she sat there, evening after evening, knitting round. and round, and round that inter minalde old gray stocking, my eves fl. lowing her with a horrid sort of faccina tion, till my nerves were wound up to the screaming point ? What if T did tell him that she always set her rocking chair on that loose board in the floor, which sent forth that little crucifying soneak. and that she always said "Bless me r and was alwllys sure to get on it again the very next lime she sat down ? •What if I did tell him that when she had eaten too much dinner. and wanted to take n sly nap. she would muffle the baby up in so many blankets it couldn't cry if it wanted to, and then would draw the curtains closely round my lied and tell me that -it was high time I took my nap ?"—I. who neither by stratagem or persuasion, could ever be induced to sleep in the daytime! who felt. as if my ey.•lashes were fast en..d np to the roots of my hair. and as if legions of little ants were crawling all over me? What if' I did tell him that she got up a skirmish with me every night. hecanw. irquid not wear a nnicanec cathfl a night. cap? What if !did tell him that the in sisted upon puttine a sticky pitch plaster urea my 'leek. for a little ghost of conot=neeasioned he her stirring the ashes in the grate to furiously—and that when I on.-vnenthal her. and clapped it round the bed nnst instead. she mutter ed spitefully that "a handsome neck wnuldn't keep me not of niv . en lyi n What. if I did tell him that she tried nn my nice little lace collar*. when she thought I was asleep at night. and insist. ed on me drinking detestable porter, that its seeMul-hand influence might "make the baby sleep?" What. if I dvl : was he not my husband ? Did not I tell him everything? %nett with him? cry with tim ? eat nff his plate ? drink of his cup of tea. herrinse being his. I fancied that they tasted better than mine? Apt] didn't he tike it tvio? Of cnnrse he did ! What if I did tell him all this? "..1"M it Charley! he i'vas forlorn too; his enivsts were tied like a fright all the time I was sick, his hair looked likerany other man's. the buttons were off lilt pretty velvet vest, and be had not even the heart to get his boots blacked. 'Poor Charley!. Well, the nurse had_ the impudence to tell us one ensuing, that awe acted like two childieu.? "Chigra r Wet.: Us? the pare is of .that eigbtpound . babyP— Thst woo the last drop is oar cup. Olter. ley paid her, and I was so glad When she left that I laughed till I cried. • Then we both drew a lung breath and • sat down and looked at the new baby— our baby ; and Charley asked me about its little sleeping habits, and I told'him, with a shake of the head, that I could not speak definitely on that point ; "Ad then we discussed, in a whisper, the respective merits of cribs and cradles, and the pro , priety of teaching it at an early. period, that impressive line of Mrs. (lemma "Night is the time for sleep." And then Charley gut up and exchanged his musical boots fur a noiseless pair of slippers, and changed the position of the shovel, tongs, and poker, and oiled the creaking hinge of the closet door, and laid a chair over the squeaking board in the floor, that he might nut tread on it, and with one eye on the baby gently shaded the night lamp; and then he look ed at me, gave a little sort of congratula tory nod.; and then he drew off ¢ia vest and hung it over a chair, and then—out rattled a perfect tempest of half dollars, q9arters. shillings, and sixpences on the hearb. Of course baby awoke—frighten ed out of a year's growth—and screamed until it was black in the face. In vain its Plot inexperienced papa kissed it, scrttch iug little velvet- face with his rough whisker the while 1 In vain we both walked the floor with it. The fire went out, the lamp went out, and just at day break it came to us like a revelation, the samistic tone of that hateful 9,1 d nurse, as she said. "Good-bve ; I hope you'll get along comfortably with the dear baby!" And so we did. Do you suppose one night's watching was going to quench our either for the baby or each other ? No, nor a thousand hke it I For, as Dr. Watts or Saxe bath it ; "It was one of the kind that was not born to die." The Loves of Elizabeth Tut vs of Elizabeth of England was a physiological Wunder. Many of her most serous detects arose front her not having been u man, us Nature must orig inally nave designed. With a Masculine will, a masculine character, and a mascu line ambition, she had all the feminine weaknesses without any of feminine gra ces or charms. Her vanity was in excess of her prde, and in spite of her unques tionable greatness, rendered her ridiculous througn life. She was ever anxious to be loved and had the exceeding misfortune not to be lovable when she biter' most. There was no great need of affection in her stubborn spirit, no yearning,for 0 . % mpathy in her self-sufficient nature. no inappeasa able crating for what the romanticists would call all intercourse tic soul. She wanted lovers more than tore, heoause lovers flattered her inordinate vanity,and told her, us lovers usually do, that which she secretly thought of herself. She nev , r tired of In aring she was the Virgin Queen, and never acted as if she relished time arrogated honor. Coquetry she would have carried to a perilous degree, ,f there had IsTll anything perilous in such a homely Amason. Not one of all the men the hat desperate and protracted ffirta nobs with—nut even Raleigh, nor Leices ter, nor Essex—eared a maravedi for her in the way she wished them to; but from reasms of State, and from motives of pol icy titer pretended to adore her. Crafty courtiers as they were, it must have been dancult for th-in to refr tin from laughing in Elizabeth's face when they called her beautiful, or when they compared her voice to the tunes of the: lute. They ,had passed through many hardships, but nothing harder than to address Euryale in the language becom ing to Aglaia. Raleigh showed his keen. ness of insight, when he spread his rich mantle beneath her ungainly feet, and Leister his understanding of eh tracter when he wrote to her that her lovely im age banished sleep from has pillow. Of tier numerous suitors none would • have given a fillet for her heart but much for her crown—the sole aim of their gallant masquerading. The, secret loves of Elizabeth and Sey thenr, and Raleigh, and Leicester, and Esiex_ and others, have often been writ ten, and not, it is to be presumed without a basis of truth. But love is a fine bap tism fur relations springing from vanity on one side and from considerations of diplomacy on the other. The Pnncess in her earlier years appeared to be fond of Seymour, and it is charitable to think she was. Pretty stories have been told of the Countess of Nottingham's withholLing the ring sent to the Queen by Essex be fo e his execution, and of the consuming sorrow from winch Elizabeth suffered af ter his death. The stories are dramatic and interesting, their chief defect being that they are ertirely untrue. The wo man %%hose reputation had been almost irreparably injured by her connection with a man of whom she could say after his execution, " his loss is not much ; fur though he had large wit, he had little judgistentrwould not be likely to be troub led by remorse for ili.libAlttely sending her nearest friend to the scaffold. Eliz..beth could not forgive in any of her sisters the possession of gifts and :truces which she must have b-tea private ly conscious were lacking in , "-Tierself. Slant Stuart's unpardonable offense was her beauty and seductive charm; and her rival was never able to regard with kind ness the men who, willing to forget the woman in the sovereign, had sought 'her hand and afterward wedded where incli halm' led. There is asp cies of dismal coinpensati m in all conditions of life. If Elizabeth failed to awaken in anv matcu line breast the flame with which 'she hopt ed to kindle the torcit.of her vanity, and if her iestal ussuitiptiOns were not al- Wuys credited. she had the good fortune, so surrounded was she by distinguished soldiers, statesmen, and scholars, to shine with the light refh-cted. from them,- . and • hear in history a glory not own.— " Historic rovers," by Juntus I t touri December Gahxy. TIIE pictures of the late Thos. Bully were disposed of by auction in Philadel- Plitao'n Friday. itithe presence of a large assemblage. The highest price reached for any single work was $4l, which VIM given for a "ilgardian Angel," after Josh ua Reynolds, °Some picture sold for as low as $1 and $2, bat the arorage pee obtained was about slt The Evils of Gambling. —o— SCENE fl CALIFORNIA IN' 1840 SPIN - put was a new arrival. The camp, malt its customary propriety. had dubbed him thus because he was so slim. On the same principle, his awkwardness soon gave him a notoriety: Nor this only; like One-eyea Tom, Spindle had made one of he happiest hits of the day. Young, pas sionate, elated beyond, degree with the splendor of his prospects. it was no sur prise that. he should court the pale faced gamblers, who were the aristocrats of the camp. It was no wonder that they should discover his weakness and determine . to "salt" him. Play ? No, no; Spindle did not play; lie only came in to watch the game; it was tiresome sittting there in the tent alone. "Try it; double your stakes on 'threes,' triple it 'full,'" said a pleasant-faced fellow, who was just raking in a hundred sings or more. Spindle was inclined to listen. "Tell you what to do," said the gambler, continuing, "go me halve' for an hour, and see how you come out." Spindle (lid so. At the end of the hour lie had. one at "stake" of several thousand dollars. Spin dle was fasc;nated. "I will double this to morrow night," said he, mentally, as be left the gambler's tent: He doubled It.— "This must he tripled," said Spindle, as lie song.lrt-the tent again ; two nights af terwards it was tripled. "Spindle means to break or he broken," said the bystand ers, one night, about a week after his original venture. "Look at the dust he is betting." He is. indeed, betting heavi ly. The rattlesnake has charmed him.— Bet after bet. till the winnings of the seek have left him ; bet after bet, till its earnings are all—gone, till the last "slug" is up. and he has lint a single "sight" for it. Woe to him, for he wins! The tide is floating again, antl Spindle is even.— "Safe. safe." lie remarks, betting a bun. deed "singe as a "blind," on the strength of his confidence. One by one the cards go round to the players. Spindle does not look at this, hut gathers them under his ha'-d on the table. "I see your blind nod go you a hundred better' It was "F.aglenoce" who spoke—"Eaglenose, the lucky." Spindle looks at his cards. He has a first class, hand—four queens and a king: four aces only will beat him. Ea glenose can have but three of those, for he saw one on the bottom of the pack se the gambler laid the mills on the ta ble; the gambler meant that he should see it. "I . we your het and raise you a hundred better." ren'ied Spindle. Eaglenose is un certain. He looks wistfully at the gold. furtively at his antagonist, and very care fully at the cards in his hand. "He waits, he weakens." said Spi idle to himself. "I thought he was "bluffing." 'Spindle does not Fee the smile on the face of the by standers at the hack of the gambler, or he world think very different. Rising from the rough stool on which he sits, Eaglenose steps hack in the tent and opens n strong wooden chest. Two bags of dust are taken from it, and the gam bler staggers under a heavy load, as he hrings it toward the table. Spindle sees a 810.no0 :nark on each of them. "Bet von them 'ere things..' says Eaglenose as. he have the two hags with the other gold. It is now Spindle's turn to hesitate. Can it he that he has the other ace? No, he will not think it ; hut what shall he do ? He has not money enough on hand to "call" him. He does not wish to do this; it would he cowardly. "Ha!" says Spin dle. "1 have it now ; I will bet my claim and the few thousands I have left against his pile, if it only be large enough." This to himself. Then . to Eaglenose: "What's your pile ?" "There are five more bags in the chest," said the gambler:quietly ; "what do you do?" "Bet my claim amtinst your pile," said Spindle, intensely excited. The bet was taken. Spindle thrbw his cards npnn the table with a half paralyz ed motion and a face whiter than the tent above him—fonr queens and a king. Es glenose filed his off, one by one—three aces, a king. and an ace Not a word was spoken by either, and Eaglenose had no reason for so doing. A few momenta af terwards the ruined miner staggered to the door of the tent, based out into the moonlight, and the game goes oa as ev er. Half an hour later Spindle sat in his tent alone. Before him was the picture of a fair, sweet face, that bad won his love but a few years back. Nobody sees him weep while he watches the play of light in its eloquent eyes. You could step in, and step heavily, too, without startling him. He is lost in reproachful thought, leading down to despair. All that he had hoped to do has vanished. Lust night, rich in gold ; to-night, bankrupt. Why; then, should he live? He can hear the roar of the Yuba as it tumbles over the atiff 'only a mile above him. He steps out into the open air; the . cataract glimmers in the distance, and the sound of its "nut km soothes and fascinates him. No body will miss him ; why should he hesi tate ? He MOVES toward it with eager bound and determined purpose. Up the rocky hill—np, np, till he stands on the edge of the precipice, far above the fall. He looks at the white tents in the distance, bate is blazoned our every one of them. He looks at the white spray, far, tar below hid; 'a hut dyed phantoms beseeCh him to come to them. A pause, for an instant only, a whispered sometlang—was it a prayer? A quick, terrible leap, then the same moonlight es before on the flower-clad hells around, ott the white' tents of the sleeping camp, and'on the whiter face of the cataract. IP-there is anything:that will make mau'a angry pabstons rig, it i 6 to hunt all over the house loran overcoat such morn ings as these and then find that it has been traded off' to an. , old el& man fur a couple Of twenty cent braCkets. Such is married life too often; luau is a good business-film epitaph : "Here lies Jane Smith, wife of Thomas smith, marble cutter.. This monument Wilti erected by her husband as a tribute to her meMory, and a specimen of his work. Monuments of tho same style, A Dog gilts Lis 11loiter and Dies of Grier. Old Peter Bean had been a digger of wells in this locality for thirty years. lie lived a life of loneliness and celibachand procured his meals at Mrs. Kenora's holariliitg house, on Front - street. llis firm and fast friend, his a mp min iu hours of toil and leisure ' was a large dog. that was hardly ever kr.lawu to be sent from the side of Peter. lie was a cheerful, even happy character, of a quiet, playful disposition, snd when he worked', to Use a homely style of•Phraseology."he worked." No one knew how old Petitr was, and no body would, even venture - to guess at the age of his dog. He was a sort of perennial youthfulness.. In the natural and regular courseof things there was every probability that he would out live a couple more generations. But it was not so to be. He fell yesterday . the victim of an accident. which no foresight could have anticipated and no precaution arrested. It was in this way: Peter was' digging a well on Front street. He bad reached a depth of forty feet, and was still industriously delving in the earth. The person assisting him on the surface of the earth had just hauled up a buck ful of dirt,. which was carried to some distance and empted out, and the bucket detached from the rope, as was usual, lay on the ground. Peter was below, when his faithful dog, having got loose, rubbed madly about in search of his master. The vigorous and excited animal be-unti ed forward to the pit to bark down to his friend at the bottom, knowing he would get a friendly answer. This enthusiastic friendship of the dog proved the death of theman. In jumpine , re the edge of the pit he drove the bucket before him into it. There was nothing heard. afterward bnt a low, painful groan, and, all was still below in the dark and narrow 'hole. When Peter was taken opt it was found that the bucket had split his head in two. He died instantly. Justice Spellman held an inquest Man hotiror so afterwards and the fury having become acquainted with these facts, gave their verdict accor dingly, laying all the blame of the ter rible accident on the dog-the last crea ture on earth that would have injured or allow others to injure a hair of his mas ters. So great was the 'grief or affliction of the animal on finding that the cold hand of Peter caressed him no more, and the voice of Peter failed to reply to his friendly yelps, that he IF y under the dead maa'seouch yesterday and, died himself, It is a curious—and sad as curious--epis tide in life and death. --ifetaphis (Tenn.) Appeal. =— The Old and the :New. . Whet is Stewart, or Belmont, or the Marquis of Westminister, to Ptolemy Philadelplins, of Egypt, who amassed_ a little property of $350,000,000? And which of our extravagant young lathes in these boasted times ever gave her lover as Cleopatra did, a pearl dissolved in vioegar (or undissolved) worth $400,000. Then there was Pauline,. one of the - ton in Rome, who used to wear jewels when she returned her visits worth $800,000.. Well, they boast of Mr. Stewart'. " marble pal ace' on Thirty-fourth street and Fifth av enue. We do not suppose this house, which is about the best they have in New York, cost more than half a million of dollars. Cicero, who was a poor man, gave $150,000 for his house, and Mains paid $650.000 for his establishment, while Massala gave $2,000.000 for tke house at Antium. Seneca. who was just a •pluin philosopher; like Mr.Creeley, was worth $120,000,000. Why they talk about a man's failing in New York for a million as if it was a big thing. Cmsar,.before he entered any . office—when he was a young: gentleman in private life—owed $14,000,- 000, and he purchased the friendship of Qumsor for 82.500,000. Murk Anthony owed $1,4'10,000 on the Ides of March, and he paid it before the Kalends of March. This was ncthing ;,heiquander ed $720,000,000 of the pUblic money. Esopusi, who Walt plar ; actor;pid $400,000 for aaingle dish: Caligula spent $400,000 on a supper.. Their wines were often kept for two ages, and some of them sold for $2O an ounce. Dishes were made of gold and silver, set With,precious stones. The beds of Heliogabulus were of solid silver. his tables and plates were of pure gold and MS mattresses, covered with carpets of cloth of gold, were stuffed with down from under the wing of the patridge. , It took 880,000 a year to keep up the digni ty of a Roman Senator, and some of them spent $1;000,000 a year. 'Cicero and Pompey " drooped in" one day' on Luenl lus—nObody at home but the fathilv—and That family ;limier 'cost 84000. Itnewe talk of population. We bo - iiit of . London - and New York. Rome had a population of between three and four millions. .The Wooden theatre of Scarnrus contained 80,000 seats; the Colliseam, built of stone would seat 22,000.m0re. Tun second trial of Enwsan S. STOKES for the murder of JAMES Ftsit, Jr ' was commenced in New York, on Monday last, before Judge Bo.trinms...v. The jury comprises siE merchants, one architect, one insurgence agent, one builder, one carpenter, ono printer and one brickman. The case was opened by ex-Judge Fun, LER - TON for the prosecution in a lengthy address, in which he recounted the facts connected - with the murder of FisK, which have heretofore been published: Ile attributed the murder to revenge from be ma beaten:at every point by Fun. Mr. ECLLEILTOY concluded by calling the jury's attention to the lawlessness, of, the times, and said the question - now prom: irient in the, community ,wae. whether criminals should be arrested, and when arrested Whether they shall 'be. punished and a atop put-to 'this'• bloodshed.-: Bad men- regard, the law punishing murder With death as played out,. and if this state of things is permitted to go on we shall won be in astate of anarchy. The et. aniination. of Witnessed -then commenced and is still progresiing. A NATIOXAG Convention of goose• pickers is to be held in Chicago, next motifh, fo * devise MO" way. of picking geese by machinery, and deodorizing the dead goslius that are so often found in boarding house 'pillows. VOLUME xxx, NIIMBER..2. Items for the Toilet. ——o— To Wurras• NAILS.—The best wash for whitening the nails is two draehmi of di luted sulphuric acid, one drachm of tine tut° of myrrh, added 'to four ounces of spring wash ; first cleuso the - hands dna then apply the water. 31Axn WIIIBEERS Gnow.—Shave the beard at least three times a week, and use the following as a stiumlent: Co logne, 1 ounce; alcohol, 1 pint; castor oil, f, pint; oil of cloves, 20 drops; oil of bergamot, 20 drops; tincture of maw. rides, 2 ounces. T ,„ ,„ O.P tt REVENT RAT Ifarn.—A good remedy for the hair turning gray and fall ing oil is the following . : Distill two pounds-of honey, a handful of rosemary, and twelve handfuls of the tendrils of grape vine, infused in a gallon' 'of new. milk ; about two quarts of water will be obtained from this, which apply to the hair frequently. TOILET ITINEGAR.--rialf a pint of Bordeaux, or of the best white wine vine. gar ; half a pint of pale rum; essence - of bergamot, rosemary, and majoram, a drachm each; and one pint of-rose or elder flower water. Mix the perfumes with the spirit, then add the vinegar, and laltly, the rose water. If not perfectly bright it may be strained through blotting paper. To Burour. RAlZ—Onions rubbed frequently on the part requiring it. The stimulating powers of this . vegetable - are of service in restoring the tone of the skin, and assisting the capillary veesels in sending forth new hair; but it is not in fallible. Should it succeed, however, the ~ r roWth of these new hairs may be assist ed by the oil of myrtle berries, the repute of which, perhaps, is' greaterthan, its real efficacy. To BEAUTIFY TEET/I.—BiSMIWO two ounces of borax in three pints of boiling Water, and before it is cold add one tea spoonful of the spirits or camphor, and bottle for use. A .tablespoonful of this mixture, with an.equal qua,tity of tepid water, and applied daily with a suft brush, preserves and beautifies .the teeth, extir pates 'all tartarous adhesion, arrests de cay, induces a healthy action of thegurns, and makes the iecthpearly-tvhite. To WIIITEN HANDS.-1. Stir -} of a pound of Castile soap, and place it lu a jar pear the fire, pour over it * pint of-al cohol ; when the soap is dissolved and mixed with,the spirit, add one ounce of glycerine, the same of oil of almonds, with a few drops of essence of violets;•or otto of roses, Wen pour it into moldti to cool f.r use. 2. A wine-glassful of esu do_ cologne, and one of lemon-juice, - two cakes of brown Windsor soup, mixed well together, when hard, will form nti excel leu substance. CUE 4 OF-NAtts.—The nails Shoithl kept clean by the daily use of the nail. brush au* scup and water. After wiping the hands. but still soft froirrthe salon of the water, gently push beelt the skin which is apt to grow over the nails, which will not only preserve them neatly rounded, but will prevent the skin around their foots, (nail springs), and becoming sore. The points of the nail should be pared at least once a week; bit ing them should be avoided. . . To CLEAN Hata flarsltss.--Fill a pan with warm water, and dissolve in it a quarter of an on nce of soda r to half a gal lon of water. Comb out the loose hairs; take one brush at a• time by thehandle nd dip it several timet in the water with out wetting the back ; then rinse in cold water, and put near the or in the open air to dry. Never use soap in washing hair brushes, or allow the water to I more than lukewarm, as hot water will soften the bristles and melt the glue in the back, and also turn -ivory backs low. • A WRITER in the British Medial' JOUT nal states that, in cases of the whooping cough, in the last stage—that is after the third week—he has had one ounce of the strongest liquid ammonia put . into a gal lon of 'boiling water in an open pan - , and the steam kept up by means of brick made red-hot throughout, and - pat into the boiling water containing the am monia, the luau being placed in the cen tre. of a room into which the tmtients were brought as the ammoniated steam was passing off. This method, he says, was used in the evening, knit before bed time, and it proved so efficacioni iu abat ing the spasniodic attack, and .after three or four_days terminating the malady, as to establish beyond any thubt the great . value of this mode of inhaling ammonia ai a therapeutic agent in tranquilizing the nervous system in whooping-cough., ASTRUNOMEILS have sometimes seen eras .move across the face of the sun n•nch more - rapidly.than the .ordinary So lar spots. .They are described as round, black, and sharply defined.. One Was ob served in Germany in 1819, one in Frineo in 1839; and one in England in 1862.-- . Ur. J4:11. Hind conjectured that this may be an. unknown planet, which exists at rfe great distance from the sun, and froth; these previchis observations ho lei calcu lated tlurt if it is such o planet, it will be visible on' the sun's dims on the 24th of March next. lie therefore recommend* that it he closely watched for on that day by astronomers in all parts of the world, in order to se ttlethe question whether we have "brought into harness,' all the infe rior planets that exist - A QUAKER, uho had been fronblea .with rate, informs a friend that ho &eas ed's thirty-foot board, filled it fall of fish hooks, set it up nt an- angle of forty-flvo degrees, and put an old cheese at the top. The rats went up, slid back, and he - got thirty of them the first, nighti • • TRH fatigue of the limbs incitlent to railway trawl, is occasioned mainly by the.trnfiling motion of the floor nailer the feet. Invali t ls will find a great vlief by the use of an air-oushion fora foot. A (mums kiwi or sausages, ma do Ars 'ante intoxicate.